Tag: General News

  • Josh Groban, don’t make changes based on hearsay

    CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Jenny Boyd, 33; Josh Groban, 43; Rozonda “Chilli” Thomas, 53; Donal Logue, 58.

    Happy Birthday: A resourceful approach to using your skills, gifts and experience will help you expand your knowledge and qualifications. Be receptive, but don’t make changes based on hearsay. Ask your best friend if you want to make wise decisions. Use your ingenuity to achieve goals that are dedicated to self-improvement and building solid relationships. Your numbers are 9, 13, 23, 25, 31, 36, 44.

    ARIES (March 21-April 19): Call someone you trust to give you hands-on help. A physical outlet will relieve tension and give you time to assess a situation or decision you must make. Address a partnership issue that has the potential to improve your lifestyle. Let your actions speak for you. 3 stars

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Indecisiveness will plague you. Think matters through before you act. Observation, listening and firsthand information are your best plans of attack. Anger and disappointment become problematic if you give someone a chance to interfere. Think twice before you share personal information with a colleague. 3 stars

    GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Learn all you can before you start something new. Check your sources for validity first. Time is on your side, and doubt is your warning sign to sit tight. Maintain integrity, and abide by the rules and regulations to avoid penalties. Protect against illness. 5 stars

    CANCER (June 21-July 22): Control your emotions. Put your energy into learning something exciting or taking a step in a direction that gives your creative side free rein to explore the possibilities. Don’t let your attachment to someone lead to poor financial decisions. 2 stars

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Share your thoughts and feelings instead of letting others choose. It’s OK to take a pass or look in a different direction. Assess your situation and adjust to suit your needs. Don’t waste time worrying about the decisions others make. Do your own thing. 4 stars

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Don’t spend on things you don’t need. Pay attention to how you look and feel. Start an exercise regimen or update your appearance. A new look will boost your confidence and give you a fresh start. Address partnership ground rules before agreeing to participate. 3 stars

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Participation will lift you and motivate you to make positive adjustments at home and to your lifestyle. Although change is warranted, a budget will be necessary if you wish to maintain your status quo. Update your image. 3 stars

    SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): A premature change will leave you in limbo. Map out your course of action before you make a move. A situation at home will require patience, discipline and a well-thought-out plan. Don’t underestimate someone who challenges you. 3 stars

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t give someone the freedom to decide for you. Stay in control, set high standards and live within your means. Let your actions speak for you, and you’ll avoid getting into a dispute with someone trying to dismantle your plans. Follow your heart. 4 stars

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Updates will influence the outcome of something you are working toward. Before you move forward, check the information you have on file and adjust costs or interest rates. Don’t take shortcuts that can lead to miscalculations. 2 stars

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Deal with important matters first. Set a budget and stick to your plans. Don’t let outside influences tempt you to get involved in something that isn’t in your best interest. Take the initiative, be creative and launch what’s affordable and makes the most sense. 5 stars

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Tidy up, plan and budget, and prepare to turn your objective into a reality. Source the cost and adjust your plans to avoid debt. When dealing with authority figures, partners and institutions, keep your emotions in check. 3 stars

    Birthday Baby: You are passionate, prominent and protective. You are alluring and insistent.

    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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  • Most Black Teens Want Schools To Teach Slavery’s Legacy 

    Hamilton High School in Los Angeles, Calif., on March 13, 2020. (Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) Credit: Los Angeles Times via Getty Imag

    by Aziah Siid

    Banning books written by Black authors, issuing permission slips to hear a book by a Black author, blocking the AP African American Studies curriculum — those are just some of the ways anti-Blackness has been showed up recently in the nation’s public schools.

    Now, a new report from the Pew Research Center reveals what teens, parents, and educators think about how race is handled on K-12 campuses, as well as two other hot-button issues: sexual orientation and gender identity.

    For the report, Pew’s researchers analyzed responses to three recent surveys. The first was an online survey taken last fall by 2,531 K-12 public school teachers. A second survey last fall collected responses from teens ages 13 to 17, and a third surveyed parents in 2022,

    “One thing we found in this study is that, while race and LGBTQ issues are often lumped together in discussions about the so-called culture wars in K-12 education, teachers, teens, and the public see these topics differently,” Luona Lin, a research associate at Pew tells Word In Black.

    But at a time when presidential candidate Nikki Haley has drawn criticism for stating the Civil War began because of “freedoms,” and textbooks have included that Black people benefitted from enslavement, how slavery is taught takes center stage.

    Student Comfort With Learning About Slavery

    First off, how comfortable are teens learning about slavery? Pew found that 38% of students overall said they’re comfortable when “topics related to racism or racial inequality have come up in their classes,” and 21% aren’t. 

    What may surprise some is that 33% of Black students said they’re uncomfortable when race or racial inequality comes up in class, significantly more than the 19% of white and 17% of Hispanic teens. 

    When it comes to teaching accurate American history,  more teens — 48% — responded that when they’re learning about slavery, they’d also like to learn how “it still affects the position of Black people in American society today.”

    However, 40% of teens say they’d like to learn “that slavery is part of American history but no longer affects the position of Black people in American society today.” 

    In addition, 11% of teens said the topic shouldn’t be taught in schools at all.

    When the responses of Black students were examined, Pew found the majority of Black teens — 79% — said they would prefer “would prefer to learn that the legacy of slavery still affects Black people today.” Only 41% of white and 45% of Hispanic teens agree.

    Teacher Attitudes About Teaching Slavery  

    The majority of K-12 teachers surveyed — 64% — said students should learn the legacy of slavery still has an impact on the lives of Black Americans. Another 23% of teachers acknowledge slavery as a historical fact that students should learn about, but they argue it’s history that no longer affects Black Americans’ standing. 

    Then, there are the 8% of teachers who responded that this crucial part of history should be swept under the classroom rug and not taught in school at all.

    The survey also asked teachers if culture war debates about how public schools should teach about race impact their ability to do their jobs.

    41% of K-12 teachers said these debates have hurt their ability to do their job, while 53% said the impact has been neither positive nor negative — or that these debates have had no impact. Just 4% said these debates have a positive impact.

    Parent Influence 

    Thanks to Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’ “Stop W.O.K.E.” campaign, parents have been empowered to get books and films stripped from classrooms and schools — putting them in the driver’s seat regarding what’s taught to students. 

    25% of teachers said parents should be able to opt their child out of discussions ‘related to racism or racial inequality.’

    “We do not offer specific policy recommendations, but what we do see in the data is that most teachers say teachers themselves don’t have enough influence over what’s taught in public schools in their area,” Lin says. “A majority of teachers also say their state government has too much influence, and more say the federal government, the local school board, and parents have too much influence than say.”

    According to the survey, 25% of teachers said parents should be able to opt their child out of discussions “related to racism or racial inequality.” 

    At the same time, “Teachers and Americans overall are more likely to say parents should be able to opt their children out of learning about LGBTQ issues than to say the same about race,” Lin explains. 

    Nearly half of the educators out there, about 48%, are giving the thumbs up to parents being able to opt their children out of instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity in their classrooms, “if the way they are taught conflicts with parents’ personal views or beliefs.”

    How did students respond? “A larger share of teens say they feel comfortable when topics related to race come up in class than say the same about topics related to sexual orientation or gender identity,” Lin says. 

    The research didn’t dig deep into the intersectionality of race and LGBTQ issues, but Lin says it certainly remains an important topic for  future research in K-12 education.

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  • Zelensky: Losing to Putin is ‘the same’ as death

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Sunday said losing the war against Russia would amount to the same tragic end as death – as Ukraine enters its third year since Russia launched its invasion.

    In an interview with CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, Zelensky was asked about an earlier statement, in which he said losing would be worse than death.

    “Do you still feel that way today?” Collins asked.

    “It’s the same,” Zelensky said. “The same for today.”

    “Because when he wants only one goal, for him, is just to kill you, your people,” Zelensky continued. “To lose (to) him, it means to be killed.”

    Zelensky’s interview comes as U.S. lawmakers struggle to find the political will to pass President Biden’s supplemental aid request for foreign aid, including billions of dollars to Ukraine. The Senate passed a national security package with $60 billion for Ukraine, but House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has refused to take up the package.

    While members of Congress try to find alternative legislative deals that include the Ukraine funding, many international security experts warn of the danger of further delays to providing aid – which they see as a strategic investment to prevent a larger war.

    Zelensky, in the interview, said the U.S. aid would be consequential in determining the future trajectory of the war. He said on Sunday there would be no new military advancements for the year if the country did not get the aid that he says it desperately needs.

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

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  • X Censors Infowars: What Will Elon Musk Do?


    Are there still stay-behind censorship networks at X following Musk’s acquisition of the social media platform?

    Infowars is apparently still encountering lingering shadow ban effects on the X social media platform months after his account was restored.




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  • Poor Power Supply: NERC Rendered Toothless By N4 Trillion Debt — Minister

    Minister of Power, Adebayo Adelabu

    Nigeria’s Power Minister, Adebayo Adelabu, has raised concerns about the crippling impact of a N4 trillion debt burdening the power sector.

    This debt, according to the minister, has rendered the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) toothless in its role of overseeing the industry, leading to epileptic power supply.

    Speaking at the launch of the “Light Up South East Scheme” in Enugu on Monday, Adelabu highlighted the crippling effect of the N4 trillion debt on the power sector.

    The debt, accumulated across various segments of the value chain, includes unpaid dues to power generation companies (N1.3 trillion) and gas suppliers (over N3 trillion).

    The minister asserted that such a monumental debt burden significantly hinders NERC’s ability to effectively regulate the sector and discourages both domestic and international investors.

    Adelabu said unless the Federal Government clears the debt, “continuity and sustainability of this sector” cannot be guaranteed.

    “We owe about N1.3 trn to the power generation companies and about 1.3 billion dollars to the gas supply companies pre-2014 (and based on) today’s exchange rate, it is more than N3 trillion”

    “Which sector will operate effectively and efficiently with a debt overhand close to N4 trillion?” the minister queried.

    This debt, according to Adelabu, has discouraged investors locally and internationally from the power sector.

    Adelabu noted that over 50% of industries, frustrated by the unstable electricity supply, have resorted to generating their own power.

    “They (the industries) now have the power in their factories where they generate their own power and you can imagine the number of industries that we have but with separate power-generating plants,” Adelabu lamented, adding that banks are increasingly wary of lending to the sector with no clear path to recouping their investments.

    “What bank will be bold enough to put its money in this sector where there is no line of sight on how this money will be paid back?

    “This is something that we need to address moving forward as a lot of the lenders have distanced themselves from this sector, which is a major issue”.

    To address these challenges and ensure the success of the “Light Up South East Scheme,” Adelabu outlined plans to upgrade transmission and distribution infrastructure to cut technical losses and deploy smart metering and improved bill collection to minimize commercial losses that currently average 52 per cent.

    Poor Power Supply: NERC Rendered Toothless By N4 Trillion Debt — Minister is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Logan Couture ‘devastated’ after return of injury

    SAN JOSE – San Jose Sharks captain Logan Couture is potentially facing another time-consuming rehabilitation from a debilitating lower-body injury that cost him the first 45 games of the year but said Monday he wants to return before the end of the regular season.

    Injured before the start of training camp in September, Couture was diagnosed with osteitis pubis, inflammation in the joint between a person’s left and right pubic bones. After taking months to recover, Couture made his season debut for the Sharks on Jan. 20 at home against Anaheim.

    But Couture said he started to feel some discomfort almost right away, and the injury continued to worsen during a stretch in which he and the Sharks played six games in 11 days at the end of January before the NHL All-Star break.

    Couture said after San Jose’s game in Anaheim on Jan. 31 — the last game before the break — he didn’t feel well for at least two days.

    “It got it got pretty bad,” Couture said.

    Couture also endured setbacks from the injury in the fall when he was trying to get back, and wondered at times whether he would be able to play in the NHL again.

    Couture’s outlook wasn’t much better this time.

    “I was devastated. It sucked,” said Couture, who has 701 points in 933 career NHL games over 15 seasons.

    “I thought it was past it. But like I said, as I started to play a little bit more, got more sore and more sore and more sore. Even on days when I didn’t skate and off days, it was getting worse.

    “It’s never a good sign. I woke up and couldn’t get out of bed, couldn’t move for a bit. I knew what it was, obviously, this time, but it definitely wasn’t much easier.”

    Couture said he is continuing to see a San Francisco-based physiotherapist and is at the point now where he’s “just trying to get back to feeling good away from hockey and day-to-day life stuff.”

    Couture said he resumed off-ice workouts roughly two weeks ago but as of now, has no timeline to skate again. He emphasized, though, that has not entertained any thoughts of having surgery.

    The Sharks, all but mathematically eliminated from playoff contention going into Tuesday’s game against Timo Meier and the New Jersey Devils, have just 26 games remaining before the end of the regular season on April 18.

    Asked if he has considered shutting himself down for the remainder of the regular season to get ready for camp in the fall, Couture said, “That thought hasn’t crossed my mind.

    “Just trying to feel better every day when I wake up and come in and get some work done, see how I feel when I go home,” Couture said. “It’s just kind of a day-by-day thing right now.”

    Couture made an impact in the six games he played. He had one just assist and seven shots, but averaged 18:45 in ice time per game — just 23 seconds less than last season — and the Sharks went 4-1-1 with him in the lineup.

    Since their return from the NHL All-Star break and their bye week, the Sharks, without Couture and fellow injured centerman Tomas Hertl, are 1-4-0 with a season record of 15-36-5.

    “It’s a tough injury,” Couture said. “It’s the way these things go, unfortunately. Just continue to work and try and get better. It’s so tough because I felt so good going into those games, was skating hard, and felt like myself on the ice. So, it’s tough.”

    Hertl had a procedure done on Feb. 12 to clean out loose cartilage in his left knee and, like Couture, wants to be back before the end of the regular season.

    For the time being, the Sharks have Mikael Granlund centering the top line with Anthony Duclair and Fabian Zetterlud and William Eklund centering the second line with Luke Kunin and Filip Zadina.

    The Sharks have never had Couture, Hertl, Granlund, and depth center and Stanley Cup champion Nico Sturm all in the lineup at the same time this season.

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  • The Horrifying Reality For Black People With Chronic Pain

    The health care system has a long history of dismissing Black people experiencing pain. Here’s what needs to change. (Credit: Maskot via Getty Images.)

    by Anissa Durham

    They say we have thicker skin. They say we have a higher pain tolerance. They say we don’t experience pain. And yet, we probably experience more pain than most.  

    Health care providers, physicians, and nurses are regularly complicit in dismissing the pain concerns of Black folks. In a 2016 study, nearly 50% of white physicians were more likely to underestimate the pain of Black patients.  

    From J. Marion Sims’ experiments on enslaved women and children in the 19th century to the Tuskegee syphilis experiment and the theft of Henrietta Lacks’ cells in the 20th century, the United States has a long, troubled history of unethical experimentation on Black bodies, dehumanization, and the spread of disinformation targeting the Black community. So, it’s unsurprising that many Black folks harbor mistrust toward physicians and the health care system. 

    And unfortunately, not much has changed.  

    The indignity of having one’s pain dismissed because of skin color remains an all-too-common experience for Black patients in the 21st century. 

    Whether it’s a chronic illness, a one-time emergency, or battling a disease, the health care experiences Black people have been well documented — with many forced to self-advocate. In a 2022 Pew Research Center report, worse health outcomes for Black people were regularly attributed to less access to quality medical care and health care provides being less likely to give advanced medical care. 

    To put the issue of radicalized pain bias in the spotlight — and spark solutions — the Advil Pain Equity project partnered with Morehouse School of Medicine and BLKHLTH for a new survey of 2,000 Black Americans about their experiences when seeking pain care and treatment. The study found 74% of respondents said there is bias in how pain is diagnosed and treated. 

    Word In Black spoke with four Black men and women about their experience with pain and treatment from health care providers. Here are their stories. 

    Mark Hayes, 42, Greensboro, North Carolina 

    Two weeks after getting diagnosed with COVID-19, I got a head cold that migrated down into my chest. In January 2021, I went to urgent care, where I tested negative for COVID-19 and the flu. They said it would pass. 

    As more time went on, I became weak and fatigued at the smallest task. I started to get pains in my chest, so I went back to urgent care. Nothing was found. As I got worse, I tried urgent care again. The doctor said she could see my breathing was labored and told me to go to the emergency room.  

    I went, and everything they tested for was negative. They sent me home again. My exhaustion worsened and the pains in my chest got stronger. I returned to the emergency room again. My undershirt, sweatshirt, and my coat were all soaked with sweat — which finally got the nurse to check my heart and request blood work.  

    Photo of Mark Hayes/ Courtesy of Advil.

    I made a phone call to my son, telling him I loved him because I thought my time on earth was over. 

    In late April of 2021, they discovered pericarditis. It took four months to get this diagnosis. I got a cardiologist. A few months later, the process was on repeat.

    On Oct. 10, 2021, symptoms appeared again. Trips back and forth to urgent care, I requested blood work, and they would not listen to me.

    It was like I was in a crowd of people screaming for help, and no one could hear or even wanted to hear me.

    MARK HAYES

    My cardiologist was out of the country, so I was passed to another one. I asked the on-call cardiologist for blood work, and he tried to dismiss me from his office. I begged him to take blood samples — he only did it to appease me.  

    Days passed, no one called with the results. I received an email with the test results, but it was just a ton of medical jargon. I called the doctor’s office; the nurse said the doctor put in his notes that it wasn’t pericarditis — and that the notes were from before he received my labs. 

    The doctor never called me.  

    On January 1, 2022, a physicians assistant told me I had pericarditis for the second time.

    I was treated as if I couldn’t possibly know what I was talking about. It was like I was in a crowd of people screaming for help, and no one could hear or even wanted to hear me. I felt like an experiment. I was treated with disrespect. As if I were intellectually inferior and didn’t know what I was feeling in my own body. 

    I am terrified of doing the things I once loved because I’m afraid the process will start all over. And the next time, I may not be lucky. My mental health suffered drastically. It just created fear and a lack of trust in the medical system because I felt like no one cared. 

    Diedra Rodriguez, 36, Irvington, New Jersey 

    Photo of Diedra Rodriguez/ Courtesy of Advil.

    I had just given birth, when I started experiencing pain on Feb. 8, 2023 due to an undiagnosed heart attack. But my symptoms were dismissed, and I was discharged. Eight days later, on Feb 18., I called the paramedics. Then, I was taken to a different hospital where I was diagnosed and treated. 

    The first hospital made me feel as though I was being a nuisance for consistently complaining of pain. I was told that what I was feeling was normal, so I started to believe that I was overreacting.  

    It’s hard to trust doctors. I second-guess everything they say. I’m afraid that something may happen, and they won’t listen or believe me, and the next time will be the last time. My mental health has taken a huge hit. Anytime I’m in the doctor’s office, my anxiety is triggered, and I have panic attacks. Now, I am seeing a therapist. I take medication to cope with the trauma this experience has caused me. 

    Derek Walker, 60, Columbia, South Carolina 

    Photo of Derek Walker/ Courtesy of Advil.

    I have suffered from migraines since I was a 11- or 12-years-old. It runs in my family. Around that age, I had a very bad one, so I went to the emergency room. Initially, the nurses took notes and asked questions about how I was feeling.  

    Then, the doctor came in, and told me that she did not believe men suffered from migraines. We had a bit of back and forth, before I threw up on her shoes. Amazingly, I was given a shot for my migraine after that. 

    Now, each time I enter a health care setting, it always has me on guard and ready to fight. I don’t assume that I’m going to have a smooth experience. Black folks are commonly dismissed because of decades of racist medical teaching that Black people have a higher threshold for pain. And the idea that Black people can’t be trusted to tell the truth — that we are lazy and will fake illnesses to avoid work. 

    Source: Pew Research Center • Graphic by Anissa Durham Survey of nearly 14,497 respondents from November 30 to December 21, 2021.

    Etisyai Pollard, 27, Florida 

    Since I started my menstrual cycles, in 2011, I’ve experienced excruciating pain. Everyone I spoke to, including my doctor, said periods were painful. It was just part of being a woman. I internalized this mindset, and this became the beginning of a very unstable relationship with my reproductive health.   

    My period lasted about nine days. After four cycles, the pain became unbearable. My mother is always in support of me speaking up. And she’s advocated for me with my primary care physician.  

    I was about 14-years-old the first time I went to a gynecologist — it was uncomfortable. She asked me a lot of questions about my sexual history and if I was on birth control. I was confused because I wasn’t sexually active, and that wasn’t the reason for my appointment.  

    The gynecologist asked if I needed birth control to avoid pregnancy. At this point, my mom and I were fed up. It felt like I was being profiled and pressured to admit to something that had no relation to my pain.

    I wish that the entire process of finding and going to the doctors didn’t feel like war.

    ETISYAI POLLARD

    After sensing our agitation, she agreed that yes, a nine-day period was a bit excessive. I was given a one-time shot of Depo-Provera to shorten my period and was told it would resolve my pain completely.

    What the doctor refrained from sharing was the grueling side effects. After the first shot, I had my cycle for 44 days. I was devastated. And my pain extended from abdominal cramps to increased heaviness and heightened back pain. It later shortened to 7 days, but I never went back for the recommended follow-up shot.  

    After my experience with that shot, I gave up on hormonal therapy. The next 10 years were an uphill battle of heavy, painful cycles, fainting spells, calling out of work, missing family events, ruined sheets and clothing, abandoning opportunities, and long nights of questioning my sanity.   

    Photo of Etisyai Pollard/ Courtesy of Advil.

    I would often gaslight myself into thinking I was being weak. I know my experience as a Black woman ties heavily into this belief, as I never want to be seen as unreliable or lazy.

    I have to work hard. I have to be strong. I am needed, and there’s no room to sit idly by or to rest. No one is coming to save us. Hyper-independence becomes the armor to shield us. It’s frowned upon to make excuses.  

    There was no room to give myself grace, even at my lowest. I was starting to get more and more sick, and by age 23, it was boiling over. I was becoming a shell of myself, trying to mask the pain and push forward. 

    No matter how much I had tried speaking up for myself to doctors over the years, I was met with the same reaction: This is normal. And the more I internalized this ideology, the more I suffered in silence. 

    This dangerous mentality almost killed me. I was rushed to emergency surgery on April 19, 2021, where I was diagnosed with stage 4 endometriosis. A 7-cm mass was removed. As a result of being neglected and years of suffering, I had my left ovary and fallopian tube removed due to excessive damage from the endometrium. 

    I wish that the entire process of finding and going to the doctors didn’t feel like war. There is a dire need for more patience, gentleness, and compassion across the board. I know it’s possible because they exist; it is happening, but it needs to be the majority, not a rare occurrence. 

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  • Kinzinger says Johnson ‘doesn’t have the political acumen’ to cut deal with Dems on Ukraine aid

    Former Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) said on Monday he doesn’t think Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has the “political acumen” to cut a deal with Democrats and pass Ukraine aid.

    “I think, from what I’ve heard, that Speaker Johnson in his heart would pass Ukraine tomorrow if he could, or tonight if he could,” Kinzinger told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins on Monday.

    “The problem is he doesn’t have the political acumen, apparently, to be able to just put it on the floor and say, ‘You know what, Freedom Caucus? You guys want to try to vacate the chair? Fine, do it.’ And then he can cut a deal with the Democrats to save him if necessary,” he added.

    Kinzinger’s remarks came after an interview with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky, who told Collins that Johnson assured him of his support for Ukraine.

    “When we spoke to each other, he said that he will do everything to support Ukraine, and he’s on our side, and he understands how heroic our people, our soldiers, and civilians and etc. And he said … that his prayers are with us, and he said that he will do it,” Zelensky told Collins in the interview, which was recorded Sunday, about his conversation with Johnson.

    “I have to trust. I have to trust,” Zelensky told Collins earlier, about Johnson’s support. “But we will see.”

    Kinzinger responded to Zelensky’s faith in Johnson, saying, “Well, I hope he’s right,” adding that “obviously they had private conversations.”

    Kinzinger stressed the importance of passing Ukraine aid and slammed his former Republican colleagues for not having the courage to push Johnson to take action.

    “They will build statues to Speaker Johnson in Kyiv,” Kinzinger said, if Johnson passes Ukraine aid. “The thing is, these men and women have an opportunity to be known in history. If just four of them go to Speaker Johnson and say we’re going to shut down all rules … all action on the floor until you put this Ukraine aid on the floor, he’d do it in a week.”

    “There’s ways to get it done,” Kinzinger added. “He has to be emboldened by the rank and file Republicans to push against the Freedom Caucus.”

    Kinzinger’s comments come more than four months since President Biden’s most recent request for Ukraine aid. The Senate passed an aid package, which included $60 billion in aid for Ukraine, but Johnson has refused to put the bill on the floor for a vote. U.S. legislators have sought alternative paths to passing what many experts say is necessary aid to Ukraine, but the funding remains stalled in Congress.

    The Hill has reached out to Johnson’s office for comment.

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

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  • London Telegraph Claims NATO Preparing To Send Troops To Ukraine To Fight Russia


    Telegraph reports “NATO and EU members ‘considering sending troops to Ukraine.’”

    Globalist publication The London Telegraph reports “NATO and EU members ‘considering sending troops to Ukraine,’” as the West ridiculously continues to support the nation’s failed offensive against Russia. Alex Jones reports:



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  • About Two Million Candidates To Write 2024 UTME As JAMB Closes Registration Exercise

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) would be closing its 2024 UTME registration on Monday, 26th February 2024.

    Recall that the registration exercise commenced on Monday, January 15, 2024.

    JAMB in its Weekly Bulletin released on Monday, stated that so far, 1,975, 926 candidates have registered for the exercise.

    Meanwhile, a total of 260,249 candidates have registered for the Mock-UTME which is scheduled to be held on Thursday March, 7, 2024.

    The Board had also asked candidates who indicated interest to sit for the mock examination to proceed to print their mock notification slips from Tuesday, February 27, 2024.

    “The notification slip indicates the candidate’s registration number, the venue, time and date of the mock examination and other necessary instructions.

    “It is imperative for candidates to be aware of these vital pieces of information, which are necessary for their participation in the examination.

    “The optional mock notification slip can be printed from anywhere that candidates find convenient provided they have internet access,” it stated.

    The Board also disclosed that a total of 747 CBT centers were initially approved for the registration exercise out of which five were delisted and one suspended for engaging in conduct deemed to be detrimental to the integrity of the examination.

    About Two Million Candidates To Write 2024 UTME As JAMB Closes Registration Exercise is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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