Journalist Bob Woodward, seen here in 2017 arriving for meetings with President-elect Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York, is the author of the newly released book Rage.

Kena Betancur/AFP via Getty Images


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Kena Betancur/AFP via Getty Images

Journalist Bob Woodward, seen here in 2017 arriving for meetings with President-elect Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York, is the author of the newly released book Rage.

Kena Betancur/AFP via Getty Images

Famed journalist Bob Woodward is addressing criticism he’s received for not promptly sharing with the public what the president told him about the coronavirus and the government’s response in a series of interviews earlier this year.

Woodward’s new book, Rage, which details the interviews, is set for release Tuesday.

During one phone interview on Feb. 7, President Trump shared with Woodward that the virus is airborne and is “more deadly than even your strenuous flus.”

And yet the next month, Trump publicly compared COVID-19 to the seasonal flu.

But Woodward told NPR All Things Considered host Mary Louise Kelly in an interview that in February, he thought Trump was referring to the virus in China.

“I … believed he was talking about the virus in China, because he had talked to Chinese President Xi [Jinping] the night before,” he said.

Woodward said he unsuccessfully tried to gain access to the transcript of the call between the two world leaders to confirm that it was Xi who gave that information about the virus to Trump.

By March, Woodward told NPR, the virus was clearly an “American problem” too.

“And so I’m asking the question, what did the president know, when did he know it, and how did he know it? And I worked for two and a half months to find out and it was finally in May when I discovered that there was this meeting, Jan. 28, in the Oval Office.”

That January meeting is the opening scene of Rage, in which Woodward says national security adviser Robert O’Brien tells Trump that the coronavirus would be the “biggest national security threat you face in your presidency.”

“I wish I knew what I learned in May earlier. Unfortunately, I did not,” Woodward said.

He added: “I’ve done this almost for 50 years, and I think I have a public health responsibility, like any citizen does — or maybe a journalist has more of a responsibility. If at any point I had thought there’s something to tell the American people that they don’t know, I would do it.”

In a March interview, Trump admitted to Woodward that he had been playing down the virus’s severity.

“I wanted to always play it down,” Trump told Woodward on March 19. “I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic.”

Trump has since defended his decision to mislead the public about the severity of the coronavirus, saying he wanted to project “strength.”

“What I went out and said is very simple: I want to show a level of confidence, and I want to show strength as a leader, and I want to show our country is going to be fine one way or another,” Trump said at a news conference on Thursday.

More than 190,000 Americans have now died from the coronavirus.

Said Woodward to Kelly: “If there’s a tragedy in all of this and I think there is, it’s that Trump who said, ‘I wanted to play it down, because I didn’t want to create a panic.’ And my study of nine presidents, 20% of the presidents we’ve had, and the history before that is when the country is told the truth, they don’t panic.”

Woodward reflected on another call from Trump, in early April, in which he hung up “feeling worried for the country.”

“I said [to Trump] … ‘This is a moment of crisis and necessity, you have a leadership responsibility … you’re gonna be judged by the virus,’ ” Woodward remembered.

“I was pushing him to deal with it, quite frankly … and at the end of the book, I say in totality: Trump is the wrong man for the job.”

Joe Biden, the Democratic nominee for president, called the president’s actions a “betrayal of the American people.”

“He had the information. He knew how dangerous it was. And while the deadly disease ripped through our nation, he failed to do his job on purpose,” he said during a campaign stop in Michigan on Thursday.

For the book, Woodward conducted 17 on-the-record interviews with Trump, spanning from December to late July, on the economy, race relations and the foreign policy.

Woodward told NPR’s Kelly that war between the United States and North Korea got far closer than many realized in 2017.

“It reached the point … that then-Secretary of Defense James Mattis would go to the National Cathedral to pray and reflect on what his responsibility would be if there was some sort of nuclear exchange with North Korea. It got very dicey,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/09/14/912524343/woodward-addresses-criticism-that-he-shouldve-detailed-trump-interviews-earlier

If Mr. Biden is able to make inroads across the state’s Republican-rich retirement communities with voters who regret supporting Mr. Trump or voted third-party in 2016, it would greatly complicate the G.O.P.’s arithmetic. And should the president perform better with Hispanics than he did four years ago, and cut deeply into Mr. Biden’s advantage in urban areas like Miami, it would all but block any Democratic path to victory in Florida.

It’s a departure from an earlier era, when the key to claiming this polyglot political jigsaw puzzle was wooing voters along the I-4 corridor across the middle of the state. Candidates from both parties beat a path to that fabled stretch of highway because the electorate around Tampa and Orlando was up for grabs.

Now, though, with surveys indicating that over 90 percent of voters know who they are supporting, the race could be decided by who does a better job turning out those who have already decided.

No voters appear more decisive than seniors, who polls show are more amenable to Mr. Biden than they were Ms. Clinton, and Hispanics, who the same surveys indicate are more supportive of Mr. Trump than they were in 2016.

“Cuban-Americans have consolidated more around Trump, and the thing that has not gelled for Joe as it should are Puerto Rican voters,” said former Senator Bill Nelson, a Democrat who is close to Mr. Biden. Mr. Nelson, who lost in 2018 in part because of Senator Rick Scott’s gains with Hispanics, said he had told Mr. Biden’s senior campaign staff about his concern.

Asked if they were acting on his plea, he said, “If they want to win, they better be.”

Amid the anxiety, Mr. Biden’s campaign dispatched his running mate, Senator Kamala Harris, to Miami last week, where she made an unscheduled stop at an arepa joint in Doral, home to so many Venezuelans that it is nicknamed Doralzuela.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/14/us/politics/florida-trump-biden-2020.html

A ‘firenado’ has been captured on camera in California as wildfires tear through large swathes of the west coast, killing at least 35 people. 

Footage showing a wildfire meeting a column of air to create a tornado-like effect was posted on TikTok on Thursday went viral over the weekend.

Social media users nicknamed the state ‘Hellifornia’, with one writing: “2020 said ‘Hey, y’all know what’s missing? A firenado! That would be so awesome! I got the perfect place, too. Here me out….”‘ one person wrote.

Another posted to Twitter: ‘2020 is something straight out of a dark science fiction novel, y’all ever seen a tornado on fire?’

The clip was posted as firefighters in California were bracing for a shift in weather that could bring stronger winds Monday and stoke dozens of fires still raging across the state. 

California this week experienced what’s being dubbed a ‘firenado’. The National Weather Service issued a red flag warning for Northern California through Monday night, saying strong southerly winds and low humidity will result in elevated fire weather conditions across the region

Twitter users called the wild fire a ‘firenado’ and nicknamed California ‘Hellifornia’ after the video was posted on Thursday

A search and rescue team, surrounded by red fire retardant, look for victims under burned residences and vehicles in the aftermath of the Almeda fire in Talent, Oregon on Sunday

Firefighters Kyle Parker (L) Battalion Chief Bob Horst (C) and Sam Hochstatter from the Grant County Fire Department work to secure the fire line on the Cold Springs Fire on Thursday in Omak, Washington. Dozens of wildfires are raging throughout West as record high temperatures and dry vegetation fuel the fast-moving, destructive blazes, destroying hundreds of acres

The National Weather Service issued a red flag warning for Northern California through Monday night with Incident Meteorologist Dan Borsum saying strong southerly winds and low humidity will result in elevated fire weather conditions across the region.

He said conditions may improve a little bit Tuesday but not a lot. Borsum added that the air quality in the region may not improve until October.

More than 16,750 firefighters were doing battle with fires that had already killed 22 people, destroyed more than 4,100 structures and engulfed scores of communities from the Oregon border to Mexico.

Then a Northern California sheriff said Sunday that two more people have died from wildfires, bringing the state’s total death toll to 24. Oregon had 10 fatalities and a one-year-old boy died in Washington.

The fires on the West Coast have been among the worst ever recorded. In California over 3.2 million acres were charred last month.

The Bobcat Fire burns in the Angeles National Forest north of Arcadia prompting evacuations, north East of Los Angeles

Firefighters watch the Bobcat Fire after an evacuation was ordered for the residents of Arcadia, California on Sunday

A firefighter works to extinguish the Bobcat Fire after an evacuation was ordered in Arcadia on Sunday

A helicopter drops water over the Bobcat fire, burning in the Angeles National Forest, near Arcadia, California

There was also a warning in effect in Oregon on Sunday night after the weather service said that the wind, humidity and fire danger will ‘likely contribute to a significant spread of new and existing fires.’

Gusts of wind are expected to reach up to 40 mph.

At least 10 people were killed in wildfires that burned the past week throughout Oregon where 35 fires have devastated 902,620 acres.

Officials have said more people are missing from other blazes and the number of fatalities is likely to rise.

Andrew Phelps, Oregon’s emergency management director, said that the state was preparing for a ‘mass fatality incident.’

‘There are going to be a number of fatalities, folks who just couldn’t get warning in time and evacuate their homes and get to safety,’ Phelps told MSNBC on Friday.

One resident told Reuters about the scene in the town of Pheonix, ‘It looks like a war just happened here,’

The fire melted the motor right out of my truck – it drained down the driveway,’ said Manson, a 43-year-old construction worker. ‘I lost everything. I lost all my tools. My truck. I can’t work. I lost $30,000 worth of guitars. All gone.’

Nearly a week after wildfires ignited across Oregon, which forced thousands of residents to flee their homes, firefighters spent Sunday setting and holding containment lines and starting to assess the damage.

A firefighter looks out over an area where crews are working to create a boundary around the Riverside fire near Fernwood, Oregon on Sunday

A search and rescue team from Salt Lake City, Utah, including a canine, look for victims through gutted homes in the aftermath of the Almeda fire in Talent, Oregon

A burned tree smolders after firefighters and community members extinguished a wildfire on Sunday (left). A search and rescue team, surrounded by red fire retardant, look for victims under burned residences and vehicles in the aftermath of the Almeda fire in Talent (right)

The Oak Park Motel was destroyed by the flames of the Beachie Creek Fire east of Salem, Oregon, Sunday

Flames from the Beachie Creek Fire melted the aluminum rims on a car near the destroyed Oregon Department of Forestry, North Cascade District Office in Lyons, Oregon on Sunday

The Webber family searches for belongings through their home, which was gutted by the Almeda fire, in Talent

Evacuees from the Riverside Fire stay in tents at the Milwaukie-Portland Elks Lodge in Oak Grove, Oregon on Sunday

Upper McKenzie Rural Fire Chief Christiana Rainbow Plews and several of her colleagues in Oregon lost their homes in the Holiday Farm Fire.

She left her home to respond to a downed power line and said the fire it caused quickly spread, making her issue a level 3 evacuation order within a couple of hours.

‘I not only have my life to put back together, I also have a fire department to put back together,’ Plews told NBC News. ‘And I honestly don’t know how I’m going to do that.’

She said many people on her team worked a week straight with only a 24 hour rest period by Sunday when the blaze had burned 161,872 acres and was only five per cent contained.

The US Forest Service said weather conditions in areas of the state, which include mist and favorable wind, was helping to limit the rapid spread of the blaze and dispersing smoke and fog to better firefighting conditions.

Two of the Oregon’s largest fires that continue to threaten communities in Clackamas and Marion Counties remained completely uncontained Sunday, but more favorable weather and an easing of some evacuation warnings in areas indicate an improving situation.

One of the large fires ravaging the area, the Riverside Fire was still within half a mile of the small city of Estacada, but the spread of the blaze has slowed.

In Marion County, where firefighters have been battling the Lionshead and Beachie Creek fires, evacuation levels of several cities were reduced during the weekend.

People in central and northeast Oregon, including in Eugene, Portland and Salem, continued to face hazardous air quality Sunday.

The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality reported Air Quality Index numbers that were off the chart.

Air Quality Index is considered hazardous between 301 and 500. Portland´s index is currently at 426.

Values above 500 – which two cities, Madras and Roseburg both reported having – are beyond the index´s scale.

Officials advised people to stay indoors and that the low visibility, caused by fog and smoke, is creating hazardous driving conditions.

In Salem, where the Air Quality Index is 394, a dense smokey haze that clouded roads and homes made it difficult to see further than 50 yards ahead.

The National Weather Service in Portland reported that rain is expected Monday night, which could help clear smoke in Oregon next week. 

Veterinary technician Cathy Ackerman checks the medical equipment by the cages for the injured cats at the Southern Oregon Veterinary Specialty Center (SOVSC)

An injured 8 week old kitten with facial burns is being treated at SOVSC, which is a 24/7 hospital dealing with rescued animals from the destructive wildfires devastating the region on Saturday

Almost a dozen cats rescued amid scorching wildfires in Oregon are being cared for at a veterinary hospital and staff members have posted their photos on social media hoping to reunite them with their owners.

The cats have burned paws covered in bandages. Some of their bellies are seared and, in one case, a cat nicknamed Depot because he was found by the Home Depot, is hooked up to oxygen because its lungs suffered damage from the hot smoke.

Rory Applegate, a veterinarian at Southern Oregon Veterinary Specialty Center, says staff members are working even though some of them have had to evacuate or had family impacted by the blazes.

Applegate says the fires are a ‘huge emotional toll’ on the staff but they are balancing out the management of critical patients and making sure they can stay stable themselves.

She said she expects animals to feel the impact of the heavy smoke in the coming days, too. 

Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8728785/Firenado-captured-swirling-California-wildfires-kill-35-people-West-Coast.html

A crowd at President TrumpDonald John TrumpCrowd aims ‘lock him up’ chant at Obama during Trump rally Nevada governor: Trump ‘taking reckless and selfish actions’ in holding rally Michigan lieutenant governor blasts Trump coronavirus response: He ‘is a liar who has killed people’ MORE‘s rally Sunday evening chanted “lock him up” after the president accused his predecessor, former President Obama, of being caught “spying” on the 2016 Trump campaign.

During the event in Henderson, Nev., Trump told attendees that the former president “got caught spying on my campaign,” referring to longstanding accusations from him and his allies that the investigation into the Trump campaign’s contacts with Russia in 2016 was orchestrated by the Obama administration in an attempt to sink his candidacy, a claim for which there is no evidence.

In response, many attendees began chanting “lock him up!”, a riff on the “lock her up” chant the president encouraged during his 2016 run against Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonCrowd aims ‘lock him up’ chant at Obama during Trump rally Author Cooper Lawrence discusses pros and cons of celebrity endorsements Trump campaign aide envisions ‘similar scenario’ as in 2016 MORE (D), during which he alleged that his opponent had committed crimes by operating a private email server as secretary of state.

The president has ratcheted up his rhetoric aimed at Obama in recent months, accusing the former president in June of committing “treason” while touting the upcoming results of the Justice Department’s investigation into the origins of the probe into the Trump campaign.

“Treason. Treason. It’s treason,” Trump told CBN News in June.

“They’d been spying on my campaign,” the president added at the time. “Turned out I was right. Let’s see what happens to them now.”

His repeated baseless claims come as the Justice Department’s own inspector general previously told the Senate late last year that neither the former president nor former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenCrowd aims ‘lock him up’ chant at Obama during Trump rally Biden campaign plans to run ad during every NFL game until Election Day LA mayor condemns protesters shouting ‘death to police’ outside hospital treating ambushed officers MORE (D) were involved with the decision to begin the investigation.

“We certainly didn’t see any evidence of that in the FBI’s files or the department’s files,” he told the Senate Judiciary Committee in December.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/516252-crowd-aims-lock-him-up-chant-at-obama-during-trump-rally

Journalist Bob Woodward, seen here in 2017 arriving for meetings with President-elect Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York, is the author of the newly released book Rage.

Kena Betancur/AFP via Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Kena Betancur/AFP via Getty Images

Journalist Bob Woodward, seen here in 2017 arriving for meetings with President-elect Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York, is the author of the newly released book Rage.

Kena Betancur/AFP via Getty Images

Famed journalist Bob Woodward is addressing criticism he’s received for not promptly sharing with the public what the president told him about the coronavirus and the government’s response in a series of interviews earlier this year.

Woodward’s new book, Rage, which details the interviews, is set for release Tuesday.

During one phone interview on Feb. 7, President Trump shared with Woodward that the virus is airborne and is “more deadly than even your strenuous flus.”

And yet the next month, Trump publicly compared COVID-19 to the seasonal flu.

But Woodward told NPR All Things Considered host Mary Louise Kelly in an interview that in February, he thought Trump was referring to the virus in China.

“I … believed he was talking about the virus in China, because he had talked to Chinese President Xi [Jinping] the night before,” he said.

Woodward said he unsuccessfully tried to gain access to the transcript of the call between the two world leaders to confirm that it was Xi who gave that information about the virus to Trump.

By March, Woodward told NPR, the virus was clearly an “American problem” too.

“And so I’m asking the question, what did the president know, when did he know it, and how did he know it? And I worked for two and a half months to find out and it was finally in May when I discovered that there was this meeting, Jan. 28, in the Oval Office.”

That January meeting is the opening scene of Rage, in which Woodward says national security adviser Robert O’Brien tells Trump that the coronavirus would be the “biggest national security threat you face in your presidency.”

“I wish I knew what I learned in May earlier. Unfortunately, I did not,” Woodward said.

He added: “I’ve done this almost for 50 years, and I think I have a public health responsibility, like any citizen does — or maybe a journalist has more of a responsibility. If at any point I had thought there’s something to tell the American people that they don’t know, I would do it.”

In a March interview, Trump admitted to Woodward that he had been playing down the virus’s severity.

“I wanted to always play it down,” Trump told Woodward on March 19. “I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic.”

Trump has since defended his decision to mislead the public about the severity of the coronavirus, saying he wanted to project “strength.”

“What I went out and said is very simple: I want to show a level of confidence, and I want to show strength as a leader, and I want to show our country is going to be fine one way or another,” Trump said at a news conference on Thursday.

More than 190,000 Americans have now died from the coronavirus.

Said Woodward to Kelly: “If there’s a tragedy in all of this and I think there is, it’s that Trump who said, ‘I wanted to play it down, because I didn’t want to create a panic.’ And my study of nine presidents, 20% of the presidents we’ve had, and the history before that is when the country is told the truth, they don’t panic.”

Woodward reflected on another call from Trump, in early April, in which he hung up “feeling worried for the country.”

“I said [to Trump] … ‘This is a moment of crisis and necessity, you have a leadership responsibility … you’re gonna be judged by the virus,’ ” Woodward remembered.

“I was pushing him to deal with it, quite frankly … and at the end of the book, I say in totality: Trump is the wrong man for the job.”

Joe Biden, the Democratic nominee for president, called the president’s actions a “betrayal of the American people.”

“He had the information. He knew how dangerous it was. And while the deadly disease ripped through our nation, he failed to do his job on purpose,” he said during a campaign stop in Michigan on Thursday.

For the book, Woodward conducted 17 on-the-record interviews with Trump, spanning from December to late July, on the economy, race relations and the foreign policy.

Woodward told NPR’s Kelly that war between the United States and North Korea got far closer than many realized in 2017.

“It reached the point … that then-Secretary of Defense James Mattis would go to the National Cathedral to pray and reflect on what his responsibility would be if there was some sort of nuclear exchange with North Korea. It got very dicey,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/09/14/912524343/woodward-addresses-criticism-that-he-shouldve-detailed-trump-interviews-earlier

The forecast track for the center of Tropical Storm Sally shifted east Sunday night to a landfall near the Louisiana-Mississippi border, reversing a westward trend earlier in the day and possibly keeping the worst of the eventual hurricane’s winds, intense rainfall and highest storm surge away from metro New Orleans.

But National Hurricane Center forecasters warned that the storm remains a potent threat to much of the northern Gulf Coast because it is expected to slow over the next two days before making landfall, and could still change course. 

It is still expected to reach hurricane strength by 7 p.m. Monday as it approaches the mouth of the Mississippi River. The new forecast track takes the eye of what’s expected to be a 130-mile-wide storm with top winds of 90 mph across the river’s mouth in Plaquemines Parish by 7. a.m. Tuesday. 

It will take 12 hours for the storm to make a final landfall at the state border at 7 p.m. Tuesday, still with top winds of 80 mph, and another half day – 7 a.m. Wednesday — to drop to tropical storm force, with winds of 50 mph, near Jackson, Miss.

At 10 p.m., Sally was 140 miles southwest of Panama City, Florida, and 185 miles east southeast of the Mississippi’s mouth, moving northwest at 8 mph.

It had maximum sustained wind gusts of 60 mph.

“Sally is expected to produce rainfall of 8 to 16 inches with isolated amounts of 24 inches over portions of the central Gulf Coast from the western Florida Panhandle to southeast Louisiana from Monday through the middle of the week,” the hurricane center said in its forecast advisory.

In New Orleans, sustained winds of 65 mph, with gusts to 80 mph are expected, with tropical storm-force winds expected by early Tuesday morning, according to a Sunday night update from the Slidell office of the National Weather Service. The high winds will be accompanied by an additional 12 to 18 inches of rain, with some locations seeing even higher amounts. 

Baton Rouge is likely to miss the worst of the winds, with sustained winds reaching only 20 mph, with gusts to 25, accompanied by an additional 2 to 4 inches of rain. 

St. Tammany Parish is expected to see winds up to 55 mph, with gusts to 65 mph, and rainfall of up to 18 inches, with higher amounts in some locatons. 

State of emergency declarations have been made in areas across southeast Louisiana and some regions are under evacuation orders.

The potential heavy rainfall could be a significant threat to locations away from the coast, including the Baton Rouge area. 

Sally’s delayed development and slow movement towards a landfall are complicating its forecast, according to the hurricane center.

“It is too early to determine where Sally’s center will move onshore given the uncertainty in the timing and location of Sally’s northward turn near the central Gulf Coast,” said Senior Hurricane Specialist John Cangialosi in a 10 p.m. forecast discussion message.  He warned that additional adjustments in the forecast track are likely to be required overnight. The next interim advisory is at 1 a.m., and next full advisory is at 4 a.m.

The eastward shift in the track was necessitated by a jog to the northeast of Sally’s center identified by an Air Force Hurricane Hunter plane that was investigating the storm at the time of the 10 p.m. forecast update. Global forecast models show a trough of low pressure is moving off the northeast U.S. coast on Monday, with a blocking ridge of high pressure building in to the storm’s north, “Which should cause the storm to resume a west-northwest motion at a relatively slow pace on Monday.”

But on Monday night and Tuesday, that ridge will slide southeastward as another trough of low pressure develops over the south-central part of the country, and that is likely to cause Sally to slow even more, and then gradually turn north and then northeast.

That takes Sally on a slower and more easterly path than previous forecasts, but models indicate that the center of the storm might slip even farther east. No matter what happens, this slowly-developing pattern is likely to provide additional time for Sally to strengthen, as a low pressure system that was producing northwesterly shear that limited the storm’s development is moving away.

“These more conducive winds aloft combined with the very warm Gulf of Mexico waters and a moist air mass should allow the cyclone to steadily strengthen until Sally crosses the coast in 36 to 48 hours,” Cangialosi said.

The slow process also is expected to increase the time that storm surge will be a threat to the northern Gulf Coast, including areas outside the New Orleans area hurricane levee system.

Equally important, is the increased rain threat this delayed landfall will create all along the coast. “Widespread significant flash flooding and minor to isolated major river flooding is likely across southeastern Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama thorugh the middle of the week,” he said. “Flooding impacts are expected to spread farther across the southeast U.S. through the week.”

A flash flood watch remains in effect for all of southeastern Louisiana through Thursday morning. 

The next track update will be 4 am Monday.



Source Article from https://www.nola.com/news/hurricane/article_bc64d506-f62a-11ea-9a10-f7364bb7596d.html

Los Angeles’ Democratic  Mayor Eric Garcetti called the actions of protesters gathered outside a hospital treating two law enforcement officers who were ambushed and shot on Saturday “abhorrent,” while offering up his prayers for a speedy recovery for the wounded sheriff’s deputies.

Garcetti’s comments, which he made on Sunday during an interview on NBC’s “Meet The Press,” come only hours after a group of protesters shouted slogans like “Death to the police!” outside the hospital where a 31-year-old female Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy and a 24-year-old male deputy underwent surgery Saturday evening.

“There’s no place in civilized society for anybody to draw an arm and to shoot our law enforcement officers that put their lives on the line,” Garcetti said. “And I won’t ever let a couple voices that not only are uncalled for, but it’s abhorrent to say something like that when we have two deputies, who are sheriff’s deputies, in grave condition.”

COMPTON ‘AMBUSH’ LEAVES 2 LA COUNTY SHERIFF’S DEPUTIES ‘FIGHTING FOR THEIR LIVES’

The deputies were shot while sitting in their patrol car at a Metro rail station and were able to radio for help, the sheriff said. Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva, whose department has come under fire during recent protests over racial unrest, expressed frustration over anti-police sentiment as he urged people to pray for the deputies.

“It pisses me off. It dismays me at the same time,” he said.

The incident happened around 7 p.m. a short distance from the Compton sheriff’s station south of downtown Los Angeles. The gunman remains at large.

Both officers are out of surgery as of Sunday. One of the deputies was shot in the face and the other in the head.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, called the shooting of the two deputies “a horrific, cowardly act” in a tweet on Sunday.

“A 31 year-old mother and a 24 year-old are fighting for their lives because of this cowardly, horrific act,” he tweeted. “The perpetrator must be quickly brought to justice.”

Newsom’s comments were echoed by Rep. Nanette Diaz Barragán, a Democrat who represents the congressional district where the two officers were ambushed.

“Prayers for the two Sheriffs Deputies shot near the Blue Line tonight as they fight for their lives,” she tweeted. “The video is disturbing and shows a coward ambushing the officers. May the suspect be brought to justice.”

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department tweeted video of the shooting that shows a person open fire through the passenger-side window of the patrol car.

While there was a quick condemnation from state and local lawmakers in California, nationally the news of the ambush did not garner as forceful of a response.

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Neither House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., nor Rep. Maxine Waters, a prominent Democrat who represents parts of Los Angeles County, have publically commented on the shooting as of Sunday afternoon.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., asked his followers on social media to pray for the wounded law enforcement agents, while President Trump angrily tweeted out the video of the shooting along with the comment that “Animals that must be hit hard!”

Both Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris of California, roundly condemned the shooting.

“This cold-blooded shooting is unconscionable and the perpetrator must be brought to justice,” Biden tweeted. “Violence of any kind is wrong; those who commit it should be caught and punished.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/los-angeles-mayor-calls-protests-outside-hospital-treating-wounded-sheriffs-abhorrent

President Trump signed an executive order Sunday to lower the cost of prescription drugs, he revealed on Twitter.

Trump announced that the aim of the order is to reduce prices to give America “the same low price Big Pharma gives to other countries.”

“Just signed a new Executive Order to LOWER DRUG PRICES! My Most Favored Nation order will ensure that our Country gets the same low price Big Pharma gives to other countries,” the president tweeted. “The days of global freeriding at America’s expense are over…”

“…and prices are coming down FAST! Also just ended all rebates to middlemen, further reducing prices,” he added in a follow-up tweet.

The Trump administration has regularly placed drug costs at the heart of its health policy, with the president already signing a series of four orders in July to lower drug prices.

TRUMP TARGETS ILLICIT IRAN TRADE AHEAD OF ISRAEL-GULF NATIONS WHITE HOUSE MEETING

The orders covered a number of measures, such as directing the Department of Health and Human Services to lower cost of certain drugs, including insulin and epinephrine. The earlier order also aimed to end a “shadowy system of kickbacks by middlemen.”

The July orders focused on reducing costs for elderly patients and people on Medicare, requiring that they pay no more than any “economically comparable OECD country,” a measure he appears set to expand to other residents. The OECD, or Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, is an intergovernmental economic group focused on world trade.

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The exact measures of the new order are not clear, but will be fully outlined in the next few days.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-executive-order-lowers-drug-prices

Former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenTrump slams Nevada governor at rally, takes aim at mail-in voting Former NFL coach Mike Holmgren slams Trump pandemic response, throws support to Biden Trump leans into foreign policy amid domestic disapproval MORE (D) is reportedly going big with ad spending during every NFL game for the remainder of the election season.

NPR reported Sunday that the former vice president’s campaign has purchased at least one advertising slot for every game between now and Election Day, with a campaign spokesperson confirming the plan to NPR. The news comes as Biden’s campaign has closed in on the Trump campaign’s formerly-large cash advantage in recent months.

The Biden campaign did not immediately return a request for comment from The Hill. NFL games often represent premium advertising slots for campaigns due to their wide viewership ratings and the campaign’s latest volley comes as the Trump campaign has targeted some games with its own ads.

“The NFL, even pre-COVID, is the most powerful advertising vehicle,” said John Link, an analyst with Ad Analytics, a media intelligence firm, in a statement to NPR about the Biden campaign’s investment. “In some markets, you get Super Bowl-like numbers on a Sunday.”

President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump slams Nevada governor at rally, takes aim at mail-in voting Former NFL coach Mike Holmgren slams Trump pandemic response, throws support to Biden Watch Live: Trump rallies supporters in Nevada MORE and other Republicans have distanced themselves from the NFL in recent months over players’ protests against police brutality and racism, which has taken the form of some players kneeling during performances of the national anthem before games. 

“I would say this: If they don’t stand for the national anthem, I hope they don’t open. But, other than that, I’d love to see them open and we’re doing everything possible for getting them open,” Trump told sports radio host Clay Travis in August.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/516234-biden-campaign-plans-to-run-ad-during-every-nfl-game-until-election-day

The death toll from wildfires that have ravaged the United States’ West Coast has risen to 33 as the National Weather Service has issued a “red flag warning” amid high winds and dry conditions in Oregon and some California counties.

Authorities said the conditions are expected to “contribute to a significant spread of new and existing fires”, amid days of blazes across the states of California, Oregon and Washington that have destroyed neighbourhoods and forest land, leaving barren and grey landscapes the size of New Jersey.

At least 10 people have been killed in the past week throughout Oregon. Officials have said more people are missing from other blazes, and the number of fatalities is likely to rise. Twenty-two people have died in California since early August, and one person has been killed in Washington state.


On Sunday, search and rescue teams, with dogs in tow, were deployed across the blackened ruins of southern Oregon towns. 

At least 35 active fires were burning in the state, as drought conditions, extreme temperatures, and high winds created the “perfect firestorm” for the blazes to grow, Governor Kate Brown told CBS news on Sunday.

Crews in Jackson County, Oregon were hoping to venture into rural areas where the Alameda Fire has abated slightly with slowing winds, sending up thick plumes of smoke as the embers burned. From Medford through the neighbouring communities of Phoenix and Talent, an apocalyptic scene of charred residential subdivisions and trailer parks stretched for miles along Highway 99.

After four days of brutally hot, windy weather, the weekend brought calmer winds blowing inland from the Pacific Ocean, and cooler, moister conditions that helped crews make headway against blazes that had burned unchecked earlier in the week.

Still, emergency officials worried that the shifting weather might not be enough to quell the fires.

“We’re concerned that the incoming front is not going to provide a lot of rain here in the Medford region and it’s going to bring increased winds,” Bureau of Land Management spokesman Kyle Sullivan told Reuters news agency.

In California, nearly 17,000 firefighters were battling 29 major wildfires, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire). Improving weather conditions had helped them gain a measure of containment over most of the blazes.

More than 4,000 homes and other structures have been incinerated in the state alone over the past three weeks. Three million acres of land have been burned in the state, according to Cal Fire. 

Air quality

The heavy smoke that has painted California skies orange has also helped fire crews corral the state’s deadliest blaze this year by blocking the sun, reducing temperatures and raising humidity.

The smoke created cooler conditions in Oregon as well. But it was also blamed for creating the dirtiest air in at least 35 years in some places, which the state’s environmental quality spokesperson described as “literally off the charts”.

On Saturday, all five of the world’s most air-polluted cities were on the US West Coast, according to IQAir, with dense smog and ash coating the atmosphere from Los Angeles up to Vancouver in Canada. 

In Portland, residents stuffed towels under door jambs to keep smoke out or wore N95 masks in their own homes.

Role of climate change

The three Democratic leaders of California, Oregon and Washing blamed the states’ dire conditions on climate change.

“It’s maddening right now we have this cosmic challenge to our communities, the entire West Coast of the United States on fire, to have a president to deny that these are not just wildfires, these are climate fires,” Washington State Governor Jay Inslee told ABC’s “This Week” programme.

Meanwhile, Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden said it was “undeniable” the extreme circumstances were connected to climate change. 

Trump, for his part, is set to visit California on Monday and meet with federal and state officials.

He has said that western governors bear some of the blame for intense fire seasons in recent years, and has accused them of poor forest management.

“They never had anything like this,” said Trump, who systematically downplays global warming, at a campaign event in Nevada. “Please remember the words, very simple: forest management.”

Source Article from https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/09/death-toll-rises-wildfires-ravage-west-coast-200913200952786.html

Hurricane Paulette is approaching Bermuda and expected to begin dumping rain on the territory late Sunday. Tropical Storm Sally is also threatening the Gulf Coast.

National Hurricane Center


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National Hurricane Center

Hurricane Paulette is approaching Bermuda and expected to begin dumping rain on the territory late Sunday. Tropical Storm Sally is also threatening the Gulf Coast.

National Hurricane Center

In what has already been an active hurricane season, storm watchers are closely monitoring a pair of weather systems that threaten to deliver more damage.

Hurricane Paulette is rolling toward Bermuda and expected to bring heavy rainfall along the coast beginning Sunday night, according to the National Hurricane Center. The NHC said Paulette is expected to be a “dangerous hurricane.”

Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Sally is threatening to grow into a hurricane as it moves toward the Gulf Coast. The storm is expected to hit New Orleans and surrounding areas as a hurricane by Tuesday morning, according to the NHC.

Residents of Bermuda were urged to protect life and property ahead of Paulette, which intensified into a hurricane late Saturday and is forecast to bring strong winds, coastal flooding and storm surge to the territory, hurricane officials said.

The storm is moving towards Bermuda with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph, forecasters said. Beginning late Sunday, forecasters expect Paulette to bring up to 6 inches of rain and “life-threatening surf and rip current conditions.”

Paulette was 240 miles southeast of Bermuda on Sunday morning and moving northwest at 14 mph. The center of the storm is forecast to move near or over Bermuda Monday morning.

Bermuda’s government announced it would close L.F. Wade International Airport on Sunday night. Schools and government buildings will also close on Monday and Tuesday.

Along parts of the Gulf Coast, residents are similarly bracing as a hurricane warning is now in effect from Morgan City, La., to Ocean Springs, Miss. Forecasters expect Sally to bring life-threatening storm surge, hurricane-force winds and heavy rainfall starting on Monday.

As of Sunday morning, the tropical storm had maximum sustained winds of 60 mph with stronger gusts, forecasters said. A slow moving storm, Sally could dump up to 20 inches of rain on parts of the central Gulf Coast by the middle of the week.

If peak storm surge coincides with high tide, the water along the mouth of the Mississippi River to Ocean Springs, Mississippi, including Lake Borgne could rise between 7 and 11 feet. Other areas could see storm surge between 4 and 7 feet.

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards declared a state of emergency ahead of Sally on Saturday, and urged residents to follow directions from local officials. The mayor of New Orleans, LaToya Cantrell, ordered residents living beyond the levee system to evacuate.

Sally approaches just two weeks after Hurricane Laura brought a massive storm surge to the southwestern Louisiana coast. Edwards said in a news conference Saturday that Sally “has the potential to be very serious.”

“Barely two weeks ago, Louisiana suffered a devastating blow when Hurricane Laura came ashore as the strongest hurricane ever to make landfall in Louisiana history, leaving a trail of destruction in its path,” he said. “This, when combined with the COVID-19 pandemic, can make us all weary. I implore Louisianans to take their preparations seriously.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/09/13/912469950/tropical-storm-sally-moves-toward-gulf-coast-as-bermuda-braces-for-hurricane-pau

Two Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies shot in what authorities described as an ambush attack are expected to survive amid an intense manhunt for the gunman captured on video firing inside their patrol car and as the violence became a new flashpoint in the political debate about policing and crime.

Both deputies were shot in the head near the Compton Metro station but went through surgery and are now listed in stable condition. The attack sparked widespread outrage, from the presidential campaign to the streets of Compton, where residents fear it would heighten already deep tensions between police and the community, after several high-profile deputy shootings and uses of force.

“It makes no sense,” said Setif Capelton, 22, who has lived in Compton nearly all his life and heard the burst of gunfire Saturday night. “It hurts this community more than anything else. Now, what if someone walks up to a police officer’s car, and they get scared and shoot that person?”

Authorities have offered no motive for the attack. But new surveillance video and dispatch calls provide a more detailed account of what happened.

The video reviewed by the Los Angeles Times shows a figure in dark clothes casually walk up a pathway near the Compton Blue Line station, approaching the deputies’ parked patrol car from behind.

The person draws closer and turns to face the passenger’s-side door, his steps quickening. Inches from the window, he raises a gun, opens fire and runs back the way he came.

Moments later, the passenger door opens and a deputy stumbles out, hand on head. The driver’s-side door opens soon after. On the radio, a shaky voice mutters: “998 Compton Pax.”

Recognizing the code for a deputy-involved shooting, a dispatcher asks: “Just happened?”

“Compton Pax, deputies down,” the voice says, almost unintelligibly. “Compton Pax 998.”

The Sheriff’s Department reported that the shooting occurred about 7 p.m. near the Blue Line station at 275 Willowbrook Ave.

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In the security footage obtained by The Times — an extended version of the clip released by the Sheriff’s Department — the shooter turns a corner out of the frame, past a second figure lingering on the sidewalk. It’s unclear if the second person was involved in the attack. A Sheriff’s Department spokesman declined to comment, citing the “ongoing active investigation.”

Capt. Kent Wegener said the security footage released by the department was recorded with a fisheye lens, so the height and weight of the assailant were distorted.

County Supervisor Kathryn Barger on Sunday recommended offering a $100,000 reward for information leading to capture of the shooter. The Board of Supervisors will vote Tuesday on whether to approve the request.

Sheriff Alex Villanueva said Sunday that the deputies “survived the shooting and (are) recovering, a double miracle.” They were being treated at St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood.

One of them is a 31-year-old mother of a 6-year-old boy and the other a 24-year-old man, Villanueva said. He said both deputies were sworn into office just 14 months ago in the same academy class.

“These are real people doing a tough job,” Villanueva said, “and it just shows just the dangers of the job, in the blink of an eye.”

Villanueva said in a brief interview that detectives had been “working furiously overnight” to identify the shooter. Detectives are scouring the area for more surveillance video that may offer a better view of the shooter, he said.

He said the shooting evoked the 2014 attack in Brooklyn where a man fatally shot two New York police officers.

“There is no rhyme or reason to it; it is an act of a coward,” Villanueva said. “Obviously tensions were running high in the neighborhood with the deputy-involved shooting. But there is no nexus to it at this time. We are chasing all leads.”

Residents in Compton also said they were struggling to understand the violence.

Juan Ceja was managing Superior Grocers on Saturday night, unloading groceries, when he heard screaming and sirens. He rushed to the front of the store, worried there was an active shooter, and learned of the shooting. The store was busy with customers, but Ceja decided to close the store early, at 8:30 pm.

A few blocks away, Maria Medina, who has lived in the area for 20 years, heard the gunfire, which is not uncommon in her neighborhood, she said.

“It feels like there’s more tension between the police and people in the area,” Medina, 66, said in Spanish, with her dog Fluffy at her side.

She’s noticed a heightened police presence in the area recently. It makes her feel safe, but she also thinks that law enforcement is more aggressive with the predominantly Black and Latino residents who live there than with white people.

Though the two deputies survived the shooting, she said, “no one deserves to have their life taken like that.”

The shooting comes amid heightened tensions between the Sheriff’s Department and the community after a string of controversial killings by deputies that have sparked months of protests.

The reporter, Josie Huang, of KPCC and LAist, was taken into custody outside St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood, where she was covering protests.

On Thursday, detectives from the Operation Safe Streets Bureau shot and killed a man who they said opened fire on them as they served a search warrant in Compton, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

Saturday’s shooting immediately entered the presidential race. President Trump tweeted his outrage at the attack, adding that if the deputies die, “fast trial death penalty for the killer. Only way to stop this!”

The president has been widely criticized for his handling of tensions and unrest sparked by the police killing of George Floyd, at times seeming to stoke the fires of racial bias as part of his reelection bid. Trump has blamed protesters for instigating violence and acts of vandalism in big cities around the country.

Former Vice President Joe Biden was quick to condemn Saturday’s attack on the two deputies.

“This cold-blooded shooting is unconscionable and the perpetrator must be brought to justice,” he said on Twitter. “Violence of any kind is wrong; those who commit it should be caught and punished. Jill and I are keeping the deputies and their loved ones in our hearts and praying for a full recovery.”

The Sheriff’s Department has been under scrutiny for several deputy-involved shootings in recent months. The killing of Dijon Kizzee, 29, in Westmont last month, who was stopped while riding a bicycle, has sparked days of tense protests. Some demonstrators came to St. Francis Medical Center, where the wounded deputies were being treated. The department said on Twitter that some of those protesters had blocked entrances and exits at the hospital, but that could not be independently verified.

Videos from the scene capture at least one person in the crowd yelling, “I hope they … die.”

A reporter for KPCC and LAist was arrested there. Video showed the reporter, Josie Huang, pinned by several deputies.

Huang received a citation for allegedly obstructing a peace officer.

Back in Compton, Capelton said tensions in the area had reached “a boiling point.”

“People are looking for someone to blame for racism,” he said. “People are looking to blame a cop.” But the deputies who were shot, he said, “were two innocent people just sitting in their car. It’s just so stupid. How else can I put it?”

Omar Williams, who lives near the Metro station on Willowbrook Avenue, said he was saddened if not surprised to learn someone had shot a police officer, an act he called “the work of an evil person.”

Williams, 40, had taken part in protests against racism and police brutality earlier in the summer, but he’d recently sensed in the crowds a heightened anger.

“You could hear the chatter in the crowd,” he said. “You could feel the tension. You could tell something was going to happen.”

He believes the police have at times abused their authority and subjected Black people in Compton and elsewhere to “years of hostility.” Those abuses shouldn’t be forgotten, he said.

“But I’ve got to remember this,” he said, standing across the street from where the two deputies were shot, “as much as I remember the killing of an unarmed Black person by the police.”

Times staff writer Alex Wigglesworth contributed to this story.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-09-13/sheriffs-deputies-ambush

The new $100 million commitment in Florida will be routed through one of Mr. Bloomberg’s super PACs, Independence USA, as well as other Democratic groups, according to a spokeswoman. The effort is expect to emphasize communications with Hispanic voters, the spokeswoman said.

Mr. Bloomberg’s appearance at the Democratic National Convention last month reignited criticism from some in the party that he had not given directly to Mr. Biden’s campaign after spending nearly $1 billion on his own bid for the nomination. Since dropping out of the race, he has also committed tens of millions of dollars to supporting House Democrats.

In response to the news of his latest pledge on Sunday, Mr. Trump ridiculed Mr. Bloomberg on Twitter, calling his participation in the Democratic primary debates “the most inept debate performance in the history of presidential politics.”

“Save NYC instead,” the president wrote.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/13/us/politics/bloomberg-florida-biden.html

President Trump argued on Sunday for tougher criminal sentencing guidelines and faster courts as the manhunt continues for the suspect in the shooting of two Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputies over the weekend.

Trump, who was speaking at a roundtable campaign event in Las Vegas, used Saturday’s gruesome shooting to highlight his campaign’s “law and order” message, while also calling out Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden as weak on crime.

“He’s not strong for law and order and everybody knows that,” Trump said of Biden during at a “Latinos for Trump” event. “When you see a scene like happened just last night in California with the two police people – a woman, a man – shot at stone cold short range.”

The president added: “We’re looking for him…and when we find that person, we’ve got to get much faster with our courts and we’ve got to get much tougher with our sentencing.”

BIDEN CALLS AMBUSH OF LA DEPUTIES ‘UNCONSCIONABLE,’ TRUMP FLOATS DEATH PENALTY IF OFFICERS DIE

Authorities in southern California were searching for the suspect who shot and critically wounded two Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies who were sitting in their squad car early Saturday evening. There is currently a $100,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the suspect.

The 31-year-old female deputy and 24-year-old male deputy underwent surgery Saturday evening, Sheriff Alex Villanueva said in a late-night news conference. Both graduated from the academy 14 months ago, he said.

They were each in critical condition Sunday afternoon, said Deputy Trina Schrader.

The deputies were shot while sitting in their patrol car at a Metro rail station in Compton and were able to radio for help, the sheriff said. Villanueva, whose department has been criticized during recent protests over racial unrest, expressed frustration over anti-police sentiment as he urged people to pray for the deputies.

Trump first responded to the ambush-style shooting early Sunday morning.

COMPTON ‘AMBUSH’ LEAVES 2 LA COUNTY SHERIFF’S DEPUTIES ‘FIGHTING FOR THEIR LIVES’

“Animals that must be hit hard!” Trump wrote, referring to criminals who target law enforcement.

“If [the deputies] die, fast trial death penalty for the killer. Only way to stop this!” Trump later wrote.

Trump and his Republican allies have continually attempted to cast Biden as weak on crime and in favor of measures to defund police departments across the country.

The “Defund The Police” movement began in force following the death in late May of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man who died while being detained by a Minneapolis police officer. Floyd’s death – and similar incidents across the country – sparked widespread protests against police brutality and racial injustice as well as calls to cut funding to law enforcement agencies.

Despite Trump and the GOP’s push to cast Biden as proponent of the “Defund the Police” movement, the Democratic candidate has called for police reforms by stopped short of defunding law enforcement departments.

“Let’s get the facts straight, I not only don’t want to defund the police,” Biden said during a campaign speech earlier this month. “I want to add $300 million to their local budgets to deal with community policing to get police and communities back together again.”

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Biden said he wants reforms including more funding for public schools, summer programs and mental health and substance abuse treatment, including a $300 million investment in the Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS).

Biden has previously said that Trump wants to cut funding for local law enforcement by roughly $500 billion, a claim that PolitiFact has rated as “Mostly True.” Trump’s FY 2021 budget proposal would reduce Justice Department funding for state and local law enforcement by $380 million compared to FY 2020, and the president’s budget would also cut COPS by $170 million, according to PolitiFact.

Biden also quickly condemned the shooting of the deputies in Compton, calling it “unconscionable” and demanding the suspect be apprehended quickly.

“This cold-blooded shooting is unconscionable and the perpetrator must be brought to justice,” Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden tweeted. “Violence of any kind is wrong; those who commit it should be caught and punished.”

Fox News’ Evie Fordham and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-calls-for-swift-justice-in-shooting-of-ambushed-deputies-as-manhunt-intensifies-in-la

An unprecedented fire season is wreaking havoc across the Western US, with nearly 100 major wildfires tearing across multiple states and air quality plummeting. At least 23 people have died, with dozens more missing and over 3,000 homes, and entire neighborhoods, destroyed since the season began. By Friday in Oregon, which has declared a state of emergency, half a million people were under evacuation orders as two fires threatened to merge and continue rapidly advancing toward Salem and Portland’s suburbs. Oregon fires have burned more than 1 million acres, said the state’s governor, Kate Brown. 

California’s wildfires, driven by extreme blazes in August and September, have already burned more acres than any year on record. As of Thursday, there are blazes burning in at least 10 western states, according to the interagency incident information system.

The images and stories coming out of the US west are eerily reminiscent of those experienced by Australians in early 2020.

In January, vast swaths of Australia burned. The skies turned orange, and smoke blanketed the country’s largest cities. Entire cities were flattened. Now, across the Pacific, this grim history is repeating. San Francisco skies turned an eerie orange last week, with smoke blotting out the sun. 

There are glimmers of hope, as a freak blizzard slowed fire growth in Colorado. But in a sign of things to come, the fire season is yet to peak, and more of Washington state burned in a 24-hour period last week week than in 12 of the last 18 fire seasons.

Here’s what we know about the ongoing fires and how you can help from the US or afar.

If you’d just like to find out where to donate or how you can help, you can skip to the end of the page by clicking here

Why is the West Coast on fire?

Fires can start in a variety of ways. Human activity, like carelessly discarding a cigarette, poorly maintained infrastructure or even gender reveal parties with pyrotechnics can spark fires. Some of the wildfires currently blazing across California are the result of accidental ignition. 

Fires can also be deliberately lit, though arson has not been linked to the current conflagrations. Rumors have circulated through social media that some of the fires may have been intentionally set by either right-wing or leftist activists, leading some officials to mount social media campaigns of their own to dispel the myths. 

Nature also conspires to begin fires, with lightning strikes a major concern. In California, intense thunderstorms kicked off a number of large blazes in August. Prolonged periods of drought and mismanagement of national forests may also play a role in helping these fires start. With the fire season getting longer, the window to perform critical hazard reduction burns has decreased, giving fires a chance to really take hold. The risk of the wildfires burning across western US was well-known to scientists and, regardless of the origins, fires are fueled by a dizzying number of factors.

A lack of rain and low soil moisture can help enable small fires to grow in size, and coupled with the high temperatures and fierce winds, small fires can quickly become huge infernos. This all feels extremely similar to anyone familiar with the bushfire crisis confronted by Australia in January. Environmental factors contributed significantly to the unprecedented fire season down under and they are playing out again in the US — partially driven by the negative effects of climate change.

What is the connection to climate change?

Wildfires aren’t started by climate change, but they are exacerbated by the effects of global warming. The Climate Council, an independent, community funded climate organization, suggests fire conditions are now more dangerous than they were in the past, with longer bushfire seasons, drought, drier fuels and soils, and record-breaking heat in Australia. The link between fires and climate change has become a political football, but experts agree climate change explains the unprecedented nature of the current crisis. 

Wildfires are getting worse in the US. According to data from the Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity program, on average, there are more wildfires, and they are burning more land each year. A study published in July 2019 concluded that “human-caused warming has already significantly enhanced wildfire activity in California … and will likely continue to do so in the coming decades.”

There’s no question that 2020 will be one of the hottest years on record for the planet, and a 75% chance it will be the hottest ever, according to a report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Increased temperatures allow fires to burn more intensely and also cause forests to dry out and burn more easily. The heating is unequivocally caused by climate change. 

“The debate is over around climate change,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom told reporters on Friday, standing in a charred landscape. “Just come to the state of California. Observe it with your own eyes. It’s not an intellectual debate. It’s not even debatable.” 

There is also a horrifying feedback loop that occurs when great swaths of land are ablaze, a fact the globe grappled with during the Amazon fires of 2019 and the Australian bushfires of 2020. Huge fires release large amounts of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, into the atmosphere. The gas, which makes up only a small percentage of the total gases in the atmosphere, is exceptionally good at trapping heat. 

Andrew Sullivan, a fire research team leader for CSIRO, an Australian government research agency, examined how technology may help predict and fight against fires. In September, he told CNET that “changes to the climate are exposing more areas to the likelihood of fire.” 

What areas are affected?

Fires are burning across the western US, but the greatest conflagrations are across California and Oregon. 

More than 3.5 million acres have burned in California, with over 2,500 more fires than at the same point in 2019. One of the largest fires during the Australian season, the Gospers mountain megafire, burned through around 2.2 million acres. “Unprecedented” is the word again being used by officials, weather services and media to describe the size and severity of the blazes. The dust and ash from the fires have turned the skies orange across California.

Blazes in Oregon have been increasingly destructive, driven by heavy winds. “I want to be upfront in saying that we expect to see a great deal of loss, both in structures and human lives,” Oregon Gov. Kate Brown said during a briefing Tuesday. “This could be the greatest loss of human lives and property due to wildfire in our state’s history.” 

Washington has also experienced significant fires, with almost 350,000 acres burned in a 24-hour period in early September. Two large fires broke out on Sept. 8, and Gov. Jay Inslee said “more acres burned … than in 12 of the last 18 entire fire seasons in the state of Washington.”

The New York Times has an informative fire map that can help you track where conflagrations are burning.

Who’s fighting the fires? 

In California, the state Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or CalFire, heads up the wildland firefighting effort, but actually beating back the flames on the ground is a massive collaboration that also involves local, county and federal resources. Teams of National Forest Service and other agencies’ “hotshot” teams travel from as far as New Mexico to fight fires on the ground. 

California also employs a controversial “conservation camp” program in which prison inmates are trained to fight fires. Prisoners can earn time off their sentences and work towards continue in a career en emergency services upon their release. But the program has been criticized for the dangerous work that comes with meager pay. 

Many conservation camps have been sidelined in the wildfire fight during this record-breaking season due to outbreaks of the coronavirus. But as of Thursday, inmate crews were out on the line fighting the out-of-control Creek Fire near Fresno. 

Do I need to wear a mask?

The smoke and ash from wildfires can irritate the respiratory tract and make it harder to breathe. During Australia’s bushfire season, there was a stark increase in the amount of calls to ambulance services and researchers have demonstrated there may be a significant health burden on those exposed to smoke. Respiratory distress sees more people entering hospitals in the US during a typical wildfire season.

Fine particles in the air can cause damage to the lungs and increase inflammation in the short-term. What is less certain is the long-term effects of exposure to smoke.

We have become intimately familiar with the use of masks over the last six months, thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, but you may be wondering whether you need to use one to protect against smoke from wildfires. The short answer is: You probably should, but filtering smoke and ash out of the air requires an N95 or P100 mask — and public health officials suggest these should be reserved for health care workers. They also cannot completely filter out some of the gases present in wildfire smoke. 

Cloth masks and other coverings we have become familiar with during the pandemic will not be effective at protecting against smoke. The US Environmental Protection Agency says remaining indoors and limiting your time outdoors is “the most effective way” to protect yourself during wildfire emergencies. 

You can find current air quality data from AirNow for your ZIP code, city or state.

How you can help

Other things you can do

  • Raise awareness! You can tweet and share and post this story — and dozens of others — all across the web. More eyeballs means more help to those who need it.
  • Run your online searches through Ecosia, which uses profits to plant trees where they’re needed most. Trees help reduce the carbon dioxide load. It can be added to Chrome.
  • In the US, if you want to contact elected officials and make your voice heard about climate change action — you can do that here

Source Article from https://www.cnet.com/how-to/2020-wildfires-in-california-along-west-coast-everything-we-know-and-how-to-help/

MOBILE, Ala. (WKRG) — Joining us this morning is Jamie Harding with AARP Alabama, I talked to her over Zoom last week. Online shopping is an even bigger business now, due to the pandemic. And there is no bigger online store than Amazon. So of course, criminals are looking for the opportunity to profit. First up, what has AARP seen through their tip line?

Guest: A number of cases of this kind of fraud coming in and attempted fraud in some cases one was from a woman who received an email, that claimed to be from Amazon and they were asking for her very personal information, her social security number, her credit card, and this woman even allowed them access to her computer and that can be a very scary situation, then they have access to all of your personal information, passwords and so forth, that was a very sad instance, there was another one where someone was contacted via text message claiming to be from Amazon, it told her the account had suspicious activity on it, they had locked it and she had to send them a cash payment in the form of gift cards, in order to get it unlocked. Sadly she ended up sending them $13,000 dollars in gift cards, so these are very pervasive crimes right now as you said because Amazon is such a huge player in the online shopping world and also because during this pandemic people are doing more online shopping than ever before.

Source Article from https://www.wkrg.com/mobile-county/mobile-county-and-others-cancel-school-for-sally-other-closures-included/

Oracle was also poised to provide the administration with a system earlier this year to help with a planned study that would have enabled the wide release of the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine to treat Covid-19. While doctors had warned the drug could have dangerous side effects, Mr. Trump had promoted its possible use to treat patients infected by the coronavirus.

Oracle’s relationship with the administration has drawn scrutiny. In August, a Department of Labor whistle-blower said that Mr. Trump’s labor secretary, Eugene Scalia, had intervened in a pay discrimination case involving the company.

On a call to discuss Oracle’s earnings last week, Ms. Catz preemptively told analysts that she and Mr. Ellison would not discuss reports about their bid for TikTok.

The rise of TikTok in the United States has been remarkably rapid; it has taken off in just the past two years. ByteDance, founded in 2012, has raised billions of dollars in funding, valuing it at $100 billion, according to PitchBook, which tracks private companies. Its investors include Tiger Global Management, KKR, NEA, SoftBank’s Vision Fund and GGV Capital.

In July, as pressure from the U.S. government escalated, ByteDance began discussions with investors to carve out TikTok.

But the deal quickly become a free-for-all with bids from various corporations and investment entities around the world and new demands from the U.S. and Chinese governments.

As the deal progressed, two of ByteDance’s largest backers, Sequoia Capital and General Atlantic, have sought to retain their holdings in its valuable subsidiary while saving TikTok from a ban in the United States. Both firms are represented on ByteDance’s board of directors.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/13/technology/tiktok-microsoft-oracle-bytedance.html