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Release of Bali bomb maker “difficult day“ for Australians, says deputy PM

2022-12-08T01:05:12Z

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FILE PHOTO: Indonesian militant Umar Patek walks after reading his final defence at the West Jakarta court May 31, 2012. Prosecutors last week sought life in prison for Patek, accused of making bombs that exploded at Bali nightclubs packed with Australian tourists in 2002, killing 202 people. Patek is also accused of mixing chemicals for 13 bombs that detonated in five churches in Jakarta on Christmas Eve, 2000 and killed around 15 people. REUTERS/Enny Nuraheni

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Indonesia’s release of convicted Bali bomb maker Umar Patek will be a “difficult day” for Australians who lost loved ones and relatives in the attacks, Australia’s Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles said on Thursday.

Patek was freed on parole late on Wednesday, the same day a suicide bomber who once was jailed on terrorism charges attacked a police station in Indonesia’s West Java province, killing himself and one officer.

Patek was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2012 for his involvement in bombings that ripped through two Bali nightclubs, killing 202 people, including 88 Australians and 38 Indonesians.

“I think this going to be a very difficult day for many Australians – all Australians – to hear about the release of Umar Patek,” Marles told ABC radio. “I’m particularly thinking right now of the families of those who were killed and injured in the Bali bombings.”

The Australian government had made repeated representations to the Indonesian government about Patek’s early release, Marles said, and would continue to engage Indonesian authorities about ensuring Patek was under constant surveillance.

Patek, a member of the al Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiyah militant group, became eligible for parole in August because of good behaviour in prison. His scheduled release was delayed after uproar from Australia.

Patek will be required to participate in a “mentoring program” until April 2030, and any violation could see his parole revoked, Indonesia’s justice ministry said in a statement.

Australian Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen told ABC Television on Thursday that Patek’s release was a concern for all Australians, but was unlikely to affect the bilateral relationship.

“I think it’s important that Australia maintains strong dialogue with Indonesia so we can have those discussions, and that’s exactly what we will do,” he said.

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Special Counsel Jack Smith is wasting no time going at Donald Trump

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It’s shaping up to be another nightmare news week for Donald Trump. Things just aren’t going his way at all. First off, the January 6 committee has said it will make criminal referrals to the Department of Justice. This is definitely not good news for Trump, but then good news for Trump is in short supply these days.

Trump also is being blasted by many for his incredibly awful comments about banishing the United States Constitution. John Bolton even came out and said if republicans do not repudiate Trump, he (Bolton) will run for President against him. Hey — the more, the merrier, I say!

And Special Counsel Jack Smith is wasting no time. The man’s been on the job for less than a month, and he’s already making headway. On Tuesday, Smith subpoenaed officials from Michigan, Wisconsin, and Arizona. Smith wants their communications with Trump.

Smith isn’t playing. He’s deadly serious, and he’s coming for Trump. Smith wants “any and all communications” these officials have had with Trump. Some of the people subpoenaed include Trump campaign lawyers and employees.


Trump also tried to walk back his insane remarks by once again lying and saying he never said what he indeed said about the constitution. Comedian Trevor Noah jumped into the Trump-bashing game by mocking him. “Trump is like one of those guys who never stop trying to get back with his ex,” Noah said.

Oh, and a jury just convicted the Trump Organization of multiple felonies. Got all that? This is just this week. So yes, at this point, suffice to say Trump is having a case of the awfuls. Awful days, an awful week, and lots more awful stuff to come.

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‘An epidemic of hate’: Biden administration officials meet with Jewish leaders to tackle rising antisemitism

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WASHINGTON (JTA) — Top Biden administration officials launched a roundtable on antisemitism on Wednesday by describing a “rising tide of antisemitism” and likening the atmosphere in the United States to that of Europe, where Jewish worship is held under lock and key.

“Right now, there is an epidemic of hate facing our country,” said Douglas Emhoff, the Jewish second gentleman, who convened and chaired the 90-minute session.

Jewish officials represented at the meeting were impressed by how comprehensive the meeting was, saying it went beyond the white supremacist threat that the Biden administration has focused on in the past to other sources, among them attackers who target the visibly Orthodox and Jewish students on campuses.

The meeting in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, adjacent to the White House, comes on the heels of weeks of antisemitic invective spewed by rapper Kanye West, who now goes by Ye, and the dinner attended last month by West, Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes and former President Donald Trump at Trump’s Florida residence. The discussion also follows alarming spikes in antisemitic invective on Twitter and other platforms.

“In my experience, there’s nothing more vicious than what we’re seeing today,” said Susan Rice, President Joe Biden’s top domestic policy adviser, who described growing up in a heavily Jewish neighborhood in Washington, D.C.

Ten years ago, Rice said, when she was defending Israel against its many enemies as the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, she did not imagine a threat to Jews domestically. Now she says she hears antisemitic expressions coming from elected officials, public figures and entertainers, calling it an “incredible rising tide.”

Deborah Lipstadt, the State Department envoy to monitor antisemitism, said she no longer has the luxury of her predecessors, who traveled abroad to assess antisemitism in foreign countries. Now, she said, she had to treat the problem as a domestic and a foreign one.

“I can’t go to these countries and say ‘You have a problem,’” she said. “Now I have to say ‘We have a serious problem.’” 

After multiple attacks on synagogues stateside in recent years, she said, Jewish places of worship were becoming more visibly fortified than they were for years when security, if it existed, was unobtrusive and synagogues were welcoming.

“For decades, when we traveled in Europe, we used to identify synagogues by gendarmes,” she said. “Now we see police cars, now we lock the doors in the United States.”

The Kanye West episodes evidently helped spur the convening of the meeting. George Selim, the Anti-Defamation League senior vice president who was present, said the meeting came together within a week, unlike similar events which can take months to organize. 

“The urgency was clear, the meeting needed to be convened, it needed to be in person,” he told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency in an interview.

Representatives of the dozen or so groups that attended were impressed by the level of attention: in addition to Emhoff, Rice and Lipstadt, there were officials from the National Security Council, the Officer of Public Engagement, and the Office of Faith-based Partnerships.

The representatives were impressed by how personal Emhoff, who is married to Vice President Kamala Harris, made the battle. He described how moved he has been by American Jews who are proud of him — the first Jewish spouse of a president or vice president. “I’m in pain right now, our community is in pain,” he said.

Emhoff’s unabashed identification with the Jewish community helped elevate the issue of combating antisemitism, said Rabbi Levi Shemtov, the executive vice president of American Friends of Lubavitch (Chabad). 

“He and I might see Jewish ritual and practice a little differently. But one thing Jewish people will remember forever in our history is that when the time came for him to make his decision, he decided to identify unequivocally as a Jew,” Shemtov said.

Amy Spitalnick, the executive director of Integrity First for America, the group that underwrote successful lawsuits against the neo-Nazis who organized the deadly 2017 march in Charlottesville, Virginia, said the officials closely listened to every presentation. (The media was present for opening remarks by government officials, and was ushered out so the representatives of Jewish groups could speak freely.)

“We were watching them take copious notes, they were genuinely listening,” she told JTA.

The range of invitees and the topics addressed also extended beyond the threat posed to Jews from the extreme right, an area that has until now been the Biden administration’s focus, through a summit on extremism in September and a speech Biden gave in Philadelphia last summer.

Speakers addressed antisemitic attacks on the visibly Orthodox which, particularly in the New York area, are most often not carried out by white supremacists. And there were officials from at least three groups that represent the visibly Orthodox: The Orthodox Union, which is Modern Orthodox, along with Agudath Israel of America and American Friends of Lubavitch (Chabad), which are haredi Orthodox.

Speakers also were sensitive to the plight of Jewish students on college campuses, who often face hostility from peers whose sharp criticism of Israel can sometimes manifest as antisemitism. 

“On college campuses, the supposed bastions of liberal ideas and ideals, many students believe it better to camouflage their Jewish identity,” Lipstadt said. One of the speakers was Julia Jassey, a senior at the University of Chicago who is the CEO of Jewish on Campus, a student group that tracks antisemitism on campuses.

The Jewish participants said they benefited from hearing how others experienced antisemitism. Abba Cohen, Aguda’s Washington director, said he found receptive listeners when he described an increased effort by local councils to limit the building of Orthodox communities. He and Nathan Diament, the Washington director of the Orthodox Union, also described the threat to the visibly Orthodox.

Their accounts moved others present who do not live the Orthodox lifestyle. “We all have different experiences with antisemitism and clearly for someone who’s Orthodox, it might feel different than for someone who’s not,” said Sheila Katz, the CEO of the National Council of Jewish Women.

Katz said the meeting was a relief because she often has difficulty explaining to her progressive allies why antisemitism persists as a threat. 

“I feel like in the last, you know, year, I’ve been saying over and over again, this is getting worse. This is getting amplified, people are emboldened,” she said. “And there are a lot, particularly in the progressive community that would say, ‘No, no, that’s not what’s happening.’”

Some practical proposals were discussed, including a letter this week from a bipartisan slate of lawmakers advocating for a cross-agency “whole of government” task force to combat antisemitism, and an expansion of federal funding that currently underwrites security upgrades for Jewish institutions to include paying for extra police patrols.

The meeting did not result in concrete decisions, but participants said they left with the impression that the federal government was ready to dive deep into finding practicable solutions. 

“For me, this is not the end. This is just the beginning of this conversation,” Emhoff said. 

Other groups represented included the American Jewish Committee, Hillel International, the Jewish Federations of North America, the Reform and Conservative movements, and Secure Community Network, the security consultancy for the Jewish community.

“It sends a very important message that the sort of rampant antisemitism we’re seeing is unacceptable and that the highest office in the country is doing something about it,” Spitalnick said.

This article originally appeared on JTA.org.

The post ‘An epidemic of hate’: Biden administration officials meet with Jewish leaders to tackle rising antisemitism appeared first on The Forward.

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Exclusive: Biden administration weighs Ukrainian requests for access to US stockpile of controversial cluster munitions



Washington

CNN

 — 

Ukrainian officials and lawmakers have in current months urged the Biden administration and users of Congress to supply the Ukrainian military with cluster munition warheads, weapons that are banned by additional than 100 countries but that Russia carries on to use to devastating impact inside of Ukraine.

The Ukrainian ask for for the cluster munitions, which was described to CNN by multiple US and Ukrainian officers, is a person of the most controversial requests the Ukrainians have manufactured to the US since the war began in February.

Senior Biden administration officers have been fielding this ask for for months and have not rejected it outright, CNN has realized, a depth that has not been beforehand reported.

Cluster munitions are imprecise by style, and scatter “bomblets” throughout massive locations that can fall short to explode on influence and can pose a lengthy-expression danger to everyone who encounters them, similar to landmines. They also build “nasty, bloody fragmentation” to any person hit by them because of the dozens of submunitions that detonate at as soon as across a significant area, Mark Hiznay, a weapons skilled and the affiliate arms director for Human Legal rights Enjoy, beforehand instructed CNN.

Prime US officers have publicly stated that they strategy to give the Ukrainians as significantly aid as they have to have to give them an upper hand at the negotiating table with Russia, should it arrive to that. But western army devices is not infinite, and as stockpiles of warheads dwindle, the Ukrainians have created simple to the US that it could use the cluster munitions now accumulating dust in storage.

For Ukraine, cluster munitions could deal with two important concerns: the will need for a lot more ammunition for the artillery and rocket programs the US and others have supplied, and a way of closing Russia’s numerical superiority in artillery.

The Biden administration has not taken the solution off the desk as a final resort, if stockpiles start out to run dangerously small. But sources say the proposal has not but obtained significant thought in huge aspect owing to the statutory limitations that Congress has set on the US’ capability to transfer cluster munitions.

All those constraints implement to munitions with a bigger than a single p.c unexploded ordnance price, which raises the prospect that they will pose a hazard to civilians. President Joe Biden could override that restriction, but the administration has indicated to the Ukrainians that that is unlikely in the close to time period.

“The means of Ukraine to make gains in current and approaching phases of conflict is in no way dependent on or connected to their procuring mentioned munitions,” a congressional aide instructed CNN.

Equally the Ukrainians and the Russians have made use of cluster bombs given that Russia invaded Ukraine in February, but the Russians – who also employed the munitions to devastating impact on civilians in Syria – have employed them much more usually and in opposition to civilian targets including parks, clinics, and a cultural middle, in accordance to an investigation by Human Legal rights Watch.

Russia’s use of the munitions – together with its 300mm Smerch cluster rockets that can unleash 72 submunitions around an area the sizing of a football pitch – has been documented in dozens of Ukrainian locations, which includes in Kharkiv, as CNN has reported.

Asked about the unfavorable perception of working with cluster munitions, a Ukrainian official speedily responded they wound only be responding in type.

“So what, Russians use cluster munitions versus us,” a Ukrainian official explained to CNN. “The [US] stress is about collateral injury. We are heading to use them towards Russian troops, not in opposition to the Russian inhabitants.”

CNN achieved out individually to the Ukranian President’s Business office and the Protection Ministry. The President’s Business office referred CNN to the Defense Ministry.

The Protection Ministry informed CNN it does not comment on reviews relating to requests for specific weapons programs or ammunition, deciding on to hold out right until any agreement with a supplier is arrived at right before quite a few any community announcement.

The US is not a signatory to the 2010 ban, known as the Convention on Cluster Munitions, and maintains large merchants of the munitions. But administration officials believe that that, in addition to the congressional restrictions, there are way too lots of downsides to the use of cluster munitions – the greatest being the danger they pose to civilians – to justify transferring them unless completely essential. And for now, the US does not feel the munitions to be very important to Ukraine’s results on the battlefield.

Ukrainian officers, nevertheless, argue that the Russians are using cluster munitions extensively, and mostly in civilian parts. For that reason, the Ukrainians have approached the Point out Department, Pentagon and Congress “many times” to lobby for the munitions, recognized as twin-reason improved typical munitions, several resources acquainted with the lobbying effort informed CNN.

Ukrainian lawmaker Oleksiy Goncharenko is between the officers who has been pushing the US to provide the munitions. “It is exceptionally crucial, to start with of all simply because it will actually transform the circumstance on the battlefield,” he advised CNN. “With these, Ukraine will finish this war substantially speedier, to the gain of most people.”

Ukrainian military serviceman Igor Ovcharruck holds a defused cluster bomb from an MSLR missile  in the region of Kharkiv, Ukraine.

“Russia is extensively applying the old types, the most barbaric designs, of cluster munitions towards Ukraine,” Goncharenko additional. “Personally, I was a sufferer of this. I was under this shelling. So we have all the proper to use it against them.”

The initially Ukrainian formal and a different resource acquainted with the requests mentioned the Ukrainians want cluster munitions suitable with both the US-offered HIMARS rocket launchers and the 155 mm howitzers, and have argued that the munitions would permit Ukrainian troops to much more proficiently attack larger sized, additional dispersed targets like concentrations of Russian troopers and motor vehicles.

Neither the US nor Ukraine are signatories to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which bans the use, generation, and stockpiling of these kinds of cluster bombs since of the prospective threat to noncombatants. But the US began phasing them out in 2016 due to the fact they “contained hundreds of lesser ‘cluster bomb’ explosives that were normally left unexploded across the battlefield, posing a danger to civilians,” according to a 2017 statement from Central Command.

The US replaced the twin-purpose enhanced typical munitions, identified as DPICMs, with the M30A1 alternate warhead. The M30A1 incorporates 180,000 compact tungsten steel fragments that scatter on affect and do not go away unexploded munitions on the floor. Ukrainian officials, nonetheless, say that the DPICMs the US now has in storage could support the Ukrainian army enormously on the battlefield – much more so than the M30A1.

“They [DPICMs] are far more efficient when you have a concentration of Russian forces,” the Ukrainian official instructed CNN, noting that Ukraine has been inquiring for the weapons “for a lot of months.”

“Russians use all these cluster munitions, they do not care,” the formal reported. “We are going to fight Russian troops, but Russians combat with our civilians with clusters.”

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The post Exclusive: Biden administration weighs Ukrainian requests for access to US stockpile of controversial cluster munitions appeared first on Ukraine Intelligence.

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FBI: Polygamous leader had 20 wives, many of them minors

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — The leader of small polygamous group near the Arizona-Utah border had taken at least 20 wives, most of them minors, and punished followers who did not treat him as a prophet, newly filed federal court documents show.

Samuel Bateman was a former member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, or FLDS, until he left to start his own small offshoot group. He was supported financially by male followers who also gave up their own wives and children to be Bateman’s wives, according to an FBI affidavit.

The document filed Friday provides new insight about what investigators have found in a case that first became public in August. It accompanied charges of kidnapping and impeding a foreseeable prosecution against three of Bateman’s wives — Naomi Bistline, Donnae Barlow and Moretta Rose Johnson.

Bistline and Barlow are scheduled to appear in federal magistrate court in Flagstaff on Wednesday. Johnson is awaiting extradition from Washington state.

The women are accused of fleeing with eight of Bateman’s children, who were placed in Arizona state custody earlier this year. The children were found last week hundreds of miles (kilometers) away in Spokane, Washington.

Bateman was arrested in August when someone spotted small fingers in the gap of a trailer he was hauling through Flagstaff. He posted bond but was arrested again and charged with obstructing justice in a federal investigation into whether children were being transported across state lines for sexual activity.

Court records allege that Bateman, 46, engaged in child sex trafficking and polygamy, but none of his current charges relate to those allegations. Polygamy is illegal in Arizona but was decriminalized in Utah in 2020.

Arizona Department of Child Services spokesman Darren DaRonco and FBI spokesman Kevin Smith declined to comment on the case Tuesday. Bistline’s attorney didn’t respond to a request for comment, and Barlow’s attorney declined to comment. Johnson didn’t have a publicly listed attorney.

The FBI affidavit filed in the women’s case largely centers on Bateman, who proclaimed himself a prophet in 2019. Bateman says he was told by former FLDS leader Warren Jeffs to invoke the “Spirit of God on these people.” The affidavit details explicit sexual acts that Bateman and his followers engaged in to fulfill “Godly duties.”

Jeffs is serving a life sentence in a Texas prison for child sex abuse related to underage marriages.

Criminal defense attorney Michael Piccarreta, who represented Jeffs on Arizona charges that were dismissed, said the state has a history of trying to take a stand against polygamy by charging relatively minor offenses to build bigger cases.

“Whether this is the same tactic that has been used in the past or whether there’s more to the story, only time will tell,” he said.

The office of Bateman’s attorney in the federal case, Adam Zickerman, declined to comment Tuesday.

Bateman lived in Colorado City among a patchwork of devout members of the polygamous FLDS, ex-church members and those who don’t practice the beliefs. Polygamy is a legacy of the early teachings of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but the mainstream church abandoned the practice in 1890 and now strictly prohibits it.

Bateman often traveled to Nebraska where some of his other followers lived and internationally to Canada and Mexico for conferences.

When Bateman was arrested earlier this year, he instructed his followers to obtain passports and to delete messages sent through an encrypted system, authorities said.

He demanded that his followers confess publicly for any indiscretions, and shared those confessions widely, according to the FBI affidavit. He claimed the punishments, which ranged from a time out to public shaming and sexual activity, came from the Lord, the affidavit states.

The children identified by their initials in court documents have said little to authorities. The three children found in the trailer Bateman was hauling through Flagstaff — which had a makeshift toilet, a couch, camping chairs and no ventilation — told authorities they didn’t have any health or medical needs, a police report stated.

None of the girls placed in state custody in Arizona disclosed sexual abuse by Bateman during forensic interviews, though one said she was present during sexual activity, according to the FBI affidavit. But the girls often wrote in journals that were seized by the FBI. In them, several of the girls referenced intimate interactions with Bateman. Authorities believe the older girls influenced the younger ones not to talk about Bateman, the FBI said.

___

Associated Press writer Sam Metz in Salt Lake City contributed to this story.

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New Peru president sworn in, predecessor Castillo arrested

2022-12-08T00:30:49Z

Peruvian protestors in Lima were seen demonstrating against Peruvian President Pedro Castillo as lawmakers voted to oust him after a Congress shut-down threat on Tuesday (December 7).

Peru’s Congress swore in a new president on Wednesday in a day of sweeping political drama that saw the former leader, Pedro Castillo, arrested after his ousting from office in an impeachment trial hours after he attempted a last-ditch bid to stay in power by trying to dissolve Congress.

Ignoring Castillo’s attempt to shut down the legislature by decree, lawmakers moved ahead with the previously planned impeachment trial, with 101 votes in favor of removing him, six against and 10 abstentions.

The result was announced with loud cheers, and the legislature called Vice President Dina Boluarte to take office.

The 60-year-old Boluarte was sworn in as president through 2026, making her the first woman to lead Peru. She called for a political truce after months of instability that have seen two prior impeachment attempts and said a new cabinet inclusive of all political stripes would be formed.

She lambasted Castillo’s move to dissolve Congress as an “attempted coup.”

The public ministry said on Wednesday evening that Castillo had been detained and accused of the crime of “rebellion” for breaking the constitutional order.

Castillo earlier had said he would temporarily shut down Congress, launch a “government of exception,” and call for new legislative elections.

That sparked resignations by his ministers amid angry accusations from both opposition politicians and his allies that he was attempting a coup. The police and Armed Forces warned him that the route he had taken to try to dissolve Congress was unconstitutional and the police said they had “intervened” to fulfill their duties.

Some small street protests took place. In Lima, dozens of people waving Peruvian flags cheered Castillo’s downfall, while elsewhere in the capital and in the city of Arequipa his supporters marched and clashed with police. One held a sign saying: “Pedro, the people are with you.”

The Government Palace and Congress in Lima were surrounded by metal barricades and dozens of police officers with shields and plastic helmets.

Peru has gone through years of political turmoil, with multiple leaders accused of corruption, frequent impeachment attempts, and presidential terms cut short.

The latest legal battle began in October, when the prosecutor’s office filed a constitutional complaint against Castillo for allegedly leading “a criminal organization” to profit from state contracts and for obstructing investigations.

Congress summoned Castillo last week to respond to accusations of “moral incapacity” to govern.

Castillo has called the allegations “slander” by groups seeking “to take advantage and seize the power that the people took from them at the polls.”

The 53-year-old leftist teacher-turned-president had survived two previous attempts to impeach him since he began his term in July 2021.

But after Wednesday’s attempt to dissolve Congress his allies abandoned him and regional powers underlined the need for democratic stability.

“The United States categorically rejects any extra-constitutional act by President Castillo to prevent Congress from fulfilling its mandate,” the U.S. ambassador to Peru, Lisa Kenna, wrote on Twitter.

The turmoil rattled markets in the world’s No. 2 copper producer, though analysts said that the removal of Castillo, who has battled a hostile Congress since taking power, could be an eventual positive.

“Peru’s financial markets will suffer, but won’t collapse, thanks mainly to solid domestic fundamentals,” said Andres Abadia at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

Related Galleries:

Peru’s Vice President Dina Boluarte, who was called on by Congress to take the office of president after the legislature approved the removal of President Pedro Castillo in an impeachment trial, attends her swearing-in ceremony in Lima, Peru December 7, 2022. REUTERS/Sebastian Castaneda

Ousted Peruvian President Pedro Castillo sits next to former Prime Minister Anibal Torres while appearing before anti-corruption prosecutors at the Attorney General’s office, following an impeachment trial, in Lima, Peru, December 7, 2022 in this still image taken from video. Peru’s Attorney General’s Office/via Reuters TV/Handout via REUTERS

Police officers clash with demonstrators outside Lima’s Prefecture where President Pedro Castillo was reportedly staying, after Congress approved the removal of Castillo, in Lima, Peru, December 7, 2022. REUTERS/Alessandro Cinque

Peru’s President Pedro Castillo delivers a statement to the media along with Chile’s President Gabriel Boric at the La Moneda government palace in Santiago, Chile, November 29, 2022. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

A member of Peru’s Congress displays a Peruvian flag after Congress approved the removal of President Pedro Castillo, in Lima, Peru December 7, 2022. REUTERS/Sebastian Castaneda

Police officers stand guard as people gather outside Peru’s Congress after President Pedro Castillo said he will dissolve it as he battles impeachment proceedings, in Lima, Peru December 7, 2022. REUTERS/Sebastian Castaneda

Peru’s President Pedro Castillo addresses the audience during the opening of the VII Ministerial Summit on Government and Digital Transformation of the Americas, in Lima, Peru November 10, 2022. REUTERS/Sebastian Castaneda

Supporters of Peru’s President Pedro Castillo protest as a police officer guards, outside of Congress as opposition lawmakers launch a third impeachment attempt against Castillo, in Lima, Peru December 1, 2022. REUTERS/Angela Ponce/File Photo

Peruvian Congress President Jose Williams speaks as lawmakers debate after opposition legislators presented another motion against President Pedro Castillo, the third formal attempt to oust the leftist leader since he took office last year, calling him morally unfit for office, in Lima, Peru December 1, 2022. REUTERS/Angela Ponce


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New York Times staffers to walk out after contract talks fail

2022-12-08T00:45:33Z

Vehicles drive past the New York Times headquarters in New York March 1, 2010. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson//File Photo

More than 1,100 union employees at the New York Times Co (NYT.N) will walk out for one day on Thursday after failing to negotiate a “complete and equitable contract” with the news publisher, the union said in a statement.

The walk-out, which marks the first time New York Times employees have participated in a work stoppage since the late 1970s, is part of a growing labor movement across the United States in which employees from companies such as Amazon (AMZN.O), Starbucks Corp (SBUX.O) and Apple Inc (AAPL.O) have organized in an effort to push back against what they say are unfair labor practices.

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Idaho murders: Police looking for white Hyundai Elantra

(NewsNation) — Idaho police announced Wednesday that they need help locating a white 2011-2013 Hyundai Elantra that was seen near the University of Idaho murder scene.

The license plate is currently unknown.

The four University of Idaho students killed were Ethan Chapin, 20; Madison Mogen, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20 and Kaylee Goncalves, 21. The three women were roommates, and Kernodle was dating Chapin.

Investigators believe the occupant, or occupants, of the car may have “critical information to share regarding this case.”

“Your information, whether you believe it is significant or not, might be the piece of the puzzle that helps investigators solve these murders,” police said in the release.

The above photos are stock images of a 2011-2013 Hyundai Elantra and are not the actual vehicle. See them in the news release link below.

“Tips and leads have led investigators to look for additional information about a vehicle being in the immediate area of the King Street residence during the early morning hours of November 13th,” the release read. Authorities are asking the public to forward any information to the tip line.

Information can be submitted:
Tip Line: 208-883-7180
Email: tipline@ci.moscow.id.us
Digital Media: fbi.gov/moscowidaho

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We’re now that much closer to killing the filibuster

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The filibuster is a legislative device employed in the United States Senate to permit one or more senators to speak for as long as they wish and on any topic they choose. It’s used to prevent a vote being taken on a bill. A filibuster can only be stopped if 60 Senators bring the debate to a close by invoking cloture under Senate rules.

Under the current rules in the Senate, modifications of the filibuster would constitute a rule change that itself can be filibustered. However, under Senate precedents, a simple majority (50 or more with a tie-breaking vote from the Vice President) can, and occasionally has, acted to limit filibusters by overruling the decisions of the chair. The removal or substantial limitation of the filibuster by a simple majority, rather than a rule change, is called the constitutional option by promoters and the nuclear option by detractors.

With the reelection of Ralph Warnock to the Senate in the Georgia runoff, Democrats now possess a much more comfortable 51-49 majority. Therefore limiting the filibuster has now become easier. Exceptions to the filibuster can now become routinely baked into Senate procedures and used when it makes sense to use them. For example, according to current Senate rules, the nomination of a Supreme Court justice cannot be filibustered.

Elimination of the filibuster altogether is also possible. Republicans are uniformly opposed to the elimination of the filibuster because it would remove their power to interfere with the passage of Senate bills from a minority position. Two Democratic Senators, Joe Manchin and Kirsten Sinema, are also opposed to the removal of the filibuster.

Senator Joe Manchin’s stated position on the filibuster is an odd one. He maintains that without the filibuster the “tyranny of the majority” will rule in the Senate. I was unaware that majority rule represented “tyranny.” I seem to recall something I read somewhere back in school about how tyranny comes from the arbitrary rule of a minority of aristocrats, many of whom lived on yachts. Manchin apparently prefers minority rule over majority rule. The promotion of the least popular opinion is somehow more appropriate from his most unusual point of view.

The most inimical part of the filibuster is it has historically been used to block civil rights legislation. It’s associated with Jim Crow Laws and the cause of segregation. It is still used (or threatened to be used) to block bills intended to promote voting rights. With the elimination of Herschel Walker as a zombie vote, the Senate has taken a larger step toward the eventual elimination of this mediaeval practice.


One immediate benefit to a 51-49 Democratic majority is committees no longer need to be composed of 50% Democrats and 50% Republicans. Now all Senate committees get to enjoy a majority of Democrats. So votes in committee no longer have to be thrown to the Senate floor for a tie-breaking vote, a cumbersome and extremely time-wasting exigency that has shackled Vice President Kamala Harris perpetually to Washington because she needs to be available to break ties.

It would, of course, be far better that we had a 52 seat majority, thereby eliminating the maleficent power held by Manchin and Sinema. But we have cut their power in half, and with any luck we will render their power completely impotent if we can finally kill the filibuster. And, as ever, ladies and gentlemen, brothers and sisters, comrades and friends, stay safe.

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Alex Jones says he can pay less than 1% of Sandy Hook verdicts

2022-12-08T00:21:23Z

(Reuters) – Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones on Wednesday said he has less than $12 million of the $1.5 billion he owes the families of Sandy Hook school shooting victims, but they immediately questioned the accuracy of his statements.

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FILE PHOTO: Infowars founder Alex Jones speaks to the media after appearing at his Sandy Hook defamation trial at Connecticut Superior Court in Waterbury, Connecticut, U.S., October 4, 2022. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo

In the first hearing of Jones’ bankruptcy in a Houston court, his attorney Vickie Driver said Jones wanted to settle with the Sandy Hook families. They won $1.5 billion in defamation trials over Jones’ lies about the 2012 school shooting.

Jones said in a court filing that it would be “functionally impossible” for him to pay the defamation verdicts in full.

David Zensky, an attorney for the Sandy Hook families, said Jones lied for years about the Sandy Hook shooting and concealed information about his companies InfoWars and Free Speech Systems. He questioned whether Jones would fully disclose his finances.

“We’re here because Mr. Jones’s stock in trade is lies, not truth,” Zensky said at the hearing.

Jones said in court filings that he needs more time to file detailed financial reports because his personal finances are “somewhat disorganized.” Jones also said that he would not “give up his public life, or discontinue public discourse” as part of a bankruptcy settlement.

Jones did not appear at Wednesday’s hearing.

Jones claimed for years that the 2012 killing of 20 students and six staff members at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut was staged as part of a government plot to seize Americans’ guns. He has since acknowledged the shooting occurred, but plaintiffs said Jones cashed in for years off his lies about the massacre.

Jones filed for Chapter 11 protection from creditors on Dec. 2. InfoWars’ parent company, Free Speech Systems, which is owned by Jones, filed for bankruptcy in July, before courts in Texas and Connecticut determined the amount of Jones’ liability for the Sandy Hook defamation claims.

Jones has said that he will appeal the Sandy Hook verdicts if he is unable to reach a settlement in bankruptcy.

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