Category: Security

  • Biden appears to kick his dog in viral video

    A new report coinciding with a resurfaced video claims that President Joe Biden kicked and punched his German Shepherd dogs.

    Pointing to a new report by Judicial Watch, a government watchdog group, Collin Rugg, co-owner of Trending Politics, tweeted a video that appears to show the president kicking his dog. Rugg captioned the video, “REPORT: President Biden has ‘mistreated’ his dogs by punching and kicking them according to sources close with Judicial Watch. Biden’s dogs are just like his son: Poorly trained.”

    Rugg noted that Department of Homeland Security documents contain records of multiple injuries and attacks that involved the Biden family’s dogs and members of the Secret Service.

    A Judicial Watch press release published Thursday stated, “According to a Judicial Watch source, President Biden has mistreated his dogs. Judicial Watch has learned he has punched and kicked his dogs.”

    Records obtained by Judicial Watch also include an email exchange between a Uniformed Division officer and a Secret Service member who was attacked by Biden’s German Shepherd, Commander, on Nov. 5, 2022, that highlights the severity of the numerous biting incidents caused by Biden’s dogs.

    At the beginning of the email exchange, the officer asked the dog attack victim, “Doing alright [redacted]? That’s freaking crazy, that stupid dog – rolling my eyes [redacted].”

    READ MORE: Biden’s dog has 12th biting incident; removed from White House

    After the victim of the biting incident explained that both his arm and leg still hurt after being bit twice by the president’s dog, the officer stated, “What a joke [redacted] – if it wasn’t their dog, he would already have been put down – freaking clown needs a muzzle – hope you get to feeling better [redacted].” 

    Commander was recently removed from the White House after revelations surfaced of a 12th biting attack incident. Elizabeth Alexander, spokesperson for First Lady Jill Biden, told The Associated Press, “Commander is not presently on the White House campus while next steps are evaluated.”

    Judicial Watch announced Thursday that the government watchdog group had filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the Secret Service to obtain additional records and information pertaining to Commander’s biting incidents.

    “It is beyond belief that even after Judicial Watch exposed their attacking 10 Secret Service personnel, Joe and Jill Biden have continued to let their dog menace and attack Secret Service and White House staff. Let’s be blunt: the dangerous dog could kill someone,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton said. “The ongoing Biden administration cover-up of the Biden dog attacks on Secret Service agents is dangerous corruption.”



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  • Psychedelic drugs help veteran with PTSD, study shows

    In a breakthrough that may transform how Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is treated in veterans, MDMA-assisted therapy appears to yield promising results.

    Jonathan Lubecky, a Marine and Army veteran who struggled with severe PTSD symptoms, found a ray of hope through psychedelic treatment, and his story may pave the way for countless others seeking relief from their PTSD, according to Military.com.

    After suffering from debilitating PTSD for eight years, Lubecky’s journey took a turn in 2014. Although a visit to the Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Charleston, South Carolina, did not immediately offer relief as no bed was available, it provided him with a crucial lead.

    An intern at the hospital discreetly handed him a note, which read, “Google MDMA/PTSD.” The anonymous tip led Lubecky to a safety trial conducted by the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) in Charleston.

    Nine years later, Lubecky credits his three MDMA-assisted therapy sessions for his remarkable transformation.

    “I’m now PTSD-free longer than I had it,” Lubecky shared on the VA’s inaugural New Horizons in Health podcast. “It’s like doing therapy while being hugged by everyone who loves you with a basketful of puppies licking your face.”

    MDMA’s potential to treat PTSD has been under investigation by MAPS since 2011. Recent Phase 3 clinical trial results published in the journal “Nature Medicine” have reportedly validated the safety and efficacy of the treatment for PTSD patients.

    As a result of the positive tests, the VA is looking to expand research into psychedelic drugs, including MDMA and psilocybin, for PTSD, depression, and other disorders within the veteran community.

    READ MORE: Vietnam vet’s new book aims to shed light on PTSD experiences

    However, challenges exist with psychedelic treatments. Both MDMA and psilocybin are currently classified as “Schedule 1” drugs by the Drug Enforcement Agency, which prevents large-scale studies from being conducted.

    Nevertheless, Dr. Shereef Elnahal, VA Under Secretary for Health, revealed that department researchers have obtained waivers for ongoing studies, funding them with private donations.

    “If and when this becomes available, VA will be able to scale it, I think, better than any other health care system because of our focus particularly on veterans,” Elnahal stated.

    The interest in psychedelic treatments stems from current statistics of veterans with PTSD. Of the 6 million veterans enrolled in VA health care in 2021, 10% of male veterans and 19% of female veterans were diagnosed with PTSD. Although traditional treatments like cognitive processing therapy and drug therapies like Zoloft and Paxil exist, studies show that the effectiveness of the treatments can vary.

    On the other hand, recent MDMA testing data showed that 87% of patients showcased significant PTSD symptom improvement post-treatment. By the study’s conclusion, 71% didn’t fit the PTSD diagnostic criteria.

    Lubecky and VA officials have urged caution against veterans self-medicating with MDMA, given the potential side effects and risks associated with unregulated drugs.

    “When you are using recreationally, you are finding something on the street. You don’t know what you are taking and what’s in that pill. That’s a risk that I hope that will cause people some pause,” Dr. Ilse Wiechers, deputy executive director of the VA’s Office of Mental Health and Suicide Prevention, said.

    According to Military.com, as research on MDMA for PTSD wraps up, MAPS aims for FDA approval in 2024. The DEA also needs to revisit its Schedule 1 classification, especially with Congress considering legislation on the study of marijuana, MDMA, and psilocybin for veterans.

    This news article was partially created with the assistance of artificial intelligence and edited and fact-checked by a human editor.



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  • Big Chinese state-owned enterprises setting up army-linked militias

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

    Major state-owned companies across China are setting up corporate militias under the direct management of local garrisons of the People’s Liberation Army, according to official reports.

    Shanghai Municipal Investment Group, a major property and infrastructure developer affiliated with the city government, held a formal opening ceremony on Sept. 28 for its new People’s Armed Forces department, which will be run by the People’s Liberation Army’s Shanghai garrison, according to reports in The Liberation Daily News and The Paper.

    The People’s Armed Forces departments were set up at every level of government, in schools, universities and state-owned enterprises to strengthen ruling Chinese Communist Party control over local militias, guard weapons caches and find work for veterans, all as part of China’s national defense mobilization strategy, according to Wikipedia.

    After decades of relative invisibility throughout the post-Mao economic boom, they are once more mobilizing to build militias in big state-owned companies and consolidate party leadership over local military operations.

    The new department at Shanghai Municipal Investment Group, also known as Shanghai Chengtou, came after similar moves in the central city of Wuhan and in the eastern province of Jiangsu, according to official statements and media reports.

    The Wuhan Agricultural Group, which is affiliated with the municipal government, set up its own armed forces department on Aug. 31, the state-run Changjiang Daily newspaper reported.

    “The establishment of the People’s Armed Forces Department in a municipal state-owned enterprise has important political significance,” the report said, adding that the department would be tasked with cultivating a spirit of “unity, cooperation and tenacious struggle” among employees, as well as improving their “political literacy.”

    According to its website, the company has total assets of nearly 10 billion yuan (US$1.4 billion), 12 subsidiaries, and employs more than 800 people, engaging in “agricultural finance, landscaping, aquatic animal husbandry, new rural construction, capital operation, and agricultural culture and tourism.”

    And in Jiangsu’s Nantong city, the Haian City Construction Development Investment Group set up its own armed forces department on June 16, according to a press release from the municipal government.

    The press release quoted Han Tao, Director of the Mobilization Bureau of the Jiangsu Provincial Military Region, as saying that “strengthening the armed construction of state-owned enterprises is of great significance to promoting the construction of reserve forces.”

    Similar moves are in the pipeline at other companies, it said.

    “Going forward, the province will … create a number of People’s Armed Forces departments in [other] companies with … standardized operations,” the statement said.

    The announcement from Shanghai’s Chengtou sparked considerable online debate about the purpose of the move, with some comments calling it a “corporate militia,” others suggesting it means the government is readying cities on its eastern seaboard for war, and others saying it could mean the authorities are anticipating mass popular unrest in connection with unfinished real estate projects as the wheels come off China’s property market.

    “At the very least, it shows that their debt situation is complex … the armed forces department can be used to deal with debt collection … or various detentions,” wrote @zyqq on the question-and-answer site Zhihu, prompting more than 1,000 users to hit “agree.”

    But @ZhihuUser disagreed, saying that the armed forces departments are in charge of militia training, defense drills, air raid shelters, warehousing of supplies, weapons and ammunition, as well as the coordination of mass evacuations during emergencies.

    “This is not about preparing to deal with creditors – it’s about preparing in case the Taiwan authorities and Japan and the United States behave irrationally, and organizing responses to emergencies such as air raids on big cities,” the user wrote, garnering more than 500 “agree” votes.

    And user @Protect_the_best_pure_pure_pure quipped: “Maybe the soldiers will now have to complete all of those unfinished buildings.”

    Jiangsu-based current affairs commentator Zhang Jianping said the move is likely linked to concern over potential social unrest, however.

    “Urban investment groups … owe huge debts and they must want to maintain stability,” Zhang said. “[Armed forces departments] can also help to solve the issue of unemployment among veterans.”

    Current affairs commentator Bi Xin agreed.

    “They are expanding their capacity to control confrontation between the people and the government,” he said. “Shanghai Chengtou is mostly engaged in urban development and property investment, as well as infrastructure projects like bridges, tunnels, metro lines and so on.”

    “The People’s Armed Forces departments are a new way to maintain stability.”

    Current affairs commentator Ma Ju said corporate militias have their organizational roots in private security operations that have always existed at state-owned enterprises, often bearing arms.

    He said the announcement came after ruling Chinese Communist Party leader Xi Jinping visited Zhejiang ahead of the Asian Games in Hangzhou, and referred to the Fengqiao experience of the early 1960s, when then supreme leader Mao Zedong called on the masses to mobilize to wage “class struggle” across the country.

    “Xi Jinping … went off to Zhejiang and talked about the Fengqiao experience, which basically means a people’s war,” Ma said.

    “These armed forces departments have nothing to do with any threat from overseas or about national defense mobilization,” he said. “They are about using military force to suppress people inside the system who are seen as disloyal.”



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  • Steven Tyler’s vocal injury ‘more serious than initially thought,’ rest of Aerosmith tour postponed

    Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler has fractured his larynx, forcing the band to postpone its remaining tour dates until next year.

    “Unfortunately, Steven’s vocal injury is more serious than initially thought,” Aerosmith said in a statement posted to its Facebook account on Friday morning. “His doctor has confirmed that in addition to the damage to his vocal cords, he fractured his larynx which requires ongoing care.”

    Tyler, 75, had previously announced that he had injured his vocal cords during his last show with the band on Sept. 9 in Belmont, New York, preventing him from performing for the next 30 days. At the time, Aerosmith postponed six tour dates.

    However, with Friday’s health development, the band said in its statement it would postpone “all the currently scheduled Peace Out shows” until “sometime in 2024.” Aerosmith assured fans that Tyler is “receiving the best medical treatment available to ensure his recovery is swift, but given the nature of a fracture, he is being told patience is essential.”

    “I am heartbroken to not be out there with Aerosmith, my brothers and the incredible Black Crowes, rocking with the best fans in the world,” Tyler said in the Facebook statement, referring to the Atlanta rock band that had been touring with Aerosmith. “I promise we will be back as soon as we can!”

    Aerosmith embarked on the 40-show trip, billed as its farewell tour, earlier this month, starting in Philadelphia’s Wells Fargo Center. The tour was scheduled to run until Feb. 29.

    The band was set to play a New Year’s Eve concert in Boston, where Aerosmith formed in 1970. But Tyler’s injury happened three shows into the tour.

    Last December, Aerosmith abruptly cut short its Deuces Are Wild residency in Las Vegas after Tyler’s undisclosed illness resulted in repeated cancellations.

    Tyler also remains embroiled in a legal dispute with a woman who alleges that he sexually assaulted her in the 1970s when she was 16 and the singer was 25. The woman, Julia Misley, alleged in the lawsuit that Tyler had assaulted her several times throughout high school. The lawsuit also stated that she had become pregnant, and Tyler allegedly prevented her from seeking prenatal care and ultimately persuaded her to get an abortion in fall 1975. He has denied the allegations and filed a motion last May to have a portion of the sexual assault lawsuit dismissed.

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    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Disney World donating $1.5 million to Florida nonprofits

    Walt Disney World announced new donations of $1.5 million to 19 nonprofit organizations in Florida on Monday.

    The company’s 2023 grants are going to groups that work with homelessness, poverty, environmental protection, education, arts, science, youth issues and other causes.

    “Florida has been our home for more than half a century and each organization receiving a grant is doing amazing work for our community,” Rena Langley, senior vice president of communications & public affairs at Disney World, said in a news release. “This will help them continue making big differences and is another step forward in our long history of giving back to those around us.”

    Receiving grants are Bok Tower Gardens, Central Florida Community Arts, Children’s Home Society of Florida, Christian Service Center, Conductive Education Center of Orlando, Conservation Florida, ELEVATE Orlando, Foundation for Foster Children, Habitat for Humanity, Hope Partnership, IDignity, Limbitless Solutions, Orlando Science Center, Osceola Arts, Page 15, Steinway Society of Central Florida, Volunteers for Community Impact and Zebra Coalition.

    The amount received varies; the groups will receive between $25,000 and $100,000 apiece.

    Disney is “stepping up in a big way during a time of growth for our organization. To have this reinforcement is a huge honor and weight off our shoulders,” Michael Dippy, executive director at IDignity, said in the Disney news release.

    Earlier this year, Disney World donated $500,000 to five Central Florida conservation organizations and $125,000 to school districts in Osceola, Lake, Polk and Seminole counties. For more information, go to disneyflorida.com.

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    © 2023 Orlando Sentinel

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Killer manatee movie will be made in Tampa

    “Jaws” taught the world that it’s not safe to go back in the water.

    Now, Tampa will be reminded of that … by a manatee?

    According to an application for a $100,000 Hillsborough County film incentive, the movie “No Wake Zone” will film for 13 days in the Tampa area throughout January and February. It is about a mutated manatee that terrorizes Tampa Bay, “leaving it up to a grizzled marine patrol veteran to save the day in this unique horror/comedy.”

    That’ll teach the locals to run out of lettuce.

    The National Wildlife Federation’s website says that manatees, often called sea cows, “are some of the most peaceful creatures in the world.”

    The Sarasota-based production company, Toxic Pictures, is estimated to spend around $800,000 in the county, according to the application, via 637 hotel room nights, over 26 residents on crew, plus food, location rentals and equipment.

    “Think ‘Sharknado’ with heart, and better looking locations,” said Tyler Martinolich, head of Hillsborough’s film commission, Film Tampa Bay “Silly premise aside, ‘No Wake Zone’ looks to be a fun tongue in cheek horror/comedy that is not only going to put locals to work but show off our beautiful waterways throughout Tampa Bay.”

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    © 2023 Tampa Bay Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office can’t account for nearly 200 guns, city controller says

    The Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office can’t account for nearly 200 guns, despite statements the sheriff made suggesting that her office had not misplaced any weapons, according to a new report released by the City Controller.

    The 185 firearms that are unaccounted for are a mix of guns that were part of the Sheriff’s Office’s arsenal and weapons that were confiscated from people subject to protection-from-abuse orders.

    Acting City Controller Charles Edacheril and investigators in his office conducted the review as a follow-up to a 2020 report that said the office couldn’t account for more than 200 weapons. At the time, the controller said the Sheriff’s Office under former Sheriff Jewell Williams had haphazard recordkeeping practices and unclear procedures around handling guns.

    During a City Council budget hearing earlier this year, Sheriff Rochelle Bilal said all but 20 of the weapons were accounted for — they were either located, had been disposed of, or were sold. An April news release on the office’s website is titled: “In the Bilal Administration, we have not lost or misplaced any weapons.”

    But Edacheril wrote in a letter Wednesday to Bilal that there wasn’t sufficient evidence to account for 76 Sheriff’s Office guns and 109 weapons that were surrendered to the office. The controller still considers the guns unaccounted for and recommended the office report them to police as missing.

    Bilal’s office did not respond to the report Wednesday. A spokesperson said Bilal plans to host a news conference Thursday to discuss the findings.

    She has in the past blamed previous administrations for practicing poor recordkeeping, saying in 2020: “They left us with a crazy mess.”

    But nearly three years later, the Sheriff’s Office can’t provide documentation for the whereabouts of several categories of weapons, according to the controller’s report.

    For example, the Sheriff’s Office reported that 46 guns that were “found” had been either traded or burned. But the only documentation offered for 36 of them was that they were on a list of weapons in a folder labeled “Weapons Burn List” that did not include details such as when or where they were disposed of.

    The Sheriff’s Office also considered 20 guns “presumptively found.” For 15 of those guns, the office said there was documentation that other guns that were registered on the same date had been disposed of — but they did not provide a record that those actual guns were destroyed.

    Bilal’s office said that in addition to the 20 guns that remain unaccounted for, there are 18 more registered to retired Sheriff’s Office deputies. Under previous administrations, retirees could opt to take their service weapons with them into retirement.

    The Controller’s Office recommended that Bilal’s office confirm whether retired deputies have the guns in their possession or proof of their disposal.

    The report expressed particular concern that one is assumed to be in the possession of former Sheriff John Green, who was sentenced to five years in federal prison in 2019 after pleading guilty to public corruption charges. Bilal made headlines that year because she threw a going-away party for Green before he headed to prison.

    The controller’s review is the latest in a string of controversies surrounding Bilal, who took office in 2020 after campaigning on a pledge to reform the Sheriff’s Office after years of documented dysfunction.

    In 2021, top staffers filed a lawsuit alleging that abuse and retaliation was rampant in the office. A sheriff’s deputy was arrested last year for allegedly selling weapons that were later used in crimes. Earlier this year, The Inquirer reported that a top legal adviser in the office was illegally working as a defense lawyer.

    And in April, The Inquirer found that Bilal’s office used $500,000 that was earmarked for new hires to instead grant raises to executives, including Bilal herself. She said her aides tried to double her salary without her knowledge and that Mayor Jim Kenney’s administration had indicated it could redirect the funds.

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    © 2023 The Philadelphia Inquirer, LLC

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Gov. Kemp makes push to limit ‘frivolous’ lawsuits a key 2024 priority

    Gov. Brian Kemp’s political allies launched a new media campaign to back his effort to curb “frivolous” lawsuits and limit enormous jury awards, another signal the Republican will make a daunting effort to overhaul Georgia’s tort laws a leading priority in 2024.

    A group linked to the second-term governor unveiled Monday an initial six-figure media blitz that includes targeted digital ads warning Georgians of “senseless regulations that drive up insurance prices.”

    “We need to reform these laws to reduce prices, to restore fairness in our court system and to bring more jobs to our communities,” said the ad, financed by the Hardworking Georgians PAC established by the governor’s allies in the runup to his 2022 reelection campaign.

    The new push follows a Kemp address at the Georgia Chamber’s annual meeting in August where he surprised some corporate executives by vowing to reshape regulations guiding plaintiffs’ litigation. While he hasn’t issued specifics, Kemp advisers say he’ll play a direct role in crafting the legislation.

    He’s taking on one of the most perilous legislative battles in Georgia. Ascendant Republicans rewrote the state’s litigation rules nearly two decades ago despite determined opposition from trial lawyers. Since then, the courts have chipped away at the overhaul.

    With a solid Republican majority in the Legislature and a second-term win in the books, Kemp and his advisers say they’re ready for a fresh fight. They also have the backing of key business groups and insurance industry leaders.

    “For too long, Georgia tort laws have encouraged frivolous lawsuits that hamstring job creators, drive up insurance costs for families already struggling to make ends meet” and make it harder for businesses to grow, said Kemp adviser Cody Hall.

    They will face determined opposition from a statewide network of trial lawyers, judicial advocacy groups and Democrats who have long opposed efforts to make it harder to bring litigation and limit big jury awards.

    The Georgia Trial Lawyers Association, the powerful lobby group that represents plaintiff’s attorneys, said it hopes to work with Kemp and legislative leaders to “protect the citizens of Georgia” and ensure their constitutional rights are preserved.

    The governor is wading into a fierce fight that escalated in 2004 after Republicans won control of the General Assembly and made an extensive rewrite of litigation rules one of their first goals.

    He enters in a position of strength, fresh off a re-election victory that helped cement him as a rising national GOP figure and a legislative session earlier this year where he secured most of his priorities — aside from a late push for school voucher measures that was turned back by Republican defections.

    The 2005 tort legislation, signed by then-Gov. Sonny Perdue, capped medical malpractice pain-and-suffering awards at $350,000, added tougher standards for expert witnesses in malpractice trials and offered new incentives for patients to settle out of court.

    Doctors and hospitals said the measures would help lure more physicians to Georgia, while business lobbies embraced the prospect of speedier out-of-court settlements.

    But trial lawyers and patient advocacy groups said that enacting limits on damage awards puts an arbitrary price on a victim’s life. They often describe the legislation as a giveaway to the insurance industry and powerful corporations.

    Court rulings have eroded elements of the law over the years, including a Georgia Supreme Court decision in 2010 that struck down the $350,000 cap. Legislators have revisited the rules since then with mixed results, though Kemp’s unequivocal support for a rewrite gives the initiative added urgency.

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    © 2023 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Couple is walking through N.J. to raise money for military families

    A married couple from New York is passing through New Jersey on a epic, 300-mile walk to Arlington National Cemetery raising awareness and money for U.S. military families.

    Tom and Ally Gallin of New Rochelle, New York, have endured steady rain since departing from West Point, New York on Saturday morning. By Monday afternoon, they had crossed from West Milford into Jefferson, in Morris County, and walked until 4:30 p.m. on Berkshire Valley Road before departing by car for a Mount Olive hotel.

    Tom Gallin (Stars for Cars/Facebook)

    Neither is complaining about the challenging weather that has them traveling slightly behind schedule.

    “The military people and their families go through far worse,” said Tom Gallin, 56.

    Their journey is expected to conclude Tuesday, Oct. 10, in Virginia by the graveside of Michael A. Arciola, of Elmsford, New York, a U.S. Amy soldier who was 20 when he was killed in Iraq in 2005.

    Neither Tom nor Ally served in their military. Their involvement with the USO — the United Service Organizations — stems from a 2011 broadcast by the Oprah Winfrey Show in which Arciola’s mother appeared.

    Tom and Ally Gallin (Stars for Cars/Facebook)

    Their son Jake, now 21, was watching that day, and it led to his family setting up “Stars for Cars,” which arranges for the sale of star-shaped magnetic car decals that say, “We Support Blue Star & Gold Star Military Families.”

    A “Blue Star” signifies that there is a family member who is serving in the U.S. military, the USO explained on its website. A “Gold Star” signifies that there is a family member who has died while serving.

    Their fundraising walk, as of Monday evening, had raised $36,241 for the USO, which since 1941 has been providing support for U.S. military families.

    Tom and Ally had planned to reach Phillipsburg by Tuesday afternoon, but that was when they thought they would be in Roxbury Monday morning.

    “The wind and the rain just got the better of us. We’re definitely behind schedule, but we will definitely make it up,” Tom Gallin said.

    Tom has been driving their Volkswagon. He parks the car, walks with Ally, doubles back, gets the car, then meets up with her again — a pattern repeated throughout the day.

    He acknowledged here have been short stretches, such as along Union Hill Road in West Milford on Monday, where it became too dangerous to walk.

    “If the shoulders are not wide enough, we’ll err on the side of caution and just drive through that. It’s not worth getting hit by a car,” he said.

    They stopped for lunch at a bagel place on Route 23.

    “I love it,” Ally Gallin said of their time in New Jersey.

    “People have been so friendly. More than one person has stopped to make sure we were OK,” Ally said.

    Tom and Ally plan to get up at 4:30 a.m. Tuesday. They’ll drive to where they stopped in Jefferson and resume their journey.

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    © 2023 Advance Local Media LLC

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC



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  • Microsoft CEO says AI will help Google extend search edge

    Microsoft Corp. Chief Executive Officer Satya Nadella said artificial intelligence could help Google extend its dominance of the search market, as he took the stand Monday in the Google antitrust trial.

    When Microsoft introduced its new Bing AI-based search in February, beating Google to the punch, Nadella touted the technology as a way for Bing to get back in the market and make Google uncomfortable. But now, he told the judge, Google could accelerate its current lead by using the massive profits it makes from search to pay publishers for exclusive rights to content it can use to make its search AI better than rivals.

    Nadella also left no doubt about his perception of Google’s dominance. “You get up in the morning, you brush your teeth and you search on Google,” he said.

    The Department of Justice has accused Alphabet Inc.’s search division of unlawfully maintaining a monopoly by paying $10 billion a year to rivals, smartphone manufacturers and wireless carriers to make its search engine the default option on mobile devices and web browsers. Google has denied the allegations.

    To help prove its case, the DOJ hopes to use testimony from Nadella and other executives from Microsoft to show how even a company of its size and resources couldn’t unlock Google’s hold on the search market.

    Last week, Microsoft business development executive Jonathan Tinter testified that the Redmond, Washington-based software giant failed to secure a deal to put its Bing search app on Apple’s products, even though it was willing to offer far better terms than Google and lose multiple billions of dollars on the agreement. In the end, Apple signed a fresh deal with Google.

    During his testimony Monday, Nadella said Apple was using Microsoft to “bid up the price” it receives from Google.“Do you think Google would continue to pay Apple if there was no search competition? Why would they do that?”

    Tinter also told the court that Microsoft’s Surface Duo smartphone was required to use Google search in order to license the Android mobile operating system and was limited from using Bing on its own devices. Nadella was personally involved in discussing some of these issues with his Google counterpart, Sundar Pichai, and was expected to be queried about those conversations.

    Nadella was instrumental in the development of Bing, created by Microsoft in an ultimately doomed attempt to catch up with Google and capture a chunk of the online advertising market. On Monday he said Microsoft had invested $100 billion in its search engine.

    “I see search or internet search as the largest software category out there. We are a very, very low share player,” he testified. “But we continue to persist in it because we think of it as a software category we can contribute to.” Nadella added: “It’s a hard game to make any breakthroughs, but no one can accuse us of not being persistent.”

    While Bing has gained share on desktop computers, where it was integrated with Microsoft’s Internet Explorer and later Edge browser, it has lagged on mobile devices where people overwhelming use Google. Three or so years ago, Microsoft even discussed selling Bing to Apple, a transaction that would have replaced Google as the default option on the iPhone maker’s devices, Bloomberg reported. But a deal never came to fruition.

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    © 2023 Bloomberg L.P

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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