Friday, December 31, 2021

Betty White

Dec 31 (Reuters) - Comedic actress Betty White, who capped a career of more than 80 years by becoming America's geriatric sweetheart after Emmy-winning roles on television sitcoms "The Golden Girls" and "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," died on Friday, less than three weeks shy of her 100th birthday.

The agent, Jeff Witjas, told People magazine: "Even though Betty was about to be 100, I thought she would live forever." No cause was cited.

In a youth-driven entertainment industry where an actress over 40 faces career twilight, White was an anomaly who was a star in her 60s and a pop culture phenomenon in her 80s and 90s.

Playing on her eminent likability, White was still starring in a TV sitcom, "Hot in Cleveland," at age 92 until it was canceled in late 2014.

White said her longevity was a result of good health, good fortune and loving her work.

"It's incredible that I'm still in this business and that you are still putting up with me," White said in an appearance at the 2018 Emmy Awards ceremony, where she was honored for her long career. "It's incredible that you can stay in a career this long and still have people put up with you. I wish they did that at home."

White was not afraid to mock herself and throw out a joke about her sex life or a snarky crack that one would not expect from a sweet-smiling, white-haired elderly woman. She was frequently asked if, after such a long career, there was anything she still wanted to do and the standard response was "Robert Redford."

"She was great at defying expectation. She managed to grow very old and somehow, not old enough. We’ll miss you, Betty," former costar and friend Ryan Reynolds wrote in a Twitter post.

"Old age hasn’t diminished her," the New York Times wrote in 2013. "It has given her a second wind."

Minutes after news emerged of her death, U.S. President Joe Biden told reporters: "That's a shame. She was a lovely lady." His wife Jill Biden said: "Who didn't love Betty White? We're so sad about her death."

Betty Marion White was born on Jan. 17, 1922, in Oak Park, Illinois, and her family moved to Los Angeles during the Great Depression, where she attended Beverly Hills High School.

A DEBUT IN THE 1930s

White started her entertainment career in radio in the late 1930s and by 1939 had made her TV debut singing on an experimental channel in Los Angeles. After serving in the American Women's Voluntary Service, which helped the U.S. effort during World War Two, she was a regular on "Hollywood on Television," a daily five-hour live variety show, in 1949.

A few years later she became a pioneering woman in television by co-founding a production company and serving as a co-creator, producer and star of the 1950s sitcom "Life with Elizabeth."

Through the 1960s and early '70s White was seen regularly on television, hosting coverage of the annual Tournament of Rose Parade and appearing on game shows such as "Match Game" and "Password." She married "Password" host Allen Ludden, her third and final husband, in 1963.

White reached a new level of success on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," playing the host of a home-making television show, the snide, lusty Sue Ann Nivens, whose credo was "a woman who does a good job in the kitchen is sure to reap her rewards in other parts of the house." White won best-supporting actress Emmys for the role in 1975 and 1976.

She won another Emmy in 1986 for "The Golden Girls," a sitcom about four older women living together in Miami that featured an age demographic rarely highlighted on American television. White also was nominated for an Emmy six other times for her portrayal of the widowed Rose Nylund, a sweet, naive and ditzy Midwesterner, on the show, which ran from 1985 to 1992 and was one of the top-rated series of its time.

After a less successful sequel to "The Golden Girls" came a series of small movie parts, talk-show appearances and one-off television roles, including one that won her an Emmy for a guest appearance on "The John Larroquette Show."

By 2009 she was becoming ubiquitous with more frequent television appearances and a role in the Sandra Bullock film "The Proposal." She starred in a popular Snickers candy commercial that aired during the Super Bowl, taking a brutal hit in a mud puddle in a football game.

A young fan started a Facebook campaign to have White host "Saturday Night Live" and she ended up appearing in every sketch on the show and winning still another Emmy for it.

The Associated Press voted her entertainer of the year in 2010 and a 2011 Reuters/Ipsos poll found that White, then 89, was the most popular and trusted celebrity in America with an 86% favorability rating.

White's witty and brassy demeanor came in handy as host of "Betty White's Off Their Rockers," a hidden-camera show in which elderly actors pulled pranks on younger people.

"Who would ever dream that I would not only be this healthy, but still be invited to work?" White said in a 2015 interview with Oprah Winfrey.

White, who had no children, worked for animal causes. She once turned down a role in the movie "As Good as It Gets" because of a scene in which a dog was thrown in a garbage chute.

She looked forward to her milestone birthday, writing on Twitter just three days before her death, "My 100th birthday ... I cannot believe it is coming up."

Friday, November 26, 2021

Bob Jones

Bob Jones, a hard-charging newspaper and television journalist who was a familiar face in TV news for over two decades in Hawaii, died at his Diamond Head home Monday.

The cause of death was heart failure, according to his wife, Denby Fawcett. He was 85.

“He will be missed. He was definitely one of a kind,” said Jim Manke, former assignment editor and news director at KGMB, where Jones was a top reporter and news anchor.

In recent years Jones was probably best known for his highly opinionated weekly columns at MidWeek and later his internet blog, which he steadfastly worked on until the day he died.

“His body was giving out, but his mind was very strong,” Fawcett said Wednesday.

Jones, originally from Ohio, began his journalism career as a police reporter for the St. Petersburg Times in Florida. Then, after serving a three-year European tour in the Air Force, he worked at newspapers in Europe before landing back in the states at the Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal.

Jones moved to Hawaii in 1963 to work for The Honolulu Advertiser, first as a general assignment reporter and then as its military editor.

He would make his mark reporting on the Vietnam War. He accompanied the Kaneohe 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines when they went into Phu Bai, Vietnam, in 1964. A year later he was embedded with the 25th Infantry Division, which had units in Cu Chi and Pleiku.

On his return to Hawaii, Jones was hired by KGMB and was later nabbed as a correspondent in Vietnam and Laos by NBC News.

When he came back to Honolulu, Jones anchored the news at KGMB until 1994. Along the way, he helped create some significant news shows and documentaries and won several Emmy awards and a Peabody Award.

“He was the consummate journalist,” former KGMB colleague Chuck Parker said. “He was always looking for a story. It didn’t matter what it was or where it was. And he was a skilled writer. He could take mundane copy and make it sing.”

Former KGMB reporter Leslie Wilcox described Jones as Hawaii’s top journalist in the golden age of television.

“Those were the days before cable and internet, and Channel 9 had a huge audience,” she said. “It was a pleasure seeing him in action.”

There was a time in the 1970s when Jones might have been best known for his end-of-show antics with co-anchor Tim Tindall and sports anchor Joe Moore.

“They could get pretty outrageous,” Manke recalled. “One night they jumped a motorcycle over the news desk.”

Manke said Jones, as a reporter, had an incredible knack for seeing the meat of a subject and being able to quickly turn it around into a understandable short-form story perfect for television.

“He could turn a story on a dime,” added Parker. “He could come in at 10 (minutes) to 5 (p.m.) and turn the lead story. He knew what it was in his head. He never missed a time slot.”

Former KGMB reporter Bambi Weil said Jones helped her and other green reporters at KGMB improve their craft.

“The guy was wonderful, and always encouraging” said Weil, who went on to become a Circuit Court judge. “He was a truth-teller and a shining light. It is his legacy at a time when the network television news is often criticized for lack of integrity.”

Dan Boylan, a professor emeritus at the University of Hawaii West-Oahu, helped anchor election nights with Jones for more than a dec­ade on KGMB, developing a friendship along the way.

Boylan said Jones’ knowledge about the Vietnam War was important to Hawaii.

“Vietnam was with us constantly. So having a guy like Bob talking about the war … added significantly to his work as a journalist,” Boylan said.

“Hawaii was very much influenced by the people and the soldiers and sailors who were going to war, and Bob had that kind of credibility. Bob grew up with the military. The war in Vietnam was our generation’s war. He covered it. Bob had been there. He commented on things that happened that day, and that is a part of Hawaii we tend to overlook. Vietnam affected Hawaii greatly,” he said.

Jones helped KGMB land Boylan for election-night political analysis.

“On election nights we had a heck of a good time and I think we were better than the other channels. He was truly a pro. A good writer, he knew the territory. He was of the best of the lot as a news anchor. Bob was strong enough and capable enough he could handle news all by himself,” he said.

“We worked together very, very well. After the polls closed on election nights Bob and I would always have a beer or two or three or four, and he was a fun guy. We would be at the Columbia Inn and people would always come up to Bob. He was good to people.”

In addition to his wife, Jones is survived by daughter Brett Jones, son-in-law Michael Goldman, grandson Miles Alexander Goldman- Jones, and brothers Ken and Tom Jones.

Thursday, November 11, 2021

climate change

11/11/21 - CHINA and the US vowed to work together to slow global warming, issuing a surprise joint statement Wednesday that injects new momentum into the last days of global climate negotiations. The deal also marks a rare moment of cooperation between superpowers locked in geopolitical rivalry and who seemed at odds for most of the two-week talks in Glasgow, Scotland.

The two sides agreed to boost their efforts to cut emissions, including by tackling methane and illegal deforestation, China’s special climate envoy Xie Zhenhua told reporters. They will establish a working group to increase ac-tion in the 2020s — a key decade — which will meet in the first half of next year. His US counterpart John Kerry said that the group will focus on “concrete” measures.

11/9/21 - Tuvalu Prime Minister gives speech standing in water

11/5/21 - More than 40 countries pledged to phase out coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel, in a deal announced Thursday at the United Nations climate summit that prompted Alok Sharma, the head of the conference, to proclaim “the end of coal is in sight.”

But several of the biggest coal consumers were notably absent from the accord, including China and India, which together burn roughly two-thirds of the world’s coal, as well as Australia, the world’s 11th-biggest user of coal and a major exporter.  The United States, which still generates about one-fifth of its electricity from coal, also did not sign the pledge.

The decision by the United States to abstain appeared to be driven by American politics.  President Biden’s domestic agenda is split between two pieces of major legislation that have been pending on Capitol Hill and that hinge on the support of Senator Joe Manchin III, Democrat of West Virginia. Mr. Manchin’s state is rich in coal and gas, the senator has financial ties to the coal industry and he is sharply opposed to any policy that would harm fossil fuels.

4/18/21 - U.S. and China to cooperate on climate change

Monday, November 01, 2021

Musk offers $6 billion to solve world hunger

Last week, the director of the United Nation's World Food Programme said if the world's top billionaires just donated a fraction of their worth, millions of people who are at risk of starving to death can be saved. Elon Musk, the second wealthiest person in the world, said he'd give up some of his wealth – only if he knows exactly where the money is going.

David Beasley, director of the World Food Programme, said on CNN last week that a "one-time" donation from the top 400 billionaires, whose net worths are ever growing, in the U.S. could help save the lives of 42 million people this year. 

"The world's in trouble and you're telling me you can't give me .36% of your net worth increase to help the world in trouble, in times like this?" he said. "What if it was your daughter starving to death? What if it was your family starving to death? Wake up, smell the coffee, and help."

Musk, the founder of Tesla and SpaceX who has an estimated net worth of $151 billion, according to Forbes, replied to a tweet questioning the group's figures. "If WFP can describe on this Twitter thread exactly how $6B will solve world hunger, I will sell Tesla stock right now and do it," Musk wrote. "But it must be open source accounting, so the public sees precisely how the money is spent."

Beasley said the organization has systems in place for transparency and open source accounting. "Your team can review and work with us to be totally confident of such," he replied.

Beasley also responded to a question about the group's existing spending, including $8.4 billion in 2020. "The $8.4B you refer to covers what we needed to reach 115 million people in 2020 with food assistance," he said. "We need $6B plus NOW on top of our existing funding requirements due to the perfect storm from the compounding impact of Covid, conflict and climate shocks." 

He also shared CBS News' article, which explains how the current hunger crisis is a "toxic cocktail" of conflict, climate change, disasters, structural poverty and inequality. COVID-19 has only made it worse and on its website, the program says it needs $6 billion to avert worldwide famine this year. 

"6B will not solve world hunger, but it WILL prevent geopolitical instability, mass migration and save 42 million people on the brink of starvation. An unprecedented crisis and a perfect storm due to Covid/conflict/climate crises," Beasley said in another tweet.

Sunday, September 19, 2021

surge at the border

[9/19/21] U.S. expelling migrants from Haiti

[3/23/21] WASHINGTON (AP) — Somehow, they didn’t see it coming.

Within weeks of Inauguration Day on Jan. 20, the Biden administration had reversed many of the most maligned Trump-era immigration policies, including deporting children seeking asylum who arrived alone at the U.S.-Mexico border and forcing migrants to wait in Mexico as they made their case to stay in the United States.

While the administration was working on immigration legislation to address long-term problems, it didn’t have an on-the-ground plan to manage a surge of migrants. Career immigration officials had warned there could be a surge after the presidential election and the news that the Trump policies, widely viewed as cruel, were being reversed.

Now officials are scrambling to build up capacity to care for some 14,000 migrants now in federal custody — and more likely on the way — and the administration finds itself on its heels in the face of criticism that it should have been better prepared to deal with a predictable predicament.

“They should have forecasted for space (for young migrants) more quickly,” said Ronald Vitiello, a former acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and chief of Border Patrol who has served in Republican and Democratic administrations. “And I think in hindsight, maybe they should have waited until they had additional shelter space before they changed the policies.”

The situation at the southern border is complex.

Since Biden’s inauguration, the U.S. has seen a dramatic spike in the number of people encountered by border officials. There were 18,945 family members and 9,297 unaccompanied children encountered in February — an increase of 168% and 63%, respectively, from the month before, according to the Pew Research Center. That creates an enormous logistical challenge because children, in particular, require higher standards of care and coordination across agencies.

Still, the encounters of both unaccompanied minors and families are lower than they were at various points during the Trump administration, including in spring 2019. That May, authorities encountered more than 55,000 migrant children, including 11,500 unaccompanied minors, and about 84,500 migrants traveling in family units.

Career immigration officials, overwhelmed by the earlier surges, have long warned the flow of migrants to the border could ramp up again.

Biden administration officials have repeatedly laid blame for the current situation on the previous administration, arguing that Biden inherited a mess resulting from President Donald Trump’s undermining and weakening of the immigration system. The White House says it has taken several steps to address the situation.

Migrant children are sent from border holding cells to other government facilities until they are released to a sponsor. That process was slowed considerably by a Trump administration policy of “enhanced vetting,” in which details were sent to immigration officials and some sponsors wound up getting arrested, prompting some to fear picking up children over worries of being deported. Biden has reversed that policy, so immigration officials hope the process will speed up now.

The White House also points to Biden’s decision to deploy the Federal Emergency Management Agency, known for helping communities in the aftermath of a natural disaster, to support efforts to process the growing number of unaccompanied migrant children arriving at the border. HHS announced Saturday that it was opening an additional facility in West Texas to help with influx of unaccompanied minors. The facility will initially accommodate about 500 children but can be expanded to house 2,000.

Biden and others have pushed back on the notion that what’s happening now is a “crisis.”

“We will have, I believe, by next month enough of those beds to take care of these children who have no place to go,” Biden said in a recent ABC News interview, when asked whether his administration should have anticipated the surge in young unaccompanied migrants as well as families and adults. He added, “Let’s get something straight though. The vast majority of people crossing the border are being sent back ... immediately sent back.”

Adam Isacson, an analyst at the human rights advocacy group Washington Office on Latin America, said Republicans’ insistence that there is a “crisis” at the border is overwrought, but that the surge in migrants was predictable.

He called it a perfect storm of factors: hurricanes that hit Central America last fall; the economic fallout caused by the coronavirus pandemic; typical seasonal migration patterns; the thousands of Central American migrants already stuck at the border for months; and the persistent scourge of gang violence afflicting Northern Triangle countries — Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

Isacson said the Biden administration may have been “two or three weeks” slow in preparing for the increase in unaccompanied young migrants and the subsequent housing crunch after announcing in early February it would stop deporting unaccompanied youths.

But Isacson added that the bottleneck was also affected by the lack of cooperation by the Trump administration with the Biden transition.

The Biden administration announced on Feb. 2 it would no longer uphold the Trump administration policy of automatically deporting unaccompanied minors seeking asylum. Two weeks later, the White House announced plans to admit 25,000 asylum-seekers to the U.S. who had been forced to remain in Mexico.

In subsequent weeks, the number of young migrants crossing without adults skyrocketed. Both Customs and Border Protection, and Health and Human Services officials have struggled to house the influx of children. Immigration officials say the number of adult migrants and families trying to enter the U.S. illegally also has surged.

Border patrol officials had encountered more than 29,000 unaccompanied minors since Oct. 1, nearly the same number of youths taken into custody for all of the previous budget year, administration officials say.

“Getting capacity up to deal with the unaccompanied minors is critical, but the numbers just don’t bear out to pointing to a crisis,” Isacson said.

That hasn’t stopped Republicans -- including Trump and House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy of California -- from pillorying Biden.

“It’s more than a crisis. This is a human heartbreak,” said McCarthy, who led a delegation of a dozen fellow House Republicans to El Paso, Texas, on Monday.

Biden is also facing criticism from Republicans that his administration has sent mixed messages.

Critics have focused on public comments from Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who earlier this month said the administration’s message to migrants was “don’t come now” and a slip by Roberta Jacobson, the White House’s lead adviser on the border, who said in Spanish during a recent briefing the “border is not closed,” before correcting herself.

The president and other administration officials in recent days have stepped up efforts to urge migrants not to come. Embassies in Northern Triangle countries are airing public service announcements underscoring the dangers of making the trek north.

Eric Hershberg, director of the Center for Latin American and Latino Studies at American University, said Biden’s team faces a powerful counter-narrative as it attempts to persuade desperate Central Americans to stay put: chatter on social media from migrants who successfully made it across the border and smugglers who insist that now is the ideal time.

Hershberg cites a Honduran friend’s reaction to U.S. warnings that migrants could face danger on the journey: “You know, you don’t need to go with such uncertainty. You can just stay here and know that you’ll be raped or killed.”

Monday, September 06, 2021

Afghanistan collapses

9/6/21 - Lindsey Graham predicts U.S. will be going back into Afghanistan
8/26/21 - Suicide bombers and gunmen attack crowds at Kabul's airport
8/25/21 - Two House members issue critical statement on evacuation effort
8/22/21 - Haley slams Biden
8/22/21 - Kinzinger and Cheney criticize Trump administration on Afghanistan

***

In a swift and stunning rout, Taliban fighters seized control of Afghanistan’s capital on Sunday, completing their sweep of the besieged nation as the Afghan government collapsed after two decades of efforts by the U.S. to reshape the region as part of its “war on terror.”

Embattled President Ashraf Ghani fled the country as the Taliban entered the capital city of Kabul, and American troops scrambled to evacuate thousands of U.S. diplomats and Afghans from the U.S. Embassy.

The Taliban is soon expected to declare the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan from the presidential palace in Kabul, an official told the Associated Press.

In Washington, President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris met via videoconference with their national security team to hear updates on the drawdown of civilian personnel in Afghanistan and the evacuation of allies who worked alongside the U.S. government during the 20-year war.

The fall of Kabul marked the final chapter of America's longest war, which began after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks masterminded by al-Qaida's Osama bin Laden, then harbored by the Taliban government. A U.S.-led invasion forced the Taliban to retreat.

For some, the U.S. pullout was a reminder of America’s ignominious withdrawal from Vietnam in 1975, which ended with iconic images of U.S. helicopters evacuating Americans from the roof of the embassy in Saigon.

Though Kabul had been expected to fall, the speed of its collapse clearly caught the Biden administration off guard. 

Biden set an Aug. 31 deadline to withdraw all U.S. forces from Afghanistan and bring an end to the 20-year conflict. Just last week, an American military assessment estimated it would be a month before the capital would come under insurgent pressure.

Defying expectations, the Taliban seized nearly all of Afghanistan in a short time, despite the hundreds of billions of dollars spent by the U.S. and NATO over nearly two decades to build up Afghan security forces. Afghan security forces were defeated by the Taliban or fled much of the country, even though they had some air support from the U.S. military.

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

China will allow three children

BEIJING (AP) — China will now allow couples to legally have a third child as it seeks to hold off a demographic crisis that could threaten its hopes of increased prosperity and global influence.

The ceremonial legislature on Friday amended the Population and Family Planning Law as part of a decades-long effort by the ruling Communist Party to dictate the size of families in keeping with political directives. It comes just six years after the last change.

From the 1980s, China strictly limited most couples to one child, a policy enforced with threats of fines or loss of jobs, leading to abuses including forced abortions. A preference for sons led parents to kill baby girls, leading to a massive imbalance in the sex ratio.

The rules were eased for the first time in 2015 to allow two children as officials acknowledged the looming consequences of the plummeting birthrate. The overwhelming fear is that China will grow old before it becomes wealthy.

China long touted its one-child policy as a success in preventing 400 million additional births in the world’s most populous country, thus saving resources and helping drive economic growth.

However, China’s birth rate, paralleling trends in South Korea, Thailand and other Asian economies, already was falling before the one-child rule. The average number of children per mother tumbled from above six in the 1960s to below three by 1980, according to the World Bank.

Meanwhile, the number of working-age people in China has fallen over the past decade and the population has barely grown, adding to strains in an aging society. A once-a-decade government census found the population rose to 1.411 billion people last year, up 72 million from 2010.

Statistics show 12 million babies were born last year, which would be down 18% from 2019’s 14.6 million.

Chinese over 60, who number 264 million, accounted for 18.7% of the country’s total population in 2020, 5.44 percentage points higher than in 2010. At the same time, the working-age population fell to 63.3% of the total from 70.1% a decade ago.

The shift to the two-child rule led to a temporary bump in the numbers of births but its effects soon wore off and total births continued to fall because many women continued to decide against starting families.

Japan, Germany and some other wealthy countries face the same challenge of having fewer workers to support aging populations. However, they can draw on investments in factories, technology and foreign assets, while China is a middle-income country with labor-intensive farming and manufacturing.

Thursday, August 26, 2021

Ige and Green, The Odd Couple

Lt. Gov. Josh Green knew it irritated people when he sign waved for his 2018 campaign in hospital scrubs.

And he admits he’s not following typical government protocol when he jumps ahead of the state Department of Health to announce new and sometimes alarming COVID-19 case numbers on social media, hours ahead of the official data release.

But Green, 51, doesn’t care. He insists that as a Hawaii island emergency room physician, his first goal is to solve problems while alerting the public about important health information.

Green also has contradicted his boss, Gov. David Ige, and has apologized twice to Ige “for getting ahead of my skis.”

“David Ige and I are not a natural couple,” Green told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser. “While I respect his engineering thinking, I’m a shoot-from-the-hip physician and he provides the cautious checks and balances.

“Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t. Our governor is very analytical and that is a strength. But he’s not a dynamic communicator and that leads a lot of people to get frustrated. Sometimes I’m way out ahead of a story and that’s not typical of government communications. Does he always love having me as lieutenant governor? You’d have to ask him.”

Sunday, August 15, 2021

Oahu Homeless upate

7/11/21 - Mayor Rick Blangiardi’s signature approach to addressing homelessness across Oahu — by eliminating the use of Honolulu police officers and instead relying on social service and health care workers around the clock — has been modified to now include the use of police officers, reduced in scope to the urban core and scaled back in its hours of operation.

Anton Krucky, the city’s director of Office of Housing and Homelessness, for months has been saying the city’s new Crisis Outreach Response and Engagement program would free up Honolulu Police Department officers’ time by not having them respond to nonviolent, homeless-related calls.

Instead, a new team of social workers and health care workers, who are in the process of being hired, are now expected to respond to homeless-related calls, backed up by HPD officers.

Even before he took office in January, Blangiardi pledged to eliminate the previous administration’s “compassionate disruption” approach to homelessness that used a combination of homeless sweeps and social service outreach to clear city streets and sidewalks of homeless encampments and offer housing and other serv­ices to Oahu’s homeless.

The city is no longer removing homeless people via sweeps of camps but is continuing to remove their possessions, Krucky said.

The new Crisis Outreach Response and Engagement approach represented Blangiardi’s first homeless-­related idea of his own, albeit modeled after a similar program borrowed from Denver.

But Oahu’s version already has been restricted to cover an area just from Kalihi to Waikiki. And instead of running 24 hours a day, the new concept has been scaled back to only two shifts per day, staffed by 12 to 20 workers with certifications in mental health, homeless outreach and medical practices who have yet to be hired.

CORE is expected to cost $3 million, using federal, COVID-19 American Rescue Plan Act funds once they become available.

CORE is modeled after Denver’s Support Team Assistance Response program that deploys paramedics and mental health professionals to respond to nonviolent, homeless-related calls such as trespassing and indecent exposure.

In its first six months of operation in 2020, Denver’s STAR program responded to 748 calls and none required the assistance of the Denver Police Department, according to a STAR Program Evaluation.

Tuesday, August 10, 2021

Andrew Cuomo resigns

NEW YORK >> Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced his resignation today over a barrage of sexual harassment allegations in a fall from grace a year after he was widely hailed nationally for his detailed daily briefings and leadership during some of the darkest days of the COVID-19 pandemic.

By turns defiant and chastened, the 63-year-old Democrat emphatically denied intentionally mistreating women and called the pressure for his ouster politically motivated. But he said that fighting back in this “too hot” political climate would subject the state to months of turmoil.

“The best way I can help now is if I step aside and let government get back to governing,” Cuomo said in a televised address.

The third-term governor’s resignation, which will take effect in two weeks, was announced as momentum built in the Legislature to remove him by impeachment and after nearly the entire Democratic establishment had turned against him, with President Joe Biden joining those calling on him to resign.

The decision came a week after New York’s attorney general released the results of an investigation that found Cuomo sexually harassed at least 11 women.

Investigators said he subjected women to unwanted kisses; groped their breasts or buttocks or otherwise touched them inappropriately; made insinuating remarks about their looks and their sex lives; and created a work environment “rife with fear and intimidation.”

At the same time, Cuomo was under fire over the discovery that his administration had concealed thousands of COVID-19 deaths among nursing home patients.

Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, a 62-year-old Democrat and former member of Congress from the Buffalo area, will become the state’s 57th governor and the first woman to hold the post. She said Cuomo’s resignation was “the right thing to do and in the best interest of New Yorkers.”

The #MeToo-era scandal cut short not just a career but a dynasty: Cuomo’s father, Mario Cuomo, was governor in the 1980s and ’90s, and the younger Cuomo was often mentioned as a potential presidential candidate. Even as the scandal mushroomed, he was planning to run for reelection in 2022.

Republicans exulted in Cuomo’s departure but still urged impeachment, which could prevent him from running for office again. “This resignation is simply an attempt to avoid real accountability,” state GOP chair Nick Langworthy said.

At the White House, Biden said: “I respect the governor’s decision.” At the same time, he said Cuomo had “done a helluva job” on infrastructure and voting rights, and “that’s why it’s so sad.”

Friday, June 25, 2021

George Floyd / Rayshard Brooks / Jacob Blake

6/25/21 - Chauvin sentenced to 22-1/2 years
3/4/21 - Six books pulled by Dr. Seuess estate
2/12/21 - Bluefield basketball team forfeits after players suspended for kneeling
12/9/20 - Ohio State player takes knee after friends killing by police
11/12/20 - Mutual of Omaha changes their logo to a lion
10/21/20 - Officer describes Breonna Taylor shooting
10/9/20 - Trump calls LeBron a great player
9/24/20 - No officers charged in Breonna Taylor's death / Two police officers shot in Louisville
9/23/20 - Uncle Ben is retired
9/18/20 - Trump wanted to borrow heat ray from Lex Luthor
9/15/20 - Eric Reid calls NFL's efforts half-hearted
9/8/20 - Kaepernick available in Madden 2021
9/2/20 - Josh Hart responds to Trump
8/31/20 - Biden says Trump can't stop the violence because he fomented it
8/31/20 - Wisconsin governor asks Trump to reconsider visit to Kenosha
8/30/20 - Trump calls Portland mayor a FOOL after backlash in Portland
8/29/20 - Jacob Blake's uncle responds to police union's version of events
8/24/20 - Jacob Blake shot in the back multiple times by Kenosha police officer
8/24/20 - Roger Goodell discusses Kaepernick
8/2/20 - Meyers Leonard stands
7/28/20 - Giants play Black National Anthem
7/27/20 - Dr. Dre kneels with Kaepernick / but apparently not Ditka
7/24/20 - Robert E. Lee High School to be renamed for John Lewis
7/24/20 - Robert E. Lee statue removed from Virginia Capitol
7/23/20 - Portland Mayor tear gassed by federal agents
7/22/20 - Gabe Kapler responds to Trump
7/17/20 - New Pentagon policy effectively bans Confederate flags
7/17/20 - Federal troops not wanted in Portland
7/6/20 - Kaepernick signs deal with Disney/ESPN
7/6/20 - Trump asks if Bubba Wallace apologized?
7/1/20 - De Blasio orders BLM mural to placed in front of Trump Tower
7/1/20 - Seattle clears CHOP zone
6/26/20 - Facebook will prohibit hate speech in its ads
6/25/20 - House passes police reform bill 236-181 with three Republicans in favor (and 178 against)
6/24/20 - Police reform dies in the Senate
6/22/20 - Favre compares Kaepernick to Pat Tillman
6/21/20 - Noose found in Bubba Wallace garage stall
6/20/20 - Eskimo Pie too?
6/17/20 - Officer who shot Rayshard Brooks charged with murder
6/17/20 - Aunt Jemima to be rebranded
6/16/20 - Trumps signs executive order on police reform
6/16/20 - Jon Stewart: the police problem is the how, but not the why
6/15/20 - Apparently Martha McCallum has not watched Monty Python & The Holy Grail
6/15/20 - Ben Carson says Trump will "get there" on understanding why athletes are kneeling
6/14/20 - Fox News removes digitally altered photos from its website
6/13/20 - Protesters burn down Wendy's
6/13/20 - Police officer fired after fatal shooting of Rayshard Brooks
6/13/20 - Atlanta police chief resigns in wake of Rayshard Brooks death
6/13/20 - Atlanta man fatally shot while running from police
6/13/20 - Gregg Popovich speaks
6/13/20 - What has changed so far
6/12/20 - Seattle's autonomous zone
6/11/20 - Seattle mayor tells Trump where to go
6/10/20 - Disney/ABC will no longer place ads on Tucker Carlson show
6/10/20 - Players Coalition urges Congress to end Qualified Immunity Act
6/10/20 - Philonise Floyd tells Congrees he seeks "Justice for George"
6/10/20 - Merrian-Webster will redefine racism
6/10/20 - George Floyd and Derek Chauvin had a history
6/9/20 - What happened when Camden New Jersey dismantled their police department?
6/9/20 - Republicans mostly silent on Trump's tweet about 75-year old protester who was knocked down by police
6/9/20 - George Floyd remembered at funeral
6/9/20 - Bernie doesn't agree with defunding police either
6/8/20 - New York Times op-ed editor resigns over Tom Cotton op-ed / McConnell
6/8/20 - France to abandon police chokeholds
6/8/20 - Adrian Peterson plans to kneel
6/8/20 - Democrats unveil police reform package
6/8/20 - Trump questions Goodell's statement
6/8/20 - Biden supports reform but not defunding police
6/8/20 - What does 'defund' the police mean?
6/7/20 - Bill Russell says it was never about that
6/7/20 - Mitt Romney marches with protesters
6/7/20 - de Blasio pledges to cut funding for NYPD
6/7/20 - Minneapolis City County plans to disband police department
6/7/20 - Trump officials say there is no systemic racism in law enforcement
6/7/20 - Trump to withdraw National Guard from Washington D.C.
6/7/20 - Tom Cotton editorial in New York Times / not published
6/6/20 - John Elway makes a statement
6/5/20 - Goodell says NFL was wrong for not listening to players earlier
6/5/20 - Twitter removes Trump campaign tribute to George Floyd
6/5/20 - Buffalo police officers suspended after shoving 75 year old protester to the ground
6/5/20 - Black Lives Matter sues Trump administration
6/4/20 - Drew Brees apologizes for comments
6/4/20 - Manuel Ellis death ruled a homicide
6/3/20 - Athletes respond to Drew Brees
6/3/20 - Three more officers charged in Floyd death
6/3/20 - Department of Defense writes letter of resignation to Esper
6/3/29 - Et tu Pat Robertson?
6/3/20 - Mattis says Trump tries to divide us
6/3/20 - Obama urges mayor to review police policies
6/3/20 - Grant Napear resigns after twitter confrontation
6/3/20 - Nickelodeon goes off the air for 8 minutes and 46 seconds
6/3/20 - Sean McVay would support on-field protests by Rams players
6/3/20 - Esper says Insurrection Act should only be used as a last resort
6/2/20 - Floyd's criminal history pointed out by police union president
6/2/20 - Floyd Mayweather offers to pay for George Floyd funeral
6/2/20 - Virginia declines to send National Guard to DC
6/2/20 - Police officers shot during protests
6/2/20 - Peaceful protesters dispersed with tear gas (and/or pepper spray), so Trump could pose in front of church with bible
6/1/20 - Protesters risk lives stopping looters
6/1/20 - Unarmed man in Louisville killed as law enforcement returns fire / police chief fired
6/1/20 - Violent protests continue / photos from around the country
6/1/20 - Trump calls governors weak in response to protests
6/1/20 - NYPD officers kneel with protesters / some police officers join protests
5/31/20 - Crowds at protests raise fears of new surge in coronavirus
5/31/20 - Trump advisors divided on how to address protests
5/31/20 - George Floyd's brother describes Trump's phone call
5/30/20 - Eric Reid calls out Pence on his twitter statement
5/29/20 - On the other hand, Denzel
5/29/20 - Stephen Jackson calls George Floyd his best friend
5/29/20 - Fired Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin arrested
5/29/20 - Trump criticized for threatening to shoot protesters
5/28/20 - Protesters gain access to Minneapolis Police Department
5/27/20  - Timeline: Death of George Floyd, reactions and protests
5/26/20 - Police officers fired after the death of Floyd
5/25/20 - Death of George Floyd

Thursday, June 17, 2021

Juneteenth

President Biden on Thursday signed legislation to make Juneteenth a federal holiday, the day after the House voted overwhelmingly to enshrine June 19 as the national day to commemorate the end of slavery in the United States.

The Senate rushed the measure through with no debate earlier this week after clearing away a longstanding Republican objection, and the House approved it on Wednesday by a vote of 415 to 14, with 14 Republicans opposed. Mr. Biden said he counted signing the legislation into law as one of the greatest honors he will have as president. Ms. Harris also signed the legislation in her capacity as President of the Senate, an administration official said.

Juneteenth commemorates the end of slavery and is also known as Emancipation Day, Jubilee Day and Juneteenth Independence Day. Its name stems from June 19, 1865, when Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger in Galveston, Texas, issued General Order No. 3, which announced that in accordance with the Emancipation Proclamation, “all slaves are free.” Months later, the 13th Amendment was ratified, abolishing slavery in the final three border states that had not been subjected to President Abraham Lincoln’s order.


Sunday, June 13, 2021

Israel and Hamas

6/13/21 - Netanyahu era is over in Israel / criticizes Biden

5/20/21 - Israel and Hamas will cease fire across the Gaza Strip border as of 2 a.m. on Friday (2300 GMT on Thursday), the Palestinian Islamist faction and Egyptian state TV said, bringing a potentially tenuous halt to the fiercest fighting in years.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said his security cabinet had voted unanimously in favour of a "mutual and unconditional" Gaza truce proposed by Egypt, but added that the hour of implementation had yet to be agreed.

Within minutes of the announcements, in the countdown to the ceasefire, the sides were trading blows again. Sirens warned of incoming rockets in Israeli border communities, and a Reuters reporter heard an air strike in Gaza.

There was no immediate word of casualties.

Amid growing global alarm at the bloodshed, U.S. President Joe Biden urged Netanyahu on Wednesday to seek de-escalation, while Egypt, Qatar and the United Nations sought to mediate.

Biden was due to deliver remarks on the Middle East at 5:45 p.m. Washington-time (2145 GMT), the White House said.

Hamas said the ceasefire would be "mutual and simultaneous".

“The Palestinian resistance will abide by this agreement as long as the Occupation (Israel) does the same,” Taher Al-Nono, media adviser to Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh, told Reuters.

Saturday, June 05, 2021

Population Stagnation

Long Slide Looms for World Population, With Sweeping Ramifications

Fewer babies’ cries. More abandoned homes. Toward the middle of this century, as deaths start to exceed births, changes will come that are hard to fathom.

A family eating hotpot at a restaurant in Beijing. China’s population is projected to contract sharply this century.Credit...Gilles Sabrié for The New York Times

By Damien Cave, Emma Bubola and Choe Sang-Hun
Published May 22, 2021 Updated May 24, 2021

All over the world, countries are confronting population stagnation and a fertility bust, a dizzying reversal unmatched in recorded history that will make first-birthday parties a rarer sight than funerals, and empty homes a common eyesore.

Maternity wards are already shutting down in Italy. Ghost cities are appearing in northeastern China. Universities in South Korea can’t find enough students, and in Germany, hundreds of thousands of properties have been razed, with the land turned into parks.

Like an avalanche, the demographic forces — pushing toward more deaths than births — seem to be expanding and accelerating. Though some countries continue to see their populations grow, especially in Africa, fertility rates are falling nearly everywhere else. Demographers now predict that by the latter half of the century or possibly earlier, the global population will enter a sustained decline for the first time.

A planet with fewer people could ease pressure on resources, slow the destructive impact of climate change and reduce household burdens for women. But the census announcements this month from China and the United States, which showed the slowest rates of population growth in decades for both countries, also point to hard-to-fathom adjustments.

The strain of longer lives and low fertility, leading to fewer workers and more retirees, threatens to upend how societies are organized — around the notion that a surplus of young people will drive economies and help pay for the old. It may also require a reconceptualization of family and nation. Imagine entire regions where everyone is 70 or older. Imagine governments laying out huge bonuses for immigrants and mothers with lots of children. Imagine a gig economy filled with grandparents and Super Bowl ads promoting procreation.

Siblings in Seoul, South Korea. The country’s fertility rate is the lowest in the developed world.Credit...Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters

“A paradigm shift is necessary,” said Frank Swiaczny, a German demographer who was the chief of population trends and analysis for the United Nations until last year. “Countries need to learn to live with and adapt to decline.”

The ramifications and responses have already begun to appear, especially in East Asia and Europe. From Hungary to China, from Sweden to Japan, governments are struggling to balance the demands of a swelling older cohort with the needs of young people whose most intimate decisions about childbearing are being shaped by factors both positive (more work opportunities for women) and negative (persistent gender inequality and high living costs).

The 20th century presented a very different challenge. The global population saw its greatest increase in known history, from 1.6 billion in 1900 to 6 billion in 2000, as life spans lengthened and infant mortality declined. In some countries — representing about a third of the world’s people — those growth dynamics are still in play. By the end of the century, Nigeria could surpass China in population; across sub-Saharan Africa, families are still having four or five children.

But nearly everywhere else, the era of high fertility is ending. As women have gained more access to education and contraception, and as the anxieties associated with having children continue to intensify, more parents are delaying pregnancy and fewer babies are being born. Even in countries long associated with rapid growth, such as India and Mexico, birthrates are falling toward, or are already below, the replacement rate of 2.1 children per family.

A center for elderly people in Washington, D.C. U.S. population growth has slowed to its lowest rate in decades.Credit...Justin T. Gellerson for The New York Times

The change may take decades, but once it starts, decline (just like growth) spirals exponentially. With fewer births, fewer girls grow up to have children, and if they have smaller families than their parents did — which is happening in dozens of countries — the drop starts to look like a rock thrown off a cliff.

“It becomes a cyclical mechanism,” said Stuart Gietel Basten, an expert on Asian demographics and a professor of social science and public policy at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. “It’s demographic momentum.”

Some countries, like the United States, Australia and Canada, where birthrates hover between 1.5 and 2, have blunted the impact with immigrants. But in Eastern Europe, migration out of the region has compounded depopulation, and in large parts of Asia, the “demographic time bomb” that first became a subject of debate a few decades ago has finally gone off.

South Korea’s fertility rate dropped to a record low of 0.92 in 2019 — less than one child per woman, the lowest rate in the developed world. Every month for the past 59 months, the total number of babies born in the country has dropped to a record depth.

Families in sub-Saharan Africa are often still having four or five children. By the end of the century, Nigeria could surpass China in population.Credit...Luis Tato/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

That declining birthrate, coupled with a rapid industrialization that has pushed people from rural towns to big cities, has created what can feel like a two-tiered society. While major metropolises like Seoul continue to grow, putting intense pressure on infrastructure and housing, in regional towns it’s easy to find schools shut and abandoned, their playgrounds overgrown with weeds, because there are not enough children.

Expectant mothers in many areas can no longer find obstetricians or postnatal care centers. Universities below the elite level, especially outside Seoul, find it increasingly hard to fill their ranks — the number of 18-year-olds in South Korea has fallen from about 900,000 in 1992 to 500,000 today. To attract students, some schools have offered scholarships and even iPhones.

To goose the birthrate, the government has handed out baby bonuses. It increased child allowances and medical subsidies for fertility treatments and pregnancy. Health officials have showered newborns with gifts of beef, baby clothes and toys. The government is also building kindergartens and day care centers by the hundreds. In Seoul, every bus and subway car has pink seats reserved for pregnant women.

But this month, Deputy Prime Minister Hong Nam-ki admitted that the government — which has spent more than $178 billion over the past 15 years encouraging women to have more babies — was not making enough progress. In many families, the shift feels cultural and permanent.

A village school in Gangjin County, South Korea, has enrolled illiterate older people so that it can stay open as the number of children in the area has dwindled.Credit...Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

“My grandparents had six children, and my parents five, because their generations believed in having multiple children,” said Kim Mi-kyung, 38, a stay-at-home parent. “I have only one child. To my and younger generations, all things considered, it just doesn’t pay to have many children.”

Thousands of miles away, in Italy, the sentiment is similar, with a different backdrop.

In Capracotta, a small town in southern Italy, a sign in red letters on an 18th-century stone building looking on to the Apennine Mountains reads “Home of School Kindergarten” — but today, the building is a nursing home.

Residents eat their evening broth on waxed tablecloths in the old theater room.

“There were so many families, so many children,” said Concetta D’Andrea, 93, who was a student and a teacher at the school and is now a resident of the nursing home. “Now there is no one.”

Even in countries like India that have long been associated with rapid growth, birth rates are falling toward, or are already below, the replacement rate of 2.1 children per family.Credit...Poras Chaudhary for The New York Times

The population in Capracotta has dramatically aged and contracted — from about 5,000 people to 800. The town’s carpentry shops have shut down. The organizers of a soccer tournament struggled to form even one team.

About a half-hour away, in the town of Agnone, the maternity ward closed a decade ago because it had fewer than 500 births a year, the national minimum to stay open. This year, six babies were born in Agnone.

“Once you could hear the babies in the nursery cry, and it was like music,” said Enrica Sciullo, a nurse who used to help with births there and now mostly takes care of older patients. “Now there is silence and a feeling of emptiness.”

In a speech last Friday during a conference on Italy’s birthrate crisis, Pope Francis said the “demographic winter” was still “cold and dark.”

More people in more countries may soon be searching for their own metaphors. Birth projections often shift based on how governments and families respond, but according to projections by an international team of scientists published last year in The Lancet, 183 countries and territories — out of 195 — will have fertility rates below replacement level by 2100.

A couple in Acciaroli, Italy. The population of many Italian villages has dramatically aged and shrunk in numbers.Credit...Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times

Their model shows an especially sharp decline for China, with its population expected to fall from 1.41 billion now to about 730 million in 2100. If that happens, the population pyramid would essentially flip. Instead of a base of young workers supporting a narrower band of retirees, China would have as many 85-year-olds as 18-year-olds.

China’s rust belt, in the northeast, saw its population drop by 1.2 percent in the past decade, according to census figures released on Tuesday. In 2016, Heilongjiang Province became the first in the country to have its pension system run out of money. In Hegang, a “ghost city” in the province that has lost almost 10 percent of its population since 2010, homes cost so little that people compare them to cabbage.

Many countries are beginning to accept the need to adapt, not just resist. South Korea is pushing for universities to merge. In Japan, where adult diapers now outsell ones for babies, municipalities have been consolidated as towns age and shrink. In Sweden, some cities have shifted resources from schools to elder care. And almost everywhere, older people are being asked to keep working. Germany, which previously raised its retirement age to 67, is now considering a bump to 69.

Going further than many other nations, Germany has also worked through a program of urban contraction: Demolitions have removed around 330,000 units from the housing stock since 2002.

Playing pool in a retirement community in Beijing. China’s rapid slowdown in population growth will pose economic challenges.Credit...How Hwee Young/EPA, via Shutterstock

And if the goal is revival, a few green shoots can be found. After expanding access to affordable child care and paid parental leave, Germany’s fertility rate recently increased to 1.54, up from 1.3 in 2006. Leipzig, which once was shrinking, is now growing again after reducing its housing stock and making itself more attractive with its smaller scale.

“Growth is a challenge, as is decline,” said Mr. Swiaczny, who is now a senior research fellow at the Federal Institute for Population Research in Germany.

Demographers warn against seeing population decline as simply a cause for alarm. Many women are having fewer children because that’s what they want. Smaller populations could lead to higher wages, more equal societies, lower carbon emissions and a higher quality of life for the smaller numbers of children who are born.

But, said Professor Gietel Basten, quoting Casanova: “There is no such thing as destiny. We ourselves shape our lives.”

The challenges ahead are still a cul-de-sac — no country with a serious slowdown in population growth has managed to increase its fertility rate much beyond the minor uptick that Germany accomplished. There is little sign of wage growth in shrinking countries, and there is no guarantee that a smaller population means less stress on the environment.

Children in Munich, Germany. The fertility rate in Germany has increased after the country expanded access to child care and paid parental leave, but it remains below the rate of replacement.Credit...Laetitia Vancon for The New York Times

Many demographers argue that the current moment may look to future historians like a period of transition or gestation, when humans either did or did not figure out how to make the world more hospitable — enough for people to build the families that they want.

Surveys in many countries show that young people would like to be having more children, but face too many obstacles.

Anna Parolini tells a common story. She left her small hometown in northern Italy to find better job opportunities . Now 37, she lives with her boyfriend in Milan and has put her desire to have children on hold.

She is afraid her salary of less than 2,000 euros a month would not be enough for a family, and her parents still live where she grew up.

“I don’t have anyone here who could help me,” she said. “Thinking of having a child now would make me gasp.”

-- Elsie Chen, Christopher Schuetze and Benjamin Novak contributed reporting.

Monday, May 03, 2021

Mazie Hirono: Heart of Fire

If you want to know what Mazie K. Hirono thinks about someone, just ask her.

Her right-wing colleagues in the Senate? “Republican zombies.” Attorney Alan Dershowitz? “Cynical and idiotic.” President Donald Trump? “A petty, vindictive, spoiled brat.”

Hirono is tough. And as her autobiography, “Heart of Fire: An Immigrant Daughter’s Story,” proves, she had to be.

Saturday, March 13, 2021

Andrew Cuomo

3/13/21 - Schumer and Gillibrand urge Cuomo to resign
3/12/21 - Andrew Cuomo timeline
3/12/21 - Cuomo refusing to resign
3/11/21 - 85 New York lawmakers call for Cuomo to resign or be impeached

Monday, March 01, 2021

wealth tax proposed

Senator Elizabeth Warren introduced legislation that would tax the wealthy on Monday, and her proposal is mounting support from voters on both sides of the aisle.

The Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act would tax the net worth of America's richest people by applying a 2 percent tax to those with a net worth above $50 million and a 3 percent tax to those worth above $1 billion. Net worth includes value of stocks, real estate, cars and anything else a person owns, minus their debts.

Polls show that Warren's proposal becoming increasingly popular, with more than three in five Americans saying they support a wealth tax, including a majority of Republican voters, which she's hoping congressional Republicans will recognize.

"A wealth tax is popular among voters on both sides for good reason: because they understand the system is rigged to benefit the wealthy and large corporations," Warren said in a statement. "As Congress develops additional plans to help our economy, the wealth tax should be at the top of the list to help pay for these plans because of the huge amounts of revenue it would generate."

A survey conducted by Reuters/Ipsos earlier this year found that a majority of Republican voters, 53 percent, agreed that "the very rich should contribute an extra share of their total wealth each year to support public programs."

"Many voters who self-identify as Republicans report that they'd be more likely to vote for a candidate that supports a wealth tax," a report from progressive economics firm Roosevelt Forward reads.

Polling in several states, the firm found that Republican support for a wealth tax is most prominent in Maine, Arizona, North Carolina, Georgia and Iowa.

Warren's proposal, which is co-sponsored by Senator Bernie Sanders among others, is similar to the plan she unveiled as a Democratic primary candidate. Sanders had also previously suggested a similar tax which would hit more taxpayers than Warren's version.

Warren's latest version, which would begin to apply in 2023 based on net worth calculations from the year before, is expected to raise $3 trillion over a decade, according to an analysis provided by the lawmakers. Her initial plan was said to raise $2.75 trillion.

University of California Berkeley professors Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, who conducted the analysis, approximated that 100,000 American families would be subjected to the tax.

The analysts noted that the revenue estimate is higher than previously stated because billionaire wealth has ballooned over the past two years.

According to the latest report from the Institute on Policy Studies, U.S. billionaires have grown $1.3 trillion wealthier over the course of the coronavirus pandemic. The analysis indicated that 664 of the nation's billionaires were collectively worth $4.3 trillion at market close on February 19—a figure 44 percent higher than 11 months ago.

The authors of the study noted that the pandemic wealth gain alone could pay for more than two-thirds of President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief proposal.

"Even as congressional Republicans try to nickel-and-dime suffering Americans by opposing President Biden's American Rescue Plan, including its $1,400 relief checks, American billionaires have reaped $1.3 trillion in pandemic profits," Frank Clemente, executive director of Americans for Tax Fairness, said. "The need for the kind of fair-share tax program Biden ran and won on becomes clearer every day, as billionaire wealth balloons while working-family hopes deflate."

Biden did not propose a wealth tax during the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries, but with 10 million Americans out of work due to the pandemic and the wealthiest continuing getting rich, Warren's proposal may add pressure on the president, whose stimulus package did not propose any tax increases.

"As Congress develops additional plans to help our economy, the wealth tax should be at the top of the list to help pay for these plans because of the huge amounts of revenue it would generate," Warren said. "This is money that should be invested in child care and early education, K-12, infrastructure, all of which are priorities of President Biden and Democrats in Congress."

Friday, February 19, 2021

Paris climate agreement still alive

[2/19/21] U.S. rejoins Paris accord

***

[12/15/18] KATOWICE, Poland — Diplomats from nearly 200 countries reached a deal on Saturday to keep the Paris climate agreement alive by adopting a detailed set of rules to implement the pact.

The deal, struck after an all-night bargaining session, will ultimately require every country in the world to follow a uniform set of standards for measuring their planet-warming emissions and tracking their climate policies. And it calls on countries to step up their plans to cut emissions ahead of another round of talks in 2020.

It also calls on richer countries to be clearer about the aid they intend to offer to help poorer nations install more clean energy or build resilience against natural disasters. And it builds a process in which countries that are struggling to meet their emissions goals can get help in getting back on track.

The United States agreed to the deal despite President Trump’s vow to abandon the Paris Agreement. Diplomats and climate change activists said they hoped that fact would make it easier for the administration to change its mind and stay in the Paris Agreement, or for a future president to embrace the accord once again. The United States cannot formally withdraw from the agreement until late 2020.

Thursday, February 04, 2021

flu almost wiped out?

The number of individuals experiencing influenza has reportedly dropped to record lows.

Simon de Lusignan, a professor of primary care at the University of Oxford and director of the Royal College of GPs research and surveillance centre, told the Sunday Times that the flu has dropped by 95%, which is the lowest average in more than 130 years.

The study reports just 1.1 individuals among 100,000 were reported to be experiencing flu-like symptoms during the second week of January, which is typically the peak of flu season.

“I cannot think of a year this has happened,” de Lusignan told the Times.

John McCauley, director of the the WHO's collaborating centre for reference and research on influenza, added that rates haven't been this low since 1888, prior to the 1889-90 flu pandemic and "when we were still just counting influenza deaths."

The World Health Organization's Norio Sugaya called the historically low rates "an extremely puzzling phenomenon," and the WHO believes the measures taken globally during the COVID-19 pandemic, including wearing masks and limiting social distancing, have likely helped in limiting the spread of influenza, the Wall Street Journal reports.

The WHO said an increase in flu vaccinations may have also contributed to the lower rates this year. Doctors said awareness of COVID-19 helped drive flu vaccinations, with more than 80% of the elderly population in England receiving a shot this season, which was more than 10% more than the previous year.

Additionally, the spread of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, may have also played a role in blocking the flu by lifting individuals' immunity to other viruses.

A New York study conducted in spring 2020 revealed individuals who tested positive for SARS-Cov-2 were much less likely to be carrying other common viruses, including those related to influenza.

***

[2/4/21] With COVID-19 precautions in place, flu is nowhere to be seen in Hawaii