Saudi women’s rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul is best known for leading the campaign to legalize driving for women in Saudi Arabia. She was detained in May of 2018 just weeks before the Saudi government lifted the ban.

Marieke Wijntjes via Reuters


hide caption

toggle caption

Marieke Wijntjes via Reuters

Saudi women’s rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul is best known for leading the campaign to legalize driving for women in Saudi Arabia. She was detained in May of 2018 just weeks before the Saudi government lifted the ban.

Marieke Wijntjes via Reuters

Saudi Arabia has released jailed activist Loujain al-Hathloul, best known for leading the campaign to legalize driving for women in Saudi Arabia, according to her family. She was held for nearly three years.

The 31-year-old activist was detained in May of 2018, along with several other female activists, just weeks before the Saudi government lifted the ban.

In December, a judge sentenced al-Hathloul to five years and eight months in prison, under a broad counterterrorism law. The charges against her include sharing information with foreign diplomats and journalists, and trying to change the Saudi system.

The judge suspended a portion of her sentence, and granted time served for another part, leading to her release on Wednesday. Al-Hathloul has already appealed her conviction under the counterterrorism law.

The move to release al-Hathloul is also seen as a gesture by the Saudi government to appease President Biden, who has called for a “reassessment” of the U.S.–Saudi relationship due to the kingdom’s human rights record. Several other prisoners have also been released in recent days.

But al-Hathloul’s case has been especially prominent. Around the time of her arrest in 2018, Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was trying to establish himself as a social reformer and modernizer, opening up the kingdom to social changes. At the same time, he made it clear there was no room for any other vision of reform. He has cracked down on dissent, jailing clerics, businesspeople and activists.

While she was behind bars, al-Hathloul became an emblem of the struggle for women’s rights in Saudi Arabia.

Her release this month was anticipated, and likely comes with restrictions on movement, talking to media, other activism and leaving the country, her family has said.

“For her, this is not freedom,” her sister Lina told NPR from Brussels in the days before her release.

“The worst thing that could happen to her is to be forgotten once she’s out and that people would just think that she’s free and not talk about the case anymore,” Lina al-Hathloul said. “And I think also she knows that she’s a symbol now and that if she gives up, then she gives up on everyone else as well.”

Abdullah Alaoudh, the research director for Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates at Democracy for the Arab World Now, told NPR that al-Hathloul in particular has presented a problem for the kingdom.

“Her existence shattered the whole government narrative of empowering women. That’s why it’s a thorn to their side,” he said prior to her release. “And the story of her comes up every time in the Saudi public and the Saudi imagination as somebody who challenges the Saudi system.”

Al-Hathloul emerged as a prominent activist after graduating from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver and moving back to Saudi Arabia in 2013, her sister said.

She had been publicly expressing her opinion in Canada that the Saudi driving ban should be lifted, and decided to move back to the kingdom to continue the fight from there. According to her sister, she landed at the airport in Riyadh and drove home with their father filming her from the passenger’s seat.

That was the first video that went viral, rocketing her to fame in Saudi Arabia, and it was just the beginning of a series of defiant moves that would bring her head to head against the powerful Saudi government.

Her impact has since grown beyond the kingdom, according to Simon Henderson, the director for the Bernstein Program on Gulf and Energy Policy at The Washington Institute.

Henderson said before her release that she “has become a symbol for a wide range of people, ordinary people, particularly in the West, perhaps in the Middle East as well, and that isn’t going to alter.”

As Saudi Arabia continues to face international pressure to improve conditions for women in the country, releasing al-Hathloul won’t ease that pressure, Henderson said. He emphasized that because her release is conditional, with a 5-year travel ban and other restrictions, she will likely remain under close government watch.

“I’m sure that she will make a noise about it,” he said. “And so the problem will escalate.”

On al-Hathloul’s case itself, her family expects her to keep fighting to prove that she and other prisoners were subjected to torture while detained – which a court in Saudi Arabia said earlier this week that she has failed to prove. She’ll also push for the release of other activists.

Saudi Arabia’s embassy in the U.S. did not respond to NPR’s repeated requests for comment on al-Hathloul’s case.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/02/10/966258281/loujain-al-hathloul-saudi-activist-jailed-for-driving-has-been-released

More than 33,000 registered voters have left the California Republican Party since the Jan. 6 riots on Capitol Hill, underscoring the diminishing sway of the GOP in the Golden State.

Statistics from the California secretary of state’s office show the exodus from the California GOP was ongoing but appears to have accelerated after the Jan. 6 Capitol breach. Just over a thousand voters left the GOP on Jan. 5, while 3,243 left on Jan. 7.

The secretary of state’s data showed 33,448 registered Republicans in total left the party from Jan. 6-28. Meanwhile, the state Democratic Party shed just 19,420 voters from Jan. 6-Feb. 1, bolstering its already yawning advantage over the GOP.

The shift underscores the Republican Party’s dwindling strength in California, which has emerged as among the bluest states in the country.

Republicans still had a foothold in the state in the 2000s, with several members of the GOP in the congressional delegation and Arnold Schwarzenegger serving two terms as governor from 2003-2011.

However, the GOP’s power in the state has since diminished, with Democrats now holding the governor’s mansion and supermajorities in both chambers of the state legislature.

Republicans were able to make some gains in 2020 House races, winning back a handful of congressional seats in Orange County that they’d lost in 2018. However, the fact that Orange County, the bedrock of the Reagan conservatism that once fueled the party, is even competitive highlights how far the GOP has slipped in the state.

The California Republican Party did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Hill.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/538249-over-33000-registered-voters-leave-gop-in-california

The Fulton County investigation comes on the heels of a decision Monday by Mr. Raffensperger’s office to open an administrative inquiry.

Jason Miller, a senior adviser to Mr. Trump, said in a statement that “the timing here is not accidental given today’s impeachment trial. This is simply the Democrats’ latest attempt to score political points by continuing their witch hunt against President Trump, and everybody sees through it.”

Ms. Willis has been weighing for several weeks whether to open an inquiry, after Mr. Trump’s phone call to Mr. Raffensperger on Jan. 2 alarmed election experts who call it an extraordinary intervention into a state’s electoral process.

Former prosecutors said Mr. Trump’s calls might run afoul of at least three state laws. One is criminal solicitation to commit election fraud, which can be either a felony or a misdemeanor; as a felony, it is punishable by at least a year in prison. There is also a related conspiracy charge, which can be prosecuted either as a misdemeanor or a felony. A third law, a misdemeanor offense, bars “intentional interference” with another person’s “performance of election duties.”

Mr. Biden’s victory in Georgia was reaffirmed after election officials recertified the state’s presidential election results in three separate counts of the ballots: the initial election tally; a hand recount ordered by the state; and another recount, which was requested by Mr. Trump’s campaign and completed by machines.

Mr. Biden was the first Democrat to win the presidential election in Georgia since 1992. Mr. Trump accused Mr. Kemp and Mr. Raffensperger of not doing enough to help him overturn the result in the weeks after the election. Mr. Kemp and Mr. Raffensperger had each resisted numerous attacks from Mr. Trump who called the governor “hapless” and he called on the secretary of state to resign.

The Georgia investigation comes as Mr. Trump is also facing an ongoing criminal fraud inquiry into his finances by the Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., and a civil fraud inquiry by the New York attorney general, Letitia James.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/10/us/politics/trump-georgia-investigation.html

WASHINGTON—Business groups and immigrant advocates say they are worried that a ban imposed last year on most forms of legal immigration in response to the Covid-19 pandemic could stick even as President Biden undoes many of his predecessor’s other immigration policies.

The ban, which former President Donald Trumpput in place in April and expanded in June, was intended to block the entry of foreigners who might take open jobs while U.S. unemployment was soaring. It covers workers in a range of industries—from tech and consulting to landscaping and seasonal resorts—along with most family members of U.S. citizens looking to immigrate.

During the campaign, Mr. Biden criticized the ban several times, writing in one June tweet that it was “yet another attempt to distract” from the Trump administration’s pandemic response: “The President can’t scapegoat his way out of this crisis.”

Mr. Biden has signed executive orders halting construction of Mr. Trump’s border wall and ending a ban on travel from several countries, including a number of Muslim-majority nations, but he hasn’t mentioned the legal-immigration ban.

It is set to expire at the end of March if not renewed, but several industry representatives say that is too long to wait, given the impact the ban is having. Business groups that argued during the Trump administration that the ban disrupted companies’ operations and slowed the country’s economic recovery are now offering another objection.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/businesses-worry-about-bidens-silence-on-work-visa-ban-11612965607

When asked by a reporter why Biden’s announcement did not include an international response to the coup, Price suggested that such a reaction is imminent.

“As you hear more from our partners, it’ll be very clear that what we are collectively rolling out, will impose steep and profound costs on those responsible for this coup,” Price said.

The Nobel laureate Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) had won Myanmar’s election in a landslide last November.

But the generals behind the coup have claimed that the election was fraudulent.

Myanmar citizens, wearing red clothes to match the NLD color, took to the streets to protest the coup.

In response, the military banned rallies and gatherings of more than five people, along with motorized processions, and imposed a 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. curfew for Yangon and Mandalay, the country’s first- and second-biggest cities.

The military also banned citizens’ use of the social media platforms Facebook, Twitter and Instagram “until further notice.”

The U.S. formally eased prior sanctions against Myanmar in 2012 to allow American dollars to enter the country, while withholding certain investments in Myanmar’s armed forces and its Ministry of Defense

At the same time, the U.S. retained the ability to bolster sanctions on individuals and entities that undermined the political reform process or whom engaged in human rights abuses.

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby last week said, “We certainly have viewed with great alarm what has happened in Burma, but I don’t see a U.S. military role right now.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/02/10/biden-announces-sanctions-on-myanmar-military-for-coup.html

Illinois will be expanding to Phase 1B of COVID-19 vaccinations on Feb. 25.

Gov. JB Pritzker announced the expansion Wednesday as the state health department recorded over 2,000 new and confirmed cases of coronavirus and 53 additional deaths.

In light of a steadily increasing federal vaccine supply, Illinois is making plans to expand Phase 1B eligibility on February 25 to people who have comorbidities and underlying conditions as defined by the CDC. In addition, Illinois will also prioritize individuals with disabilities,” a statement from the governor’s office said.

Local health departments and other providers will work with the governor’s office on distribution plans.

“Those health departments that have substantially completed their existing Phase 1B population prior to the February 25 statewide expansion date will be able to move forward earlier at the determination of local public health officials and IDPH,” the statement said.

In accordance with the CDC guidelines, Illinois is using the following framework for what qualifies as a high-risk medical condition once Phase 1B expands on February 25. 

This list is subject to change as guidance evolves and does not reflect an order of priority:

  • Cancer
  • Chronic Kidney Disease
  • COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease)
  • Diabetes
  • Heart Condition
  • Immunocompromised State from a Solid Organ Transplant
  • Obesity
  • Pregnancy
  • Pulmonary Disease
  • Sickle Cell Disease

Source Article from https://wgntv.com/news/coronavirus/illinois-to-expand-to-phase-1b-of-covid-19-vaccination-eligibility/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/02/10/neera-tanden-sanders-challenges-bidens-omb-pick-vicious-attacks/6702351002/

Democratic lawmakers have called for Facebook to take more aggressive action to limit how its algorithms recommend and amplify political content after January’s violent insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. Participants in the riot used a variety of mainstream and fringe social media platforms to plan and promote the assault.

A grand experiment: “During these initial tests we’ll explore a variety of ways to rank political content in people’s feeds using different signals, and then decide on the approaches we’ll use going forward,” Facebook Product Management Director Aastha Gupta said.

Zuckerberg announced last month that the company would make permanent its policy of not recommending political groups in a bid to “discourage divisive conversations.” It had previously suspended election and issue-advocacy ads since shortly before Election Day 2020, partly to avoid amplifying false claims about the election results.

Who will feel the impacts: Facebook said the tests will initially affect only a “small percentage” of users, and it will exempt health organizations such as the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization, as well as official accounts for government services and agencies.

But accounts for politicians and public officials will not be exempt from the policy, a Facebook spokesperson confirmed in an email. That decision could limit the reach of global leaders’ posts.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/10/facebook-politcal-content-468253

According to aides, the brand new footage will also underscore the risk that the violence could have spiraled further “but for the brave action of the officers” securing the building even when they were outnumbered by a pro-Trump mob.

The managers’ use of video footage underscores a central theme of their trial strategy — to make senators re-live the horrors of Jan. 6 and the raw emotions that come with it. One of the managers’ aides said the team is still convinced that it can marshal the power of those moments to “move hearts, minds, the consciences of 100 jurors,” even as an acquittal seems exceedingly likely.

Wednesday’s argument will also focus on the weeks before the Jan. 6 insurrection, when the managers say Trump primed his base with false claims that the 2020 election was “stolen” from him. The managers intend to show that the violence of last month’s insurrection was the “foreseeable” result of Trump’s rhetoric, aides said.

They will also argue that Trump’s remarks on Jan. 6 to a group of his supporters, urging them to march on the Capitol and “fight like hell” to stop Joe Biden’s presidency, were “filled with meaning” — and directed at a group he knew included “folks with violent backgrounds.”

“January 6 was the culmination of his conduct, not the beginning of it,” said one of the aides.

The Democrats are taking heart from the unexpected decision of Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) to support their case that the trial is constitutional. Cassidy, who praised the House managers’ presentations on Tuesday, was the only senator whose vote was not forecast in advance.

On Tuesday, the trial’s first official day, the managers played a lengthy montage on the Senate floor that intertwined Trump’s words and tweets with the violent actions of the rioters. Even some of the Republicans who voted to declare the trial unconstitutional said they were moved by the videos — an acknowledgement that the trial’s jury pool witnessed and was a victim of the insurrection.

The Senate ultimately voted to uphold its constitutional authority to put a former president on trial, with six Republicans joining all 50 Democrats in the vote.

The aides also indicated that Democrats expect to use less than the full 16 hours of argument time they have been allotted, a nod to the concerns they have shown about preventing repetitiveness and lulling the Senate into boredom. They added that all nine impeachment managers selected by Speaker Nancy Pelosi will participate in the arguments.

Democrats also intend to use their opening arguments to guard against what they expect to hear from the Trump defense team when it presents its case on Friday and Saturday. Trump’s team argues that his words to the Jan. 6 crowd were protected by the First Amendment and that the rioters who breached the Capitol did so of their own accord, not with Trump’s urging or blessing.

The Trump team’s arguments were marred Tuesday by a rambling performance from lead attorney Bruce Castor, whose hour-long presentation was roundly panned by senators from both parties. But most Senate Republicans are predisposed to acquitting Trump and appeared poised to overlook the weaknesses of the Trump team’s case in the early stages of the trial.

The impeachment managers got some timely help Wednesday from Atlanta-area prosecutors who, according to a New York Times report, have decided to launch a criminal investigation of Trump’s effort in December to pressure Georgia’s secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, to “find” enough votes to help him win the state’s presidential election.

That episode, captured in an audio recording that was released by the Washington Post last month, figured in the House’s case against Trump, part of what they said was a prolonged effort by Trump to wrest the election from Biden and claim a second term.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/10/trump-impeachment-trial-day-2-468291

The Biden administration’s guidance on how schools can “safely open” will come from multiple federal agencies and departments, according to several people familiar with the plan. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is expected to release an “operational strategy” advising that it would be safe for K-12 schools to reopen if they apply recommended “mitigation” practices, according to an email sent by an Education Department official soliciting feedback from education groups and obtained by CBS News. 

The CDC guidance, which is expected to be released this week, builds on guidelines already released by the agency, a federal official told CBS News. It’s expected to focus on five areas of COVID-19 mitigation in schools, rather than relying on vaccinating teachers as a precondition for reopening. 

The mitigation practices include ensuring teachers and students wear masks, maintain proper social distancing and institute a good “hand hygiene” program with proper coughing and sneezing etiquette.

Advice on cleaning and ventilating facilities, implementing a strong contact tracing program and isolating and quarantining will also be included in the guidance, according to the official.

The Biden administration will be advising that teacher vaccinations are supplementary, suggesting that if school districts adhere to the recommended mitigation practices, mandatory vaccination of all teachers isn’t a precondition for reopening schools. There was already a strong hint that this would be the stance adopted by the administration, since CDC Director Rochelle Walensky had already said as much last week.

“There is increasing data to suggest that schools can safely reopen and that safe reopening does not suggest that teachers need to be vaccinated,” Walensky said Wednesday, reiterating that teacher vaccination was “not a prerequisite.”  

But White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Walensky was speaking in her “personal capacity,” since CDC guidance had not been released. 

This has been a point of contention for some teachers unions, which have insisted on vaccinating educators before schools can be reopened. However, Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, told Boston Public Radio on Friday vaccinating teachers was “not a precondition” for reopening. 

But teachers are already in a priority group for vaccination: according to COVID-19 vaccination recommendations established by the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, educators are in Phase 1b.

As of February 9, at least 26 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, have made some or all teachers eligible to receive the coronavirus vaccine, Education Week notes.

The guidance is expected to encompass all K-12 students, unlike the current Biden White House goal for reopening schools, which only targets grades K-8. Asked for clarification of Mr. Biden’s goal on Tuesday, Psaki said the goal is to reopen a “majority of schools — so more than 50%” with teachers instructing “at least one day a week” by day 100. 

But sixty-four percent of K-8 students are already being offered some form of in-person instruction, either full in-person instruction or a part-time hybrid model of learning, according to data collected and analyzed by Burbio and reported by CBS News.  

In an interview Sunday, President Biden told CBS News’ Norah O’Donnell the guidance could be released as soon as Wednesday. But a federal official later said the release date would likely be Friday. Multiple officials told CBS News the guidance is still being finalized and could potentially change. 

“Soon after” the CDC announces its updated guidelines, the Education Department plans to release “volumes” of its own guidance, according to the email sent by Kimberly Watkins-Foote, the acting director of the Education Department’s national engagement team.    

It will begin focusing on the “practical application” of CDC’s guidance: how to plan for in-person learning and engagement and additional “supports” and “protections” for students and educators, with a focus on “trauma-informed approaches to meeting the social-emotional needs of students and staff,” according to the email. This guidance will also advise districts on how to use funds allocated to schools and state and local governments to make schools safer.  

The second volume is expected in the “next couple of weeks” and contains ten topics for now, according to the email. The “draft topics” could change, but they currently address the social and emotional well being of both students and educators, how to bridge learning gaps that have come about because of COVID-19, “support for educators, including advancing educator diversity,” online and in-person learning, school nutrition and, “digital equity.” 

Another topic is “extended learning time,” which may reflect a shift in the school calendar this year or changes to summer school, which is briefly referenced in Mr. Biden’s national strategy plan for COVID-19.

The Education Department’s guidance may also take a look at other concerns about “resource equity” across racial and socioeconomic concerns, “school discipline,” and increased data collection “to support students, parents, and educators.” Last week, the federal government announced a plan to track how many schools in the country are teaching in-person or virtually.  

The Education Department has begun to solicit feedback on these topics from education groups. On his first few days in office, Mr. Biden issued several executive orders directing the Education Department and the Department of Health and Human Services to develop a “handbook” for reopening schools.

The CDC did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The White House and the Education Department declined to comment.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/school-reopening-guidelines-biden-cdc/

PHOENIX — An Arizona man who participated in the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol while sporting face paint, no shirt and a furry hat with horns said he regrets storming the building, apologized for causing fear in others and expressed disappointment with former President Donald Trump.

In a statement released late Monday through his attorney, defendant Jacob Chansley said he has re-evaluated his life since being jailed for over a month on charges stemming from the Jan. 6 riot and realizes he shouldn’t have entered the Capitol building. Chansley, who previously said Trump inspired him to be in Washington that day, said Trump “let a lot of peaceful people down.”

Chansley said he’s coming to terms with events leading to the riot and asked people to “be patient with me and other peaceful people who, like me, are having a very difficult time piecing together all that happened to us, around us, and by us. We are good people who care deeply about our country.”

Chansley’s attorney, Al Watkins, released the statement about a half-day before the second impeachment trial of Trump was scheduled to begin in the U.S. Senate.

Watkins, who unsuccessfully sought a pardon on Chansley’s behalf from Trump, said the Senate didn’t take up his offer to have his client testify on how he was incited by the former president.

The defense lawyer said his client’s apology wasn’t self-serving but rather a genuine expression of culpability. Still, he said he doesn’t think it’s right for the government to prosecute people who were incited.

“If you believe the government is correctly prosecuting the (former) president, you can’t at the same time hold criminally culpable those who were incited, because the people incited become victims,” Watkins said in an interview.

Chansley has pleaded not guilty to felony charges of civil disorder and obstructing an official proceeding, plus four other misdemeanor charges.

The U.S. Justice Department declined to comment Tuesday on Chansley’s apology.

Chansley was among hundreds of pro-Trump supporters who charged past outnumbered police officers and stormed the Capitol as Congress was meeting to certify Joe Biden’s electoral win.

Authorities say Chansley was one of the first people in the Capitol building, disobeyed orders by an officer to leave, refused the officer’s request to use Chansley’s bullhorn to tell rioters to leave the Senate chamber, and wrote a note to then-Vice President Mike Pence saying, “It’s only a matter of time, justice is coming.”

Prosecutors said a spear on top of a flagpole carried by Chansley was a weapon, though his attorney has characterized the spear as an ornament.

Since being jailed, Chansley has had two instances in which he wasn’t eating because the detention facilities where he was being held didn’t serve organic food. He lost 20 pounds (9 kilograms) during the latest starvation episode. Chansley, who calls himself the “QAnon Shaman,” said he has been following such a diet for eight years while practicing Shamanism.

Last week, a judge ordered corrections officials to provide Chansley with organic food. He was later moved to a jail in Virginia after the District of Columbia Department of Corrections said it couldn’t honor the court’s order to feed him organic food.

Source Article from https://www.startribune.com/man-who-wore-horns-hat-apologizes-for-storming-capitol/600021005/

WSIL — An Ice Storm Warning is in effect for western Kentucky, northwest Tennessee, the Missouri Bootheel, and counties along the Ohio River in southern Illinois. Farther north, a Winter Weather Advisory is in effect for the rest of southern Illinois and southeast Missouri.

For most, ice has already arrived. Light freezing rain and freezing drizzle has been coming down since very early this morning and it’s creating a scenario very similar to Tuesday morning. Main roads with heavy amounts of salt will have less problems with ice, but bridges, overpasses, and rural areas may still be slick. Meanwhile, secondary roads, parking lots, and sidewalks are extremely icy.

Off and on freezing rain is expected much of the day Wednesday, with some the heaviest expected during the afternoon. Temperatures will remain well below freezing, so some of the areas that are icy this morning may not see much improvement, even after sunrise. While freezing rain is likely to be the dominant precipitation type, sleet and even some snow may mix across parts of southern Illinois and southeast Missouri.

By tonight, freezing rain gradually begins to shift south into western Kentucky, northwest Tennesee, and the Missouri Bootheel. Some of the heaviest ice is expected to occur first thing Thursday morning.

0.2 to 0.4 inch of ice is expected from around Hayti, Missouri to Mayfield, Kentucky and areas to the south. This is enough ice to sag trees and cause power outages. Farther north, up to around 0.1 of ice is possible, but power outages and major impacts are unlikely.

Thursday in southern Illinois and much of southeast Missouri may end up being dry, while a signficant ice storm is occuring near the Kentucky/Tennessee line.

Whatever does fall, is likely not going anywhere for quite a while. Temperatures will plummet this weekend as the coldest air of the season arrives.

Join Evie, Brooke, Dave, and Nick on News 3 This Morning!

Source Article from https://wsiltv.com/2021/02/10/ice-ice-baby-ice-storm-warning-in-effect-through-thursday/

Michigan state Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey was recorded on video calling the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol a “hoax.”

Al Goldis/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Al Goldis/AP

Michigan state Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey was recorded on video calling the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol a “hoax.”

Al Goldis/AP

Michigan’s highest ranking Republican leader was caught on video calling the Jan. 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol a “hoax” and espousing other conspiracy theories related to the siege.

Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey, in a video posted on YouTube of a meeting with Hillsdale County Republican Party officials, said of the Capitol insurrection in which five people died: “It was all staged.”

About half an hour into the video Shirkey can also be heard asking, “Why wasn’t there more security there?” He accused Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of being involved, saying McConnell “is part of the decision-making how much security they have on stand. I think they wanted to have a mess.”

Shirkey on Tuesday issued a statement that didn’t directly address his claims but said he regretted the words he chose and his “insensitive comments.”

“I said some things in a videoed conversation that are not fitting for the role I am privileged to serve. I own that. I have many flaws,” Shirkey said. “Being passionate coupled with an occasional lapse in restraint of tongue are at least two of them.”

The Metro Times in Detroit first reported Shirkey’s comments, which also included remarks that sexualized Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

The video was posted to the YouTube account of Reclaim Our American Republic last week. The video’s description, in part, reads “The Hillsdale County Republican Party has had enough of RINO”s,” meaning Republicans in Name Only. “We will continue to flush them out of our local party.”

A day after this meeting, the county GOP censured Shirkey for backing a ban on firearms at the state Capitol, according to a press release from the organization.

The organization’s secretary, Jon Smith, told CNN that he posted the video, which he surreptitiously recorded, on his personal YouTube page because he didn’t trust Shirkey “to be honest with me and I wanted to expose his lies and I might need it to keep it for my own record.”

The FBI has arrested hundreds of participants in the siege and has said members of right-wing extremist groups took part. Footage of the breach, much of which was captured by participants on their own phones and shared on social media, shows that supporters of former President Donald Trump stormed the building while wearing Trump 2020 shirts and other Trump-related paraphernalia.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/02/10/966207859/michigans-top-republican-calls-u-s-capitol-attack-a-hoax

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/02/10/trump-impeachment-trial-puts-former-president-spotlight/4389726001/

Wendy Borger tested positive for Covid-19 at an urgent care center in Palmerton, Pennsylvania, on Dec. 28. She said she was fatigued, short of breath, and had a headache, heart palpitations and a fever of 103 degrees Fahrenheit. Her oxygen level dipped to 94%.

Borger, who is 50 and suffers from chronic bronchitis, said her lungs felt like a “weapon” when she walked down the stairs or even had a shower. It took almost two weeks before it didn’t hurt to breathe, she said. It’s been more than a month since her diagnosis, and she still isn’t fully recovered.

Despite her suffering, she still won’t get a Covid-19 vaccine shot.

“I’m not a believer in the flu shot, either. I just think that our body needs to fight off things naturally,” Borger, a self-described anti-vaxxer, told CNBC. “I mean, like me, you know, luckily I survived. It was bad, but I survived.”

As President Joe Biden works to ramp up the supply of Covid-19 vaccines in the United States, public health officials and infectious disease experts warn of another big challenge for the new administration: A significant portion of the U.S. population will likely refuse to get vaccinated.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/02/10/biden-covid-vaccine-anti-vaxxers-us.html

He explained that these protests are very different from the large-scale demonstrations that took place in 2007, known as the “Saffron Revolution,” which was triggered by the military government’s decision to raise fuel prices.

“This is a Myanmar that’s spent the last 10 years opening to the world, democratizing,” Poling said. “Most citizens have mobile internet access — or they did before the coup. Most of the people on the streets probably don’t remember the Saffron Revolution directly and have certainly no memory of 1988.”

Myanmar saw nationwide protests, marches and civil unrest in 1988, in what is sometimes referred to as the 1988 Uprising.

“That could be both good and bad because it may very well convince them that the military won’t crack down,” Poling said about the current protesters. “Or perhaps it gives them the confidence to go out and show the generals that they don’t rule the same Myanmar that they did 15 years ago.”

He explained that while it is a “remarkably dangerous moment” for Myanmar, the junta has not immediately leaped to the worst possible response. In previous protests, demonstrators had been killed in crackdowns while many were arrested.

Protesters in capital Naypyitaw and other cities like Mandalay have been hurt by security forces, Reuters reported, citing local media. The agency reported that police largely fired into the air and used water cannon and tear gas to disperse demonstrators. CNBC could not independently verify those reports.

The United States has condemned the military takeover and threatened sanctions. Beijing’s response has been milder, with the foreign ministry in recent press briefings characterizing China as a “friendly neighbor of Myanmar” and calling for solutions that would that would ensure the latter’s political and social stability.

But China, Japan, Singapore and Thailand have greater influence on the Myanmar economy than the U.S. does.

“I think the real question is what Japan does, because it’s the only one of those major players likely to impose any kind of economic pain on the generals,” he said.

Japan’s deputy defense minister warned this month that if the world closes channels for communications with Myanmar’s military generals in response to the coup, that could push the Southeast Asian nation closer to China, local reports said.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/02/10/myanmar-coup-protests-differ-from-saffron-revolution-1988-uprising.html

LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) – This looks like a very problematic system. This has the potential to cause significant issues across Kentucky.

The exposure time to the freezing rain and ice will be the most significant weather issue we face. Any snow that falls with this system will be mainly light in nature. The rest of it, the freezing rain part, will cause all of the issues.

– Significant ice accumulations

– Some could see between a quarter-inch and a full inch of ice

– This is the glazing of ice

Our weekend will feature yet another round of the wintry stuff. This pattern is absolutely loaded with them.

It is another Wednesday, and every day we move forward is a day closer to a return to our ordinary world. All signs suggest that we are finally nearly there! Take care of each other; we’ve got this!

Copyright 2021 WKYT. All rights reserved.

Source Article from https://www.wkyt.com/2021/02/10/jim-caldwells-forecast-major-winter-storm-with-high-impact/

Michigan State Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey was caught on video calling the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol building “fake.”

Al Goldis/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Al Goldis/AP

Michigan State Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey was caught on video calling the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol building “fake.”

Al Goldis/AP

Michigan’s highest ranking Republican leader was caught on video calling the Jan. 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol building a “hoax” and espousing other conspiracy theories related to the siege.

Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey, in a video posted on YouTube of a meeting with Hillsdale County Republican Party officials, said of the Capitol insurrection in which five people died: “It was all staged.”

About a half an hour into the video Shirkey can also be heard asking, “Why wasn’t there more security there?” He accused Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of being involved, saying McConnell “is part of the decision making how much security they have on stand. I think they wanted to have a mess.”

Shirkey on Tuesday issued a statement that didn’t directly address his outlandish claims, but said he regretted the words he chose and his “insensitive comments.”

“I said some things in a videoed conversation that are not fitting for the role I am privileged to serve. I own that. I have many flaws,” Shirkey said. “Being passionate coupled with an occasional lapse in restraint of tongue are at least two of them.”

The Metro Times in Detroit first reported Shirkey’s comments, which also included remarks that sexualized Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

The video was posted to the YouTube account of Reclaim Our American Republic last week. The video’s description, in part, reads “The Hillsdale County Republican Party has had enough of RINO”s,” meaning Republicans in Name Only. “We will continue to flush them out of our local party.”

A day after this meeting, the county GOP censured Shirkey for backing a ban on firearms at the state Capitol, according to a press release from the organization.

The organization’s secretary Jon Smith, told CNN that he posted the video, which he surreptitiously recorded, on his personal YouTube page because he didn’t trust Shirkey “to be honest with me and I wanted to expose his lies and I might need it to keep it for my own record.”

The FBI has arrested hundreds of participants in the siege and has said members of right-wing extremist groups took part. Footage of the riots, much of which was captured by participants on their own phones and shared on social media, clearly show that former President Donald Trump supporters stormed the building while wearing Trump 2020 shirts and other Trump-related paraphernalia.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/02/10/966207859/michigans-top-republican-calls-u-s-capitol-attack-a-hoax?ft=nprml&f=