Tag: General News

  • Pair of pitching prospects could make run at rotation

    SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Don’t rule out Landen Roupp or Carson Whisenhunt from making a late run at the final spot in the San Francisco Giants’ rotation.

    Roupp, a 26-year-old righty, and Whisenhunt, a 22-year-old left-hander, are considered two of the most advanced arms in the Giants’ farm system, but each has been slowed this spring by injuries that cut short their 2023 seasons.

    Circumstances, manager Bob Melvin explained Thursday, have changed.

    “I think because of what’s transpired, we probably move these guys along a little bit more so than we originally anticipated,” Melvin said from his office, sheltering from the first rain of the spring. “It’s exciting. These are two of the better arms and two of the most talented guys we have in the organization.”

    With injuries to Tristan Beck (aneurysm) and Sean Hjelle (elbow sprain), and uncertainty surrounding Keaton Winn’s elbow, it’s also a necessity.

    Not long after Melvin spoke, Roupp was slated to make his spring debut against the Dodgers before the game was rained out in the third inning. Whisenhunt may not be far behind. He faced live hitters on the backfields, typically the final step before appearing in a live game — something Melvin said at the outset of camp was unlikely would happen for either this spring.

    Roupp’s unlikely rise from 12th-round draft pick to one of the top pitching prospects in the organization was stalled last June when a disc slipped in his lower back, ending his season after 10 starts — and a 1.74 ERA — at Double-A Richmond. Whisenhunt, the 66th overall selection in 2022, has rocketed through the system on the strength of his changeup, but made only six starts at Double-A last season — 58⅔ innings across all levels — before elbow pain prematurely ended his season.

    “Those are some pretty exciting names,” Melvin said Thursday.

    While each pitcher is considered fully healthy this spring — besides a comebacker off the finger that slowed Whisenhunt by a week — the plan entering camp was to slow-play their build-up to ensure they entered the season healthy and ready to debut when needed.

    That time, it turns out, arrived before they broke camp.

    Each will get the chance to pitch themselves into the picture, though they shouldn’t necessarily be considered front-runners.

    Source

  • Sexually Transmitted Infections on Rise in EU – Report


    Riskier sexual behavior post-pandemic has been named as one of the reasons by a health agency.

    Europe has seen a “troubling” rise in the number of cases of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), an EU agency has warned.

    The Annual Epidemiological Report published by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) on Thursday revealed the findings for 2022 for the member states of the European Union and the European Economic Area (Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway).

    According to the document, across the EU/EEA, cases of bacterial infections such as syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia saw a “troubling” and “significant” increase compared to 2021. Gonorrhea cases rose by 48%, syphilis cases by 34%, and chlamydia cases by 16%, the paper states. The report did not provide figures for viral STIs such as HIV and Hepatitis.

    Sexual health education, expanded access to testing and treatment services, as well as fighting the stigma associated with STIs have been named as ways to address the issue by ECDC Director Andrea Ammon.

    ”Unfortunately, the numbers paint a stark picture, one that demands our immediate attention and action,” she told a media conference on Thursday.

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    “These numbers – as big as they are – most likely only represent the tip of the iceberg, because surveillance data may underestimate the true burden of syphilis, gonorrhea and chlamydia due to difference in testing practices, access to sexual health services and reporting practices across the countries,” she added, as cited by Euractiv.

    While sexually transmitted infections such as chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis, are treatable, they can still lead to serious complications including chronic pain and infertility, if left untreated, the report notes.

    STIs have been rising for years in the EU/EEA, although this was stalled during the 2020-2021 COVID-19 pandemic, as governments imposed social isolation measures forcing people to stay at home and avoid social contact.

    READ MORE: Women sue EU state over birth control experiment – media

    An increase in riskier sexual behavior, along with better surveillance, a rise in home-testing, have been named by the ECDC as the reasons behind the sustained rise.

    A jump in infections among young heterosexual people in the latest data, and particularly among young women, could be attributed to a change in sexual behavior post-pandemic, the EU agency said.

    Before the pandemic, in 2019, reported numbers of cases of bacterial STIs reached an all-time high in Europe, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).


    EXCLUSIVE: Reporter At The Border Finds Foreign Military IDs On The Rio Grande


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  • Teacher Explains How Over 200 Students Were Abducted In Kaduna School

    bandits

    One of the teachers of the Local Government Education Authority Primary and Secondary School (LGEA) in Kuriga village in Chikun Local Government Area of Kaduna State, Sani Abdullahi has narrated how over 200 students were abducted.

    THE WHISTLER reports that armed men stormed the school on Thursday and abducted over 200 students.

    Abdullahi, who disclosed that the abducted students were a total of 287, stated that the bandits surrounded the school premises and asked everyone on sight to head to the bush.

    The teacher who was speaking when the Governor of Kaduna State, Uba Sani led government officials to the scene of the incident on Thursday evening, said the bandits took them by surprise.

    “I resumed school today at exactly 7:47 am. I entered the Acting Principal’s office and signed. All of a sudden, the Acting Principal asked me to look at my back and when I turned, we discovered that bandits had surrounded the school premises.

    “We became confused, we didn’t know where to go. Then, the bandits asked us to enter the bush, so we obeyed them because they were many. The pupils, who were about 700, also followed us,” he said.

    Abdullahi further stated that in the course of the confusion that followed, he was able to escape with some other students.

    “I returned to the village and reported what happened to the community. Immediately, our vigilantes and personnel of the Kaduna State Vigilante Service (KADVIS) followed the bandits,” he said.

    He, however, stated that the vigilantes were not able to rescue the abducted students, adding that one of the vigilantes was killed in the process.

    “It was when we came back from that pursuit that we briefed the Village Head and we started making efforts to know the actual number of pupils and teachers taken away by the bandits. At GSS Kuriga, 187 students are presently missing. In the primary school, 125 pupils were initially missing, but 25 of them escaped and returned home,” he said.

    Speaking to the community, the governor promised to do everything to ensure that students returned unhurt.

    “Before coming here, I spoke with the National Security Adviser (NSA), Malam Nuhu Ribadu and we are making efforts, the security forces have swung into action and by God’s grace, we will rescue the children.

    “We will do whatever we need to do to ensure the safe return of these children, even if it means coming to Kuriga to stay with you. The essence of government is protection of citizens’ lives and property. We recognized the fact that we are holding this position in trust for the people and by God’s grace, we will protect the citizens’ rights,” he said.

    The governor, who stated that he was one of the prominent voices on the issue of insecurity in Nigeria, maintained that State Policing will be able to curb the issue of insecurity in the country.

    “When I was in the Senate, I moved the motion for the creation of State Police. We have realised that there are not enough boots on ground. That is why we feel that if there is State Police, every community like Kuriga will have people in the Police and they would be armed with AK-47 rifles. That is the only way we would be able to protect the lives and property of the citizens. The vigilantes are not as armed as the bandits, because they don’t have AK-47. That is why the bandits are constantly causing us destruction. They come in to humiliate, kill and abduct our citizens.”

    While urging the community to be calm as the government will not rest until the children are back to their families, he promised to establish a Police Station and military camp in the community.

    “Since I received the sad news of this incident, I have not had any rest because every child in Kaduna state is my child. So, I don’t want you people to be disturbed. Let us pray to God to help and on our part as a government, we will not rest until these children return home. We are going to select seven people from this community, who will be part of a committee, where we will be having discussions,” he said.

    Teacher Explains How Over 200 Students Were Abducted In Kaduna School is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Fact Check: Fact-checking Joe Biden’s 2024 State of the Union address

    Facing a challenging path to reelection amid low favorability ratings and public wariness over the economy, President Joe Biden used his 2024 State of the Union address to take a fighting posture. He repeatedly drew contrasts with his presumptive Republican opponent, former President Donald Trump, and occasionally sparred with GOP lawmakers in the audience.

    “This is a moment to speak the truth, to bury lies,” Biden said, referring to the Jan. 6, 2021, storming of the U.S. Capitol  by Trump supporters who believed falsehoods that the 2020 election had been stolen. “Here’s the simple truth: You can’t love your country only when you win.”

    Biden didn’t say Trump’s name in his remarks, but he frequently invoked Trump’s record and  proposals, usually referring to him as “my predecessor.” 

    Some Republicans called out Biden from the floor. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., challenged Biden over the murder of Laken Riley, a University of Georgia nursing student. An immigrant in the country illegally has been charged in Riley’s death.

    Another Republican lawmaker, Wisconsin Rep. Derrick Van Orden, yelled, “Lies!” in response to Biden’s criticism of Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic. 

    Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., gave the Republicans’ response to the speech and we fact-checked that. 

    In forceful terms, Biden framed himself as a protector and defender of Americans and their prosperity, touting pocketbook policies to ease student loan burdens and lower prescription drug prices.

    Biden repeated calls for Republicans in Congress to approve aid to Ukraine, which is fighting an invasion by Russia. He also walked a fine line on the Middle East. He called for Hamas to free the Israeli hostages it continues to hold in Gaza — the families of some hostages were in the chamber for his address — but also announced a plan to build a temporary pier to expand humanitarian aid to Palestinians caught in the crossfire.

    We fact-checked key statements on immigration, Trump, the economy, reproductive rights and crime.

    Immigration

    Biden blamed Republicans for sidelining Senate border security bill 

    For years, Republicans have blamed Biden for the historically high illegal immigration under his watch. Some Republicans wore red and white pins that said “Stop the Biden border crisis” in large capital letters. 

    As Biden entered the House chamber, Greene gave him a pin with text that said: “Say her name: Laken Riley,” the University of Georgia student who was murdered. 

    As he discussed border security and immigration, Greene interrupted Biden and challenged him to say Riley’s name. 

    “Lincoln Riley, an innocent young woman who was killed by an illegal,” Biden said, misstating Riley’s first name.

    Some high-profile Democrats criticized him for using the phrase “illegal,” which some argue is dehumanizing.

    “He should have said undocumented,” former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said on CNN.

    “Let me be clear: No human being is illegal,” Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., posted on X. 

    Biden also said it was Republicans’ turn to act and cooperate with him and Democrats on a border security bill. He blamed Republicans for sidelining a Senate immigration bill, which failed in a 49-50 vote, that he claimed was “the toughest set of border security reforms we’ve ever seen.” 

    Here’s some context missing from some of Biden’s comments on the bill.

    “It would also give me and any new president new emergency authority to temporarily shut down the border when the number of migrants at the border is overwhelming.”

    This needs context.

    The proposal sought to enable the executive branch to block people from seeking asylum in between ports of entry if illegal immigration encounters reached certain levels. 

    It aimed to change what happened when people reached the border, but that doesn’t mean people would stop showing up. Despite the emergency authority, the government’s ability to quickly remove people from the U.S. would still hinge on its resources, and other countries’ willingness to take back immigrants. 

    “In short, there is no authority that Congress could pass that would allow for a ‘complete and total shutdown of the border,’” Theresa Cardinal Brown, the Bipartisan Policy Center’s senior adviser for Immigration and border policy previously told PolitiFact. “That’s just not how borders work in any real sense. Especially not our border with Mexico.”

    “That bill would hire … 100 more immigration judges to help tackle the backload of 2 million cases.”

    The backlog number is higher — there are more than 3 million cases in immigration courts as of November 2023, according to Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. The backlog grew by 1 million cases from November 2022 to November 2023.

    The bill called for “4,300 more asylum officers and new policies so they can resolve cases in six months instead of six years now.” 

    On average, asylum cases in immigration court take more than four years to be resolved, according to a 2023 report published by the American Immigration Council, an immigrants’ rights advocacy group.

    But the growing case backlog could increase that average.

    Attacking Trump with his own words

    In more than a dozen nameless references to his predecessor, Biden used partial quotes by Trump to draw policy contrasts on guns; Roe v. Wade; and Russian President Vladimir Putin and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

    “Now my predecessor, a former Republican president, tells Putin, quote, ‘do whatever the hell you want.’ That’s a quote.”

    Trump wasn’t directly inviting Russia to do whatever it wanted to NATO allies. He was telling a story during a rally in South Carolina about what he said to an unnamed ally years ago. Trump claimed  he was tough on NATO and got results, misrepresenting several facts about the alliance and his record in the process.

    “I got them to pay up,” Trump said Feb. 10. “NATO was busted until I came along. I said, ’Everybody’s gonna pay.’ They said, ‘Well, if we don’t pay, are you still going to protect us?’ I said, ‘Absolutely not.’”

    Trump added, “One of the presidents of a big country stood up and said, ‘Well, sir, if we don’t pay and we are attacked by Russia, will you protect us?’ I said, ‘You didn’t pay, you are delinquent?” He said, ‘Yes, let’s say that happened.’ No, I would not protect you, in fact, I would encourage them to do whatever the hell they wanted. You gotta pay. You gotta pay your bills.”

    “My predecessor told the NRA he’s proud he did nothing on guns when he was president.” 

    Trump did say that, even though his record was more nuanced. Speaking at the National Rifle Association’s convention in Pennsylvania in February, Trump said, “During my four years, nothing happened. And there was great pressure on me, having to do with guns. We did nothing. We didn’t yield.”

    But in 2019, when Trump was asked what he had done about the gun problem, he said, “We’ve done, actually, a lot.” Trump banned bump stocks, which let semi-automatic weapons fire dozens of bullets in seconds. He also supported a bipartisan effort to improve the background-check database and his administration prioritized gun-related prosecutions. However, Trump’s administration also tried to expand gun laws and regulations or block efforts to tighten them.

    “After another shooting in Iowa recently … when asked what to do about it he said,  ‘Just get over it.’” 

    Trump’s remarks were not in direct response to a question. Trump’s full remarks, which included sympathies for the victims, came at a January rally in Iowa after a sixth grade student was killed and several others wounded in a shooting at Perry High School. The shooter, 17, was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot.

    “I want to send our support and our deepest sympathies to the victims and families touched by the terrible school shooting yesterday in Perry, Iowa.” Trump also said, “It’s just horrible, so surprising to see it here. But, ah, have to get over it, we have to move forward, we have to move forward. But to the relatives and to all of the people that are so devastated right now to a point they can’t breathe, they can’t live, we are with you all the way, we are with you and we love you and we cherish you.”

    “My predecessor came to office determined to see Roe v. Wade overturned. He’s the reason it’s overturned and he brags about it.”

    At a January town hall in Des Moines, Iowa, Trump said, “For 54 years, they were trying to get Roe v. Wade terminated. And I did it and I’m proud to have done it.” Trump also said, “Nobody else was going to get that done but me and we did it, and we did something that was a miracle.”

    Trump appointed three Supreme Court justices that cemented the court’s conservative majority, which reversed the Roe decision in June 2022.

    On Truth Social in May 2023, Trump said, “After 50 years of failure, with nobody coming even close, I was able to kill Roe v. Wade, much to the ‘shock’ of everyone.”

    Economy

    Biden took a victory lap on the reduced inflation rate and other economic metrics. But a few of his talking points, including on “soaring” consumer confidence and cuts to the deficit, were exaggerated. 

    “Inflation has dropped from 9% to 3% — the lowest in the world!”

    The U.S. is doing better on managing inflation than most advanced industrialized nations are, but does not rank No. 1 internationally.

    Biden is correct that the year-over-year inflation rate has dropped from 9%, a four-decade high,  in summer of 2022 to a little above 3% today amid sharp interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve.

    In December 2023, seven countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development  — Canada, Denmark, Italy, Latvia,Lithuania, the Netherlands and South Korea — had inflation rates lower than the U.S’. 

    Twenty OECD member countries had higher inflation rates than the U.S., including France, Germany and the United Kingdom, each of which belongs to the G-7 of elite economies.

    “Consumer studies show consumer confidence is soaring.”

    It depends on the measure.

    Two long-running consumer confidence measures are released by the University of Michigan and the Conference Board, a business membership and research organization. 

    Consumer confidence, as measured by the University of Michigan survey,, has climbed sharply since bottoming out in the summer of 2022, when inflation reached 9%, a four-decade high. However, the rating under Biden remains lower than it was for four of the past five presidents at the same point in their tenures.

    Biden scores higher on the Conference Board survey, which is focused more on questions related to the labor market than inflation. 

    The labor market has been a strength for Biden during his watch. And the Conference Board survey shows that consumer sentiment is now higher than it was under three of the previous four presidents at this point in their tenures.

    “I’ve already cut the federal deficit by over a trillion dollars.”

    This merits asterisks. The deficit — the difference between federal spending and federal revenues — fell by $1.4 trillion between 2021, Biden’s first year in office, and 2022, his second year. That was a larger decline than any in any previous one-year span. 

    However, this reduction stems largely from the phasing-out of pandemic era relief programs. Also, even at its reduced levels, the deficit remains higher under Biden than it was pre-pandemic. The deficit in 2022 and 2023 under Biden was higher than in each of Trump’s first three years, partly because of bills such as the 2021 American Rescue Plan, a pandemic recovery measure.

    Biden: “There are 1,000 billionaires in America. You know what the average federal tax is for those billionaires? No? They’re making great sacrifices. 8.2%.”

    This is misleading. 

    A White House report arrived at the 8.2% figure by including unrealized gains in the income calculations of the 400 richest U.S. families.

    Currently, if people see their stock shares rise in value over time, those gains are not taxed until the shares are sold. If the shares are never sold, they aren’t taxed. Under current law — which Biden proposes to change — stocks may be passed to the next generation with little or no taxation. 

    Economists and policymakers have long debated whether the government should tax unrealized gains. But Biden made it sound as if 8.2% was the standard tax rate billionaires pay today. It’s not: Unrealized wealth, unlike income, is not taxed today.

    The actual average tax rate the top 1% of taxpayers pay is more than three times what Biden said: 25.6%, according to IRS data from 2019. A more elite group, the top 0.001% — which in 2019 meant people earning about $60 million or more a year — paid 22.9%.

    Another analysis, by the investigative journalism outlet ProPublica, found that the actual tax rate paid by 25 U.S. billionaires under current law is 16%, which is still about twice what Biden said.

    A “law and order” president

    Violent crime has declined recently in the U.S., and Biden largely took responsibility.

    “America is safer today than when I took office,” he said, claiming that the year before he became president, “murders went up 30%, the biggest increase in history.” 

    Homicides did increase 30% in 2020, and it was considered the largest single-year jump in more than a century. But Biden ignored that the spike coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Touting his 2022 American Rescue Plan Act as “the largest investment in public safety ever,” Biden pointed to the 2023 homicide rate: “Last year, the murder rate saw the sharpest decrease in history. Violent crime fell to one of its lowest levels in more than 50 years. But we have more to do.”

    Violent crime has decreased from 2020’s record highs, but this is because of a confluence of factors, experts said, some that are beyond Biden’s control.

    Using data from hundreds of cities, criminologists estimated that 2023 homicides were down around 12% compared with 2022. The numbers are considered preliminary, but crime analysts say that if the final numbers remain the same, it would represent one of the largest single-year homicide declines since U.S. crime record-keeping began.

    Despite the decline, data shows that the 2023 homicide rate is expected to be about 18% higher than it was in 2019, before the pandemic began.

    Legislation such as the American Rescue Plan, which included funding for community public safety initiatives, and the 2022 Bipartisan Safer in Communities Act, which provided funding to help states implement “red flag laws” and put more limits on gun purchases, might have helped propel the downward trend, researchers said. Other contributing factors likely include an easing of the pandemic’s social disruptions and cities’ individual crime-reduction efforts in response to homicide spikes.

    Reproductive issues

    “The Alabama Supreme Court shut down IVF treatments across the state, unleashed by a Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade.”

    On Feb. 16, the Alabama Supreme Court released a ruling that said frozen embryos should be considered children. 

    The decision lacks the power to shut down in vitro fertilization treatments statewide. But it caused multiple clinics in the state to pause IVF treatments as they reviewed the decision and potential liabilities.

    Since then, Alabama lawmakers passed legislation to shield IVF providers from civil or criminal liability in a rush to protect fertility treatments after backlash grew. Two clinics announced they were resuming operations after Republican Gov. Kay Ivey signed the law.

    Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill. — who had two daughters using in vitro fertilization — introduced a similar federal bill aimed at protecting IVF. But Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., blocked it Feb. 28, saying it was a “vast overreach that is full of poison pills that go way too far — far beyond ensuring legal access to IVF.”

    “If you, the American people. send me a Congress that supports the right to choose, I promise you: I will restore Roe v. Wade as the law of the land again.” 

    We continue to rate Biden’s promise to codify Roe v. Wade Stalled. 

    Biden called on Congress to help him achieve his 2020 campaign promise to codify Roe v Wade.

    He can’t do it alone.

    The Supreme Court ruled in 2022 to overturn Roe, ending nearly 50 years of federally protected abortion access.

    Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., introduced the Women’s Health Protection Act of 2023, which would prohibit governmental restrictions on access to abortion. But it has no Republican co-sponsors and didn’t advance.

    We have been tracking Biden’s campaign promise to codify Roe v. Wade, one of about 100 promises on our Biden Promise Tracker. The lack of 10 Republicans to overcome an expected filibuster has stalled Biden’s efforts on codification. That lack of a path forward continued even after Democrats kept narrow control of the Senate in the midterms.

    Prescription drugs

    Americans pay more for prescription drugs than anywhere in the world.”

    We rated a similar claim by Biden Mostly True.

    American per capita spending on prescription drugs is nearly three times the average of other advanced, industrialized countries that comprise the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. A study by the Rand Corp., a nonpartisan research organization, found that, across all drugs, U.S. prices were 2.78 times higher than the prices in 33 OECD countries.

    The gap was even larger for brand-name drugs, with U.S. prices averaging 4.22 times higher than those in comparison nations. The U.S. pays less than comparable nations for unbranded, generic drugs, which account for about 90% of filled prescriptions in the U.S., yet make up only one-fifth of prescription drug spending. 

    Researchers say factors including country-specific pricing, confidential rebates and other discounts can obscure actual prices, making comparisons harder.

    Former Rep. George Santos was in attendance

    Is former Rep. Georoge Santos really allowed to sit among the people who expelled him in December?

    The short answer is yes. 

    PolitiFact Staff Writers Loreben Tuquero and Marta Campabadal Graus contributed to this report.



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  • James Van Der Beek, do your own thing

    CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: James Van Der Beek, 47; Freddie Prinze Jr., 48; Camryn Manheim, 63; Aidan Quinn, 65.

    Happy Birthday: Rise above controversy this year. Deal with situations before they have a chance to grow. Be clear regarding your wants and needs if someone tries to invade your privacy or space or to pressure you to get involved in something. Don’t be afraid to do your own thing and to say no to anyone trying to change or manipulate you. Your numbers are 4, 10, 18, 26, 32, 37, 43.

    ARIES (March 21-April 19): Personal gain is a priority. Don’t waste time on empty promises or big talkers who don’t deliver. Put your energy where it will do you some good. A “me first” attitude and protecting yourself will spare you from being taken for granted. 4 stars

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t offer more than you can deliver. It’s time to update before it’s too late. Keep your life simple, take care of your business before you offer to help others and refuse to let compliments and manipulative people throw you off track. 2 stars

    GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Tread carefully. Say little, do a lot and leave no room for error. Be aware of other agendas and steer clear of being used for your attributes, skills and connections. Focus more on personal improvements and less on trying to change others. 5 stars

    CANCER (June 21-July 22): Evaluate situations, know who is on your team and prepare to indulge in pastimes that spark your imagination, bring back memories and reconnect you to soulmates you want in your inner circle. A change of scenery will motivate you. 3 stars

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Don’t second-guess yourself when you should be questioning others. Put your energy into what makes sense and will bring the highest returns or the most joy. Personal growth will require physical endurance, but it will be worth every ounce of energy you contribute. 3 stars

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Take the initiative to make things happen. Be the one to spread the word, take on projects and lead the way to positive change. Partnerships look promising if you keep your money separate and set boundaries to protect your rights and reputation. 3 stars

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Relax and have fun. You don’t have to break the budget to enjoy life. A reunion with old friends or a walk in the woods or down by the waterfront will spark your imagination and sprout ideas and plans. Romance and self-improvement are favored. 5 stars

    SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Don’t make a rash decision before taking the time to verify information and consider how you’ll be affected by what’s happening around you. Use your ingenuity, and you’ll devise a plan that protects you from what you fear. Change begins with you. 5 stars

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Take a breather. You owe it to yourself and those you care about to digest your life choices and decide what’s best for you. Don’t let outside interference cost you mentally, emotionally or financially. 4 stars

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Don’t take on someone else’s responsibilities when you need to concentrate on what you can do to get ahead or to live the life that suits you best. Your happiness is your responsibility, and the more you do to soothe your soul, the better. 3 stars

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Stay calm, regardless of what others do. Distance yourself from situations and people who aren’t consistent or make last-minute changes that don’t fit your criteria. Focus on what works for you and personal growth. 3 stars

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Being stubborn will deter someone who wants to take advantage of you. Don’t let temptation get the better of you. Be direct, don’t hesitate to say no and don’t pay for something you don’t want or for someone else’s mistake. Don’t share personal information. 3 stars

    Birthday Baby: You are insightful, resourceful and persistent. You are bold and persuasive.

    1 star: Avoid conflicts; work behind the scenes. 2 stars: You can accomplish, but don’t rely on others. 3 stars: Focus and you’ll reach your goals. 4 stars: Aim high; start new projects. 5 stars: Nothing can stop you; go for gold.

    Visit Eugenialast.com, or join Eugenia on Twitter/Facebook/LinkedIn.

    Want a link to your daily horoscope delivered directly to your inbox each weekday morning? Sign up for our free Coffee Break newsletter at mercurynews.com/newsletters or eastbaytimes.com/newsletters. 

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  • Haiti Is On Fire: The Montana Accord Movement To The Rescue

    By Dr. Ron Daniels

    (Trice Edney Wire) – Haiti, our first Black Republic, is a virtual failed state where vicious gangs tied to the parasitical elite, and gangs with their own wannabe leaders or criminal kingpins control most of the Capital of Port Au Prince and much of the country. Ariel Henry, an unelected, illegitimate, and inept “Prime Minister” has a tenuous hold over what passes for a “government.”

    The well-armed rampaging gangs are terrorizing the country, utilizing kidnapping for ransom, extortion, trafficking in drugs and assaulting and raping women unchecked. They are attacking police stations and killing members of the National Police, attacking prisons, and releasing prisoners and attacking and killing each other over turf. They are also in deadly competition with each other to take over the government or at least emerge as the dominant force that will be the de facto government.

    Haiti is on fire and as the people suffer and demand the resignation of an illegitimate Prime Minister, what is the posture of the U.S. government and the Core Group of nations and multilateral bodies? Unfortunately, tragically the U.S. is propping up a recalcitrant, illegitimate, shaky Henry regime despite massive opposition from the people. Rather than insisting that Henry relinquish the reins of power, the U.S. and its allies are negotiating with him and preparing to finance a Kenyan-led military force to “restore order.”  The U.S. and its allies are arrogantly and blatantly ignoring rather than respecting and supporting the wishes of the Haitian people. We’ve seen this movie before. Unfortunately, even heads of state in the Caribbean, who should be good-faith facilitators, have recently acquiesced to negotiating with Henry rather than demanding his immediate departure from office.

    Haiti is on fire. That’s the bad news.  But the good news is that there is a remarkable, broad-based civil society movement involving hundreds of organizations and leaders from across the political spectrum who have boldly and courageously come forward to devise a plan, process and strategy to put out the fire, to extinguish the raging conflagration; firefighting freedom fighters committed to advancing a “Haitian Solution” to rescue the first Black Republic from what one leader has termed the “criminal enterprise” which is spreading death and destruction across the land. This powerful, people-based effort is called the Montana Accord Movement (MAM). These courageous leaders are determined to raise Haiti from the ashes to create a sustainable, people-based democracy.

    The challenge is, our challenge as allies and friends of the First Black Republic is to persuade, demand, compel the U.S. government, the Core Group and our sisters and brothers from CARICOM to insist that Henry relinquish power immediately. Equally important, the U.S. and all external international players should immediately acknowledge and support the Montana Accord Movement plan, process and strategy as the way forward toward sustainable democracy and development in Haiti. To achieve this righteous outcome, we the people must rise-up to support the Montana Accord Movement to save Haiti. Let’s do it. #SaveHaiti, SupportMAM 

    Review the Montana Accord Plan Here — URL: 

    Dr. Ron Daniels is President of the Institute of the Black World 21st Century, Founder of the Haiti Support Project and Distinguished Lecturer Emeritus, York College City University of New York. 

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  • White House officials to embark on post-State of the Union travel blitz

    Biden administration officials are kicking off a two-week travel blitz next week to sell President Biden’s accomplishments and draw a contrast with former President Trump, the likely GOP nominee.

    The White House previewed more than two dozen trips over the course of March from various Cabinet officials and top aides to the president. Their travel will coincide with planned campaign stops by Biden to swing states like Pennsylvania, Georgia and Michigan in coming days.

    “In the weeks following his State of the Union address, the President’s Cabinet and senior Administration officials will continue fanning out across the country to speak directly to the American people — underscoring the historic progress we have made thanks to the President’s agenda as well as the clear contrast between competing visions for the country,” a White House official said.

    The travel will kick off Monday, with Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack heading to Arizona to tout investments for farmers, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland traveling to Florida for a climate conference and senior adviser Steve Benjamin touting private sector investments in Texas.

    Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg will travel to Philadelphia on Tuesday to highlight bridge repairs funded by the bipartisan infrastructure law, while Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will be in Kentucky on Wednesday to tout investments that benefit disadvantaged communities.

    Other states officials will visit from March 11-27 include South Carolina, Nevada, Missouri, Massachusetts, New York, California, North Carolina, Utah, Ohio and Michigan.

    The administration-wide travel to educate the public on the president’s accomplishments comes as his campaign looks to shift its focus toward a likely general election matchup with former President Trump.

    Biden used Thursday’s State of the Union to highlight numerous bipartisan accomplishments from his first three years in office and highlight priorities for a possible second term, including codifying abortion rights, curbing gun violence, giving teachers a pay raise and increasing the corporate minimum tax.

    Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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  • Global Debt Levels Are a Ticking Time Bomb


    The end of the United States dollar will not come from external threats but from the irresponsible actions of its own government.

    The relentless increase in global debt is an enormous problem for the economy. Public deficits are neither reserves for the private sector nor a tool for growth. Bloated public debt is a burden on the economy, making productivity stall, raising taxes, and crowding out financing for the private sector. With each passing year, the global debt figure climbs higher, the burdens grow heavier, and the risks loom larger. The world’s financial markets ignored the record-breaking increase in global debt levels to a staggering $313 trillion in 2023, which marked yet another worrying milestone.

    In the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projections, the United States deficit will fluctuate over the next four years, averaging an insane 5.8 percent of GDP without even considering a recession. By 2033, they still expect a 6.9 percent GDP budget hole. Unsurprisingly, the economy, even using optimistic scenarios, stalls and will show a level of real GDP growth of 1.8% between 2028 and 2033, 33% less than the 2026–2027 period, which is already 25% lower than the historical average.

    Some analysts say that this whole mess can be solved by raising taxes, but reality shows that there is no revenue measure that will fill an annual financial hole of $2 trillion with additional yearly receipts. This, of course, comes with an optimistic scenario of no recession or economic impact from a higher tax burden. Deficits are always a spending problem.

    Citizens are led to believe that lower growth, declining real wages, and persistent inflation are external factors that have nothing to do with governments, but this is incorrect. Deficit spending is printing money, and it erodes the purchasing power of the currency while destroying the opportunities for the private sector to invest. The entire burden of higher taxes and inflation falls on the middle class and small businesses.

    Markets never react to rising risks until reality kicks in. Risk builds slowly but happens fast. This is why governments feel so comfortable adding more public debt. Politicians think that bullish markets and low bond yields are a validation of their policies, and even when interest expenses rise to alarming levels, they just pass the bburden onto the next administration. The result? Eroding potential growth, weaker productivity, and the destruction of the middle class through higher taxes and persistent inflation.

    • Our fan-favorite Turbo Force Plus is now 40% off! See for yourself the delicious one-of-a-kind energy boost infowarriors CRAVE!

    Debt crises happen. and governments never pay attention to the risks because they do not pay for the consequences. Furthermore, by the time a debt crisis happens, most governments will blame “markets” and short sellers.

    The latest data from the Institute of International Finance (IIF) shows that the dangerous trend of rising debt has accelerated. A $15 trillion surge in debt over the course of a single year underscored the alarming pace at which the debt burden was escalating. To put this figure into perspective, it is worth noting that just a decade prior, the global debt tally stood at a comparatively modest $210 trillion—a stark reminder of the exponential growth trajectory that debt has embarked upon.

    Developing economies are leading the path of this debt onslaught, with debt-to-GDP ratios reaching unprecedented heights. Emerging markets are following the developed nation trend, adding structural challenges and vulnerabilities as debt accumulation leads to the destruction of the local currency and diminishing confidence in the domestic monetary systems.

    The implications of this debt binge are significant, including weaker economic growth and a danger to financial stability. At its core, the surge in global debt represents a fundamental imbalance—an imbalance between present consumption and future obligations, between short-term expenditure and long-term sustainability. Cheap government debt promises higher growth and better opportunities for citizens but only delivers weaker growth, higher instability, and an increasingly worthless currency. If you wonder why your wages are paying for fewer goods and services and why the middle class finds it increasingly difficult to thrive, blame it on money printing and public debt. It is eroding the purchasing power of your savings and wages under the false promise of growth and security that never arrives.

    As debt levels swell, so do the risks of debt distress, default, and contagion. Debt is currency printing; the confidence in the purchasing power of the newly issued money slumps as debt balloons. Furthermore, a sudden loss of market confidence or a liquidity crunch in one corner of the globe can swiftly snowball into a full-blown financial crisis with far-reaching systemic implications. To think this will not happen in the United States is myopic and reckless. The interconnected nature of the modern global economy means that no nation exists in isolation, and the repercussions of a debt crisis in one area can reverberate across the entire financial ecosystem.

    Beyond the immediate risks of financial instability, the long-term consequences of excessive debt accumulation are equally troubling. High debt levels function as a drag on economic growth, siphoning off resources from productive investment and stifling innovation and entrepreneurship. Moreover, the burden of servicing debt imposes a heavy toll on future generations, diverting funds away from infrastructure spending and saddling future taxpayers with a legacy of debt.

    The end of the United States dollar will not come from external threats but from the irresponsible actions of its own government. Cheap debt is always exceedingly expensive.


    MUST WATCH: Funeral Home Director John O’Looney Exposes The Secret COVID Holocaust


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  • Hardship: Don’t Sell Subsidized Food Products From Govt, Uzodinma Warns Imo Civil Servants

    The Governor of Imo State Hope Uzodinma has approved the distribution of bags of rice, vegetable oil and other food items to civil servants in the state as part of the government’s measure to stem the surge of hardship ravaging the country.

    The governor, while flagging off the distribution of the food items at the state secretariat, said the exercise is not a ‘permanent solution to the situation we have found ourselves in Nigeria.’

    He said, “This is an interim measure to manage the effects of the current hardship occasioned by the global economic stagnation and the current effects of reforms that are being undertaken by the current administration of the federal government.

    “I have come to give you solidarity. The government is now working hard to stop crude oil theft, to regulate foreign exchange usage and utilization, to review monetary policies and physical policies, and to bring a new life to our people.”

    During the launch of the food voucher program for Imo workers and reviving of the Imo Marketing Company, the governor said that the time is now when civil servants and will begin to enjoy the benefits of his government.

    “In the past, there is a reason why you were called civil servants.

    “There are benefits and privileges that come with being a civil servant

    “I have re-strengthened Imo marketing company, I want you to be a civil servant who will not lack,” he added.

    Bags of rice

    Hardship: Don’t Sell Subsidized Food Products From Govt, Uzodinma Warns Imo Civil Servants is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Fact Check: Fact-checking Katie Britt’s immigration claims in Republican 2024 State of the Union response

    Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., delivered the Republican response to President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address from her kitchen table in Montgomery, Alabama. During her 17-minute rebuttal, Britt criticized Biden on immigration, the economy and crime. 

    “What we saw was the performance of a permanent politician who has actually been in office for longer than I’ve been alive,” said Britt, who is 42. 

    “Our families are hurting. Our country can do better. And you don’t have to look any further than the crisis at our southern border to see it,” Britt said. “President Biden inherited the most secure border of all time. But minutes after taking office, he suspended all deportations, he halted construction of the border wall and he announced a plan to give amnesty to millions.”

    “We know that President Biden didn’t just create this border crisis,” Britt continued. “He invited it with 94 executive actions in his first 100 days.”

    It’s unclear which specific 94 executive actions Britt was referring to. A few months into Biden’s administration, the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute released a report detailing 94 immigration-related Biden executive actions. However, not all the actions were directly related to the border. 

    Here’s the context behind Britt’s claims.

    Biden “suspended all deportations.” 

    On Biden’s first day in office, the Department of Homeland Security published a memo pausing the removals of certain people illegally in the U.S. for 100 days. Federal courts quickly stopped the pause.

    The memo also acknowledged that because of resource constraints, and increased illegal border crossings, removals should be prioritized for people who posed a national security or public safety threat or who entered the U.S. after Nov. 1, 2020.

    “While resources should be allocated to the priorities enumerated above, nothing in this memorandum prohibits the apprehension or detention of individuals unlawfully in the United States who are not identified as priorities herein,” the memo added.

    In September 2021, DHS released a second memo detailing similar guidelines for Immigration and Customs Enforcement to prioritize the removal of people who have crossed the border in recent years or who threaten public safety. Courts also halted those guidelines in 2021, but they were reinstated in 2023 after a Supreme Court decision.      

    There have been more than 3.6 million removals, returns and expulsions from February 2021, Biden’s first month in office, to September 2023, based on Department of Homeland Security estimates.

    Biden “halted construction of the border wall.” 

    On his first day in office, Biden issued a proclamation terminating the national emergency, former President Donald Trump used to divert Defense Department funding to build additional border barriers. However, in October 2023, the Biden administration resumed barrier construction using money Congress had previously appropriated. The administration also has spent millions on barrier repairs.

    Immigration experts have questioned barriers’ effectiveness at reducing illegal immigration.

    Instead of lowering the number of people crossing, barriers have prompted people mainly to try crossing at different parts of the border, David Bier, immigration studies director at the libertarian Cato Institute told PolitiFact in July 2023. 

    Biden “announced a plan to give amnesty to millions.”

    “Amnesty” is a political term that can be defined narrowly as giving people in the U.S. illegally citizenship or broadly to mean any policy favorable to people in the U.S. illegally.

    On his first day in office, Biden proposed the U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021 to provide a citizenship path for farmworkers and immigrants who came to the U.S. illegally as children and for beneficiaries of Temporary Protected Status. House Democrats introduced the bill in February 2021, but it did not advance.

    More recently, Biden said he would sign the Senate’s bipartisan immigration bill into law if it reached his desk. That bill, which failed a vote in the Senate, did not include a path to citizenship for people living in the U.S. illegally.

    Biden “chose to release” to the U.S. the man accused of killing Laken Riley

    Britt also mentioned the killing of 22-year old University of Georgia nursing student, Laken Riley.

    “This beautiful 22-year-old nursing student went out on a jog one morning, but she never got the opportunity to return home,” Britt said. “She was brutally murdered by one of the millions of illegal border crossers President Biden chose to release into our homeland.”

    Jose Ibarra, the man charged with Riley’s killing, illegally crossed the U.S.-Mexico border in September 2022. Ibarra was paroled in, allowing him to be released into the U.S. to await further immigration proceedings, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    Biden does not decide who is released into the country. Border officials decide whom to release into the U.S. because they lack enough resources to detain everyone who illegally crosses U.S. borders.

    PolitiFact Staff Writer Samantha Putterman contributed to this report.



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