Categories
Audio Posts In English

At least 10 people killed, nine injured in shootout in northern Mexico


2023-05-21T02:58:38Z

At least 10 people were killed and nine injured in a shootout at a car show in northern Mexico’s Baja California on Saturday, the municipal government reported.

The attack occurred during an all-terrain car racing show in the San Vicente area of the city of Ensenada. Around 2:18 p.m. (2118 GMT) people with long guns got out of a gray van and began shooting at participants at a gas station, according to reports of 911 calls.

Municipal and state police, the Marines, the Fire Department and Mexican Red Cross, among other agencies arrived at the scene.

Mayor Armando Ayala Robles said state Attorney General Ricardo Ivan Carpio Sanchez commissioned a special group to investigate the shooting.



Categories
Audio Posts In English

Biden, House Speaker McCarthy could speak Sunday on debt limit


2023-05-21T03:02:15Z

U.S. President Joe Biden participates in a Quad Leaders’ meeting with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida of Japan, Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India, and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of Australia, May 20, 2023, in Hiroshima, Japan. Kenny Holston/Pool via REUTERS

U.S. President Joe Biden and top congressional Republican Kevin McCarthy could speak as soon as Sunday in talks over raising the federal $31.4 trillion debt ceiling.

Biden, who is traveling in Japan for the Group of Seven (G7) summit, sought the call after his negotiating team briefed him on the status of talks that broke up on Friday with no signs of progress, according to a White House official.

There are less than two weeks before June 1, when the U.S. Treasury Department has warned that the federal government could be unable to pay all its debts. That would trigger a default that could cause chaos in financial markets and spike interest rates.

Officials did not meet on Saturday, and they announced no progress from their prior meetings on Friday or any plan to talk again. Instead, both sides cast the other’s proposals as too extreme.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre noted in a statement that Biden and McCarthy, the speaker of the House of Representatives, had agreed that any budget agreement would need to be bipartisan and accused Republicans of offering proposals too far to the right to pass Congress.

Late Saturday afternoon, McCarthy told reporters at the Capitol that he did not think talks could move forward until Biden was back in the country from the G7 meeting. He accused Democrats of taking a position that was too extreme toward the left.

White House officials said they were expecting the call between Biden and McCarthy would take place on Sunday morning, Washington time, after the president is scheduled to hold a press conference following the G7 meetings in Japan.

Biden will be headed back to Washington on Sunday after cutting his trip to Asia short to focus on the debt limit talks.

McCarthy’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Republican-led House last month passed legislation would cut a wide swath of government spending by 8% next year. Democrats say that would force average cuts of at least 22% on programs like education and law enforcement, a figure top Republicans have not disputed.

Republicans hold a slim majority of seats in the House and Biden’s fellow Democrats have narrow control of the Senate, so no deal can pass without bipartisan support.

A source familiar with the negotiations said Republicans had proposed an increase in defense spending, while cutting overall spending. The source also said House Republicans want to extend tax cuts passed under former President Donald Trump, which would add $3.5 trillion to the federal debt.

The source said the Biden administration had proposed keeping non-defense discretionary spending flat for the next year, which would cut spending when adjustments are made for inflation.

U.S. Representative Patrick McHenry, a Republican negotiator, had said Republicans leaders were “going to huddle as a team and assess” where things stood.

Republicans are pushing for sharp spending cuts in many domestic programs in exchange for the increase in the government’s self-imposed borrowing limit, which is needed regularly to cover costs of spending and tax cuts previously approved by lawmakers.

Congressional Republicans voted to raise the debt ceiling three times, with no budget cut pre-conditions, when Republican President Donald Trump was in the White House.


Categories
Audio Posts In English

The unending stupidity of Ted Cruz


19121c5c768fb6ee35d5576afe2d9a7f?s=100&d

Let’s go win this! Support Palmer Report by clicking here

Pay $5 to Palmer Report:

Pay $25 to Palmer Report:


Let’s go win this! Support Palmer Report by clicking here

Send $5 to Palmer Report:

Send $25 to Palmer Report:


I once said in another article that I do not equate intelligence with education. I stand by that comment. For me, intelligence is not about how “book-smart” one is. Someone may have graduated from an ivy league school with HONORS, and they can still display stupidity and ignorance.

On the other hand, someone could drop out of school in the tenth grade and turn out to be one of the smartest people ever. Nor do IQ tests tell the real story of intelligence. It’s important to understand that. Case in point: Albert Einstein, whom many consider being the most brilliant person ever to exist.

Albert Einstein had a learning disability. So no all the scholarly awards in the world, all the best education money can by, is not proof of intelligence. To me, mindfulness, and an ability to listen and absorb knowledge, is a far more important indicator of intelligence. Ted Cruz does not listen. He does not absorb knowledge.

Ted Cruz has some impressive educational credentials. It does not matter. Ted Cruz is perhaps one of the most stupid, ignorant and idiotic humans I’ve ever seen.

And nobody’s a favorite mariachi lover is proving it again by demanding Bud Light be investigated. This is not a joke.There is no “Candid Camera” here. There’s just Ted Cruz, an ignorant jerk of a person, an unendingly abnormal pimple who cannot stop himself from saying and doing very stupid things.

The reason Teddy wants to do this investigation is that Bud worked with a Trans woman. Ted does not like Trans women. Ted is clearly intimidated and afraid of Trans women. Who knows why? I suspect Freud would have adored playing around with THAT question.


Teddy’s not alone. Tennessee walking nightmare Senator Marsha Blackburn has signed on. They want to launch an investigation into Bud’s marketing strategy. Could this be another Disney waiting to happen? I suspect so. And WHAT is with the GOP ordering companies to do as they wish?

Don’t you remember when the GOP was the ” hands-off” party? Now those days seem long gone. I have a theory as to why. It’s ignorance. It’s the ignorant nature of Cruz and other Republicans coming out just like they came out over the abortion discussion. Perhaps Trump did us one favor after all. He acted as a sort of truth serum for Republicans to let their most awful selves out. Now they can’t pull those selves back in, it would seem.

Let’s go win this! Support Palmer Report by clicking here

Pay $5 to Palmer Report:

Pay $25 to Palmer Report:

Pay $75 to Palmer Report:

Let’s go win this! Support Palmer Report by clicking here

Send $5 to Palmer Report:

Send $25 to Palmer Report:

Send $75 to Palmer Report:

The post The unending stupidity of Ted Cruz appeared first on Palmer Report.


Categories
Audio Posts In English

G7 ‘outreach’ an effort to build consensus on global issues like Ukraine, China, climate change


HIROSHIMA, Japan (AP) — Leaders of the Group of Seven wealthy democracies are joining their counterparts from other countries during their summit in Japan in an effort to expand the G7’s sway and to include voices from the so-called Global South.

From South America to South Asia, Ukraine to the South Pacific, the guests represent a carefully considered choice of countries including big emerging economies like Australia, Brazil, Indonesia and India and smaller ones like the Comoros and Cook Islands.

Critics accuse the G7 of being an “elite club” of countries whose relevance as global leaders is being eclipsed by up-and-coming powers. By including leaders of big but less wealthy democracies like India and Brazil, Japan and the other G7 countries aim to amplify their consensus on vital issues like the war in Ukraine, China’s growing assertiveness, debt and development issues and climate change.

It’s something of an odd assortment, but there’s a method to the mixture.

South Korea is a key ally of the U.S. and Japan, with a huge stake in regional security and stability. The Comoros, an archipelago off the coast of East Africa, is currently chairing the African Union — a vital connection to a continent that increasingly is the focus of rivalry between Western democracies in China.

The Cook Islands is heading the Pacific Islands Forum — another link to a strategically important region.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has said another aim is to highlight the importance of the Global South developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. As the only Asian G7 member, Japan has a special role to play in that regard, said Yuichi Hosoya, a professor of international politics at Tokyo’s Keio University.

In a joint statement issued Saturday, the G7 leaders underscored their commitment to helping countries cope with debts that have mounted to perilous levels during the pandemic and war in Ukraine. They also reiterated their aim to pull together up to $600 billion in financing for projects to develop infrastructure such as railways, clean energy and telecommunications in developing nations.

Kishida convened a session of G7 leaders and guests that included executives from Citigroup and other private partners to discuss how to get more done — and offer an alternative to financing from China with investments in a “transparent and fair manner.”

“We’re just getting started. Together we have a lot to do to close the infrastructure gap,” President Joe Biden told the gathering, pointing to a railway project in West Africa that he said would improve food security and supply chains.

“Let’s commit to showing that democracies can deliver,” Biden said. “We have to deliver.”

Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, said the effort might raise the amount of investment from “billions to trillions.”

“We want to put a better offer on the table,” she said.

A key aim of including a broader set of countries in the annual G7 summit is to help build agreement ahead of the annual summit of the broader Group of 20 major economies in India later this year.

“Important global issues cannot be solved” without the other countries, Hosoya said. “Without the support coming from the countries in the Global South, the G7 cannot, unlike before, effectively respond to the most pressing issues in the world.”

Indonesia was host of the G20 last year and Brazil will host the meetings in 2024. All have complicated relations with China and Russia and the G7 is seeking support for its efforts to push Russia to end the war. India has abstained several times from voting on U.N. resolutions against Moscow and has increased its imports of Russian oil, while calling for a diplomatic resolution to the conflict.

Brazil and India belong to the so-called BRICS group of developing nations, that also includes China, Russia and South Africa. Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva recently visited China to strengthen ties with its biggest trade market.

Vietnam is an increasingly important trading partner for the U.S., Japan and other G7 nations and one of the region’s fastest growing economies. Like Japan, it has territorial disputes with China.

“At a time when the world is heading toward divisions, one of the most important issues is to figure out how to steer the world in one direction and regain cooperation and Japan is expected to play an important role as a bridge between G7 and the so-called Global South countries including the G20,” said Akio Takahara, a professor at University of Tokyo.

___

Find more of AP’s Asia-Pacific coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/asia-pacific


Page 2

HIROSHIMA, Japan (AP) — Leaders of the Group of Seven wealthy democracies are joining their counterparts from other countries during their summit in Japan in an effort to expand the G7’s sway and to include voices from the so-called Global South.

From South America to South Asia, Ukraine to the South Pacific, the guests represent a carefully considered choice of countries including big emerging economies like Australia, Brazil, Indonesia and India and smaller ones like the Comoros and Cook Islands.

Critics accuse the G7 of being an “elite club” of countries whose relevance as global leaders is being eclipsed by up-and-coming powers. By including leaders of big but less wealthy democracies like India and Brazil, Japan and the other G7 countries aim to amplify their consensus on vital issues like the war in Ukraine, China’s growing assertiveness, debt and development issues and climate change.

It’s something of an odd assortment, but there’s a method to the mixture.

South Korea is a key ally of the U.S. and Japan, with a huge stake in regional security and stability. The Comoros, an archipelago off the coast of East Africa, is currently chairing the African Union — a vital connection to a continent that increasingly is the focus of rivalry between Western democracies in China.

The Cook Islands is heading the Pacific Islands Forum — another link to a strategically important region.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has said another aim is to highlight the importance of the Global South developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. As the only Asian G7 member, Japan has a special role to play in that regard, said Yuichi Hosoya, a professor of international politics at Tokyo’s Keio University.

In a joint statement issued Saturday, the G7 leaders underscored their commitment to helping countries cope with debts that have mounted to perilous levels during the pandemic and war in Ukraine. They also reiterated their aim to pull together up to $600 billion in financing for projects to develop infrastructure such as railways, clean energy and telecommunications in developing nations.

Kishida convened a session of G7 leaders and guests that included executives from Citigroup and other private partners to discuss how to get more done — and offer an alternative to financing from China with investments in a “transparent and fair manner.”

“We’re just getting started. Together we have a lot to do to close the infrastructure gap,” President Joe Biden told the gathering, pointing to a railway project in West Africa that he said would improve food security and supply chains.

“Let’s commit to showing that democracies can deliver,” Biden said. “We have to deliver.”

Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, said the effort might raise the amount of investment from “billions to trillions.”

“We want to put a better offer on the table,” she said.

A key aim of including a broader set of countries in the annual G7 summit is to help build agreement ahead of the annual summit of the broader Group of 20 major economies in India later this year.

“Important global issues cannot be solved” without the other countries, Hosoya said. “Without the support coming from the countries in the Global South, the G7 cannot, unlike before, effectively respond to the most pressing issues in the world.”

Indonesia was host of the G20 last year and Brazil will host the meetings in 2024. All have complicated relations with China and Russia and the G7 is seeking support for its efforts to push Russia to end the war. India has abstained several times from voting on U.N. resolutions against Moscow and has increased its imports of Russian oil, while calling for a diplomatic resolution to the conflict.

Brazil and India belong to the so-called BRICS group of developing nations, that also includes China, Russia and South Africa. Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva recently visited China to strengthen ties with its biggest trade market.

Vietnam is an increasingly important trading partner for the U.S., Japan and other G7 nations and one of the region’s fastest growing economies. Like Japan, it has territorial disputes with China.

“At a time when the world is heading toward divisions, one of the most important issues is to figure out how to steer the world in one direction and regain cooperation and Japan is expected to play an important role as a bridge between G7 and the so-called Global South countries including the G20,” said Akio Takahara, a professor at University of Tokyo.

___

Find more of AP’s Asia-Pacific coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/asia-pacific


Categories
Audio Posts In English

Second child dies in US Border Patrol’s custody


(NewsNation) — An 8-year-old girl from Panama, who suffered from heart problems since birth, died while in Border Patrol custody. This is the second time a child in the custody of the U.S. government has died in two weeks.

The girl’s mother said agents repeatedly ignored pleas to hospitalize her daughter, who says she felt pain in her bones. The girl was declared dead after being taken to the hospital.

The 8-year-old girl and her family were being held in Harlingen, Texas, in the Rio Grande Valley, the busiest sector of the border in Texas.

Customs and Border Protection’s internal affairs office is investigating the death and an autopsy has been ordered. The Homeland Security inspector general and the Harlingen police have also been notified of the 8-year-old’s death.

NewsNation reached out to CBP for comment but is yet to hear back.

Despite Border Patrol agents reporting a decrease in daily crossings, facilities holding migrants are still facing an overcrowding issue across the southern border.

Since Title 42 expired, daily apprehensions have plummeted along the southern border, according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. The day after the expiration, Border Patrol agents averaged 4,000 encounters a day with migrants crossing illegally between ports of entry, a significant decrease from the 10,000 encounters per day in the days leading up to the end of Title 42.

Texas officials were preparing for up to 13,000 illegal crossings per day following the end of Title 42. Texas Gov. Geg Abbot held a press conference in the border town of Brownsville, which has become the epicenter of illegal crossings, crediting the Texas National Guard and the Texas Department of Public Safety for preventing migrants from entering the U.S. illegally.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis recently announced he is sending 800 National Guard soldiers and 200 law enforcement officers to assist Texas authorities at the southern border. DeSantis also included planes, dromes, command vehicles and boats to assist authorities.


Categories
Tweets and Blog

Saved Web Pages – Daily Report at 9 p.m. [Inoreader digest]


logo-mail.png

Saved Web Pages – Daily Report at 9 p.m.

created by Michael Novakhov  •  May 20 2023

The most notable news articles in full text version.
Current Page:
https://www.inoreader.com/stream/user/1006407045/tag/web-pages/view/html

“Ukrainian victims deserve to see Lvova-Belova behind bars in The Hague, not meeting with high-level…
bbc.com 2h

Continue reading the main storyWealthy democracies rev up an effort to spend trillions on a new climate-friendly…
nytimes.com 2h

You can unsubscribe from those emails at any time.

Inoreader. Build your own newsfeed. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.
Innologica Ltd. 35 Akad. Boris Stefanov str., 1700 Sofia, Bulgaria

The News And Times Information Network – Blogs By Michael Novakhov – thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com

Categories
Audio Posts In Russian

Взгляд: Подполковник армии США Дэвис сравнил ситуацию на фронте для ВСУ с судьбой нацистских войск после наступления в Арденнах


Президента Украины Владимира Зеленского ждет такая же катастрофа на фронте, как и гитлеровские войска после наступления в Арденнах в 1944–1945 годах, заявил подполковник армии США Дэниел Дэвис.

Дэвис отметил, что тогда «немцы предприняли внезапное крупномасштабное контрнаступление» и поначалу даже добились успеха, но в результате «были измотаны огромными силами союзников и неустанной способностью их промышленности вести войну». Он предположил, что Украина оказалась в «аналогичных обстоятельствах».

По мнению Дэвиса, вооруженные силы Украины ждет катастрофа во многом по тем же причинам, что и гитлеровские войска. Он указал, что Россия выстроила сложные многоуровневые оборонительные сооружения, а армия Украины недостаточно велика, вооружена и обучена для захвата территорий, передает РИА «Новости» со ссылкой на 19Fortyfive.

Напомним, американские СМИ пишут, что администрация США готовит план по заморозке военной части украинского конфликта на годы, возможно, на десятилетия, как это произошло на Корейском полуострове.

zenvz.jpg

342589 Взгляд


Categories
Audio Posts In Russian

ПРАЙМ: Белый дом заявил об отброшенных назад переговорах по госдолгу США


829131470.jpg

1980699 ПРАЙМ


Categories
Audio Posts In Russian

Белый дом: Команда Маккарти отбросила назад переговоры по госдолгу США


000_33fh9l7_2fb.jpg

Команда спикера палаты представителей США Кевина Маккарти выдвинула ряд предложений, “отбросивших назад” переговоры с администрацией по проблеме американского госдолга. С таким заявлением в субботу выступила пресс-секретарь Белого дома Карин Жан-Пьер.


Categories
Audio Posts In Russian

1. Russian Press from Michael_Novakhov (80 sites): Российская газета: Посол Украины Зварич назвал неприемлемым призыв Польши извиниться за Волынскую резню


Посол Украины в Польше Василий Зварич назвал неприемлемыми слова пресс-секретаря МИД Польши Лукаша Ясины о том, что Киеву необходимо извиниться за Волынскую резню.

396889 Российская газета

6776987 1. Russian Press from Michael_Novakhov (80 sites)