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Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has faced further criticism that he was responsible for delays to legislation aimed at helping families and businesses weather the economic impacts of the COVID-19 outbreak.

The bipartisan Families First CoronaVirus Response Act will provide a suite of relief measures, including free testing and paid emergency leave for those affected by coronavirus.

But McConnell, who tweeted on Sunday that such a package was “urgent,” had been criticized for sending senators home for recess and reportedly returned to Kentucky himself before the House passed the bill.

McConnell has been lambasted by leading Democrats. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said he was “out of touch,” and Sen. Elizabeth Warren told MSNBC that the decision was “absolutely irresponsible.”

During a Senate session on Monday, Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown added to the chorus of criticism, saying that last Thursday “we were supposed to start working on this.”

“I asked Senator McConnell on this floor, I opened this door… I pointed down the hall and I said ‘Senator McConnell should come back here and let’s work on this bill.’ Whether they are actually finished in the house, down the hall, doing it or not, we should be working on this.

“Senator McConnell had to go back to Kentucky. I don’t really know what he went back for. We asked him to stay and finish this and negotiate and do it, to take care of stopping this virus, to take care of all the people in my state…to take care of all these people that are losing their jobs and don’t know what to do.

“Senator McConnell went back to Kentucky, wasted three days—make that four days. It’s three more days of people worrying, it’s three more days of people self-quarantining, it’s three more days of businesses…shutting down.

“It’s the anguish that you feel if you think one of your loved ones is sick, all of that…and we are just wasting another day.”

Newsweek has contacted McConnell’s office for comment.

When McConnell made the decision to send senators home, the House had not finalized the coronavirus response bill.

In a statement he tweeted on Sunday, McConnell said: “First, we still need to receive the final version of the House’s coronavirus relief legislation.”

On Monday, a spokesperson for McConnell reiterated that point, telling Newsweek that the Senate had not yet received the House bill.

When asked what the Senate would do when it officially receives the bill, McConnell told CNN: “Pass it.”

Some Republicans had expressed concerns at the impact on businesses of the bill’s paid leave provisions, however, its prospects of passing were boosted after the House approved a number of changes by unanimous consent, The Hill reported, adding that it could get through the upper chamber as early as Tuesday.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/mitch-mcconnell-sherrod-brown-coronavirus-relief-bill-senate-1492660

President Biden and other world leaders at the G20 Summit in Rome endorsed a global minimum tax on corporations, a move U.S. officials are hoping will help bolster the president’s Build Back Better agenda.

G20 finance ministers in July had formerly agreed on a 15% minimum tax. The measure needed formal endorsement at the summit from the world’s economic powerhouses Saturday in Rome.

In a statement, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen claimed the agreement made by the leaders on international tax rules, with a minimum global tax, “will end the damaging race to the bottom on corporate taxation.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen speaks during a news conference after attending the G7 finance ministers meeting at Winfield House in London June 5, 2021.  (Justin Tallis/Pool via REUTERS / Reuters Photos)

WORLD LEADERS REACH LANDMARK GLOBAL TAX DEAL, SETTING 15% MINIMUM RATE

Biden, who had originally called for a 21% minimum tax, celebrated the move in a tweet, writing that the leaders “made clear their support for a strong global minimum tax.”

“Here at the G20, leaders representing 80% of the world’s GDP – allies and competitors alike – made clear their support for a strong global minimum tax,” Biden’s tweet stated. “This is more than just a tax deal – it’s diplomacy reshaping our global economy and delivering for our people.”

World leaders pose for a group photo at the La Nuvola conference center for the G20 summit on Oct. 30, 2021 in Rome.  (Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth – Pool/Getty Images / Getty Images)

The agreement aims to discourage multinationals from stashing profits in countries where they pay little or no taxes. These days, multinationals can earn big profits from trademarks and intellectual property. They can then assign earnings to a subsidiary in a tax haven country.

In the U.S., updating the tax law will require legislative approval by Congress – a feat that still faces an uphill trek to passage as the U.S. is home to 28% of the world’s 2,000 largest multinationals. The House and Senate will need to pass a bill raising the minimum tax on companies’ overseas profits to 15% from the current rate of 10.5%.

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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and U.S. President Joe Biden, pose for the media prior to a G20 summit meeting.  (Photo by Stefan Rousseau – Pool/Getty Images / Getty Images)

Democrats are planning to include the increase as part of their party-line tax and spending bill that will likely be passed using a procedural tool known as reconciliation, allowing the party to bypass a 60-vote filibuster by Senate Republicans.

“Joe Biden’s drive to get the G20 leaders to create a cartel to keep business taxes high will be as popular with taxpayers in America as the similar success of OPEC nations to set a high price for oil was for American car owners,” Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform, told Fox News.

Fox Business’ Megan Henney and the Associated Press contributed to this article.

Source Article from https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/world-leaders-endorse-global-corporate-minimum-tax-at-g20-summit-in-rome

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Updated 8:55 AM ET, Tue February 5, 2019

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(CNN)When President Donald Trump delivers his second official State of the Union address he’ll be speaking to a very different audience. Democrat Nancy Pelosi, the newly elevated House speaker, will be behind him; a new Democratic majority, the most diverse Congress in history, will be before him.

Former cabinet members highlighted
1st row: White House chief of staff John Kelly, DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, Veterans Secretary David Shulkin, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Secretary of Defense James Mattis, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Steven Breyer, Justice Elena Kagan, Justice Neil Gorsuch, Gen. Joseph Dunford, Gen. David Goldfein

2nd row: US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, US Trade Rep. Robert Lighthizer, EPA Director Scott Pruitt, OMB Director Mick Mulvaney, Energy Secretary Rick Perry, Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, HUD Secretary Ben Carson, HHS Secretary Alex Azar, Labor Secretary Alex Acosta, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/02/05/politics/sotu-photo-comparison-2017-2019/index.html

El sol tibio del otoño apenas lamía las ventanas del salón de Aeroparque, aquel 10 de junio de 2010, cuando el joven funcionario desenrolló una copiosa lista de promesas contenidas en el Plan de Negocios 2010-2014. “El grupo Aerolíneas dio una pérdida de casi mil millones de dólares en el año 2008. Eso incluye las pérdidas operativas y la reversión de numerosas maniobras contables que se habían hecho para disimular la situación de la empresa. Este número habla de la inviabilidad de esta empresa como empresa privada”, se escandalizaba. “Este plan quinquenal pretende creer en la operación, pretende lograr eficiencias en la estructura de costos y pretende lograr una enorme mejora del producto”, prometía.

Aerolíneas ya llevaba dos años bajo control del gobierno, sin que opositores, fiscales ni órganos de control pudieran saber qué se hacía ahí adentro. Pero el relato prometía un futuro mejor, del que hasta entonces sólo nos habían distanciado la codicia y la perfidia de los gestores españoles. Pues bien, otros dos años más tarde, aquellos espejismos se siguen alejando.

En medio de tironeos de último momento por parte del oficialismo para evitar la difusión de conclusiones rotundas y sin duda decepcionantes, la Auditoría General de la Nación aprobó ayer un informe que derrumba ladrillo a ladrillo aquella construcción que al final era de arena: desde la compra de dos decenas de aviones Embraer que por su tamaño no alcanzan a llevar las valijas en algunos vuelos de mediano alcance -una operación, recordemos, por la que en Estados Unidos la proveedora brasileña admitió haber pagado coimas en Argentina- hasta la pésima selección de rutas y horarios para los vuelos, o la peor gestión de los talleres y hangares, según denuncia el gremio de los mecánicos aeronáuticos. Todas las noticias son malas. Por eso, dicen los que conocen a fondo la empresa, hay pocas noticias surgidas desde Aerolíneas.

Recalde busca soslayar el informe diciendo que se refiere a una situación vieja, como si desde 2012 las cosas hubieran cambiado radicalmente.Antes de insistir en esa tesis, podría escuchar el audio de aquella vieja reunión de 2010, cuando uno de sus gerentes presentó el famoso plan quinquenal de la empresa: “Estamos esperando llegar al equilibrio financiero en el 2011. Y de ahí en adelante empezar a devolverle al Estado la plata que no ha malgastado en Aerolíneas y Austral, sino la plata que ha invertido para que haya una línea de bandera que preste un servicio público y que sirva de instrumento para el desarrollo económico y social del país.”

La grabación puede encontrarla en el archivo de clarin.com, junto a una investigación de este diario sobre Aerolíneas publicada el 24 de junio de 2012. No le costará reconocer la voz en ese audio de su viejo gerente de Finanzas: Axel Kicillof.

Source Article from http://www.clarin.com/politica/Todas-noticias-malas_0_1243675702.html

Los jóvenes que viven conectados a Internet son amantes de publicar fotos en Facebook. Los padres a veces no entienden esta moda, pero algunos intentan lograr empatía con sus hijos, haciendo lo mismo.

PUEDES VER: Facebook: “gato bípedo” adelanta Halloween con su disfraz de pirata

El papá de esta historia viral mostró su lado divertido luego de su hija publicó una foto sexy en Facebook. La chica se puso los calcentines hasta la rodilla y mostró sus piernas, así como una taza de café y su laptop.

Según contó el hermano de la joven en la red social Imgur, el padre también mostró sus piernas con sus calcetines. Además de los otros elementos que acompañan la imagen.

“Mi hermana publicó una foto en Facebook y así respondió mi papá”, escribió la persona que juntó las dos imágenes e hizo publica esta anécdota.


View post on imgur.com

El papá ganó más popularidad de la que esperaba tras compartir su foto. “Tu papá tiene lindas piernas y buenas medias”, “¿tu papá es soltero?”, “no me deja de preocupar que esas tazas de café se derramen en los teclados”, fueron algunos de los comentarios en Facebook.

La fotografía se hizo viral en Imgur, así como en otras redes sociales, con miles de compartidos. La identidad de los protagonistas aún no sido revelada.

Source Article from http://larepublica.pe/mundo/711384-facebook-joven-publico-foto-sexy-y-fue-trolleada-por-su-padre

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

Mr García denies the allegations against him

Peru’s former President Alan García has shot himself as police came to arrest him.

Casimiro Ulloa hospital in the capital, Lima, said he was in surgery where he was being treated for “a bullet wound to his head”.

Mr García is accused of taking bribes from Brazilian construction company Odebrecht – claims he has repeatedly denied.

Officers had been sent to arrest him in connection with the allegations.

Health minister Zulema Tomás said Mr García’s condition was “very serious and critical”, and that he had to be resuscitated after suffering three cardiac arrests.

“Let’s pray to God to give him strength,” the former president’s lawyer Erasmo Reyna reportedly told journalists at the hospital.

Mr García served as president from 1985 to 1990 and again from 2006 to 2011.

Investigators say he took bribes from Odebrecht during his second term in office, linked to a metro line building project in the capital.

Odebrecht has admitted paying almost $30m (£23m) in bribes in Peru since 2004.

But Mr García says he is the victim of political persecution, writing in a tweet on Tuesday that there is “no clue or evidence” against him.

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

Mr García was taken to Casimiro Ulloa hospital in Lima after shooting himself

What is the Odebrecht scandal?

Odebrecht is a Brazilian construction giant behind major infrastructure projects around the world, including venues for the 2016 Olympics and 2014 World Cup in its home country.

But under the glare of anti-corruption investigators the company admitted paying bribes in more than half of the countries in Latin America, as well as in Angola and Mozambique in Africa.

Investigators say Odebrecht bribed officials or electoral candidates in exchange for lucrative building contracts.

The corruption scandal has brought down politicians throughout Latin America.

How is Peru affected?

Peru’s four most recent presidents are all being investigated for alleged corruption, with a fifth – Alberto Fujimori – serving a prison sentence for corruption and human rights abuses.

Ex-leader Pedro Pablo Kuczynski was taken to hospital with high blood pressure on Wednesday just days after his own arrest in connection with Odebrecht charges.

And the current leader of the opposition, Keiko Fujimori, is also in pre-trial detention on charges of taking $1.2m (£940,000) in bribes from Odebrecht.

In October, an opinion poll by Datum showed 94% of Peruvians believed the level of corruption was either high or very high in their country.

The scandal embroiling Peru’s presidents

  • Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, in office 2016-2018, resigned over a vote-buying scandal and detained last week
  • Ollanta Humala, in office 2011-2016, accused of taking bribes from Odebrecht to bankroll his election campaign, in pre-trial detention in Peru
  • Alan García, in office 2006-2011, suspected of taking kickbacks from Odebrecht, sought asylum in Uruguay’s Lima embassy but had his request denied
  • Alejandro Toledo, in office 2001-2006, accused of taking millions of dollars in bribes from Odebrecht, currently a fugitive in the US

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-47961425

ISIS DOWN, NOT OUT: While Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan declared ISIS is just weeks away from losing the last bit of territory it controls in Syria, the nation’s top intelligence official told the Senate, “ISIS is intent on resurging and still commands thousands of fighters in Iraq and Syria.”

Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats testified yesterday at a Select Senate Committee hearing on worldwide threats, “While ISIS is nearing territorial defeat in Iraq and Syria, the group has returned to its guerrilla warfare roots while continuing to plot attacks and direct its supporters worldwide.”

NORTH KOREA NOT DENUCLEARIZING: It wasn’t the only reality check delivered by Coats yesterday. He also cast doubt on whether President Trump will be able to secure a deal to get North Korea’s Kim Jong Un to give up his missiles and nuclear weapons programs.

“We currently assess that North Korea will seek to retain its WMD capabilities. It is unlikely to completely give up its nuclear weapons and production capabilities because its leaders ultimately view nuclear weapons as critical to regime survival,” Coats said in his opening statement. “Our assessment is bolstered by our observations of some activity that is inconsistent with full denuclearization.”

IRAN NOT NUCLEARIZING: “While we do not believe Iran is currently undertaking activities we judge necessary to produce a nuclear device, Iranian officials have publicly threatened to push the boundaries of [the Iran nuclear deal] restrictions if Iran does not gain the tangible financial benefits is expected from the deal,” Coats said in his annual assessment, noting that Iran maintains the largest inventory of ballistic missiles in the Middle East.

“The Iranian regime will continue pursuing regional ambitions and improved military capabilities even while its own economy is weakening by the day,” he said.

HAPPENING THIS MORNING, TRUMP WEIGHS IN: “When I became President, ISIS was out of control in Syria & running rampant. Since then tremendous progress made, especially over last 5 weeks. Caliphate will soon be destroyed, unthinkable two years ago. Negotiating are proceeding well in Afghanistan after 18 years of fighting,” President Trump tweeted at 6:30 a.m. “Fighting continues but the people of Afghanistan want peace in this never ending war. We will soon see if talks will be successful? North Korea relationship is best it has ever been with U.S. No testing, getting remains, hostages returned. Decent chance of Denuclearization.”

COATS ON CHINA: “China’s actions reflect a long-term strategy to achieve global superiority,” Coats said. “In its efforts to diminish U.S. influence and extend its own economic, political and military reach, Beijing will seek to tout a distinctly Chinese fusion of strongman autocracy and a form of Western-style capitalism as a development model; an implicit alternative to democratic values and institutions. These efforts will include the use of its intelligence and influence apparatus to shape international views and gain advantages over its competitors, including especially the United States.”

COATS ON RUSSIA: “Even as Russia faces a weakening economy, the Kremlin is stepping up its campaign to divide Western political and security institutions and undermine the post-World War II international order. We expect Russia will continue to wage its information war against democracies and to use social media to attempt to divide our societies. Russia’s attack against Ukrainian naval vessels in November is just the latest example of the Kremlin’s willingness to violate international norms, to coerce its neighbors and accomplish its goals.”

SLOW MOTION WITHDRAWAL: The Pentagon insists it’s in the process of complying with President Trump’s December order to begin withdrawing all U.S. ground troops from Syria. “We are on a deliberate, coordinated, disciplined withdrawal,” Shanahan said yesterday.

But people in Syria don’t see any sign of it. “There has been no change in the situation on the ground,” Ilham Ahmed told the Washington Post. Ahmed, who heads the executive committee of the Syrian Democratic Council said the situation is “just like before” Trump’s announcement.

Shanahan indicated yesterday that the hold-up may be figuring out who is going to fill the vacuum left by the departure of U.S. troops, so that Russia, Iran or Syria regime forces don’t move in, or worse ISIS reconstitutes.

“The phase that this moves to is how do you sustain local security?” Shanahan said. “You know that’s, that’s where the support of the coalition, that’s where these partnerships are so critical,” he said.

5,000 TROOPS TO COLOMBIA: Shanahan punted when asked about the mysterious notation seen on John Bolton’s legal pad Monday with the words, “5,000 troops to Colombia,” scrawled on it, just as Bolton asserted that “all options are on the table.”

“I didn’t bring a notepad today,” Shanahan joked, but when pressed he repeated refused either confirm or deny whether President Trump is seriously considering dispatching American troops to Colombia to turn up the heat on Nicolas Maduro, the embattled president of neighboring Venezuela.

This morning Trump tweeted, “Maduro willing to negotiate with opposition in Venezuela following U.S. sanctions and the cutting off of oil revenues. [Juan] Guaido is being targeted by Venezuelan Supreme Court. Massive protest expected today. Americans should not travel to Venezuela until further notice.”

MORE TROOPS, OR DIFFERENT TROOPS? Shanahan also revealed yesterday a Department of Homeland Security request for more U.S. military support for southern border security through the rest of the fiscal year.

“DHS has asked us to support them in additional concertina wire, and then expanded surveillance capability,” Shanahan said. “And we’ve responded with, you know, ‘Here’s how many people it would take, and this is the timing we’d be able — timing and mix of the people to support that.’” Asked how many people that would require, Shanahan said “Several thousand. I’ll leave it at that number.”

Currently, there are approximately 2,350 active duty troops and about 2,270 national guard troops on the border. What’s unclear is how many of those troops will be rotated out and replaced with new troops, and what that will do to the total number deployed in 2019.

“The numbers fluctuate,” John Rood, undersecretary of defense for policy, told the House Armed Services Committee, yesterday. “One portion of them has been approved to be deployed through January of 2019. There will be additional deployments of active duty troops that will go through the end of this fiscal year, September 30th, in response to the latest request from the Department of Homeland Security.”

WHY ACTIVE DUTY? Committee Chairman Rep. Adam Smith D-Wash, grilled Rood about why active-duty troops were sent instead of more National Guard units. “It is very, very rare to send troops to the border,” Smith insisted.

Rood said the 5,900 active-duty members of the military were dispatched because they were more readily available since thousands of guardsmen had been deployed in April.

“Active-duty military personnel were selected because the secretary of defense determined them to be the best-suited and most readily available forces from the total force to provide the assistance requested by the DHS,” Rood told the committee.

LOCKHEED MARTIN IN THE BLACK: Lockheed Martin Corporation reports $1.5 billion in profits on fourth quarter 2018 net sales of $14.4 billion. The company expects sales to climb more than 6 percent this year amid a swelling order backlog for the F-35 fighter jet, the most expensive weapons program in U.S. history

The Bethesda, Md.-based defense contractor said Tuesday its targeting $57 billion in revenue this year after sales growth in 2018 fueled by increased U.S. military spending. An F-35 order late in the year added 250 planes to the fighter’s outstanding orders, pushing the total to 400, CEO Marillyn Hewson told investors on an earnings call. That “exceeds the total F-35 deliveries made to date,” she said, “a clear sign of the program’s momentum.”

MORE 4Q RESULTS DUE: Both Boeing and General Dynamics are set to release their fourth quarter results this morning, with Northrop and Raytheon reporting tomorrow.

BOEING: At yesterday’s off-camera press briefing at the Pentagon, Shanahan was asked about reports he was perceived as ‘the man from Boeing,” given his past position with the company, and reports that in private meetings that he trashed Lockheed Martin and boasted that Boing would have done a better job meeting production goals for the F-35.

“I am biased towards performance,” Shanahan said. “I am biased towards giving the taxpayer their money’s worth.  And the F-35 unequivocally I can say has a lot of opportunity for more performance.”

He said the Pentagon’s strong ethics rules prevent him from intervening on behalf of Boeing and dismissed the grumbling about pro-Boeing bias as “just noise.”

THE RUNDOWN

Washington Post: Russia secretly offered North Korea a nuclear power plant, officials say

Bloomberg: Launch-and-Landing Failures Add to $13 Billion Ship’s Troubles

Voice of America: Afghans Worry as US Makes Progress in Taliban Talks

Navy Times: Senator: Chinese Buildup In South China Sea Like ‘Preparing For World War III’

Foreign Policy: U.S. Developing Supply Route Along Dangerous Stretch From Djibouti to Somalia

Breaking Defense: More Missile Defense Ships, New Ground Deployments

Voice of America: Iran’s Cyber Spies Looking to Get Personal

Stars and Stripes: China tests ‘Guam killer’ missile, claims weapon could strike moving aircraft carrier

Air Force Magazine: Air Force Academy to Hire Enlisted NCOs for Accredited Faculty Position

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/afghanistans-government-losing-its-grip-on-the-country-as-the-taliban-gain-upper-hand-in-peace-talks

Press Release

Savaget: passion for Arabian tales

 São Paulo – It all starts when the director of Cultural Heritage of the International Society for the Rescue of Imagination (Sirf) goes to Baghdad, in Iraq, to save Ali Baba, Sherazade, Aladdin and other characters from the Thousand and One Nights who may be in danger amidst the war in 2003. The same director then goes to Jordan, where she finds the magic lamp minus the genie, and then sets off to Palestine in an attempt to find him. The incessant conflict with Israel could only be explained by the fact that the genie landed in villainous hands.

These three phases, the director’s journey through Iraq, Jordan and Palestine, and her interaction with the characters of the most famous piece of literature from the East, form the plot of the series of three children’s books that Brazilian author Luciana Savaget wrote. The first is called “Operation Rescue in Baghdad – The Battle of the Invisible” and was published in Brazil in 2003; the second, “Operation Rescue in Jordan – The Secret of the Desert”, was launched in 2007; and the third, “Operation Rescue in Palestine – Heritage Conflict”, is from 2010.

The last two books are the result of the journeys the writer made to promote her first book in Arab lands. Apart from Portuguese, original language of the three books, “Operation Rescue in Baghdad” was also published in Arabic, which turned Savaget into an author well-known by Arab children, particularly in Palestine, as the government of that country purchased 100,000 copies for the libraries in refugee camps.

“I went to Palestine twice, once for the book launch and then again for talks with youngsters who read my books. From the first trip came the book “Operation Rescue in Jordan”, where we find Aladdin’s lamp, but not the genie. Imagine if an enemy finds this powerful genie who fulfils his master’s every desire? It could destroy the world,” says Savaget. “And on the second trip we find the genie hidden in Nablus, in the hands of the dream demolishers and enemies of our powerful Sirf association,” tells Savaget.

The writer puts herself in the role of the director of the International Society for the Rescue of Imagination, and thus transfers to her character her passion for the Arab world. “The idea [for the book] came from my passion for Arab tales and stories, which have amazing magic. These tales and the stories of the Thousand and One Nights are part of my childhood. When I wrote “Operation Rescue in Baghdad”, right at the beginning of the American attacks on the Iraqi capital city, I couldn’t have imagined other books would follow to complete the series,” stated Savaget.

According to the author, one book called out for the next. “And they also physically took me to those wonderful lands, where Sherazade spoke of ‘happily ever after in Baghdad.’” In Palestine, the operation Baghdad book was translated by Tamer Literature. In Brazil, all books were published by publishing house Nova Fronteira. “To have a book published in far and conflicted lands such as Palestine was an honor. Until now I have only had one book edited in Arabic, but who knows in the future, perhaps the other ones will be published too,” says Savaget.

The writer states she will keep on dreaming and that Sirf shall not abandon the Arab world. She feels like writing more about the East. Savaget says she felt first hand, when she visited the Arab country, the Palestine people’s difficulty in being acknowledged as a country. According to her, it is unacceptable that at this day and age there are still wars in that region, where Jesus Christ was born. “I am the Sirf director of Cultural Heritage and I fight for dreams and for peace, not only in books, but also in life,” says Savaget.

Born in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Savaget is a journalist and works for Globo News, a cable TV news channel belonging to network Rede Globo. Savaget translated to Portuguese the book “My Life With Pablo Neruda”, written by the poet’s wife, Matilde Urrutia, and has received many awards for her work in journalism and literature. Her books “Dadá, a Mulher de Corisco” (Dadá, Corisco’s Wife, loosely translated) and “Operation Rescue in Baghdad” are among her prized works. The author was also granted the Vladimir Herzog Amnesty and Human Rights Award, in 2002.

*Translated by Silvia Lindsey

Source Article from http://www2.anba.com.br/noticia/21862009/arts/writer-published-three-childrens-books-about-the-arabs/

Cristina Fernández de Kirchner pasó varios meses en el llano tras abandonar el poder y después de la derrota electoral del Frente Para la Victoria. Desde el 10 de diciembre solo tuvo apariciones esporádicas, principalmente a través de las redes sociales.

La expresidenta quiere volver al centro de la escena política en marzo, después de que su sucesor, Mauricio Macri, inaugure las sesiones ordinarias en el Congreso de la Nación. Pero además del ámbito político, CFK quiere incursionar también en el periodismo. Por eso, estaría preparando su propia agencia de noticias.

El organismo de la exmandataria llevaría el nombre Instituto Patria, y sus oficinas se encontrarán a pocos metros del Congreso de la Nación.

El edificio ubicado en Rodríguez Peña 80, a tan solo 200 metros del edificio gubernamental, contará con las nuevas oficinas –junto a las de Oscar Parrilli y Carlos Zanini–, donde funcionará una agencia de noticias. La agencia estará a cargo de Tristán Bauer, ex director de Radio y Televisión Argentina (RTA).

Otra de las integrantes del nuevo proyecto será Anita Montanaro, militante que durante el Gobierno de Cristina estuvo a cargo de la cuenta de Twitter oficial de la Casa Rosada, y la exministra de Cultura, Teresa Parodi, quien estará a cargo de diferentes actividades a realizarse en el lugar.

Según indicó Clarín, los encargados del Instituto Patria estiman que la Presidenta comenzará a utilizar su nueva oficina durante marzo y que iría incrementando su actividad “a medida que se deteriore la imagen de Macri”.

A su vez, el medio asegura que “desde allí intentaría labrar una candidatura legislativa para el año próximo”.

Source Article from http://www.perfil.com/politica/Cristina-Kirchner-vuelve-y-prepara-su-propia-agencia-de-noticias-20160229-0040.html

Derechos de autor de la imagen
Alex Klis/Facebook

Image caption

Esta foto fue tomada poco antes del ataque en Manchester que dejó 22 personas muertas. Entre ellos, Marcin (izq.) y Angelika, quienes fueron a recoger a sus hijas al concierto de Ariana Grande.

El lunes por la noche, Angelika y Marcin Klis pasearon por un rato por las cercanías del Manchester Arena antes de acercarse al estadio para recoger a sus hijas, Alex y Patricia, que asistían al concierto de la cantante estadounidense Ariana Grande.

Los Klis, una pareja polaca que vivía en la ciudad de York, en el norte de Inglaterra, aguardaban en el hall que finalizara el recital de la exestrella de la cadena juvenil Nickleodeon.

En ese momento, Selman Abedi, un joven de 22 años y que vivía cerca del estadio, se acercó allí y detonó un artefacto explosivo.

Ellos dos, junto a otras 20 personas, se convirtieron en las víctimas fatales del atentado que sacudió a Reino Unido y dejó, además, 59 heridos.

Pero no fue el único efecto: dentro de la arena, la explosión generó un estampida. El público que había asistido al concierto de Grande intentó huir y ponerse a salvo.

Y cuando Alex, de 20 años, y la adolescente Patricia lograron sortear el caos, su primer instinto fue buscar a sus padres.

Pero no los encontraron. Entonces la hermana mayor recurrió a todos los medios disponibles para dar con su paradero.

Pocos minutos después del ataque y cuando ya la policía había confirmado que el atentado había dejado “víctimas fatales“, Alex publicó en Facebook una foto de Angelika y Marcin con el siguiente mensaje:

Derechos de autor de la imagen
Facebook.

Image caption

La comunidad polaca en la ciudad de York creó dos páginas para recaudar fondos con la idea de ayudar a las hermanas.

“Cualquier persona que esté en un lugar seguro o en un hospital en Manchester, si alguien se cruza con mis padres, por favor, por favor déjenmelo saber. Ellos están desaparecidos desde el ataque”, escribió en su cuenta de la red social.

Y remató las palabras con un detalle: “Esta foto fue tomada esta misma noche, así que ellos están vestidos con la misma ropa”.

En la imagen se puede ver a Marcin, de 42 años, junto a él Angelika, de 40, sonriendo a la cámara.

Detrás de ellos una de sus paradas en su paseo por Manchester: el Corn Exchange, un centro comercial ubicado cerca del Museo Nacional del Fútbol.

Pero a pesar de la publicación de la foto, no llegó ninguna información.

En el lugar equivocado

La única noticia arribó este miércoles y la dio el ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Polonia, Witold Waszczykowski: “Una pareja polaca se encuentran entre las víctimas del ataque de este lunes en Manchester”.

Los padres habían pasado a recoger a sus hijas después del concierto y desafortunadamente han muerto. Sus hijas están a salvo”, agregó.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
Getty Images

Image caption

El ataque dejó 22 personas muertas, 59 heridos, de los cuales 20 permanecen en estado crítico.

De inmediato, Alex y a su hermana comenzaron a recibir mensajes de solidaridad a través de las redes sociales.

Siento mucho lo que ha pasado. No tengo palabras y es imposible imaginar por lo que estás pasando. Mi corazón está contigo”, escribió Kirsty Williams.

El gobierno polaco confirmó que se hará cargo de todo el apoyo que necesiten las hermanas, y varias personas crearon páginas para recaudar fondos para los gastos funerarios.

De Marcin se sabe que estaba empleado como taxista. BBC Mundo se comunicó con la empresa York Cars Taxi Service y confirmó que trabajaba allí.

No podemos dar ninguna información sobre él. Solo podemos decir que sí trabaja aquí, pero preferimos guardar silencio por el momento por respeto a la familia”, dijo una de las voceras de la empresa.

Y añadió que estaban preparando un comunicado.

Por su parte, la comunidad de York publicó en su página de internet la foto de la familia Klis y un mensaje de condolencias.

“Ellos llegaron al peor lugar en el momento equivocado. Nuestras sentidas condolencias a la familia de Marcin y Angelika”.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-internacional-40027184


ÚN | Gustavo Rodríguez.- Valencia. Con la ayuda de las autoridades locales y de la Guardia Nacional, los detectives de la policía científica identificaron a seis integrantes de una sanguinaria banda de asaltantes de carretera conocida como Los Rapiditos, quienes son investigados por el asesinato de la actriz Mónica Spear y de su ex esposo Thomas Henry Berry, y por causar heridas a la hija de 5 años de ambos, hecho ocurrido en la autopista Valencia-Puerto Cabello (Car) la noche del lunes.

El alcalde de Puerto Cabello, Rafael Lacava, dijo a Últimas Noticias que Los Rapiditos fue desmantelada con la detención de seis personas, entre ellas dos mujeres, en el sector El Churro de El Cambur. El mandatario local explicó que los aprehendidos declararon en la Policía Municipal y quedaron a la orden del Cicpc y la Fiscalía. Anoche fuentes policiales aseguraron que entre los detenidos se encuentran dos menores de edad.

Las detenciones fueron realizadas en los vecindarios que colindan con el río Aguas Calientes, donde suelen ocultarse los criminales luego de esquilmar a quienes transitan por la autopista.

Según precisó la policía, el Toyota Corolla, placa GBY-74K, de color gris, que era conducido por Thomas Henry Berry, pudo haber caído en un hueco o chocar contra un objeto contundente. La actriz viajaba en el puesto del copiloto y la niña de 5 años dormía en el asiento trasero. El director del Cicpc, comisario José Gregorio Sierralta, confirmó que la pareja fue asesinada en el momento cuando llegaban los tripulantes de una grúa para auxiliarlos.

Inicialmente informó de la detención de cinco personas presuntamente vinculadas con el doble crimen y exhortó “a no utilizar el suceso como un circo político”. Los dos conductores de la grúa son interrogados como testigos.

Al parecer, la pareja se negó a abrir las puertas del auto, por lo que sus agresores optaron por dispararles sin darles oportunidad de escapar. “Un disparo hirió por una de sus axilas a Spear, otro impactó en el pecho de Berry. Ambos murieron en el sitio”, indicó Sierralta. Una fuente reveló que los grueros huyeron y las víctimas fueron socorridas por otros conductores.

Fin de un paseo. Los cadáveres fueron trasladados a la morgue del hospital Adolfo Prince Lara, de Puerto Cabello, pero no había patólogos y fueron remitidos a la morgue del Hospital Central de Valencia, donde se congregaron familiares y amigos de las víctimas. En la tarde fueron llevados a Caracas.

La niña, quien resultó herida en una pierna, fue enviada en ambulancia a un centro clínico en la capital. La pareja estaba a punto de culminar un paseo por diferentes sitios de Venezuela.

Versiones policiales señalan que Spear y Berry permanecieron más de 45 minutos en la carretera, a la espera de una patrulla o una grúa. Casi una hora después y en medio de la oscuridad observaron a los grueros que pasaban del otro lado de la vía y les pidieron que los remolcaran. Estos intentaron subir rápidamente el carro a la plataforma, pero los asesinos venían en camino.

El sitio del suceso fue tomado policialmente ayer en la mañana y el tránsito quedó restringido. Los detectives recolectaron conchas de proyectiles y otras evidencias. Son 50 pesquisas del Eje de Homicidios de Carabobo quienes llevan el caso, dijo el comisario Douglas Rico, subdirector del Cicpc. Los fiscales 2ª nacional y 8º de la entidad, Narda Sanabria y Wilmer Romero, coordinan las averiguaciones.

Source Article from http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/sucesos/apresan-banda-los-rapiditos-por-asesinato-de-spear.aspx

As testimony wrapped up this week in the trial of Kyle Rittenhouse, a wary America has realized that the trial of the young man on charges linked to his killing of two racial justice protesters in Kenosha, Wisconsin, has not played out like many people expected.

With more than 30 witnesses taking the stand throughout a tumultuous week, a few called on by the state appeared to help Rittenhouse’s legal team with its claim that he was acting in self-defense. That added to notable errors made by prosecutors, as well as a judge with a simultaneously stern and flamboyant courtroom style who has shocked with controversial comments and outbursts.

With closing arguments set to begin on Monday the US has been gripped by the highly contentious case and many people are slowly understanding that the verdict in the trial is far from certain.

Last August, Rittenhouse traveled from his home in Antioch, Illinois, armed with an AR-15-style rifle and in response to a Kenosha-based militia calling for protection of businesses against protesters supporting the Black Lives Matter movement. The city had been racked by protests after the shooting of Jacob Blake, who is now paralyzed from the waist down, by a white police officer.

Since then, Rittenhouse has been charged with two counts of homicide, one of attempted homicide and two of recklessly endangering safety for firing his weapon near others. He is also charged with possession of a dangerous weapon by a minor, as he was 17 at the time. Rittenhouse has pleaded not guilty.

The case has come to symbolize different things for different slices of America. Many see Rittenhouse’s popularity on the right as a racist affront to the protests against police brutality and note how he and other armed white vigilantes were treated very differently by police when compared with protesters. Meanwhile, conservatives have raised huge amounts of money for Rittenhouse’s legal defense and see him as a hero.

Judge Bruce Schroeder rebukes the prosecutor after a defense motion for a mistrial. Photograph: Mark Hertzberg/AP

Those controversies have been given extra edge by the bizarre behavior and controversial rulings of the judge in the case.

Before the trial, Judge Bruce Schroeder, Wisconsin’s longest-serving circuit judge, made headlines when he controversially ruled that the people shot by Rittenhouse last August cannot be referred to as “victims” by prosecutors. Defense attorneys may, however, call them “arsonists” or “looters”.

Even though rulings against using the term “victims” are not uncommon in trials involving self-defense claims, prosecutors argued that Schroeder was establishing a double standard.

Throughout the trial, several of the state’s witnesses appeared to have bolstered Rittenhouse’s self-defense argument, including Gaige Grosskreutz, the 27-year-old man he injured. Grosskreutz testified that he carried a loaded gun that night and acknowledged that it was aimed at Rittenhouse when Rittenhouse shot him.

During cross-examination, the defense attorney Corey Chirafisi asked Grosskreutz, “It wasn’t until you pointed your gun at him, advanced on him … that he fired, right?”

“Correct,” Grosskreutz answered. He has, however, affirmed that he did not intend to point his pistol at Rittenhouse, saying, “That’s not why I was out there. It’s not who I am.” Grosskreutz, who trained as a paramedic, testified that he volunteered as a medic at the protest.

Kyle Rittenhouse breaks down on the stand as he testifies about his encounter with the late Joseph Rosenbaum. Photograph: Sean Krajacic/AP

Another witness, videographer Richie McGinniss, described the 36-year-old Joseph Rosenbaum whom Rittenhouse fatally shot as chasing after Rittenhouse and lunging for his gun. When prosecutor Thomas Binger pressed McGinniss to concede he did not know what Rosenbaum’s intent was, McGinniss had a pointed – and damaging – answer.

“Well,” McGinniss replied, “He said, ‘Fuck you,’ and then he reached for the weapon.”

Prosecutors also made at least one unforced error that allowed evidence favorable to the defense that otherwise would have been barred. When Rosenbaum’s fiancee, Kariann Swart, took the stand last Friday, a prosecutor asked her if Rosenbaum had taken medication earlier on the day he was shot.

By asking that question, Schroeder ruled, prosecutors opened the door for the defense to ask Swart what the medication was for. She told jurors it was for bipolar disorder and depression during cross-examination, in turn potentially adding credibility to the idea that Rosenbaum was an unstable aggressor.

As the trial unfolded, things took a startling turn on Wednesday after Rittenhouse testified that he was under attack when he shot the three men. The 18-year-old broke down crying uncontrollably at one point and Schroeder ordered a 10-minute break for him to compose himself.

During cross-examination, Binger asked Rittenhouse whether it was appropriate to use deadly force to protect property. He also posed questions about Rittenhouse’s silence after his arrest.

At that, the jury was ushered out of the room, and Schroeder loudly and angrily admonished Binger for pursuing an improper line of questioning and trying to introduce testimony that the judge earlier said he was inclined to prohibit. “Don’t get brazen with me,” Schroeder yelled at Binger.

As the defense argued for a mistrial with prejudice over Binger’s actions, Schroeder’s phone suddenly rang to the ringtone of God Bless the USA. Released in 1984 by Lee Greenwood, the song is popular in conservative circles and often played as Trump’s entrance theme during his rallies.

Mark Richards, lead defense attorney, right, argues with Assistant District Attorney Thomas Binger, left/ Photograph: Sean Krajacic/The Kenosha News/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shutterstock

Schroeder also appeared to sympathize with the defense team on Wednesday after Rittenhouse’s lawyers suggested Apple’s pinch-to-zoom feature on tablets and phones can distort video evidence.

The company’s “iPads … have artificial intelligence in them that allow things to be viewed through three dimensions and logarithms,” the defense team argued. “This isn’t actually enhanced video. This is Apple’s iPad programming creating what it thinks is there, not what necessarily is there.”

Schroeder responded that the prosecution shouldered the burden of proof that Apple does not use artificial intelligence to manipulate footage.

“You’re the proponent of the exhibit, and you need to tell me that it’s reliable,” he said. The judge also suggested prosecutors find an expert during their brief recess, saying: “Maybe you can get someone to testify on this within minutes? I don’t know.”

On Thursday, Schroeder urged jurors to clap for military veterans after he saw that one of the defense’s witnesses, John Black, was a veteran. “Give a round of applause to the people who have served our country,” he announced in court.

Right before a lunch break, Schroeder made a racist comment that prompted widespread outrage on social media. “I hope the Asian food isn’t coming … isn’t on one of those boats along Long Beach harbor,” he said.

The judge appeared to have been referring to the record-breaking number of cargo ships that are waiting off the coast of California due to a supply chain backlog at the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports.

On Friday, Schroeder announced that he would allow the jury to consider lesser charges in one of the two killings, while ruling against the prosecution’s request to allow the jury to consider a lesser charge in the killing of Rosenbaum.

According to him, the evidence did not show that Rittenhouse could win acquittal on first-degree reckless homicide but be found guilty on the second.

Schroeder has set time limits of two and a half hours for each side’s closing arguments on Monday, saying: “The brain cannot absorb what the seat cannot endure.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/nov/13/kyle-rittenhouse-trial-yelling-tears-and-surprises-reflect-divided-america

Aurea Santos/ANBA

Executives were given tips on how to negotiate

São Paulo – Brazilian pharmaceutical industry executives attended a lecture this Wednesday (30th) at the offices of the Arab Brazilian Chamber of Commerce, in São Paulo, to learn more about the workings of this industry in the Middle East and North Africa. The workshop was also attended by professionals from other industries who are interested in doing business with Arabs.

The event is sponsored by a partnership between the Arab Chamber and the Brazilian Pharma Chemical and Pharmaceutical Inputs Industry Association (Abiquifi), and precedes a matchmaking event for Arabs and Brazilians due on August 5th and 6th, during the CPhI South America fair in São Paulo.

The workshop was delivered by the Arab Chamber’s CEO Michel Alaby, International Business executive Rafael Solimeo, and Business and Markets manager Rafael Abdulmassih.

“The Arab countries rank among the leading pharmaceutical importers in the world, and are the 23rd leading export destination for the Brazilian pharma industry. There is plenty of room for growth,” Solimeo stressed. In his presentation he showed that last year, Arab countries imported a combined US$ 18.59 billion worth of pharma products from the world. Brazil, however, only accounted for US$ 11.57 million of that sum.

The Arab companies attending the matchmaking are Tabuk (Saudi Arabia), Bajafar Medical (Sudan), Reopharm and Al Taqaddom Pharmaceutical Industries (Jordan), Ibn Hayyan&Mohdar (Yemen), Al Multaqa Drugs & Pharmaceutical (United Arab Emirates), Unipharma (Iraq), Biopharm and SigmaTec Pharma (Egypt).

Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Sudan, Iraq and Emirates are some of the top Arab pharma importers.

During the lecture, the profiles of each of the matchmaking companies were outlined, as well as those of their countries of origin. “Europeans are always among the main trade partners with Arab countries in this industry,” said Solimeu. He also explained that countries like Saudi Arabia and the Emirates operate as distribution hubs in the region, acting as gateways into other countries.

Adriana dos Santos, the New Business director for Brasterápica Farmacêutica, notes that her although her company does not export at this time, it is expanding and beginning to seek out export avenues.

And what caused the company to become interested in the Arab market? “I see many opportunities, because they already import from Europe and the United States. I believe Brazil offers more competitive pricing, so there is an opportunity to be explored,” she says.

Brasterápica manufactures medication for the flu, fever, headache, cough, cold, vitamin supplements for children, and phytotherapy products, among others. “I hope we can pave the way for new business deals,” she said regarding her expectations for the matchmaking with Arabs.

Theraskin, a maker of cosmetics, dermo-cosmetics and therapeutic treatment products, is also looking to start selling to foreign countries. “The Arab market is very large. I believe it holds several areas of interest to the company. We are not certain that we will start exporting right away, but we believe some of the countries, considering their market characteristics, may be interesting eventually,” said Products manager Álvaro Menezes.

At the presentation, the profiles of Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Sudan attracted the executive’s attention. Menezes believes the matchmaking will kick-start his prospecting. “We will begin to learn a bit about our possibilities as concerns exports and the foreign market,” he said.

Aurea Santos/ANBA

Alaby: Arabs are keen on interpersonal relationships

How to negotiate

The workshop also featured important tips on doing business in the Arab world. “Arab businessmen favour personal relationships over entrepreneurial ones,” Alaby warned.

The Arab Chamber CEO also highlighted the importance of one-on-one contact when doing business, and explained that email is a tool mostly used by the younger executives, while older businessmen prefer the telephone, in case an actual meeting is not possible.

Alaby also discussed the Ramadan, the holy month of Muslims, which ended on Monday (28th). “During the Ramadan, it is not advisable to schedule trips to [the Arab world]. They work less hours and are not allowed to drink water or eat [during daytime]. Doing business during this period is harder,” he said.

According to Alaby, “we must be familiar with the culture in order to avoid mistakes and keep negotiation channels open.” The executive also stressed the importance of speaking other languages, such as French and English, when the time comes to talk business with Arab executives.

*Translated by Gabriel Pomerancblum

Source Article from http://www2.anba.com.br/noticia/21864442/business-opportunities/companies-learn-about-arab-pharma-market/

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/31/business/mexico-tariffs-auto-industry/index.html


Republicans have said that the Green New Deal would cost $93 trillion — more than enough money to “buy every American a Ferrari,” according to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. | Somodevilla/Getty Images

Energy & Environment

Republicans’ estimates that the climate plan would cost $93 trillion are based on a think tank study that doesn’t endorse that total.

Republicans claim the Green New Deal would cost $93 trillion — a number that would dwarf the economic output of every nation on Earth.

The figure is bogus.

Story Continued Below

But that isn’t stopping the eye-popping total from turning up on the Senate floor, the Conservative Political Action Conference and even “Saturday Night Live” as the progressive Democrats’ sweeping-yet-vague vision statement amps up the political conversation around climate change.

The number originated with a report by a conservative think tank, American Action Forum, that made huge assumptions about how exactly Democrats would go about implementing their plan. But the $93 trillion figure does not appear anywhere in the think tank’s report — and AAF President Douglas Holtz-Eakin confessed he has no idea how much exactly the Green New Deal would cost.

“Is it billions or trillions?” asked Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional Budget Office. “Any precision past that is illusory.”

The Green New Deal isn’t even a plan yet — at the moment it’s a non-binding resolution that calls for major action to stop greenhouse gas pollution while reducing income inequality and creating “millions of good, high-wage jobs.” But top Republicans have embraced the $93 trillion price tag, using it to argue that the climate plan would bankrupt the United States.

Democrats say Republicans are using the number to try to dodge responsibility for decades of denying climate science, while the White House continues to disregard the evidence linking human activity to rising temperatures and extreme weather.

To come up with the $93 million total, Republicans added together the cost estimates that the AAF report’s authors had placed on various aspects of a Green New Deal platform. Most of those were based on assumptions about universal healthcare and jobs programs rather than the costs of transitioning to carbon-free electricity and transportation.

“There’s a race for think-tankers, analysts and academia to be the first to come up with a number, and you can see why — look at how many people latched onto that $93 trillion number,” said Nick Loris, an economist at the conservative Heritage Foundation. “A lot of times you just see the number and you don’t get a lot of the backstory behind the number.”

Holtz-Eakin told POLITICO that he was interested only in “ballparks,” adding that the study is best viewed as “a sincere but a heroic estimate of a not very well-specified proposal.” When asked whether he had a problem with the way Republicans had characterized his study and the $93 trillion figure, Holtz-Eakin said: “We did try to play it straight here. We never added it up.”

Green New Deal supporters acknowledge that their preferred polices won’t be free, but they say Republicans are acting in bad faith by trying to paint the resolution with a specific brush so early and refusing to acknowledge that unchecked climate change poses its own economic risks. For instance, a United Nations report last fall estimated a global cost of as much as $69 trillion from even a modest rise in global temperatures.

“We all knew this vacuum was here, but you can’t put a price on it until you have a piece of legislation that you can score,” said Greg Carlock, Green New Deal research director with the progressive think tank Data for Progress. He said the AAF study “was an attempt to fill that vacuum, but it does it in a mean-spirited way.”

Yet the figure is already a fixture of GOP talking points about the Green New Deal — echoing attacks the party has made on environmental regulations going back decades.

“That’s always been the crux of the Republican argument against making all these changes,” said Rory Cooper, a Republican strategist and managing director at Purple Strategies, a bipartisan consulting firm. “It’s significant lifestyle changes in exchange for an undefined benefit.”

The GOP’s eagerness to wield the price estimate underscores the prominence that climate change has achieved in Washington for the first time in nearly a decade.

When they set out to put a price tag on the Green New Deal last month, Holtz-Eakin and his associates had no real policy or plan to evaluate, so they made one up to perform back-of-the-envelope calculations. AAF’s analysis extrapolated from the various ideas laid out in the non-binding resolution from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) — such as switching the electric grid entirely off fossil fuels and providing jobs and health care for everyone.

Democrats dismiss the AAF study as a fabrication. And on Wednesday, as Republican senators railed on the floor about the $93 trillion estimate and the dangers of socialism, several Democrats interrupted them to demand that the GOP acknowledge the reality of climate change.

“That is a completely made up number by the Koch brothers,” Markey, who also co-sponsored the 2009 cap-and-trade bill, said on the Senate floor.

Markey interrupted a speech by Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), who is expected to be among Democrats’ top targets in next year’s elections.

“I don’t care if it is $93 trillion, $43 trillion or $10 trillion — it is unsustainable,” Tillis shot back. “We can sit here and question the sources, but at the end of the day, we all know that this was theater.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell also kept pushing the talking point, noting that $93 trillion is “more than the combined annual GDP of every nation on Earth” — as well as more than enough to “buy every American a Ferrari.”

The figure has been a fixture of GOP messaging since AAF released its report on Feb. 25.

Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.) wielded the $93 trillion figure at the recent Conservative Political Action Conference. Senate Environment and Public Works Chairman John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) took to a USA Today op-ed with the price estimate. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) proudly displayed it on a poster from the Senate floor. It worked its way into an online skit from “Saturday Night Live” that parodied Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s (D-Calif.) interaction with a group of young climate activists.

The number is so large as to be nearly incomprehensible, but it dwarfs other massive endeavors such as building the Interstate Highway System, which cost $241 billion in today’s dollars, for example. And the AAF study does not distinguish between government and private-sector spending, nor does it attempt to quantify the benefits of reducing pollution or other policies. For example, Stanford University’s Mark Jacobson estimated that eliminating the electricity sector’s carbon emissions would avoid $265 billion in annual U.S. damages beginning in 2050.

“A central challenge to climate policy-making is there are costs right away and the benefits emerge over time,” said Michael Greenstone, an economist and director of the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago. “But just because the benefits happen over time doesn’t mean it’s not real.”

In fact, $80.6 trillion of the costs in AAF’s study come from a jobs guarantee and universal healthcare. The Green New Deal resolution calls for “guaranteeing a job” and providing “high-quality health care” to everyone, but it is primarily focused on outlining a set of goals to get the U.S. economy to net-zero carbon emissions by mid-century. While liberal activists say economic justice must be a part of any eventual policy based on the resolution, most see the Green New Deal itself as a vehicle for an energy transition and industrial economic policy, rather than something more sweeping, like “Medicare for All.”

“Given that the [Green New Deal] is at this point simply a set of long-term goals, without any specification of how those goals would be achieved, any estimate of cost is itself likely to be exceptionally speculative,” Robert Stavins, an environmental economist at Harvard University, said in an email.

Many studies that warn of dire economic effects overstate the potential harm, according to a Pew Charitable Trusts review of environmental policies.

Nevertheless, having a specific figure to cite can define the contours of policy conversation, said Margo Thorning, a senior economic policy adviser with the American Council for Capital Formation. Thorning was a frequent Capitol Hill witness when Congress debated cap-and-trade legislation in the early years of the Obama administration. She was coveted partly because her organization published an influential study that used U.S. Energy Information Administration statistics to show that the policy would curb economic growth $3.1 trillion between 2012 and 2030.

Similarly, a National Association of Manufacturers-backed study on the potential effects of tightening standards for ozone said the measure would cost $1.1 trillion and surrender $1.7 trillion in economic growth between 2017 and 2040.

“I think it helped shape the debate because if people realized we were going to be losing 2 to 3 percent of GDP or more and other countries weren’t, we were going to be losing a lot,” Thorning said of her organization’s study on cap-and-trade.

Climate hawks say Republicans dismissing the Green New Deal as unaffordable are ignoring the cost of doing nothing, such as property damage from extreme weather and public health effects from continued fossil fuel pollution. The AAF study makes no attempt to address potential benefits of avoiding those consequences.

“Not talking about the cost of inaction is incredibly misleading,” said Rhiana Gunn-Wright, policy director with New Consensus, one of the groups working on the Green New Deal. “It’s about how, when and where you want to spend your money, because you’re going to spend it.”

The United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said in October that the global cost of temperatures rising 1.5 degrees Celsius — the target the Green New Deal aims to avoid — would be $54 trillion in 2100. That would rise to $69 trillion in a 2-degree scenario. Those targets also served as the basis of the 2015 Paris climate change agreement, which Trump has announced plans to abandon.

Global temperatures are on track to rise by at least 4 degrees by the end of the century, according to projections from the Trump administration. That would lead to even greater economic devastation — for example, damaging $3.6 trillion of coastal property by 2100 without measures to adapt to climate change, according to the National Climate Assessment published last November.

Some GOP strategists see a long-term risk in a dismissive approach to climate policy.

“With the Green New Deal, Republicans are excited to talk about climate change for the first time because we can point out how silly Democrats are being,” said Alex Conant, a GOP strategist and partner at Firehouse Strategies. “It’s likely not a long-term position. Ultimately Republicans, if we want to be taken seriously on climate change, we will have to offer conservative solutions to it.”

At least one Republican has kept her criticism of the Green New Deal more muted: Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, whose home state is warming more quickly than the rest of the country. Chairing an Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing on climate Tuesday, Murkowski pointed to dwindling fisheries and melting permafrost, which her constituents are already dealing with. She has never publicly cited the American Action Forum study.

“This has got to be a priority for all of us,” she said of confronting climate change. “It is directly impacting our way of life.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/03/10/republican-green-new-deal-attack-1250859

Image copyright
AP

Image caption

Patricia amenaza Jalisco, Colima y Nayarit.

El huracán Patricia amenaza con consecuencias “potencialmente catastróficas” la costa oeste de México, donde se espera que toque tierra en algún momento de la tarde o noche del viernes, informó el Centro Nacional de Huracanes de Estados Unidos, con sede en Miami, Florida.

La Secretaría de Gobernación mexicana ya declaró “emergencia extraordinaria” en varias localidades de los estados de Colima, Nayarit y Jalisco ante la inminente llegada de la tormenta.

Con vientos máximos sostenidos de hasta 325 km/h, Patricia alcanzó a última hora del jueves la categoría 5 –la máxima de la escala Saffir-Simpson– y se desplaza a unos 18 km/h hacia la costa mexicana.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Patricia se acerca a las costas del Pacífico mexicano como el más poderoso desde que se tiene registro.

“Es muy probable que […] este huracán sea el más intenso que haya existido en la parte del Pacífico de nuestro país, desde que se tiene registro”, dijo el director de la Comisión Nacional del Agua de México, Roberto Ramírez de la Parra.

“Sus vientos son lo suficientemente fuertes como para levantar un avión y mantenerlo en el aire”, destacó la portavoz de la Organización Meteorológica Mundial (OMM), Claire Nullis.

Lea también: Así se forman los huracanes

El más intenso

Según el Centro Nacional de Huracanes de EE.UU. “algunas fluctuaciones” en la intensidad del huracán son posibles, por lo que no descartó que Patricia pueda debilitarse al momento de tocar tierra.

“Pero se espera que Patricia siga siendo un extremadamente peligroso huracán Categoría Cinco“, destacó la institución.

Y la OMM dijo que, en estos momentos, el huracán tiene una fuerza comparable a la del tifón Haiyán, que dejó más de 7.000 muertos y desaparecidos en las Filipinas hace dos años.

“Patricia es ahora el huracán más intenso en haber alcanzado jamás la región noreste del Pacífico”, confirmó su portavoz, Nullis.

Lea también: Huracanes con nombre femenino “son más letales”

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

Varios estados fueron declarados en “alerta extraordinaria”.

Las autoridades mexicanas ya preparan albergues para atender a la población y las clases han sido suspendidas en varios estados.

El diario El Universal informó que en la zona costera que se prevé sea afectada se inició la evacuación de unas 50.000 personas.

Además, se aconsejó a los turistas que no viajen a la zona. El centro turístico de Puerto Vallarta, situado en Jalisco, puede ser directamente golpeado por la tormenta.

Lea también: ¿Es posible realmente controlar el clima?

“Más vale prevenir”

Algunos establecimientos siguieron los consejos de las autoridades y ya cesaron sus actividades.

Image copyright
AP

Image caption

En locales de Puerto Vallarta se preparan para la llegada de Patricia.

“Mejor estar seguros que lamentarse. Los huracanes son impredecibles”, le dijo a la agencia AFP Enrique Esparza, director de una tienda de muebles en Manzanillo.

En esta localidad se pudo ver a residentes comprando provisiones de emergencia en los supermercados.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Miles de personas fueron evacuadas.

Se prevé que Patricia produzca entre 15 a 30 centímetros de lluvia en los estados de Jalisco, Colima, Michoacán y Guerrero, lo que puede causar inundaciones y deslaves, advirtió el centro estadounidense.

También se teme que pueda haber desbordamientos en la costa, acompañadas de “grandes y destructivas olas”.

La comisión de aguas alertó que los ríos se pueden desbordar y las carreteras se pueden ver afectadas por el mal tiempo.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2015/10/151023_mexico_huracan_patricia_jalisco_colima_az

La familia del joven hizo la denuncia de su ausencia el sábado, en Montevideo, a la mañana siguiente de haber mantenido contacto telefónico con el joven.

Cuando desapareció iba en un Chevrolet Spark negro que fue encontrado el domingo en Lagomar. En el interior del auto había una carta cuyo contenido no fue divulgado, aunque fuentes consultadas por El País indicaron que la misma “tenía un tono de despedida”. Sin embargo, el escrito no daba indicaciones que pudieran precisar más cuál era la decisión del muchacho, quien no había dado señales de conflictos familiares.

Tampoco había, en torno al automóvil -abandonado en una calle, a unas cuadras de la rambla de Lagomar- signos de violencia o huellas.

La Armada Nacional a través del personal de la Sub Prefectura de Ciudad de la Costa, en apoyo a la Seccional N°18 de Lagomar, participó en la búsqueda del joven con recorridas a pie y en cuadriciclos por la zona de playa y médanos, entre las bajadas 16 y 19 que dan a la rambla. También se utilizaron botes neumáticos para hacer un rastreo por mar, sin que se reportaran resultados positivos.

El capitán de navío Gastón Jaunsolo, vocero de la Armada, dijo que hoy se incorporará a la búsqueda el plantel de perros de la Policía, especializado en este tipo de tareas.

Source Article from http://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/armada-busca-joven-desaparecido-lagomar.html

São Paulo – Etihad Airways had its best performance in March since it started flying to São Paulo, in June 2013. The Abu Dhabi-based airline’s CEO in Brazil, Christophe Didier, said last month, the average occupancy rate of flights leaving from São Paulo was 75.2%. “It was the first time we had an average occupancy higher than 70%, a sensational performance,” said Didier last Wednesday (9th), during the opening cocktail party for the 2nd Japanese Cuisine Festival at São Paulo’s Intercontinental Hotel, which will continue until April 12th and is sponsored by the airline.

Marcos Carrieri/ANBA

Cocktail party celebrated Japanese cuisine

 Didier said performance last month was “sensational” because it represents the growth, in Brazil, of the airline and the Etihad brand, which was unknown upon arriving in Brazil. He ascribed the higher occupancy to the exclusive service the company offers its passengers.

“Etihad has been doing great work in Brazil. The flight leaves today at the best time (10:15 pm). It is the best time, because it is what passengers call for. They don’t want to fly early in the morning; they want to leave late in the evening. We have also succeeded in having a daily flight, despite the fact that the Guarulhos Airport handles large numbers of aircraft. In March, we had 75% occupancy, which is excellent considering that we have been operating for roughly eight months,” he said. Still, Didier said the company needs to keep growing and strengthening its brand in the country.

Higher demand during the World Cup

Etihad is expecting passenger demand to be up roughly 20% during the FIFA World Cup in Brazil. Didier told ANBA that last Tuesday (8th), the company decided on using a larger aircraft in its flights to Brazil, probably from June to August. The event opens on June 12th and ends on July 13th.

The unit deployed will be an Airbus A340-600, which is a 292-seater, more than the aircraft flying the route connecting São Paulo and the capital of the United Arab Emirates at this time. The Airbus A340-500 currently in use has 240 seats.

This will not be the first time the airline temporarily switches aircraft in Brazil. In July last year, Etihad used a Boeing 777 in some flights during the World Youth Journey, which was attended by Pope Francis.

Etihad started flying to Brazil on June 1st last year, with three weekly flights between São Paulo and Abu Dhabi. Two months later, the flights went daily. Didier took charge of the company in Brazil in January this year, replacing Juan Torres who was allocated to the Philippines. Prior to working at Etihad, Didier spent nine years with Air France and fourteen years with the United States’ Delta Airlines.

*Translated by Gabriel Pomerancblum

Source Article from http://www2.anba.com.br/noticia/21863453/tourism/etihad-has-highest-occupancy-rate-in-brazil/

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(CNN)Moments after a gunman opened fire in Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein’s synagogue, as his friend lay dying in the lobby, he wrapped his arm and bleeding fingers in a prayer shawl, stood on a chair and spoke to his congregation.

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{videoPinner.setIsPlaying(true);videoPinner.animateDown();}}},onContentReplayRequest: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(true);var $endSlate = jQuery(document.getElementById(containerId)).parent().find(‘.js-video__end-slate’).eq(0);if ($endSlate.length > 0) {$endSlate.removeClass(‘video__end-slate–active’).addClass(‘video__end-slate–inactive’);}}}},onContentBegin: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (mobilePinnedView) {mobilePinnedView.enable();}/* Dismissing the pinnedPlayer if another video players plays a video. */CNN.VideoPlayer.dismissMobilePinnedPlayer(containerId);CNN.VideoPlayer.mutePlayer(containerId);if (CNN.companion && typeof CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout === ‘function’) {CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout(‘removeEpicAds’);}CNN.VideoPlayer.hideSpinner(containerId);clearTimeout(moveToNextTimeout);CNN.VideoSourceUtils.clearSource(containerId);jQuery(document).triggerVideoContentStarted();},onContentComplete: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (CNN.companion && typeof CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout === ‘function’) {CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout(‘restoreFreewheel’);}navigateToNextVideo(contentId, containerId);},onContentEnd: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(false);}}},onCVPVisibilityChange: function (containerId, cvpId, visible) {CNN.VideoPlayer.handleAdOnCVPVisibilityChange(containerId, visible);}};if (typeof configObj.context !== ‘string’ || configObj.context.length 0) {configObj.adsection = window.ssid;}CNN.autoPlayVideoExist = (CNN.autoPlayVideoExist === true) ? true : false;CNN.VideoPlayer.getLibrary(configObj, callbackObj, isLivePlayer);});CNN.INJECTOR.scriptComplete(‘videodemanddust’);

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/29/us/san-diego-synagogue-shooting-rabbi-monday/index.html