Tag: General News

  • Draymond Green will miss out on NorCal rivalry

    SAN FRANCISCO — Draymond Green will sit out for the Warriors’ game against the Sacramento Kings on Friday night, missing the first game this season between the two Northern California teams. His absence denies fans a chance to see Green and Kings big Domantas Sabonis face off for the first time since Green told the world why he “lost respect” for Sabonis during last year’s playoff series.

    Green, who is recovering from a left ankle sprain, also missed Opening Night as he works back into game shape. Head coach Steve Kerr was hopeful Thursday that Green could be back for at least part of the Warriors’ upcoming road back-to-back against the Houston Rockets and New Orleans Pelicans, but they will be without Green as they navigate the first part of a tricky portion of the schedule in which they play seven of their next eight games on the road.

    Green’s absence weakens the Warriors defensively against dribble-handoff maestro Sabonis and leaves them without a voice to help keep up with the Kings’ fast-paced offense led by De’Aaron Fox.

    “We’ve seen them twice in the preseason without Draymond, so I don’t think matchups are too much of an issue,” Kerr said. “But missing Draymond is an issue. He’s one of the best defensive players, if not the best, in the whole league and he does so many other things for us, so we’re anxious to get him back, for sure.”

    Kevon Looney and Green had success defending Sabonis’ handoffs in the playoffs. Then drama hit when Green earned an ejection and one-game suspension after stepping on Sabonis in Game 3 of the series. The Warriors’ Game 4 win in his absence showed the benefits of staggering Green’s and Looney’s minutes in order to space the floor.

    After Game 7, Green said he lost respect for Sabonis when he refused to shake Green’s hand in the immediate aftermath of the closeout game.

    “You don’t shake guys’ hands after you lose, I don’t respect that,” Green said on his podcast.“I once left the court when we lost in Game 7 to the Cleveland Cavaliers (in the 2016 NBA Finals) and I went to my locker room and I sat down and I said, ‘This don’t feel right’ — and I walked back out on the court and I showed everybody love.”

    Green’s absence eliminates that conundrum and lessens the chances of another Sabonis altercation, but leaves the Warriors incomplete on defense. This year, the Kings have much the same roster that had the highest offensive rating (119.7) last year while the Warriors have gotten a little older and, perhaps, slower.

    The Warriors will play the Kings twice in the next week — one away, one at home — for the first meaningful games since the two teams took a first-round playoff series to a blockbuster seven games last season. Steph Curry put up a then-record 50 points in Game 7 to advance the experienced but struggling Warriors past the NBA’s best offense.

    “The guys here last year are experienced with how Sacramento plays,” Dario Saric said on Thursday. “They have one of the best three offenses in the league, maybe the best. They push the ball out there, they have some guys who can bring the ball down. They have amazing shooters. It’s going to be a tough game, but this is the regular season now. New year, it’s going to be different.”

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  • NAAT Rejects Condition Given By Govt For Payment Of Withheld Salaries

    Bola-Ahmed-Tinubu-

    The National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) has rejected the Federal Government pre-condition for the payment of four months out of its eight months withheld salary.

    Recall that President Bola Tinubu had approved for the payment of four months’ salary and a waiver for the staff of tertiary institutions on the ‘No Work, No Pay’ policy invoked by the government during the eight month strike embarked upon by the university-based unions.

    The government further said that the waiver was granted based on the principles of presidential prerogative of mercy, subject to the Federal Ministries of Education and that of Labour and Employment developing a document of Understanding (DoU), before payment of the withheld salaries can be affected.

    However, in a statement signed by the President of NAAT, Comrade Ibeji Nwokoma, the union said that it viewed the Federal Government’s condition as draconian and undermines workers’ fundamental human rights to freedom of expression and association guaranteed by the 1999 Constitution.

    “The attention of the leadership of our great Union, the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) has been drawn to this development which we consider as a matter of great concern and worrisome.

    “While we want to commend the President for his magnanimity in granting the partial waiver, we view the condition of DoU as draconian and undermines our Fundamental Human Right to freedom of expression and association guaranteed by the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended.

    “Hence, NAAT rejects in its entirety the idea of DoU as a pre-condition for payment of the withheld salaries of our members.

    “Furthermore, we use this medium to appeal to Mr. President to rescind his decision and approve unconditional payment of the withheld salaries immediately.”

    The Union stated that the work loss as a result of the strike action has since been covered through extra work hours which had witnessed subsequent graduation of their students who are now undertaking their mandatory National Youth Service programme.

    “NAAT wishes to call on well-meaning Nigerians to intervene and ensure payment of our withheld salaries in full for a sustainable industrial harmony,” it said.

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  • Fact Check: Vivek Ramaswamy offers dubious figure for China’s role in supplying pharmaceutical ingredients

    NASHUA, N.H. — Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, who as a venture capitalist has had business ties to China in the past, has made policy concerns about China a focus of his campaign.

    In an Oct. 13 address to the First in the Nation Summit in Nashua, New Hampshire,  Ramaswamy warned the U.S. against relying on China for key resources. He said the U.S. needed to build up its “semiconductor independence” because chips are vital for a whole host of consumer products. He also cited a need to reduce dependence on pharmaceutical ingredients from China.

    He urged the U.S. to declare “pharmaceutical independence,” saying that “95% of over-the-counter pharmaceuticals are coming from our enemy in China.”

    However, the 95% figure is greatly exaggerated. Available data puts the share at no bigger than 20%, and possibly even lower.

    Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for global health in Washington, D.C., at the New York.-based Council on Foreign Relations, told PolitiFact that the 95% figure “is clearly an overestimate or misquote.”

    Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy addresses the First in the Nation summit in Nashua, N.H., on Oct. 13, 2023. (Louis Jacobson/PolitiFact)

    Ramaswamy’s campaign did not respond to an inquiry for this article.

    His figure for Chinese pharmaceuticals matches one that appeared in a 2019 Politico article about China “weaponizing” drug exports that was produced in partnership with the South China Morning Post, a Hong Kong-based, English-language newspaper.

    In 2018, according to the article, “China accounted for 95% of U.S. imports of ibuprofen, 91% of U.S. imports of hydrocortisone, 70% of U.S. imports of acetaminophen, 40% to 45% of U.S. imports of penicillin and 40% of U.S. imports of heparin, according to Commerce Department data.”

    The 95% figure applied to ibuprofen, not all drugs. Beyond that, the 95% figure for ibuprofen has come under scrutiny since the article appeared. Drug dependence on China became a talking point in the early months of the coronavirus pandemic, when some in the U.S. worried whether Americans would suffer shortages of medicines sourced from overseas producers.

    Early in the pandemic, the Pacific Research Institute, a free-market think tank, cited U.S. Census Bureau data showing that China accounted for 18% of U.S. imports of active pharmaceutical ingredients in 2019, and just 1% of U.S. imports of finished pharmaceutical products the same year.

    Meanwhile, the health care consulting firm Avalere found a more modest role for China in a 2020 report. 

    According to Avalere, 54% of active pharmaceutical ingredients in the U.S. in 2019 were produced in the U.S. Another 19% came from Ireland, and just 6% came from China, with smaller shares for Singapore, the United Kingdom, Switzerland and several other countries.

    “No single foreign country dominates the overall supply of (active pharmaceutical ingredients) for the U.S. market,” the study concluded. (Avalere disclosed that Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the drugmakers’ trade group, helped fund the study.)

    A third study involved calculations by Niels Graham, a trade policy specialist with the Atlantic Council, a Washington-based think tank. He found that although China does account for 75% of the U.S. supply of vitamins B6, B12, B1 and C and nearly 70% of its vitamin E supply, Chinese producers account for a much smaller share of other key ingredients.

    These include 11.7% of U.S. imports of pain relievers, fever reducers, anti-inflammatory medicines, or combinations of those categories; 10.5% of cold and cough medicines; and 12.5% of laxatives. The shares were even smaller for a variety of prescription drugs, such as immunosuppressives, cardiovascular medicines, and certain types of antibiotics.

    “Over the past decade, the U.S. has gotten, on average, around 17% of its (active pharmaceutical ingredient) imports from China,” Graham wrote. “While still considerable, this number is far short of the often cited but erroneous statistic.”

    These low shares calculate imports from China as a percentage of all U.S. imports, without taking into account what the U.S. produces. By Graham’s calculations, the U.S. is not only producing significant amounts of pharmaceutical ingredients for itself but is exporting a growing amount to China. 

    U.S. pharmaceutical exports to China increased by nearly 400% from 2016 to 2022, he found. That’s a slower rate than the roughly 600% growth in China’s pharmaceutical exports to the U.S., but still a substantial increase.

    Our ruling

    Ramaswamy said “95% of over-the-counter pharmaceuticals” in the U.S. come from China.

    This aligns with a percentage for ibuprofen imports from China that was cited in a 2019 news story. However, the percentages for other medicines listed in the article all have smaller percentages sourced from China.

    Regardless, these percentages sharply conflict with at least three other analyses that show China’s share of U.S. pharmaceutical ingredient imports ranging from about 20% down to the low single digits.

    We rate the statement False.



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  • Viral Post Uses Altered Audio of Interview with Greta Thunberg

    Para leer en español, vea esta traducción de Google Translate.

    Quick Take

    Greta Thunberg recalled in a 2022 BBC interview how she began her environmental activism. But a recent video shared on social media deceptively alters the audio from that interview, making it appear that Thunberg called for the use of eco-friendly military weapons and “vegan grenades.” The altered video originated on a site that labeled it as satire.


    Full Story

    The 20-year-old Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg has often been the subject of online misinformation, as we’ve written before. Now, amid the wars in the Middle East and Ukraine, Thunberg has once again become a target with fabricated quotes attributed to her.

    A viral video, shared on Instagram by conservative comedian Terrence K. Williams on Oct. 24, purports to show Thunberg advocating for the use of “sustainable tanks and weaponry” in armed conflicts. The post by Williams, a frequent spreader of misinformation, received more than 17,000 likes.

    In the video, Thunberg appears to be saying, “There are so many new concepts for battery-powered fighter jets that can carry many more missiles — biodegradable missiles, of course.” She is also heard saying: “If you use hand grenades, please use vegan grenades. No animal should have to give their life for all this mayhem and chaos.” The video ends with Thunberg promoting a new book, “Vegan War.”

    Most of those commenting on the post believed the video to be real. One user wrote, “Vegan grenades??? Battery powered jets??? What is she smoking?”

    But the audio on the video isn’t real. As fact checkers at India Today found, the video was originally posted to social media by Snicklink, a self-described “conspiracy comedian.”

    In its post, Snicklink tagged the video as satire in the lower right corner of the video, as seen in this post shared by another user on Instagram. In Williams’ post, however, the satire label is cut off.

    The video was made by replacing the audio track on an existing video of Thunberg — in this case, her 2022 appearance on the BBC. Deepfake technology was then used to sync the movement of her lips to a fabricated audio track.

    In the real clip from her BBC interview, Thunberg discussed how she became an environmental activist: “I started with turning off the lights at home to save energy, and that led to another thing, which led to another thing, and eventually I stopped flying. … I became vegan and so-on. And then I got my parents to do that, too.”

    Thunberg did promote her new book in the BBC interview, but its title is “The Climate Book,” not “Vegan War.”


    Sources

    “About Terrence.” Terrence K. Williams Store. Accessed 25 Oct 2023.

    Associated Press. “Live updates | Relief operations in Gaza in jeopardy as Israeli airstrikes increase.” 25 Oct 2023.

    BBC. “Greta Thunberg on how to tackle climate anxiety | The One Show – BBC.” YouTube. 1 Nov 2022.

    Butler, Alexander and Maria Butt. “Ukraine-Russia war – live: Putin’s troops forced to regroup as they suffer heavy losses in east, says Kyiv.” The Independent. 24 Oct 2023.

    Farley, Robert. “Trump Retweets False Attack on Rep. Omar.” FactCheck.org. 18 Sep 2019.

    Fichera, Angelo. “Doctored Photo Places Thunberg, Soros Together.” FactCheck.org. 30 Sep 2019.

    Jaffe, Alan. “Romney Not Switching Parties, Contrary to Online Claim.” FactCheck.org. 2 Aug 2023.

    Jones, Brea. “Posts Misrepresent Pentagon Accounting Errors in Ukraine Aid.” FactCheck.org. 23 Jun 2023.

    Paul, Andrew. “Deepfake audio already fools people nearly 25 percent of the time.” Popular Science. 2 Aug 2023.

    Puzhakkal, Dheeshma. “Fact Check: No green missiles and vegan grenades – this Greta Thunberg video is EDITED.” India Today. 23 Oct 2023.

    Zinsner, Hadleigh. “Viral Posts Distort Greta Thunberg Tweet Warning About Climate Change.” FactCheck.org. 28 Jun 2023.



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  • Trick or travel? Halloween holiday options for the whole family – Paradise Post

    Lynn O’Rourke Hayes | FamilyTravel.com (TNS)

    Trick or treat? Why not treat your family to a haunted holiday. Here are five to consider:

    1. New Orleans, La.

    A recent TripAdvisor survey ranked New Orleans as the spookiest city in the U.S., based on the number of spooky tours and events available to visitors. Among the options in NOLA is a family-friendly, small group tour during which your clan will learn about the legends that are part of the French Quarter’s storied past. It’s a spooky, but not over-the-top wander through an historic neighborhood said to be frequented by ghosts and goblins.

    For more: www.Viator.com

    2. Great Wolf Lodges

    Choose from 18 resorts across the country where seasonal décor — think Fall leaves, pumpkins, and other ghostly treats — await youngsters. During October, select resorts will feature special packages through which families can swim through a sea of floating pumpkins to find their favorite gourd, embark on an immersive journey to reunite a little pumpkin with its family, and enjoy seasonal treats like cider and donuts while they decorating pumpkins.

    Also, be on the lookout for Trick-Or-Treat Trails, a Monster Bash Dance Party, Howl-O-Ween trivia and engaging crafts. Visit the Great Wolf Lodge in the Pocono Mountains, Pa., Gurnee, Ill., Grapevine, Texas, LaGrange, Ga. or Garden Grove, Calif. and you can check into a Pumpkin Spice Suite. That means you’’ll have access to bottomless Pumpkin Spice Lattes from the coffee shop located in the lodge, a daily amenity service that includes warm buns with pumpkin cream cheese frosting and sleep in a room with pumpkin pillows and pops of oranges and browns to further celebrate the season.

    For more: www.GreatWolf.com

    3. Sleepy Hollow, New York

    Check out the brilliant autumnal display while hiking, biking, visiting historic attractions and celebrating the spooky season. Take in the Jack-o’-lantern Blaze where more than 7,000 individually hand-carved and illuminated jack-o’-lanterns glow in a historic, riverside landscape.

    Learn more about Washington Irving’s Legend of Sleepy Hollow during a spine-chilling tour on the Irving estate. Take part in a literature-themed scavenger hunt and take in a special exhibit that highlights how the Legend has lived on in popular culture.

    Take your chances during a haunted hayride and pay homage to the author and the season with a visit to the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery where Washington Irving is buried.

    For more: www.visitsleepyhollow.com

    4. Virginia City, Montana

    Perhaps it’s the ghost of Calamity Jane who saunters back into town. Or maybe it’s the gold miner whose luck ran out. No one knows for sure, but the colorful mining town is said to be “spirited.” Once home to as many as 10,000 residents, lively saloons and dance halls, Virginia City was considered the capital of the Montana Territory.

    Today, travelers who make their way to this well-preserved treasure are treated to old-time theater, music, train rides, living history demonstrations as well as walking or horse-drawn carriage tours. And, plenty of good ghost stories.

    For more: www.virginiacity.com; www.visitmt.com

    5. A haunted house near you

    Sticky cobwebs, spine-chilling music, hair-raising sights. If you dare, find a haunted place near you and go boldly into the night.

    During this spooky season expect fields of screams, terror in the cornfields and whole towns devoted to scaring you out of your wits. If you dare, you can find a chamber of horrors to suit your family’s tastes.

    For more: www.hauntedhouse.com

    _____

    ©2023 FamilyTravel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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  • Senate Confirms Aliyu’s Appointment As ICPC Chairman 

    The Senate has confirmed the appointment of Musa Aliyu, as the new chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practises and Other Related Offences Commission.

    Recall that THE WHISTLER had reported hpw President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in a letter written to the Senate on Wednesday, asked for the confirmation of Aliyu, a lawyer and Attorney-General of Jigawa State, as the chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission.

    The letter was addressed to the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio and read during the plenary session by the Deputy Senate President Jibrin Barau.

    The upper legislative chamber on Thursday carried out the confirmation process after screening him and other nominees in a closed session, a deliberation that lasted nearly an hour.

    After being confirmed, Aliyu addressed the Senate and outlined his commitment to changing the narrative in the fight against corruption, saying the commission will conduct proper investigations and not put people to shame unnecessarily.

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  • Fact Check: Iran’s foreign reserves plummeted on Trump’s watch, but his figures are off

    During a rally in New Hampshire, former President Donald Trump touted his administration’s policies on Iran, saying they weakened the country’s government.

    At the Oct. 23 rally in Derry, New Hampshire, Trump cited efforts during his presidency to starve Iran’s hard-line religious government of foreign currency, in hopes of hampering the country’s support for militant groups.

    “When I came into office, Iran had $70 billion in foreign exchange reserves,” Trump said. “It was loaded up with money that’s from Obama. His piggy bank was full and it was also full of terrorists. By the time I left they had nothing. They were broke. They were broke.”

    Trump’s numbers are off. But his description of the plummeting trend line holds up — the plunge was about 60% more dramatic than the figures he used. 

    The Trump campaign did not respond to an inquiry for this article.

    In 2018, the Trump administration pulled out of the 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran, which was premised on Iran curtailing its nuclear efforts in exchange for a loosening of economic sanctions. The U.S. exit from the deal meant that those sanctions snapped back into place.

    “Scores of international companies announced that they would end or suspend their operations in Iran even before U.S. sanctions were formally re-imposed,” according to the International Crisis Group, an organization that advocates for conflict avoidance. The sanctions, some of them old and some newly crafted, began to be enforced in 2018. 

    When foreign entities purchase Iranian goods, they typically pay either in U.S. dollars, their own currency, or another widely used currency such as euros. So, making it harder for Iran to conduct business with other countries meant that its supply of foreign currency dwindled, as existing Iranian stashes of foreign currency weren’t replaced when spent on overseas goods.

    This can have a serious impact on a nation’s economy. It can make it harder to import needed goods, which could dampen economic output and increase inflation and unemployment. The country’s own currency usually loses value against other currencies, as well.

    Official data shows that foreign currency reserves in Iran’s central bank climbed steadily from about $2 billion to about $128 billion from 2000 to 2015, including a period of intense negotiation between the U.S., Iran and other countries over the nuclear deal. The level of foreign reserves remained high through the early part of Trump’s tenure, but after the sanctions hit, Iran’s foreign holdings fell precipitously, declining to about $15 billion in 2019. 

    That’s not “zero.” Iran had more than $70 billion in reserves when Trump took office, but the fall was dramatic. In absolute dollars, Trump’s figures understated the scale of the decline; he said it was $70 billion, but it was actually about 60% bigger: $113 billion.

    “The policy that the Trump administration pursued led to a significant decline in the readily available official reserves of Iran,” or the foreign currency to which Tehran has full access, said Saeed Ghasseminejad, a senior advisor on Iran with the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a right-leaning think tank in Washington, D.C.

    The sanctions policies pursued by the Trump administration were “a key reason for Iran’s decreased exports and imports, massive inflation, and significant depreciation of the rial,” its currency, Ghasseminejad said.

    Iran’s foreign currency reserves have since risen to about $24 billion, but that remains well below their pre-Trump level.

    The Trump-era sanctions did not lead to the ouster of Iran’s government, and it continues to play an international role at odds with U.S. foreign policy. But on the metric of foreign reserves, Trump was close to accurate. 

    Our ruling

    Trump said, “When I came into office, Iran had $70 billion in foreign exchange reserves. … By the time I left, (it was) nothing. They were broke.”

    His numbers are off. Iran’s reserves were larger than he said and they did not fall to zero. But he’s on point about the trend line: Iran’s foreign currency reserves fell from $128 billion in 2015 to $15 billion in 2019, a plunge nearly 60% bigger in absolute dollars than Trump said. 

    This decline is widely believed to be a consequence of the tightened U.S. sanctions under Trump, and it has not reversed to any significant degree since.

    The statement is partially accurate. We rate it Half True.



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  • 49ers great Ronnie Lott, music star Sheila E. introduce music program

    Legendary 49er Ronnie Lott and music star Sheila E. are among the arts/media/sports/business leaders who are banding together for Follow the Music.

    It’s a new program seeking to offer music education and help for emerging artists that has been developed in partnership with Elevate Oakland, which was co-founded by Sheila E.

    The program is set to kick off with a concert featuring young artists from Oakland School for the Arts, GLIDE Memorial Church, San Francisco Community Music Center, ELM (Enriching Lives Through Music), Blue Bear School of Music and SFJAZZ at 6 p.m. Oct. 29 at the Guild Theatre in Menlo Park. Tickets are $20, guildtheatre.com.

    While details of exactly how the new program will operate are still to come, the organization’s name — Follow the Music — serves as “a call to action inspired by the Bay Area’s unrivaled legacy of music and social justice,” according to a news release. “It recognizes that young people are inheriting a world facing profound challenges, and music has a unique ability to help them express themselves, and navigate the road ahead,”

    “Music gave the Bay Area its soul,” Sheila E. says. “We’ve been through hard times before, and music is the one tool that brings people together to imagine a different future. Together we can support the next generation.”

    Sheila E. performs during half time of Game 4 of the NBA Western Conference Finals between the Golden State Warriors and the Houston Rockets at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, May 22, 2018. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Sheila E. performs during half time of Game 4 of the NBA Western Conference Finals between the Golden State Warriors and the Houston Rockets at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, May 22, 2018. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)

    Sheila E. and Lott (as well as other Niners alumni) will also attend the kickoff. The goal of the evening is “to center the conversation about music education and supporting young artists in the Bay Area and beyond,” according to a news release.

    “Watching young, gifted athletes rise from being a kid to an adult is an incredible journey,” Lott says. “We believe music can have the same impact on young lives, and we want to make sure that the young musicians have the same coaching and support that athletes get. We believe that we can help provide that for young people.”

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  • Supreme Court Validated Mandate Freely Given To Tinubu By Nigerians – Sanwo-Olu

    Babajide-Sanwo-Olu-e1611680794858 (1)

    Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has described the Supreme Court’s judgment affirming Bola Tinubu as the duly elected president of Nigeria as a validation of the mandate freely given to him by the Nigerian people.

    The apex court had on Thursday dismissed the appeals filed by the presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP), Peter Obi, and that of the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar against the election of Tinubu.

    The two opposition candidates had in separate appeals listed grounds such as non-compliance to the electoral act, corrupt practices and disqualification against the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and Tinubu.

    But the court in its ruling dismissed the appeals for lacking in merit.

    Reacting to the judgment, Sanwo-Olu urged Atiku and Obi to join hands with the president to move the country forward.

    “I am delighted by the Supreme Court’s verdict reaffirming H.E President Bola Tinubu’s electoral victory in the February 25, 2023 Presidential election,” the governor said in a statement shared on his social media handles.

    “This judgment is a clear validation of the mandate freely given by the people of Nigeria to President Tinubu, who will lead our nation from May 29, 2023, to May 2027.

    “I urge the opposition to join hands with the President to move our country forward and I appeal to all Nigerians, especially those of the opposition parties, to unite with the President in his vision to elevate Nigeria from its current situation to where we aspire it to be.

    “Let us all contribute our efforts to the development of our great nation, as we have no other place to call home but Nigeria.

    “Furthermore, I commend the judiciary for upholding the truth and safeguarding our nascent democracy. Their commitment to justice is vital in protecting the interests of our country and its citizens,” he added.

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  • Fact Check: Did Donald Trump make these 27 campaign promises? Fact-checking this viral list

    A liberal group says former President Donald Trump has promised more than two dozen “insane” actions if he reclaims the White House, including rounding up all homeless people, pardoning Jan. 6 defendants and ending the war in Ukraine within 24 hours.

    MeidasTouch Network, a liberal news website, shared an Oct. 21 Instagram reel that highlights its earlier article headlined, “27 Insane Things Trump Said He Will Do in a 2nd Term.” The article was written by MeidasTouch’s editor-in-chief, Ron Filipkowski, a Florida-based former prosecutor and former Republican whose account on X has more than 825,000 followers.

    MeidasTouch compiled the promises largely from 2023 video clips, including Trump campaign’s “Agenda 47” — a series of short clips that detail initiatives Trump plans to implement if he wins the presidency in 2024. 

    Many of Trump’s promises would face practical or legal challenges.

    We analyzed the 27 items and found that Trump did say something close to what the article claimed, although in some cases MeidasTouch Network ignored nuances in Trump’s framing.

    Former President Donald Trump smiles before his speech at the California Republican Party Convention Friday, Sept. 29, 2023, in Anaheim, Calif. (AP)

    1. “Will arrest all homeless people across the country for ‘urban camping,’ round them up and then ‘relocate them’ to ‘tent cities’ where they can be ‘rehabilitated.’”

    This is close to what Trump said, but it ignores some of his framing.

    Trump said, “We’ll ban urban camping wherever possible.” But he also said that relocation and rehabilitation would be optional for the people arrested. They would “be given the option to receive treatment and services if they’re willing to be rehabilitated,” he said. Trump promised that the rehabilitation would come with the assistance of “doctors, psychiatrists, social workers and drug rehab specialists.”

    2. “Require every federal employee to take a new patriotism exam and they will be terminated if they refuse to take them or fail to pass.”

    This is essentially what Trump said.

    In a video responding to federal investigations over retaining documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate and trying to overturn the 2020 election, Trump said, “I will require every federal employee to pass a new civil service test demonstrating an understanding of our constitutional-limited government. This will include command of due process rights, equal protection, free speech, religious liberty, federalism, the Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable search and seizure – I know all about that at Mar-a-Lago, don’t I — and all other constitutional limits on federal power.” 

    He didn’t say he would “terminate” or “fire” employees who fail the test or refuse to take it, but he said passing the test would be a requirement, so that would not be much of a leap.

    3. “Will build 10 new Trump ‘freedom cities’ around the country, which will be free of any government regulations.”

    MeidasTouch’s description is more expansive than Trump’s proposal. Trump proposed lifting regulations — presumably federal ones, which are the only ones he as president would have influence over — that pertain to manufacturing.

    Trump said, “We will create an ultra-streamlined federal regulatory framework, specifically for ‘freedom cities,’ allowing them to be true frontiers for the return of U.S. manufacturing, the rebirth of economic opportunity, and safe and affordable living.”

    Regardless, George Mason University law professor Ilya Somin said, such cities “cannot be completely free of state regulation, as Congress cannot override all state regulations of every kind.”

    4. “He will appoint federal judges in the mold of Clarence Thomas.” 

    This closely matches what Trump said in a video, although he said “adopt” rather than “appoint”: “My administration will again adopt rock-solid constitutional conservatives to the federal bench, justices and judges, but in the mold of Antonin Scalia and Justice Clarence Thomas.” Trump made similar comments about appointing judges aligned with Scalia and Thomas when he was in office.

    5. “He will have (the Justice Department) subpoena local DAs and their staff and remove them from office if he determines that they are failing to do their job to his satisfaction.” 

    This is close to what Trump said, except that he didn’t target all district attorneys. 

    In a campaign video titled “Firing the Radical Marxist Prosecutors Destroying America,” Trump vowed to investigate what he called “Soros prosecutors” — a reference to district attorneys who benefited from campaign backing or funding linked to liberal billionaire George Soros. The video was published after Trump was indicted in a case involving hush money paid to adult entertainment actress Stormy Daniels. Trump has accused the prosecutor in that case, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, of being tied to Soros. The Color of Change PAC, a racial justice group, received money from Soros, and the PAC supported Bragg.

    In the video, Trump promised to overhaul the Justice Department and FBI, and to “launch sweeping civil rights investigations into Marxist local District Attorneys,” specifically citing those in Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles.

    6. He will “fire staff and disband college accreditation boards since they ‘have become dominated by marxist maniacs and lunatics.’”

    This reflects what Trump said. In a video that outlined his higher education policy goals, Trump promised to “reclaim” colleges and universities from the “radical left” by replacing college accreditation boards and imposing new standards.

    These new standards, Trump said, would include “defending the American tradition and Western civilization”; removing diversity, equity and inclusion staff; protecting free speech; and requiring that colleges offer “accelerated and low-cost degrees.” Trump said he would also implement college entrance and exit exams “to prove that students are actually learning.”

    Accreditors and other experts told Inside Higher Ed that Trump’s plan would interfere with the federal accountability system and long-standing principles in higher education and, since it would require congressional backing, stands little chance of being carried out. 

    7. “He will seize university endowments and also fine them millions of dollars if he determines the schools are Marxist and/or discriminating against white people.”

    In the same announcement, which he titled “Protecting Students from the Radical Left and Marxist Maniacs Infecting Educational Institutions,” Trump vowed to direct the Justice Department to pursue federal civil rights cases against schools “that continue to engage in racial discrimination” and said he would advance a measure to fine schools that continue these policies up to the entire amount of their endowment.

    University endowments are funds that colleges and universities receive from organizational and individual donors. Any attempt by the government to expropriate private funds would almost certainly tee up a major fight in court.

    Outgoing Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley speaks during a farewell tribute at Joint Base Myer–Henderson Hall in Fort Myer, Va., on Sept. 29, 2023. (AP)

    8. He would have the Justice Department “investigate and prosecute General Milley for treason.”

    Trump didn’t use the word “treason” to refer to former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley in a Truth Social post, but he implied it. 

    Trump criticized Milley for calling his Chinese counterpart to reassure China after the storming of the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, saying it was “an act so egregious that, in times gone by, the punishment would have been DEATH.” The comment was widely seen as an accusation of treason because it is a crime eligible for the death penalty.

    However, treason is only a crime during wartime. “It’s pretty obvious Milley has not committed treason, and any such prosecution would be dismissed by a court, possibly even with sanctions” against the attorneys pursuing it, George Mason’s Somin said.

    9. “He will end the war in Ukraine in 24 hours by threatening to withhold US aid to Ukraine if Zelensky doesn’t agree to a deal with Russia.”

    Trump has repeatedly promised to end the war in Ukraine in 24 hours. However his strategy for accomplishing it isn’t as clear as MeidasTouch suggests.

    “If I were president, and I say this, I will end that war in one day, it will take 24 hours,” Trump said in an interview with GBNews, the clip cited by MeidasTouch. “I know Zelensky well, I know Putin well.”

    Trump added, “a lot of it has to do with the money. I would get that deal done within 24 hours.” 

    In an interview on Fox News, Trump more clearly hinted that part of his strategy would involve what the U.S. gives to Ukraine. Host Maria Bartiromo asked Trump, “You said you could end the war in Ukraine in 24 hours. How would you do that?”

    “I would tell Zelenskyy, ‘No more,’” Trump replied. “‘You got to make a deal.’ I would tell Putin, ‘If you don’t make a deal, we’re going to give him a lot. We’re going to [give Ukraine] more than they ever got if we have to.’ I will have the deal done in one day. One day.”

    10. “Require that schools hold elections each year where principals will be elected by parents who will choose whoever they want to run the school each year.

    This is close to what Trump said. 

    In a speech at an annual summit for Moms for Liberty — a conservative parents-rights group — Trump said he would fight for the “direct election” of school principals by parents. He didn’t say these elections would occur each year, and said parents could do this if they aren’t satisfied with their children’s current principal.

    “If you have a bad principal who is not getting the job done, the parent will, under the Trump administration, be allowed to vote to fire that principal to select someone who will do a great job,” he said.

    Typically, public school principals are appointed by superintendents and approved by local school boards or selected by charter school boards. Because K-12 education is largely directed at the state and local level, it’s unclear how the federal government would enact this idea, and whether it could withstand legal scrutiny.

    11. He proposed that “any person convicted of selling drugs will get the death penalty.”

    That’s essentially what Trump said. 

    “We’re going to ask that everyone who sells drugs, gets caught selling drugs, to receive the death penalty for their heinous acts,” Trump said.

    This would be a huge expansion of crimes eligible for capital punishment. Currently, only such crimes as murder, treason, genocide, or the killing or kidnapping of a member of Congress, the President, or a Supreme Court justice would qualify based on Supreme Court precedent.

    In 2019, some 210,000 people were arrested for the sale or manufacture of drugs, according to Pew Research Center data. That compares to 34 state and federal death penalty convictions handed down that year, a number that has since fallen to 21 in 2022.

    Another practical concern: Large, interstate operations can be prosecuted federally, but states and localities handle most drug cases. This would put the vast majority of drug cases beyond the purview of a Trump administration.

    Jericho Steve, of Pennsylvania, a supporter of the January 6th defendants and former President Donald Trump, protests outside federal court on Aug. 30, 2023, in Washington, D.C. (AP)

    12. “Pardon convicted J6 inmates convicted of seditious conspiracy and assaulting police officers, with an apology from the U.S. government.”

    Trump has repeatedly said he would pardon defendants charged with the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

    In September 2022, two months before he announced his campaign, Trump told conservative radio show host Wendy Bell that he had met with some of the Jan. 6 defendants. “I will look very very favorably about full pardons” if he wins the campaign, Trump said. He added, “I mean full pardons, with an apology to many.” Trump didn’t single out specific charges he would pardon.

    This is one promise he could carry out: If Trump becomes president, he would have the power to pardon. However, those would be federal pardons, meaning some defendants might still be liable for state charges.

    13. Have the Justice Department “investigate Comcast, NBC and MSNBC for treason and remove them from the public airwaves.”

    Trump did call for investigating those outlets, but his comments about any specific punishment were vague.

    In a Truth Social post, Trump wrote “Comcast, with its one-side and vicious coverage by NBC NEWS, and in particular MSNBC, often and correctly referred to as MSDNC (Democrat National Committee!), should be investigated for its ‘Country Threatening Treason.’ Their endless coverage of the now fully debunked SCAM known as Russia, Russia, Russia, and much else, is one big Campaign Contribution to the Radical Left Democrat Party. I say up front, openly, and proudly, that when I WIN the Presidency of the United States, they and others of the LameStream Media will be thoroughly scrutinized for their knowingly dishonest and corrupt coverage of people, things, and events.”

    Trump did not clearly state that he would try to deplatform the outlets, but he appeared to challenge their existence, stating: “Why should NBC, or any other of the corrupt & dishonest media companies, be entitled to use the very valuable Airwaves of the USA, FREE? They are a true threat to Democracy and are, in fact, THE ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE!”

    14. “Pardoned felon Michael Flynn will be appointed to a top position in his Administration.” 

    This is not as clear as MeidasTouch suggested in the clip it cited from a January 2022 Republican Party event in Lee County, Florida. Trump introduced Flynn and said, “Stay in good health, Michael. Get ready. Only 18 more months!”

    In July 2020, Trump said he would welcome Flynn back to the White House. 

    Flynn was appointed as Trump’s first national security adviser but left after less than a month in February 2017. Flynn resigned from his position, saying he’d given “incomplete information” to White House officials about contacts he’d had with senior Russian officials weeks before Trump took office that may have addressed lifting sanctions on Russia that had been imposed by then-President Barack Obama. 

    Flynn pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about conversations with a Russian ambassador, but he was pardoned by Trump and then a federal judge dismissed the case.

    15. “He will end all DEI programs in government agencies by executive order, including the military.”

    This is something Trump promised in March. 

    Trump railed against “equity” initiatives under the Biden administration and said he would instruct the Justice Department to investigate organizations that practice and carry out such efforts.

    This is something Trump tried to do in his first term as president when he issued a September 2020 executive order restricting the federal government and its contractors from offering diversity training that he labeled “divisive” and “un-American.” A federal judge blocked the order, and then Biden reversed it in 2021. Trump pledges to reinstate it.

    Activists march past the White House to protest the Trump administration’s approach to illegal border crossings and separation of children from immigrant parents on June 20, 2018. (AP)

    16. “He will bring back the architect of the child separation policy at the border” and “Tom Homan (will) run ICE.”

    Tom Homan was a former police officer who served as Trump’s acting director of ICE starting in January 2017 and part of 2018. He oversaw the early stages of the child separation policy for migrants, which became controversial and was later reversed by Trump.

    Homan said Trump will bring him back, but we did not find that Trump said that in the video Meidas cited.

    Homan said at an event in 2022 that Trump told him, “You and I will fix this in 2024.” Homan said, “I will make you this promise if he comes back, I come back and it’s not going to be nice.” He added, I shook his hand at Mar-a-Lago two weeks ago. If he comes back, I come back. And we will fix this sh–.”

    At a recent rally in New Hampshire, Trump said  “Tom Homan was incredible, right?” 

    We sent a message to Homan through his consulting website to ask about his remarks, and we also asked the Trump campaign in an email if Trump plans to bring Homan back. We did not get a reply. 

    17. “He would terminate the Constitution if he determined that fraud occurred during an election.” 

    Trump did say this, although he later sought to walk it back.

    In a Dec. 3, 2022, Truth Social post, Trump alleged election fraud in 2020 and wrote that “massive Fraud of this type and magnitude allows for the termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution. Our great ‘Founders’ did not want, and would not condone, False & Fraudulent Elections!”

    Two days after his post, Trump sought to walk back his words about the Constitution, writing in a new post, “The Fake News is actually trying to convince the American People that I said I wanted to ‘terminate’ the Constitution” and called it “disinformation and lies.”

    Despite Trump’s follow-up post, he said plainly in his initial statement the alleged fraud “allows for the termination” of constitutional rules. We rated Trump’s notion that he could terminate the Constitution Pants on Fire. 

    President Donald Trump walks with Wendy Sartory Link, Supervisor of Elections Palm Beach County, after casting his ballot for the presidential election on Oct. 24, 2020, in West Palm Beach, Fla. (AP)

    18. “Eliminate all early and absentee voting in America.” 

    Trump has been inconsistent about whether he wants to allow early voting or mail ballots.

    Trump told Real America’s Voice radio show, “We should have one-day voting, we should have paper ballots, and we should have voter ID.” But two days earlier, Trump recorded a message for the Republican National Committee’s 2024 early voting campaign called “Bank Your vote.”

    “Go to bankyourvote.com to sign up and commit to voting early. … We’re going to win, and we’re going to make America great again,” Trump said. 

    Legally, the idea that a president could shut down early voting is dubious. Those are decisions generally set by state legislators.

    19. “Create a commission to investigate his long-standing theory that vaccines cause autism.”

    Trump has repeatedly made comments that could leave voters with the impression that he is tying vaccines to autism — and he has said he would create a commission to investigate what is causing autism. However, in our review of Trump’s speeches, we found Trump was not as blunt as MeidasTouch asserts.

    Even before he ran for president a decade ago, Trump linked autism to vaccines — a claim that has been debunked.

    During a 2023 speech at the conservative Turning Point Action conference, Trump said he would not give “one penny” to any school that has a “vaccine mandate.” 

    Immediately following that comment, Trump said, “I will also continue my long record of standing up to Big Pharma by creating a special presidential commission to investigate what is causing the decades-long increase in childhood diseases, autoimmune disorders, autism, obesity, infertility and other chronic health problems.” 

    Although the comment about vaccines was followed by a comment about investigating what causes autism, Trump stopped short of directly linking vaccines and autism; he urged further investigation.

    20. “End birthright citizenship by executive order.” 

    Trump did make this promise. 

    Birthright citizenship is the automatic granting of citizen status to anyone born on United States soil. In a video, Trump said that “as part of my plan to secure the border on day one of my new term in office, I will sign an executive order making clear to federal agencies that under the correct interpretation of the law, going forward, the future children of illegal aliens will not receive automatic U.S. citizenship. It’s things like this that bring millions of people to our country.” 

    However, legal experts say that anything short of a constitutional amendment seeking to end birthright citizenship would prompt a major court battle.

    Trump broke his 2016 campaign promise to end birthright citizenship.

    21. He would “fire 40,000 career civil servants on day one and replace them with ‘patriots’ loyal to him.”

    This aligns with Trump’s past actions and reporting by the online news outlet Axios.

    Shortly before the 2020 election, Trump signed an executive order called “Creating Schedule F in the Excepted Service.” It established a new employment category for federal employees. Biden rescinded it when he took office.

    Under the order, tens of thousands of civil servants who have an influence over policy would become “Schedule F” employees without civil service protections. An initial estimate by the Trump administration estimated that it could apply to as many as 50,000 federal workers out of more than 2 million total. That would be more than 10 times larger than the current number of politically appointed federal positions, which is more than 4,000. 

    22. “Set up a commission to study whether genetically engineered marijuana is the cause of mass shootings.”

    Trump didn’t directly say that genetically engineered marijuana caused mass shootings, nor did he specify that a commission should study it. But he did suggest a possible link when he spoke at the National Rifle Association-Institute for Legislative Action’s leadership forum in April. 

    While discussing school safety and arming teachers, Trump said, “We need to drastically change our approach to mental health” and vowed to ask the Food and Drug Administration to convene an independent outside panel to investigate whether “transgender hormone treatments and ideology increase the risk of extreme depression, aggression and even violence.” Then he moved on to marijuana: “Furthermore, we have to look at whether common psychiatric drugs as well as genetically engineered cannabis and other narcotics are causing psychotic breaks.”

    23. “Abolish the Department of Education.” 

    He did make this promise, and it’s similar to pledges made by other Republican presidential candidates, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy.

    In a policy video, Trump promised to close the department and “to send all education work and needs back to the States.”

    However, eliminating the department would have to go through Congress, so Trump couldn’t do it on his own. 

    24. “Reinstitute a ban on transgender people serving in the military.”

    During his July 15 Turning Point Action speech, Trump vowed to reinstate his transgender military ban. “I will restore the Trump ban on transgender in the military. I had it stopped, totally stopped, and then they approved it,” he said. 

    Biden reversed the ban in January 2021, days after he took office.

    25. “He will ‘bring back God’ into the public school system.”

    He said this.

    In a recorded message played at Iowa’s annual Faith and Freedom Coalition conference, Trump said he would “bring back God to our schools and our public squares.”

    “On Day 1,” he continued, “we will begin to find the radical zealots and Marxists who have infiltrated the federal Department of Education and we will have them escorted from the building.”

    26. “Impose a new 10% tariff (tax) on all goods imported into the US.”

    This is basically what Trump said in an interview with Fox Business News.

    Trump suggested an “automatic” 10% tariff on goods imported from all countries. The only wiggle room might be that Trump said it would be imposed “when companies come in and dump their products in the United States.” “Dumping” has a specific definition in international trade, referring to instances in which a foreign company sells a product in the U.S. below its home-country price or lower than its cost of production.

    However, a later comment by Trump in the interview — that “I do like the 10% for everybody” — would support a more informal definition of the word.

    Biden’s White House said the 10% levy would amount to a “sweeping tariff tax on the middle class,” increasing inflation to spike and hamper economic growth, Bloomberg reported. 

    27. “Reinstitute a travel ban on people from Muslim countries.”

    Trump has repeatedly made this promise.

    “When I return to office, the travel ban is coming back even bigger than before and much stronger than before,” Trump said at an Iowa campaign event in July. “We don’t want people blowing up our shopping centers. We don’t want people blowing up our cities, and we don’t want people stealing our farms. So it’s not gonna happen.”

    In the statements we analyzed, Trump didn’t specify “Muslim.” But he said he is renewing his 2016 promise, which was a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States.” The Supreme Court upheld the third version of Trump’s ban, but it was not a “total” ban on Muslims entering the U.S., so we rated this a Promise Broken. 

    PolitiFact researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this article.

    RELATED: Trump broke about half of his campaign promises



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