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It is unclear to what extent the Justice Department already has assessed the contents of the boxes, which the National Archives arranged to retrieve from Mar-a-Lago in January — including documents clearly marked as classified, The Washington Post previously reported. The Justice Department, though, has been in touch with the Archives about moving its own inquiry forward, people familiar with the matter said.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/04/07/trump-boxes-archives-investigation-maralago/

The United States’ top intelligence office has told lawmakers it will largely stop holding in-person briefings on election security, signalling that it does not trust lawmakers to keep the information secret.

Donald Trump’s new director of national intelligence, John Ratcliffe, notified the House and Senate intelligence panels on Friday that it would send written reports instead, giving lawmakers less opportunity to press for details as the 3 November election approaches.

An official in Ratcliffe’s office, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said on Saturday the office was “concerned about unauthorized disclosures of sensitive information following recent briefings”.

The move drew a heated rejoinder from House Democrats, who have focused on foreign efforts to sway the presidential election in 2016 and again this year.

“This is a shocking abdication of its lawful responsibility to keep the Congress currently informed, and a betrayal of the public’s right to know how foreign powers are trying to subvert our democracy,” the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, and the intelligence committee chairman, Adam Schiff, said in a statement.

Ratcliffe’s office had offered to hold in-person briefings for the House and Senate oversight panels next month, even after concerns surfaced about leaks from previous meetings, a House committee official said. It later rescinded the offer.

The decision was first reported by CNN.

Senator Marco Rubio, a Republican and acting chairman of the Senate select committee on intelligence, said in a statement late on Saturday that he had spoken to Ratcliffe, who “stated unequivocally” to him that he would fulfil the intelligence community’s obligations to keep members of Congress informed.

The committee will continue receiving briefings on all oversight topics, including on election matters, Rubio said Ratcliffe told him. It was unclear whether Rubio meant those would be in-person briefings.

Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, told reporters while on a visit to Texas that Ratcliffe will “ultimately give full briefings, in terms of not oral briefings, but fully intel briefings”.

The office of the director of national intelligence said this month that Russia, which orchestrated a hacking campaign to sway the 2016 election in Trump’s favor, was trying to “denigrate” Trump’s 2020 Democratic opponent, Joe Biden. And it said China and Iran were hoping Trump is not re-elected.

“For clarity and to protect sensitive intelligence from unauthorized disclosures, we will primarily do that through written finished intelligence products,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Biden said in a statement late on Saturday that the office was curtailing one of the intelligence community’s most basic duties and it is “nothing less than a shameless partisan manipulation to protect the personal interests of president Trump”.

Ratcliffe, a close political ally of Trump, is a former member of the House intelligence panel and was a vocal defender of the president during investigations of Russia’s efforts to influence the 2016 election. He told senators during his confirmation hearing this year that “the intelligence I deliver will not be subject to outside influence.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/30/outcry-as-us-intelligence-stops-in-person-reports-to-congress-on-election-security

Sabemos que nuestros lectores se mantienen informados de distintas maneras.

Algunos solo quieren recibir el periódico impreso. Otros prefieren leer las últimas noticias en su teléfono celular a modo de alertas. Y a otros les gusta ver los videos de noticias o de entretenimiento en una tableta o computadora.

Nuestro equipo de el Nuevo Herald está trabajando para mantenerlos conectados a nuestra comunidad y al mundo y este miércoles lanzamos un rediseño de elnuevoherald.com y del periódico impreso, con la meta de ayudarlos a mantenerse informados de cualquier manera que desee. Podrá escoger cómo y a qué ritmo recibirá las noticias de nuestro premiado equipo de reporteros, fotógrafos, editores y diseñadores.

En la versión digital, ponemos más énfasis en elementos interactivos y periodismo visual, con videos de noticias, bases de datos interactivas y galerías de fotos. También encontrarán un nuevo diseño más organizado. Todos nuestros productos priorizan los reportajes y noticias de mayor impacto, a la vez que proveemos elementos que ayudan a darles contexto y profundidad a los temas de importancia.

Nuestro nuevo método de contar la noticia va entregando la información por etapas ofreciendo al lector la oportunidad de revisar rápidamente los titulares más destacados o explorar un tema más a fondo. Encontrará resúmenes de los puntos clave, detalles destacables y citas que capturarán su atención. Nuestro nuevo énfasis en video provee formas atractivas de contar lo que un texto no puede capturar.

El contenido cuenta con una mezcla de estilos de presentación y redacción, ya sea para noticias de último minuto, editoriales o reportajes de profundidad, lo cual nos permite contar la noticia de la mejor manera posible.

Entre los cambios más importantes en el periódico impreso, ha aumentado la cobertura de noticias locales en la sección A.

Expandiendo nuestra popular cobertura de los domingos en Séptimo Día, presentamos Trasfondo, una nueva sección diaria que ofrece reportajes más largos y profundos con más información de contexto y perspectiva. En la versión impresa, encontrará infografías, mapas y otros elementos visuales de utilidad que ayudan a ilustrar mejor el tema en cuestión. En las versiones digitales, estos reportajes también incluyen videos, mapas interactivos, bases de datos y enlaces que lo ayudarán a explorar el tema más a fondo. Se trata de una nueva y emocionante forma de saber más – y aprovechar mejor su tiempo. Trasfondo también incluirá la caricatura del día, las cartas al editor y opiniones de nuestros talentosos columnistas como Daniel Shoer Roth, Andrés Oppenheimer, Carlos Alberto Montaner, Fabiola Santiago, Bernadette Pardo y Sabina Covo, entre muchos más.

La tercera sección, la de Deportes, incluirá una columna nueva los sábados sobre deportistas de nuestras escuelas secundarias. Encontrarán también lo último en Negocios. Los domingos esta sección contará con una nueva página de Finanzas Personales y otra de Tecnología.

Vienen muchos cambios, pero lo que no cambiará es el periodismo de altura que le entregamos todos los días: reportajes especiales sobre la ciudad; lo más importante que acontece en América Latina y el Caribe, particularmente en Cuba, Venezuela, Colombia y Centroamérica. Seguiremos celebrando las artes, las letras, la música y los viajes los domingos en Galería 305, ayudándolos con su salud cada miércoles en Viva Más, y la sección Viernes le ofrecerá sugerencias para pasar un fin de semana entretenido.

Nuestros lectores vienen de muchos lugares pero el sur de la Florida es donde todos hemos echado raíces. El Nuevo Herald sigue dedicado a contar las historias de sus vidas. Esperamos que disfruten los cambios para seguir siendo: “Cada día, parte de tu vida”.

mmarquez@elnuevo herald.com

Siga a Myriam Márquez en Twitter: @MyriamMarquez

Source Article from http://www.elnuevoherald.com/noticias/septimo-dia/article35041347.html

New York lawmakers approved a bill Friday to strip Gov. Andrew Cuomo of the extraordinary authority to issue COVID-19 directives — a power it granted last year. But the measure allows existing orders to be extended. Cuomo is seen here during a news conference last month.

Seth Wenig/POOL /AFP via Getty Images


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New York lawmakers approved a bill Friday to strip Gov. Andrew Cuomo of the extraordinary authority to issue COVID-19 directives — a power it granted last year. But the measure allows existing orders to be extended. Cuomo is seen here during a news conference last month.

Seth Wenig/POOL /AFP via Getty Images

New York lawmakers voted to strip Gov. Andrew Cuomo of his extraordinary emergency powers on Friday, saying that current COVID-19 circumstances no longer justify the expansive powers Cuomo was granted last year. But the legislation also allows the governor to extend orders he has already issued.

New York’s Senate and Assembly, both of which are led by Cuomo’s fellow Democrats, approved the move on Friday. The Senate vote was 43-20; the Assembly vote was 107-43.

The votes took place as a pair of political crises are undermining the governor’s standing. At least three women have accused Cuomo of sexual harassment, and his administration was found to have undercounted the coronavirus’ horrible toll on nursing home residents. Those crises have fueled calls for Cuomo to resign, and for him to be impeached.

Earlier this week, Cuomo apologized for acting “in a way that made people feel uncomfortable,” but he denied inappropriate conduct and refused to resign. The state’s attorney general is conducting an investigation into the harassment allegations.

Several lawmakers who voted against the legislation Friday said they did so only because they believe it doesn’t do enough to wrest power back from the executive branch.

“What more could this governor possibly do?” Republican Sen. Fred Akshar said, adding that Cuomo has issued some 96 orders during the pandemic. Approving the bill, Akshar said, “is worse than doing nothing.”

The bill, which is identical in both chambers, allows the governor’s COVID-19 directives to stay in effect for 30 days. But while it would stop Cuomo from issuing any new directives without lawmakers’ approval, it also would allow the governor’s existing directives to be extended.

The measure’s supporters said it would be unsafe to suddenly lift all of the orders, noting that despite the arrival of vaccines, the pandemic isn’t over. Cuomo has used the powers to enact a number of policies, from establishing capacity maximums for movie theaters to creating color-coded restriction zones and setting up quarantine restrictions for travelers.

But during Friday’s debate, several lawmakers called for Cuomo’s orders to be lifted immediately, and for him to face recriminations for his handling of the pandemic.

“I support impeachment,” Democratic Assemblyman Charles Barron said, emphasizing that he doesn’t think the legislation goes far enough to strip Cuomo of the special powers. Accusing Cuomo of obstruction and abuse of power, Barron said he would vote for both the Republican and the Democratic versions of the bill to rescind the emergency powers.

During debate on the bill, many lawmakers referenced the political turmoil Cuomo is now in. But as they discussed repealing the governor’s emergency powers, many legislators also returned to a common theme: that their constituents are ready for their lives and businesses to start returning to normal.

“We demand to go back to work. We demand to send our children back to school,” Republican Assemblyman Robert Smullen said, calling for his colleagues to repeal the law that granted Cuomo the powers last year.

The legislature gave Cuomo the extraordinary leeway to issue new orders last year, as New York faced a quick succession of challenges from the COVID-19 pandemic, which imposed unprecedented disruptions on everyday life in communities around the world.

But now, the bill states, “The legislature finds that there has been progress in the fight against the virus with the approval and distribution of multiple vaccines in recent months.”

With the worst of the COVID-19 emergency now seemingly over, lawmakers said, it was time to restore the balance of powers.

“This is the last good chance we have to reassert ourselves as a legislature,” Assemblywoman Marjorie Byrnes, a Republican, said.

The bill leaves intact any emergency powers the governor’s office had before the pandemic. But it also says the legislature can terminate a state disaster emergency if both chambers approve a concurrent resolution.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/03/05/974083354/new-york-legislature-strips-cuomo-of-extraordinary-emergency-powers-with-a-cavea

After three demonstrators were killed on Tuesday by riot police officers who resorted to live fire, Mr. Mehdi ordered the security forces to refrain from the use of bullets. By nightfall on Wednesday, however, it seemed that some police officers may have ignored his instructions as more people were reported shot.

Officials in the prime minister’s office said the government had cut off the internet to hinder the use of social media by protesters, but the extent of such a shutdown was unclear.

The protests have veered from furious attacks on government property to peaceful, even ecumenical, pleas for the government to respond to citizens’ needs. At dusk in Baghdad, some Sunni and Shia Muslims joined together in prayer.

Some demonstrators carried banners that seemed in keeping with Mr. Mehdi’s statement that both the police and the demonstrators were sons of Iraq. But some banners also appeared aimed at rallying the police to the side of the protesters.

One banner read: “Oh you soldier, do not open fire. I am your brother. Your mother and my mother cry the same tears. You fight for me and I demonstrate for you.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/02/world/middleeast/iraq-corruption-protests.html


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En las noticias más leídas del día de hoy, el año pasado, México captó 26,738.6 millones de dólares de Inversión Extranjera Directa, donde el principal participante fue Estados Unidos, con 10,410.2 millones. A casi un mes de que Donald Trump haya sido nombrado presidente oficial de Estados Unidos, ya registra una de las peores aprobaciones en los últimos años por los ciudadanos estadounidenses. Samsung cerrará algunos de sus negocios temporalmente.

1. Estados Unidos concentró 38.9% de IED en México

Después de la complicada relación que se está viviendo en América del Norte y a la incertidumbre económica que podría vivir México por las posibles políticas de Donald Trump, durante el 2016 el país captó 26,738.6 millones de dólares de Inversión Extranjera Directa, donde el principal participante fue Estados Unidos, con 10,410.2 millones (38.9% del total).
De acuerdo con datos de la Secretaría de Economía, le siguieron España (10.7%), Alemania (9.0%), Israel (7.5%), Canadá (6.3%) y Japón (5.7 por ciento).

En comparación con la inversión extranjera del 2015, del top 10 la mitad presentó aumentos; el mayor dinamismo lo registró Israel, al pasar de 0.9 millones de dólares a 2,015.2 millones, cuya apuesta fue en la Ciudad de México (55.7% del total) y Jalisco (31.8 por ciento).

2. Pemex pagó por activos inservibles

Según la Auditoría Superior de la Federación, determinó que la compra de la planta de Agronitrogenados, por medio de una empresa de Pemex llamada Pro Agroindustria en diciembre del 2013, se hizo a un costo inicial de 275 millones de dólares, pero se elevó a 760 millones de dólares porque más de la mitad de la planta no servía

Dentro de las irregularidades detectadas se encontró que 60% de las instalaciones vendidas por Agronitrogenados eran inservibles y deberían ser cambiadas, no se hizo una evaluación de las condiciones de la planta antes de la venta porque, según los vendedores, se perderían las garantías pese a que llevaba 14 años sin operar.

Para la segunda auditoría, ya no sobre la compra sino sobre la rehabilitación de la planta, se concluye que PMI Comercio Internacional, que es la entidad que tenía el proceso en sus manos, no cumplió con las disposiciones legales y normativas aplicables para el trabajo.

3. ¿Cuándo vale la pena tener una tarjeta que cobra anualidad?

Una tarjeta amerita el pago de una anualidad cuando nos ofrecen beneficios que son relevantes para nosotros, que realmente necesitamos y que van acorde con las prioridades del cliente, de acuerdo con Freddy Domínguez, cofundador de Comparaguru.com.

La primera pregunta que nos hacen cuando queremos una tarjeta de crédito, es ¿qué beneficios son importantes para nuestro futuro? ya que resulta contraproducente pagar por un plástico que ofrece millas si no nos dedicamos mucho a viajar, o si nuestra aerolínea no aplica para los beneficios otorgados.

Otra de las guías para identificar cuándo no deberíamos pagar anualmente por un plástico, radica en qué tanto uso le damos. Si quieres obtener más información con respecto a cuándo vale la pena adquirir una tarjeta, entra a la nota completa.


src=”http://media.eleconomista.com.mx/contenido/infografias/201702/17/NoPerder_3_17022017.png” alt=”¿Cuándo vale la pena tener una tarjeta que cobra anualidad?” border=”0″ />

4. Trump divide cada vez más a Estados Unidos

El mal que dejó la elección presidencial en Estados no da muestras de una pronta recuperación. A tan sólo semanas de que Donald Trump asumió la presidencia, la percepción de la población estadounidense está cada vez más dividida y se inclina sobre todo hacia la desaprobación del desempeño del nuevo mandatario, de acuerdo con una encuesta realizada por el Pew Research Center.

Los datos ofrecidos por el centro de investigación contradicen la postura de Trump en su conferencia de prensa del pasado 16 de febrero, en la que afirmó que según una encuesta de Rasmussen Reports su administración registra un nivel de aprobación de 55 por ciento.

5. Samsung, en crisis tras arresto de su líder

El principal conglomerado de Corea del Sur, Samsung Electronics suspenderá la mayoría de sus nuevos negocios e inversiones, al menos temporalmente, tras el arresto del heredero del grupo, Lee Jae-yong, indicaron los observadores de la industria.
Lee, el líder del grupo, fue arrestado este viernes por la mañana bajo los cargos de soborno en conexión con el escándalo de tráfico de influencias centrado en la presidenta suspendida, Park Geun-hye, y su amiga íntima, Choi Soon-si.



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Source Article from http://eleconomista.com.mx/politica/2017/02/17/5-noticias-dia-17-febrero

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Lunes, 01 de Junio 2015  |  11:39 am



Créditos: Vanity Fair Twitter

“Llmenme Caitlyn” pide el patriarca del clan Kardashian quien hace tan solo unos meses conmocionaba a las redes sociales luego de anunciar su cambio de sexo.






El exatleta Bruce Jenner realizó su primera portada convertida en toda una mujer en la última edición de la revista Vanity Fair. La sesión de fotos a cargo de la fotógrafa Annie Leibovitz muestra el cambio drástico al que se ha sometido el patriarca del clan Kardashian.

Como se recuerda, Bruce confirmó en una entrevista para ’20/20’ que cambiará de sexo, además habló de lo que significó para él su proceso de transición a ser mujer.

“Sí, para todos los efectos soy una mujer. La gente me ve de manera distinta, como un macho, pero en mi corazón y alma, en todo lo que hago en la vida, es parte de mí, este lado femenino es parte de mí, es quién soy. No nací genéticamente de esta manera”.

“No soy gay, hasta donde sé soy heterosexual. Nunca he estado con un chico, nunca me atrajeron los hombres, la sexualidad era un asunto diferente. Es muy confuso”, argumentó el padrastro de Kim Kardashian.

En las imágenes podemos ver a un Bruce Jenner que exige desde hoy se le conozca bajo el nombre que planea usar. “Caitlyn ya no tiene ningún secreto. A partir del lanzamiento de la portada, seré libre”, afirma en el video compartido a través de las cuentas en redes sociales de la publicación estadounidense.







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Source Article from http://www.rpp.com.pe/2015-06-01-bruce-jenner-su-primera-foto-como-mujer-en-vanity-fair-noticia_802886.html

After a tense back-and-forth between congressional Democrats and the Justice Department, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler and the DOJ announced Thursday evening that Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker, likely in his final days as the country’s chief law enforcement officer, will appear Friday as scheduled before the panel.

House Democrats had threatened to subpoena Whitaker’s testimony about Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe, and in response, Whitaker — who previously had agreed to testify — warned that he wouldn’t show up unless lawmakers dropped the ultimatum he described as “political theater.”

In a letter to Whitaker late Thursday, Nadler, D-N.Y., wrote, “If you appear before the Committee tomorrow morning and if you are prepared to respond to questions from our Members, then I assure you that there will be no need for the Committee to issue a subpoena on or before February 8.”

He continued: “To the extent that you believe you are unable to fully respond to any specific question, we are prepared to handle your concerns on a case-by-case basis, both during and after tomorrow’s hearing.”

Although it appeared possible that those statements might have fallen short of the assurances Whitaker was seeking, Nadler wrote on Twitter late Thursday that Nadler would, indeed, make an appearance at 9:30 a.m. ET.

The DOJ later said in a statement: “The Chairman has made the commitment that we requested, and agreed that, if Mr. Whitaker voluntarily appears at tomorrow’s hearing, the Committee will not issue a subpoena on or before February 8. In light of that commitment, Acting Attorney General Whitaker looks forward to voluntarily appearing at tomorrow’s hearing and discussing the great work of the Department of Justice.”

Nadler had approved a tentative subpoena to ensure that Whitaker appeared Friday and answers questions. But, for several hours on Thursday, it appeared possible Whitaker would not show up, leaving representatives to either cancel the hearing or ask questions to an empty chair.

WHITAKER SAYS RUSSIA PROBE IS ‘CLOSE TO BEING COMPLETED’

The vote by the committee didn’t issue a subpoena but allowed Nadler to do so if Whitaker was uncooperative. Nadler said he hoped not to have to use the subpoena, but said, “a series of troubling events over the past few months suggest that we should be prepared.”

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Rep. Jerrold Nadler D-N.Y., during the panel’s debate over a subpoena Thursday. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

The New York Democrat said that as late as last week the committee had received reports that some at the department were counseling Whitaker not to appear.

Whitaker insisted Thursday that he had “devoted considerable resources and numerous hours to my preparation” and was looking forward to the hearing. He criticized the committee for prematurely and unnecessarily authorizing a subpoena for him even though he had agreed to appear.

“Weeks ago, in good faith, I voluntarily agreed to appear and testify on February 8 before the House Judiciary Committee,” Whitaker wrote to Nadler on Thursday afternoon. “Unfortunately, the Committee now has deviated from historic practice and protocol and taken the unnecessary and premature step of authorizing a subpoena to me, the Acting Attorney General, even though I had agreed to voluntarily appear.”

JUDGE NAP HITS BACK AT TRUMP CRITICISM: CONGRESS CAN INVESTIGATE WHATEVER IT WANTS

A Justice Department spokesperson told Fox News earlier this week that Whitaker had, in fact, accepted Nadler’s invitation to testify in public.

And, senior Justice Department officials told Fox News that Whitaker had been engaged in “robust” preparations for his appearance before the committee for weeks, including several mock hearings and briefings from all components within the Justice Department.

Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker, center, acting Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan, right, and members of President Donald Trump’s cabinet at the State of the Union address Tuesday night. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Whitaker added: “Such unprecedented action breaches our prior agreement and circumvents the constitutionally required accommodation process. Based upon today’s action, it is apparent that the Committee’s true intention is not to discuss the great work of the Department of Justice, but to create a public spectacle. Political theater is not the purpose of an oversight hearing, and I will not allow that to be the case.”

Democrats have said they want to talk to Whitaker because he is a close ally of Trump who has criticized Mueller’s Russia investigation, which he oversees.

They are calling him to testify even though his time leading the Justice Department is ending, with the Senate expected this month to confirm Trump’s nominee for attorney general, William Barr. The Senate Judiciary Committee voted along party lines Thursday to approve Barr’s nomination, sending the pick to the full Senate.

TRUMP SLAMS SCHIFF AS ‘POLITICAL HACK’ AS DEMS LAUNCH NEW RUSSIA PROBE, SEPARATE FROM MUELLER’S

Republicans strongly opposed Nadler’s resolution to approve a subpoena if necessary. They said it was unnecessary because Whitaker was already appearing voluntarily.

Georgia Rep. Doug Collins, the top Republican on the panel, called the subpoena authorization “political theater” before the vote. Collins said it was “choreographed by the chairman and starring the acting attorney general as some mythological protector of secrets.”

After Whitaker’s statement, Collins said Nadler had overplayed his hand.

“In a quest to score political points against the president, they authorized a pre-emptive subpoena, treating a voluntary witness as hostile,” Collins said.

In a separate letter sent to Nadler, Assistant Attorney General Stephen Boyd demanded a response on the subpoena question. Boyd also responded to Nadler’s request for notification if Whitaker planned to assert executive privilege on certain topics.

Boyd laid out an argument for asserting such executive privilege in the letter, saying that administration officials from both parties have declined to answer questions about conversations they have had with the president.

“Rather than conducting appropriate oversight into the department’s programs and activities, the committee evidently seeks to ask questions about confidential presidential communications that no attorney general could ever be expected to disclose under the circumstances,” Boyd wrote.

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Nadler had noted that previous Trump administration officials, including former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, declined to answer questions about conversations with the White House during testimony, saying that the president might want to claim executive privilege on those conversations in the future. Nadler said that was “ridiculous” and administration officials needed to provide the committee with answers or a better excuse to withhold them.

“Without the threat of a subpoena, I believe it may be difficult to hold Mr. Whitaker to this standard,” Nadler said.

Fox News’ Brooke Singman, Catherine Herridge, Adam Shaw, Jake Gibson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/whitaker-will-testify-before-house-panel-tense-back-forth-nadler

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EPA

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Blatter y Platini fueron suspendidos “temporalmente”. Pero la carrera de uno, y las aspiraciones del otro, parecen haber sido tocadas definitivamente.

El Comité de Ética de la FIFA suspendió temporalmente al presidente del organismo, Sepp Blatter, pero también a uno de los favoritos para sucederlo, el actual presidente de la UEFA, Michel Platini.

Ambos hombres recibieron una suspensión de 90 días de toda actividad vinculada con el fútbol, tanto a nivel internacional como local.

La decisión fue tomada varios días después que las autoridades suizas anunciaran una investigación penal en contra de Blatter por presuntos actos de corrupción.

Entre las actividades investigadas está un “pago deshonesto” de unos US$2 millones al exfutbolista francés.

Lea también: Fiscalía suiza abre procedimiento criminal contra Sepp Blatter, el presidente de la FIFA

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Platini, uno de los grandes futbolistas de todos los tiempos, era el favorito para remplazar a Blatter y limpiar la FIFA.

Antes de conocerse la decisión, Platini había reaccionado a filtraciones sobre la misma calificándolas de intentos por dañar su reputación.

También prometió luchar contra cualquier eventual suspensión.

Blatter, por su parte, ha negado en repetidas ocasiones haber hecho algo ilegal o inadecuado, aunque las acusaciones en su contra ya lo habían llevado a anunciar su dimisión.

Y sus abogados dijeron que el presidente de la FIFA lamentaba que el Comité de Ética no hubiera seguido sus propios procedimientos, que “incluyen una oportunidad para hacerse oír”.

En su comunicado los abogados también dijeron que la suspensión del suizo se basaba en un “mal entendido” sobre el proceso iniciado por las autoridades suizas y pronosticaron que la misma no va a prosperar.

Lea también: Escándalo de corrupción de la FIFA: Sepp Blatter dice a la BBC que “está limpio” de toda culpa

Ruedan cabezas

La suspensión de nueve meses también fue aplicada al Secretario General de la FIFA, Jerome Valcke, quien ya había sido separado temporalmente de su cargo.

El sudcoreano Chung Mong-joon, ex vicepresidente honorario de la organización, por su parte, fue suspendido por seis años y multado con 100.000 francos suizos (unos US$103.000).

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Reuters

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Blatter planeaba dejar su cargo el próximo 26 de febrero.

El organismo se encuentra sumido en un escándalo de corrupción desde hace meses y varios de sus directivos ya están siendo procesados criminalmente.

Lea también: Blatter, el mandamás del fútbol que no sobrevivió al escándalo

El escándalo inició con una investigación sobre el proceso de selección de las sedes para los mundiales de fútbol de 2018 y 2022 por parte de fiscales en Estados Unidos.

Y las acusaciones de pago de sobornos han llevado a muchos a pedir que Rusia y Qatar sean eliminadas como países sedes y se ordene una nueva votación.

Lea también: ¿Puede la FIFA quitarle las sedes de los mundiales a Rusia y Qatar?

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AFP

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El escándalo también le costó el puesto a Jerome Valcke.

Las acusaciones de corrupción, sin embargo, van incluso más allá.

Y como resultado del escándalo Blatter se vio obligado a presentar su renuncia y a anunciar elecciones para el próximo 26 de febrero.

El suizo, de 79 años, había asumido la presidencia de la FIFA en 1998, pero hora todo indica que su largo reinado finalmente llegó a su fin.

Aunque un colaborador cercano, Klaus Stoehlker, le dijo a la BBC que Blatter nada más estaba “en la banca por 90 días” y que esperaba “su regreso para, con suerte, organizar el congreso de 2016”.

“Este no es el final. Es una lástima que después de 40 años en el fútbol esto le pasara. Pero él va a tener la última palabra”, declaró.

Lea también: Sepp Blatter en 7 frases polémicas y memorables

Poco después de anunciada la suspensión de Blatter, FIFA anunció el nombramiento del camerunés Issa Hayatou, presidente de la Confederación Africana de Fútbol, como presidente interino.

Pero la decisión sobre Platini le inyectó todavía más incertidumbre a su posible sucesión a largo plazo.

Aunque el Comité de Ética dijo que la suspensión no necesariamente significaba el final de la candidatura del francés a la presidencia del organismo.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2015/10/151008_fifa_suspension_blatter_platini_aw

La Gran Época le presenta un resumen de los principales acontecimientos más recientes. En primer lugar, en un discurso en Miami, Donald Trump aseguró que apoyará al pueblo cubano en su lucha contra la opresión del comunismo. En la cumbre de los Países No Alineados, en la isla Margarita, Venezuela llamó a los demás a refundar el sistema de Naciones Unidas. Por otro lado en Florida (EE.UU.) se encontraron 980 millones de litros de agua contaminada con sustancias radiactivas. En Filadelfia hubo un nuevo tiroteo y –por último- la primera dama estadounidense dio su mensaje al aspirante republicano Donald Trump.

Donald Trump dijo que apoyará al pueblo cubano en su lucha contra la opresión del comunismo

Este viernes, en el salón del centro de convenciones James Knight (Miami) dio un discurso el aspirante republicano a la Casa Blanca, Donald Trump y como estaba lleno de cubanos, hizo propicia la oportunidad para dirigirse a ellos: “apoyaremos al pueblo cubano en su lucha contra la opresión del comunismo”. Los asistentes reaccionaron poniéndose en pie entusiasmados. En una crítica dirigida  al presidente Barack Obama, añadió que solo negociará con el régimen de los hermanos Castro si respetan la libertad política y religiosa y liberan a los presos políticos.

“El acuerdo parcial del presidente sobre Cuba solo beneficia al régimen de los Castro”, agregó. “Pero todas las concesiones que Barack Obama ha hecho al régimen de los Castro fueron hechas por medio de orden ejecutiva, lo que supone que el próximo presidente puede derogarlas y eso es lo que haré a menos que el régimen de los Castro acceda a nuestras demandas”, remató el candidato.

Cuba Fidel Raul Castro (R) levanta el brazo del Presidente de Estados Unidos Barack Obama al final de una conferencia de prensa conjunta en el Consejo de Estado cubano, de 21 de marzo de 2016 en la Habana, Cuba. Sr. Obama, quien se encuentra en un viaje de 48 horas a Cuba, es la primera sesión el Presidente de Estados Unidos para visitar Cuba en casi 90 años. (Foto por Sven Creutzmann/Mambo foto/Getty Images)

Venezuela llama a los No Alineados a refundar el sistema de Naciones Unidas

Nicolás Maduro, presidente de Venezuela, llamó hoy a los miembros del Movimiento de países No Alineados (NOAL) a refundar y democratizar el sistema y funcionamiento de la Organización de Naciones Unidas (ONU), una medida que consideró necesaria. Desde la Isla de Margarita, sede de la cumbre, aseguró que Venezuela, con el mando de los No Alineados, asumirá el “compromiso” de “acelerar los procesos de transformación de la ONU para “lograr su verdadera democratización” y cambiar la forma en que se maneja la toma de decisiones en el organismo internacional. Por otra parte, el jefe de Estado venezolano reiteró su apoyo a Palestina que, según dijo, sufre una “masacre” por parte de Israel, y rechazó el bloqueo económico que mantiene el Gobierno de EE.UU. sobre Cuba.

Nicolas Maduro en Caracas, Venezuela. (Getty Images/Creative)

980 millones de litros de agua contaminada con sustancias radiactivas en Florida

Las autoridades del estado de Florida (EE.UU.) informaron este sábado que al menos 980 millones de litros de agua contaminada filtraron dentro de la principal reserva de agua potable de la región. De acuerdo a los funcionarios, la causa fue un enorme hoyo se abrió debajo de una planta productora de fertilizantes en la ciudad de Tampa hace tres semanas, lo que produjo un daño en la zona donde se procesan y almacenan las aguas residuales. Estas aguas residuales, que contienen fosfoyeso – medianamente radiactivas- se filtraron en una de las principales reservas acuíferas subterráneas del Estado. La compañía Mosaic -propietaria de la planta- afirmó que no hay peligro para los habitantes de la zona. Sin embargo, Jacki Lopez, directora del Centro de Diversidad Biológica de Florida, le dijo a la agencia Reuters que “es difícil confiar en ellos cuando dicen ‘No te preocupes’, cuando llevan ocultando esto durante tres semanas”.

Nuevo ataque a tiros contra policías deja 2 muertos y 5 heridos en Filadelfia

Una salvaje persecución y un tiroteo en las calles del oeste de Filadelfia a última hora de la noche del viernes dejaron seis heridos, dos de ellos policías, y al sospechoso abatido. La sargento Sylvia Young fue víctima de una emboscada y recibió varios disparos en un brazo y en su chaleco antibalas, explicó el comisario de la policía de Filadelfia, Richard Ross. Ed Miller, ex agente de la ciudad que ahora trabaja en la policía de la Universidad de Pennsylvania, también resultó herido, agregó. Dos de los cuatro civiles heridos están en estado crítico. El sospechoso fue acorralado en un callejón y abatido por la policía, explicó el  comisario.

(Foto por Scott Olson / Getty Images)

“Ser presidente no es como un reality show”: Michelle Obama a Donald Trump

En un discurso de media hora de duración el viernes en Fairfax, Virgina, la primera dama, Michelle Obama, declaró que el tipo de política que lleva adelante Trump debe mantenerse lejos de la Casa Blanca, anticipando que su estilo grandilocuente de campaña no cambiaría si gana la carrera por la presidencia. “Ser presidente no es nada parecido a un reality show”, dijo la esposa del mandatario. “No se trata de enviar tuits insultantes o dar discursos incendiarios, se trata de si el candidato es o no quien puede manejar la enorme responsabilidad de dirigir este país”, subrayó la primera dama. Por otro lado, cuestionó directamente las posiciones y tácticas más usadas por Donald Trump, incluyendo las reiteradas dudas sembradas por el candidato sobre la elegibilidad de su marido para ser presidente.

(Foto: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

La Gran Época la recomienda la lectura del siguiente artículo: Ex empleado de hospital chino revela detalles sobre el macabro negocio estatal de trasplantes

Source Article from http://www.lagranepoca.com/internacionales/87164-ultimas-noticias-del-mundo-lo-mas-destacado-donald-trump-dijo-que-apoyara-a-los-cubanos-en-su-lucha-contra-la-opresion-del-comunismo.html

The price index idea, which the pharmaceutical industry and many medical providers have vigorously opposed, is still under review from the Office of Management and Budget and may begin as a five-year pilot program next year. But it would apply to only a small subset of the drug market, and would not affect the prices paid for more typical prescription drugs that are sold at retail pharmacies. An executive order on drug prices would most likely have no force of law on its own, but could direct the Department of Health and Human Services to pursue or expand this approach.

Outside of the doctor’s office or hospital, the federal government does not buy many medications itself. Under current law, Medicare’s main prescription drug program farms out its drug purchasing to private insurance companies, and is barred from negotiating with drugmakers directly. The federal government does buy drugs for some populations, including veterans and federal prisoners, but they represent only a small fraction of the nation’s drug market.

“The frustration that the U.S. pays much higher prices for drugs has been a persistent theme of this administration,” said Peter Bach, the director of the Memorial Sloan Kettering Center for Health Policy and Outcomes, in an email. “We will have to see what is ordered to understand what could actually be implemented by executive order. The scope will have to be pretty limited in that the government itself does very little purchasing of drugs. It is all done through intermediaries that we pay for the service.”

The Department of Health and Human Services published a white paper of possible drug pricing policies last year, and has begun rolling out regulations to help enact portions of it. Congress is also seriously considering a handful of measures related to drug pricing, some of which may become law this year.

A bill introduced by Senator Rick Scott, a Republican from Florida, has not advanced to a committee hearing, but comes the closest to what the president described Friday. Mr. Scott’s bill would link a drug’s approval by the Food and Drug Administration to a requirement that the drug’s retail list price in the United States be no higher than the lowest price charged in Canada, France, Britain, Japan or Germany.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/05/upshot/trump-drug-prices-executive-order.html


Univision Arizona and the Cronkite School have partnered to regularly broadcast a 30-minute news program produced by bilingual ASU students on important Latino community and statewide issues.
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“Creating opportunities for young bilingual journalists and media professionals to sharpen their craft and to tell stories that are critical to our Latino community is more important than ever today,” said Roberto Yañez, vice president and general manager of Univision Arizona and a member of the Cronkite Endowment Board of Trustees. “It is with great pride that we kick-off this new partnership with the Cronkite School that will allow us to give a platform to the next generation of leaders in the field.”

“Cronkite Noticias” is part of Cronkite Noticias/Mixed Voces, a new multiplatform Spanish-language news operation at the Cronkite School, which began last month. It is made possible by the Raza Development Fund, the largest Latino community development financial institution that is dedicated to generating economic growth and opportunities for Latino families across the country.

Currently, a team of bilingual Cronkite students are producing a variety of in-depth, Spanish-language digital and video stories for cronkitenoticias.org, which houses the “Cronkite Noticias” program after airing on UniMás Arizona.

“We are thrilled to be partnering with Univision Arizona on this important endeavor to expand critical news coverage to the Latino community,” said Christopher Callahan, dean of the Cronkite School. “We’re excited to share the outstanding work of our students, who regularly cover Latino issues under the guidance of our award-winning faculty.”

The “Cronkite Noticias” program is part of a growing constellation of classes and immersive professional experiences available to Cronkite students interested in Latino and borderlands issues.

Cronkite News, the student-staffed, professionally led news division of Arizona PBS, features a Borderlands Bureau in which students cover border and immigration issues in English under the guidance of award-winning borderlands journalists.

The Borderlands Bureau builds on a Latino seminar and a depth reporting class that takes students on a reporting trip to another country. Past projects have covered the Dominican Republic, Mexico, Nicaragua and Puerto Rico, among other regions.

The Cronkite School’s faculty includes three Southwest Borderlands Initiative professors, a faculty appointment plan designed to strengthen existing ASU scholarly and instructional resources on the Southwest and to enhance institutional recruitment and retention efforts toward building a faculty fully reflective of the Southwest borderlands’ diversity.

The Cronkite School is widely recognized as one of the nation’s premier professional journalism programs. Students participate in 13 professional immersion programs, guided by award-winning journalists and communications professional, applying what they have learned in the classroom in real-world learning environments.

Source Article from https://asunow.asu.edu/20170228-univision-arizona-asu-cronkite-school-partner-air-cronkite-noticias

President Donald Trump said Friday that his remarks on injecting disinfectants to treat COVID-19 were sarcasm, after doctors responded with horror and disinfectant manufacturers urged people not to ingest the poisonous substances.

“I was asking a question sarcastically to reporters just like you, just to see what would happen,” Trump said on Friday during a bill signing for the coronavirus aid package. “I was asking a sarcastic and a very sarcastic question to the reporters in the room about disinfectant on the inside. But it does kill it and it would kill it on the hands, and it would make things much better.”

But the president’s comments the day before — a lengthy musing that disinfectant or powerful light could be used to fight the virus — did not appear to be sarcasm; they were in part directed at a Homeland Security official.

Download the NBC News app for full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

Ingesting or injecting bleach into the body is extremely dangerous and doctors immediately called the president’s suggestion “irresponsible” and “dangerous.”

Trump denied he was asking his experts to investigate the issue, and repeatedly reiterated that disinfectant on the hands and sun can damage or kill the coronavirus. He said he was urging his officials to investigate how “sun can help us.”

Here’s what the president said in Thursday night’s briefing:

“And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute. And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning. Because you see it gets in the lungs and it does a tremendous number on the lungs. So it would be interesting to check that. So, that, you’re going to have to use medical doctors with. But it sounds, it sounds interesting to me.”

He also asked Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House pandemic response coordinator, to ask doctors whether heat and light could be used to treat the virus.

“Not as a treatment,” she said. “Certainly fever is a good thing, when you have a fever, it helps your body respond. But I have not seen heat or light…”

“I think it’s a great thing to look at,” Trump responded.

Pressed by a reporter on Thursday on offering “rumors” to the American people, Trump said, “I’m the president and you’re fake news.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-says-he-was-being-sarcastic-comments-about-injecting-disinfectants-n1191991

During President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address, he announced Americans will be able to order a second wave of four more free at-home COVID-19 tests, which will be delivered to their homes for free, Staten Island Advance reports.

The president announced the first wave of COVID-19 tests to be delivered to homes for free in December. This was in response to the surge in cases due to the Omicron variant rapidly becoming the dominant COVID-19 strain.

Originally, the Biden administration only order 500 million tests before the president requested 500 million more tests were ordered to bring the total to 1 billion.

The first wave of tests became available in January, and initially, individual households could only order four at-home COVID-19 tests.

Though beginning next week, the second wave of tests can be ordered via special.usps.com/testkits or COVIDtests.gov and delivered to households across the country for free.

According to the websites special.usps.com/testkits or COVIDtests.gov, these tests should take seven to 12 days for shipping.

READ MORE:

Source Article from https://www.pennlive.com/nation-world/2022/03/biden-administration-announced-second-wave-of-at-home-covid-test-kits-heres-how-you-get-it.html

For much of America to wake up to the realities of systemic racism and police brutality, the context had to be extreme; the violence had to be prolonged — more than eight minutes of a black man suffering, a knee on his neck, saying he can’t breathe. The cameras had to not only be rolling, but the officer had to look directly at it without caring he was being filmed, or apparently worried that he was risking his own health in the middle of a pandemic. And an audience had to be watching, pleading “to let him breathe.” All over a $20 bill.

“Violent white supremacy doesn’t rest,” says Ijeoma Oluo, speaker and author of the book So You Want to Talk About Race.

But for many white Americans, this idea of active white supremacy is not one they have ever thought about before. Amid George Floyd’s death and the protests it has inspired over the past two weeks, the country is waking up. The issues demonstrators are pushing against aren’t new — especially to black, brown, and indigenous people who have experienced them their entire lives. But the diverse and widespread outrage over them we’re seeing right now is. Polls show swift and significant shifts in attitudes about police violence toward people of color.

But the conversation about racism in America, especially for those new to it, is uneasy and imperfect. Oluo knows: She dedicates much of her time talking about how to talk about race, as the title of her book suggests.

She and I recently spoke about her views on the current moment, the Black Lives Matter movement, and what it will take to create lasting change. It’s not inevitable that the protests will fade quickly — the Montgomery, Alabama, bus boycott lasted for 381 days — but it’s vital to have conversations now while the energy is high about what happens next.

We also talked about what it means to get educated on racism and to do the work and what isn’t helpful when it comes to solidarity. For example, those black boxes on Instagram last week — not the best idea.

“Be wary of anything that allows you to do something that isn’t actually felt by people of color,” Oluo said. “I always ask myself when I’m trying to do solidarity work, can the people I’m in solidarity with actually feel this? Can they spend this? Can they eat this? Does this actually help them in any way? And if it doesn’t, let it go.”

And those looking to help need to focus on more than police brutality. Racism factors into so many parts of the cultural fabric — education, work, housing, and much more. That requires attention, too. “It’s not just that we deserve to not be killed,” Oluo said. “We deserve to thrive in this country, just like everyone else.”

Our conversation, lightly edited for length and clarity, is below.

Emily Stewart

Just to start off, how are you feeling in this moment?

Ijeoma Oluo

I’m exhausted, honestly. It’s been a lot, and I’m preparing to do more. I think that right now we are tired and scared and sad and a little excited to see some steps toward real change, and I’m kind of holding all of that in me right now. But mostly, I’m very, very exhausted.

Emily Stewart

Is this a moment in your mind? Is this something different that’s happening right now?

Ijeoma Oluo

I would say it’s definitely a moment that we have not seen in at least 30 years, as far as a nationwide movement for change, where we’re actually starting to see some cities paying attention and seeing a shift in the national conversation about racism, systemic racism, and police brutality in America. What will come? I don’t know if it will lead to something different than what we’ve seen, but it is different this time.

Emily Stewart

What’s different?

Ijeoma Oluo

Right now, it’s really been a perfect storm. We haven’t seen protests in all 50 states where you could have a day where every state, and then multiple countries around the world, are joining in to say that black lives matter, to say that enough is enough. We haven’t seen that in a very long time.

What’s happening right now — when you have people who are already tired and scared and worried about the pandemic that we’ve been in — is that not only did it hit the black community especially hard to see that violence in the midst of this pandemic that’s coming for us, but to also see that violent white supremacy doesn’t rest. Police will still take the time and risk their own health to take the life of a black person.

It also shocked the rest of the country to realize this is how ingrained it is. It is this ingrained, when everyone is supposed to be staying home, when we should all have bigger things to worry about, that a supposedly fraudulent $20 bill will cost a black person their life.

I think that we were all feeling raw. We all had less reserves, and it was just a collective “enough.” It’s been enough for a lot of us for a very long time, but I’m still glad to see so many people coming out in solidarity.

Emily Stewart

How is the conversation about race different from in the past? Ten years, five years, even two years ago?

Ijeoma Oluo

When I started writing, “Black Lives Matter” wasn’t a phrase that was even said. I remember desperately getting people to just recognize why they should care about this. And Black Lives Matter itself was a movement just trying to say that we deserve to live. And a large segment of the American population that was still struggling with, “Is Black Lives Matter the thing to say?” have set that aside now. They’re saying okay, there is a problem, we’re not going to argue whether this is something we should be saying. We’re moving past that. And that is new. There are, of course, still some people who love to shout, “All lives matter.” But I used to run into well-meaning people asking, why do I have to say this? They’re not asking that question anymore.

That’s new, because it allows us to start talking strategy.

When I wrote my book, I remember talking in a chapter about police brutality and reform. My book is kind of an introduction to race, and I am so encouraged to see people move so far past that to be talking about what it means to defund, to completely restructure how we keep communities safe and healthy. I love seeing people who maybe a year ago thought reform was the way ago now saying, wait a minute, what if we imagine a whole system that doesn’t rely on criminalization, that doesn’t have a certain amount of brutality built into it as the thing we put up with to feel safe?

That is what is encouraging to me, seeing people move past, “Is this a big deal?” to “What is the best way to tackle it?”

Emily Stewart

A lot of white people seem to have been caught by surprise by the realities of police brutality and racism. Why do you think that is?

Ijeoma Oluo

Our culture still frames racism as something that lies fully within the hearts and minds of racist white people. It’s racism if you hate, and therefore if we can just find the few people who hate people of color, who hate black people, then we could solve racism if we could just solve them. What that means is that the everyday fear and heartbreak and stigmatization that we deal with in this country is largely ignored.

You don’t see after-school specials on racism that talk about the ways in which teachers don’t think you wrote your paper because you did really well on it, or how people with their hair in braids are seen as less professional. These are not issues that people think of when they think racism. When I give talks, when I say someone’s a racist, what do you think? And people say, “The Klan.”

For people to realize that it had to be so bad in our police forces, it wasn’t just the act. It wasn’t just the fact that the way George Floyd was killed was so shocking. It was the fact that things had to be so bad that all four of those officers knew that they would be completely fine to murder someone long and painfully in front of cameras, in front of a live audience. What it spoke to was not just those officers, it spoke to an entire culture. You can’t say it’s a few bad apples at that point. That’s where a lot of that shock is coming from.

It’s frustrating. I know that I’m frustrated, and I’m hearing from so many other black people who are so frustrated at getting phone calls from white people they’ve known for a long time saying they had no idea. And you think, “Why weren’t you listening to me? I’ve been saying this the whole time. I’m a human being with words who can say that this is what’s happening.”

Had it just been one officer, it wouldn’t have been as shocking. But to see four officers participate in this, in front of an audience, knowing they were being recorded, was really what showed that this goes deep. This is a systemic issue in a way that people who don’t have to worry about the system of policing had [not seen].

Emily Stewart

So when we see white people rallying en masse against racism now and in support of Black Lives Matter, do you think it really is just seeing George Floyd’s murder? Or what do you think is happening, that these protests are now finally very diverse?

Ijeoma Oluo

I think that’s part of it. It really did shock the conscience of people in ways it hasn’t before.

It’s important to note for the black community, for the indigenous community, it was not just George Floyd. It was the accumulation of Breonna Taylor and all these other beautiful black and indigenous lives that have been taken.

It’s also white people are seeing other people say something, speaking out, protesting. And they’re saying, “I can do it, too.” And it’s contagious. People forget that this sort of resistance is a social activity — it’s not a fun social activity, but it is a social activity. It is a collective movement, and it does cause more people to come out.

I do think people have more time. We can’t overestimate the impact of a lot of people being out of work, having time to get out there with protests and talk about this.

Our social connections to people via the internet are sustaining us in a way that hasn’t happened in the past, because we can’t see people in person. Therefore, we’re talking about these things in a way that we weren’t before. We’re not going out to a bar; we’re talking about the social issues of the day on social media. And I think that’s also contributing to it. I hate to use the phrase perfect storm, but it took a perfect storm of events to really engage white America in a way that hasn’t happened before.

Emily Stewart

So what is your advice to those white people who want to talk about race right now?

Ijeoma Oluo

Right now, you need to be running two tracks at the same time.

You have to be running your track of education, asking why didn’t I know about this? Why wasn’t I doing something sooner? Where am I lacking? What words are confusing me? Start reading up and start learning.

At the same time, look at being of use. Look at what your local protest leaders and resistance leaders are doing. Do they need donations? Do they need masks? Do people need certain messages amplified? Start looking at conversations you can be having in your cities, your towns, your school districts, in your offices to bring those issues forward.

It’s not just that we deserve to not be killed. We deserve to thrive in this country, just like everyone else.

Look how you can be of use to the people who have been struggling for justice and for black, indigenous, and people of color to really thrive in this country. Ask how you can help make sure that it’s something people actually want and can feel.

It’s not just money, but if you can, give money to causes. But give your time. Amplify voices. Open doors. If someone’s saying they’re having trouble at your office talking about the issue of race, can you add your voice to back that person up? If your school board is not talking about the ways in which their disciplinary systems are set up, or talking about getting police out of schools, that is something that you can bring up. And you can bring your friends in. Start looking at how you can be of use, and then also, at the same time, keep your personal education going.

Emily Stewart

What should people avoid when talking about race?

Ijeoma Oluo

If you are a white person, right now is not the time to go seek out the most racist person and try to tell them they’re an awful person and argue with them — not because they don’t need to know that, because I think that open racism should always be met with resistance and pushback, but because our time is precious and you need to be doing actions.

There’s something really performative about saying, “I spent all my day today arguing with my Trump-loving uncle.” I, as a black person, don’t know your Trump-loving uncle. I don’t feel that — the only reason why I know is because you posted that you did it. It does not help my life.

I hear from a lot of people saying, “I’ve never been black, but this happened to me, so I know what it’s like.” Don’t minimize the experiences of black and indigenous people with state violence by comparing it to the time that someone didn’t like you or you were accused of doing something you didn’t do. Recognize that you will never fully know what it’s like to live under white supremacy as a black and indigenous person in this country. You will just have to believe us, and you just have to take us at our word and fight with us. Don’t try to make it about you. Don’t try to make it about your pain and your journey, and keep your energies focused on where you can be of use to the struggle and to the movement that’s happening right now.

Emily Stewart

When you talk about the question of being performative on social media, I’m curious about your thoughts on Blackout Tuesday, when people were posting black boxes on social media to show solidarity. Is that helpful?

Ijeoma Oluo

It’s not helpful; it actually harms things. And I think it’s an important conversation to have.

This is very similar to me to the whole safety pin debacle after Trump’s election [where people put a safety pin on their clothes to signify they opposed acts of religious and racist violence and abuse in the wake of his victory]. What it is is people who are looking for something quick that they can do to feel like they’ve done something.

These are not things that black people come up with. When I’m thinking, what would help me feel safe in this country? It’s not “I wish everyone’s Instagram squares were black.” I can’t feel that. Especially when coupled with the disengagement — people do this performative gesture and then disengage. People aren’t even open to the feedback of why that’s not helpful or what they could be doing to be helpful.

Be wary of anything that allows you to do something that isn’t actually felt by people of color. Be wary of things that are purely symbolic; they are not helpful. We are not dying because of lack of symbolism in this country, so question who benefits from that. If what you think is, oh, it made me feel better, then you’re the one who’s benefiting from it.

Stay away from those things and question them, because that energy does take away. The time we had to spend arguing about this, to spend getting the word out, all of these PSAs [saying] take your squares down because nobody can actually see real Black Lives Matter protests — that energy could have gone toward amplifying a useful message, and it’s a waste of time. And when we waste time, we lose lives, so it’s not trivial.

Just always be aware. I always ask myself when I’m trying to do solidarity work, can the people I’m in solidarity with actually feel this? Can they spend this? Can they eat this? Does this actually help them in any way? And if it doesn’t, let it go.

Emily Stewart

Once these protests slow down, do you expect white people to keep doing the work?

Ijeoma Oluo

I hope that they can. I think it’s important to recognize that there are people out there who have been doing work for 10, 15, 20 years and will continue to do it even when the story is the protests are over. The work has continued and will continue, regardless of how many people are standing next to the people doing the work.

If we are going to sustain this, we have to start talking about what it means to sustain. We have to start digging into our history and figuring out how the Montgomery bus boycott lasted a year, how we had Freedom Summer. How did we have all of these long, sustained protests and activities that brought about real change? What did they do? What tactics did they use to keep people going? What was the support system?

And we need to start looking at that now while the energy’s high and ask what it would look like to hold cities accountable to keep pushing toward change, what connections we need to make, how to support people doing the work, how to rotate people in and out so that people don’t burn out. We need to have those conversations now while the energy is high. A lot of people are just assuming it will go away, and so planning to keep it going is important.

Emily Stewart

What should the work look like?

Ijeoma Oluo

It’s really important to watch what’s happening in Minneapolis right now, and Los Angeles, and New York, with the defunding and the allocating of funds from the police system and into communities. We need to invest in that and look at our own cities and towns and see what we can do right now to demilitarize our police and take some of those funds and resources and put them back into the communities that have been so harmed.

It’s also really important right now to see who’s been doing this work. Look in your city, in town — anywhere you have people of color, someone has been doing that work. Ask, “How can I invest in that work?” Let’s not reinvent the wheel.

What we’re hearing right now, the changes that are being pushed, are things that activists have been asking for for a very long time. It’s not new; they’re not new ideas. The plans are in place. We just need people to put their excitement behind it. It’s a little less sexy to go to the old head activists and ask what they’ve been doing, but that’s what we actually have to do. The plans are already in place.


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Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2020/6/9/21285062/ijeoma-oluo-interview-talk-race-book-george-floyd-protests

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. – Officials displaced hundreds of apartment building residents over safety concerns Friday and Saturday in Miami-Dade County.

Tanbeer Mahmood was displaced from an apartment in a Miami Beach property that records show was built in 1925. He said the city official’s decision to evacuate didn’t surprise him.

“We’ve been just going through this struggle for a while,” Mahmood said about the building’s maintenance.

The tragic June 24th partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South building in Surfside prompted building officials in Miami-Dade County to increase audits and inspections of residential properties.

There has been hypervigilance on buildings that are undergoing the recertification process that is required every 40 years. Champlain Towers South was undergoing the process when 12 floors turned into pancaked concrete while residents were sleeping.

The tragedy also caused a ripple effect among the residents of condominium buildings who had maintenance concerns. Some demanded officials inspect their properties. In some cases, officials determined the concerns were unfounded. In others, officials evacuated buildings.

On Friday, about 300 residents of Crestview Towers at 2025 NE 164 St., had hours to evacuate 156 units before midnight in North Miami Beach. City officials said an engineers’ Jan. 11 report warned of safety concerns.

Displaced North Miami Beach residents sheltered at Rodeway Inn

On Saturday, the residents of a two-story building at 1619 Lenox Ave., also had hours to evacuate 24 units in South Beach. Officials said there was a flooring system failure and excessive deflection of an exterior wall.

“Now we’re kicked out and we don’t know what to do … Apparently, it’s like sinking,” Mahmood’s neighbor Derek Williams said Saturday.

The Miami-Dade Homeless Trust and the American Red Cross were assisting the displaced who had nowhere to go. There was a temporary shelter at Miami-Dade County Fair & Exposition at University Park.

“One of those families that stayed down there has a four-month-old and a 1-year-old,” said Ron Book, chairman of the Miami-Dade Homeless Trust, about a decision to transfer families to Rodeway Inn.

In Surfside, some of the residents of the Champlain Towers North and East buildings volunteered to evacuate.

There was a demolition Sunday night of what was left standing of Champlain South at 8777 Collins Ave. The search-and-rescue operation continued Monday morning. The official death toll was at 27 on Monday evening and 118 remained unaccounted for.

Related stories: Safety concerns after building collapse

July 5: Uncertainty surrounds North Miami Beach condo’s safety and when residents can return

July 4: Engineer reports Crestview Towers in North Miami Beach was safe for occupancy, attorney says

July 3: Apartment building in Miami Beach evacuated after structural issues discovered

July 2: North Miami Beach condemns ‘unsafe’ condo, evacuates about 300 residents

July 1

June 30

June 29

June 28: Residential property audit announced by Miami-Dade mayor already underway

June 25: Surfside collapse could have impact on South Florida real estate market

Timeline of a tragedy

Complete coverage: Surfside Building Collapse

Rescue workers handle a tarp containing recovered remains at the site of the collapsed Champlain Towers South condo building, Monday, July 5, 2021, in Surfside, Fla. The remaining structure was demolished Sunday, which partially collapsed June 24. Many people remain unaccounted for. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Coverage on July 5

Rescue workers lift a tarp containing recovered remains at the site of the collapsed Champlain Towers South condo building, Monday, July 5, 2021 in Surfside, Fla. The remaining structure was demolished Sunday, which partially collapsed June 24. Many people remain unaccounted for. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Coverage on July 4

Workers are on the site of the Champlain Towers South condo building, where scores of victims remain missing more than a week after it partially collapsed, Sunday, July 4, 2021, in Surfside, Fla. Demolition teams are preparing to bring down the unstable remainder of the structure ahead of a tropical storm. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Coverage on July 3

In this satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies heavy-lift cranes are used to aid in the search and recovery operation at the partially collapsed Champlain Towers South condo building on Saturday, July 3, 2021, in Surfside, Fla. (Maxar Technologies via AP) (Satellite image ©2021 Maxar Technologies)

Coverage on July 2

Workers load a stretcher with remains extricated from the rubble into a Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner van, near the Champlain Towers South condo building, where scores of people remain missing more than a week after it partially collapsed, Friday, July 2, 2021, in Surfside, Fla. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Coverage on July 1

President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden visit a memorial wall covered in flowers and photos of the missing Thursday, July 1, 2021, after a condo tower collapsed in Surfside, Fla. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Coverage on June 30

A dog working with search and rescue personnel barks to alert them after sniffing a spot atop the rubble at the Champlain Towers South condo building, where scores of people remain missing almost a week after it partially collapsed, Wednesday, June 30, 2021, in Surfside, Fla. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Coverage on June 29

Search and rescue workers comb the rubble of an oceanfront condo building that collapsed, with many dead and unaccounted for, in Surfside, Fla., Tuesday, June 29, 2021. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Coverage on June 28

FILE – In this June 28, 2021, file photo, workers search the rubble at the Champlain Towers South Condo in Surfside, Fla. Search and rescue teams from Miami-Dade have been described as among the best and most experienced in the world. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Coverage on June 27

This aerial image shows an oceanfront condo building that partially collapsed three days earlier, resulting in fatalities and many people still unaccounted for, in Surfside, Fla., Sunday, June 27, 2021. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Coverage on June 26

Rescue workers search the rubble of the Champlain Towers South condominium, Saturday, June 26, 2021, in the Surfside area of Miami. The building partially collapsed on Thursday. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Coverage on June 25

FILE – In this June 25, 2021, file photo, rescue personnel work at the remains of the Champlain Towers South condo building in Surfside, Fla. Harry Rosenberg, a New York City man, bought a beachfront home there to start a new chapter of his life after his wife and parents died. Now he is missing in the collapse of the building outside Miami. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File) (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Coverage on June 24

This photo taken from video provided by ReliableNewsMedia, firefighters rescue a survivor from the rubble of the Champlain Towers South Condo after the multistory building partially collapsed in Surfside, Fla., early Thursday, June 24, 2021. (ReliableNewsMedia via AP)

Source Article from https://www.local10.com/news/local/2021/07/05/surfside-building-collapse-prompts-officials-to-act-quickly-in-miami-beach-north-miami-beach/