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Las autoridades divulgaron imágenes de las cámaras de seguridad de los hermanos Khalid e Ibrahim El Bakraoui.

El fiscal de Bélgica, Frederic Van Leeuw, confirmó este miércoles que Brahim el Bakraoui se inmoló en el aeropuerto de Bruselas y que su hermano, Khalid El Bakraoui, fue uno de los atacantes del metro.

Habían nacido en Bruselas, eran de nacionalidad belga y tenían antecedente penales, aunque no relacionados con terrorismo, añadió.

Además dijo que el segundo atacante en la terminal aérea no sido identificado y que un tercero está prófugo.

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La policía ahora busca a un tercer supuesto atacante, que según los medios belgas es Najim Laachraoui.

Bélgica se encuentra en alerta máxima después de que una serie de explosiones en el aeropuerto y una en el metro dejaran 31 muertos y más de 270 heridos en Bruselas, según confirmó Van Leeuw.

Los ataques fueron reivindicados por el autodenominado Estado Islámico.

Líneas de investigación

La policía ya llevó a cabo una operación en un apartamento del barrio Schaerbeek, un suburbio de Bruselas, donde descubrió “un artefacto explosivo que contenía, entre otras cosas, clavos”.

Según la fiscalía, el lugar fue descubierto gracias a los datos proporcionados por un taxista que llevó a los tres sospechosos hasta el aeropuerto.

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Decenas de personas recordaron a las víctimas este miércoles en Bruselas.

El conductor contactó a la policía después de que la foto de los tres hombres fuera difundida.

Los investigadores también hallaron en la casa productos químicos y una bandera del grupo autodenominado Estado Islámico.

Fue la organización la que reivindicó la autoría de los atentados en un texto publicado en inglés en el que señala a Bélgica como uno de los países que “participa en la coalición internacional contra EI”.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2016/03/160323_belgica_bruselas_identifican_atacantes_inmolaron_aeropuerto_hermanos_el_bakraoui_lv

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2021/07/23/coronavirus-cases-vaccine-pandemic-white-house-china-italy/8065219002/

Two of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s top female aides are leaving the administration as the governor faces fallout over the coronavirus pandemic and sexual misconduct allegations from two former staffers and a third woman.

The departing officials are press secretary Caitlin Girouard and interim policy adviser Erin Hammond – and although their exits come as the governor faces calls for his resignation, both had been planned in advance, officials said.

Girouard, notably, is the spokeswoman who sent out a statement last week denying the sexual harassment allegations former staffer Lindsey Boylan leveled against Cuomo in a Medium essay.

NEW YORK’S LEADING DEMOCRATS REACH DEAL TO STRIP CUOMO’S EMERGENCY CORONAVIRUS POWERS

In a statement, she told Fox News Friday that her departure had been planned for more than a month. She said she accepted a private sector job offer on Jan. 26.

In this image taken from video from the Office of the N.Y. Governor, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks during a news conference, Wednesday, March 3, 2021, in Albany, N.Y. Besieged by sexual harassment allegations, a somber Cuomo apologized Wednesday, saying he “learned an important lesson” about his own behavior around women, but he said he intended to remain in office. (Office of the NY Governor via AP)

“While I’m saddened to announce Friday is my last day in the Administration, I will always remain a supporter from afar, wishing my colleagues all the success in the world as they continue fighting COVID and building a better future for New Yorkers,” she said.

She called the two and a half years she spent working for Cuomo “the honor of a lifetime.”

The governor’s communications director had equal praise for the departing press secretary.

CUOMO ACCUSER CHARLOTTE BENNETT CALLS GOVERNOR ‘TEXTBOOK ABUSER’ IN INTERVIEW

“Caitlin is a world-class, top-flight communications professional who is well respected in New York, Washington and beyond,” ‎Peter Ajemian said in a statement. “She’s been a real rock for our press shop, especially during the past year fighting the pandemic, and we wish her nothing but the best in her next chapter.”

In a statement, senior Cuomo adviser Rich Azzopardi said Hammond’s exit had “been planned for several months” and would allow her to focus on her family. She could not immediately be reached for comment.

Boylan, currently a candidate for Manhattan borough president, did not respond to a request for comment. She has accused the governor of inviting her to “play strip poker” on a work-related flight in 2017, showing her a cigar box he said was a gift from Bill Clinton and kissing her on the lips without permission.

LINDSEY BOYLAN CALLS NY GOV. CUOMO ‘A MONSTER’ AFTER FELLOW ACCUSER CHARLOTTE BENNETT INTERVIEW

Charlotte Bennett, another former aide who has accused the governor of workplace harassment, called him a “textbook abuser” in an interview with CBS News Thursday evening and dismissed his attempt at an apology.

A third woman, Anna Ruch, accused Cuomo of making unwanted advances, touching her exposed lower back and asking if he could kiss her. That allegedly happened at a 2019 wedding reception. She had no professional ties to the governor.

Even with the departures planned before the three women went public with their allegations, the governor has for months been facing criticism over his pandemic response – in particular a March directive that sent coronavirus-positive patients into the state’s nursing homes.

The administration early Friday morning said that advisory “was not a driver of nursing home deaths.”

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But the Wall Street Journal published a bombshell report Thursday evening alleging that top Cuomo administration advisers had pressured state health officials to underreport nursing home COVID-19 deaths for months.

Once a full accounting became public, the death toll skyrocketed from roughly 6,400 to more than 15,000.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/cuomo-girouard-female-staffers-leaving

El grupo islámico es considerado un movimiento terrorista por varios países del mundo.

Israel lleva a cabo la tercera campaña militar en su contra; su fundador y varios de sus líderes han muerto en acciones del ejército de ese país al que se niega a reconocer y, además, se ha enfrentado a la Autoridad Nacional Palestina (ANP).

Es Hamas. Su nombre significa Movimiento de Resistencia Islámica y su origen se remonta a los primeros días de la Intifada (o levantamiento palestino) de 1987 en contra de la ocupación israelí de Cisjordania y la Franja de Gaza.

Hoy es el grupo islámico más numeroso dentro del pueblo palestino.

Desde sus comienzos, el grupo tuvo dos ramas con objetivos disímiles: por un lado la militar, las Brigadas Qassam, encargada de la lucha armada contra el Estado de Israel, cuya existencia nunca fue reconocida por Hamas; por el otro, el ala política, cuya misión es construir escuelas y hospitales y brindar ayuda a la comunidad en asuntos sociales y religiosos.

Pero desde 2005, la facción islámica adoptó una nueva dimensión, la participación activa dentro del proceso político palestino. En 2006, Hamas alcanzó el poder tras lograr una clara victoria en las elecciones para el Consejo Legislativo Palestino, pero su triunfo electoral no duraría por mucho tiempo.

Las tensiones políticas con la otra facción palestina, Fatah, se trasladarían un año después al terreno militar. En junio de 2007, ambos grupos se enfrentaron en cruentos combates en Gaza que terminarían con Hamas a cargo de la Franja y su rival político gobernando desde Cisjordania.

Para Israel, Estados Unidos, Canadá, Japón, la Unión Europea y hasta el vecino Egipto, el grupo islámico es una “organización terrorista”, debido a su amplio historial de ataques contra objetivos israelíes y a su compromiso de destruir ese estado que está explícito en su acta fundacional.

Pero para sus seguidores es un movimiento de resistencia legítimo.

Las brigadas Izzedine al-Qassam componen la rama militar de Hamas.

Gaza como bastión

Israel ha culpado a Hamas de los ataques con cohetes lanzados desde la Franja de Gaza y ha llevado a cabo tres campañas militares en contra de sus militantes en diciembre de 2008, noviembre de 2012 y julio de 2014.

Las dos primeras campañas israelíes afectaron seriamente la capacidad militar de Hamas pero el grupo logró renovados apoyos en Gaza y Cisjordania por haberse enfrentado a Israel y haber sobrevivido en el intento.

Fuentes palestinas indicaron que la facción islámica intento mantener la calma tras la segunda operación militar -que dejó 170 palestinos, la mayoría de ellos civiles, y seis israelíes muertos en los ocho días de enfrentamientos- y que las Brigadas Qassam dejaron de lanzar cohetes hacia Israel.

El nuevo operativo de Israel es la tercera campaña militar en contra de Hamas.

Pero el grupo tampoco hizo nada por evitar que otras facciones en la Franja realizaran sus propios ataques, aparentemente porque no quería ser visto como menos comprometido en su lucha contra el Estado israelí que otros grupos militantes, particularmente la Yihad Islámica.

En julio de 2013 Hamas sufrió un duro revés cuando el líder de los Hermanos Musulmanes, Mohamed Morsi, uno de sus principales aliados, fue víctima de un golpe de Estado en Egipto y perdió la presidencia.

Pero ése no es el único problema a nivel regional que tiene el grupo: su alineación con los grupos sunitas que combaten en Siria al presidente chiita Bashar al Assad lo dejó sin el financiamiento de Irán, nación chiita aliada con el mandatario sirio que solía donar hasta US$20 millones al mes a Hamas, suficiente dinero como para mantener al gobierno en Gaza.

Cercado internacionalmente, en abril de 2014, el líder de Hamas, Khaled Meshaal, aceptó integrar un gobierno de unidad nacional con Fatah, liderada por Mahmoud Abbas desde la muerte de Arafat.

Dos meses después, el secuestro y muerte de tres adolescentes israelíes en Cisjordania motivó el arresto de varios miembros del grupo islámico en ese territorio y los cohetes volvieron a lanzarse desde Gaza.

El 7 de julio, Hamas asumió la responsabilidad por el lanzamiento de estos misiles desde la Franja por primera vez desde 2012 y los enemigos tradicionales se volvieron a enfrentar.

Hasta el momento hay más de 200 palestinos muertos y miles de desplazados, según las autoridades palestinas.

Atacantes suicidas

Los atentados de Hamas en Israel dejaron decenas de muertos.

Luego de la primera Intifada palestina, Hamas surgió como el principal opositor a los acuerdos de paz de Oslo entre Israel y la Organización para la Liberación de Palestina (OLP).

A pesar de las numerosas operaciones israelíes y de las drásticas medidas tomadas por la ANP en su contra, el grupo respondió a las negociaciones de paz con varios ataques suicidas.

Entre febrero y marzo de 1996, estos atentados le costaron la vida a casi 60 israelíes (los ataques fueron una respuesta de Hamas al asesinato en diciembre de 1995 de su hacedor de bombas, Yahya Ayyash).

La ola de atentados fue considerada por muchos como la principal responsable del desencanto de los israelíes con el proceso de paz y de la llegada al poder de Benjamin Netanyahu, un férreo opositor a los acuerdos de Oslo.

El jeque Ahmed Yassin, fundador de Hamas, fue asesinado por Israel en marzo de 2004.

Tras el fracaso de las negociaciones en Camp David, Estados Unidos, entre la ANP e Israel en el año 2000, y de la explosión de la segunda intifada, Hamas continuó ganando respaldo político.

En plena intifada, las operaciones “de martirio” de los militantes de Hamas eran vistas por muchos como una forma efectiva de responder a la ocupación israelí.

Su labor social en clínicas y escuelas también le atrajo el favor de varios palestinos que se sentía decepcionados con la corrupción y la ineficiencia de la Autoridad Nacional Palestina, dominada por Fatah.

Esto, sumado a la muerte en 2004 de Yasser Arafat, el principal líder palestino y uno de los fundadores de Fatah, contribuyó a su victoria electoral en 2006.

Pero Fatah no fue el único en perder a su líder en 2004. En marzo de ese año, el jeque Ahmed Yassin, fundador y líder espiritual del grupo, murió en un ataque israelí con misiles.

Otras figuras de Hamas asesinados por Israel son el jefe de las brigadas Qassam, Salah Shehada, en julio de 2002; Abdul Aziz al-Rantissi, líder del movimiento en Gaza, en abril de 2004; Ismail Abu Shanab en agosto de 2003; Said Siyamin en enero de 2009 y Ahmed Jabariin en noviembre de 2012.

Sin tregua

Los misiles lanzados desde la Franja de Gaza contra Israel no se han detenido a pesar de las campañas militares israelíes.

Cuando Hamas llegó al poder, el grupo se negó a aceptar todos los acuerdos anteriores firmados con Israel, así como a reconocer la legitimidad de ese estado y a renunciar a la violencia.

El acta fundacional de Hamas define a la histórica Palestina -incluyendo el actual Israel- como una tierra islámica, y descarta un acuerdo de paz permanente con su enemigo.

El texto está plagado de ataques contra el pueblo judío, lo que le ha merecido al grupo acusaciones de ser antisemita.

Sin embargo, Hamás ha ofrecido una tregua de 10 años si Israel se retira completamente de los territorios ocupados en 1967: Cisjordania, la Franja de Gaza y Jerusalén Oriental.

Pero el movimiento insiste que los millones de palestinos refugiados que abandonaron sus casas desde 1948, año de creación del Estado de Israel, deben regresar a sus tierras, algo que Israel ve como una amenaza a su existencia como estado.

Por estas razones, y a pesar de haber sido elegido democráticamente, el gobierno de Hamas fue blanco inmediato de sanciones económicas y presiones diplomáticas por parte de Israel y sus aliados en Occidente.

Poco después, su pelea con Fatah volvería a recluirlo en la Franja de Gaza, territorio donde hoy combate nuevamente contra Israel.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.co.uk/mundo/noticias/2014/07/140714_hamas_palestina_israel_gaza_mz.shtml

Conrado Valle
/ Víctor López


29 de julio de 2014

1:31h




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Keylor Navas continúa en Pérez Celedón (Costa Rica) a la espera de una llamada del Madrid. | David González

Keylor Navas sigue a la espera de una llamada para viajar a Madrid. Hace 24 días que inició sus vacaciones tras caer Costa Rica eliminada del Mundial ante Holanda y el guardameta ansía que el club blanco haga oficial el acuerdo alcanzado la pasada semana y poder así ponerse a las órdenes de Ancelotti cuanto antes. Pero el anuncio de su fichaje, concretado entre las tres partes (Real Madrid, Levante y jugador) sigue pendiente de la salida de Diego López o bien de Iker Casillas.

Keylor Navas aún está dentro del plazo de vacaciones fijado por el Real Madrid para sus internacionales que, como mínimo, alcanzaron los cuartos de final del Mundial. James, Benzema y Varane se incorporarán el próximo viernes 1 de agosto a los entrenamientos en Valdebebas. Ese día aún espera poder estar también Keylor en Madrid. Precisamente esa fecha de retorno de los internacionales blancos era la que llevó al presidente del Levante, Quico Catalán, a aventurar el pasado jueves en la sede de la RFEF que “la próxima semana habrá novedades sobre Keylor”. Desde el Real Madrid se le indicó al dirigente levantinista que el costarricense se incorporaría a la vez que los mencionados James, Benzema y Varane. Pero al cierre de esta edición, Keylor, según su entorno más cercano, seguía sin billete reservado para viajar a España.

Diego e Iker. La entidad de Concha Espina continúa sin resolver el problema de fondo que conlleva su fichaje. Éste no es otro que el hecho de que Ancelotti se juntaría con tres porteros con galones como Iker Casillas, Diego López y el propio Keylor Navas. Y tal situación se intenta evitar a toda costa. Como dice el refrán: dos son compañía (aunque no siempre bajo palos), tres son multitud. Pero no es sencillo resolver el enredo que tiene el Real Madrid en la portería con el fichaje de Keylor. Diego López e Iker Casillas, de primeras, quieren seguir. Y de segundas: los dos quieren lo que les corresponda y que sea el Madrid el que diga que no cuenta con ellos. Además querrían un contrato acorde al que tienen en el Madrid y sus emolumentos no están al alcance de muchas entidades en Europa… ni tampoco en la entidad blanca se quiere reforzar a rivales que puedan considerarse potenciales en la lucha por la Liga de Campeones.

Keylor sigue en su retiro veraniego en Pérez Celedón (Costa Rica). Allí coge la forma ejercitándose por su cuenta en la playa. Lo que desea ahora es incorporarse cuanto antes a las órdenes de Ancelotti. Y también lo espera el Levante, que aguarda como agua de mayo los ocho millones de euros que ingresará por su traspaso (son diez, aunque dos le corresponden al guardameta).

Anuncio. Desde la entidad granota se da por hecho que el anuncio oficial es “cuestión de días”, si bien, a su vez, se empiezan a replantear qué hacer con Keylor en el caso de que esta semana no se hiciera efectivo el acuerdo alcanzado con el Madrid. El guardameta se marchó al Mundial sin ninguna indicación sobre fecha de retorno a Valencia. Se daba por hecha su salida pese a que no había ofertas en firme. Pero si el 4 de agosto, día en el que el Levante regresa de su pretemporada en Holanda, sigue sin ser formalmente jugador del Madrid, le citarían para incorporarse al día a día del conjunto granota.

Source Article from http://futbol.as.com/futbol/2014/07/29/primera/1406590287_969948.html

Yellow vest protesters marched — and set fires — Saturday in Paris to remind the government that rebuilding the fire-ravaged Notre Dame Cathedral isn’t the only problem the nation needs to solve.

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Yellow vest protesters marched — and set fires — Saturday in Paris to remind the government that rebuilding the fire-ravaged Notre Dame Cathedral isn’t the only problem the nation needs to solve.

Francisco Seco/AP

Updated at 3:20 p.m. ET

Yellow vest protests grew violent on Saturday as firefighters battled several fires amid clouds of tear gas in eastern Paris.

Protesters set ablaze a car, motorbikes and barricades near the Place de la République as they took to the streets of Paris and other French cities for the 23rd Saturday in a row, The Associated Press reported. This time they say they are outraged the government could raise more than a billion dollars to help restore the burned Notre Dame cathedral while their demands to fight wealth inequality remain overlooked.

By late afternoon, police were firing tear gas and water cannons to disperse a tense crowd of several thousand people around France’s finance ministry. Firefighters acted fast to put out several small fires in the area. NPR’s Eleanor Beardsley reports from the scene that emergency personnel carried out the wounded on stretchers.

French police detained 189 people and took 110 into custody. The Interior Ministry says there were 6,700 protesters in Paris and more than 10,000 across country.

Activists have marched in the streets every Saturday since November urging French President Emmanuel Macron to respond to a social crisis that has crippled the working class and elderly in France.

Protesters were banned from the Île de la Cité, the site of Notre Dame, and other major thoroughfares in the city. Some 60,000 police officers were patrolling the streets.

Protesters are calling Saturday’s demonstrations their “second ultimatum” against Macron and his government. The night Notre Dame caught fire, Macron canceled a speech to propose solutions to the Yellow Vest movement. He is expected to hold a press conference on Thursday.

While the number of protesters have dwindled in recent weeks, French officials had warned that the marches could attract more protesters following the shock and sadness of the Notre Dame fire. Many protesters were set off by how quickly French billionaires pledged funds to restore the damaged cathedral, while many working class people in France struggle to pay their bills.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/04/20/715470174/yellow-vest-protesters-fueled-by-anger-over-notre-dame-funds-march-in-paris

Less than a day after a heated exchange about race, Reps. Mark Meadows and Rashida Tlaib reconciled on the House floor.

Tlaib, a freshman Democratic congresswoman from Michigan, had criticized Meadows for using a black administration official as a “prop” at the House Oversight Committee hearing Wednesday. Meadows was attempting to discredit testimony by Donald Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, that the president was a “racist.”

The official, Lynne Patton, a regional administrator of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, formerly worked for the Trump Organization and a foundation established by Eric Trump, the president’s son. She stood behind Meadows during his remarks but did not speak.

“Just because someone has a person of color, a black person working for them does not mean they aren’t racist,” said Tlaib, who is a Palestinian-American and one of two Muslim women in Congress. “And it is insensitive, and some would even say that the fact that someone would actually use a prop, a black woman, in this chamber, in this committee is alone racist in itself.”

Meadows expressed outrage and asked for Tlaib’s comments to be stricken from the record. Committee Chairman Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., who is black, tried to smooth over the confrontation, calling Meadows one of his best friends. He offered Tlaib the opportunity to clarify her statement and she said that she was not calling Meadows a racist, but that it was a “racist act” to use Patton in that way.

RELATED: Michael Cohen testifies before the House

Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a Democrat from New York, listens during a House Oversight Committee hearing with Michael Cohen, former personal lawyer to U.S. President Donald Trump, not pictured, in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2019. Cohen plans to tell a congressional committee about alleged misdeeds by his former boss, claiming that Trump knew during the 2016 presidential election that his ally Roger Stone was talking to Julian Assange of WikiLeaks about a release of hacked Democratic National Committee emails. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Representative Jim Jordan, a Republican from Ohio and ranking member of the House Oversight Committee, pauses while speaking during a hearing with Michael Cohen, former personal lawyer to U.S. President Donald Trump, not pictured, in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2019. Cohen plans to tell a congressional committee about alleged misdeeds by his former boss, claiming that Trump knew during the 2016 presidential election that his ally Roger Stone was talking to Julian Assange of WikiLeaks about a release of hacked Democratic National Committee emails. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

UNITED STATES – FEBRUARY 27: From left, Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass., and Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., are seen during a House Oversight and Reform Committee hearing in Rayburn Building featuring testimony by Michael Cohen, former attorney for President Donald Trump, on Russian interference in the 2016 election on Wednesday, February 27, 2019. (Photo By Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)




Meadows, with tears in his eyes, thanked Cummings and Tlaib.

“To my colleague, Mr. Meadows, that was not my intention,” Tlaib said. “And I do apologize if that’s what it sounded like. But I said ‘someone’ in general.”

Late Thursday morning, the Washington Post’s Paul Kane reported that Tlaib and Meadows had hugged on the floor and engaged in a long, cordial discussion.

“She said she didn’t mean it yesterday, so there was no need to apologize,” Meadows told reporters afterwards. “I wanted her to know and she wanted me to know that our relationship is one that will hopefully provide real good results going forward.”

“I believe that moment as a person of color and not only myself, two, three other of my colleagues had mentioned how insensitive that act was. I think all of us, even folks at home, kind of gasped when that actually happened,” said Tlaib in a CNN interview Thursday when asked if she felt what Meadows had done was a racist act. “I think if we want to talk about race in this country, that’s not the way to do it.”

Before Tlaib spoke, Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass., who is also black, asked Cohen about Trump’s history.

“Would you agree that someone could deny rental units to African-Americans, lead the birther movement, referred to the diaspora as ‘shithole countries,” and refer to white supremacists as ‘fine people,’ have a black friend and still be racist?” asked Pressley.

“Yes,” said Cohen.

“I agree,” said Pressley.

Meadows, leader of the ultra-conservative Freedom Caucus, had previously endorsed the “birther” conspiracy theory that President Barack Obama was not a native U.S. citizen. “We’ll send him back home to Kenya or wherever it is,” said Meadows in a 2012 video.

When asked about the comments Thursday, Meadows told reporters that it was “old news” and that he had said it while trying to win an election.

“I’ve addressed that dozens of times and candidly apologized for that a number of times,” said Meadows. “It was when I was running for office and answered a question — I actually had just gotten back from Kenya. We had been doing mission work in Kenya, so anybody who knows me knows that I really show respect regardless of race or gender,” Meadows told reporters outside the House chamber.

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/02/28/meadows-and-tlaib-hug-on-house-floor-after-racist-charges/23680904/

A handful of red states are placing bets on abortion bans in the hopes of having the Supreme Court reconsider Roe v. Wade, the landmark decision that legalized abortion nationwide for up to 24 weeks into a pregnancy.

States are quickly passing laws banning abortion when a doctor can detect a fetal heartbeat, at about six weeks into a pregnancy and before many women know they’re pregnant. Such “heartbeat bills” have passed this year in Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Ohio, and in previous years in Iowa and North Dakota.

Because the laws violate Roe‘s 24-week standard, they’ve been quickly struck down or put on hold everywhere they have been challenged, and abortion remains legal across the U.S. Still, advocates who push them hope they may eventually offer the opportunity to reverse Roe given that the Supreme Court’s makeup has changed with President Trump’s appointments of Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch. If that were to happen, the decision over the legalization of abortion would fall to the states.

“Certainly the intent of these laws is to ask the court to revisit whether there is any constitutional right for abortion whatsoever,” said Jennifer Dalven, director the Reproductive Freedom Project at the ACLU, which has brought challenges against the bans. “Whether the Supreme Court decides to take up one of these, we’ll wait and see.”

Having a six-week ban appealed to the Supreme Court would take years, and is unlikely. Still, it would be possible if lower court decisions are appealed or if circuit judges were to rule differently from one another. This would be unexpected: No federal court has upheld bans on abortion that are earlier in a pregnancy, and judges are likely to strike down six-week bans because lower court judges are compelled to apply Supreme Court precedence in their rulings.

“I think that scenario is the longest of longshots,” Clarke Forsythe, senior counsel at Americans United for Life, said of lower courts upholding a six-week ban on abortion.

But other anti-abortion advocates and lawmakers who back the six-week bans believe that it’s time for the Supreme Court to reexamine its 1973 ruling that abortion is allowed nationwide up until the point at which a baby would be able to be born early and still survive outside the womb, which is generally understood to be at about 24 weeks into a pregnancy. Opponents of this standard think that the question of viability has changed thanks to medical technology that helps premature babies survive and that allows pregnant women to see fetal development.

“The clear vitality of life that is developing is becoming more and more apparent to our eyes and our ears, and that for many people is what is inspiring these bills,” said Andrea Picciotti-Bayer, an attorney for the Catholic Association.

But Forsythe thinks it’s unlikely the bans would reach the Supreme Court, noting that the justices had already declined to hear cases on other abortion bans in recent years, causing them to be struck down. The judge who is hearing the Mississippi ban on May 21 already struck down a 15-week ban in the state, signaling he’s likely to rule similarly on an even more restrictive ban. Still, the Supreme Court has a different makeup than it used to.

“It may be that anti-choice politicians hope they get a different result this time,” said Hillary Schneller, staff attorney at the Center for Reproductive Rights. “But the Supreme Court has always come out the same way on this very core issue as to whether a person has the right to make this very core decision.”

How abortion cases are challenged, whether in federal or state court, will also factor into the significance of a ruling. The Supreme Court could narrowly uphold state laws without touching on Roe, or it could rule in a way that opens the door to states chipping away at abortion rights.

Both sides know the Supreme Court doesn’t have to hear an abortion ban to overturn Roe. Other bills that limit abortion access can have a similar effect. For the Supreme Court, there are a multitude of potential outcomes in between outright upholding or fully overturning Roe that would allow for more restrictions on abortion.

Schneller called such a strategy “death by a thousand cuts to eliminate abortion in a more stealth way” and a “more subtle but very dangerous way of eliminating access to abortion without actually having to overturn Roe.”

The Supreme Court is already considering abortion challenges, including over a law in Indiana that would ban abortion on the basis of race, sex, or disability status.

In another case, the Center for Reproductive Rights has asked the Supreme Court to strike down a Louisiana law that obligates doctors have admitting privileges to local hospitals, which is a similar law to one the high court ruled unconstitutional in Texas almost three years ago. If allowed to proceed, the law would reduce the number of doctors who provide abortions in the state to just one.

“The right to abortion on paper doesn’t mean anything in practice unless you’re able to have a clinic in your state where you’re able to access abortion without an undue burden,” Schneller said.

Many national advocacy groups who seek to end abortion favor the more gradual approach, including the Susan B. Anthony List, which is influential with the Trump administration. Americans United For Life backs abortion laws that ban the procedure at 20 weeks as well as laws that require all women to undergo an ultrasound before having an abortion.

“Any of those could be the vehicle for re-examining Roe, although the court is not going to do so in the short term,” Forsythe said.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/healthcare/could-a-heartbeat-bill-take-down-roe-v-wade

A magnitude 7.1 earthquake shook Acapulco, Mexico, on Wednesday. After the quake, Mexicans shared videos of bursts of blue lights streaking across the sky.

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A magnitude 7.1 earthquake shook Acapulco, Mexico, on Wednesday. After the quake, Mexicans shared videos of bursts of blue lights streaking across the sky.

Getty Images/Getty Images

Mexicans are sharing spectacular videos of bursts of blue lights seen streaking across the skies as a strong earthquake rocked the country’s Pacific coast city of Acapulco on Wednesday.

The 7.0 magnitude quake struck some 11 miles northeast of the resort city in the southwestern state of Guerrero. At least one person was killed, buildings were damaged and rockslides littered a major highway, but the temblor didn’t cause widespread damage.

It did rattle nerves though.

Felt some 200 hundred miles away in Mexico City, and lasting nearly a minute, residents fled into the streets as buildings swayed, sidewalks undulated and the blue lights burst brilliantly in the sky.

Twitter users posted videos of the blue flashes.

Soon users started using the hastag “Apocalipsis,” Spanish for the biblical term denoting the end of the world, apocalypse.

It’s a phenomena that occurs somewhat regularly

Rutgers University Physicist Troy Shinbrot says not to worry — the blue lights are not a sign of the world coming to an end.

“If it did, the apocalypse would have happened a thousand years ago when this was first discovered,” said Shinbrot. In an interview with NPR, he said the phenomena of so-called earthquake lights has been recorded historically and occurs fairly regularly.

Some scientists believe the eruption of light, or luminosity, is caused by the friction of rock near Earth’s crust, which releases energy into the atmosphere. The flash of light is produced near the planet’s surface.

Shinbrot has tried to recreate the phenomena in his lab and says he has measured voltage changes similar to what happens when the Earth’s crust slips in an earthquake.

He urges the scientifically curious to take a roll of adhesive tape into a dark closet and quickly peel back a strip. Shinbrot says a glow of light will be emitted. But he cautions not to relate “earthquake lights,” or EQL, and the adhesive tape experiment too closely, since there is still a lot scientists don’t know.

There’s disagreement about what actually causes the flashes

The U.S. Geological Survey makes that clear on its website, stating, “Geophysicists differ on the extent to which they think that individual reports of unusual lighting near the time and epicenter of an earthquake actually represent EQL.”

National Autonomous University of Mexico seismologist Victor Manuel Cruz Atienza does believe in the phenomena, but says last night’s sky was full of a lot of electrical activity from a rainstorm.

“We can’t for sure associate the earthquake with the light show we saw last night, especially given the rainstorm we were experiencing,” he told NPR. He said it was difficult for him to distinguish the difference on several videos he saw making the rounds on social media.

But both scientists agree there will likely be more chances to see the blue flashes across Mexico’s skies. And many Mexicans are pointing out that most probably will happen during the month of September sometime. That’s when many of Mexico’s greatest quakes have hit, including a 8.2 magnitude temblor that struck the state of Oaxaca exactly four years ago on September 7, 2017. Mexico City’s destructive 1985, 8.0 quake also hit on September 19th of that year.

That got Twitter users abuzz renaming the month, Septiemble, a combination of “September” and “Tremble” in Spanish.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/08/1035335407/first-came-a-quake-in-mexico-then-strange-blue-lights-people-feared-the-apocalyp


Comienzos de febrero. Mar del Plata. Fiesta de la revista Gente. El hijo del intendente de La Feliz, Guillermo Arroyo (39), también concejal por Cambiemos, queda embelesado ante la belleza de la vedette Mónica Farro (40) y le pide a un amigo en común que se la presente. No se sueltan en toda la noche. Gracias a este breve affaire, Arroyo pensó en un probable nombramiento de la vedette como “asesora en violencia de género” rentada por la municipalidad local. El hijo del intendente pretendió incorporar a Mónica Farro dentro de su plantilla con un sueldo de 36.000 pesos mensuales, pero debido al escándalo que generó este romance y a algunas fotos juntos que estuvieron circulando tuvo que dar marcha atrás con la medida. “Lo del nombramiento en principio me pareció divertido. Si existe la posibilidad me encantaría hacerlo para poder ayudar a la gente, sería genial. Sufrí mucho durante 4 años, sé mucho del tema”, asegura Farro en diálogo con NOTICIAS. La vedette se encuentra haciendo temporada en Mar del Plata con el espectáculo “Cocodrilo, la revista”.

Noticias: El cargo sería rentado, eso no estaría muy bien visto.

Mónica Farro: ¿Qué quiere decir “cargo rentado”?

Noticias: Que le pagarían por mes para hacerlo.

Farro: ¿Y por qué no? ¿Vos no trabajás por plata? Yo también.

Arroyito. La ciudad balnearia no vive momentos políticos felices. El intendente Carlos Arroyo (71), de Cambiemos, está sufriendo embates políticos aunque cuenta con un fuerte respaldo de la gobernadora María Eugenia Vidal. Se le cuestionan los altos índices de desempleo e inseguridad y una temporada de verano que fue mucho menos exitosa de lo esperado. Arroyo hijo (“Arroyito” o “Willi” para sus amigos) tuvo que soportar, por este vínculo con la escultural rubia, duras críticas tanto de los ciudadanos como de la oposición política y debió bajar su perfil por varios días. Incluso, una concejal de su propio partido le exigió que saliera a desmentir los rumores, pero él se negó. “Guillermo me pareció muy atrevido pero también divertido y atractivo. No soy amante de las relaciones a distancia, aunque ya muchos dicen que me voy a venir a vivir a Mardel”, admite Farro en tono pícaro. “Desde su entorno le dijeron que soy mucha mujer para él. Y es verdad, soy mucha mujer para cualquier hombre”, desafía.

En el pasado, Farro fue víctima de violencia de género cuando mantenía una relación de pareja con Jorge “El Negrito” Luengo, productor de Ideas del Sur e hijo del fotógrafo institucional de la productora. “Fue terrible, ya pasaron 5 años. Hoy con las redes sociales es diferente. Si me hubiese sacado una foto cada vez que tenía la boca rota, la cara destruida, los pelos arrancados y con 8 kilos de menos, sería otra la historia”.

Noticias: ¿Cómo sería su trabajo de “consejera” o “asesora”?

Farro: No sé si puedo ser una consejera o una salvadora, pero está bueno ayudar. Creo que las víctimas lo que tienen que hacer es hablar. Es difícil porque te convertís en un autista. La persona violenta te separa del mundo. Pero está en uno querer salir. Sí puedo decir que después de un grito o de un empujón, va a venir el golpe. Eso hay que tenerlo en claro.

Noticias: ¿Cómo se sale de una relación violenta y enfermiza?

Farro: Mi historia en violencia de género me agarró de grande, después de un matrimonio espectacular. Creí estar enamorada de un psicópata y al final terminás tan enfermo como la otra persona. Salir de una relación de violencia es muy complicado. No es fácil. Los que hablan de afuera, que dicen ‘te quedás porque te gusta que te peguen’ y todas esas huevadas, no lo vivieron. Hay que querer salir. En este tipo de vínculos, si no hay golpes y gritos durante unos días, parece raro. Es lo contrario de las relaciones normales. Igual me separé por un tema de infidelidad, no me separé por la violencia, fue un error muy grande el mío.

Noticias: ¿Qué opina del movimiento #NiUnaMenos? ¿Fue a las marchas?

Farro: No. Creo que hacer una marcha no soluciona nada. Estamos viendo cantidad de femicidios y cada vez son peores. La violencia contra la mujer es impresionante. Ya no les pegan, directamente las matan. Me parece perfecto que se hagan marchas, pero yo no me prendo porque también necesito olvidarme un poco de todo lo que pasé. Cada vez que hablo del tema vuelvo a recordar todo lo que viví, que no fue nada lindo.

Noticias: ¿Qué opina de la cosificación de la mujer siendo usted vedette?

Farro: No creo que cosificar a una mujer sea hacer un desfile en ropa interior o salir casi desnuda en el teatro, como hago yo. Se fueron de mambo. Un lindo piropo no es cosificar a la mujer y, a veces, hasta te sube la autoestima. Ser vedette no es para toda la vida, yo puedo hacer otras cosas.




Source Article from http://noticias.perfil.com/2017/02/19/monica-farro-de-vedette-a-funcionaria/

While New York’s Governor Andrew Cuomo once called the coronavirus a “great equalizer”, data shows the virus has been anything but indiscriminate.

As the US climbed to more than 10,000 coronavirus deaths on Monday state health officials grappled with its disproportionate impact on black Americans. The disparity is especially stark in cities like New Orleans, Chicago and Detroit, where high concentrations of African Americans live.

Louisiana has the fourth largest number of Covid-19 cases in the country, and the majority of the Covid-19 deaths are in New Orleans, where black Americans constitute 60% of the population. “Slightly more than 70% of [coronavirus] deaths in Louisiana are African Americans,” the state’s governor, John Bel Edwards, said in a press conference on Monday. “That deserves more attention and we’re going to have to dig into that to see what we can do to slow that down.”

Midwestern cities including Detroit, Chicago and Milwaukee are also reporting an increasing imbalance.

Detroit, which is almost 80% black, has the most concentrated coronavirus cases in the state of Michigan. The death rate in the city accounts for 40% of overall deaths in the state.



A driver wearing a protective mask operates a Chicago Transit Authority bus in Chicago, Illinois. Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images

In Chicago, which is 30% black, black Americans account for 70% of all coronavirus cases in the city and more than half of the state’s deaths. “We know all too well that there are general disparities in health outcomes that play along racial lines and the same may be true for this virus,” said Ngozi Esike, director of the Illinois department of public health.

African Americans face a higher risk of exposure to the virus, mostly on account of concentrating in urban areas and working in essential industries. Only 20% of black workers reported being eligible to work from home, compared with about 30% of their white counterparts, according to the Economic Policy Institute.

The virus has killed a high number of older black men because of this, though there have also been outbreaks among women and young African Americans in the south.

Meanwhile, experts also point to initial research showing a high prevalence of Covid-19 among those suffering from obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes – risk factors more common among black Americans. The virus is known to take a harsher toll on those with underlying health issues, and many hospitals are only testing those admitted for critical care.



Pedestrians wearing protective masks walk near the Eastern Market in Detroit, Michigan. Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images

Critics note that those risks are significantly exacerbated by racial inequities in healthcare, including facility closures and caps on public health insurance plans like Medicaid and Medicare. African Americans are twice as likely to lack health insurance compared with their white counterparts, and more likely to live in medically underserved areas, where primary care is sparse or expensive.

Unconscious racial bias can also contribute to unequal health outcomes, especially when health professionals are inexperienced with the culture of the community they serve, according to the Journal of General Internal Medicine. The Century Foundation found that healthcare providers located within majority African American or Latinx neighborhoods tend to provide lower-quality care.

Governor JB Pritkzer of Illinois acknowledged racism’s role in the state’s response to the outbreak, but he called it “a much broader problem” that won’t be solved in a matter of weeks. “It’s hard to make up for decades, maybe centuries, of inequality of application of healthcare to people of color,” he said.

And while the virus doesn’t discriminate, Dr Uché Blackstock, practitioner and CEO of Advancing Health Equity, a healthcare advocacy group, said government responses can.

She noted that as the virus first spread, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention initially released testing guidelines that prioritized those who had traveled abroad. That meant Blackstock’s mostly black patients in low-income areas of Brooklyn and Queens were not tested as quickly as her more affluent, white clients in Manhattan who had the means to travel.

“What we know now is that Covid-19 had been circulating in our communities for much longer than we realized,” she said.

In Wisconsin, more than half of the state’s 86 confirmed deaths are in the city of Milwaukee. Limited testing and slow public outreach resulted in the number of cases in the city jumping from just one to more than 350 in less than two weeks. Health officials said the virus was probably introduced to the city after its first infected resident came in contact with someone from an affluent, white suburb nearby.



A man wearing a face mask walks past the Franklin Square fire station in Washington DC. Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

The state representative David Bowen, who is black, was the first Wisconsin lawmaker to be diagnosed with the virus. He told the Guardian that it was later confirmed he had passed the virus on to three others. Only one person was able to get tested.

“When white communities get sick, we in the black community are threatened to die from the same sickness, with lack of healthcare often leaving us to self-diagnose,” he said.

According to CDC guidelines, every state is legally required to track data on testing and treatment by race, as it has done during other outbreaks. Fewer than a dozen have released that data so far.

Last week congressional Democrats, including Senator Elizabeth Warren and Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley, both of Massachusetts, sent a letter demanding the CDC provide racial data. Without demographic data, health officials and lawmakers would not be able to address inequities in health outcomes and testing that might emerge, the letter said.

The Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights also called out the CDC for not including those racial breakdowns. “This is a crisis like none other and officials in our state and federal governments play a large role here in bringing transparency,” said Kristen Clarke, committee president and executive director.

The committee sent letters urging state health departments, as well as Washington DC, to release their numbers. On Monday, Washington’s Mayor Muriel Bowser published coronavirus numbers by race for the first time: of the District’s 24 deaths, 14 were of black patients. After losing its majority-black status in 2011, Washington DC is now 45.5% African American.

Bowser dismissed questions on racial disparities, claiming “all deaths are a concern”. But for many black communities the threat of being infected by Covid-19 is proportional to their fear. According to Pew, 46% of black Americans viewed the coronavirus as a threat to their health, more than double their white counterparts.

“We know that black Americans are particularly vulnerable. This is a social, economic and racial justice issue,” Clarke said. “How one community is treated impacts all communities across the country.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/08/its-a-racial-justice-issue-black-americans-are-dying-in-greater-numbers-from-covid-19

Anthony Sanders slid on a fluorescent orange “Security” vest, tucked his pistol under the waistband of his jeans and planted his feet at the front entrance to the Masjid Al-Mu’minun mosque in Atlanta during Friday afternoon prayers. 

Sanders closely watched each person who walked in, looking for “shaky” behavior, big bags or clothing that didn’t match the warm weather. Three other men monitored each car pulling into the front parking lot. A fourth man stood sentry inside, watching live security camera footage from many different angles. 

Sanders and his crew were being extra cautious following Friday’s mass shootings at a pair of mosques in New Zealand, a massacre that claimed the lives of 49 people and injured dozens more. Police have taken three people into custody. One has been charged with murder, an unidentified man who left behind a white nationalist manifesto that rails against immigrants and Muslims. 

>> RELATED | “My heart breaks”: Atlantans, world leaders condemn attacks on New Zealand mosques

“It’s unfortunate that when these things happen that we have to become more aware — more conscious — of security. But, I mean, New Zealand? Nothing happens there,” Sanders, a private security guard who volunteers at the mosque, said of his shock. 

At a news conference inside Sanders’ mosque Friday, the Georgia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations called on local police to send patrol cars out to guard local Muslim houses of worship. Atlanta and Gwinnett County police confirmed they would help. 

“We have our officers conducting directed patrols around city mosques and asking them to be on heightened alert for suspicious activity,” Atlanta police spokesman Carlos Campos said. “Additionally, our Homeland Security Unit is monitoring the events out of New Zealand.”

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Gwinnett police responded similarly.

“In response to the incident in New Zealand, we have increased patrols at all mosques in Gwinnett County,” said Cpl. Michele Pihera, a Gwinnett police spokeswoman. “We hope to bring some measure of comfort to those who visit these places of worship during this difficult time.”  

Since 2005, there has been a rise in anti-mosque incidents, including acts of vandalism, according to the American Civil Liberties Union. In Georgia, for example, there have been nearly a dozen incidents.  

In the summer of 2017, for instance, a man made several threatening phone calls to the Islamic Society of Augusta, including threats to blow up the mosque and hurt members. The man later pleaded guilty.  

Centers of faith are by nature open and welcoming to anyone who wants to visit, and that makes them vulnerable, said Glen Evans, president of ChurchSecurityTrainer.com in Dayton, Ohio, which advises faith leaders on how to protect their members.  

“Most people who want to cause harm understand this about the faith community,” Evans said. “They all share one common footprint — they were generally welcoming places with generally nonviolent people. It’s what we call a soft target.”  

When people hear screaming or shooting, they should be able to lock down an area without having to get permission from a pastor, imam or rabbi, Evans said. Those few seconds or minutes could save lives before police arrive, he added. There is a movement to station armed people inside places of worship, including specially trained members, private security guards and off-duty police officers, Evans said.  

Sulaimaan Hamed, the imam at Atlanta Masjid of Al-Islam, said armed personnel protect his mosque.  

“Georgia is a state that respects our Second Amendment, as do I,” he said. “We do have armed security who are licensed — who are trained — to protect those who come to worship God.”  

>> MORE | President Trump on New Zealand shootings: “We stand ready to help”

Furqan Muhammad, the imam at Masjid Al-Mu’minun, pointed to his mosque’s longstanding security plans, saying: “The best time to prepare for war is at peace.”  

“Our faith teaches us to believe in God, to believe in Allah,” he said, “but tie your camel.”  

Inside his mosque Friday, Abdulkarim Muhammad sat at a desk near the entrance, toggling between watching surveillance video footage inside the building and greeting everyone who walked down the hallway toward him. 

A Marine veteran and grandfather, Muhammad peered inside a visitor’s black duffel bag. When another visitor in an Atlanta Braves ball cap reached out to shake his hand, Muhammad politely refused, saying he didn’t want to be distracted from his important duty. Meanwhile, he urged people to turn off their cellphones before they joined the Friday afternoon prayers.  

Muhammad said he believes Allah will protect him, though he remains vigilant.  

“Pray as well as watch,” he said. “I am always alert.”

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Source Article from https://www.ajc.com/lifestyles/atlanta-muslims-urged-step-security-after-new-zealand-attacks/lyDkyFdG4lEYWeEU0YJbyI/

The delta variant now makes up about 83% of new COVID-19 cases in the country, and the uptick is seen everywhere.

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Sacramento County is up roughly five new cases from exactly one week ago at 14.2 new cases per 100,000 people, and vaccination numbers are still low. Specifically, in the North Highlands area with 95660 zip code, where 41% of residents have received one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and only 35% are fully vaccinated.

The reasons for vaccine hesitancy vary. On the ground, we heard fear, misinformation and a lack of access to information among some unvaccinated residents like Aurora, who had a vaccination appointment last week and backed out once she heard someone got sick from COVID-19 after receiving their shot.

But the CDC says that this isn’t possible, since the vaccines don’t actually contain the live virus.

“It only includes instructions to make one part of the virus and that’s the spike protein and once you make that spike protein, then your body forms an immune response to that,” said Dr. Dean Blumberg, a professor and chief of pediatric infectious diseases at UC Davis Children’s Hospital.

“I also wanted to see how it was going to play out with everybody because people are having different reactions,” said another North Highlands resident who chose not to be identified.

Can I get long-term side effects from the COVID-19 vaccine?

“The FDA required a long-term [two-month] follow-up following vaccinations, to make sure that these vaccines were safe and found no long-term side effects,” Blumberg added.

The CDC and the American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists haven’t found evidence that suggests that vaccines have any impact on fertility.

And if you’re still hoping to be protected from a previous COVID-19 infection, you might want to think that one over.

“The immune response following vaccination is stronger than the immune response following natural infection, so the vaccines protect better against reinfection compared to getting naturally infected,” Blumberg said.

KCRA 3 reached out to the offices of Sacramento County Supervisors Phil Serna and Rich Desmond, to find out how they’re engaging and educating residents so that residents can access accurate information and resources; as of the publishing of this article, neither have responded.

Should I get the COVID-19 vaccine if I’m healthy?

“At this point in the pandemic you have two choices: you can either get vaccinated or you can get COVID,” Blumberg said.

“More than 97% of cases in the U.S. that are being hospitalized are in unvaccinated individuals, more than 97% of deaths that occur with COVID-19 are unvaccinated individuals. So, if you want to decrease your chance of ending up in the hospital, if you want to decrease your chance of dying, then the clear choice is to get vaccinated,” he added.

Can receiving a COVID-19 vaccine cause you to be magnetic?

COVID-19 vaccines do not contain ingredients that can produce an electromagnetic field at the site of your injection. All COVID-19 vaccines are free from metals.

“There is no microchip in the vaccine. There is no metal in the vaccine. You can’t get magnetized by getting vaccinated. That’s just false. Those are all lies,” adds Blumberg.

Source Article from https://www.kcra.com/article/covid-19-cases-up-vaccinations-stay-stagnant-sacramento-county-areas/37084284

With one week to go until ballots must be postmarked, deposited in drop boxes, or handed in in-person in California’s gubernatorial recall election,  Gov. Gavin Newsom is making his closing pitch to save his job steering the nation’s most populous state.

And the embattled Democratic governor is giving a helping hand.

President Biden‘s expected to head to California next week, just ahead of the Sept. 14 recall election.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Tuesday that the president would travel to California “early next week.”

“He will be, I expect we’ll have more to report to all of you, or announce, on a trip he’ll take early next week,” Psaki told reporters aboard Air Force as Biden traveled to New York and New Jersey to survey storm damage.

The visit by Biden, who won California’s whopping 55 electoral votes by nearly 30 points over then-President Trump last November, will follow that of  Vice President Kamala Harris.

The former California attorney general and Golden State senator, who ran for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, will team up with the governor at a rally in the Bay Area on Wednesday. 

NEWSOM SPOTLIGHTS TRUMP AS HE FIGHTS TO SURVIVE CALIFORNIA RECALL

Harris will be the latest high profile national Democratic surrogate to team up with Newsom, after the governor was joined on Saturday in Culver City, California, by Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, a progressive leader who also unsuccessfully ran for the White House in 2020, and on Sunday in Santa Ana by Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, another Democratic presidential contender last cycle. 

California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, left, campaigns with Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., against the California recall election at Culver City High School in Culver City, Calif., Saturday, Sept. 4, 2021.  (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
(AP)

Former two-term San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, one of the better known GOP replacement candidates on the ballot, charged in a statement to Fox News that Newsom is “hiding behind national political leaders.”

It’s not just on the campaign trail where the governor’s getting a lift from top surrogates.

BERNIE SANDERS SLAMS CALIFORNIA RECALL IN AD BACKING GAVIN NEWSOM 

“At this unprecedented moment in American history, when we’re trying to address the crisis of climate change, guarantee health care for all, and pass real immigration reform, the last thing we need is to have some right-wing Republican governor in California,” longtime Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont says in a TV commercial supporting Newsom that’s currently running statewide in California.

“The Sept. 14 recall of Gov. Newsom is a bold-faced Republican power grab,” the progressive rock star and runner-up to Biden in last year’s Democratic presidential nomination race charges in the ad. “Don’t let it happen. Please, return your ballot or vote no in person by Sept. 14.”

Thanks to unusual campaign finance laws for recall elections – California treats the question of whether to remove the governor as a ballot issue, rather than a candidate race – Newsom can raise unlimited amounts of money as he fights to keep his job. 

NEWSOM SPOTLIGHTS ‘CONSEQUENTIAL DECISION’ OVER COVID IN RECALL ELECTION

And that’s what he’s been doing – hauling in and spending big bucks and lapping the leading GOP replacement candidates when it comes to fundraising. Newsom’s massive advantage is allowing him to dominate the airwaves.

The governor’s “Stop the Republican Recall” campaign has spent nearly $33 million dollars to run TV, digital and radio ads – with the bulk of it being dished out since mid-July – according to AdImpact, a leading national ad buying firm. 

That’s leagues ahead of 2018 Republican gubernatorial nominee John Cox, who’s spent $7 million to run ads for his recall election campaign. And conservative talk radio host Larry Elder, the polling front runner among the 46 replacement candidates on the recall ballot, has spent $4.8 million to run ads since launching his campaign in mid-July, according to figures from AdImpact.

HERE’S WHO’S AIMING TO SUCCEED NEWSOM IN CALIFORNIA’S RECALL ELECTION

Voters are being asked two questions on the Newsom recall ballots. The first question is whether the governor should be removed from office. If more than 50% support removing Newsom, the second question offers a list of candidates running to replace the governor. If the governor is recalled, the candidate who wins the most votes on the second question – regardless of whether it’s a majority or just a small plurality – would succeed Newsom in steering California. 

Newsom’s strategy is simple: In the very blue state of California – where he won election by 24 points over Cox in 2018 – he needs to get Democratic voters to cast their ballots, to make up for energized Republican voters hoping to oust the governor from office.

Newsom’s strategy may be working.

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Most public opinion polls conducted in July and August indicated that likely voters were divided on whether to recall Newsom. 

But the latest surveys, including one conducted Aug. 20-29 by the Public Policy Institute of California , suggest a majority of likely recall election voters support keeping the governor in office. 

Fox News’ Samuel Dorman contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/newsom-spends-big-bucks-teams-up-with-big-names-in-california-recall-election-closing-push

Justin: “Vamos nena, no pasa nada. Te quiero”.

Selena: “No aguanto más. He sido honesta contigo y he intentado darte una segunda oportunidad. Pero todos mis amigos tenían razón, eres un tonto del c***”.

Justin: “Tú eres todo lo que necesito. Sé que puedo cambiar si estoy contigo”.

Selena: “Eres es un drogadicto. Necesitas ayuda”.

Tras este intercambio de tirantes declaraciones, Justin habría decidió enviarle una foto de su pene erecto, lo que hizo que Selena decidiera poner fin a su relación.

Justin: “Vamos, dime que no echas de menos esto [refiriéndose a la foto]“.

Selena: “¡Para ya! Tienes que escuchar lo que te dice Scooter (Braun, su mánager) y entrar en un centro de rehabilitación. Estás enfermo”.

Justin: “¿Rehabilitación? ¡A la mie*** con eso!”.

Selena: “Ya está, Justin, hemos terminado”.

Pero la discusión no terminó ahí, sino que Selena también quiso sacar a la luz la reciente detención del rapero Lil Za por posesión de cocaína en casa de Justin, un hecho del que le culpó sin miramientos.

Selena: “¿Y cómo pudiste dejar que detuvieran a Lil Za por tu culpa? Necesitas crecer de una p*** vez. Espero que entres a la cárcel a tiempo. Te lo mereces. Además, te deberías retirar de la música también”.

Justin: ¡¡QUE TE VAYAS A LA MIE***!! ¿Que necesito crecer? OK, OK! Que te diviertas sin mí, pu**!!! Que te jod** a ti y a Scooter y a todo el mundo. Tú solo eres famosa gracias a mí y lo sabes. Todo el mundo lo sabe. Vete a j**** a cualquier otro. Mantén esa vag*** lejos de mí!”.

Source Article from http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/chevere/espectaculos/difunden-mensajes-de-texto-entre-selena-gomez-y-ju.aspx

Graves tensiones diplomáticas entre Venezuela y Argentina

El dirigente chavista Diosdado Cabello llamó “cobarde” al presidente argentino, Mauricio Macri, y declaró “enemigo” de su país al diplomático a cargo de la embajada argentina en Caracas.

El presidente de Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro aseguró haber enviado una nota de protesta al gobierno argentino, luego de la presunta agresión que sufrió la canciller Delcy Rodríguez- en las afueras de la cancillería de Argentina- en Buenos Aires.

Según el mandatario, la ministra fue severamente agredida por funcionarios policiales de la nación sudamericana junto al canciller de Bolivia, David Choquehuanca cuando intentaron ingresar a la sede del Ministerio para asistir a la reunión del Mercado Común del Sur (Mercosur).

La Ministra de Relaciones Exteriores de Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez  llega a la Cancillería argentina en Buenos Aires durante una reunión entre ministros del Mercosur, donde Venezuela no fue invitada, el 14 de diciembre de 2016. (Foto: EITAN ABRAMOVICH/AFP/Getty Images)

Siria suspende evacuación de miles de personas de la ciudad de Alepo

El gobierno sirio suspendió este viernes la evacuación de miles de civiles y combatientes de Alepo oriental, tras acusar a los insurgentes de romper los términos del acuerdo, reportó la televisión estatal.

El último acuerdo de alto al fuego para evacuar a decenas de miles de combatientes y civiles de los barrios que estaban en poder de los rebeldes en Alepo oriental ha sido suspendido, confirmó un funcionario sirio.

Fuentes del gobierno dijeron que los rebeldes habían bloqueado la evacuación de civiles en otras dos ciudades de Siria, acordadas en virtud de la tregua.

No estaba claro cuánto tiempo duraría la suspensión o si la evacuación sería retrasada en el marco de un proceso que probablemente tome varios días.

La TV estatal informó que el gobierno sirio denunció que los rebeldes habían abierto fuego contra un convoy de evacuados, en un punto de cruce con el enclave.

(Foto: BARAA AL-HALABI/AFP/Getty Images)

Obama dijo que tomarán medidas por hackeos durante las elecciones

Barack Obama, el presidente estadounidense dijo que Estados Unidos tomará medidas contra Rusia o cualquier otro  gobierno extranjero que intente entrometerse en las elecciones estadounidenses.

“Creo que no hay duda de que cuando cualquier gobierno extranjero intenta impactar la integridad de nuestras elecciones… Necesitamos tomar medidas y lo haremos” dijo el presidente a la Radio Pública Nacional en una entrevista para ser transmitida el viernes por la mañana.

“Algunos de ellos pueden ser explícitos y publicitados, algunos de ellos no pueden ser” dijo.

La CIA concluyó en que piratas informáticos rusos irrumpieron en las computadoras del Partido Demócrata para filtrar emails sobre la campaña presidencial de Hillary Clinton con el aparente objetivo de ayudar al republicano Donald Trump a ganar las elecciones del mes pasado.

Entretanto, el presidente electo Donald Trump cuestionó a la Casa Blanca por no haber actuado antes y lo quiere hacer solo ahora que la candidata demócrata Hillary Clinton perdió las elecciones.

Presidenta surcoreana desafía juicio político en su contra

La destitución de la presidenta de Corea del Sur, Park Geun-hye, por el parlamento carece de base legal y debe ser rechazada por el Tribunal Constitucional indicaron hoy los abogados que representan a la mandataria, envuelta en un escándalo de corrupción.

Los representantes legales de la presidenta en suspensión entregaron una declaración de 24 páginas sobre el caso al Tribunal Constitucional, que determinará si destituir o reincorporar a la jefa de Estado después de una revisión que podría durar hasta seis meses.

“Como no hay pruebas de ofensas legales (citadas en la moción del juicio político) creemos que no hay fundamento para el enjuiciamiento” señaló uno de los abogados ante los reporteros después de entregar el documento tal como solicitó la semana pasada el tribunal. El abogado añadió que su postura es que no hay motivo para la destitución y que lucharán por todos los hechos y temas legales, reportó la agencia surcoreana de noticias Yonhap.

Presidenta de Corea del Sur, Park Geun-hye (Foto: Jeon Heon-Kyun-Pool/Getty Images)

Encuentran antigua y desconocida ciudad griega al norte de Atenas

Un equipo internacional de arqueólogos e historiadores está explorando los restos dispersos de una desconocida acrópolis en el centro de Grecia, en la colina Strongilovoúni, ubicada entre las grandes llanuras de Tesalia informó el 12 de diciembre de 2016, la Universidad de Gotemburgo.

“Hemos encontrado una plaza de la ciudad y una red de calles que indicaba que estamos tratando con una ciudad bastante grande. El área dentro de las medidas de la pared de la ciudad es de más de 40 hectáreas”, dijo Robin Rönnlund, quien lidera el trabajo en terreno, mientras está realizando su doctorado en Arqueología Clásica e Historia Antigua de la Universidad de Gotemburgo.

El hallazgo cerca del pueblo Vlochos, luego de la primera temporada de trabajo de campo, que se completó en septiembre pasado fue fechado en diversos períodos de la historia griega.

Artículo completo aquí

Paredes de la fortaleza, torres y puertas de la ciudad griega en Vlochos, son claramente visibles desde el aire. (Universidad de Gotemburgo y U. de Bournemouth)

La Gran Época le recomienda el siguiente artículo: “No puedo describir el dolor que sufrí”: la historia de Yu Zhenjie

Source Article from http://www.lagranepoca.com/ultimas-noticias/104974-noticias-ultima-hora-16-diciembre.html

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Prime Minister Theresa May managed to convince EU leaders to grant the U.K. more time before it leaves the bloc, but experts say her days in office are now numbered.

“A six-month period is clearly enough for the Conservative Party to contemplate a change in leadership while still allowing some time for the incoming PM to seek to negotiate with the EU,” J.P. Morgan economist Malcolm Barr said in a research note Thursday.

“One could even cram a general election into that time frame too if PM May were to resign by roughly the end of May.”

More tumult in British politics is expected despite a reprieve from Brussels on Wednesday night, with EU leaders agreeing to a “flexible extension” of the Brexit deadline until October 31, following a request from May.

The U.K. was initially meant to leave the bloc on March 29 but was granted an extension to April 12 with the British Parliament failing to agree on any exit deal. Then, when it was apparent that there was still no majority consensus for the deal on offer, May was forced to ask for more time.

Influential pro-Brexit members of her Conservative Party are unhappy at May’s decision and would have preferred a no-deal departure. Others balked at May’s withdrawal agreement with the EU which was seen as a “softer” Brexit that maintained a closer relationship with the bloc.

Time’s up for May?

Despite the Brexit extension Wednesday evening, May will still work to get her deal passed (which would allow the U.K. to leave earlier) and would like to do so before a May 22 cut-off point — after which the U.K. must take part in EU Parliamentary elections.

May had promised to step down if her deal was approved. She has already survived a vote of no confidence from within her own party last December (and technically another vote cannot be held within 12 months) but she could be forced to go if there is a dramatic revolt against her.

“I think this is the end of May,” James Crabtree, associate professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, told CNBC.

“In theory, they can’t have another leadership campaign until December but if half of her cabinet resigns en masse, or if half of her parliamentary party say they want her to go — which they do — then her position becomes untenable.”

“She’s a very resilient prime minister and she’s hung on when we all expected her to collapse but I think her time is finally up.”

Crabtree said it was now a question of “when, not if” she goes. He also did not think a deal would pass by October, noting “there’s not a majority for anything.”

May’s plea for more time comes after months of infighting in the ruling Conservative Party, and the wider U.K. Parliament, over the direction and form Brexit should take with “Brexiteers” and “Remainers” largely holding to their positions.

May has been holding talks with opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in recent days in the hope that a compromise or alternative plan can be found, but this has so far proved elusive.

WATCH:
Niall Ferguson: Brexit has turned into a student asking for a paper extension

Brexit ‘horror story’

The new Brexit departure date of Halloween — which is likely to be the last deadline on offer to the U.K. — has not been lost on Brexit watchers.

“Brexit is now, officially, a horror story,” Barr noted, adding that the new departure date has removed any pressure on the Labour party to come to an agreement with May to ensure that a “no-deal” departure is avoided.

“The fact the ‘no deal’ deadline is now more than six months away serves to remove any real sense of urgency in the near term,” Barr added.

A sense of calm also pervaded markets Thursday morning, sterling was a touch lower against the dollar (at $1.3088) and the euro. London’s FTSE 100 index was trading lower. Daniel Lacalle, chief economist at Tressis Gestion, told CNBC Thursday that a delay means “very little” for investors in the U.K.

“The market right now is rightly discounting an agreement that may take a little bit longer or a little bit less but will ultimately happen,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe.”

“If you look at the performance of the pound and gilts (U.K. sovereign bonds) in particular, you are seeing that investors are quite comfortable with the current situation and that the U.K. stock market is not affected by the challenges of Brexit.”

The British economy has so far proved more resilient than expected during the last two years of Brexit negotiations and uncertainty over a future relationship. U.K. gross domestic product grew by 0.3% in the three months to February 2019, data Wednesday showed. But economists question what effect the delayed departure could have on business investment.

“U.K. GDP growth will probably move sideways for a bit longer yet, perhaps averaging 1.5 percent this year,” Paul Dales, chief U.K. economist at Capital Economics said Thursday. “Of course, many developments could alter our forecasts, such as the state of the global economy, a change in prime minister, a general election, a change in government, a second referendum and what actually happens with Brexit,” he said in a note.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/11/brexit-delayed-but-theresa-mays-leadership-is-out-of-time.html

Full $1,400 payments are slated to go to those with adjusted gross incomes of up to $75,000 for individuals, $112,500 for heads of household and $150,000 for married couples filing jointly.

As with previous stimulus checks, the payments are reduced for those with income above those thresholds.

This time, however, the Senate has called to lower the income levels at which the payments get phased to zero.

Under those terms, the payments will be capped for individuals earning $80,000 in income, heads of household with $120,000 and married couples with $160,000.

Estimates indicate that change could make it so up to 12 million fewer adults may receive the stimulus money.

Another notable change is that dependents of all ages stand to be eligible for the payments. Previous checks have only includes those under 17.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/08/1400-stimulus-checks-who-is-eligible-how-soon-they-could-arrive.html