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Jueves, 21 de Mayo 2015  |  2:48 pm



Créditos: Foto: MorgueFile

Investigacin de la Universidad de Pittsburgh sostiene que la grasa en los glteos de las madres sirve para construir el cerebro del beb.








Un estudio realizado por investigadores de la Universidad de Pittsburgh, en Estados Unidos, concluy que las mujeres con glteos grandes tienen hijos ms inteligentes.

Esa aseveracin se sustenta -de acuerdo a la investigacin- en que la grasa materna influye en el desarrollo del sistema nervioso de los bebs.

Segn explic el profesor Will Lassek, de la Universidad de Pitthsburg, la grasa acumulada en el trasero y los muslos de la mujer contienen “componentes esenciales” para el desarrollo del sistema nervioso de los bebs, los cuales se transmitiran mediante la lactancia.

La grasa en estas zonas es un almacn que sirve para construir el cerebro de un beb. Se necesitan muchas grasas para crear un sistema nervioso y las grasas en estas zonas estn enriquecidas con ADH (cido docosahexaenoico), un componente importante del cerebro humano”, seal en entrevista con Sunday Times.

Es as que las clulas de grasa son absorbidas por el feto, de ah se aprovechara la grasa corporal de la mujer, que supera la del hombre en casi 100 %.

El experto David Bainbridge, de la Universidad de Cambridge, respalda este estudio en su nuevo libro llamado Curvologa: orgenes y poder de la forma del cuerpo femenino.

Bainbridge seala que esta constitucin fsica de algunas fminas tambin ha influido en los mecanismos de atraccin para los hombres, quienes ven a las dueas de caderas ms curvas y nalgas grandes como las ms aptas para dar a luz a bebs sanos y ms inteligentes.

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Source Article from http://www.rpp.com.pe/2015-05-21-mujeres-con-nalgas-grandes-tienen-hijos-mas-inteligentes-segun-estudio-noticia_799557.html

via press release:

NOTICIAS  TELEMUNDO  PRESENTS:

“MURIENDO POR CRUZAR,” AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE INCREASING NUMBER OF IMMIGRANT DEATHS ALONG THE BORDER, THIS SUNDAY, AUGUST 3 AT 6 P.M./5 C

Carmen Dominicci and Neida Sandoval present the Telemundo and The Weather Channel co-production

Miami – July 31, 2014 – Telemundo presents “Muriendo por Cruzar”, a documentary that investigates why increasing numbers of immigrants are dying while trying to cross the US-Mexican border near the city of Falfurrias, Texas, this Sunday, August 3 at 6PM/5 C.  The Telemundo and The Weather Channel co-production, presented by Noticias Telemundo journalists Carmen Dominicci and Neida Sandoval, reveals the obstacles immigrants face once they cross into US territory, including extreme weather conditions, as they try to evade the border patrol.  “Muriendo por Cruzar” is part of Noticias Telemundo’s special coverage of the crisis on the border and immigration reform.

 

“‘Muriendo por Cruzar’” dares to ask questions that reveal the actual conditions undocumented immigrants face as they try to start a new life in the United States,” said Alina Falcón, Telemundo’s Executive Vice President for News and Alternative Programming.  “Our collaboration with The Weather Channel was very productive. They have a unique expertise in covering the impact of weather on people’s lives, as we do in covering immigration reform and the border crisis. The result is a compelling documentary that exposes a harrowing reality.”

“Muriendo por Cruzar” is the first co-production by Telemundo and The Weather Channel.  Both networks are part of NBCUniversal.

Source Article from http://tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com/2014/07/31/noticias-telemundo-presents-muriendo-por-cruzar-this-sunday-august-3-at-6pm/289119/

UPDATE:

In an unprecedented move, Columbus police showed body camera footage of the shooting by a Columbus police officer of a 16-year-old girl just hours after the incident.

The video shows an officer approaching a driveway with a group of young people standing there. In the video, it appears that the 16-year-old, identified now as Ma’Khia Bryant, who was moments later shot by police pushes or swings at a person who falls to the ground.

Ma’Khia then appears to swing a knife at a girl who is on the hood of a car, and the officer fires his weapon what sounds like four times, striking the girl.

Columbus police stressed that the Bureau of Criminal Investigation is leading the investigation into the case, but the city wanted to release the body camera to give the public more information.

Source Article from https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/crime/2021/04/20/one-person-killed-officer-involved-shooting-east-side/7309088002/

March 16 at 9:02 PM

Former vice president Joe Biden is expected to announce soon whether he will seek the White House in 2020. On Saturday night, he seemed — for a moment — to get ahead of himself.

“I have the most progressive record of anybody running for the United . . . anybody who would run,” Biden told Delaware Democrats at their party fundraising dinner.

The crowd at a ballroom at the Dover Downs casino complex began to cheer, as Biden laughed and crossed himself.

Biden, 76, has repeatedly pushed back possible announcement dates for what would be his third run for the presidency. He has tapped staffers who would be expected to lead a national campaign, leaving many of his political allies convinced he’ll run. But he has yet to make those plans official.

Saturday night’s state Democratic gala, which also celebrated a top-to-bottom Democratic sweep in the state’s midterm elections, repeatedly turned to Biden’s own plans.

Sen. Thomas R. Carper (D-Del.) referred to him as “President Biden.” Sen. Christopher A. Coons (D-Del.) told the crowd that he was “praying” for a president who “unites us and heals us,” referring to Biden. Sonia Schorr Sloan, an activist accepting an award at the dinner, said she had told Biden that she had “one campaign left” in her.

“Joe doesn’t just look like he’s back,” Delaware Gov. John Carney said. “He looks like he’s ready for a fight.”

The Delaware speech was Biden’s second political appearance of the week, after an address to the International Association of Fire Fighters that resembled a campaign rally, with “Run Joe Run” signs waving in the audience.

At both speeches, Biden described the Trump presidency as a dangerous sham.

“Trump turned his back on the very people he said he would help,” Biden said in Dover. He decried the president’s praise for Vladi­mir Putin and Kim Jong Un, noting that some foreign dictators had borrowed the president’s “fake news” rhetoric to crack down on opposition in their countries.

“If you asked me a few years ago whether our democracy could ever crumble, I would have laughed at you,” said Biden.

The former vice president offered a few hints of what a 2020 campaign could focus on, telling the crowd it was “gonna hear a lot” from him about a “new corporate ethic” focused on workers’ prosperity, and attacking the health-care cuts in the Trump administration’s proposed budget, released this week.

But Biden also continued his running argument with the Democratic Party’s “new left,” returning several times to the idea that politics had been broken by people who refuse to seek consensus. He referred to Delaware’s election tradition of “returns day,” where victorious and defeated candidates literally bury a hatchet together and ride in a parade, as an example of the way politics should be.

“We don’t demonize our opponents,” he said. “We don’t belittle them. We don’t treat the opposition as the enemy. We might even say a nice word about a Republican if they do something good.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/hes-running–almost-joe-biden-gets-ahead-of-himself-in-saturday-speech-to-cheers-from-the-crowd/2019/03/16/afdb83ee-4847-11e9-8aab-95b8d80a1e4f_story.html

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Leonardo Boff fue sancionado por el Vaticano en 1985.

El permiso temporal concedido por el papa Francisco para que los sacerdotes perdonen a mujeres que hayan abortado supone “abrir una puerta” que “ya no se cierra” para la iglesia católica, afirmó el teólogo brasileño Leonardo Boff.

Uno de los principales referentes de la Teología de la Liberación, condenado al ostracismo en 1985 por el Vaticano por su libro “Iglesia, carisma y poder”, Boff expresó su entusiasmo con el actual pontífice durante una charla con BBC Mundo.

“El Papa está inaugurando otro tipo de Iglesia, adecuada a la globalización”, dijo el exsacerdote, quien contó que colaboró con la encíclica sobre ecología que Francisco divulgó este año.

Lea: El papa da permiso para perdonar durante el Año Santo a las mujeres que hayan abortado

Lo que sigue es un resumen del diálogo telefónico con este escritor de 76 años, que vive en una zona campestre del estado de Río de Janeiro.

¿Qué opina del permiso temporal que concedió el papa Francisco para que los sacerdotes puedan absolver del “pecado de aborto a quienes lo han practicado y que estén arrepentidos”?

Esta decisión está ligada directamente al concepto fundamental que el Papa tiene del evangelio como misericordia. Dios tiene un amor incondicional y su misericordia no tiene límites. Solamente un cristianismo doctrinario, apologético, yo diría casi machista y sin misericordia, es duro en eso.

Este Papa ha declarado claramente: yo no voy a dirigir la Iglesia por el poder sino por el amor y la misericordia. Esta decisión es absolutamente coherente con su mensaje.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Boff es uno de los principales exponentes de la Teología de la Liberación.

Usted habla de una misericordia sin límites, pero el perdón se podrá conceder sólo durante el Año Santo (entre el 8 de diciembre próximo y el 20 de noviembre de 2016). Visto así no parece un cambio duradero…

Sí, pero esto es abrir una puerta. Y una vez abierta la puerta, ya no se cierra. Significa que él tiene cierta pedagogía, cierto sentido de proceso. No es un proceso que va a retroceder. Empezó ahora y el Año Santo es una ocasión muy oportuna, porque es el año de la misericordia y del perdón de todas las deudas. Se abre una puerta y esta será una actitud pastoral permanente en la Iglesia.

Lea también: Perdón de la Iglesia a las mujeres que abortaron: ¿cambio profundo o retoque estético?

¿Cree que esto anticipa un cambio doctrinario dentro de la Iglesia?

Creo que el Papa no va a discutir las doctrinas. Él dice siempre que la realidad está por encima de las doctrinas. Si la realidad dice que hoy hay muchos divorcios, el concepto de familia está cambiando cada vez más, y para él lo importante es que hay amor. Donde hay amor, sea en el primero o segundo matrimonio, ahí hay algo de Dios.

La Iglesia rechaza por ejemplo que aborte una niña de 10 años violada y embarazada, como ocurrió en Paraguay. ¿Cómo se coloca la realidad sobre las doctrinas ahí?

Creo que el Papa no iba a hacer eso; él iba a entender. El obispo local o la iglesia local pueden hacer eso porque hacen deducciones: no se puede cometer aborto porque importan las personas. Eso es abstracto.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Según Boff, Francisco I está inaugurando un nuevo tipo de iglesia.

La pregunta es cuán reformista es el papa Francisco: algunos creen que está impulsando cambios de fondo y otros que son apenas actos cosméticos de alguien que en definitiva es el guardián de la doctrina católica…

El es guardián de la tradición de Jesús. Porque la doctrina católica es una invención de teólogos. Cada época elabora su teología. Pero hay valores que marcan una ruptura. Es decir: aquí empieza algo nuevo. Y este Papa vive de esa ruptura. No es populista, no es nada. Él vive su profunda convicción como hombre religioso. Ya lo vivía como cardenal en Argentina fuera del palacio, utilizando los medios comunes, el bus y el metro, iba solo a las villas miseria.

El papa también dijo que no era quién para juzgar a una persona gay, pero su Iglesia sigue condenando la práctica homosexual y oponiéndose al matrimonio gay. ¿Cómo ve eso?

El Papa en eso está innovando en la línea de la misericordia y la comprensión. Él dice: hay que hacer una revolución pastoral, el pastor tiene que tener olor de oveja, caminar junto con su pueblo. Y él entiende la condición humana, entonces no tiene nada de rigidez.

Y respecto a los abusos sexuales dentro de la Iglesia, ¿está haciendo todo lo que debe para atacar este problema grave?

Ahí el Papa es implacable, es tolerancia cero. Ese nuncio apostólico de Santo Domingo fue inmediatamente condenado. Un cardenal de Irlanda fue inmediatamente dimitido y enviado a un convento a hacer penitencia. Es rígido porque es pecar contra un inocente, abusar de quien no puede defenderse. Ese crimen tiene que ser juzgado por la justicia civil, y el Papa tiene claro eso. Un crimen no puede ser ocultado como fue en los dos pontificados anteriores.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Muchos en la iglesia católica se oponen tajantemente al aborto.

En marzo hubo una polémica en Chile porque el Vaticano defendió el nombramiento de un obispo acusado de encubrir abusos sexuales. Hay quienes señalan que en los hechos no se ven tantos cambios…

Todos los cambios necesitan procesos, no se hacen de la noche al día. Se hacen con prácticas nuevas y es un proceso pedagógico donde las mentes van madurando. Muchos se quedan atrás y otros que son muy conservadores serán cada vez más aislados.

El Papa está inaugurando otro tipo de Iglesia, adecuada a la globalización. No puede ser una iglesia occidental, porque Occidente es cada vez más un accidente en la historia y la iglesia no puede ser rehén de esa cultura occidental.

¿El Papa consultó sus escritos para preparar la encíclica que lanzó este año sobre ecología?

No es bueno hablar sobre esto. Pero tres veces fui solicitado a enviar materiales mediante el embajador argentino en la Santa Sede. Con gran alegría he constatado que muchas cosas fueron aprovechadas. Pero la encíclica es del Papa, no es mía. Lo nuevo de la encíclica es superar la visión de la ecología como ambientalismo. No es una encíclica verde, es una encíclica de la ecología integral, política, económica, espiritual, no solamente de la relación con la naturaleza. El Papa parte ya del nuevo paradigma.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Boff está entusiasmando con el nuevo Papa.

¿Hay algún cambio con este Papa en la Iglesia respecto a la Teología de la Liberación?

La Teología de la Liberación tiene varias tendencias. En Argentina a raíz de la represión militar y la furia antimarxista no utilizaba ninguna categoria de clase, pero era la teología del pueblo oprimido y la cultura silenciada. Es lo mismo. Y Bergoglio nunca fue contra la Teología de la Liberación. Estuvo siempre del lado de los pobres que son oprimidos, a favor de la justicia social.

Pero usted mismo había criticado a Bergoglio como un exponente de conservadurismo de la Iglesia, alguien que apoyó al régimen militar argentino que cometió crímenes de lesa humanidad. ¿Quién cambió, él o usted?

No hay que olvidar que (en Argentina) la Iglesia católica es la iglesia oficial del Estado, entonces todos los obispos y sacerdotes tenían dificultad en oponerse al régimen. Y Bergoglio sufrió con eso. Pero no se puede decir que él sencillamente ha adherido a eso. Ha salvado a muchísimas personas, como jesuitas que envió a Brasil, Uruguay y otras partes. Pero la Iglesia como sigue hoy todavía es en gran parte conservadora, a excepción de algunos.

En 2005 usted no opinaba eso. Cuando el diario “Página/12” le preguntó sobre la candidatura del cardenal Bergoglio, dijo que debía ser descartada ad limine, porque “un papa no puede haber estado ligado a los militares como lo estuvo él”…

Pero eso es de 2005. Estamos en 2015. Hay 10 años de diferencia. No doy valor a eso. Estaba pensando que en el contexto global era difícil que viniera alguien de América Latina —en Chile era mucho peor, en Brasil menos— donde de alguna manera muchos habían colaborado con regímenes porque eran anticomunistas, por temor al comunismo, etcétera. Pero no era en el sentido de decir que Bergoglio estaba comprometido; pertenecía a una Iglesia que en su conjunto tiene mucho que pedir perdón al pueblo argentino por no haber sido suficientemente profética y denunciadora de los crímenes.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2015/09/150901_brasil_iglesia_leonardo_boff_entrevista_gl

The most significant hopes and gains unlocked by the Berlin Wall’s fall, which was 30 years ago Saturday, are all at risk.

They included a historic expansion of democracies and open markets, a wave of globalization that created the greatest prosperity and largest global middle class the world has ever seen, and the enlargement the European Union, to 28 from 12 members, and NATO, to 29 from 16 – deepening ties among the world’s leading democracies.

That all brought with it the hope of what then-President George H.W. Bush called in 1989 “A Europe Whole and Free,” in which Russia could find its proper and peaceful place. Bush went even further in September 1990, after the UN Security Council had blessed the U.S.-led coalition’s war to free Kuwait from Iraqi invasion, envisioning a New World Order, “an era in which the nations of the world, East and West, North and South, can prosper and live in harmony.”

The idea had been hatched a month earlier by President Bush and General Brent Scowcroft, his national security adviser, while fishing near the president’s vacation home at Kennebunkport, Maine. They came home with three bluefish and an audacious vision that the Cold War’s end and the Persian Gulf Crisis presented a unique chance to build a global system against aggression “out of the collapse of the US-Soviet antagonisms,” in the words of General Scowcroft.

Reflecting on those heady days, Scowcroft recently told me that he felt everything he had worked for in his life was now at risk. If U.S. and European leaders don’t recover the common purpose they shared at that time – and there is yet little sign they will – this weekend’s Berlin Wall anniversary is more a moment for concern than celebration.

“Look at what is happening in the world,” French President Emmanuel Macron said in a freshly published interview in the Economist. “Things that were unthinkable five years ago. To be wearing ourselves out over Brexit, to have Europe finding it so difficult to move forward, to have an American ally turning its back on us so quickly on strategic issues; nobody would have believed this possible.”

This weekend’s 30th anniversary of the Berlin Wall’s fall provides a good moment to reflect on four reasons that event – one of freedom’s greatest historic triumphs – has failed to deliver on its full potential. Understanding that, might unlock a better path forward.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/11/09/new-world-order-at-risk-30-years-after-berlin-wall-fell.html

Media captionBoris Johnson says about 74 convicted terrorists have been released early from prison

Boris Johnson has told the BBC that 74 people jailed for terror offences and released early will have their licence conditions reviewed.

The Ministry of Justice launched the urgent review after convicted terrorist Usman Khan, who had served half of his sentence, killed two people in a knife attack at London Bridge on Friday.

The prime minister claimed scrapping early release would have stopped him.

But Labour is blaming budget cuts for “missed chances to intervene”.

One of the victims has been named by police as 25-year-old Jack Merritt. The second victim has not been named, but the University of Cambridge has confirmed she was a former student.

One of the three other people injured was a member of staff from the university.

Dr Vin Diwakar, medical director for NHS London, said two victims remain in a stable condition in hospital, while a third has been discharged.

They were all attending an event to mark five years of the Learning Together programme – which gives students and inmates the opportunity to study together to help reduce re-offending.

Friday’s attack was brought to an end when police shot Khan dead.

The 28-year-old had previously been jailed over a plot to bomb the London Stock Exchange in 2012.

He was sentenced to indeterminate detention for “public protection” with a minimum jail term of eight years.

This sentence would have allowed him to be kept in prison beyond the minimum term.

But in 2013, the Court of Appeal quashed the sentence, replacing it with a 16-year-fixed term of which Khan should serve half in prison.

He was released on licence in December 2018 – subject to an “extensive list of licence conditions”, Met Police Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu said.

Media captionVideo footage shows moment London Bridge attacker was apprehended

‘Repulsive’

The prime minister told the BBC’s Andrew Marr show it was “repulsive” that someone as “dangerous” as Khan could be released from prison after “only serving eight years”.

He blamed Khan’s release on legislation introduced under “a leftie government”, insisting the automatic release scheme was introduced by Labour – but was challenged about what the Conservatives had done to change the law over the past 10 years in government.

“I’m a new prime minister,” said Mr Johnson. “We take a different approach.”

He added: “I opposed [automatic release] both in 2003 and 2008, and now that I am prime minister I’m going to take steps to make sure that people are not released early when they commit… serious sexual, violent or terrorist offences.

“I absolutely deplore that fact that this man was out on the streets… and we are going to take action against it.”

Mr Johnson said there are “probably about 74 people” who had been subject to early release following serious offences, adding that action had been taken immediately following London Bridge attack “to ensure there is no threat to the public”.

The Ministry of Justice confirmed the 74 figure following the interview.


How the law on early release changed

2003 – The Criminal Justice Act meant most offenders would be automatically released halfway through sentences, but the most “dangerous” would have their cases looked at by a Parole Board. Sentences with no fixed end point, called Imprisonment for Public Protection (IPP), were also introduced.

2008 – Criminal Justice and Immigration Act removed review process by Parole Boards, meaning more offenders were released automatically halfway through sentences. Judges could still hand down life sentences or IPPs for dangerous offenders.

2012 – Usman Khan was handed a sentence with no fixed end date because of the risk he posed to the public. In the same year, the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act scrapped IPPs and reintroduced the role of the Parole Board for extended sentences of 10 years or more – this time after two-thirds of the sentence has passed. But that did not mean those already serving IPPs would have them lifted.

2013 – During an appeal, Lord Justice Leveson ruled that Khan’s indeterminate sentence should be substituted for an extended sentence with automatic release at the halfway point.


At an event in York, Jeremy Corbyn called for an inquiry into “everything surrounding” Khan, including his sentence and what happened to him in prison.

But he warned against “knee-jerk legislation”, saying the country could “pay a price later”.

Media captionJeremy Corbyn says cuts in public services could put more lives at risk

In his speech, the Labour leader said: “No government can prevent every attack. No-one would believe any political leader who said they could.

“But the government can act to make such acts of terror less, rather than more likely.”

Mr Corbyn said there needed to be more funding for public services, including probation and mental health, as when they are cut “they leave behind gaps”.

He added: “That can lead to missed chances to intervene in the lives of people who go on to commit inexcusable acts, whether it’s during their childhood, their first brush with the law, their first conviction or in prison through rehabilitation programmes.

“You can’t keep people safe on the cheap.”

Mr Corbyn told Sky’s Sophy Ridge programme terrorists should “not necessarily” serve their full sentences automatically, but that it “depends on circumstances”.

“There has to be an examination of how our prison services work and crucially what happens when they are released from prison,” he said.

Both parties have been accused of politicising the attack.

Liberal Democrat deputy leader Ed Davey told Sophy Ridge on Sunday that he was “alarmed” at Mr Johnson’s reaction to the London Bridge attack.

“In the middle of an election, we shouldn’t be making political capital out of a tragedy, and he’s doing that, and he’s doing that in a way which is misleading people about what the law actually says.”

But Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage tweeted that those convicted of terror offences “should never be released”.

“It is appalling that 74 convicted terrorists are on our streets,” he added. “These are not ordinary criminals but people with a jihadi virus.”

Media captionUsman Khan speaking to the BBC in 2008: ‘I ain’t no terrorist’

The father of Jack Merritt, who was a course co-ordinator for Learning Together, said in a now-deleted tweet that his son “would not wish his death to be used as the pretext for more draconian sentences or for detaining people unnecessarily”.

Foreign secretary Dominic Raab said David Merritt should be listened to, declaring “nobody wants to see the politicisation of this”.

But he added: “The question is, who is going to make sure that the overriding priority is avoiding any unnecessary risk to the public?”

“I think if you look at what we’re saying on sentencing… it is the Conservatives who are saying we will stop at nothing to keep people safe.”

Khan was living in Stafford and wearing a GPS police tag when he launched his attack inside Fishmongers’ Hall, where he was one of dozens of students and offenders attending a conference hosted by Learning Together, a prisoners’ rehabilitation programme.

The attack then continued onto London Bridge itself.

Mr Basu said officers had been working “flat out” to try to establish the “full circumstances” of the stabbing.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-50618744

En un esfuerzo conjunto entre Policía y el CTI se logró desarticular la banda que tenía su centro de operaciones en la localidad de Fontibón. De las 22 personas capturadas, 13 eran mujeres.

Según el general Humberto Guatibonza, la líder de La saga de los González llevaba 20 años dedicada a negocios relacionados con el tráfico de los estupefacientes.

A través de sus nueve hijos distribuía la droga en parques y vías públicas. La banda tendría nexos directos con narcotraficantes del norte del Valle del Cauca.

Durante los allanamientos se decomisaron varios kilos de marihuana, bazuco, dinero en efectivo y dos armas de fuego, con las cuales realizaban los cobros e intimidaban a otras bandas de microtráfico.  

Source Article from http://www.noticiascaracol.com/colombia/desmantelan-banda-delincuencial-dirigida-por-una-mujer-de-70-anos

Billionaire financier Tom SteyerThomas (Tom) Fahr SteyerTom Steyer’s campaign to impeach Trump will continue after Steyer enters 2020 race Five things to know about Tom Steyer Don’t dismiss Tom Steyer: He’s the most media-savvy candidate going MORE announced he would join the 2020 presidential race on Tuesday — and the dominant reaction from Democrats was annoyance.

Critics on the left accuse Steyer, a liberal activist from California, of mounting a vanity project that they say has no real chance of success.

They worry he could damage the chances of more prominent candidates whose views align with his own, notably Sens. Bernie SandersBernie SandersRussian intel planted Seth Rich conspiracy theory: report Poll: Trump trails Biden and Sanders, beats Buttigieg, Harris, and Warren Democrats are too far left to win Middle America MORE (I-Vt.) and Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth Ann WarrenPoll: Trump trails Biden and Sanders, beats Buttigieg, Harris, and Warren Democrats are too far left to win Middle America Poll: Biden leads 2020 Democratic pack by 15 points, Warren, Harris, Sanders tie for second MORE (D-Mass).

The threat from Steyer is simple: His wealth means he can run a well-funded campaign for almost as long as he likes. A Steyer spokesman told The New York Times that he was willing to spend “at least $100 million” on his presidential bid.

“Anybody with $100 million to spend will have an impact,” said Jonathan Tasini, a well-known progressive writer and activist in New York. “I just think it is a massive case of ego run amok. There is absolutely nothing that Steyer is saying that other candidates, especially Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders are not saying.”

“He typifies the kind of candidate that Democrats hate the most, which is somebody who thinks they can buy the primary or buy support,” said a party strategist who is unaligned with any current presidential candidate and requested anonymity to speak candidly blasted the Democratic mega-donor.

Still, the criticisms of Steyer bump up against the fact that he has espoused causes that are popular with the liberal grass roots.

After making his fortune, he first came to political prominence as a vigorous advocate for action on climate change. 

More recently, he has been best known for spearheading a drive to impeach President TrumpDonald John TrumpGraham open to investigating Acosta-Epstein plea deal Sustaining progress with Mexico on migration Government to issue licenses for business with Huawei MORE — an effort that has collected more than 8 million supporters and has encompassed a major TV ad campaign, with most them putting Steyer front and center.

Some progressives acknowledge Steyer’s commitment to their causes even as they are skeptical of his 2020 chances.

Charles Chamberlain, chairman of progressive group Democracy for America, emphasized Steyer’s record on climate change as one potential upside to his candidacy.

On that topic, he said, “What is exciting about Tom getting into the race is, with the kind of money he has, he may be able to drive forward solutions in a way that could be positive for America.”

Even so, Chamberlain noted that overall, “It’s a little difficult to see what Tom Steyer has to offer, other than bringing a billionaire’s finances into it.”

In an emailed statement, Adam Green, the co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, which has endorsed Warren, said of Steyer’s choice to enter the race this late: “Especially for a rich white male, this decision should be gut checked in a major way.”

But Green also noted that “Steyer will likely add attention to two issues he and Warren have led on: impeachment and addressing the climate crisis. Those issues deserve attention.”

Sanders and Warren seem less than thrilled to have Steyer in the race. 

He would appear to pose a much bigger threat to them than to more centrist candidates such as former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenTransgender activist Sarah McBride announces bid for Delaware state Senate Poll: Trump trails Biden and Sanders, beats Buttigieg, Harris, and Warren Democrats are too far left to win Middle America MORE, who continues to top national polls despite losing some of his lead following the first debates last month.

Sanders and Warren already face a challenge in trying to get progressive voters to coalesce behind one or the other.

That will be an even steeper climb now that a candidate with a presumptive $100 million in his campaign coffers has joined the race.

In the second quarter of this year, Warren and Sanders raised $19.1 million and $18 million respectively.

On Tuesday, Warren tweeted, “The Democratic primary should not be decided by billionaires, whether they’re funding Super PACs or funding themselves” — a clear shot at Steyer.

Sanders, in an MSNBC interview, said he was personally fond of Steyer but was “a bit tired of seeing billionaires trying to buy political power.”

Bill Carrick, a Democratic strategist and admaker in Steyer’s home state of California, told The Hill that Sanders and Warren have cause to be concerned: “The candidates who are running to the more progressive, left side — they just got another candidate doing that as well, and one with unlimited resources. That may complicate things for those candidates.”

Carrick noted that Steyer’s pro-impeachment ads have boosted his name recognition among the public and that his access to the email addresses of the people who signed up to that effort could help him enormously.

Elsewhere in the progressive world, however, there is carping that Steyer — if genuinely concerned about the issues rather than self-promotion — could have put his wealth to use in more effective ways.

Jamelle Bouie, a liberal columnist with The New York Times, tweeted, “if i were a liberal billionaire with a $100 millions to burn i’d spend it on a nationwide voter registration drive instead of a vanity presidential campaign.”

Tasini, the progressive activist in New York, argued Steyer could have made more of a substantive difference if he had been prepared to use his money to buttress Democratic hopes of taking back control of the Senate next November.

Tasini poured cold water on the suggestion that Steyer would have a real impact in terms of taking votes away from the top progressive candidates. 

“That’s unlikely because I think his status as a white man billionaire does not chip in to the base of either Warren or Sanders,” Tasini said. “Would he win five of their votes? Maybe. But not 5 percent of them.”

The Memo is a reported column by Niall Stanage, primarily focused on Donald Trump’s presidency.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/the-memo/452294-the-memo-democrats-irked-as-billionaire-steyer-joins-2020-race

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One of former U.S. Rep. Beto O’Rourke’s supporters from his 2018 Senate campaign has been reaching out to top Democratic Party donors to see if they will back him to run for president in 2020.

Louis Susman, former U.S. ambassador to the U.K. and a lead bundler for Barack Obama’s first presidential campaign, has been speaking with political financiers from across the country, including those in the financial industry, to see if they will invest in O’Rourke’s campaign, according to people with direct knowledge of the outreach.

The former Obama backer has put together a string of senior party donors who are willing to contribute to the former congressman’s presidential operation, said the people, who declined to be named due to the conversations being deemed private.

In an interview with CNBC, Susman says the people he’s talked to about donating to the campaign are “family and friends.” He added “everyone is excited to go,” while noting he’s been in touch with O’Rourke’s campaign and coordinating his efforts with them. He declined to say who these donors are or which industry they are from.

“Whatever I do, I do it in coordination with the campaign,” Susman said. He said there’s no discussion about him becoming a campaign finance chairman and he has not recently spoken with O’Rourke himself. He’s confident the former Texas Senate candidate will be successful in the fundraising circuit.

“I don’t think, whether it’s through large bundlers or small donors, that he’s going to have a tough time raising money,” Susman said.

He also did not rule out holding fundraisers for O’Rourke, noting “everything is in the planning stages.”

“The team is focused on these four days in Iowa, and everything is going to develop from there,” he added and then abruptly ended the phone call.

Meanwhile, his daughter, Pfizer executive Sally Susman, is supporting another 2020 hopeful: Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York. She’s hosting a fundraiser for Gillibrand in March at her home, and tickets range from $1,000 to $2,700.

CNN first reported in December that Louis Susman was planning to support O’Rourke’s candidacy if he ran for president.

A spokesman for O’Rourke did not return repeated requests for comment.

O’Rourke officially launched his campaign for president on Thursday and declared he would be following the same pledge he made when he ran for a Senate seat from Texas in 2018: He will not accept contributions from political action committees, corporations or any special interests. He did not rule out receiving the backing of wealthy financiers like Susman, who currently is a senior advisor to behemoth asset management firm Perella Weinberg Partners and investment firm Atlas Merchant Capital.

Susman was a contributor to O’Rourke’s failed Senate bid, in which he lost to Ted Cruz by just under 2 percentage points. He wrote a $2,700 check to O’Rourke’s campaign in March 2018. O’Rourke finished the 2018 election cycle raising $80 million with almost half of the contributions coming from supporters who gave $200 or less.

For O’Rourke, having Susman on his side could prove to be a difference maker, especially in appealing to donors who are willing to write the larger checks.

“Here’s what Beto doesn’t know: if the contributions he got in Texas will translate into a presidential race. He doesn’t know that,” said a Democratic donor who’s heard Susman’s pitch for backing O’Rourke. “He can’t just rely on that if he really wants to win,” this source added.

Before becoming Obama’s ambassador, Susman bundled at least $500,000 during Obama’s first run for president in 2008, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics. He was also the national finance chairman for John Kerry’s 2004 bid for president.

In the buildup to his announcement, O’Rourke himself had been actively speaking with donors, including some in New York.

Robert Wolf, a longtime party donor and a veteran on Wall Street, spoke with O’Rourke on Wednesday afternoon, he confirmed to CNBC. Wolf would not comment on whether he will support him in the 2020 election but said he was impressed by his initial presidential campaign rollout. O’Rourke had a “great positive message and very smart retail-style politics, where he launches locally in an Iowa coffee shop shaking hands and taking questions.”

O’Rourke made his first campaign stop in the early caucus state of Iowa and traveled to the town of Keokuk to meet with voters at a local coffee shop.

Robert Zimmerman, another lead party bundler and donor, who has yet to hear from O’Rourke, said he considers him a viable candidate to compete for the Democratic nomination. Zimmerman said O’Rourke’s small-dollar donor base, which he put together when he ran for the Senate, will be a formidable hurdle for anyone competing against him.

“I think he’s a top-tier candidate. Very few candidates have shown the ability to build a donor base among young people, campaign in coffee shops around the country and also make the cover of Vanity Fair,” Zimmerman said.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/03/14/former-obama-bundler-reaches-out-to-donors-to-back-orourke-in-2020.html

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Reuters

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Lisa Murkowski has described the impeachment trial as “rushed”

Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski has said she is “disturbed” by her party’s stance before President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial.

Mr Trump was this month impeached by the Democrat-run House for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.

He now faces trial in the Republican-dominated Senate, whose members are supposed to remain impartial.

However, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has pledged “total co-ordination” with the White House.

Mr Trump, the third president in US history to be impeached, is unlikely to be removed from office because of the Republican control of the Senate.

The president has repeatedly described the impeachment proceedings as a “witch-hunt”.

What did Ms Murkowski say?

Ms Murkowski told Alaska’s KTUU news channel that she was uncomfortable with Mr McConnell’s comments about “total co-ordination”.

“When I heard that I was disturbed,” she said.

Media captionWhat does it take to impeach a president?

The senator also said there should be distance between the White House and the Senate over how the trial is conducted. “To me it means that we have to take that step back from being hand in glove with the defence,” she said.

At the same time, she described the impeachment proceedings as “rushed”.

Ms Murkowski, a moderate Republican, has criticised President Trump on a number of policy issues. In October 2018, she opted not to vote to confirm Mr Trump’s nominee for the Supreme Court, after sexual assault allegations.

What about Mr McConnell’s role?

Mr McConnell will play a key role in how the impeachment trial – which is supposed to be impartial – will be conducted.

But he publicly stated last week that he was not “an impartial juror” in the proceedings.

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Getty Images

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Mitch McConnell is confident that President Trump will be acquitted

“This is a political process. There is not anything judicial about it. Impeachment is a political decision,” he said.

And Mr McConnell also said he was confident that Mr Trump would be acquitted in the Republican-led Senate. “We will have a largely partisan outcome,” he said.

Republican and Democratic leaders in the Senate have repeatedly clashed over the rules of the trial.

Democrats want assurances witnesses and documents will be allowed, to enable what they term a fair trial.

Mr McConnell has so far stopped short of agreeing ahead of time to take testimony during the trial.

What is President Trump accused of?

Mr Trump is accused of pressuring Ukraine’s president to start an investigation into his political rival, Democratic presidential front runner, Joe Biden.

Mr Trump is accused of doing this by withholding military aid and making a White House visit contingent on co-operation.

The trial could begin next month, after the holiday break.

Media captionThe story of impeachment by a Christmas choir

Want to find out more?

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50913932

Un automóvil con tres ocupantes circulaba por ruta 8 desde Melo hacia la frontera de Aceguá cuando al pasar a un auto, despistó, cambió de senda y chocó contra un árbol.

Fallecieron en el acto uno de los acompañantes y al llegar al hospital otro de los hombres. Los dos tenían 39 años y eran de Noblía y Aceguá. El tercer ocupante y conductor no sufrió heridas de consideración.

Trabajó personal policial de la  seccional quinta al mando del comisario Danubio Fábrica y personal de la 14. 

Source Article from http://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/muertos-vuelco-cerro-accidente.html

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Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

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(Seated from left) Associate Justices Stephen Breyer, Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John Roberts, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Samuel Alito; (standing from left) Associate Justices Neil Gorsuch, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Brett Kavanaugh

The US Supreme Court has ruled against the Trump administration’s policy to deny asylum to any migrants crossing the US-Mexico border illegally.

The top court rejected the policy 5-4, with Chief Justice John Roberts siding with the court’s liberals.

Federal judges had previously stayed the asylum ban, ruling it tried to circumvent existing laws granting anyone the right to asylum in the US.

The government had described the policy as a way to address the border crisis.

Conservative justices Neil Gorsuch, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Brett Kavanaugh dissented.

The court offered no opinion, just a document noting the order upholding the lower courts’ ruling against the ban.

What was the asylum ban?

On 9 November, President Donald Trump issued a proclamation stating that only asylum claims made at official ports of entry would be heard.

Lower federal courts blocked the policy from going into effect soon after.

In Solicitor General Noel Francisco’s request to the Supreme Court to give the proclamation the go-ahead, he claimed the president’s decree was for border security and to discourage dangerous crossings.

The petition claimed that migrants entered the US illegally and then claimed asylum, allowing them to remain in the country while their cases were being processed – even if those cases were unlikely to be granted.

“These measures are designed to channel asylum seekers to ports of entry, where their claims can be processed in an orderly manner; deter unlawful and dangerous border crossings; and reduce the backlog of meritless asylum claims.”

The government added that the temporary ban would “assist the president in sensitive and ongoing diplomatic negotiations” with Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.

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AFP

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Honduran migrants try to climb the Mexico-US border fence to cross to San Diego County from Tijuana, Mexico

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which issued the legal challenge to the ban, said the policy was unjustifiable and unfair.

The ACLU noted that many legitimate asylum seekers, fearing for their lives, enter illegally “through no fault of their own”.

“The government’s statutory arguments boil down to the contention that it would be more ‘rational’ and ‘sensible’ to deny asylum to people who enter illegally. But Congress expressly rejected that argument,” ACLU court documents stated.

The ACLU concluded that the administration was addressing “the wrong branch of government” with its request.

“It should make its case to Congress rather than seeking emergency intervention from this court regarding an almost 40-year-old statute.”

What did the lower courts say?

Though the administration’s ban was described as temporary, the lower courts ruled that it was not up to the White House to change existing federal laws in this way.

Under US law, there is a legal obligation to hear asylum claims from migrants if they say they fear violence in their home countries – regardless of how they have entered the country.

US District Judge Jon Tigar in California had first blocked Mr Trump’s proclamation in November, and extended his order this month.

A panel of appeals court judges upheld that injunction.

Conservative Judge Jay Bybee wrote in the appeals opinion: “Just as we may not, as we are often reminded, ‘legislate from the bench,’ neither may the Executive legislate from the Oval Office”, the Washington Post reported.

Media captionTrump and the facts about the migrant caravan

What is the situation at the border?

The latest group of migrants seeking entry into the US come from across Central America. They travelled north for weeks in what Mr Trump described as a “caravan of people”.

They say they are fleeing persecution, poverty and violence in their home countries of Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador.

In the run-up to the US mid-term elections, President Trump said most were criminals, called the caravan an invasion, and ordered troops to the border.

On Thursday, the Department of Homeland Security announced that any migrants who illegally enter the US – including asylum seekers – will have to wait in Mexico for their cases to be heard.

The Mexican government has said it will offer migrants work visas and protections while they await asylum proceedings, according to the US Department of State.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-46652863

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AP

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La operación continúa en Bruselas, que vive en estado de alerta.

La policía de Bruselas mantiene el cerco sobre dos sospechosos en una redada antiterrorista que se saldó de momento con cuatro agentes de policía heridos y con la muerte de uno de los sospechosos en un tiroteo y que sigue activa.

El operativo tuvo lugar en Forest, en el oeste de Bruselas. El suburbio permanece sellado por las fuerzas de seguridad porque la operación continúa.

“Al parecer dos personas se han refugiado en una vivienda”, dijo el alcalde de Forest, Marc-Jean Ghyssels.

“Se ha encontrado un cuerpo en la casa de Rue du Dries. Su identidad se desconoce, pero en cualquier caso no se trata de Salah Abdeslam”, dijo el portavoz de la Fiscalía sobre el asalto al primer apartamento.

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AFP

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Hay tres agentes heridos, uno de ellos de gravedad.

El operativo está conectado con los ataques de noviembre pasado en París que dejaron más de 130 muertos. El denominado Estado Islámico (EI) se responsabilizó de los ataques.

Abdeslam es uno de los dos sospechosos de los atentados de París que sigue fugado.

“Durante la operación, una o varias personas abrieron fuego sobre los policías cuando entraron en el apartamento”, informó la Fiscalía.

“Un sospechoso armado con un (fusil) kalashnikov también murió”, agregó.

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AP

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La policía cerró varias calles en el barrio de Bruselas donde se realizó la redada.

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El tiroteo se presentó en el barrio de Forest, en el oeste de Bruselas.

Damian Grammaticas, reportero de la BBC en la escena, asegura que además del tiroteo hubo más disparos durante la persecución y que la zona está sellada.

Dos escuelas y dos guarderías permanecieron cerradas durante horas con unos 100 niños dentro.

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Dos escuelas permanecen cerradas con unos 100 niños en su interior.

Participación de Francia

El ministro francés del Interior, Bernard Cazeneuve, aseguró que agentes franceses participaron en la redada en Bruselas.

Surya Jonckheere, residente en la zona, dijo a la BBC que hay mucha confusión en la zona.

Desde los atentados del 13 de noviembre, las autoridades han identificado a la mayoría de personas que creen que realizaron o idearon los ataques.

Image copyright
Reuters

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Los sospechosos se han refugiado en una vivienda.

La mayoría murió el mismo día o en los operativos policiales posteriores.

Pero dos sospechosos, Abdeslam y Mohamed Abrini, siguen fugados.

Además, 11 personas fueron arrestadas y acusadas en Bélgica en relación con los atentados en París. Otros ocho siguen detenidos a la espera de cargos.

Tras los atentados en París hubo redadas en varias zonas de Bruselas, donde vivían varios sospechosos, lo que durante días hizo pensar también en un posible atentado en la capital belga.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2016/03/160315_belgica_internacional_tiroteo_paris_ataques_amv

At a press conference late Tuesday, September 29, Santa Rosa Fire Chief Tony Gossner had sobering words for those hopeful that the Glass Incident Fire had run its course. “We’re going to be in this for a couple of weeks,” Gossner said in remarks reported by the Bay Area News Group. “And it’s going to be painful for those that are dealing with it.”

As of the morning of Wednesday, September 30, the Glass Incident Fire — which began on the Napa/Sonoma County border on Sunday, September 27 and has so far damaged or destroyed at least 114 structures, including the three-Michelin-starred Restaurant at Meadowood and 120,000 bottles at destination winery Castello di Amorosa — had forced the evacuation of at least 70,000 people and consumed 48,440 acres of wine country land, CalFire said in a briefing. So far, no deaths have been reported, and there have only been a “handful” of injuries to area residents. The fire is at 2 percent containment.

The cause of the fire remains unknown, with officials saying that workers are inspecting power lines near where the fire began. According to a statement from Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), the company hasn’t received any indication that its equipment sparked the blaze, but BANG reports that residents along North Fork Crystal Springs Road, near the hillside where the fire was first spotted, say some utility wires were down shortly before the fire began.

As the fire made its way across wine country, vintners and restaurateurs who’d fled the blaze returned the the area, many of them discovering that their life’s work had been destroyed. Here’s the latest on the food and beverage businesses damaged or lost in the fire.

  • Behrens Family Winery: Wine Spectator spoke with general manager Schatzi Throckmorton, who says that “Our current information for Spring Mountain is that the winery at Behrens burned, but the tank barn and tasting room there are ok.”
  • Bremer Family Winery: The Bay Area News Group reports that their photographer saw a fully-charred vineyard, but that its historic buildings (including an 1891-vintage structure that was the original headquarters of the famous Sutter Home label) have survived.
  • Burgess Cellars: The Howell Mountain winery was completely destroyed, its owners tell Wine Spectator, but “damage to the vineyards was minimal.” “While we are devastated by the loss of these great heritage structures, we were heartened to hear that the vineyards were mainly spared. We look forward to many more great vintages once we can rebuild the winery,” CEO Carlton McCoy Jr. said via statement.
  • Calistoga Ranch: The luxury resort was “badly damaged,” SF Gate reports. State Sen. Bill Dodd tweeted photos from the scene, which depict leveled buildings and charred picnic tables. The Ranch is home to Lakehouse Restaurant, the status of which remains unknown.
  • Castello di Amorosa: The 13th-century–style winery in Calistoga known for its unique “castle” building lost $5 million of wine (based on 120,000 bottles) in the fire, BANG reports, but its $30 million castle remains safe.
  • Chateau Boswell: The winery was one of the first destroyed by the Glass Incident Fire.
  • Davis Estates: The heat from the flames prompted a 1,000-gallon propane tank on the property to explode, owner Mike Davis tells the Chron, but though “everything surrounding the winery” burned, the winery, itself, was saved.
  • Fairwinds Estate Winery: On its website, Fairwinds says that “Most of the Fairwinds Winery and its Tasting Room has been very seriously damaged by the recent Napa Valley fires…We are pleased to report our people are all safe. Our hearts go out to friends and neighbors, many of whom have lost their homes and all their belongings. This will change us, but it will not reduce us.” According to video from photojournalist Brittany Hosea-Small, it appears to be completely leveled.
  • Hourglass Winery: Wine Spectator reports that the proudly “anti-Napa” winery has “extensive damage.” An Instagram post from the winery shows a completely demolished building, and says that “our Blueline Estate was unfortunately in nature’s furious path,” and owner Jeff Smith tells KPIX that its winery facility and 162-year-old guest house were lost.
  • Hunnicutt Wines: The SF Chronicle reports that “much of its winemaking equipment” was lost, but that its winery building is safe.
  • Meadowood Resort: The building that housed the three-Michelin-starred Restaurant at Meadowood, the Grill at Meadowood, and a golf shop has burned to the ground, prompting a flood of social media grief. Co-owner Bill Harlan said that “We have to find something positive out of all of this. This gives us the opportunity to rebuild this better than before,” a spokesperson tells ABC 7, but executive chef Christopher Kostow tells the Chron “It’s weird that it’s all gone. It’s all rendered futile.” Food critic Soleil Ho worries that its loss is the end of an era, saying that “As wildfires become more of a yearly reality in the region, it’s hard to say if anyone will ever want to risk opening another restaurant as ambitious as the one at Meadowood, only to receive ashes in return.”
  • Merus Wines: “One of our production outbuildings at Merus was destroyed, as was one of the two residences on the property. We also lost some farming vehicles,” a spokesperson tells WS. “The winery building is damaged but still intact. There was a small wooden bridge that ran from our parking lot to the winery building that went up in flames. It looks like Cal Fire made a stand there and saved the winery building. Our generator is up and running, and we are going to try to resume operations at some point today after we get things cleaned up.”
  • Newton Vineyard: The Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton (LVMH) owned winery “was significantly impacted, Wine Spectator reports, with a spokesperson saying that the company “intends to do whatever it takes to rebuild this truly special place.”
  • Paloma: Sheldon Richards, who owns the Spring Mountain winery, tells WS that he believes the property has been completely destroyed, but that he was forced to flee on Sunday night.
  • Sherwin Family Vineyards: According to the Chron, the 24-year-old family-owned winery was destroyed.
  • Spring Mountain Vineyard: Its main winery and mansion, which the Chron reminds us was featured in 1980s soap Falcon Crest, is safe, but its vineyard and an 1873-era winery were lost.
  • Sterling Vineyards: A statement from owner Treasury Wine Estates confirmed “that video footage on social media appears to show Sterling Vineyards suffering fire damage, but that the property is currently evacuated and the damage has yet to be assessed,” WS reports.
  • Tofanelli Vineyards: Owner Vince Tofanelli tells the SF Chronicle that he believes that “many of the grapevines, planted in 1929,” were lost, as was a 120-year-old barn and the winery’s (currently unoccupied) family home.
  • Tuck Beckstoffer Vineyards: Owner Tuck Beckstoffer tells WS that “we saved the winery last night, but everything else was lost.”

According to the Napa County Office of Emergency Services, there are 64 total wineries within the evacuation zone, a significant percentage of Napa Valley’s 400 (or so) total wineries or tasting rooms. As of Wednesday morning, a total of 22,553 homes, restaurants, and other businesses remain at risk.

Damaged wine barrels sit stacked at Fairwinds Estate Winery, destroyed by the Glass Fire on September 29, 2020 in Calistoga, California.
Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Source Article from https://sf.eater.com/2020/9/30/21495351/napa-sonoma-wildfire-glass-incident-meadowood-calistoga-boswell-davis-fairwinds

Source Article from http://www.lanacion.com.ar/1871937-buenas-y-malas-noticias-en-el-arranque-de-macri