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(Caracas, 30 de marzo. Noticias24).- Aíslan 78 ADN distintos del avión de Germanwing; 23 personas resultaron heridas tras aterrizaje forzoso en Canadá; alerta de tsunami en el pacífico; 17 víctimas mortales por inundaciones en Chile y por último en la República de Yemen es bombardeado por quinto día, estas son las noticias más importantes en el mundo en este momento.

Source Article from http://www.noticias24.com/venezuela/noticia/279242/en-breve-las-cinco-noticias-internacionales-que-han-marcado-pauta-en-el-mundo/

Closer to the lake the fire was more sedate in the early hours of Wednesday, burning more gently than it had the night before, when it forced its way into the basin.

The fire has a ways to travel before it reaches the lakeshore. A golf course, an airstrip, a timber merchant’s roadside lot crowded with neatly stacked logs and, perhaps more ominously, a propane storage facility — all separating the flames from the boundary line of South Lake Tahoe, the most populous city on the lake.

Given the erratic — and often terrifying — behavior of California’s megafires in recent years it seems anyone’s guess when and whether the fire will reach the lake.

Firefighters on Tuesday night were making a stand, calculating that they might be able to stop the flames at a creek along Highway 50, the road that wends down from the mountains toward South Lake Tahoe.

Minutes before midnight hand crews were clearing brush by the lights of their headlamps. A cacophony of chain saws, generators and pickaxes striking the soil competed with the rumbling of diesel engines of fire trucks lined up along the side of the road.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/01/us/lake-tahoe-caldor-fire-photos.html

(CNN)As US states lift more coronavirus restrictions, experts are worried people who aren’t fully vaccinated could contribute to further spread of the virus.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/06/16/health/us-coronavirus-wednesday/index.html

    Source Article from https://www.texastribune.org/2021/10/12/texas-businesses-vaccine-requirements-greg-abbott/

    Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., suggested in a tweet Friday that “powerful people” are attempting to bribe President Trump into war with Iran.

    Rep. Ocasio-Cortez quoted a tweet by Washington Post reporter David Fahrenthold which linked to an article that revealed documents obtained from Trump hotels. According to the Post’s report, an Iraqi sheik reportedly stayed at a suite in Trump’s hotel in Washington D.C. for 26 days after urging the Trump administration to take a “hard-line” approach towards Iran in July 2018.

    “Sure looks like powerful people are trying to bribe the President into war,” Rep. Ocasio-Cortez wrote.

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    Rep. Ocasio-Cortez’s tweet garnered more than 30,000 likes and 7,000 retweets in under five hours, but responses to her statement were varied.

    Concerns about escalating tensions between the United States and Iran prompted Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to proclaim that the Trump administration is ready to sit down with Iran’s leaders for a conversation with “no preconditions.”

    He added, however, that “the American effort to fundamentally reverse the malign activity of this Islamic Republic, this revolutionary force, is going to continue.”

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    President Trump has consistently maintained that he does not want to resort to military intervention to respond to “credible threats” from Iran but will do so if it becomes necessary.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/ocasio-cortez-trump-bribe-war-iran-twitter

    Source Article from http://www.lanacion.com.ar/2059307-nicolas-repetto-puedo-presentar-las-noticias-de-un-modo-descontracturado

    A key Food and Drug Administration advisory committee on Tuesday recommended a lower dose of Pfizer and BioNTech‘s Covid-19 vaccine for children ages 5 to 11, a critical step in getting some 28 million more kids in the U.S. protected against the virus as the delta variant spreads.

    The endorsement by the agency’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee will now be considered by the FDA, which could issue a final decision within days. The vote was nearly unanimous with 17 backing it and one abstention.

    The agency doesn’t always follow the advice of its independent committee, but it often does. Next week, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccine advisory group is expected to make its own recommendation. If it issues an endorsement and CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky signs off, shots for young kids could begin immediately.

    The Biden administration said it plans to distribute the doses as soon as it’s authorized by the FDA and CDC, which is expected to come early next month. The administration said it’s procured enough vaccine to inoculate all 28 million 5- to 11-year-olds in the U.S., and will distribute it in smaller dosing and with smaller needles to make it easier for pediatricians and pharmacists to administer to kids.

    Many parents say they are anxiously awaiting the vaccine’s authorization with schools now open across the U.S. and the delta variant driving a surge in children’s cases.

    Children ages 5 to 11 account for roughly 9% of all reported Covid cases in the U.S., according to data presented to the committee by the FDA on Tuesday. The number of new Covid cases in kids remains exceptionally high, with more than 1.1 million child cases added over the past six weeks, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.

    Still, some parents and advocacy groups argue Covid vaccinations for children are unnecessary as studies show kids are less likely to experience symptoms from the disease even though they get infected at similar rates as adults.

    Some committee members said Tuesday that vaccinating younger groups would help the U.S. move toward Covid’s “endemic” phase, where the virus is still circulating but at lower levels than it is now. Others noted there are still unknowns, like the rate of myocarditis in young kids, but still emphasized the benefits of the shots outweighed the risks. One member wondered whether they should issue a recommendation only for at-risk children.

    “We don’t want children to be dying from Covid, even if it is far fewer children than adults and we don’t want them in the ICU,” member Dr. Amanda Cohn said before the vote.

    Prior to the vote, Dr. Peter Marks, the FDA’s top vaccine regulator, asked committee members to keep today’s debate “civil,” saying there were strong feelings on both sides.

    “To be clear, today’s discussion is going to be about the scientific data that are presented, and it’s not about vaccine mandates which are left to other entities outside of FDA,” Marks said at the top of the meeting. “I ask that we keep our discourse today civil and focus on the science related to this issues so that we can get through a productive discussion.”

    Pfizer asked the FDA to authorize its vaccine for kids ages 5 to 11 on Oct. 7. The company published data that showed a two-dose regimen of 10 micrograms — a third of the dosage used for teens and adults – is safe and generates a strong immune response in a clinical trial of young children. It said the shots were well tolerated and produced an immune response and side effects comparable with those seen in a study of people ages 16 to 25.

    Dr. Doran Fink, a deputy director of the FDA’s division of vaccines, said Tuesday a “small army” of FDA staff worked around the clock over the last month to ensure the data on kids they were presenting today was as accurate as possible.

    The staff of the FDA published an analysis late Friday, saying a smaller dosage of the Pfizer vaccine appears to be safe and highly effective in young kids. They noted the increased risk of myocarditis and pericarditis but said the benefits of the shots, including preventing severe disease, hospitalization and death, would generally outweigh the risk of the rare inflammatory heart conditions.

    There have been 1,640 cases of myocarditis reported in people under 30 who received Pfizer or Moderna’s Covid vaccines as of Oct. 6, Dr. Mathew Oster, a CDC official, told the FDA’s vaccine committee. Just 877 met the CDC’s case definition for myocarditis. He added the agency hasn’t seen increased rates of the condition among children ages 12 to 17.

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/26/fda-panel-recommends-pfizers-low-dose-covid-vaccine-for-kids-ages-5-to-11.html

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    EPA

    Image caption

    Italy’s PM Giuseppe Conte addresses the Senate flanked by Matteo Salvini (L) and Luigi Di Maio

    After a blistering attack on coalition partner Matteo Salvini, Italy’s Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has said he will tender his resignation.

    Mr Conte said Mr Salvini had been “irresponsible” in creating a new political crisis for Italy for “personal and party interests”.

    Mr Salvini, the leader of the nationalist League party, had tabled a no-confidence motion against Mr Conte.

    He also said he could no longer work with his coalition partners Five Star.

    The League and the anti-establishment Five Star Movement formed a coalition to govern just 14 months ago with Mr Conte as an independent as prime minister.

    What did the PM say about Salvini?

    Addressing the Senate on Tuesday, Mr Conte said the League leader, who was sitting beside him, had been “looking for a pretext to return to the polls” since his party’s success in European elections in May.

    In those elections, the League came top with 34% of the votes in Italy, whereas Five Star got about 17%.

    Mr Conte warned that Mr Salvini had undermined the function of the government, “which stops here”.

    “It is irresponsible to initiate a government crisis. It shows personal and party interests,” he said.

    He also criticised Mr Salvini’s use of “combining political slogans and religious symbols at rallies”, calling it “unconscionable”.

    “I take this opportunity to announce that I will present my resignation as head of government to the president of the republic,” he added.

    What have the coalition leaders said?

    “I did not speak ill of some colleagues, but as minister of the interior I delivered a safer Italy in the past year of government,” Mr Salvini told the Senate.

    “I am not afraid of the judgement of Italians,” he added, referring to his earlier call for fresh elections.

    He went on to say that while he had been accused of leading a party of “alleged fascists”, the League was the only party pushing for a democratic vote. “Imagine that,” he said, “the dictatorship that wants the vote of the Italian people”.

    Media caption“All politicians are to blame”

    Five Star leader Luigi Di Maio, meanwhile, said his party did not fear another election.

    In a Facebook post ahead of Mr Conte’s address, Mr Di Maio said it was “the day when the League will have to answer for its faults for having decided to bring everything down, opening a government crisis in the middle of August”.

    He added that working with Mr Conte “was an honour”.

    What happens next?

    Mr Conte was due to present his resignation letter to President Sergio Mattarella for approval after the Senate debate.

    The next step is in the president’s hands. Mr Mattarella could call early elections but he could also decide to announce discussions with party leaders on forming a new coalition government – which could begin as early as Wednesday morning.

    While Mr Salvini is ahead in the polls, he is unlikely to have enough support to become prime minister. He indicated on Tuesday that he was prepared to work with his coalition partners to secure budget reforms ahead of early elections.

    Five Star, meanwhile, are said to have been in discussions with the centre-left opposition Democratic Party (PD) about forming an alternative coalition.

    Matteo Renzi, former leader of the PD and prime minister, has returned to frontline politics, saying Mr Salvini must be stopped.

    He has called for a technocratic caretaker government.

    The coalition talks represent a change of tack for Five Star. Mr Di Maio said recently that “nobody wants to sit at the table with Renzi”. This uneasy relationship could make it difficult to form a government.

    Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-49411760

    Christensen: It did not impact me as far as the trial went. However, only being about six blocks from the police department, I could hear everything. When I came home, I could hear the helicopters flying over my house… I could hear the flash bangs going off. If I stepped outside, I could see the smoke from the grenades. One day, the trial ran a little late, and I had trouble getting to my house, because the protesters were blocking the interstate, so I had to go way around. I was aware, but it did not affect me at all.

    Source Article from https://www.kare11.com/article/news/local/george-floyd/derek-chauvin-trial-alternate-juror-lisa-christensen/89-97b74eb1-c875-4ed5-93ad-5c72620b9f18

    An already tense hearing involving former Trump fixer Michael Cohen got heated when a Democratic congresswoman and a Republican congressman traded accusations of racism.

    The flareup started when Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., was questioning Cohen and took a swipe at Rep. Mark Meadows for bringing Lynne Patton, a black woman who’s friends with the Trump family and works for the federal government, to the hearing as a “prop.” Meadows had presented Patton to the hearing to push back against Cohen’s claims that the president is a racist.

    “Just because someone has a person of color, a black person, working for them does not mean they aren’t racist, and it is insensitive that some would even say — the fact that someone would actually use a prop, a black woman, in this chamber, in this committee, is alone racist in itself,” the freshman Democrat said.

    An angry Meadows demanded Oversight Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Maryland, strike her comments from the record. “I’m sure she didn’t intend to do this, but if anyone knows my record as it relates, it should be you, Mr. Chairman,” he said to Cummings.

    Asked to clarify her remarks, Tlaib said, “I’m just saying that’s what I believe to have happened and as a person of color in this committee that’s how I felt at that moment, and I wanted to express that. But I am not calling the gentleman, Mr. Meadows, a racist for doing so. I’m saying in itself it is a racist act.”

    The North Carolina Republican and close Trump ally denied he’d used Patton as a prop — and said that accusation was racist.

    “To indicate that I asked someone who is a personal friend of the Trump family, who has worked for him, who knows this particular individual, that she’s coming in to be a prop — it’s racist to suggest that I ask her to come in here for that reason,” he said. “She loves this family. She came in because she felt like the president of the United States was getting falsely accused.”

    He said he took the accusation especially personally because “my nieces and nephews are people of color. Not many people know that. You know that, Mr. Chairman.”

    Cummings responded that he could “see and feel” Meadows’ pain, and referred to him as “one of my best friends” before giving Tlaib another opportunity to clarify her remarks.

    She maintained it wasn’t her intention to call Meadows a racist and said, “I do apologize if that’s what it sounded like.”

    “As everybody knows in this chamber I’m pretty direct so if I wanted to say that I would have, but that’s not what I said,” she said.

    Patton, now an official at the U.S. Department of Housing and Development, made her unusual cameo appearance earlier in the hearing.

    “I asked Lynne to come today,” Meadows told Cohen as she stood behind the congressman.

    “You made some very demeaning comments about the president Ms. Patton doesn’t agree with. She says as a daughter of a man born in Birmingham, Alabama, there’s no way she would work for an individual who’s a racist. How do you reconcile that? “

    Cohen responded, “Ask Ms. Patton how many people who are black are executives at the Trump Organization. The answer is zero.”

    Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/lawmakers-racial-dispute-mars-cohen-hearing-n977441

    The man accused of orchestrating the shooting of Boston Red Sox icon David Ortiz has been arrested by police in the Dominican Republic.

    Victor Hugo Gómez was arrested Friday.

    That tweet, which has been translated by Click 2 Houston, suggests Gómez was “one of the intellectual authors of the attack.”

    Gómez is believed to have ties to the Gulf Cartel in Mexico. He was reportedly already being investigated for his alleged involvement with the group, according to Click 2 Houston.

    An indictment that was unsealed in March lists a Victor Hugo Gomez as a defendant, wanted on two counts of drug possession, one count of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and heroin and one count of conspiracy to conduct financial transactions with money earned unlawfully.

    Ortiz, 43, was shot in the back by a gunman while in the Dominican Republic in early June. He was taken to Massachusetts General Hospital and is still recovering from his wounds. Prior to Friday, the gunman and nine others had been arrested in connection with the shooting.

    Police do not believe Ortiz was the intended target of the shooting.




    ———

    Chris Cwik is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at christophercwik@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter! Follow @Chris_Cwik

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    Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/06/28/police-in-dominican-republic-arrest-man-accused-of-orchestrating-david-ortiz-shooting/23759161/

    One can spend several days trying not to overreact to President Trump’s latest, unprovoked tweetstorm against the late Sen. John McCain R-Ariz., yet still conclude that there is something sick and twisted about Trump’s obsession with the singular American hero Trump disparages.

    Tom Rogan already in these pages has eloquently explained why, fake heel spurs or no fake heel spurs, Trump could never be fit to wear McCain’s discarded shoes. And lawyer George Conway, husband of top Trump aide Kellyanne Conway, has presented a persuasive case that Trump’s fulminations about McCain and other bizarre eruptions are signs of a personality disorder.

    What remains, though, is a reminder that on facts as well as fulminations, Trump’s flip-out against McCain is full of falsehoods.

    First, as many others have noted, Trump repeatedly accused McCain of trying to spread the so-called “Steele dossier” as a way to block Trump’s election, but the undisputed evidence shows McCain didn’t even become aware of the dossier until after Election Day. (Plus, McCain did exactly what a senator should do when provided such material: He turned it over to the FBI, without prejudice. But that’s beside the point about Trump’s dishonesty.)

    [Related: Trump: ‘I was never a fan of John McCain and I never will be’]

    What has not been as adequately refuted is Trump’s allegation that McCain voted against a bill to “repeal and replace” Obamacare, and that McCain’s vote was a big surprise. Neither element of that story is true.

    First, by the time a healthcare bill finally reached a vote in the Senate, it was in no way, shape or form a “repeal and replace” bill. In reality, it was a shell of a bill known as “skinny repeal,” which did next to nothing other than keep a title and fulfill a promise to repeal the individual and employer mandates from Obamacare. The bill, in short, was an absolute sham. On its own terms, as even most of its supporters admitted, it made no sense, but would have thrown the healthcare market into absolute turmoil.

    Instead, skinny repeal was meant only to keep alive the anti-Obamacare effort until something could be concocted behind the closed doors of a conference committee with members of the House.

    As neither the House nor the Senate versions had been vetted in open committee hearings, and as the Senate’s skinny repeal was such a sham anyway, McCain reasoned that whatever emerged from conference committee would be seen by the public as illegitimate. He may or may not have been right in that assessment, but it was not unreasonable. And, as skinny repeal itself was a fraud, McCain was indisputably not breaking his pledge to support a repeal of Obamacare combined with a free-market replacement.

    Not only that, but he believed, correctly, that the one substantive element of skinny repeal, the elimination of the individual mandate, could be accomplished anyway — as, indeed, it was, in the GOP tax reform bill that later became law. Thus, McCain’s vote effectively blocked no GOP progress on that front, none at all.

    Finally, it is just a lie to say McCain had not signaled his intentions, and his reasoning, well in advance. Two days earlier, in his tour de force of a major floor speech upon his return to the Senate from his initial cancer treatment, McCain signaled quite clearly where he stood [with my emphases in Italics]:

    I will not vote for the bill as it is today. It’s a shell of a bill right now. We all know that. I have changes urged by my state’s governor that will have to be included to earn my support for final passage of any bill. I know many of you will have to see the bill changed substantially for you to support it. We’ve tried to do this by coming up with a proposal behind closed doors in consultation with the administration, then springing it on skeptical members, trying to convince them it’s better than nothing, asking us to swallow our doubts and force it past a unified opposition. I don’t think that is going to work in the end. And it probably shouldn’t.”

    And he continued in that vein for several more paragraphs.

    McCain’s argument was one of deepest principle. Even those of us who would have reluctantly voted for skinny repeal in order to keep the whole effort alive could recognize the wisdom in McCain’s position.

    So, McCain did not kill a “repeal and replace” bill, and he blindsided nobody by voting against the bill that finally emerged. Trump is lying about McCain, and it’s time for him to stop it.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/trump-should-stop-attacking-and-lying-about-mccain

    Seattle Police Officers Guild President Michael Solan told “Outnumbered Overtime” Friday that the city is now the “closest I’ve ever seen …  to becoming a lawless state.”

    Solan called for local leaders to help restore order after anti-cop protesters declared a six-block section of the city’s Capitol Hill neighborhood to be an “autonomous” area and a “cop-free zone.”

    SEATTLE POLICE UNION CHIEF: CITY LEADERS HAVE ‘LOST ALL POLITICAL WILL TO ENFORCE THE RULE OF LAW’

    Solan told host Harris Faulkner that legitimate issues of police brutality and racism had been “stolen by unreasonable activists in the city of Seattle.

    “And now, they control six square blocks,” he added. “They control the precinct. And that is a direct result of our city-elected officials lacking the political willpower to enforce the rule of law.”

    “And, this is the closest I’ve ever seen our country, let alone the city here, to becoming a lawless state when public safety issues are deeply, deeply concerning,” Solan went on.

    People walk near a sign that reads “You are entering free Capitol Hill,” Thursday in Seattle. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

    “And, if…unreachable activists have taken over an East Precinct voluntarily given up by an elected officials’ decisions, what’s to stop them from taking another precinct?” he asked. “And…West Precinct — where 300 protesters marched on it two nights ago, where officers were ordered back inside, outside the perimeter — If we lose that flagship precinct, that houses the 911 communications center. Therefore, if that becomes disabled, how do we provide public safety services to the entire city?”

    “This is how serious this conversation is,” he asserted.

    Seattle’s Democratic mayor, however, had a different take on the demonstration. On Thursday, Jenny Durkan told CNN that the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ) was more akin to a patriotic “block party.”

    In an exclusive interview with Fox News’ Harris Faulkner earlier Thursday, President Trump described Durkan’s handling of the situation as “pathetic,” and assured that his administration is “not going to let Seattle be occupied by anarchists.”

    “I will tell you, if they don’t straighten that situation out, we’re going to straighten it out,” he promised.

    “We need leadership from somebody. Because it’s not occurring in the city right now,” Solan urged.

    “The overall Seattle community, the reasonable people, fully support reasonable activism. Not this unreasonable activism that, sadly, has taken our city hostage,” he told Faulkner.

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    ‘We need rule of law here. And, as a Seattle resident, I am so embarrassed,” he added. “And, as a proud professional public safety officer, we are more than willing to be brought to the table as a stakeholder. But, we have yet to be invited, and our open letter to the mayor has yet to [be] publicly acknowledged.”

    “We need some serious help in Seattle,” Solan concluded.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/seattle-police-union-chief-city-close-lawlessness


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    Source Article from https://knightcenter.utexas.edu/blog/00-17122-mexican-digital-news-site-aristegui-noticias-recognized-knight-international-journalis

    And on Twitter, Mr. Trump offered a novel idea for pushing back against any impeachment proceedings if House Democrats tried to move forward with them: He would get the Supreme Court to order them to stop.

    “If the partisan Dems ever tried to Impeach, I would first head to the U.S. Supreme Court,” Mr. Trump wrote over two posts. “Not only are there no ‘High Crimes and Misdemeanors,’ there are no Crimes by me at all.”

    Nothing in the Constitution or American legal history gives the Supreme Court a role in deciding whether Congress has misidentified what counts as a high crime or misdemeanor for the purpose of impeachment.

    Notwithstanding Mr. Trump’s denunciation of the subpoena to Mr. McGahn, his administration’s legal team has not put forward any legal theory for why executive privilege — the president’s power to keep secret certain internal executive branch information — would ban the kind of testimony the House Judiciary Committee is seeking from the former White House lawyer: essentially, to go over what he already told Mr. Mueller.

    Mr. Trump waived executive privilege to let Mr. Mueller freely question Mr. McGahn about their conversations, and Attorney General William P. Barr made Mr. McGahn’s accounts public by disclosing most of the special counsel’s report — likely a further waiver of the privilege.

    Mr. McGahn has expressed frustration about the situation, according to a person close to him. He advised the president in 2017 against cooperating with Mr. Mueller and believes that if Mr. Trump had followed his advice, he would have a far stronger argument that their conversations are protected by executive privilege, the person said.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/24/us/politics/donald-trump-subpoenas.html