Archive for the ‘Media Control’ Category

4 things you can do if you feel overwhelmed by the news or social media – CU Boulder Today

If you or someone you know is struggling, there are resources available that can help.

Counseling and Psychiatric Services (CAPS) is here to support undergrad and graduate students who may be experiencing impacts from the recent events at King Soopers, Atlanta and other mental health concerns. Students can access crisis services by calling 303-492-2277 or visiting the CAPS Crisis Support page.

CAPS is also providing drop-in services through e-Lets Talk, which allows you to connect with a counselor virtually for free. Due to the current influx of appointment requests, CAPS is encouraging students to call or use e-Lets Talk if youre not able to schedule a screening appointment right away.

Students can also build valuable skills related to stress management, mindfulness, distress tolerance, self-care, relationships and healthy living by signing up for one of CAPS free virtual workshops, which are available throughout the week.

The Office of Victim Assistance (OVA) provides free, confidential counseling, advocacy, information and referrals for all CU community members, including undergrad and graduate students, staff and faculty. They specialize in addressing current and past life-disruptive events, including but not limited to, crime, trauma, gender-based violence, experiences of bias, harassment, discrimination, abuse and violence.

For 24/7 support, same-day appointments and consultation services, please call 303-492-8855. OVA also provides free and confidential drop-in services virtually through their e-Ask an Advocate program.

The Collegiate Recovery Center (CUCRC) offers free peer-to-peer support meetings and community for students, staff and faculty who are in recovery, interested in recovery or who are recovery allies. The CUCRC is here to provide a space for CU community members to connect, find support and process traumatic events in a healthy and productive way.

Dont Ignore It provides resources for students, staff and faculty to explore your options and learn how to help a fellow Buff in need.

The Faculty and Staff Assistance Program (FSAP) provides free, confidential counseling services for CU Boulder faculty and staff through brief individual counseling, workshops and groups. They can also provide assistance to faculty and staff for personal and work-related concerns.

The Real Help Hotline provides access to professional counselors who can offer assistance finding local resources as well as immediate crisis counseling. This program is free, confidential and available to all employees 24/7 at 833-533-2428

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4 things you can do if you feel overwhelmed by the news or social media - CU Boulder Today

Fleischer predicts Democrats will nix filibuster for gun control | TheHill – The Hill

Fox News contributor and former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer on Wednesday predicted that Senate Democrats will move to nix the Senate filibuster on gun reform legislationafter multiple deadly mass shootings.

During an interview on Foxs Americas Newsroom, Fleischer, who served under former President George W. Bushs administration, said that gun control is one of the issues at the core of the Democratic Party.

I think this is going to be an issue that breaks the Senate, he said. It is so deep and fervent inside the Democratic Party that gun control is the answer.

Fleischer went on to predict that Senate Democrats will break the filibuster over this, adding, I dont think they have any choice.

The base demands it, they demand action, they say thoughts and prayers are not enough, he continued. Theyre going to try to get through whatever they can get through on 50 votes, and this will be the issue that they challenge the filibuster over.

Co-host Bill Hemmer pointed out opposition to nixing the filibuster among moderate Democrats, particularly Sen. Joe ManchinJoe ManchinThe Hill's Morning Report - Biden tasks Harris on border; news conference today Democrats face questions over agenda Democrats divided on gun control strategy MORE (D-W.Va.), who told CNNon Tuesday that he would still advocate against it even if removing the rule would allow the passage of his bipartisan bill with Republican Sen. Pat ToomeyPatrick (Pat) Joseph ToomeySasse rebuked by Nebraska Republican Party over impeachment vote Philly GOP commissioner on censures: 'I would suggest they censure Republican elected officials who are lying' Toomey censured by several Pennsylvania county GOP committees over impeachment vote MORE (Pa.), which requires background checks on armed sales at gun shows and over the internet.

The bill goes short of mandating background checks in private transfers of firearms, which the broader House gun reform bills have included.

However, Fleischer said, Manchin also said he would only support a bipartisan COVID bill, and of course, there was a partisan COVID bill and he supported it.

Manchin is always an open question, he added. Im not sure I would take him at his word, particularly when the pressure mounts on the core issue that defines the modern day Democratic Party.

Fleischers remarks come amid growing support among Democrats to eliminate the 60-vote filibuster needed to end debate on legislation. Ending the practicewould return the Senate to a talking filibuster, in which senators need to physically be on the floor to block legislation

Senate Majority Leader Charles SchumerChuck SchumerOvernight Health Care: Senate confirms Levine for HHS, first openly transgender official | Progressives up pressure on Biden to back COVID vaccine patent waiver | Former Operation Warp Speed chief fired over sexual harassment allegations Mississippi GOP senator says it's wrong to vote on Sunday for religious reasons Senate confirms first openly transgender official, approving Levine for HHS MORE (D-N.Y.) has pledged to put forth a series of bills on the floor, which will likely force Democrats to take a position on removing the filibuster in order to move forward their desired policy proposals in the face of Republican opposition.

President Biden on Tuesday called on Congress to enact meaningful gun control legislation, including a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, as well as closing loopholes in background checks for firearms.

Bidens call for further reforms included a demand that the Senate immediately pass two bills approved by the House earlier this year that would expand background checks on gun sales, and Schumer has vowed to take action on the legislation.

Other lawmakers have signaled that they would support removing the filibuster in order to move forward a range of other legislative reforms.

Sen. Angus KingAngus KingSenators eye rollback of Trump methane rule with Congressional Review Act Manchin says Democrats should pay for infrastructure, raise corporate taxes Fleischer predicts Democrats will nix filibuster for gun control MORE (I-Maine) on Wednesday suggested he would support changing Senate rules should Republicans block voting rights legislation.

"All-out opposition to reasonable voting rights protections cannot be enabled by the filibuster; if forced to choose between a Senate rule and democracy itself, I know where I will come down," King wrote in an op-ed for The Washington Post.

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Fleischer predicts Democrats will nix filibuster for gun control | TheHill - The Hill

‘This is not happening’: Carjacking victims’ fears are realized as Chicago fights to control the crime – Herald-Mail Media

CHICAGO One womans Honda Civic was taken when she was held at gunpoint while picking up her son at a day care center.

Another woman lost her Chevrolet Camaro after a day of shopping when she was pulled out of it and thrown to the ground and her key fob was ripped from its chain.

A ride-share drivers Ford Escape was stolen after he struggled with a customer he had asked not to eat in the back seat. After a scuffle, the driver held onto the car as it started moving, his knees scraping the pavement after he let go.

I was so upset when I saw that car being driven off, the driver, Phillip Sanchez, told the Chicago Tribune. My mind was freaking out.

These were among the hundreds of carjackings in Chicago already this year, brazen crimes that have frightened city residents and frustrated police, politicians and community leaders many of whom are already preoccupied with intractable violence that has given the city an unflattering reputation.

Through mid-March, there had been more than 370 carjackings in Chicago. Despite a dip during Februarys harsh winter weather, that figure was easily the most seen here during the same period in any year since at least 2001, crime statistics show.

And the result is a shaken city, where residents look over their shoulders more than usual and at least one alderman has gone so far as scheduling a special, secure event at a gas station so constituents could safely fill up.

The woman who was thrown to the ground as her Camaro was taken blamed herself for becoming a victim.

I knew this was happening a lot. I just wasnt paying attention, she told the Tribune in the moments after the carjacking. Its nerve-wracking. I think right now Im getting over the shock. Im just now like, I cant believe I was this dumb to just be sitting in my car.

The Tribune spent a few days earlier this month trying to find victims of carjackings in the hours or days after they occurred. Here are some of their stories.

I knew something was definitely wrong

One night earlier this month, police officers with flashlights walked along sidewalks and across front lawns on Kenwood Avenue in the Calumet Heights community on Chicagos South Side.

They pointed beams of light up and down the faces of townhouses and three-flats, looking for video cameras or possibly witnesses to help shed some light on how two women were carjacked on the block earlier in the evening.

One of the women gave the other a ride home to the block. The longtime friends, who asked not to be identified due to safety reasons, stood outside the passengers building as they gave information to an officer scribbling notes.

Im gonna pray for you! one neighbor called out to the women through her apartment window.

The two had pulled up on the block in a white Chevrolet Camaro after a day of clothes shopping. The driver was dropping off her friend, but the two began chatting before parting ways.

Thats when a gray vehicle pulled up alongside the Camaro and then in front of it, boxing it in and startling the women.

Theres four guys in there ... and they were all looking back at me, or us, in the car, the woman who had been behind the wheel of the Camaro recalled between moments of talking to police on the scene. And right then I knew something was definitely wrong, especially how close they were to my car.

She said everything happened fast. The gray vehicle came in quickly, and a group of younger men got out and were on them in no time.

And a few of them got out and theyre like, yelling, Get out of the car! the woman said.

They tried to pull her door open, she said of her friend, the passenger. The other ones came around to my side and yanked me out and pushed, threw me to the (ground). I had my keys to my chest on the (ground), and they started cursing at me, telling me, Give me the keys! Give me the keys!

She screamed hoping someone would hear, as one of the carjackers yelled that he would shoot her.

From what she remembers, one of them got in her Camaro and drove off, while the others left the block in the gray vehicle after taking the womens purses.

Officers lingered on the block for more than an hour. They spoke with the women periodically and eventually delivered more bad news.

Theyre trying to use my card? one woman asked an officer after learning the carjackers tried to use her bank card at a business on Ashland Avenue.

Later the same night, a 69-year-old man walked to his vehicle outside his home in the Beverly community, about seven miles southwest of where the two women were carjacked.

As he was about to head to work, a gray Ford Fusion pulled up and a couple of young men got out of the car.

Give me your money, (expletive), one of them said, according to authorities.

Before things went further, the man, who happened to be licensed to carry a gun, pulled out a pistol and fired two shots, striking one of the suspects, authorities said. The group then fled in the Ford.

About 15 minutes later, police about two miles away heard the call of the attempted robbery and spotted a quick flash of lights on 99th Street near Vincennes Avenue. Police saw a large smoke and dust cloud and followed it north, authorities said.

The Fusion crashed 11 blocks away into a pillar of a viaduct. The car was wrecked. Air bags deployed. The rear lights blinked as the horn blared intermittently.

The young men tried to get away. But they were arrested a short time later. One of them, a 17-year-old, had been shot in the right knee by the man with the gun.

The two other teenage boys, one 15 and the other 16, were escorted by police to two separate ambulances on the scene.

Police said they believe they know where the car the teens crashed came from. Many cars taken by force or stolen on the street wind up used in other crimes.

Just days earlier, Tyler Rasmuson had gone to meet a friend for dinner to celebrate a work promotion.

Rasmuson parked his gray 2016 Ford Fusion in the 800 block of West Blackhawk Street near his friends apartment, just north of downtown.

After the dinner, Rasmuson got calls from a stranger who tried him three times. It was a passer-by along Blackhawk Street who got his name and phone number off some dry cleaning that was scattered on the ground, along with a golf bag.

This person wanted to see if Rasmuson was OK. So Rasmuson met up with the caller and noticed his car was missing.

Had my keys with me. My car was gone. I had no freakin idea what was going on, he recalled in a telephone interview.

A day after Rasmusons Fusion crashed on the South Side, Phillip Sanchez had a costume for an acting gig and a bag with his iPad next to him in his 2020 Ford Escape.

The Lyft driver spent four months looking for the perfect car one with a rotary gear shift, a digital speedometer and in Sedona orange and finally got it in January. He also had waited through the pandemic for another acting role and finally got a call from the show Chicago P.D. to play a homeless man. He had his gray and black beard grown out for such a role.

The 56-year-old driver told the Tribune he was just doing bunny hop rides, or short rides that are barely a mile along, before he dropped off a passenger in scrubs at the University of Chicago Medical Center. He almost immediately got a notification for another ride, and picked up a young couple by the hospitals emergency entrance. They were his 10th ride of the day.

He asked the couple to put their seat belts on as the young woman was talking on the phone.

Sanchezs father had made two signs for his cars interior that were on the back of his headrests for passengers. One said, No Mask No Ride, as a pandemic precaution, and another read, No Snacking.

Still, the couple asked if they could stop for food, and Sanchez instructed them on how to add a side trip to their Lyft route. The two chose a nearby Wendys, and Sanchez pulled into the drive-thru.

Sanchez reminded the pair of his sign and the rule against snacking, he recalled, and things took an ugly turn.

Before he knew it, his male passenger was attacking him from behind, Sanchez recalled, punching him in the chest and his head.

I couldnt defend myself because of one, the position I was in, and two, I was locked in my seat belt, he said. In moments, the couple was out of the car, with the bag that held his iPad.

I freaked out. I thought, No, this is not happening, Sanchez said, quickly realizing the man had jumped behind the wheel of his car. He tried to hold on to the car as he was dragged a short distance through the Wendys parking lot.

He watched the pair drive off with the two new good things in his life: the costume and his new orange Escape.

Its like Im not meant to have anything nice in life. As soon as I have it, its pulled out of my hands, Sanchez said. This (expletive) proved I couldnt have it.

His car was found the next day, totaled, in suburban Calumet Park. Sanchez has called his insurance company but hes unable to work. A church he attends virtually has started raising money for him.

Many carjacking victims are Lyft and Uber drivers. Organizers with the Independent Drivers Guild said they believe some people use the apps to shop for victims and the apps make it easy for them to do so.

Several of the organizers held a news conference and candlelight vigil on March 9 to pray for two drivers who were seriously injured during recent carjackings.

Kevin Nelson, an organizer, said the guild estimates there are 120,000 to 150,000 drivers in the Chicago area.

People are able to exploit a security flaw in the app, Nelson said. People dont have to verify ID. They dont have to include selfies.

The drivers must verify themselves, and the passengers can see what kind of car they are driving, making it easy for would-be carjackers to wait for a vehicle they would like to take, organizers said. In a statement, Lyft said it is exploring the expansion of safety features to prevent these kinds of crimes.

In February, a 46-year-old driver was shot multiple times in the 3900 block of West Jackson Boulevard. One bullet lodged into his neck, paralyzing him.

Another driver was shot March 3 by his passenger in an attempted carjacking, according to Chicago police.

Mustafa Alawsi spoke at the news conference about being carjacked in early November.

He picked up passengers around 3 a.m. in the Ukrainian Village area. When they got in the car, Alawsi asked for a name to confirm the ride, but had a gun put to his head instead.

He got out, and they took his phone, money and everything that was with him, he said. His car was found 15 days later.

On March 14, four of the guild organizers including Nelson gathered at the ride-share drivers lot outside OHare International Airport.

Some drivers will pick up passengers only at the airports, organizers said, as a way to know that passengers likely do not have a weapon on them.

The guild organizers handed out flyers of a man police were looking for who is accused of raping and robbing an Uber driver.

Two of the drivers said they carry guns, and promised to take care of the man themselves if they saw him.

In Sanchezs carjacking, 19-year-old Najee Bursey was arrested March 12 in the Woodlawn neighborhood, according to Chicago police. He was charged with felony vehicular hijacking and misdemeanor theft.

Two of the teens arrested with Rasmusons Ford Fusion faced charges in Cook County Juvenile Court. A 15-year-old boy who was arrested with them could appear in court later in the spring.

Chicago police said they believe the teens may have also been responsible for taking the white Camaro from the two women on Kenwood Avenue on the same evening prior to the confrontation with the man who surprised them with a gun. But no charges have been filed in the carjacking of the two women.

The women told the Tribune they heard from police that at least one of their bank cards was found at the hospital in the pocket of the 17-year-old who was shot.

On March 11, the 17-year-old and the 16-year-old had their initial court hearings before Cook County Juvenile Court Judge Linda Perez. Both had been through the countys juvenile justice system before.

The 17-year-old who was shot was only charged with criminal trespassing, and the 69-year-old victim couldnt identify him as one of those who confronted him at his car. As it turned out, that teen had just appeared before Perez on another case hours before his arrest.

He appeared at his latest hearing over a video feed while still at Christ Hospital recovering from his bullet wound. The judges worries for him had been realized, she told the youth.

Now you need surgery for this bullet wound, Perez told the teen. Young man, you are in a world of trouble.

Just hours before Sanchezs harrowing experience at Wendys, Chicago police Superintendent David Brown announced at a news conference the debut of a new section of the Police Departments website that provides information about carjackings in the city.

The page includes surveillance video, booking photos of suspects and an outlet for the public to send tips.

Brown said suspects use carjacked vehicles to sell for parts and to commit other crimes, but the No. 1 reason for carjackings is joyriding.

Its a shame that youll hold a gun to someones head just to joyride, Brown said.

The Police Departments efforts to curtail carjackings have been an up-and-down affair.

After a spike in the crime in 2017, a task force was formed the following year. Officials credit it with reducing carjackings to their lowest level in several years.

But that task force, consisting of local, state and federal law enforcement, was sent to concentrate on other work when the number of carjackings dropped.

Chicago police Superintendent David Brown addresses reporters during a news conference to announce updates on a recently formed vehicular hijacking task force operation on March 10, 2021.

Chicago police Superintendent David Brown addresses reporters during a news conference to announce updates on a recently formed vehicular hijacking task force operation on March 10, 2021. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune)

In February 2020, not long before Brown took the department helm, Chicago saw another spike, a roughly 75% rise in carjackings during the first two months of that year. So CPD officials announced the restart of a task force to address the problem.

Brown has called the situation a national phenomenon, saying reasons for the spike include the fact that more juveniles have been on the street with time on their hands because of schools closed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

On March 12, two days after Brown spoke, a 21-year-old woman drove her Honda Civic into the small parking lot of the Illinois Institute for Children to pick up her 3-month-old son after work.

As she pulled into the lot at 10009 S. Yates Blvd. in the South Deering neighborhood, she saw a young man walking down the sidewalk.

She thought nothing of it. But as she parked just outside the day care center, the man came up to her door from behind.

She locked the doors and thought he might just be asking her for money, she told the Tribune moments later. But when he got to her window, he pulled out a gun and pointed it at her.

(Expletive), get out, he said.

Thats what she did, and he got in. He pulled out of the lot and went west down 100th Street.

I was scared, she said. I didnt know what to think.

The woman cried softly as she stood outside the day care center as beat officers called for a detective. Relatives came to help her, as she had her infant nestled in his carrier.

She shook her head. The next day was her birthday, she said.

At least she was OK and her son wasnt in the car, but she had just started a second job and now didnt have a way to get there. An officer walked up to her to give her an update on her car.

They put it in the system real quick because weve done so many of these, he said.

But a few days later, she still had heard nothing.

And she still didnt have a car.

(Chicago Tribune reporter Annie Sweeney contributed to this report.)

2021 Chicago Tribune. Visit at chicagotribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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'This is not happening': Carjacking victims' fears are realized as Chicago fights to control the crime - Herald-Mail Media

Biden press conference: President stirs controversy on border, China and Trump and vows to run in 2024 – The Independent

Joe Biden says hell run for a second term in 2024

On the 65th day of his presidency, Joe Biden held his first formal press conference since entering the White House on 20 January.

In the hour-long Q&A, Biden courted controversy on migration at the Mexico border, the US relationship with China, and the potential to face off against Trump in 2024 in a rematch that see two oldest presidential candidates in US history (Biden 82 v Trump 78).

Of the 15 presidents of the past 100 years, all but for Biden have held a press conference within 33 days of being sworn into office. Donald Trump did it 27 days in, while Barack Obama outdid Trump by a week at 20 days.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg dismissed the company's role in polarising the US, blaming the "political and media environment" for promoting extremism and misinformation. His opening statement in the Senate big tech hearing came after a cutout of the Facebook boss dressed as the QAnon Shaman Jacob Chansley appeared on Capitol Hill before Congress began grilling the social media platforms.

Kayleigh McEnany, former White House press secretary to Mr Trump, has meanwhile appeared on Fox News to claim Joe Biden is in badly declining health and is concealing his condition behind a Covid face mask, a baseless smear intended to undermine his first press conference as president, where questions on immigration, the coronavirus vaccine rollout, infrastructure and gun control are likely to be forthcoming.

His vice president, Kamala Harris, is also already facing criticism from Republicans Ted Cruz and Doug Ducey, Arizonas governor, after being appointed to lead the countrys response to the latest surge in asylum seekers arriving at the US border with Mexico as the administration struggles to find temporary housing for hundreds of unaccompanied children.

Read more:

Good morning and welcome to The Independents rolling coverage of the Joe Biden administration.

Joe Sommerlad25 March 2021 09:05

US vice president Kamala Harris will lead the countrys response to the latest surge in asylum seekers arriving at the US border with Mexico from Central America as it struggles to find temporary housing for hundreds of unaccompanied children.

The immigration portfolio is the first specific assignment Joe Biden has delegated to his deputy.

The presidents decision signals the administration is redoubling its efforts to address concerns about the thousands of migrant children in US government care, as the overwhelmed Homeland Security and Health and Human Services Departments manage a rapid increase in arrival numbers.

I asked her, the VP, today, because shes the most qualified person to do it, to lead our efforts with Mexico and the Northern Triangle, and the countries that can help, need help in stemming the movement of so many folks, stemming the migration to our southern border, Biden told reporters on Wednesday.

The veep had this to say about the immigration crisis on Monday - before (somewhat unwisely) laughing when asked whether she would visit the border, allowing conservative commentators to accuse her of refusing to take the issue seriously.

Griffin Connolly has this report.

Joe Sommerlad25 March 2021 09:15

The president will hold the first press session of his reign later today, 64 days on from his inauguration, with questions on immigration, the coronavirus vaccine rollout, infrastructure and gun control likely to be forthcoming.

Griffin Connolly has this on the key issues.

Joe Sommerlad25 March 2021 09:45

The Biden administration is reportedly mulling new executive orders to reform firearm ownership laws in the wake of two deadly mass shootings in Atlanta, Georgia, and Boulder, Colorado, within the last week.

The president is not waiting for anything to fail in Congress, his press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters on Wednesday.

Alex Woodward has the latest.

Joe Sommerlad25 March 2021 10:15

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell says he hasnt spoken with the president since his inauguration on 20 January.

McConnell complained that Democrats are not interested in bipartisan cooperation (which is pretty rich coming from the Grim Reaper himself) during an interview with Bill Hemmer on Fox News on Wednesday in which he revealed: I dont believe I have spoken with him since he was sworn in. We had a couple of conversations before that.

But that appears not to be true.

Oliver OConnell was watching.

Joe Sommerlad25 March 2021 10:45

The president looks likely to run for two terms after all, according to one of his advisers, despite campaigning on being a "transitional" president and wresting power away from Donald Trump with the aim of handing it over to a younger successor.

On the campaign trail in March 2020, Biden said: Look, I view myself as a bridge, not as anything else. Theres an entire generation of leaders you saw stand behind me. They are the future of this country.

That bridge now appears to have been extended.

One longtime adviser was asked byThe Hill whether the president had had second thoughts about the duration of his tenure and answered: I dont think theres any reason to say that he wont.

This is particlarly good news for comedy legend Dana Carvey, who has just perfected his Biden impersonation and debuted it on Stephen Colberts chat show.

Gustaf Kilander has more on the prospect of Biden running again in 2024 at the age of 81.

Joe Sommerlad25 March 2021 11:15

The Texas senator and Cancun holidaymaker has sneered at Joe Biden tasking Kamala Harris with tackling the immigration crisis at the US-Mexico border, picking up on a almost two-year-old tweet to challenge her to allow the media to film the empty cages when children have been released from US Custom and Border Protection facilities.

Cruzs attack is part of a predictable bad faith attack from Republicans calling for greater transparency from the administration on temporary containment facilities - as though the zero tolerance policies of Donald Trump never happened.

Doucy Ducey, Arizonas governor, has meanwhile called her the worst possible choice to take on the situation.

Joe Sommerlad25 March 2021 11:45

Another Trumpista with a conveniently short memory is the ex-presidents former press secretary, now a pundit at Fox News, who was accused of lying several times at the podium during her White House tenure despite overtly promising the lobby she would never do so.

Here she is with the bare-faced cheek to attack Biden for a lack of transparency ahead of his press conference.

Joe Sommerlad25 March 2021 12:05

Jen Psaki said during her daily briefing on Wednesday that the employees lost their jobs after a review that also raised other security issues.

She added that Biden had not stepped in to prevent the firings over admissions of past drug use because, although decriminalised in some states, cannabis remains illegal federally.

What we tried to do as an administration was work with the security service who actually make these determinations about the suitability for serving in government, Psaki said.

In the past, and I served in the Obama-Biden administration when the rules were actually far more stringent, so that is not about anyones personal point of view it is about working through the process and the history and modernising it and taking steps to address the fact that marijuana is legal in a number of states across the country but it is still illegal federally, right? We know that.

Joe Sommerlad25 March 2021 12:35

The US Department of Agriculture has announced the end of a Trump-era policy that could have stripped federal food benefits from over a million people during the pandemic by imposing stricter working requirements on those reliant on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Programme (SNAP).

A federal court allowed new agriculture secretary Tom Vilsack to withdraw the preceding administrations appeal against an earlier ruling blocking the policy change.

We are pleased to finally put to rest a policy that would have restricted the ability of states to provide nutrition assistance to able-bodied adults without dependents (ABAWDs) during times of high unemployment, Vilsack said in a statement.

The rule would have penalised individuals who were unable to find consistent income, when many low-wage jobs have variable hours, and limited to no sick leave.

Groups with typically higher unemployment, including rural Americans, Black, Indigenous, Hispanic and People of Color, and those with less than a high school education would have been disproportionately harmed by this cruel policy.

The move was applauded by his colleagues.

Joe Sommerlad25 March 2021 13:05

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Biden press conference: President stirs controversy on border, China and Trump and vows to run in 2024 - The Independent

Judge: ‘One-Party Control Of Media Is A Threat To A Viable Democracy’ – The Federalist

The control of major media by one political party is a dangerous threat to the country, a federal judge warned in a blistering dissent that called for courts to revisit libel laws that generally protect the press from being held liable for their reporting.

It should be borne in mind that the first step taken by any potential authoritarian or dictatorial regime is to gain control of communications, particularly the delivery of news, wrote Judge Laurence Silberman of the D.C. Circuit for the Court of Appeals. It is fair to conclude, therefore, that one-party control of the press and media is a threat to a viable democracy.

Silberman argued that its time for courts to revisit New York Times v. Sullivan, which has shaped press law in favor of media outlets for more than five decades. The New York Times and the Washington Post are virtually Democratic Party broadsheets. And the news section of The Wall Street Journal leans in the same direction, Judge Silberman wrote in his March 19 dissent.

He said that orientation also controls the Associated Press and most large papers in the country, including the Los Angeles Times, Miami Herald, and Boston Globe. Nearly all televisionnetwork and cableis a Democratic Party trumpet, Judge Silberman added.

Silicon Valley also has enormous influence over the distribution of news and it similarly filters news delivery in ways favorable to the Democratic Party, wrote Judge Silberman, highlighting the shocking suppression of stories about Joe Biden and his family when he was running for president.

In that case, Twitter and Facebook censored media outlets that reported accurately about the Biden familys dealing with foreign entities. Twitter suspended users, including sitting White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, for merely sharing accurate information, and prevented people from sharing the information privately on its platform. Facebook said it would censor coverage of the Biden family corruption pending a fact-check, an unprecedented privilege given to Biden in the closing days of one of the closest presidential elections in history.

Only a few major media outlets are not controlled by the left, Silberman noted, citing Fox News, where this reporter is a contributor, the New York Post, and The Wall Street Journal. It should be sobering for those concerned about news bias that these institutions are controlled by a single man and his son. Will a lone holdout remain in what is otherwise a frighteningly orthodox media culture? After all, there are serious efforts to muzzle Fox News, he wrote. CNN hosts and other leftist activsts are currently on a campaign to deplatform their rival.

Admittedly, a number of Foxs commentators lean as far to the right as the commentators and reporters of the mainstream outlets lean to the left, Silberman wrote in a footnote, in a dig at reporters inserting their extreme partisan views into news stories.

A New York Supreme Court judge last week ruled against The New York Times effort to get a defamation suit against it dismissed. The Times had said that its reporters were inserting opinion into news stories, and that opinions are not actionable for defamation. The argument didnt hold sway with the judge, who critiqued the blending of news and opinion in purported news stories.

Another footnote critiqued the tepid response of some to big techs behavior censoring conservative speech. Silberman called repression of political speech in large institutions with market power fundamentally un-American.

Some emphasize these companies are private and therefore not subject to the First Amendment. Yeteven if correct it is not an adequate excuse for big techs bias. The First Amendment is more than just a legal provision: It embodies the most important value of American Democracy. Repression of political speech by large institutions with market power therefore isI say this advisedlyfundamentally un-American, Silberman wrote.

He then cited Tim Grosecloses book, Left Turn: How Liberal Media Bias Distorts the American Mind, which empirically argued that media bias even a decade ago gave Democrat candidates an 8-10 point advantage. And now, a decade after this books publication, the press and media do not even pretend to be neutral news services. Silberman noted.

The First Amendment guarantees a free press to foster a vibrant trade in ideas. But a biased press can distort the marketplace. And when the media has proven its willingnessif not eagernessto so distort, it is a profound mistake to stand by unjustified legal rules that serve only to enhance the press power, Silberman concluded.

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Judge: 'One-Party Control Of Media Is A Threat To A Viable Democracy' - The Federalist