Tag: General News

  • Davido, Samklef Clash After Producer Shared Video Of Newborn Babies

    Davido-Samklef

    Afrobeats star, David Adeleke (Davido) and music producer, Samuel Oguachuba (Samklef) have exchanged words after the latter shared a video of Davido’s newborn twins on Instagram.

    Samklef had on Friday shared a clip showing the moment Davido’s wife Chioma was discharged from an Atlanta hospital after giving birth to a set of twins.

    Reacting, Davido asked that the producer delete the video, calling him a ‘clout chaser’ and a ‘wicked’ person.

    However, Samklef refused to delete the video more than three hours after he posted it, saying he had done nothing wrong.

    He reminded Davido that as a celebrity, he no longer enjoys privacy.

    “The day you choose to be a celebrity your life is no longer private. Make I go take a nap. I refused to be bullied,” he posted on Instagram.

    In another post, the producer said “I mean good for them, but they meant harm for me. Maybe I should start blogging all the negative posts about him here that have been sent to me but ignored. Ask Asa Asika (Davido’s manager).”

    Davido and Chioma lost their son, Ifeanyi Adeleke, on October 31, 2022.

    Ifeanyi drowned in a swimming pool in Davido’s residence in Banana Island, Lagos State, days after his birthday.

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  • Fact Check: Cargo plane that evacuated people from Kabul, Afghanistan, in 2021 is real, not a decoy

    In August 2021, hundreds of people desperate to be evacuated from Afghanistan ran alongside a moving U.S. Air Force C-17 transport plane at the international airport in Kabul as the Taliban took control there. 

    A recent Facebook post rehashes an old unfounded conspiracy theory that the plane was fake. 

    In the video, the narrator points out how the windows and plane engines appear “blacked out.” 

    “This is what a C-17 that’s not an inflatable looks like,” the person says. “See the windows clearly. See the engines clearly.”

    An image of the aircraft appears with the label: “Inflatable decoy plane.”

    But there’s no evidence to support this claim. 

    This 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.)

    The footage of people running alongside the plane and clinging to it was shared Aug. 16, 2021, on X by an Afghan journalist. News outlets such as The Washington Post picked it up and published it. 

    Air Force officials have said the plane is real, and from the 62nd Airlift Wing at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state. 

    Further evidence that the plane is real: Human remains were discovered in the plane’s wheel well after the plane’s crew struggled to close the landing gear. The U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations investigated the incident and determined the crew “acted appropriately” under the circumstances, The Hill reported. The office released the remains to local police. 

    We rate claims that this plane was an inflatable decoy False.

     



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  • Feds rein in use of predictive software that limits care for Medicare Advantage patients – Paradise Post

    Susan Jaffe | KFF Health News (TNS)

    Judith Sullivan was recovering from major surgery at a Connecticut nursing home in March when she got surprising news from her Medicare Advantage plan: It would no longer pay for her care because she was well enough to go home.

    At the time, she could not walk more than a few feet, even with assistance — let alone manage the stairs to her front door, she said. She still needed help using a colostomy bag following major surgery.

    “How could they make a decision like that without ever coming and seeing me?” said Sullivan, 76. “I still couldn’t walk without one physical therapist behind me and another next to me. Were they all coming home with me?”

    UnitedHealthcare — the nation’s largest health insurance company, which provides Sullivan’s Medicare Advantage plan — doesn’t have a crystal ball. It does have naviHealth, a care management company bought by UHC’s sister company, Optum, in 2020. Both are part of UnitedHealth Group. NaviHealth analyzes data to help UHC and other insurance companies make coverage decisions.

    Its proprietary “nH Predict” tool sifts through millions of medical records to match patients with similar diagnoses and characteristics, including age, preexisting health conditions, and other factors. Based on these comparisons, an algorithm anticipates what kind of care a specific patient will need and for how long.

    But patients, providers, and patient advocates in several states said they have noticed a suspicious coincidence: The tool often predicts a patient’s date of discharge, which coincides with the date their insurer cuts off coverage, even if the patient needs further treatment that government-run Medicare would provide.

    “When an algorithm does not fully consider a patient’s needs, there’s a glaring mismatch,” said Rajeev Kumar, a physician and the president-elect of the Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine, which represents long-term care practitioners. “That’s where human intervention comes in.”

    The federal government will try to even the playing field next year, when the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services begins restricting how Medicare Advantage plans use predictive technology tools to make some coverage decisions.

    Medicare Advantage plans, an alternative to the government-run, original Medicare program, are operated by private insurance companies. About half the people eligible for full Medicare benefits are enrolled in the private plans, attracted by their lower costs and enhanced benefits like dental care, hearing aids, and a host of nonmedical extras like transportation and home-delivered meals.

    Insurers receive a monthly payment from the federal government for each enrollee, regardless of how much care they need. According to the Department of Health and Human Services’ inspector general, this arrangement raises “the potential incentive for insurers to deny access to services and payment in an attempt to increase profits.” Nursing home care has been among the most frequently denied services by the private plans — something original Medicare likely would cover, investigators found.

    After UHC cut off her nursing home coverage, Sullivan’s medical team agreed with her that she wasn’t ready to go home and provided an additional 18 days of treatment. Her bill came to $10,406.36.

    Beyond her mobility problems, “she also had a surgical wound that needed daily dressing changes” when UHC stopped paying for her nursing home care, said Debra Samorajczyk, a registered nurse and the administrator at the Bishop Wicke Health and Rehabilitation Center, the facility that treated Sullivan.

    Sullivan’s coverage denial notice and nH Predict report did not mention wound care or her inability to climb stairs. Original Medicare would have most likely covered her continued care, said Samorajczyk.

    Sullivan appealed twice but lost. Her next appeal was heard by an administrative law judge, who holds a courtroom-style hearing usually by phone or video link, in which all sides can provide testimony. UHC declined to send a representative, but the judge nonetheless sided with the company. Sullivan is considering whether to appeal to the next level, the Medicare Appeals Council, and the last step before the case can be heard in federal court.

    Sullivan’s experience is not unique. In February, Ken Drost’s Medicare Advantage plan, provided by Security Health Plan of Wisconsin, wanted to cut his coverage at a Wisconsin nursing home after 16 days, the same number of days naviHealth predicted was necessary. But Drost, 87, who was recovering from hip surgery, needed help getting out of bed and walking. He stayed at the nursing home for an additional week, at a cost of $2,624.

    After he appealed twice and lost, his hearing on his third appeal was about to begin when his insurer agreed to pay his bill, said his lawyer, Christine Huberty, supervising attorney at the Greater Wisconsin Agency on Aging Resources Elder Law & Advocacy Center in Madison.

    “Advantage plans routinely cut patients’ stays short in nursing homes,” she said, including Humana, Aetna, Security Health Plan, and UnitedHealthcare. “In all cases, we see their treating medical providers disagree with the denials.”

    UnitedHealthcare and naviHealth declined requests for interviews and did not answer detailed questions about why Sullivan’s nursing home coverage was cut short over the objections of her medical team.

    Aaron Albright, a naviHealth spokesperson, said in a statement that the nH Predict algorithm is not used to make coverage decisions and instead is intended “to help the member and facility develop personalized post-acute care discharge planning.” Length-of-stay predictions “are estimates only.”

    However, naviHealth’s website boasts about saving plans money by restricting care. The company’s “predictive technology and decision support platform” ensures that “patients can enjoy more days at home, and healthcare providers and health plans can significantly reduce costs specific to unnecessary care and readmissions.”

    New federal rules for Medicare Advantage plans beginning in January will rein in their use of algorithms in coverage decisions. Insurance companies using such tools will be expected to “ensure that they are making medical necessity determinations based on the circumstances of the specific individual,” the requirements say, “as opposed to using an algorithm or software that doesn’t account for an individual’s circumstances.”

    The CMS-required notices nursing home residents receive now when a plan cuts short their coverage can be oddly similar while lacking details about a particular resident. Sullivan’s notice from UHC contains some identical text to the one Drost received from his Wisconsin plan. Both say, for example, that the plan’s medical director reviewed their cases, without providing the director’s name or medical specialty. Both omit any mention of their health conditions that make managing at home difficult, if not impossible.

    The tools must still follow Medicare coverage criteria and cannot deny benefits that original Medicare covers. If insurers believe the criteria are too vague, plans can base algorithms on their own criteria, as long as they disclose the medical evidence supporting the algorithms.

    And before denying coverage considered not medically necessary, another change requires that a coverage denial “must be reviewed by a physician or other appropriate health care professional with expertise in the field of medicine or health care that is appropriate for the service at issue.”

    Jennifer Kochiss, a social worker at Bishop Wicke who helps residents file insurance appeals, said patients and providers have no say in whether the doctor reviewing a case has experience with the client’s diagnosis. The new requirement will close “a big hole,” she said.

    The leading MA plans oppose the changes in comments submitted to CMS. Tim Noel, UHC’s CEO for Medicare and retirement, said MA plans’ ability to manage beneficiaries’ care is necessary “to ensure access to high-quality safe care and maintain high member satisfaction while appropriately managing costs.”

    Restricting “utilization management tools would markedly deviate from Congress’ intent in creating Medicare managed care because they substantially limit MA plans’ ability to actually manage care,” he said.

    In a statement, UHC spokesperson Heather Soule said the company’s current practices are “consistent” with the new rules. “Medical directors or other appropriate clinical personnel, not technology tools, make all final adverse medical necessity determinations” before coverage is denied or cut short. However, these medical professionals work for UHC and usually do not examine patients. Other insurance companies follow the same practice.

    David Lipschutz, associate director of the Center for Medicare Advocacy, is concerned about how CMS will enforce the rules since it doesn’t mention specific penalties for violations.

    CMS’ deputy administrator and director of the Medicare program, Meena Seshamani, said that the agency will conduct audits to verify compliance with the new requirements, and “will consider issuing an enforcement action, such as a civil money penalty or an enrollment suspension, for the non-compliance.”

    Although Sullivan stayed at Bishop Wicke after UHC stopped paying, she said another resident went home when her MA plan wouldn’t pay anymore. After two days at home, the woman fell, and an ambulance took her to the hospital, Sullivan said. “She was back in the nursing home again because they put her out before she was ready.”

    ©2023 KFF Health News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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  • Salon Gossips: Cheating Husbands, Parenting And Other Secrets Women Share At Beauty Parlors

    Hair-Salon

    The salon, for many women, is not just a place to pamper themselves with hair makeovers and beauty treatments; it’s also a social hub for companionship.

    As women gather in the cosy embrace of salon chairs and under the warm glow of hair dryers, it becomes a sanctuary for the exchange of stories, the sharing of secrets, and the expression of personal experiences.

    The conversations naturally gravitate towards topics such as sex, family life, and parenting styles. These discussions help women connect, empathize, and seek advice from each other, making each visit to the salon an anticipated opportunity for this reporter to catch up on the latest gossips.

    As a single lady, the reporter eagerly anticipates these ‘salon gossips’ every two weeks when she visits to make her hair at BB12 Beauty Parlour to do her hair.

    Located in Dutse Market, Abuja, women who visit the salon often exchange stories that traverse politics and lifestyle.

    During the reporter’s visit this week, the salon’s customers ventured into a controversial topic: cheating husbands.

    Blessing, known as ‘Mummy Femi’, opened the discussion when she admitted that she was aware of her husband’s infidelity but is unbothered so long as he performs his obligations to her and their children.

    “My own is, he should provide me with money; I don’t care. God save him if I get any infection,” she said, adding in Pidgin English “Na that time you go know say madness get levels.”

    Blessing’s confession about her husband’s extramarital affairs set the stage for a lively discussion.

    Angela, another customer at the saloon, shared her own perspective on cheating husbands. “Where I will have an issue with you is when you fail to take care of your responsibilities or rub it on my face,” she explained.

    Angela shared an instance when her husband did not return home after hanging out with friends: “My husband the other day went out and didn’t come back, and you expect me to call him?” she laughed. “Nah, so he came back the next day and picked a fight because I didn’t ask about his movement. I only said, ‘Thank God you are back safe.”

    According to Angela, she would allow anything to tamper with her “mental stability because of some cheating man that calls himself a husband.”

    Betty, this reporter’s personal stylist, shared similar views on cheating husbands: “I don’t even have enough time for myself, children, and work, let alone to start monitoring a cheating man. He should go ahead, but he shouldn’t forget I’m also pretty, and men make passes at me too,” she declared with a confident smile.

    She went on to recount a funny tale about her husband’s jealousy, highlighting the hypocrisy that sometimes exists within relationships.

    “My husband and his friends engaged in a talk about my beauty regimen and how I don’t dress as they expect a married woman to. Interestingly, my husband approached me and asked me to stop whatever I was doing to maintain my radiant skin, with a stupid assurance that he would love me regardless of my complexion. It’s funny coming from someone who can’t take his eyes off beautiful women he sees.”

    After a while, Cecilia, who owns the larger part of the salon, changed the topic of discussion to parenting. The hairstylist who is often accompanied by her children to the saloon says she believes in advising her kids rather than chasing them around.

    “Any life you choose to live will be on you,” she firmly stated. Cecilia believes parents should adopt a hands-off approach to parenting and encourage personal responsibility by ensuring that their children understand the consequences of their actions.

    Betty also shared her story of growing up with a strict mother who, while loving, kept her on a tight leash.

    She attributes her youthful marriage to her mother’s vigilant eyes: “If my mom was soft or lenient enough, I wouldn’t have gotten married at the age I did.”

    She continued, “I couldn’t even have a male friend without my mother’s knowledge, or she’d report it to my father. She scared me into keeping nothing from her.”

    Not long after, Miriam, a skilled makeup artist who initially appeared uninterested in the conversation started a discussion about the unhealthy competition among hair stylists and makeup artists.

    “These hairstylists and makeup artists can kill for a customer,” she said, recounting an argument with Cecilia, another stylist, who she blamed for not referring a customer to her.

    Cecilia, in her response, explained that customers have a right to choose whichever stylist they like.

    “I simply asked why you didn’t recommend the customer to me, as I’m capable of making the hairstyle she desires. Please, let’s not misinterpret what I said,” she said.

    Editor’s Note: Out of respect for the privacy and confidentiality of the individuals mentioned, we have altered their real names, with one exception — Cecilia.

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  • Fact Check: Joe Biden isn’t ‘funding every angle’ of Israel-Hamas war, as misleading post claims

    As Israel bombarded Gaza with airstrikes in the days following a surprise attack by Hamas militants, one social media user attempted to tie the escalating conflict to money provided by President Joe Biden.

    “Biden doesn’t want the world to know that he is funding every angle of this conflict,” said text in an Oct. 11 Instagram post atop an image of competing missiles in the night sky.

    The post listed three claims about funding provided by Biden:

    • “Biden unfroze $360 million in 2021 and began sending it to Palestine.”

    • “America sends billions every year to Israel for military aid.”

    • “Biden unfroze $6 billion cash for Iran on 9/11.”

    This 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.)

    The post misleads by leaving out critical facts to give the impression that money provided by Biden is behind the current Israeli-Hamas fight. In short, U.S. aid to Palestinians was for humanitarian reasons; Biden’s military funding to Israel continues a long tradition of U.S. aid that predates Biden’s administration; and the $6 billion of unfrozen Iranian oil money has yet to be disbursed.

    Let’s take a closer look at the three claims.

    Claim: “Biden unfroze $360 million in 2021 and began sending it to Palestine.”

    The State Department announced in May 2021 that the U.S. was providing more than $360 million in aid to the Palestinian people in Gaza and the West Bank. The announcement came soon after a cease-fire in an 11-day conflict between Israel and Hamas.

    It also reversed a decision by former President Donald Trump, who in 2018 cut off U.S. funding for humanitarian assistance to Palestinians.

    The money Biden provided was for humanitarian purposes, not for military aid, as the Facebook post suggests. According to a 2021 statement from Secretary of State Antony Blinken, the aid would not go to Hamas, an Islamic militant group the U.S. designated as a terrorist organization in 1997. Hamas won elections in 2006 and has ruled Gaza since 2007.

    “All of these funds will be administered in a way that benefit the Palestinian people — not Hamas, which has only brought misery and despair to Gaza,” Blinken said in 2021.

    Claim: “America sends billions every year to Israel for military aid.”

    The U.S. sends billions of dollars every year to aid Israel’s military, but it has been doing so for decades under both Republican and Democratic administrations. In fiscal years 2021 through 2023, the U.S. sent about $12.4 billion total to Israel for its defense, according to a March report from the Congressional Research Service. 

    The U.S. has sent more than $124 billion dollars in military aid and missile defense to Israel since 1946, according to that report.

    Claim: “Biden unfroze $6 billion cash for Iran on 9/11.”

    In the context of this post, this claim omits some important details. The Biden administration made a deal with Iran to unfreeze $6 billion in Iranian oil revenue held in South Korean banks in exchange for the release of five American prisoners held in Iran. Five Iranians held in U.S. prisons were also released as part of the deal.

    The $6 billion deal was announced in August, although the administration officially told Congress on Sept. 11 that it had issued a waiver to give Iran access to the money.

    In the days after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack, many Republicans, including presidential candidates, criticized the deal, claiming that the money could have indirectly helped fund the assault on Israel. Some argued that “money is fungible” — meaning Iran may have spent money arming Hamas knowing it would soon have access to the released funds.

    Biden administration officials said none of the $6 billion, which was transferred from South Korea to Qatar’s central bank, has been disbursed to Iran yet, and any distribution would be supervised by the U.S. Treasury Department.

    Blinken said in an Oct. 12 news conference in Tel Aviv, Israel, that the money can only be dispensed for humanitarian goods and that the U.S. has “strict oversight of the funds, and we retain the right to freeze them.”

    Our ruling

    An Instagram post said Biden is funding “every angle” of the Israel-Hamas conflict, citing $360 million in aid to the Palestinians, military funding to Israel and the unfreezing of $6 billion in Iranian oil revenue.

    The post leaves out key context. The $360 million in aid to Palestinians was for humanitarian purposes, and didn’t go to Hamas. The U.S. has given military funding to Israel for decades. The $6 billion in Iranian oil money has yet to be disbursed, and also can be used only for humanitarian reasons.

    We rate the claim Mostly False.

    RELATED: 

    The US freed $6 billion in Iranian money. Did it help fund Hamas’ attack on Israel? 

    How to avoid misinformation about the war in Gaza 

    Donald Trump wrong that US tax dollars went to Iran, Hamas 

    Fact-check: What Trump said about ‘$6 billion to Iran,’ immigration, economy at New Hampshire rally 

    Hamas militants ‘pouring’ across U.S. southern border? Donald Trump’s claim is Pants on Fire! 



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  • ‘House of Usher’ is a brilliant, unsettling take on Edgar Allan Poe – Paradise Post

    Two of the most anticipated streaming series of the season — Netflix’s “The Fall of the House of Usher” and Apple TV+’s “Lessons in Chemistry” — originated from the literary world. But does that transition from page to screen work?

    Oh, yeah.

    Here’s our roundup.

    “The Fall of the House of Usher”: It’s risky to modernize or repurpose classic literary works and try to create something unique and visionary in the process. Even Oscar-winning filmmaker Alfonso Cuarón failed with a misguided “Great Expectations,” starring Ethan Hawke and Gwyneth Paltrow.

    But upscale horror filmmaker Mike Flanagan could write a textbook on how to do it right with his eight-part ode to legendary horror writer Edgar Allan Poe. This inspired “Usher” infuses Poe’s tales of terror with contemporary relevance and respects the source material.

    Flanagan’s macabre update of Poe’s story of familial depravity and madness serves as a table setting for an “And Then There Were None” schematic in which the ones getting picked off are soulless members of a privileged, uber-wealthy family that has built its pillar of wealth by addicting Americans to painkillers.

    Lording over this dynasty is a vile twosome with a rotten childhood to say the least: brother Roderick (the underrated Bruce Greenwood) and his conniving sister Madeline (the equally underrated Mary McDonnell).

    Ostensibly, Roderick is the patriarch in charge but he has a hard time corralling his narcissistic adult children (inheritors), all of whom have kinky dark sides that lead them down the bloody road to a Poe-inspired fate. Flanagan wrote or co-wrote all but one episode, and the writing is as razor-blade sharp and bloody clever as with his signature works, Netflix’s “The Haunting of Hill House,” “Midnight Mass” and the underrated standalone film “Doctor Sleep.”

    The creepy production values are top-notch and the scares are not only frightening but disturbing. (“Usher” is more gory and loads up on more sex than Flanagan’s past series). The cast is consistently strong and features Mark Hamill going gruff as the extra-busy Usher lawyer Arthur Pym, who attempts to mop up the family’s many messes. Another treat is seeing Flanagan regular Carla Gugino as a mysterious presence popping up throughout the lives of Roderick and Madeline. It all makes for ghoulish fun that’s well-suited for the upcoming Halloween season. Make no mistake, though, this isn’t just a bingeworthy streamer; “The Fall of the House of Usher” just so happens to be one of the best series Netflix has ever produced. Details: 4 stars out of 4; all episodes drop Oct. 13.

    “Lessons in Chemistry”: Ask any book club member to choose one of their favorite novels from 2022 and chances are Bonnie Garmus’ beguiling novel featuring a quirky brainiac with one of the best names ever — Elizabeth Zott — will pop up on that list. While the misfortune was mine for not reading it beforehand, I will definitely do so after watching showrunner Lee Eisenberg’s moving eight-part adaptation for Apple TV+.

    I can see why “Lessons in Chemistry” found a favored spot on bookshelves everywhere. But as fans know, divulging too much about what happens to Elizabeth (played to the eccentric hilt by Oscar winner Brie Larson) would be a recipe for hate mail. Suffice to say she stars as a brilliant chemist whose career is blotted by the patriarchy ruling the science world of the ‘50s. What can be also be said is that there is great chemistry between Larsen and Lewis Pullman as hot-shot chemist Calvin Evans who shares the same passion as she and is just as equally socially awkward. A turn of events upends their careers and leads the resilient Elizabeth on a path to a subversive cooking show. “Lessons in Chemistry” could have been tighter (trimmed to six episodes), and a subplot about Black neighbor Harriet (Aja Naomi King) fighting racial injustice could be more developed. Still, “Chemistry” comes up with a winning formula in the end. And one episode that gets told from the perspective of the family dog Six Thirty (voice of B.J. Novak) tears you up — particularly if you’re a pet owner. Details: 3 stars; two episodes drop Oct. 13, with a new episode dropping every Friday through Nov. 24.

    “Foe”: What unfolded well on paper doesn’t fare so well on screen in Garth Davis’ misguided but very good-looking version of Iain Reid’s ambitious sci-fi-tinged psychological drama. Its central premise about a stranger (Aaron Pierre) making an extraordinary offer that calls into the question the relationship of an isolated couple (Paul Mescal and Saoirse Ronan) in a farmhouse and separates them for an extended period of time is indeed intriguing, but the unpredictable turns in the screenplay — written by Davis and Reid — wind up ringing false and unraveling into a pretentious, impenetrable mess. There are big themes explored here — including AI — but the should-be unsettling material gets way too cluttered and at times becomes laughable, disconnecting us from the plight of these two, who seem to use up a hell of a lot of water during a drought that’s killing off the planet. That is just one of the puzzling aspects of a production that unfortunately squanders the talents of Mescal and Ronan and its gorgeous production values. Just read the book. Details: 1½ stars; opens Oct. 13 in San Francisco theaters and Oct. 20 at the Piedmont Theatre in Oakland.

    “The Caine Mutiny Court Martial”: In one of his final acts as director, the late, great William Friedkin presented his cast — notably Kiefer Sutherland as the quick-tempered Lt. Philip Francis Queeg (a part made immortal by Humphrey Bogart) — with the greatest gift he could offer, allowing each actor to take juicy command of the camera as it hones in on every facial tic and twitching hand on the witness stand. Each gets a chance to shine in this contemporized courtroom drama that’s based on Herman Wouk’s play. Queeg doesn’t get much screen time but his presence lingers throughout. Viewed as an old guard who’s out of touch, Queeg’s blamed by Lt. Steve Maryk (Jake Lacy, giving the role some shading) and others for putting members of the Navy at risk during a storm at sea. Maryk’s decision to step in and take command gets him branded as a mutineer and lands him in a court-martial trial, along with his reluctant lawyer (Jason Clarke). It makes for a classic courtroom thriller, and comes with a zinger at the end — a warning from a filmmaker who’s irreplaceable. Details: 3 stars; available on Showtime and Paramount+.

    “Castlevania: Nocturne”: In eight briskly told animated episodes, showrunners Kevin Kolde and Clive Bradley relocate the popular vampire streaming series in the French Revolution with vampire hunter Richter Belmont (voiced by Edward Bluemel) taking on a nasty batch of aristocrats preying on poor people. The action does get bloody and features a batch of new and intriguing characters, including the gay Olrox (voice of Zahn McClarnon of “The Dark Winds” series), an Aztec bloodsucker responsible for the death of Richter’s mom. He too senses that something major and ominous is in the works, and doesn’t like it. My only beef about this intricately plotted season is that its eighth episode lacks a true ending, making us gnash our teeth for another season. Fortunately, we’ll get it since Netflix just announced “Nocturne” has been renewed. Details: 3 stars; available now on Netflix.

    Contact Randy Myers at soitsrandy@gmail.com.

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  • Why We Lifted Forex Ban On Cement, Rice, 41 Other Items- CBN

    The Central Bank of Nigeria has released an explainer to defend its action of lifting foreign exchange restrictions on the 43 items excluded from accessing foreign exchange from the official market.

    The apex bank had on Thursday notified the public in a circular that it has lifted the foreign exchange restrictions placed on the importation of 43 items by the former CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele.

    Emefiele had in 2015 blacklisted the 43 items and two other items subsequently from the official forex window to reduce foreign exchange demand for products that could be locally produced, improve employment generation and conserve foreign reserves.

    This created room for the importers to source their foreign exchange from the black market which weakened the parallel-market exchange rate and pushed up prices.

    Explaining the reason for lifting the ban, the apex bank said, “The CBN wants to ensure price stability and is seeking to boost liquidity in the Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market. As liquidity improves, we expect the distortions to moderate.

    “The CBN wants to promote orderliness and professional conduct by all Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market participants to ensure market forces determine exchange rates on a Willing Buyer – Willing Seller principle. The CBN wants a unified market for FOREX with flexible and transparent pricing.”

    The CBN explained that the implication of the policy is that Monetary Policy tools would become more effective with the attainment of a unified, well-functioning market for FX, where pricing is based on a willing-buyer and willing-seller system.

    The apex bank said with this, the CBN’s core functions and mandates become realizable.

    The CBN explained, “The willing-buyer and willing-seller system allows the exchange rate to adjust to clear the market and ensure that there is always supply. In recent months, the widening premium between the official rate and the parallel market indicates that the rate has not been setting a clearing price.

    “Importers of these products rely on the parallel market to source FX for importing these goods. This puts additional demand pressures on the parallel market, thereby widening the gap with the official rate and permanently segmenting the market. Removing these restrictions eliminates the need for importers of these products to go to the parallel market, reducing the pressure on the naira.

    “The hitherto FX restrictions had implications on inflation, causing the prices of affected goods to increase.”

    However, the Senior Partner and Economist at SPM Professionals, Paul Alaje, argued that the decision was not well thought out.

    “I don’t know who advised us on these 43 items. It’s important we rethink the decision before it is too late. Our issues are around insufficient FX.

    “How is demand stimulation policy going to bring us out of the FX crisis? This may further weaken the naira,” Alaje said in reaction to the decision of the CBN.

    Source

  • Fact Check: Fact-checking Day 1 of the New Hampshire GOP summit

    NASHUA, N.H. — On the first day of a summit sponsored by the New Hampshire GOP, Republican presidential candidates emphasized support for Israel, embraced get-tough policies at the U.S.-Mexico border and advocated for federal spending cuts.  

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis railed against “moral equivalence” about deaths in Gaza as Israel’s military strikes back after an Oct. 7 attack by Hamas militants. DeSantis also said when it comes to Mexican drug cartels, he would “shoot them stone cold dead right at the southern border.”

    Former South Carolina governor and United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley took aim at Congressional Republicans, pointing to what she said is exorbitant spending on earmarks, a category where Republicans have outpaced Democrats. 

    Frontrunner and former President Donald Trump was the only leading candidate who didn’t make an appearance in Nashua. Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie earned the day’s only chorus of boos when he called out Trump for promoting the false narrative that the 2020 election was rigged.

    Vivek Ramaswamy joined other candidates in criticizing China. He said that we should “unshackle ourselves from the climate cult … while leaving China unchained.”

    Adding an element of unexpected drama to the event, Ramaswamy walked to the podium with a Colonial-era fife and drum corps. 

    Here, we fact-check several of the candidates’ claims. 

    Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie speaks to the press after his Oct. 13 speech at the GOP’s First in the Nation Summit in Nashua, New Hampshire. (Samantha Putterman/PolitiFact)

    Immigration

    DeSantis: “You have 7 million people coming into your country through the border illegally.”

    Haley: “6 million illegal immigrants have crossed that border.” 

    This is Mostly False.

    DeSantis and Haley misrepresent the data. Since Joe Biden took office in January 2021, U.S immigration authorities have encountered migrants about 7.2 million times at and between ports of entry. But that doesn’t mean that many migrants entered and remained in the U.S. That data shows events, not individuals, and one person can be recorded multiple times. 

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection data also shows that millions of those encounters led to removals. 

    Congress and federal government

    DeSantis: Imposing a central bank digital currency would allow the government to “limit transactions for ammo and gas and all the things elites don’t like.”

    This is misleading.

    When DeSantis made similar remarks in April, banking experts told PolitiFact that he  overstated the likelihood that such a system is possible, much less likely, to emerge in the United States — for a variety of technical, legal and political reasons.

    Experts said such surveillance may be technically possible. But in practice, U.S. laws do not permit the kinds of surveillance and control that DeSantis describes. 

    And even if it is technologically possible,”technology does not operate in a vacuum,” said American University law professor Hilary J. Allen. Systems can achieve specific goals only “if the relevant social and legal institutions permitted such use.”

    Haley: “Let’s claw back the $500 billion of unspent COVID funds that are still out there, instead of 87,000 IRS agents going after middle America.”

    The claim about the unspent COVID-19 funds is Half True, and the claim about 87,000 IRS agents is misleading.

    Government estimates show that more than $400 billion in pandemic relief money remained unspent as of Jan. 31. But a majority of the money has been allocated, meaning it’s earmarked to be spent and wouldn’t be eligible to be rescinded. Estimates about how much remains unspent and unallocated range from $70 billion to $90.5 billion.

    The government injected more money into the IRS as part of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. But the 87,000 figure includes all new hires — such as information technology experts and customer service representatives — not just enforcement staff. And many of those hires would go toward holding staff numbers steady in the face of budget cuts and retirements. About 7,000 new hires will focus on enforcement, making sure wealthy taxpayers and big corporations pay their taxes, according to an April 2023 IRS report.

    Haley: “Congress has only put out a budget four times in 40 years on time.”

    This is correct. The Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan research group, wrote earlier this year that Congress has passed its required appropriations measures on time only four times in the modern budgeting era. 

    Those were in fiscal years 1977, 1989, 1995 and 1997. 

    Ramaswamy: “Government agencies that should not exist … we will get in there and shut them down.”

    Ramaswamy repeated his promise to reduce the federal workforce by 75% during an eight-year presidency. Regardless of whether it’s a good or bad idea, he could be unable to carry it out on his own.

    Legal experts said sweeping cuts must be approved by Congress, and cannot be accomplished by presidential action alone.

    “The only way this could be changed would be for Congress to grant the president new reorganization authority,” said Donald F. Kettl, the former dean of the University of Maryland’s public policy school. “That seems highly unlikely.”

    Anne Marie Lofaso, a West Virginia University law professor, said Ramaswamy is arguing that the president “can unilaterally repeal a statute that authorizes the establishment of a government agency. That would be a radical revision of presidential power and a likely violation of separation of powers.”

    GOP presidential candidate and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis addresses the First in the Nation Summit in Nashua, N.H., on Oct. 13. (Louis Jacobson/PolitiFact)

    Fentanyl

    DeSantis: In Florida, “we had an 18-month-old baby crawling on the carpet of an AirBnB rental, and presumably whoever had it before was doing drugs. There was fentanyl residue in the carpet. The baby came in contact with it. And the baby died.”

    That’s what a March lawsuit alleges.

    Enora Lavenir, a 19-month-old visiting Wellington, Florida, died Aug. 7, 2021, at an AirBnB rental where her family was staying.

    The Palm Beach County Medical Examiner’s Office determined that the toddler died of acute fentanyl toxicity, NBC News reported when the lawsuit was filed. The family, who was visiting from France at the time of their AirBnB stay, filed a wrongful death lawsuit that said the property had a history of being used for parties. 

    NBC reported that a sheriff’s incident report showed investigators interviewed the prior renter, who said cocaine and marijuana were used during his stay, but not fentanyl. The sheriff’s office said the death is listed as accidental and the case is now closed.

    Education

    Haley: “Only 29% of our eighth graders in our country are proficient in reading. Only 26% of our eighth graders are proficient in math.”

    This is accurate. 

    The National Assessment of Educational Progress report — known as the nation’s report card — tests fourth and eighth graders on key academic subjects. The 2022 report, the first since the COVID-19 pandemic began, found that eighth grade reading scores declined in several states, and no state showed significant improvement, with an average 29% being proficient nationally. This continued a downward trend that predated the pandemic, but represented the largest average reading score decline since 1990.

    The report also found that eighth grade math scores fell in nearly every state, with 26% rated as proficient, down from 34% in 2019. 

    Electric vehicles

    DeSantis: “Places like California, they’re forcing all new cars, at a certain date, in the pretty close future, to be electric.”

    This is accurate.

    California has instituted an escalating scale for the percentage of new zero-emission cars and light trucks that must be sold on car lots  — 35% by 2026, 68% by 2030 and 100% by 2035. The state did not ban existing gasoline-powered cars.



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  • Jonathan Kuminga and bench lead Warriors to win against Lakers

    LOS ANGELES — The Warriors put together a veteran-laden roster in the offseason at a slight expense: They lack size.

    It’s a familiar shortcoming Golden State typically overcomes with pace and high IQ, but it becomes an issue against seven-footer Anthony Davis and the Los Angeles Lakers on both ends of the floor, especially with Draymond Green out due to injury.

    All that length mucked up the Warriors’ ball movement and Golden State’s road woes from last year seeped into their performance on Friday. But the Warriors won out a battle between the two teams’ bench squads in a tight 129-125 win on Friday night at Crypto.com Arena. Trayce Jackson-Davis’ block in the final seconds of the game, initially called a foul then overturned, helped secure the win.

    Jonathan Kuminga looks to be gaining confidence on the offensive end. He led the team again in points with 26 and didn’t hesitate to take the open 3-pointers — he went 3-for-5 from beyond the arc.

    Though they were competitive on the boards, defensively they struggled to contain Austin Reaves and saw Taurean prince get hot from 3-point land. The starting five of Paul, Steph Curry, Klay Thompson, Andrew Wiggins and Kevon Looney had the leash to play into the 20-minute range.

    The starters’ highlight play came early on when Curry passed out of trouble to Paul at the top of the arc, who found a relocating Curry on the wing for a 3-pointer. A good indication that the two guards are jiving.

    Looney got into foul trouble early and played only 11 minutes, making way for rookie Jackson-Davis to play. He collected four quick fouls, but came back into the game later and delivered a key play.

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  • JUST IN: Bayo Onanuga Finally Gets Appointment As Tinubu Names New Aides On Ministerial Coordination

    Bayo-Onanuga-and-Femi-Fani-Kayode

    …As Femi Fani-Kayode Continues To Wait

    President Bola Tinubu has finally appointed Bayo Onanuga, one of the spokespersons in his presidential campaign organization, as a special adviser.

    Onanuga, who had served as the Director of Media and Publicity in Tinubu’s campaign team, was notably one of the members of that campaign organization yet to receive an appointment in the president’s administration.

    While aides like Dele Alake and Festus Keyamo, who had played key roles in the campaign, were appointed as ministers, Onanuga had to patiently wait for his turn.

    The wait came to an end on Friday night as the Presidency announced the appointment of Onanuga as the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy.

    Ajuri Ngelale, President Tinubu’s media adviser, made the announcement late Friday.

    Ngelale further revealed that Ms. Delu Bulus Yakubu was also named as the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation.

    A veteran in media management, Onanuga is the Managing Director of The News/PMNews and former Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    Ngelale said the appointments were “part of efforts to prioritize effective and efficient working synergy between the Presidency and Federal Ministries” that the appointees “have prior working experience within the architecture of the Federal Ministries they will be coordinating with, in addition to duties that will be carried out at the President’s discretion.”

    Meanwhile, the former Minister of Aviation, Femi Fani-Kayode, who served in Tinubu’s campaign organization as Director of New Media, has yet to be considered for appointment.

    Source