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Russia“s war on Ukraine latest news: Russian troops pull back near Kherson

2022-12-01T14:49:31Z

Fears that the Ukraine war could spill over its borders and escalate into a broader conflict eased on Wednesday, as NATO and Poland said it seemed likely a missile that struck a Polish village was a stray from Ukraine. Kyiv, which has blamed Russia, demanded access to the site. Lucy Fielder has more.

Ukraine’s military said Russia had pulled some troops from towns on the opposite bank of the Dnipro River from Kherson city, the first official Ukrainian report of a Russian withdrawal on what is now the main front line in the south..

* Spain has stepped up security at public and diplomatic buildings after a spate of letter bombs, including one sent to Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and another to the Ukrainian embassy in Madrid, where an official suffered minor injuries.

* Air raid alerts were issued across all of Ukraine following warnings by Ukrainian officials that Russia was preparing a new wave of missile and drone strikes. “An overall air raid alert is in place in Ukraine. Go to shelters,” country’s border service wrote on Telegram messaging app.

* Ukraine’s military said it had found fragments of Russian-fired nuclear-capable missiles with dud warheads in west Ukraine, and that their apparent purpose was to distract air defences.

* The recently liberated Ukrainian city of Kherson has lost its power supply after heavy shelling by Russian forces, the regional governor said.

* European Union governments tentatively agreed on a $60 a barrel price cap on Russian seaborne oil, with an adjustment mechanism to keep the cap at 5% below the market price, an EU diplomat said.

* Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on that big problems had accumulated in the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), accusing the West of spurning the chance to make it a real bridge with Russia after the Cold War.

* Lavrov said that discussions with Washington about potential prisoner exchanges were being conducted by the two countries’ intelligence services, and that he hoped they would be successful.

* The European Union needs patience as it sanctions Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, as most measures will only have an impact in the medium and long term, Lithuania’s prime minister said in an interview at  the  Reuters NEXT conference.

* Switzerland has frozen financial assets worth 7.5 billion Swiss francs ($7.94 billion) as of Nov. 25 under sanctions against Russians to punish Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine, the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) said.

* Russia said the German parliament’s move to recognise the 1932-33 famine in Ukraine as a Soviet-imposed genocide was an anti-Russian provocation and an attempt by Germany to whitewash its Nazi past.

* Ukraine sacked a top engineer at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, accusing him of collaborating with Russian forces, and urged other Ukrainian staff at the plant to remain loyal to Kyiv.

* Russia must withdraw its heavy weapons and military personnel from the Zaporizhzhia plant if the U.N. atomic watchdog’s efforts to create a protection zone are to succeed, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said.

* In a grim sign of the energy crisis caused by Russian attacks on Ukraine’s electricity grid, nine people have been killed in fires over the past 24 hours as Ukrainians resorted to emergency generators, candles and gas cylinders in violation of safety rules to try to heat their homes after power outages.

* “Remember one thing – the Russians are afraid. And they are very cold and no one will help them, because they do not have popular support,” – Andriy Yermak, chief of Ukrainian presidential staff.

Related Galleries:

Ukrainian servicemen fire a mortar on a front line, as Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues, in Donetsk region, Ukraine, in this handout image released November 20, 2022. Iryna Rybakova/Press Service of the 93rd Independent Kholodnyi Yar Mechanized Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces/Handout via REUTERS

A view shows the city without electricity after critical civil infrastructure was hit by Russian missile attacks, amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine November 23, 2022. REUTERS/Vladyslav Sodel/File Photo

Rescuers work at a site of a residential building destroyed by a Russian missile attack, as Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues, in the town of Vyshhorod, near Kyiv, Ukraine, November 23, 2022. REUTERS/Vladyslav Musiienko

Toys are placed near the cross in memory of victims of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 plane crash in the village of Rozsypne in Donetsk region, Ukraine March 9, 2020. REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg speaks during a news conference at the Alliance’s headquarters in Brussels, Belgium November 25, 2022. REUTERS/Johanna Geron
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Donald Trump’s money trail just got even uglier

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Another day, another scandal-at least in the world of Donald Trump. His tax returns are set to be released Friday by the House Ways and Means Committee. This should be interesting. Most of Trump’s schemes-like the one for which his company was recently found guilty-center around securing loans he can’t repay and decreasing his taxes. According to Business Insider, Trump declared negative income in 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2020. The total Trump paid for 2016 and 2017 was $1,500. Rubbing salt into the proverbial wound, BI reported that he and his wife Melania paid zero income tax in 2020 and claimed a refund of $5.47 million. A review of the report prepared by the Joint Committee on Taxation to the House Ways and Means Committee dated December 15, 2022, tells the story.

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In 2015, Trump claimed a refund of $707,123 after paying $28,049. Under his filing for DJT Holdings, Trump claimed that he lost $28,248,588 and that he made charitable contributions totaling $21,081,511. The 2015 tax return is the only return that the IRS was auditing, so Trump lied about that as well. It gets better. In 2016, Trump and his wife filed for an extension, paying $1,000,000 with his extension request, which ended in a refund of $402,718, most of which he applied to 2017. His business income for that year for DJT Holdings was negative $64,497,128. The very next year, Trump paid $4,200,000 to file an extension, and in 2018, the figure was $7,500,000. He then shows overpayments for 2017 and 2018 of $4,431,776 and $9,980,925, respectively. Come on. There is no way this man didn’t owe taxes on this kind of money. The man is a bona fide crook and tax cheat, but all of that will soon be made public. No wonder he didn’t want his taxes made public. If most of us had to pay back $1,000, it could stand to ruin us, but here’s this man, who claims to be worth millions, getting refunds that are larger than most of us make in a lifetime. Trump’s taxes aren’t his only problem.


The media has been buzzing about an alleged bribery scheme that allowed Dwight and Steve Hammond to secure pardons from Trump. The scheme was cooked up by real estate developer Mike Ingram, who made a $10,000 donation to America First Action, Inc. the day after he wrote to Trump Interior Department arguing for the Hammonds’ pardons. Ingram then made another $10,000 donation, which the House Natural Resources Committee is investigating as part of a potential criminal action surrounding the Villages at Vigneto in Arizona. That case involves the donation of almost a quarter million dollars to the Trump Victory Fund and the Republican National Committee. These donations during the time frame in which they were made were not a coincidence. It’s just not possible. When you add Donald Trump to the mix, you can count on something untoward going on.

Donald Trump’s reign of terror has almost neared its end, and the country will be much better off with him out of the picture. Here’s to a happy 2023 that includes Trump on trial for his criminal misdeeds.

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Kyiv residents told to head to air raid shelters as sirens wail across city

2022-12-30T01:26:03Z

Residents of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv were urged to head to air raid shelters early on Friday as sirens wailed across the city, a day after Russia carried out the biggest aerial assault since it started the war in February.

Shortly after 2.00 a.m. Kyiv’s city government issued an alert on its Telegram messaging app channel about the air raid sirens and called on residents to proceed to shelters.

Olekskiy Kuleba, governor of Kyiv region, said on Telegram that an “attack by drones” was under way.

A Reuters witness 20 km (12 miles) south of Kyiv heard several explosions and the sound of anti-aircraft fire.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, in a video address on Thursday night, said air commands in central, southern, eastern and western Ukraine repelled 54 Russian missiles and 11 drones on Thursday.

Zelenskiy acknowledged that most regions were suffering power outages. The areas where loss of power was “especially difficult” included the capital Kyiv, Odesa and Kherson in the south and surrounding regions, and the region around Lviv near the western border with Poland, Zelenskiy said.

“But this is nothing compared with what could have happened if it were not for our heroic anti-aircraft troops and air defence,” he said.

Reuters footage on Thursday showed emergency workers searching through the smouldering wreckage of residential homes in Kyiv destroyed by a blast and smoke trails of missiles in the sky. Officials had earlier said more than 120 missiles were fired during Thursday’s assault.

More than 18 residential buildings and 10 critical infrastructure installations were destroyed in the latest attacks, the defence ministry said in a statement.

Waves of Russian air strikes in recent months targeting energy infrastructure have left millions without power and heating in often freezing temperatures.

Ukraine’s smaller armed forces have scored several battlefield victories against the invading Russian troops but for months Zelenskiy has asked Western countries for additional help with air defence. To that end, the United States last week announced nearly $2 billion in more military aid, including the Patriot Air Defense System, which offers protection against aircraft, cruise and ballistic missiles.

Moscow has repeatedly denied targeting civilians, but Ukraine says its daily bombardment is destroying cities, towns, and the country’s power, medical and other infrastructure.

Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 in what President Vladimir Putin calls a “special military operation” against what it perceives as threats to its security. Ukraine and its Western allies have denounced Russia’s actions as an imperialist-style land grab and imposed sanctions to try to disrupt the campaign.

The most intense fighting is still in the eastern frontline towns of Bakhmut and Soledar in Donetsk province, one of four regions Russia claimed to have annexed in September. The others are Luhansk in the east, and Kherson and Zaporizhzhia in the south.

Russian forces do not fully control any of the four regions, although the Kremlin has said they are making progress in one of the main stated goals of “demilitarising” Ukraine.

Russia is looking for a battlefield victory in eastern Ukraine and has been trying to capture Bakhmut for months.

Russia “has not abandoned the insane idea of capturing the Donetsk region,” Zelenskiy said on Thursday night.

Ukraine’s troops have held on in Donetsk, which together with Luhansk makes up Russian-speaking Donbas, an industrial heartland and part of which was seized by Russia-backed separatists in 2014. The same year, Russia also annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine.

Related Galleries:

A rescuer rests at a site of a residential house damaged during a Russian missile strike, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine December 29, 2022. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko

Rescuers work at a site of private houses heavily damaged by a Russian missile strike, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, in this handout picture released December 29, 2022. Press service of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine/Handout via REUTERS

A view of a house destroyed by a Russian missile strike, as Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues, in Kyiv, Ukraine December 29, 2022. REUTERS/Vladyslav Musiienko

Rescuers work at a site of a residential house damaged during a Russian missile strike, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine December 29, 2022. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko

A view of a house destroyed by a Russian missile strike, as Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues, in Kyiv, Ukraine December 29, 2022. REUTERS/Vladyslav Musiienko

Ukrainian Border Guards receive drawings from school children, among donations of food and gifts from their families and people in general, as Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues, in Sloviansk, Ukraine, December 29, 2022. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne

Local resident Klavdia, 82, stands near her house which was destroyed by a Russian military strike, as Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues, in Kherson, Ukraine December 29, 2022. REUTERS/Oleksandr Ratushniak
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Exclusive: U.S. considers airline wastewater testing as COVID surges in China

2022-12-30T01:38:29Z

Travellers walk with their luggage at Beijing Capital International Airport, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Beijing, China December 27, 2022. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo

As COVID-19 infections surge in China, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering sampling wastewater taken from international aircraft to track any emerging new variants, the agency told Reuters.

Such a policy would offer a better solution to tracking the virus and slowing its entry into the United States than new travel restrictions announced this week by the U.S. and other countries, which require mandatory negative COVID tests for travelers from China, three infectious disease experts told Reuters.

Travel restrictions, such as mandatory testing, have so far failed to significantly curb the spread of COVID and function largely as optics, said Dr. Michael Osterholm, an infectious disease expert at the University of Minnesota.

“They seem to be essential from a political standpoint. I think each government feels like they will be accused of not doing enough to protect their citizens if they don’t do these,” he said.

The United States this week also expanded its voluntary genomic sequencing program at airports, adding Seattle and Los Angeles to the program. That brings the total number of airports gathering information from positive tests to seven.

But experts said that may not provide a meaningful sample size.

A better solution would be testing wastewater from airlines, which would offer a clearer picture of how the virus is mutating, given China’s lack of data transparency, said Dr Eric Topol, a genomics expert and director of the Scripps Research Translational Institute in La Jolla, California.

Getting wastewater off planes from China “would be a very good tactic,” Topol said, adding that it’s important that the United States upgrade its surveillance tactics “because of China being so unwilling to share its genomic data.”

China has said criticism of its COVID statistics is groundless, and downplayed the risk of new variants, saying it expects mutations to be more infectious but less severe. Still, doubts over official Chinese data have prompted many places, including the United States, Italy and Japan, to impose new testing rules on Chinese visitors as Beijing lifted travel controls.

Airplane wastewater analysis is among several options the CDC is considering to help slow the introduction of new variants into the United States from other countries, CDC spokeswoman Kristen Nordlund said in an email.

The agency is grappling with a lack of transparency about COVID in China after the country of 1.4 billion people abruptly lifted strict COVID lockdowns and testing policies, unleashing the virus into an undervaccinated and previously unexposed population.

“Previous COVID-19 wastewater surveillance has shown to be a valuable tool and airplane wastewater surveillance could potentially be an option,” she wrote.

French researchers reported in July that airplane wastewater tests showed requiring negative COVID tests before international flights does not protect countries from the spread of new variants. They found the Omicron variant in wastewater from two commercial airplanes that flew from Ethiopia to France in December 2021 even though passengers had been required to take COVID tests before boarding.

California researchers reported in July that sampling of community wastewater in San Diego detected the presence of the Alpha, Delta, Epsilon and Omicron variants up to 14 days before they started showing up on nasal swabs.

Osterholm and others said mandatory testing before travel to the United States is unlikely to keep new variants out of the country.

“Border closures or border testing really makes very little difference. Maybe it slows it down by a few days,” he said, because the virus is likely to spread worldwide, and could infect people in Europe or elsewhere who may then bring it to the United States.

David Dowdy, an infectious disease epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said increasing genomic surveillance is important, and wastewater sampling could be helpful, but the testing takes time.

“I think we should be cautious in how much we expect those data will be able to truly inform our ability to respond,” he said.

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House Republicans descend into total chaos

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The Republican party is not good at much. From recruiting candidates to winning elections, the fact is the GOP sucks and sucks bigtime. But there is one thing the GOP has been good at in the past. Yes, it’s true! That is the game of political theater. The GOP has been great at showing fake outrage over fake headlines attached to fake news stories, which they have done rather well.

Fake outrage is the GOP’s bread and butter – or at least it USED to be. I say this because reports are Republicans are even flopping at that these days. The poor GOP. They just can’t get anything right, can they? MSNBC columnist Hayes Brown says the GOP is now existing in “pure chaos” and that they are even failing at political theater.

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“Democrats must feel good knowing that not only is the GOP split over policy, it’s also failing at what is usually the party’s bread and butter: political theater.” Ah — political theater, fake outrage, or my favorite — guerrilla theater–it seems the GOP cannot even get THAT right.


Brown argues that the GOP is falling in on itself — set to take over the house during a time of massive amounts of petty republican squabbles and political infighting not seen before in the not-so-grand old party. “Chaos.”

Greene, Boebert, McCarthy, and now the stigma of liar George Santos. It’s like someone pressed a button, and all the ills and woes of the GOP came crawling out from inside them to turn into one massive, unruly black cloud that they now cannot get away from. So in these last few days, before a new year hits us, let’s take a moment to reflect on the GOP’s woes and smile and say they brought it all on themselves.

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Biden signs $1.7 trillion bill funding government operations

KINGSHILL, U.S. Virgin Islands (AP) — President Joe Biden on Thursday signed a $1.7 trillion spending bill that will keep the federal government operating through the end of the federal budget year in September 2023, and provide tens of billions of dollars in new aid to Ukraine for its fight against the Russian military.

Biden had until late Friday to sign the bill to avoid a partial government shutdown.

The Democratic-controlled House passed the bill 225-201, mostly along party lines, just before Christmas. The House vote came a day after the Senate, also led by Democrats, voted 68-29 to pass the bill with significantly more Republican support.

Biden had said passage was proof that Republicans and Democrats can work together.

Rep. Kevin McCarthy, the House Republican leader who hopes to become speaker when a new session Congress opens on Jan. 3, argued during floor debate that the bill spends too much and does too little to curb illegal immigration and the flow of fentanyl into the U.S. from Mexico.

“This is a monstrosity that is one of the most shameful acts I’ve ever seen in this body,” McCarthy said of the legislation.

McCarthy is appealing for support from staunch conservatives in the GOP caucus, who have largely blasted the bill for its size and scope. Republicans will have a narrow House majority come Jan. 3 and several conservative members have vowed not to vote for McCarthy to become speaker.

The funding bill includes a roughly 6% increase in spending for domestic initiatives, to $772.5 billion. Spending on defense programs will increase by about 10%, to $858 billion.

Passage was achieved hours before financing for federal agencies was set to expire. Lawmakers had approved two short-term spending measures to keep the government operating, and a third, funding the government through Dec. 30, passed last Friday. Biden signed it to ensure services would continue until Congress sent him the full-year measure, called an omnibus bill.

The massive bill, which topped out at more than 4,000 pages, wraps together 12 appropriations bills, aid to Ukraine and disaster relief for communities recovering from natural disasters. It also contains scores of policy changes that lawmakers worked to include in the final major bill considered by that session of Congress.

Lawmakers provided roughly $45 billion for Ukraine and NATO allies, more than even Biden had requested, an acknowledgment that future rounds of funding are not guaranteed when Republicans take control of the House next week following the party’s gains in the midterm elections.

Though support for Ukraine aid has largely been bipartisan, some House Republicans have opposed the spending and argued that the money would be better spent on priorities in the United States.

McCarthy has warned that Republicans will not write a “blank check” for Ukraine in the future.

The bill also includes about $40 billion in emergency spending, mostly to help communities across the U.S. as they recover from drought, hurricanes and other natural disasters.

Biden signed the bill Thursday in the U.S. Virgin Islands, where he is spending time with his wife, Jill, and other family members on the island of St. Croix. The Bidens are staying at the home of friends Bill and Connie Neville, the White House said. Bill Neville owns US Viking, maker of ENPS, a news production software system that is sold by The Associated Press.

Also in the bill are scores of policy changes that are largely unrelated to spending, but lawmakers worked furiously behind the scenes to get the added to the bill, which was the final piece of legislation that came out of that session of Congress. Otherwise, lawmakers sponsoring these changes would have had to start from scratch next year in a politically divided Congress in which Republicans will return to the majority in the House and Democrats will continue to control the Senate.

One of the most notable examples was a historic revision to federal election law to prevent a future president or presidential candidate from trying to overturn an election.

The bipartisan overhaul of the Electoral Count Act is a direct response to-then President Donald Trump’s efforts to persuade Republican lawmakers and then-Vice President Mike Pence to object to the certification of Biden’s victory on Jan. 6, 2021, the day of the Trump-inspired insurrection at the Capitol.

Among the spending increases Democrats emphasized: a $500 increase in the maximum size of Pell grants for low-income college students, a $100 million increase in block grants to states for substance abuse prevention and treatment programs, a 22% increase in spending on veterans’ medical care and $3.7 billion in emergency relief to farmers and ranchers hit by natural disasters.

The bill also provides roughly $15.3 billion for more than 7,200 projects that lawmakers sought for their home states and districts. Under revamped rules for community project funding, also referred to as earmarks, lawmakers must post their requests online and attest they have no financial interest in the projects. Still, many fiscal conservatives criticize the earmarking as leading to unnecessary spending.

___

Associated Press writer Kevin Freking in Washington contributed to this report.

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A Florida crypto entrepreneur bragged in the middle of his January 6 testimony about his ‘legs day’ personal record at the gym

Proud BoysProud Boys attend a pro-Trump rally at Freedom Plaza, Washington DC on December 12, 2020.

Luis M. Alvarez/AP Photos

  • Crypto advocate Samuel Armes had an eventful interview with the January 6 committee in July 2022.
  • While being asked about a key riot planning document, he ended up on the floor with a leg cramp.
  • Before speaking about his ties to the document, he bragged about how much weight he had squatted.

A Florida cryptocurrency advocate struggled to maintain his composure during questioning over a planning document prosecutors have alleged was tied to the Proud Boys and their efforts in the January 6. insurrection.

Samuel Armes, the founder of the Florida Blockchain Business Association, told the January 6 committee in a July 2022 interview that his name is not attached to a document titled “1776 returns,” which was in the possession of Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio ahead of the insurrection. Prosecutors have alleged in the Proud Boys’ upcoming trial on seditious conspiracy charges that the document was circulated by the group in December 2021.

The members of the group have pleaded not guilty and have denied the charges.

In the middle of being grilled about who authored the document, Armes ended up on the floor with a leg cramp and then bragged about how much weight he had just lifted.

“Sorry, I’m cramping,” Armes told Rep. Zoe Lofgren during the virtual interview, per the transcript released on December 23.

“He’s on the floor. Charley horse. Charley horse,” Anessa Santos, Armes’ lawyer, responds. “Just exhale.”

According to the transcript, Armes then took the opportunity to shift the conversation to his gym routine.

“I’m good. I just did leg day today, and I maxed out my PR squats,” Armes said. “By the way, that PR was 425 pounds.”

“That will now be in the congressional Record, so that’s good,” an unnamed January 6 investigator responds.

Throughout the course of the interview, Armes confirmed that he had met with Tarrio but denied authoring “1776 Returns,” a 9-page right-wing planning document tied to the January 6 riot, which included plans to occupy congressional offices, the Supreme Court, and CNN. The goal, according to the document, was to “fill the buildings with patriots and communicate our demands,” and to demand a re-do of the 2020 election with “Paper Ballots only.” 

Armes said that an associate of his in the crypto world, Erika Flores, and Tarrio, who knew each other, were “trying to get me to help him figure out a way to make money off of selling T-shirts online.”

Flores did not respond to Insider’s request for comment.

“And they wanted me to, like, brainstorm with them on, like, T-shirt ideas and setting up some kind of warehouse in Miami to help underserved kids,” Armes said.

He added that he drafted his own 3- to 5-page document, which he had shared with Flores, claiming that he used his political science background to play out “war gaming” scenarios in case there was not a peaceful transition between administrations. He acknowledged in the interview with the committee that elements of his plan were used in the lengthier “1776 returns” document he was shown.

“I ended up sharing it with her on a Google Drive,” he told the committee, referring to Flores. “And after that, I thought nothing of it. I would’ve never imagined that it turned into the document that I was shown last week, would’ve had zero clue, zero idea. It’s horrific for me to even imagine that something that I would’ve written would’ve been used to source this kind of, like — I guess call it ‘terroristic document.'”

Armes’ attorney did not immediately respond to Insider’s requests for comment. An attorney for Tarrio did not return Insider’s request for comment. 

Read the original article on Business Insider
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Donald Trump’s nonstop bad news

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In concluding the last of its business, the House select committee investigating the January 6 attack on the US Capitol released a final tranche of evidentiary materials. These materials included transcripts of interviews with the allies of Donald Trump. One of the transcripts included testimony from Trump’s director of personnel, Johnny McEntee.

McEntee told the committee that Trump was considering “blanket pardons” for rioters who stormed the Capitol. This contradicts Trump’s December 26 video rant, posted to “Truth” Social, where he claimed that some of the rioters got out of hand despite the “decisive action” Trump claimed he took to quell any possible violence.

Clearly Trump wouldn’t have considered pardoning any rioters at all if he didn’t think he himself was implicated in the violence and that there was a potential that the violent rioters could eventually testify against him. This is one of the many examples of Trump’s “mens rea,” or “guilty mind.” It also would have been highly inconsistent for Trump to consider pardoning anyone for a crime he thought was being committed against his wishes.

This is also an example of the legion of problems Trump faces as a direct result of the fact that he is constantly shooting off his big, stupid mouth. Any criminal defence lawyer will tell you that one of the worst things a potential defendant can do is to talk to the press. Trump constantly talks to the press — though admittedly the radical MAGA friendly press — and anyone else who will listen to him. His public statements are invariably recorded, and those recordings can and will be used against him in a court of law.

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Another thing that Trump has going against him is the huge number of people who have testified about him. These are not Democrats or partisan people who hate Trump, these are former White House employees straight out of Trump World who are giving under oath testimony that is extremely damaging to the former president.


The year 2023 is shaping up to be a horrible one for Trump. It seems that every week, indeed, every day, worse and worse bad news about him is revealed. The bad news is almost always spectacularly and unrelentingly bad, and there seems no end to it.

It’s wonderful finally to see Trump getting the brunt of the bad news when for so many years he was the cause of most of it for us. Now he knows what it feels like, and I hope it tortures him to madness. And, as ever, ladies and gentlemen, brothers and sisters, comrades and friends, stay safe.

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Vivienne Westwood, Influential Fashion Trailblazer, Dies at 81

(LONDON) — Vivienne Westwood, an influential fashion maverick who played a key role in the punk movement, died Thursday at 81.

Westwood’s eponymous fashion house announced her death on social media platforms, saying she died peacefully. A cause was not disclosed.

“Vivienne continued to do the things she loved, up until the last moment, designing, working on her art, writing her book, and changing the world for the better,” the statement said.

Westwood’s fashion career began in the 1970s when her radical approach to urban street style took the world by storm. But she went on to enjoy a long career highlighted by a string of triumphant runway shows and museum exhibitions.

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The name Westwood became synonymous with style and attitude even as she shifted focus from year to year, her range vast and her work never predictable.

As her stature grew, she seemed to transcend fashion. The young woman who had scorned the British establishment eventually became one of its leading lights, even as she kept her hair dyed that trademark bright shade of orange.

Andrew Bolton, curator of The Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of New York, said Westwood and Sex Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren — her onetime partners — “gave the punk movement a look, a style, and it was so radical it broke from anything in the past.”

“The ripped shirts, the safety pins, the provocative slogans,” Bolton said. “She introduced postmodernism. It was so influential from the mid-70s. The punk movement has never dissipated — it’s become part of our fashion vocabulary. It’s mainstream now.”

Westwood’s long career was full of contradictions: She was a lifelong rebel honored several times by Queen Elizabeth II. She dressed like a teenager even in her 60s and became an outspoken advocate of fighting climate change, warning of planetary doom.

In her punk days, Westwood’s clothes were often intentionally shocking: T-shirts decorated with drawings of naked boys and “bondage pants” with sadomasochistic overtones were standard fare in her popular London shops. But Westwood was able to transition from punk to haute couture without missing a beat, keeping her career going without stooping to self-caricature.

“She was always trying to reinvent fashion. Her work is provocative, it’s transgressive. It’s very much rooted in the English tradition of pastiche and irony and satire. She is very proud of her Englishness, and still she sends it up,” Bolton said.

One of those contentious designs featured a swastika, an inverted image of Jesus Christ on the cross and the word “Destroy.” In an autobiography written with Ian Kelly, she said it was meant as part of a statement against politicians torturing people, citing Chile’s Augusto Pinochet. When asked if she regretted the swastika in a 2009 interview with Time magazine, Westwood said no.

“I don’t, because we were just saying to the older generation, ‘We don’t accept your values or your taboos, and you’re all fascists,’” she responded.

She approached her work with gusto in her early years, but later seemed to tire of the clamor and buzz. After decades of designing, she sometimes spoke wistfully of moving beyond fashion so she could concentrate on environmental matters and educational projects.

“Fashion can be so boring,” she told The Associated Press after unveiling one of her new collections at a 2010 show. “I’m trying to find something else to do.”

Her runway shows were always the most chic events, drawing stars from the glittery world of film, music, and television who wanted to bask in Westwood’s reflected glory. But still she spoke out against consumerism and conspicuous consumption, even urging people not to buy her expensive, beautifully made clothes.

“I just tell people, stop buying clothes,” she said. “Why not protect this gift of life while we have it? I don’t take the attitude that destruction is inevitable. Some of us would like to stop that and help people survive.”

Westwood’s activism extended to supporting Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, posing in a giant birdcage in 2020 to try to halt his extradition to the U.S. She even designed the dress Stella Moris wore when she married Assange this past March at a London prison.

Westwood was self-taught, with no formal fashion training. She told Marie Claire magazine that she learned how to make her own clothes as a teenager by following patterns. When she wanted to sell 1950s-style clothes at her first shop, she found old clothes in markets and took them apart to understand the cut and construction.

Westwood was born in the Derbyshire village of Glossop on April 8, 1941. Her family moved to London in 1957 and she attended art school for one term.

She met McLaren in the 1960s while working as a primary school teacher after separating from her first husband, Derek Westwood. She and McLaren opened a small shop in Chelsea in 1971, the tail end of the “Swinging London” era ushered in by the Beatles and the Rolling Stones.

The shop changed its name and focus several times, operating as “SEX” — Westwood and McLaren were fined in 1975 for an “indecent exhibition” there — and “World’s End” and “Seditionaries.”

Among the workers at their shop was Sex Pistols bassist Glen Matlock, who called Westwood “a one off, driven, single minded, talented lady” in a statement to The Associated Press.

He said it was a privilege “to have rubbed shoulders with her in the mid ’70s at what was the birth of punk and the worldwide waves it created that still continue to echo and resound today for the disaffected, hipper and wised up around the globe.”

“Vivienne is gone and the world is already a less interesting place,” tweeted Chrissie Hynde, the frontwoman of the Pretenders and another former employee.

Westwood moved into a fresh type of designing with her “Pirates” collection, exhibited in her first catwalk show in 1981. That breakthrough is credited with taking Westwood in a more traditional direction, showing her interest in incorporating historical British designs into contemporary clothes.

It was also an important step in an ongoing rapprochement between Westwood and the fashion world. The rebel eventually became one of its most celebrated stars, known for reinterpreting opulent dresses from the past and often finding inspiration in 18th century paintings.

But she still found ways to shock: Her Statue of Liberty corset in 1987 is remembered as the start of “underwear as outerwear” trend.

She eventually branched out into a range of business activities, including an alliance with Italian designer Giorgio Armani, and developed her ready-to-wear Red Label line, her more exclusive Gold Label line, a menswear collection and fragrances called Boudoir and Libertine. Westwood shops opened in New York, Hong Kong, Milan and several other major cities.

She was named designer of the year by the British Fashion Council in 1990 and 1991.

Her uneasy relationship with the British establishment is perhaps best exemplified by her 1992 trip to Buckingham Palace to receive an Order of the British Empire medal: She wore no underwear, and posed for photographers in a way that made that abundantly clear.

Apparently the queen was not offended: Westwood was invited back to receive the even more auspicious designation of Dame Commander of the British Empire — the female equivalent of a knighthood — in 2006.

Westwood is survived by her second husband, the Austrian-born designer Andreas Kronthaler who had a fashion line under her brand, and two sons.

The first, fashion photographer Ben Westwood, was her son with Derek Westwood. The second, Joe Corre — her son with McLaren — co-founded the upscale Agent Provocateur lingerie line and once burned what he said was a collection of punk memorabilia worth millions: “Punk was never, never meant to be nostalgic,” he said.

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Katz, a longtime correspondent for The Associated Press who died in 2020, was the principal writer of this obituary. AP journalist Nardos Haile contributed to this report from New York.