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Ojo al santo que nos pasaron. Nos dijeron que la edición nocturna de Telenoticias la  está viendo a palitos con la audiencia por culpa de la exitosa novela  “Betty la fea”,  que pasa canal 6 a las 6 p.m. La novela colombiana  está  dejando botada a la competencia cuando empiezan las noticias. Es decir, jala a más gente. Aunque a ninguna de las dos televisoras le gusta  soltar números de la audiencia pensamos que, si está pasando lo que nos dijeron, bien podemos traer a cuento aquello de que “la  suerte de la fea, en La Sabana se la desean”. 

Source Article from http://www.lateja.cr/farandula/en-todas-betty-jala-mas-que-las-noticias/E6FE52VSWJCTFAOPHP37IT5ZOE/story/

Despite widespread concern over the claims — which were followed by other allegations of sexual misconduct, all of which Mr. Kavanaugh has consistently denied — Mr. Trump steadfastly backed the judge. He deployed Mr. McGahn to shepherd Mr. Kavanaugh through the unusually fraught confirmation, which culminated in a heated, daylong hearing in September of 2018.

Both Christine Blasey Ford, the professor who said she was assaulted, and Mr. Kavanaugh were grilled by Senators on the Judiciary Committee.

In a recent interview with the author Michael Wolff, Mr. Trump put his handling of Justice Kavanaugh into stark terms, asking “Where would he be without me? I saved his life.”

But in addition to offering shows of support, the Trump White House carefully controlled the investigations into Mr. Kavanaugh’s past. After Dr. Ford came forward, Mr. Trump’s staff tried to limit the number of people the F.B.I. interviewed as part of that probe. Only after an outcry from Democrats over the president’s approach did the administration say the agency could conduct a more open investigation.

Ultimately, 10 witnesses were interviewed by the F.B.I., according to the F.B.I.’s recent letter. Dr. Ford and Mr. Kavanaugh themselves were never interviewed by the F.B.I.

Senator Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of Connecticut, who signed Wednesday’s letter to the F.B.I., called the process “an injustice in fact orchestrated by the White House under Donald Trump, an injustice that frankly was a disservice to the F.B.I.”

Debra Katz and Lisa Banks, the lawyers who represented Dr. Ford, said in a statement that the nation “deserved better” when it came to the inquiry into Justice Kavanaugh.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/22/us/politics/kavanaugh-fbi-investigation.html

Hurricane Dorian careened toward the southeastern United States on Saturday, taking an unpredictable path that has residents of four states on edge.

Dorian had swelled to a more powerful Category 4 hurricane, with raging winds of more than 150 mph. The storm could bring life-threatening storm surge as it plows up the Atlantic coast toward Georgia and the Carolinas.

And experts warned that the storm could strengthen even more before it reaches the United States.

“Dorian is forecast to move over a deep layer of very warm waters, which is like high-octane fuel for hurricanes,” National Hurricane Center senior forecaster Lixion Avila wrote in a Saturday update.

But even as officials urged residents to prepare for the worst, they struggled to deal with the storm’s unpredictable path. On Friday, it looked as if Dorian would bear down on South Florida. By Saturday afternoon, the National Hurricane Center said Dorian might skirt the state’s coast without making landfall, instead striking somewhere along the Carolina coast midweek.

Even so, officials urged Florida residents not to let their guard down. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) warned that Dorian could be dangerous even if it never ­touches land.

Jared Moskowitz, director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, said “most of the east coast” of Florida will probably see high winds and flooding. “At this point, the only thing consistent about this storm has been its inconsistency,” Moskowitz said in a news release.

But the shifting track confounded public officials, who wrestled with whether to declare mandatory evacuations. Five counties issued voluntary evacuations, but only two — Martin and Brevard — planned to make it mandatory for residents on barrier islands.

Saturday evening, Florida ordered hurricane watches for five counties, from Broward County to Indian River County, as Dorian lumbered at 8 mph toward the Bahamas.

That country is preparing for “catastrophic” wind, rain and storm surge Sunday, especially in the north, said Lindsay Thompson, public information officer for the National Emergency Management Agency in Nassau.

“It’s slow moving, so it’s really not good,” Thompson said. “We are a low-lying island nation. We’re looking at a storm surge in some areas up to 12 feet, 15 feet.”

She said Prime Minister Hubert Minnis warned residents Saturday afternoon of the danger from Dorian. “He made a final appeal for people to get off the smaller islands,” she said. “He said basically, you will die if you stay.”

Hurricane-force winds extended out 30 miles from the ­well-defined eye of the storm, and tropical-storm-force winds of up to 74 mph extended outward 115 miles, according to the National Hurricane Center.

The wind field and uncertain track kept people on the east coast of Florida in active preparation mode Saturday. Florida Power and Light (FPL), which provides electricity to nearly 10 million people in the state, called in 18,000 restoration crew workers from across the country and Canada. They were deployed around the state — including at the Daytona Motor Speedway — waiting for the power outages officials said are inevitable with a strong hurricane.

FPL communications director Brian Garner said Dorian is likely to knock out power somewhere in the state.

“Rest assured that Florida remains in the cone of uncertainty, and this is still a very dangerous storm,” he said.

Floridians seemed to be heeding that warning Saturday. Water, bread, ice and plywood were selling fast at stores along the state’s east coast.

“We’re kind of last minute,” said Christyna Hooks, as she and roommate Teika Woodbury wove through the waiting cars in the parking lot of a West Palm Beach Home Depot. “Honestly, I don’t even want to put up shutters. We need wood — our landlord said it was on us to put it up — and snacks and lots of water.”

“And alcohol,” she added.

Stores selling supplies were busy, but places that would normally be crowded with tourists on Labor Day weekend were quiet. Orlando International Airport, the busiest in the state, plans to cease commercial operations at 2 a.m. Monday.

On Saturday morning, entire blocks of the Daytona Beach boardwalk were deserted, and Labor Day crowds were nowhere to be found. Amusement park rides were shut down, and crews were boarding up an ice cream shop.

Those who stayed said their heads were spinning from a week of changing expectations for the slow-moving storm.

“It’s annoying not knowing,” said Eileen Keenan, as she sipped a salted caramel mocha at a beachside Starbucks.

Keenan filled her car with gas and went grocery shopping without issue earlier in the week. After the hurricane was upgraded to Category 3 on Friday, the same station was out of gas and the same store was out of water.

Karen Cook, manager of a sprawling beachfront souvenir shop, frowned as she watched the Weather Channel on a large TV behind the cash register.

“I can’t hear about it anymore,” she said, planning to switch channels to HGTV or college football. “It’s so much stress . . . making sure we have food preparations and the kids taken care of. The waiting game, it’s just so hard. But that eye is so big.”

St. Johns County in North Florida offered free sandbags to residents, and city workers placed hundreds of them along the streets of St. Augustine.

In South Florida, residents who rushed to board up windows and stock up on supplies heading into the weekend found themselves out of the cone Saturday. But many of them were still wary.

On Fort Lauderdale’s beaches, crowds were sparse, despite sunshine, temperatures in the low 90s and a mild breeze. Lifeguard stands had yellow flags fluttering, meaning there was a medium hazard with “moderate surf and/or currents.”

Without mandatory evacuations, the highways weren’t crowded, and lines at gas stations were short.

“There have been 10 different predictions, and even though conditions are now more favorable, let’s not forget what happened in 2017,” said Broward County Mayor Mark Bogen, speaking at an 11:30 a.m. briefing in the county’s fully staffed Emergency Operations Center in Plantation.

Bogen was referring to Hurricane Irma in 2017. South Florida was in the direct path of a Category 4 storm, only to dodge a major disaster when Irma turned at the last minute and headed up the west coast of Florida instead. There was still considerable storm damage here, including significant flooding and many days without power for a number of residents — including 12 people who died in a nursing home that wasn’t equipped with a generator — but not the devastation originally predicted.

Bogen struck a cautionary tone Saturday.

“Assume you’ll lose power, ­assume you’ll be in the dark, assume the worst,” he said. “Be prepared. Be in a safe location.”

Hurricane Irma was a much bigger storm than Dorian, enveloping most of the state. The prestorm warnings and evacuation orders from state officials, such as then-Gov. Rick Scott (R), prompted one of the largest mass evacuations in the country’s history: 6.8 million people left their homes to find safer ground.

That caused massive traffic snarls on the state’s major highways. Drivers ran out of gas on the Florida Turnpike and camped out on the side of the road.

A year after Irma, a survey by the National Hurricane Survival Initiative found that 3 in 5 Floridians would refuse to evacuate, mostly because of concerns about traffic.

DeSantis, while urging residents to “remain vigilant” in the face of Hurricane Dorian, left evacuation warnings up to local officials in the state’s 67 counties.

Evacuation orders are never popular. Even evacuation suggestions irk people — as officials in the Florida Keys discovered Saturday. On Friday, when the Keys were in the cone of uncertainly, officials asked visitors to leave if they could.

On Saturday, when the new forecast showed that Dorian was no longer a threat to the islands, they reversed course.

It was good to be out of the cone, said Rhonda Holding of the Marathon Chamber of Commerce and Visitors Center.

“You’d have a better chance of getting through Dorian here than you would up north,” Holding said. “It’s a beautiful, sunny day. There’s a nice breeze. It would be a good day for fishing or snorkeling.”

Jason Samenow contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/hurricane-dorians-unpredictable-path-has-officials-residents-in-4-states-unsettled/2019/08/31/97501072-cc24-11e9-be05-f76ac4ec618c_story.html

African-Americans have played a profound role in shaping the U.S. business landscape. Technological innovations like the traffic light, automatic elevator doors and even caller ID all sprung from the minds of creative black luminaries. 

To honor their business achievements this Black History Month, Forbes spoke to a number of founders, investors, activists, celebrities and experts on the black diaspora. What emerged from these conversation was a rich, complex portrait of black entrepreneurship, one that highlights the black community’s tremendous creativity, as well as a resilience that was born, in part, out of hardship and necessity.

Historically, black-owned companies, like Madam C.J. Walker’s hair-care line and the businesses that formed Tulsa, Oklahoma’s Black Wall Street, were developed in direct response to racial discrimination. “These segregation patterns then created market opportunities for black entrepreneurs to step in, make money and meet the demands of the black community,” says Mehrsa Baradaran, author of The Color of Money: Black Banks and the Racial Wealth Gap. With few work opportunities and high job instability, many black pioneers took matters into their own hands, building small enterprises that served and employed fellow African-Americans.

The black community’s long history of entrepreneurship is marked by ebbs and flows. The Reconstruction era, the period after the Civil War, saw a sharp rise in the number of black-owned businesses as the country attempted to right some of the inequities of slavery. But in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the resurgence of Jim Crow laws enforcing racial segregation, coupled with the Great Depression, led to the decline of black entrepreneurship. “Black businesses were targeted and we saw a rollback in many of the advancements that were made previously,” says Tiffiany Howard, a small business and entrepreneurship fellow at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation.

The rate of black business creation continued to rise and fall throughout the 20th and 21st century, increasing in the ’90s, dipping during the 2008 recession and rising again post-recession. In recent years, the number of black-owned businesses has risen dramatically, with black women fueling much of that growth. In 2003, Oprah Winfrey, arguably the most notable black female entrepreneur, became the first black American billionaire. And in just the last five years, four other African-Americans have reached the billionaire echelon.

But even with this forward momentum, black entrepreneurs still face a number of challenges: primarily, a lack of access to capital, says Ron Busby, president of the U.S. Black Chambers. “We have the acumen, the creativity, the knowledge and even the manpower. But without access to capital, our ideas come to a standstill, are stolen or are manipulated.” 

Many of the black 2020 30 Under 30 listmakers echo a similar sentiment in candid video interviews with Forbes, but they also note the black community’s collective ability to persevere against all odds. And in an effort to level the playing field for entrepreneurs of color, a number of corporations and wealthy black business leaders have created funds to invest in minority-owned companies. Real estate tycoon Don Peebles announced a $500 million fund for emerging minority and female developers in June 2019, and banks like JPMorgan and Citigroup have launched initiatives and investment funds to support underrepresented entrepreneurs. 

Still, much remains to be done both in the private and public sectors. “In order for there to be a great America, there must be a great black America,” Busby says. “And in order for there to be a great black America, you must have great black businesses and a great black economy.”

If history is any indication, black entrepreneurship will continue to grow and thrive in the coming years—an economic boon for Americans of all colors.

-Ruth Umoh

Nick Cannon: Renaissance Man, Mogul In The Making

READ MORE: Nick Cannon Has A Big Year Ahead—In The Classroom And The Boardroom

Meet The Members Of The Black Billionaires Club

Robert F. Smith

Smith, the founder and CEO of Vista Equity Partners, made national headlines in 2019 when he pledged to pay off student loans for the entire graduating class of Morehouse College. He made his Forbes 400 billionaire debut in 2015 with a net worth of $2.5 billion.

Current Net Worth: $5 Billion


David Steward

Steward once watched his car get repossessed from his office parking lot. Today, he’s the billionaire founder and chairman of IT provider World Wide Technology—one of the largest black-owned businesses in America. In 2018, Forbes named him a billionaire with a net worth of $3.4 billion.

Current Net Worth: $3.5 Billion


Oprah Winfrey

The media maven got her start in the entertainment and news industry, later morphing her hit talk show into a business empire. Forbes first listed her as a billionaire in 2003 with a $1 billion net worth.

Current Net Worth: $2.7 Billion


Michael Jordan

Not only is Jordan regarded as one of the NBA’s greatest players, he’s also the highest-paid athlete, thanks to his majority stake in the Charlotte Hornets and a Nike shoe deal. Jordan was first featured as a Forbes billionaire in 2015 with a $1 billion net worth.

Current Net Worth: $1.9 Billion


Jay-Z

In the words of Jay-Z, “I’m not a businessman. I’m a business, man.” Since hitting the hip-hop scene more than 25 years ago, the rapper has created a $1 billion fortune that encompasses liquor, art and real estate. He made his first showing as a Forbes billionaire in the spring of 2019.

Current Net Worth: $1 Billion

Black In The Day: A Timeline Of Business Firsts

We have Thomas Jennings, the first black patent holder, to thank for the prototype of modern dry cleaning.

Madam C.J. Walker creates a hair-care line that will later gain her recognition as the first self-made female millionaire.

H. Naylor Fitzhugh is the first known African-American to graduate from Harvard Business School.

Warren H. Wheeler establishes Wheeler Airlines, the first black-owned and -operated air service in the U.S.

Joan and George Johnson’s hair-care company, Johnson Products, becomes the first black-owned business on the American Stock Exchange.

Reginald F. Lewis, the head of TLC Beatrice International, becomes the first African-American to own a company with $1 billion in sales.

Franklin D. Raines becomes the first black CEO of a Fortune 500 company when he takes over Fannie Mae.

Robert L. Johnson becomes the nation’s first black billionaire after selling the cable network Black Entertainment Television to Viacom.

Ruth Simmons is sworn in as the 18th president of Brown University, where she’s the first African-American president of an Ivy League school.

Don Peebles becomes the first African-American to develop and own a major luxury hotel.

Oprah Winfrey becomes the first black female billionaire, coming in at No. 427 on Forbes list of billionaires.

Ursula Burns is appointed CEO of Xerox, making her the first black female to lead an S&P 500 company.

Words Of Wisdom From Next-Gen Black Entrepreneurs

Members of the 2020 class of 30 Under 30 listmakers discuss black history and what it means to be an entrepreneur of color.

Responses have been edited for clarity and brevity.

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Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/ruthumoh/2020/02/03/celebrating-black-history-month-2020/

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Viernes, 13 de Marzo 2015  |  3:51 pm






Si no puedes dormir, sal de la cama

Aunque pareza raro, los expertos recomiendan que salgas de la cama cuando no puedes dormir. Si no puedes dormir, trata de ocuparte en otras actividades atractivas y relajantes, en las que te metas lo suficiente como para olvidarte del sueo, indic Tracy Kuo, especialista del insomnio de la Universidad de Stanford. | Fuente: Privada | MorgueFile


Unos de los factores que influyen en la calidad del sueo es la posicin adoptada. La ms adecuada es de costado con caderas y rodillas flectadas, ya que no causa un impacto en la columna vertebral, mantenindola relativamente en la posicin neutra, lo que permitir lograr que los tejidos que la componen puedan recuperarse del estrs diario.








Suele ocurrir que nos recostamos para dormir pero no logramos conciliar el sueño y nos quedamos en la cama pensando en cualquier cosa, perdiendo así valiosas horas de descanso.

O algunos tienen la costumbre de revisar el celular estando ya recostados, lo que también influye negativamente en la calidad del sueño.

En este Día Mundial del Sueño, revisa algunos consejos de expertos de diversas áreas que brindan algunos consejos para dormir mejor y así ser más productivos al día siguiente.

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Source Article from http://www.rpp.com.pe/2015-03-13-dia-mundial-del-sueno-recomendaciones-para-dormir-placenteramente-noticia_777723.html

Two staffers for the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) resigned after expressing frustrations about a hold on military assistance to Ukraine that is now at the center of the impeachment inquiry, a witness has testified.

Mark Sandy, an OMB staffer, testified this month that the two staffers, one of whom was in the legal division, had resigned partially due to frustrations with the unexplained aid freeze, according to a transcript of his testimony released Tuesday

Sandy recalled that one individual who resigned had “expressed some frustrations about not understanding the reason for the hold,” according to the transcript, but he noted that he was “reluctant to speak to someone else’s motivations.”

He was also asked whether the OMB legal division employee said they were leaving “at least in part because of their concerns on frustrations about the hold on Ukraine security assistance.”

“Yes, in terms of that process, in part,” Sandy responded.

The officials were not named in the transcript.

A senior administration official categorized the assertion that the two officials resigned in part over the aid freeze as false in an email to The Hill.

Sandy also testified that he believed President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump puts Kushner in charge of overseeing border wall construction: report Trump 2020 national spokesperson gives birth to daughter New McCarthy ad praising Trump includes Russian stock footage MORE had directed the hold on Ukraine aid.

His testimony was part of the House’s impeachment inquiry into Trump’s dealings with Ukraine, including the freeze on security assistance.

The transcript of Sandy’s closed-door interview was one of the latest released by House Democrats. They also released testimony from a closed-door session with Philip Reeker, the acting assistant secretary of State in charge of European and Eurasian Affairs.

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam SchiffAdam Bennett SchiffNunes faces potential ethics review over alleged meeting with Ukrainian official Poll: Interest in impeachment inquiry dips among Democratic voters Schiff: Judiciary Committee to receive impeachment report ‘soon after’ Thanksgiving recess MORE (D-Calif.), Oversight and Reform Committee Chairwoman Carolyn MaloneyCarolyn Bosher MaloneyThe Hill’s Morning Report – Sondland stuns; Dems pull punches in fifth debate Maloney wins House Oversight gavel The Hill’s Morning Report – Wild Wednesday: Sondland testimony, Dem debate take center stage MORE (D-N.Y.), and Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot EngelEliot Lance EngelOvernight Defense — Presented by Boeing — House chairmen demand answers on Open Skies Treaty | China warns US to stay out of South China Sea | Army conducting security assessment of TikTok House chairmen demand answers on surveillance flight treaty Maloney wins House Oversight gavel MORE (D-N.Y.) said in a statement Tuesday that the Reeker and Sandy interviews bolster their case against Trump. 

“The testimonies from Ambassador Reeker and Mr. Sandy continue to paint a portrait of hand-picked political appointees corrupting the official levers of U.S. government power, including by withholding taxpayer funded military assistance to Ukraine, to further the President’s own personal political agenda,” they said.

Hours after Democrats released the transcripts, Trump appeared at a campaign rally in Florida, where he blasted the ongoing impeachment inquiry, with supporters breaking into a chant of “bullshit” when he insisted that the inquiry was falling flat with voters.

The transcripts’ release comes as Schiff’s panel works to put together a report for the Judiciary Committee that will be used to determine whether to draft articles of impeachment against Trump. 

The House launched the inquiry after revelations that Trump had asked Ukraine’s president to look into former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenKennedy walks back comments on potential Ukraine interference: ‘I was wrong’ Nunes faces potential ethics review over alleged meeting with Ukrainian official Bloomberg campaign chief: Trump is winning 2020 election right now MORE, a top political rival and leading candidate for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination.

Updated: 10 p.m.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/policy/national-security/472202-two-omb-staffers-resigned-after-voicing-concerns-about-halted

Image copyright
AP

Image caption

Bomberos intentan apagar el fuego provocado por la explosión.

Al menos 28 personas murieron y otras 61 resultaron heridas en Turquía en una explosión de un carro bomba en Ankara, la capital del país.

Las autoridades dijeron que los explosivos fueron detonados cuando autobuses que transportaban personal militar estaban detenidos en un semáforo cerca del Parlamento y de un cuartel militar.

El ministro de Justicia, Bekir Bozdag, calificó lo ocurrido como un acto “terrorista”.

El presidente Recep Tayip Erdogan y el primer ministro Ahmet Davutoglu han cancelado viajes que tenían planificados al extranjero.

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

Tras la explosión se produjo un amplio despliegue de seguridad en la zona.

El ataque ocurre en un momento en el que Turquía se ha implicado más en el conflicto de Siria, mientras intenta contener una escalada de violencia al sur del país, en zonas habitadas mayormente por población kurda.

Davutoglu iba a viajar este jueves a Bruselas para participar en una mini cumbre con 11 de los 28 países de la Unión Europea a propósito de la crisis de refugiados sirios que se han asentado en Turquía.

Durante el último año, Turquía ha sufrido una serie de ataques con explosivos que han sido mayormente atribuidos al autodenominado Estado Islámico.

En este caso, hasta ahora, nadie se ha atribuido la responsabilidad por lo ocurrido.

  • Enero de 2016 Un ataque suicida en Estambul atribuido al autodenominado Estado Islámico causa 10 muertos, principalmente turistas alemanes.

  • Octubre de 2015 Mueren más de 100 personas en un doble atentado suicida contra una manifestación por la paz de grupos pro-kurdos en Ankara.

  • Julio de 2015 Unas 30 personas fallecen en un ataque suicida en Suruc, ubicada junto a la frontera con Siria.

Una explosión enorme

“Escuché una explosión enorme. Había humo y un olor realmente fuerte, pese a que la detonación ocurrió a varias calles de distancia”, le dijo a Reuters un testigo.

“Inmediatamente podías oír las sirenas de las ambulancias y de las patrullas policiales acercándose al lugar”, agregó.

Image copyright
Getty

Image caption

La columna de humo ocasionada por la detonación podía verse a gran distancia del lugar donde ocurrió.

Largas columnas de humo podían ser vistas en el cielo, saliendo del lugar donde ocurrió el suceso.

Tras la explosión, las fuerzas de seguridad realizaron la detonación controlada de un paquete sospechoso.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2016/02/160217_turquia_explosion_carro_ankara_muertos_ab

The Trump administration on Friday declared the coronavirus a public health emergency in the United States, and announced that people who pose a risk of transmitting the disease will temporarily be suspended from entering the U.S.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said that President Donald Trump signed an order for the U.S. to deny entry to foreign nationals who have traveled to China within the past two weeks, aside from the immediate family of U.S. citizens.

Azar, speaking to reporters at the White House, also said that any U.S. citizens who have been in China’s Hubei province — home of Wuhan, the epicenter of the virus — within the last 14 days “will be subject to up to 14 days of mandatory quarantine to ensure they’re provided proper medical care and health screening.”

The risk to the American public is “low” at this time, said Robert Redfield, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Azar called the measures “fairly incremental” and “appropriate, preventative steps.” Yet, officials said they wanted to ensure it would remain a low risk to Americans.

Acting Homeland Security Secretary Ken Cuccinelli, another member if the White House task force on the coronavirus, said incoming flights from China will be limited to just seven airports beginning Sunday.

The briefing came as markets fell on fears about the fast-spreading virus’ potential economic impact.

The briefing included members of President Donald Trump’s coronavirus task force, which includes national security advisor Robert O’Brien, Health Secretary Alex Azar and other leading officials. It is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. ET. You can watch it here.

Earlier Friday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention quarantined 195 Americans who have been evacuated from Wuhan, China.

As of Friday afternoon, the coronavirus had infected roughly 10,000 people across the globe. In China, the virus is responsible for at least 213 deaths.

Redfield added at the White House press briefing Friday that 191 people in the U.S. are being investigated for the disease.

Also Friday, U.S. airlines including Delta, United and American announced they would suspend all remaining service to mainland China after a State Department warning put a damper on demand for flights there.

Airlines have said ticket sales for China have dropped sharply, a trend that will likely dent their first-quarter revenues.

Dozens of other large U.S. corporations, including Apple, Ford and Kraft Heinz, have already restricted their employees’ China business travel or scaled back operations because of the outbreak.

Here are the members of the White House’s coronavirus task force:

Secretary Alex Azar, Department of Health and Human Services

Robert O’Brien, Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs

Dr. Robert Redfield, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health

Deputy Secretary Stephen Biegun, Department of State

Ken Cuccinelli, Acting Deputy Secretary, Department of Homeland Security

Joel Szabat, Acting Under Secretary for Policy, Department of Transportation

Matthew Pottinger, Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor

Rob Blair, Assistant to the President and Senior Advisor to the Chief of Staff

Joseph Grogan, Assistant to the President and Director of the Domestic Policy Council

Christopher Liddell, Assistant to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Coordination

Derek Kan, Executive Associate Director, Office of Management and Budget

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/01/31/white-house-to-hold-briefing-on-coronavirus-friday-afternoon.html

Image copyright
EPA

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Activistas ambientales y organizaciones sindicales y rurales de América Latina se oponen a las políticas extractivas impulsadas desde los gobiernos de esa región.

París puede parecer un destino lejano para América Latina, el acuerdo firmado este sábado puede contener un lenguaje incompresible y, tal vez, el cambio climático no es una prioridad para la mayoría de personas que habitan la región.

Pero los expertos reunidos en la capital francesa son conscientes que el acuerdo de la COP21 tendrá un impacto considerable en la vida de las personas que viven en América Latina y en la economía de los gobiernos en los años por venir.

Estas serían las cinco maneras que en América Latina se afecta con el acuerdo logrado en París en las últimas horas.

1. Clima extremo y descongelamiento

Aunque América Latina solo es responsable del 10% de las emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero, muchas zonas del continente son vulnerables en un mundo que se calienta.

Significa mucho, por ejemplo, que el acuerdo de París señale que los países deben hacer su mejor esfuerzo evitar que el aumento de la temperatura global supere los 1,5 grados centígrados, aunque el límite haya sido establecido “muy por debajo” de los dos grados centígrados.

Antes de la cumbre de París, las discusiones fueron solo sobre el aumento de los dos grados centígrados.

Pero los científicos habían sido claros que con un límite menor habría menor riesgo de un clima más extremo que generara sequías, inundaciones y olas de calor.

Esto es importante para América Central.

De acuerdo con la ONG Germanwatch, entre los años de 1995 y 2014, tres países de la región estuvieron ubicados entre los 10 países a los que más fuerte había golpeado el clima extremo.

El más afectado: Honduras.

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AFP

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Honduras pierde el 3% de sus bosques por año debido a la tala ilegal.

Millones de personas que viven en los países andinos también se encuentran vulnerables a los efectos del descongelamiento de los glaciares.

El Banco Mundial estimó que si las temperaturas aumentaban más de los dos grados centígrados, más del 90% de los glaciares se descongelarían.

2. Adaptarse a lo que viene

El acuerdo también incluye a la población que vive en las ciudades, localidades o en el campo para que adapten los recursos para lo que viene en el futuro.

El pacto de París señala que antes de 2025, los países deberán acordar una meta de al menos US$100.000 millones anuales que los países ricos proveerán a los más pobres en su lucha contra el cambio climático.

Muchos críticos afirman que no es suficiente. Pero algunos países de América Latina podrán recibir algo de este dinero de un Fondo del Clima.

Ellos probablemente no estarán en la lista de países prioritarios para recibir este dinero, que estará encaminado a ayudar a los más pobres ubicados en la región de África Subsahariana.

Una cláusula de daños y perjuicios asociados con los efectos del clima extremo fue añadida en el acuerdo y tal vez podría ayudar a los países más vulnerables. Sin embargo, no específica las responsabilidades o las bases para una compensación.

3. El futuro de la energía

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AP

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Venezuela, México, Perú, Colombia y Bolivia tiene economías que dependen del petróleo y el gas.

Tal vez el cambio más significativo que afecte a América Latina en el futuro será el cambio a la economía sin el uso de fuentes de energía fósiles.

Los observadores dicen que el objetivo del acuerdo es alcanzar un pico mundial de las emisiones de gases de efecto tan pronto como sea posible y que eso implica una dirección clara para evitar el uso del petróleo, gas y carbón y el traslado de las economías a la dependencia de las energías renovables.

Greenpeace dijo que el acuerdo de París puso a las compañías petroleras “en el lado equivocado de la historia”.

Venezuela es el país con las mayores reservas de petróleo en el mundo. Colombia, México, Perú, Bolivia dependen del consumo de gasolina y gas.

El acuerdo del COP21 podría tener enormes implicaciones para sus economías en el largo plazo.

Pero lo logrado en París podría ayudar al ímpetu de los inversionistas para que se interesen en las energías renovables.

América Latina es considerada una región bastante atractiva para la inversión en energía limpia.

Un reporte de la empresa Climatescope incluye a Brasil, Chile, México y Uruguay entre los 10 países más atractivos para invertir en proyectos de energía eólica, solar y otras fuentes renovables.

Uruguay en particular ha hecho enormes esfuerzos sobre este tema. Cerca del 95% de su electricidad viene de fuentes renovables.

Costa Rica alcanzó recientemente el récord de utilizar por 94 días consecutivos solo energía renovable para su sistema eléctrico.

4. La selva amazónica

Perú, Ecuador, Bolivia y Colombia son los países que tienen un tercio de la selva amazónica y millones de personas viven allí.

Muchos países del continente dependen de reducir la deforestación con el ánimo de alcanzar sus objetivos en la reducción de emisión de gases.

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EPA

Image caption

Las movilizaciones en París reclamaron a los presidentes latinoamericanos un alto a la deforestación de bosques para construir carreteras y exploración petrolera.

El presidente de la COP21, el ministro de Relaciones Exteriores francés, Laurent Fabius, fue explícito en afirmar que el acuerdo va a ayudar a los países latinoamericanos en sus intentos de reforestación y protección de la enorme selva amazónica.

El pacto de París también reconoce la importancia de proveer “adecuados y previsibles” fondos para ayudar a los gobiernos para reducir la deforestación.

Esto significa el incremento de dinero para los países que tienen parte de la Amazonía, en tanto puedan alcanzar los requerimientos para asegurar la reducción de la deforestación de una forma confiable.

5. Sociedad civil y los próximos años

Hay un acuerdo universal ahora, pero el verdadero reto es ver cómo los países, incluidos los de América Latina, van a llevar a cabo las reducciones a las que se han comprometido y entonces incrementar sus ambiciones.

Todos los países del continente, excepto Venezuela, Nicaragua y Panamá han hecho sus propuestas ante la ONU.

Una plataforma llamada “diálogo facilitador” se realizará en 2018, lo que ofrecerá a los estados la oportunidad de hacer una última revisión a los compromisos antes de que sean irreversibles a partir de 2020.

ONG han dicho que dependerá de la sociedad civil en América Latina hacer cumplir a los gobiernos las promesas hechas e incrementar sus compromisos con la reducción de emisiones.

Ellos han dicho que alcaldes, hombres de negocios, consumidores, ciudadanos e inversionistas tendrán que asegurar que la transisicón hacia un mundo libre de combustibles fósiles se convierta en una realidad.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2015/12/151212_acuerdo_paris_cop21_america_latina_bm

A majority of voters support a proposal floated by U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to dramatically increase the highest tax rate on the wealthiest Americans to as high as 70 percent.

Around 59 percent of registered voters support the idea, according to a Hill-HarrisX survey, which was conducted Jan. 12-13 after the New York Democrat set off a nationwide debate with her comments on CBS’s “60 Minutes” that she would support the increase to fund her climate change plan.

The proposed tax hike would affect those making $10 million or more, she said.

OCASIO-CORTEZ QUESTIONS TRUMP’S WEALTH AFTER PRESIDENTIAL SWIPE

“That doesn’t mean all $10 million are taxed at an extremely high rate, but it means that as you climb up this ladder you should be contributing more,” Ocasio-Cortez said during the interview.

HARRY REID SWIPES AT OCASIO-CORTEZ TAX HIKE PROPOSAL, SAYING AMERICANS WON’T ACCEPT ‘RADICAL CHANGE QUICKLY’

Women supported the proposal by 62-38 percent and men favored it by 55-45 percent, according to the Hill. Southerners back the concept by a 57 to 43 percent margin and 45 percent of Republican voters also viewed it positively.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

During the “60 Minutes” interview, Ocasio-Cortez referenced tax rates returning to levels seen in the 1950s and 1960s, when the richest Americans were taxed at up to 90 percent.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/most-voters-support-70-percent-tax-hike-on-richest-americans-poll

¿Sabes cuánta gente veía La Comay en Puerto Rico? ¿Tienes alguna idea realmente del nivel al que llega nuestro gusto por lo “cafre�? Bueno… esta columna puede ofenderte.

Escucho continuamente a las personas diciendo que la prensa es negativa. Que la prensa no escribe sobre temas positivos y que pasan todos los días cosas muy buenas en Puerto Rico.  Estaba compartiendo con unas amigas en Río Grande y me dijeron: “La prensa es sensacionalista, amarillista a nivel de ‘Primer Impacto’ a la séptima potenciaâ€�. “Parece que los periódicos del País son una revista de chisme y que lo que hacen es controlar a las masasâ€�.

Hoy les voy a contestar. Los periodistas y la prensa quisieran escribir de cosas mejores, más interesantes y seguramente más profundas. Pero, el mercado es el mercado y la prensa y los medios son un negocio igual que cualquier otro. Es decir, ¿verdad que los restaurantes no dejan de vender productos que hacen daño porque te causen problemas de salud? ¿Verdad que sigues consumiendo esas papitas fritas, arroz blanco grasoso con chuletas y hamburgers con kétchup y mayonesa de la mala? Ahhh, pero que no falte el refresco de “dieta�.

Entonces, si sigues consumiendo cosas que te hacen daño y aun así te las metes al cuerpo y alguien te las vende y las compras… ¿por qué la prensa debe ser diferente?

Esta semana hice un experimento en mi página de Facebook. Típicamente un mensaje que escribo en mi página pública llega a entre 80 mil y 120 mil personas (cuando tienes un Fan Page te dice ese tipo de información). Me siguen en Facebook unas 610 mil personas. Un día de la semana participé del Radiomaratón a favor del Hospital del Niño en Guaynabo y en mis redes sociales solamente escribí cosas positivas relacionadas a cooperar y ayudar a un lugar tan especial como ese. Hice la prueba; en la misma hora verifiqué el “reach� de mis “posts� cuando hago críticas políticas y lo positivo que estaba escribiendo ese día. La diferencia fue impresionante por lo enorme.

Mientras que la noticia positiva solo tenía un “reach� de 12 mil a 15 mil personas, si hacía en el mismo horario comentarios políticos de crítica, señalamiento y denuncia estos podían llegar a sobrepasar el “reach� de 120 mil fácilmente. Incluso, he publicado en los mismos horarios noticias sobre Maripily e igualmente llegó a sobrepasar el “reach� de 120 mil.

De hecho, la columna que he escrito que mayor “reach� alcanzó fue la que titulé “El gistro amarillo coge gasolina�. El negocio de los medios es el “rating�, es el nivel de “likes� y “shares� igual que el tuyo en una tienda es vender un producto y en un “dealer� vender carros. Por tanto, a nosotros se nos juzga por la cantidad de gente que nos escucha, lee o patrocina. De hecho, cada vez que alguien pide periodismo investigativo debe comprender algo: este es costosísimo y te expone a demandas, a costos legales, a denuncias, a perder clientes y todo para el mismo nivel de “rating� y a veces menos de lo que te genera una noticia sobre Maripily.

Cada  vez que tú coges una noticia y la lees, le das “copyâ€�, le das “pasteâ€� en tu Facebook y escribes “¿a quién le importa?â€�, pues caramba, ¿a quién le importa? PUES A TI… porque si no te importara no le dedicarías tanto tiempo. Incluso, el mero hecho de que comentes en esas noticias que alegas no interesar leer, estás endosándolas y pidiendo más porque lo que se vende en la prensa es precisamente el nivel de personas que la vieron y demás, no si te gustó o no que se publicara el asunto.

Por si acaso, sí los medios tienen una responsabilidad social y claro que se intenta, pero como cualquier negocio se le da al cliente lo que el cliente compra. En este caso el cliente es el pueblo de Puerto Rico. Para que usted tenga una idea del cliente que somos, La Comay, a quien alegadamente nadie la veía, tenía un millón de televidentes. Anderson Cooper, de CNN, tiene en todo Estados Unidos unos 800 mil televidentes. Sí, a ese nivel llegaba La Comay en esta isla. Así que si fueras tú el dueño del negocio y sin correr riesgos y con bien poquitos gastos publicas una noticia de Maripily y logras 300 mil “views� y una noticia de periodismo investigativo con montones de costos y riesgos logra solo 120 mil y una noticia positiva como la del Hospital del Niño logra 20 mil “views�, ¿qué harías?

Finalmente, en una ocasión la gente dijo en un grupo focal que se hizo para saber “los gustos y preferencias� al investigador que “no le gustaba la política�, que preferían noticias de “salud� y de “cosas positivas�. Cuando a esa gente se le preguntó sobre los programas de radio que escuchaban, ninguno tenía ni remotamente algo parecido a lo que alegaban querer escuchar en su programa de radio. De hecho, los programas de salud y de cosas positivas tienen pésimos ratings.

¿Por qué crees que se publican tantas noticias de Maripily? Para perder dinero no es…

Vamos, seamos honestos y honestas en cuanto a qué es lo que nos gusta y qué es lo que nos llama la atención. Queremos mejor televisión, mejor radio, mejor prensa… estoy seguro que hay muchísima gente que quiere crear mejor radio, prensa y televisión… para lograrlo comencemos con el primer paso de dejar de ser hipócritas.

Source Article from http://www.primerahora.com/noticias/puerto-rico/columna/jay-fonseca/columnas/notegustanlasnoticiasbuenasna-1039762/

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., called Democrats’ reconciliation bill a “great American shakedown.”

President Biden on Friday announced a scaled back $1.75 trillion social spending and climate change package that still failed to win over the support of moderate Sens. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., and Joe Manchin, D-W.V., stalling further negotiations until next week.

“We’re back to the days where you have to pass the legislation to know what’s in [the bill],” Scott argued during an interview with Fox News’ Neil Cavuto Thursday. “That’s bad news for every single American, and it feels like the great American shakedown.”

The senator added that the “lack of confidence and transparency in this process” of passing the bills should concern “every American.”

 U.S. Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) poses before a meeting with Seventh Circuit Court Judge Amy Coney Barrett (Photo by Bonnie Cash-Pool/Getty Images)

“I do think there’s a loss of trust between the Biden administration and the bipartisan coalition that supported the infrastructure package,” Scott explained, noting that Democrats have gone back and forth about voting on the two bills together or separately.

BIDEN TAKES NO QUESTIONS ON RECONCILIATION SPEECH JUST BEFORE JETTING OFF ON EUROPEAN TRIPS: ‘I’LL SEE YOU IN ROME

House Democrats are working on a plan to vote on both Biden’s $1.75 trillion social spending plan and his $1.2 trillion infrastructure package on Tuesday because many progressive Democrats do not have faith that their more moderate colleagues like Sinema and Manchin will pass the reconciliation plan before passing the infrastructure bill, a source told Fox News’ Chad Pergram on Saturday.

BIDEN RECONCILIATION FRAMEWORK COSTS $1.75T, INCLUDES $1.995 TRILLION IN TAX HIKES, WHITE HOUSE SAYS

Democrats initially planned that the reconciliation package would contain $3.5 trillion worth of spending and tax initiatives over 10 years. But demands by moderates led by Manchin and Sinema to contain costs mean its final price tag could well be less than $2 trillion.

President Joe Biden delivers remarks on the debt ceiling during an event in the State Dining Room of the White House, Monday, Oct. 4, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci) 

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was forced to abandon plans to pass the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure plan that has become tangled in the deliberations. 

BIDEN RECONCILIATION FRAMEWORK COSTS $1.75T, INCLUDES $1.995 TRILLION IN TAX HIKES, WHITE HOUSE SAYS

Progressives have been refusing to vote for that public works package of roads, bridges and broadband, withholding their support as leverage for assurances that Manchin and Sinema are on board with Biden’s big bill.

Fox News’ Chad Pergram and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/tim-scott-democrats-reconciliation-bill-great-american-shakedown



















 

 

LOS ANGELES, July 30, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — KWHY-TV Noticias 22, the MundoFOX Los Angeles television network affiliate’s award-winning newscast, Noticias 22, “La voz de Tu Ciudad,” “The voice of your city”, scored as the fastest growing late Spanish language newscast in Nielsen’s recently completed July 2015 Sweeps for Los Angeles, the city with the largest Hispanic market in the nation.

“Our growth is a strong statement of relevance and support to our news team and editorial direction,” stated Palmira Perez, Noticias 22 MundoFOX News Anchor. “Noticias 22 continues to produce the most engaging, compelling news and information daily for our community, and as part of Meruelo Media, together we’re committed to journalistic excellence,” added Otto Padron, President of Meruelo Media.

KWHY-TV Noticias 22 MundoFOX Los Angeles July 2015 Sweeps Highlights:

  • KWHY-TV Noticias 22 MundoFOX at 10:00 p.m. posted significant “year-to-year” growth in average ratings among the key demographic Adults 18-49, up 35% from the July 2014 Sweeps.
    • All the other Spanish-language late local newscasts were down, including those on KRCA/Estrella (-22%), KVEA/Telemundo (-1%) and KMEX/Univision (-2%). (Based on Monday to Friday average ratings.)
  • Among Adults 25-54, ratings for KWHY-TV Noticias 22 MundoFOX at 10:00 p.m. were up 34% from the July 2014 Sweeps, more than the late newscast on KMEX/Univision (+15%) and KVEA/Telemundo (+7%), with KRCA/Estrella falling 19%.

Source: Los Angeles NSI Ratings, July 2015

For more information on KWHY-TV Noticias 22 MundoFOX, please visit www.mundofox22.com.

About Meruelo Media

Meruelo Media (MM) is the media division of The Meruelo Group.  MM currently operates two Southern California Legendary media platforms; the classic hip-hop and R&B radio station, 93.5 KDAY and one of Los Angeles’ oldest Hispanic TV stations, KWHY-TV Canal 22, which is currently the flagship of MundoFOX Television Network.  MM also owns the first and only US Hispanic Super Station, Super 22, airing on its KWHY-TV second digital stream and reaching over 6 Million Homes over various multiple video delivery providers.  MM also broadcasts in Houston and Santa Barbara.  The Meruelo Group is a minority owned, privately-held management company serving a diversified portfolio of affiliated entities with interests in banking and financial services; food services, manufacturing, distribution and restaurant operations; construction and engineering; hospitality and gaming; real estate management; media, public and private equity investing. For more information please visit www.meruelogroup.com.

Rebekah Salgado
rsalgado@meruelogroup.com 
562.228.8191

 

 

 

SOURCE Meruelo Group / Meruelo Media

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Source Article from http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/kwhy-tv-noticias-22-mundofox-reigns-as-las-fastest-growing-late-spanish-newscast-in-july-2015-sweeps-300121156.html

A boarded-up Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills. The Grove, one of the city’s premier dining and retail centers, staggering with several stores looted. National Guard troops deployed in the streets, and an entire police department mobilized for the first time in 25 years.

That’s what Los Angeles woke up to this morning, as an overnight curfew attempted to quell the mob rule that dominated most of Saturday. The protests marked the fourth straight day of activity, and there is little to indicate that passions and violence will cool over the next few days.

For a fragile city that is still in an economic recovery from the two-month shutdown of business by the pandemic, Friday and Saturday’s arson, looting, and general chaos is a blow that will make it that much tougher for Los Angeles to revive.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti held a press conference at 4 PM on Saturday offering a velvet hand out to protesters, expressing hopes that everyone would simply stop any violent actions. He pooh-poohed the idea of bringing in the National Guard, saying that’s not what the city is about. He also limited the curfew he instituted to the downtown area, despite a massive gathering already brewing in midtown, where a police car had been burned and other police vehicles were damaged.

Hours later, Garcetti was begging Governor Gavin Newsom to send troops and declaring a state of emergency.

AP Images

Garcetti’s misread of the city’s street situation and the mood as the protests devolved was just one step along the way toward Saturday night’s chaos. Police were stretched, having to cover looting activities across the span of the city. More than 550 people were arrested on Friday in downtown’s protest activities, and although no officials totals for Saturday have been released, it’s likely at least several hundred people were detained on Saturday.

Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore, who earlier in the week issued a YouTube video saying he welcomed protests, spoke to the Los Angeles Times from the ransacked Nordstrom’s store at the Grove.

“This is not the solution,” he said. “We haven’t given up on L.A., and L.A. shouldn’t give up on itself. We can pull around this…Policing doesn’t fix these kinds of societal problems. I need all of L.A. to step up right now and be part of the solution.”

Source Article from https://deadline.com/2020/05/los-angeles-awakens-ater-day-of-chaos-on-streets-1202947609/

The FBI on Tuesday announced that it had concluded its investigation into the 2017 Las Vegas shooting, in which 58 people were killed. But the conclusion left a big mystery open: Investigators could not figure out the shooter’s motive, meaning we may never know why he carried out the attack.

It’s certainly unsatisfying and upsetting that we’ll never know why this happened. For the families and friends of the victims, it may rob them of closure. And for policymakers and law enforcement, not knowing the motive may make it harder to implement steps to prevent similar attacks in the future.

But just because we don’t know the motive does not mean that we don’t know why the shooting happened. We don’t know what drove the shooter to kill 58 people. But we know why he was able to: He lived in a country where he could get nearly 50 guns — comprising everything from handguns to assault rifles, sometimes modified with bump stocks that can make these weapons more lethal.

After mass shootings, politicians and other officials try to point to all sorts of explanations for why an attack happened. It’s mental illness. It’s misogyny. It’s anti-Semitism. It’s some other form of extremism or hate.

In individual shootings, these all of course can play a role. But when you want to explain why America sees so many of these mass shootings in general — 27 so far in 2019 alone, by one estimate — and why America suffers more gun violence than other developed nations, none of these factors in individual shootings give a satisfying answer. Only guns are the common factor.

To put it another way: America does not have a monopoly on mental health issues, bigots, or extremists. What is unique about the US is that it makes it so easy for people with these issues to obtain a gun.

America’s gun problem, briefly explained

It comes down to two basic problems.

First, America has uniquely weak gun laws. Other developed nations at the very least require one or more background checks and almost always something more rigorous beyond that to get a gun, from specific training courses to rules for locking up firearms to more arduous licensing requirements to specific justifications, besides self-defense, for owning a gun.

In the US, even a background check isn’t a total requirement; the current federal law is riddled with loopholes and snared by poor enforcement, so there are many ways around even a basic background check. And if a state enacts stricter measures than federal laws, someone can simply cross state lines to buy guns in a jurisdiction with looser rules. There are simply very few barriers, if any, to getting a gun in the US.

Second, the US has a ton of guns. It has far more than not just other developed nations, but any other country period. Estimated for 2017, the number of civilian-owned firearms in the US was 120.5 guns per 100 residents, meaning there were more firearms than people. The world’s second-ranked country was Yemen, a quasi-failed state torn by civil war, where there were 52.8 guns per 100 residents, according to an analysis from the Small Arms Survey.


Small Arms Survey

Both of these factors come together to make it uniquely easy for someone with any violent intent to find a firearm, allowing them to carry out a horrific shooting.

This is borne out in the statistics. The US has nearly six times the gun homicide rate of Canada, more than seven times that of Sweden, and nearly 16 times that of Germany, according to United Nations data for 2012 compiled by the Guardian. (These gun deaths are a big reason America has a much higher overall homicide rate, which includes non-gun deaths, than other developed nations.)


Javier Zarracina/Vox

The research, compiled by the Harvard School of Public Health’s Injury Control Research Center, is also pretty clear: After controlling for variables such as socioeconomic factors and other crime, places with more guns have more gun deaths. Researchers have found this to be true not just with homicides, but also with suicides (which in recent years were around 60 percent of US gun deaths), domestic violence, and violence against police.

As a breakthrough analysis by UC Berkeley’s Franklin Zimring and Gordon Hawkins in the 1990s found, it’s not even that the US has more crime than other developed countries. This chart, based on data from Jeffrey Swanson at Duke University, shows that the US is not an outlier when it comes to overall crime:


Instead, the US appears to have more lethal violence — and that’s driven in large part by the prevalence of guns.

“A series of specific comparisons of the death rates from property crime and assault in New York City and London show how enormous differences in death risk can be explained even while general patterns are similar,” Zimring and Hawkins wrote. “A preference for crimes of personal force and the willingness and ability to use guns in robbery make similar levels of property crime 54 times as deadly in New York City as in London.”


This is in many ways intuitive: People of every country get into arguments and fights with friends, family, and peers. But in the US, it’s much more likely that someone will get angry at an argument and be able to pull out a gun and kill someone.

Researchers have found that stricter gun laws could help. A 2016 review of 130 studies in 10 countries, published in Epidemiologic Reviews, found that new legal restrictions on owning and purchasing guns tended to be followed by a drop in gun violence — a strong indicator that restricting access to guns can save lives. A review of the US evidence by RAND also linked some gun control measures, including background checks, to reduced injuries and deaths. A growing body of evidence, from Johns Hopkins researchers, also supports laws that require a license to buy and own guns.

That doesn’t mean that bigots and extremists will never be able to carry out a shooting in places with strict gun laws. Even the strictest gun laws can’t prevent every shooting.

And guns are not the only contributor to violence. Other factors include, for example, poverty, urbanization, alcohol consumption, and the strength of criminal justice systems. But when researchers control for other confounding variables, they have found time and time again that America’s loose access to guns is a major reason the US is so much worse in terms of gun violence than its developed peers.

So America, with its lax laws and abundance of firearms, makes it uniquely easy for people to commit massacres. Until the US confronts that issue, it will continue to see more gun deaths than the rest of the developed world.

For more on America’s gun problem, read Vox’s explainer.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2019/1/29/18202358/las-vegas-mass-shooting-motive-fbi