Tag: General News

  • Education Minister Calls For Synergy Between West, Central Africa To Advance Research

    The Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman has called for collective efforts between West and Central Africa to advance education and research in the continent.

    Mamman who stated this while delivering an address at the 2024 West and Central African Research and Education Network (WACREN) Conference on Thursday in Abuja, emphasized the pivotal role of education and research in shaping the future of nations.

    The Minister reaffirmed the importance of research and education in driving sustainable development and highlighted the need for African nations to address challenges in their educational systems.

    He further emphasized the importance of leveraging initiatives like the WACREN conference to strengthen regional ties and build networks that transcend geographical boundaries.

    He also highlighted the Federal Ministry of Education’s roadmap to transform the educational system of Nigeria under the leadership of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, expressing optimism about the future of the country’s education sector and calling for support from stakeholders across the African continent.

    Also, the Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), Mr. Chris Maiyaki, speaking on the conference theme, “Forging Future High Education and Research Communities,” emphasized the need for proactive, innovative, and forward-thinking approaches to teaching, learning, and research.

    He encouraged participants to embrace digital transformation, foster collaboration, and cultivate a culture of innovation and entrepreneurship among students and faculty.

    Maiyaki also highlighted the importance of preparing higher education and research communities for the challenges and opportunities ahead, calling for engagement in thought-provoking discussions, sharing best practices, and exploring innovative solutions to common challenges.

    He emphasized the collective efforts needed to shape a brighter future for generations to come, encouraging active participation and networking among participants.

    “I encourage all participants to actively engage in sessions, network with their peers and seize the opportunity to contribute their expertise and insight to the discussions, together we can forge stronger more resilient higher education and research communities that are capable of shaping a brighter future for generations to come I wish you all to be productive,” he said.

    Education Minister Calls For Synergy Between West, Central Africa To Advance Research is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Fact Check: Yes, George Santos can attend the State of the Union, walk House floor despite being expelled

    Surprise guests are a feature of the president’s State of the Union address.

    President Joe Biden’s March 7 speech had a big one, though not one invited by the president: former Rep. George Santos, who was seen mingling with his former Republican colleagues a little more than three months after the House expelled him.  

    This surprised some people. Is Santos really allowed to sit among the people who expelled him in December?

    The short answer is yes, according to the Rules of the House of Representatives.

    “Surprisingly to me, there is no bar in the rules, regulations, or precedents barring a former member from the floor generally, unless they are a lobbyist or someone advocating for  particular individuals, groups or causes,” said Donald Wolfensberger, a congressional scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

    Another reason former members would be barred is if they have been convicted of a crime related to House activities. That doesn’t affect Santos — yet.

    Santos faces criminal charges including wire fraud, false statements, identity theft and conspiracy, but his case has not gone to trial yet.

    As Biden was getting into his limousine to be driven to the Capitol, CNN reported that Santos was initially seated in a section usually filled by current members. Chamber officials asked Santos to stand in the back of the chamber, and he complied, CNN reported.

    Beyond floor access, Santos is allowed, as a former House member, to use parking, athletic and wellness facilities, administrative services, dining facilities, and access materials from the Congressional Research Service and the Library of Congress. 

    Former members may also use the frank — the right to send mail to constituents free of charge — for 90 days after leaving office. For Santos, who was expelled Dec. 1, 2023, that deadline has passed.

    Wolfensberger added that the House speaker does have some discretion to direct the chamber’s sergeant-at-arms to bar people, including former members, from accessing the floor. 

    “In this case, the distraction factor alone would justify such an action to preserve and protect the dignity and decorum of the chamber,” Wolfensberger said.



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  • Combative attacks on a foe with no name

    By Chris Megerian and Aamer Madhani, Associated Press

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The State of the Union address is one of the durable set pieces of the presidency, a forum that almost always favors the speaker in a one-way conversation with millions of Americans.

    Most of the speeches are instantly dissected, and almost as quickly forgotten. But this is a most unusual year, with President Joe Biden needing to make the case not simply that his policies warrant a a second term, but that he has the personal capacity at age 81 to do the job.

    President Biden Delivers State Of The Union Address
    U.S. President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address during a joint meeting of Congress in the House chamber at the U.S. Capitol on March 07, 2024 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

    He laid out the clear contours of the campaign ahead, criticizing former President Donald Trump over the Jan. 6 insurrection and going after the Supreme Court, with justices present, over its ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade.

    Also, the shrinking size of a Snickers bar.

    Here are some key takeaways from the speech.

    HE WHO WON’T BE NAMED

    Biden opened the speech with fiery denunciations of the rioters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, then singled out Republicans in the chamber and GOP foe Trump. But he refused to utter Trump’s name, saying that “my predecessor and some of you here seek to bury the truth about Jan. 6.”

    He wrapped that into a larger theme that democracy is threatened like no time since the Civil War, signaling a clear line of attack he will use against the man he would not name.

    President Biden Delivers State Of The Union Address
    U.S. President Joe Biden delivers the annual State of the Union address before a joint session of Congress in the House chamber at the Capital building on March 7, 2024 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Shawn Thew-Pool/Getty Images)

    He also criticized “my predecessor” for Trump’s assertion that Russian President Vladimir Putin can “do whatever the hell he wants” with respect to NATO allies, and he implored Congress to pass additional aid for Ukraine.

    Speaking with a vigor that his supporters have said has been lacking, he set up a contrast between his internationalist view of the world and the more isolationist leaning of his “predecessor.”

    Biden used almost the entirety of the speech to find ways to try to persuade Americans of the contrast.

    THE OLD AGE QUESTION

    When asked about his age and how it affects is ability to be president, Biden’s stock answer is: Watch me.

    On Thursday night, he delivered what a lot of his own supporters had found wanting. It was a high energy, forceful speech, and at times he taunted Republicans with ad-libs. When they heckled his support for bipartisan border security legislation, Biden said, “Look at the facts, I know you know how to read.”

    Biden stumbled over a few words, but it was a more vigorous performance than other speeches where his remarks can be meandering or hard to hear. It was also a rejoinder to criticisms that Biden is too old to keep serving as president. He would be 86 at the end of a second term, and Republicans — though Trump is only four years younger — have relished slicing and dicing videos of the president to make him look as feeble as possible on social media.

    Biden leaned into his age, mentioning he was born during World War II, but defended his vision for the country as fresh. “You can’t lead America with ancient ideas that only take us back.”

    ABORTION ON THE BALLOT

    The president said efforts to restrict abortion were an “assault on freedom,” and he derided the Supreme Court ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade, with three members of the Supreme Court who were in the majority in that decision, seated just feet away.

    President Biden Delivers State Of The Union Address
    (L-R) Maria Shriver, former first lady of California, Kate Cox, abortion rights advocate, and Latorya Beasley, in vitro fertilization (IVF) recipient and reproductive health care advocate, sit in first lady Jill Biden’s guest box during U.S. President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address during a joint meeting of Congress in the House chamber at the U.S. Capitol on March 07, 2024 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    He also welcomed Kate Cox, a Dallas mother whose fetus had a fatal condition that put her own health at risk. She had to leave the state in order to get an abortion. “My God,” Biden said, “what freedoms will you take away next?”

    Through much of his career, Biden has not emphasized abortion rights. In his speech, he showed how much he believes that issue could be a key to a second term.

    HEALTH CARE, STILL A BFD

    Back to “my predecessor.” Biden playfully said that the Obama-era health care law is still a “big deal,” paying homage to the moment as vice president he used more colorful language to describe the landmark policy win for President Barack Obama. And he vowed to work to make a tax credit tied to the law permanent.

    “Over 100 million of you can no longer be denied health insurance because of a pre-existing condition,” Biden said. “Well, my predecessor, many in this chamber, want to take the prescription drug benefit away by repealing the Affordable Care Act. I’m not going let that happen.”

    Biden appeared to slip in a riff about pharmaceutical companies selling their drugs at a cheaper prices around the globe, telling the audience that he’d like to take them on Air Force One to several major global cities including Moscow to see how much they would save on the same drugs.

    Biden quickly caught himself, saying it was “probably” the case even in Russia, and pressed ahead. “Bring your prescription with you. And I promise you I’ll get it for you for 40%. The cost you pay now.”

    WAR IN GAZA GETS ITS MOMENT

    The bloody conflict between Israel and Hamas was an unavoidable backdrop to Biden’s speech. His motorcade took a different route to the U.S. Capitol after protesters blocked part of Pennsylvania Avenue. Inside the House chamber, some lawmakers wore keffiyehs, the black and white checkered scarves that have symbolized solidarity with Palestinians.

    Biden announced plans for the U.S. military to help establish a temporary pier on the coast of Gaza, an effort that the administration says should significantly boost the flow of aid into the besieged territory.

    President Biden Delivers State Of The Union Address
    U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) (L) and Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) hold up signs as President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address during a joint meeting of Congress in the House chamber at the U.S. Capitol on March 07, 2024 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    The unveiling of the plan was perhaps the most substantive element of his address that touched on the war. It allowed Biden to demonstrate that he’s taking action in the face of anger and defiance from some Democrats over his strong support for Israel even as the Palestinian death toll mounts. It also comes after Biden last week approved the U.S. military airdropping aid into Gaza.

    The temporary pier, Biden said,” will enable a massive increase in humanitarian assistance getting into Gaza.”

    But at the same time he called on the Israelis to do more to alleviate the suffering even as they try to eliminate Hamas. “To Israel, I say this humanitarian assistance cannot be a secondary consideration or a bargaining chip,” Biden said.

    MIDDLE CLASS JOE

    Biden outlined an economic vision that went big and small. He touted a post-pandemic economic recovery that didn’t sacrifice job creation in order to tame inflation. With housing prices still high, he proposed a tax credit that would reduce mortgage costs.

    He also hammered Republicans for tax policies that favor the wealthy. “Check the numbers. Folks at home, does anybody really think the tax code is fair?”

    Biden said there should be a minimum tax rate of 25% on billionaires, saying “no billionaire should pay a lower federal tax rate than a teacher, a sanitation worker or a nurse.”

    The president talked about cracking down on junk fees that can chip away at Americans’ budgets and he criticized snack companies for “shrinkflation,” which means getting less product for the same price.

    “You get charged the same amount and you got about 10% fewer Snickers in it.”

    MUST-SEE, BUT NOT NECESSARILY ON TV

    When Biden was elected to the Senate in 1972, the State of the Union address was appointment television for tens of millions of Americans who watched on three major networks.

    Now it is so much more than a television event. The traditional ways of measuring viewers has shown a steady decline. Biden’s address last year drew the second smallest audience for the annual event in at least 30 years, according to the Nielsen company.

    The audience is so fragmented that Biden’s campaign was prepared with targeted segments to pump out to specific audiences on social media. Guests whose stories were highlighted in the speech will make the rounds on local television markets to talk about the real-life impact of Biden’s policies. And look for Biden and his surrogates to find creative ways to get bits of his message to Americans that didn’t tune in on Thursday evening.

    Hours before delivering the address, Biden posted on his X account a video of him getting advice on delivering the big speech from actors, including Morgan Freeman, Michael Douglas, and Geena Davis, who have played president in the movies and TV.

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  • Super Tuesday Victories Sets Stage For Biden Trump Rematch

    President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris

    More than a dozen states participated in primaries and caucuses, constituting the most significant nominating race day, and shifting the focus from the one-by-one march through early-voting states.

    By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent
    President Joe Biden and his twice-impeached and four-times indicted predecessor, Donald Trump, emerged victorious on Super Tuesday, wrapping up their respective party nominations and setting up a rematch of the volatile 2020 election.

    More than a dozen states participated in primaries and caucuses, constituting the most significant nominating race day, and shifting the focus from the one-by-one march through early-voting states.

    Despite signs of potential weaknesses in their election strategies, both Biden and Trump faced challenges. Numerous progressives, reportedly disillusioned with Biden, opted for the “uncommitted” option in places like Minnesota and Michigan, while college-educated suburbanites leaned towards alternatives to Trump. While the 15 states in contention didn’t officially provide Trump with enough delegates to secure the GOP nomination for a third consecutive time, he closed the gap, leaving little room for his main rival, Nikki Haley, who suspended her campaign on the morning after. Haley and Biden earned victories in the District of Columbia’s primaries held the Sunday before Super Tuesday.

    The latest delegate estimate revealed Trump’s substantial gain of 617 delegates on Tuesday, propelling his overall count to 893, or 92% of those awarded, putting him on the brink of the 1,215 delegates required for clinching the GOP nomination. In contrast, Haley lagged significantly with only 66 delegates.

    “They call it Super Tuesday for a reason,” declared Trump, whom a civil jury twice sanctioned for sexually assaulting a writer and a New York judge found guilty of massive business fraud. “This is a big one,” continued Trump, who was ordered to pay nearly $500 million for his New York crimes and $90 million for the sexual assault guilty finding. “And they tell me, the pundits and otherwise, that there’s never been one like this.”

    Despite facing challenging headlines and low approval ratings, Biden maintained his dominance on Super Tuesday, securing approximately 80% of the vote, while Trump struggled to reach that threshold. Although Haley posed a more formidable challenge, Biden retained solid support from his party’s rank-and-file.

    Looking ahead to the general election in November, Trump faces potential headwinds like those he encounters now, including four criminal trials that could potentially land him an 800-year prison sentence. Conversely, Biden has room to win over intra-party detractors, especially those critical of his handling of Israel’s conflict in Gaza, where the administration has increased its call for a ceasefire.  

    Meanwhile, in California, the battle for the U.S. Senate seat left vacant after Dianne Feinstein’s death intensified. Rep. Adam Schiff will face former baseball star Steve Garvey, a Republican and Trump supporter. Garvey secured a spot in the top two alongside Democrat Schiff, outpacing Democratic Reps. Barbara Lee and Katie Porter. Sen. Laphonza Butler, appointed after Feinstein’s demise, had earlier pledged not to run for the seat in 2024.  

    “We have a clear path to victory,” Biden’s campaign said in a memo circulated late Tuesday. “A significant share of moderate and Haley voters across the country are saying that Trump cannot count on their votes in a general election. The November election will be a very close general election contest like all modern presidential elections are… but, we have a clear path to victory.” 

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  • Now LIVE: Biden’s State of the Union Address


    Watch & share!

    Puppet President Biden’s State of the Union address is now live. Stay tuned for special commentary:

    Mirror feeds:

    Reuters:

    The Washington Post:


    Biden is reportedly running late for the address. Pro-Palestine protesters are just outside the Capital.




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  • Council of Bishops, Imams Organise Prayer For Abba Kyari, Plead For His Release

    The Nigerian Cleric Council of Bishops And Imams (NCCBI) on Thursday organised a prayer session for former head of Intelligent Response Team (IRT), Abba Kyari, in Abuja and called on President Bola Tinubu to look at the security situation in the country and release him.

    The group who held the prayer at the Unity Fountain in Abuja said the prayer was in collaboration with Leadwell Africa Global Initiative to offer prayer for peace in the country and urged Nigerians to support the current leadership in Nigeria.

    Bishop Lawrence Ngene, President of NCCBI, who addressed the media said they were “driven by the spirits of oneness and as concerned citizens of our dear nation, Nigeria to share the pain we suffered from the country that is being covered with the cloud of darkness and stained with the blood of some of her innocent citizens, whose souls are either restless in the sky or in the hands of kidnappers, bandits, armed robbers and terrorists, who have turned our day to perilous and fearful night, where evils prevail.”

    He noted that as concerned citizens of Nigeria, they feel the pain “over the ugly situations in the country; feel the pain and the loss of the departed souls of innocent Nigerians whose lives were cut short by the enemies of the country, called bandits, armed robbers, kidnappers and terrorists.

    “We feel the pain of the rising cases of insecurities across the country” and “the rising cost of living in Nigeria and hardship in the land.

    “We feel the pain of Nigerians, who felt disappointed at their fellow Nigerians, who took advantage of the weakness of Naira against dollars to inflate and manipulate prices of goods and services in the country.

    “We feel the pain of the rising cases of corruption, ranging from embezzlement of public funds, nepotism, favouritism, tribalisms, amongst others that have taken the order of the day both at the public and private institutions.”

    The group said it’s sad “common Nigerians are losing their lives while some have lost hopes and confidence in the judiciary system” noting that some Nigerians have also “lost trust in their representatives at both the lower and upper chambers of the national assembly.”

    They decried the “loss of hope and trust in the electoral system in Nigeria” pointing out that “they are Nigerians in the Nigerian Correctional centre that have not been tried at competent jurisdiction for their alleged crimes.”

    The clerics further said they “feel the pain of Nigerians who are calling for immediate release of Abba Kyari and his team, whom they believed will liberate them from the fear of insecurities in the country.

    “It is upon these pains in the hearts of Nigerians that have prompted our gathering here today as concerned citizens of Nigeria to pray to God Almighty to intervene in the ugly situations which we have found ourselves as a nation.

    “It is upon these pains that we are here to pray to President Ahmed Bola Tinubu, members of the national assembly, the judiciary and all the security agencies to wake up to their mandates and rescue Nigerians from the pains in their hearts.

    “Most urgently, is the pain arising from the insecurities in the country, which is very alarming, and this is where as concerned citizens of our dear nation, we pray to God Almighty and to the leadership of Nigeria to bring Abba Kyari and his team back to Nigerian Security Architecture.

    “We know how the doggedness of Abba Kyari and his team brought down high-profile criminals, terrorists, assassins and kidnappers when they were with us in the society.

    “We share the feeling of the majority of Nigerians that the presence of Abba Kyari and his team in our society can largely take away the pain of fear of unknown gunmen from our hearts.

    “We pray for the presence of tested and trusted hands of Abba Kyari and His Team in Nigeria Security Architecture.

    “We pray for good governance and good leadership in Nigeria,” the clerics prayed.

    Council of Bishops, Imams Organise Prayer For Abba Kyari, Plead For His Release is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Fact Check: No, 10 million people have not entered the U.S. under Biden as pastor Franklin Graham claims

    Evangelical pastor Franklin Graham made a trip to Texas and, while there, he waded into the immigration debate.

    “(Joe Biden) undid all of the policies that former President Donald J. Trump put in place,” Graham wrote in a Feb. 27 Facebook post.  “As a result, over 10 million people have come across the border with no vetting, no plan, and no path.”

    Days later, Graham, son of the late evangelist Billy Graham, shared a photo of himself shaking hands with Trump. “Look who I ran into at the border today! He was a great encouragement to many here,” he wrote.

    The Facebook post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    Graham did not cite evidence for this claim and did not respond to PolitiFact’s request for comment.

    A November 2023 report by Pew Research Center estimated that “the unauthorized immigrant population in the United States reached 10.5 million in 2021.” But that figure includes people who have lived in the U.S. for years, even decades before Biden became president. 

    We have seen this 10 million figure cited before, with some articles attributing it to The Center Square, a conservative news outlet. The Center Square’s article appears to have based some of its numbers on the U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s nationwide encounters data, including for a number of months Trump was in office. The Center Square also said it based its analysis partly on information from a U.S. Border Patrol agent who wanted to remain anonymous.

    But the encounters data represents stops at the border — not people. These numbers don’t tell us how many people now live in the United States after crossing the border illegally. For example, a person who has been stopped by border officials on three separate occasions would be counted as three encounters. People encountered by immigration officials can be turned away, detained in federal custody or released into the country.

    The Customs and Border Patrol encounters data shows that from February 2021, Biden’s first full month as president, to January 2024, the month with the latest available data, immigration officials recorded nearly 8.8 million encounters nationwide.

    There also 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.

    There are no definitive numbers for how many people have entered the country illegally since Biden became president in January 2021. It is also hard to accurately measure the number of people who have illegally crossed the U.S. border because border authorities don’t stop everyone.

    We rate the claim that “over 10 million people have come across the border with no vetting, no plan, and no path” during Biden’s presidency False.

    PolitiFact Staff Writer Maria Ramirez Uribe contributed to this report



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  • House panel approves bill that would ban TikTok

    By Brian Fung | CNN

    A powerful House committee advanced a bill on Thursday that could lead to a nationwide ban against TikTok on all electronic devices, renewing lawmakers’ challenge to one of the world’s most popular social media apps and highlighting unresolved fears that TikTok may pose a Chinese government spying risk.

    The measure that sailed unanimously through the House Energy and Commerce Committee would prohibit TikTok from US app stores unless the social media platform — used by roughly 170 million Americans — is quickly spun off from its China-linked parent company, ByteDance.

    If enacted, the bill would give ByteDance 165 days, or a little more than five months, to sell TikTok. If not divested by that date, it would be illegal for app store operators such as Apple and Google to make it available for download. The bill also contemplates similar prohibitions for other apps “controlled by foreign adversary companies.”

    It’s the most aggressive legislation targeting TikTok to come out of a congressional committee since company CEO Shou Chew testified to lawmakers last year that the app poses no threat to Americans.

    “Today, we will take the first step in creating long-overdue laws to protect Americans from the threat posed by apps controlled by our adversaries, and to send a very strong message that the US will always stand up for our values and freedom,” said Washington Republican Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, the panel’s chair.

    New Jersey Rep. Frank Pallone, its ranking Democrat, compared the bill to prior efforts to regulate the US airwaves, citing testimony from national security officials from a closed-door hearing earlier Thursday.

    “I take the concerns raised by the intelligence community this morning very seriously,” Pallone said. “They have asked Congress to give them more authority to act in these narrowly defined situations, and I believe that this bill will do that.”

    The bill was introduced with some bipartisan support earlier this week by Wisconsin Republican Rep. Mike Gallagher, who chairs a House select committee on China, and the ranking member of that committee, Illinois Democratic Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi. The legislation also has the support of the White House and House Speaker Mike Johnson, though its prospects in the Senate are unclear.

    House lawmakers voted unanimously in the same session Thursday to advance a second bill, one that would limit US companies’ ability to sell Americans’ personal information to foreign adversaries.

    US officials have cited the widespread commercial availability of US citizens’ data as another source of national security risk. The US government and other domestic law enforcement agencies are also known to have purchased US citizens’ data from commercial data brokers.

    TikTok launches opposition

    TikTok is mounting a push against the bill, including trying to mobilize its user base.

    The company has served some users with full-screen pop-ups in the app warning that the bill “strips 170 million Americans of their Constitutional right to free expression.”

    “This will damage millions of businesses, destroy the livelihoods of countless creators across the country, and deny artists an audience,” reads the notification, a copy of which was reviewed by CNN.

    The call to action concludes with a link prompting users to dial their members of Congress and express their opposition to the bill. Multiple congressional staffers told CNN Thursday that House offices are being flooded with phone calls — in some cases in the hundreds — amid the campaign.

    Many of the calls appear to be coming from teenagers and the elderly, some of whom seem to be “confused” about why they are exactly calling or why TikTok might be at risk, one GOP aide told CNN.

    Speaking to reporters on the Capitol steps Thursday, Gallagher rejected characterizations of the bill as a TikTok ban.

    “It’s not a ban,” he said. “It puts the choice squarely in the hands of TikTok to sever their relationship with the Chinese Communist Party. As long as ByteDance no longer owns the company, TikTok can continue to survive. People can continue to do all the dumb dance videos they want on the platform, or communicate with their friends, and all that stuff. But the basic ownership structure has to change.”

    In a post on X, TikTok rejected lawmaker claims about the legislation providing options for TikTok.

    “This legislation has a predetermined outcome: a total ban of TikTok in the United States,” the company wrote. “The government is attempting to strip 170 million Americans of their Constitutional right to free expression. This will damage millions of businesses, deny artists an audience, and destroy the livelihoods of countless creators across the country.”

    During Thursday’s session, Texas Republican Rep. Dan Crenshaw dismissed criticisms that lawmakers didn’t understand the technology they were trying to regulate.

    “It’s not because we’re old, and grumpy, and don’t understand TikTok, and how you use it for your business, and how you use it to communicate with your friends,” Crenshaw said. “I was on social media long before any of the Gen Z-ers who are mad about TikTok. I understand.”

    In addition to potentially barring app stores from hosting TikTok, the bill could also restrict TikTok traffic or content from being carried by “internet hosting services,” a broad term that encompasses a variety of industries including “file hosting, domain name server hosting, cloud hosting, and virtual private server hosting.”

    That language could mean many more parts of the economy will be affected by the bill than just TikTok, Apple and Google.

    Fears of spying

    For years, US officials have warned that China’s intelligence laws could enable Beijing to snoop on the user information TikTok collects, potentially by forcing ByteDance to hand over the data.

    Policymakers fear the Chinese government could use the personal information to identify intelligence targets or to facilitate mass disinformation campaigns that could disrupt elections and sow other chaos.

    So far, the US government has not publicly presented any evidence the Chinese government has accessed TikTok user data, and cybersecurity experts say it remains a hypothetical albeit serious concern.

    They also say governments can already buy vast troves of personal data from data brokers or use commercial spyware to hack individual phones with ease.

    State and federal lawmakers have already banned TikTok from government-owned devices, but have repeatedly run aground in trying to broaden restrictions to Americans’ personal devices.

    Last year, Senate lawmakers proposed legislation clamping down on TikTok but triggered concerns that it could give the executive branch too much power.

    Efforts to ban TikTok date to the Trump administration, which used a series of executive orders to try to force app stores not to offer TikTok and to compel ByteDance to spin off the company. Those efforts also stalled amid legal challenges, though it led TikTok to engage in negotiations with the US government about how it could secure Americans’ personal data. Those talks are ongoing, even as TikTok has moved to store US user data on US-based servers controlled by the tech giant Oracle.

    In Montana, a federal judge last year temporarily blocked a statewide ban on TikTok, calling the legislation overly broad and threatening Montanan users’ First Amendment rights to access information through the app.

    A legislative factsheet from the sponsors of the House bill claims the proposal does not censor speech.

    “It is focused entirely on foreign adversary control—not the content of speech being shared,” the factsheet says.

    But the overall effect of the bill would still implicate Americans’ free speech rights, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

    “We’re deeply disappointed that our leaders are once again attempting to trade our First Amendment rights for cheap political points during an election year,” said Jenna Leventoff, senior policy counsel at the ACLU. “Just because the bill sponsors claim that banning TikTok isn’t about suppressing speech, there’s no denying that it would do just that. We strongly urge legislators to vote no on this unconstitutional bill.”

    And the bill would also threaten the free-speech rights of tech powerhouses Apple and Google, said a major trade group representing those companies.

    “The government may not tell private parties, including digital service companies, what speech they may publish. The First Amendment forbids it,” said Stephanie Joyce, senior vice president of the Computer and Communications Industry Association. “The Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act would infringe the First Amendment rights of private businesses, including app stores, to curate and display content they believe is appropriate for their communities.”

    CNN’s Haley Talbot and Melanie Zanona contributed to this report.



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  • The Steep Price Of School Underfunding

    Fedrick C. Ingram, secretary-treasurer of the 1.7 million member American Federation of Teachers, says America can’t thrive if it continues to deny equal rights and opportunity to Black people. ((RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images) Credit: Denver Post via Getty Images)

    by Fedrick C. Ingram

    There are numbers you know, and then there are numbers you feel. 

    For instance, I know that Black children make up 15% of this country’s K-12 public schools. 

    I also know that Black folks make up roughly the same percentage of U.S. citizens. 

    But when I read The Adequacy and Fairness of State School Finance Systems, a report from the Albert Shanker Institute, and saw that Black children are 3.5 times more likely than white children to be in chronically underfunded school districts, well, I can feel that number. 

    That’s because I was that number.  

    What should feel like a lifetime ago feels like yesterday for me growing up as a Black boy in a tough part of Miami. I know what it feels like to read from outdated textbooks and play music with broken instruments. Those experiences propelled me to pursue higher education at Bethune-Cookman University. It inspired me to become an educator, and to return to the classrooms and communities that have been economically forgotten.  

    Yet as sobering as the report is for Black K-12 students and their families, it is by no means a new trend. The root of the issue lies deep in our country’s troubling past.  

    After Reconstruction — those few brilliant years when America lived up to its promise of righting the wrongs of slavery and race-based violence — the country returned to its worst instincts. It closed its eyes to an epidemic of lynchings and fought against movements to desegregate stores, the military, and education.  

    To keep Black people out of white neighborhoods, America invented redlining, the New Deal-era practice of designating Black neighborhoods as less desirable and locking Black folks into houses they couldn’t sell for profit. That practice was outlawed in the 70s, but it all but ensured that schools in those districts, funded through property taxes, would suffer. They simply did not have the resources to match schools in whiter, more affluent communities. 

    And the damage persists. Without adequate funding, Black students in chronically resource-starved schools are often taught by younger, inexperienced teachers who aren’t being paid very well. Black students are also 1.2 times more likely to encounter a law enforcement officer than a school counselor — hardly the support they need to thrive. And, Black students are more than twice as likely to “receive a referral to law enforcement or be subject to a school-related arrest” than their white peers. 

    This is the reality our community feels and suffers from every day.  

    Even for Black children who, like me, made it out of underfunded schools to head to historically Black colleges and universities, the news is not much better. 

    The HBCU network of more than 100 schools does an incredible job for our community, matriculating 10% of all Black students and graduating half of the nation’s Black doctors, lawyers, and teachers.  

    Still, a 2023 Department of Education report found that HBCUs in 16 states have been underfunded by some $12 billion. Heartbreaking, if not fully surprising.  

    America cannot thrive if it continues to deny equal rights and opportunity to Black people.

    Despite our endless push for education, even when it meant hiding knowledge for fear of abuse and death, America has yet to truly, meaningfully invest in schools that serve Black children.

    I do not pretend that I alone can cure this ill, but I wake up every day in my position here at the AFT striving to ensure all our students — but especially our Black students — are getting the education they want so they can have the future they deserve.  

    We do this by helping distribute millions of free books to kids and families. We do this by pushing for more career and technical education programs that offer kids multiple pathways to the American dream. We do this by rallying with local and state leaders to push back against extremist policies that target our children, our communities, and our history.  

    We do this work because we know that a democracy cannot thrive if one community is repeatedly — persistently — starved of resources. And we know that America cannot thrive if it continues to deny equal rights and opportunity to Black people, who have fought, cried, and died in a seemingly endless struggle to ensure their home country lives up to its founding promise of liberty and justice for all.

    Fedrick C. Ingram is the Secretary-Treasurer of the American Federation of Teachers, serving 1.7 million members, including pre-K through 12th-grade teachers; school and college support staff; higher education faculty; federal, state and local government employees; and nurses and other healthcare professionals. Ingram is the immediate past president of the 140,000-member Florida Education Association. He also has served as an elected vice president of the AFT’s executive council.

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  • Roger Stone Explains Why Michelle Obama Will Be The Dem Nominee, And What Trump’s Doing For Biden’s SOTU Address


    Republican political analyst says Dems still might swap Crooked Joe for Big Mike.

    Roger Stone joins Owen Shroyer to break down the latest on the 2024 presidential race, and why he still thinks Dems will eventually sub Joe Biden for Michelle Obama.



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