So far it’s a fairly quiet Christmas morning on the Twitter front for President Donald Trump. The president tweeted simply “MERRY CHRISTMAS!” overnight, and retweeted a Christmas greeting posted by first lady Melania Trump, along with a video message from the first couple. “Wishing you all a very #MerryChristmas! May your day be filled with peace, love and happiness!,” the first lady tweeted.

“The president and I want to wish each and every American a very Merry Christmas,’ Melania Trump, wearing holiday red, said in the video message. President Trump then joined in. “At this sacred time of year Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ and rejoice in his love for every person. We give thanks to the millions of Americans who come together to care for others with compassion and bring the warmth and bliss of this holiday season to our family, our friends, our neighbors and to those in need.”

The video, filmed at the White House, featured images of the White House holiday decorations and events attended by the president and first lady throughout the year, including Melania Trump’s visit to the Red Cross to pack care packages for troops overseas and President Trump’s Thanksgiving visit to Afghanistan.

“As we gather with loved ones this holiday, Americans across this land are grateful for all the men and women in uniform who keep us safe: our military, our police and everyone in law enforcement,” Melania Trump said.

President Trump closed out the holiday greeting: “We say a special prayer those for military service members stationed far from home and we renew our hope for peace among nations and joy to the world. On behalf of the entire Trump family we wish everyone a very joyous and Merry Christmas and a very happy happy New Year.”

The mellow Christmas Day messages followed a busy Christmas Eve in which the president slammed the “radical left” Democrats, Nancy Pelosi and the impeachment process.

Source Article from https://deadline.com/2019/12/donald-trump-tweetstorm-christmas-day-edition-melania-trump-1202816986/

Media captionThe Pope spoke to thousands who had gathered to hear his Christmas message

The Pope has prayed for a softening of “stony and self-centred hearts” to help end injustice in the world, in his Christmas Day message.

From the Vatican balcony, Pope Francis spoke of “walls of indifference” being put up to people fleeing hardship in the hope of finding a better life.

The Pope prayed for those hit by conflict, natural disasters and disease, listing several countries.

He singled out parts of Africa where Christians had been killed.

Speaking under a clear blue sky to thousands crowded into St Peter’s Square, the Pope urged “comfort to those who are persecuted for their religious faith, especially missionaries and members of the faithful who have been kidnapped, and to the victims of attacks by extremist groups, particularly in Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and Nigeria”.

An attack on Christmas Eve in Burkina Faso left 35 people dead, most of them women.

Hundreds of people have been killed in the country over the past few years, mostly by jihadist groups.

Hours earlier, in a rare joint message with two other Western Church leaders, the Pope appealed for peace in South Sudan.

In their statement, the pontiff, the head of the Anglican Church and the former moderator of the Church of Scotland called for “a renewed commitment to the path of reconciliation and fraternity”.

South Sudan declared independence from Sudan in 2011 but has been crippled by conflict ever since.

In what was his seventh “Urbi et Orbi” (“To the City and the World”) Christmas Day address, the Pope also highlighted other hotspots of unrest including Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq, Venezuela, Ukraine and the Holy Land.

For change to happen for the better, he said, people had to be more compassionate.

“May [God] soften our often stony and self-centred hearts, and make them channels of His love. May He bring His smile, through our poor faces, to all the children of the world: to those who are abandoned and those who suffer violence,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50911452

PARIS — The rector of Notre Dame Cathedral says the Paris landmark is still so fragile that there’s a “50 percent chance” the structure might not be saved, because scaffolding installed before this year’s fire is threatening the vaults of the Gothic monument.

Monsignor Patrick Chauvet said restoration work isn’t likely to begin until 2021 — and described his “heartache” that Notre Dame couldn’t hold Christmas services this year, for the first time since the French Revolution.

“Today it is not out of danger,” he told The Associated Press on the sidelines of Christmas Eve midnight Mass in a nearby church. “It will be out of danger when we take out the remaining scaffolding.”

“Today we can say that there is maybe a 50% chance that it will be saved. There is also 50% chance of scaffolding falling onto the three vaults, so as you can see the building is still very fragile,” he said.

The 12th-century cathedral was under renovation at the time of the accidental April fire, which destroyed its roof and collapsed its spire. With no more roof to keep the massive stone structure stable, the cathedral’s surviving vaults are crucial to keeping it standing, but they are vulnerable.

Some 50,000 tubes of scaffolding crisscrossed the back of the edifice at the time of the fire, and some were damaged. Removing them without causing further problems is one of the toughest parts of the cleanup effort.

“We need to remove completely the scaffolding in order to make the building safe, so in 2021 we will probably start the restoration of the cathedral,” Chauvet said. “Once the scaffolding is removed we need to assess the state of the cathedral, the quantity of stones to be removed and replaced.”

Chauvet estimated it would take another three years after that to make it safe enough for people to re-enter the cathedral, but that the full restoration will take longer. President Emmanuel Macron has said he wants it rebuilt by 2024, when Paris hosts the Olympics, but experts have questioned whether that time frame is realistic.

Another reason it’s still too dangerous to host religious services inside Notre Dame: The fire released tons of toxic lead dust, and authorities are working to clean it up and assess related health risks.

Notre Dame’s symbolism reaches far and wide. Church officials estimated 2 million people from around the world visited the cathedral during the holiday season.

Tourists can photograph it from nearby embankments, but they can no longer hear its organs or get a close view of its stone carvings and masterpiece rose windows. The vast forecourt is barricaded, barren of its Christmas tree.

But its congregation, clergy and choir are keeping its spirit alive, and decamped Christmas celebrations to the Saint-Germain l’Auxerrois Church across from the Louvre Museum instead.

Parishioners shared sorrow about the fire, but also a feeling of solidarity.

“I remember my mother told me that she was watching TV, and that there was a fire at Notre Dame. I told her ‘it’s not possible,’ and I took my bike, and when I arrived I was crying,” said Jean-Luc Bodam, a Parisian engineer who used to cross town to attend services at the cathedral.

“We are French, we are going to try to rebuild Notre Dame as it was before, because it is a symbol,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/paris-notre-dame-still-very-fragile-eight-months-after-fire-n1107051

HONG KONG—Christmas in Hong Kong descended into a flurry of tear gas and arrests as police clashed with protesters in neighborhoods around the city, signalling an escalation of tensions after weeks of relative calm.

Riot police fired off pepper spray in areas including Mong Kok and Kowloon Bay on Wednesday, Christmas Day, while also arresting black-clad protesters, according to local media. They also used pepper spray inside some malls.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/christmas-brings-an-escalation-of-tensions-to-hong-kong-11577292564

Here’s what you need to know to understand the impeachment of President Trump.

What’s happening now: Trump is now the third U.S. president to be impeached, after the House of Representatives adopted both articles of impeachment against him.

What happens next: Impeachment does not mean that the president has been removed from office. The Senate must hold a trial to make that determination. A trial is expected to take place in January. Here’s more on what happens next.

How we got here: A whistleblower complaint led Pelosi to announce the beginning of an official impeachment inquiry on Sept. 24. Closed-door hearings and subpoenaed documents related to the president’s July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky followed. After two weeks of public hearings in November, the House Intelligence Committee wrote a report that was sent to the House Judiciary Committee, which held its own hearings. Pelosi and House Democrats announced the articles of impeachment against Trump on Dec. 10. The Judiciary Committee approved two articles of impeachment against Trump: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.

Stay informed: Read the latest reporting and analysis on impeachment here.

Listen: Follow The Post’s coverage with daily updates from across our podcasts.

Want to understand impeachment better? Sign up for the 5-Minute Fix to get a guide in your inbox every weekday. Have questions? Submit them here, and they may be answered in the newsletter.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/in-aftermath-of-ukraine-crisis-a-climate-of-mistrust-and-threats/2019/12/24/03831e3e-2359-11ea-a153-dce4b94e4249_story.html

“Unlike expensive new cancer drugs that extend survival by three-to-six months, antibiotics like ours truly save a patient’s life,” said Larry Edwards, chief executive of the company that makes Xerava, Tetraphase Pharmaceuticals. “It’s frustrating.”

Tetraphase, based in Watertown, Mass., has struggled to get hospitals to embrace Xerava, which took more than a decade to discover and bring to market, even though the drug can vanquish resistant germs like MRSA and CRE, a resistant bacteria that kills 13,000 people a year.

Tetraphase’s stock price has been hovering around $2, down from nearly $40 a year ago. To trim costs, Mr. Edwards recently shuttered the company’s labs, laid off some 40 scientists and scuttled plans to move forward on three other promising antibiotics.

For Melinta Therapeutics based in Morristown, N.J., the future is even grimmer. Last month, the company’s stock price dropped 45 percent after executives issued a warning about the company’s long-term prospects. Melinta makes four antibiotics, including Baxdela, which recently received F.D.A. approval to treat the kind of drug-resistant pneumonia that often kills hospitalized patients. Jennifer Sanfilippo, Melinta’s interim chief executive, said she was hoping a sale or merger would buy the company more time to raise awareness about the antibiotics’ value among hospital pharmacists and increase sales.

“These drugs are my babies, and they are so urgently needed,” she said.

Coming up with new compounds is no easy feat. Only two new classes of antibiotics have been introduced in the last 20 years — most new drugs are variations on existing ones — and the diminishing financial returns have driven most companies from the market. In the 1980s, there were 18 major pharmaceutical companies developing new antibiotics; today there are three.

“The science is hard, really hard,” said Dr. David Shlaes, a former vice president at Wyeth Pharmaceuticals and a board member of the Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership, a nonprofit advocacy organization. “And reducing the number of people who work on it by abandoning antibiotic R & D is not going to get us anywhere.”

A new antibiotic can cost $2.6 billion to develop, he said, and the biggest part of that cost are the failures along the way.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/25/health/antibiotics-new-resistance.html

Image caption

The Pope mentioned a range of countries where people were suffering

The Pope has prayed for a softening of “stony and self-centred hearts” to help end injustice in the world, in his Christmas Day message.

From the Vatican balcony, Pope Francis spoke of “walls of indifference” being put up to people fleeing hardship in the hope of finding a better life.

The Pope prayed for those hit by conflict, natural disasters and disease, listing several countries.

He singled out parts of Africa where Christians had been killed.

Speaking under a clear blue sky to thousands crowded into St Peter’s Square, the Pope urged “comfort to those who are persecuted for their religious faith, especially missionaries and members of the faithful who have been kidnapped, and to the victims of attacks by extremist groups, particularly in Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and Nigeria”.

An attack on Christmas Eve in Burkina Faso left 35 people dead, most of them women.

Hundreds of people have been killed in the country over the past few years, mostly by jihadist groups.

Hours earlier, in a rare joint message with two other Western Church leaders, the Pope appealed for peace in South Sudan.

In their statement, the pontiff, the head of the Anglican Church and the former moderator of the Church of Scotland called for “a renewed commitment to the path of reconciliation and fraternity”.

South Sudan declared independence from Sudan in 2011 but has been crippled by conflict ever since.

In what was his seventh “Urbi et Orbi” (“To the City and the World”) Christmas Day address, the Pope also highlighted other hotspots of unrest including Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq, Venezuela, Ukraine and the Holy Land.

For change to happen for the better, he said, people had to be more compassionate.

“May [God] soften our often stony and self-centred hearts, and make them channels of His love. May He bring His smile, through our poor faces, to all the children of the world: to those who are abandoned and those who suffer violence,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50911452

David Calhoun will have a long to-do list when he takes over as CEO of Boeing next month, starting with winning approval from aviation regulators for changes to the 737 MAX’s flight control system to allow the company’s bestselling plane to return to service. Following that, Boeing will face the complex task of retrofitting roughly 400 aircraft it has produced since the 737 MAX was grounded in March in the wake of two deadly crashes, as well as reversing steps taken to preserve the planes while they were idled.

Then there are the 387 aircraft that were already in service with customers that Boeing will have to help restore to working condition.           

The enormity of the work that lies ahead is reinforced by satellite photos from Planet Labs of locations where Boeing is storing undelivered aircraft.

Boeing is marshaling the lion’s share of the planes at its test facility at Moses Lake near Seattle, seen below on Dec. 8.

There were 249 aircraft parked at Moses Lake as of Thursday, a few dozen aircraft away from the airfield’s capacity, says Michel Merluzeau, a Seattle-based director of aerospace and defense market analysis with the consultancy AIR. Most are on the pad in the southwest corner of the picture, which Boeing began parking planes on in October, he says.

That’s up sharply from 40 in July, when, to illustrate the buildup of undelivered planes since March, Forbes published the series of time-lapse photos below from Planet Labs, a San Francisco-based company with a network of about 140 small satellites that take over a million images of the Earth a day:  

Moses Lake is a short flight from the delivery center at Boeing Field and the company’s factory complex in Everett, Washington, the two locations where the bulk of the return to service work is expected be done.

Boeing has been storing roughly 60 planes at Boeing Field since at least July, with some 737 MAXs occupying employee parking spaces.

Boeing’s maintenance center in San Antonio, which will also prepare 737 MAX aircraft to return to service, is hosting 74 planes, also little-changed from July, but the company has moved more to a northern section of Kelly Field, seen below, away from its facilities.

Some 19 planes were outside its hangars at the southern end of the former military base as of Dec. 15.

The aircraft at Boeing Field and San Antonio will be the first to be delivered, says Merluzeau.

Beyond updating the planes’ flight control software, Boeing’s task is made more complex by the varying amounts of time different aircraft have been sitting. The longer they’ve been parked, the more that may have to be done to restore them to flying condition.

To make its job easier, Boeing could group aircraft together that need the same work packages, says Merluzeau.

Southwest Airlines said earlier this year that it expects it will take 120 hours of work on each of its 34 grounded 737 MAX planes to get them ready to fly again, and 30 to 60 days for the airline’s whole fleet.

To get the work done, Boeing will be able to draw at least initially on the 12,000 employees at the 737 plant in Renton, which will be idled at the beginning of January. Aerospace analyst Ronald Epstein of Bank of America/Merrill Lynch believes Boeing won’t restart production until two months after the global average return to service date.

However, two other bottlenecks loom for Boeing. The FAA has decided it will inspect and certify all of Boeing’s planes that are coming out of storage before they are delivered, a task it had previously delegated to Boeing. That could slow down the process.

Airlines also may not have the capability to inspect and take delivery of large quantities of 737 MAX aircraft quickly – and in some cases they may not want to if travel growth continues to slow.

Southwest Airlines was expecting delivery of 41 planes by the end of this year and American Airlines was expecting 16.

It could take 15 months for Boeing to clear out all the stored aircraft, Merluzeau estimates, during which time it will also have to integrate new aircraft into the delivery flow once the Renton factory restarts production.

When Boeing can get started depends on when the FAA ungrounds the plane. FAA Administrator Stephen Dickson earlier this month punctured Boeing’s hopes that the regulator could finish its evaluations of Boeing’s revisions to the flight control system and proposed training changes before the end of the year, telling a congressional panel that nearly a dozen milestones remained to be completed. Some observers think a decision could come by late February or early March.

United Airlines on Friday said it was scrubbing its 737 MAX aircraft from its flight schedule until June 4.

Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeremybogaisky/2019/12/24/satellite-photos-of-hundreds-of-undelivered-737-max-aircraft-underscore-how-much-work-boeing-has-ahead/

On Tuesday, thousands of protesters flooded the Tsim Sha Tsui shopping district and clashed with the police, who fired pepper spray and tear gas.

The police said some protesters had built barricades, vandalized stores and set fire to the entrance of a subway station. One clash took place outside one of Hong Kong’s most expensive hotels, the Peninsula.

For six months, protesters have staged regular demonstrations, sometimes violent, over concerns that China’s central government is increasing its control over the semiautonomous territory. They have called for expanded elections, amnesty for arrested demonstrators and an investigation into the police’s use of force.

“I have especially come out to stand with our young protesters,” said Alan Ming, 61, a retired factory owner. “I have never felt more upset on a Christmas Eve. I feel heavy-hearted.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/24/world/asia/hong-kong-protest-photos.html

PALM BEACH, Fla. – President Donald Trump was getting into the holiday spirit Tuesday but, like millions of Americans, he also hadn’t fully finished Christmas shopping. 

Speaking to U.S. soldiers on Christmas Eve from his Mar-a-Lago resort, the president said he had not yet picked up a gift for first lady Melania Trump. Asked what he got her, Trump said he had only a “a beautiful card” and is “still working on a Christmas present.”

“We love our family and we love each other,” Trump said. 

Trump, who has claimed that Americans are saying “Merry Christmas” more frequently  because of his presidency, waved off the “Christmas gift” threatened by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. The dictator has been making the threats to pressure the U.S. to resume talks over lifting sanctions on the country.

Instead of a missile test, as some believe Kim is threatening, Trump appeared to joke that it might be an actual Christmas gift. 

Trump and Kim Jong Un:Trump’s friendly ties with Kim Jong Un faces new test

“Maybe it’s a present where he sends me a beautiful vase as opposed to a missile test,” Trump said. “I may get a vase. I may get a nice present from him. You don’t know. You never know.”

The “beautiful card” the president said he got for the first lady is apparently a go-to gift. That’s the same gift the president said he got his wife for her 48th birthday.

That card, at least, came with flowers.

“Maybe I didn’t get her so much,” Trump told Fox in an April interview. “I got her a beautiful card, you know I’m very busy to be running out looking for presents. I got her a beautiful card and some beautiful flowers.”

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/12/24/trump-jokes-north-koreas-kim-jong-un-may-send-vase-christmas/2677267001/

The new HuffPost-YouGov poll was conducted between Dec. 20 and Dec. 22 among 1,000 U.S. adults. The poll has a margin of error of 3.3 percentage points. 

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/house/475886-new-poll-shows-nearly-half-of-voters-approve-of-trumps-impeachment

Michael Bloomberg’s presidential campaign is ending its relationship with a vendor amid reports that the vendor used prison labor for campaign work.  First reported by The Intercept and confirmed to CBS News by a Bloomberg campaign official, the campaign, through a third-party vendor, contracted the services of ProCom, a New Jersey-based company that runs call centers out of at least two prisons in the state of Oklahoma.

According to the Intercept, incarcerated women in the Oklahoma minimum-security women’s prison, Dr. Eddie Warrior Correctional Center, made calls on behalf of the Bloomberg campaign to California voters.  

“We only learned about this when the reporter called us, but as soon as we discovered which vendor’s subcontractor had done this, we immediately ended our relationship with the company and the people who hired them,” the campaign said in an email.  “We do not support this practice and we are making sure our vendors more properly vet their subcontractors moving forward.”

The campaign would not disclose the name of the third-party vendor that hired ProCom or how much the campaign paid the vendor.

Matt Elliott, a spokesperson for the State of Oklahoma Department of Corrections, tells CBS News that  vendors contract with his department through Oklahoma Correctional Industries for call centers. Some of the calls include “conducting surveys, selling subscriptions and making campaign calls all while reading from a script.”  Elliott says the projects provide inmates with “excellent work opportunities,” and that whether inmates are required to identify themselves as inmates is up to the vendors. 

“Inmates can receive $1.45 an hour working for call centers, working eight hours a day, five days a week. Inmates may work additional hours but only with permission from the director of Oklahoma Correctional Industries,” Elliott said. “We believe this type of work helps prepare inmates for release, and these public-private partnerships give them an idea of and training in what to expect in the workplace later.”

A spokesperson for ProCom has not yet responded to a request for comment by CBS News.

A late entry into the field, Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York and a prominent businessman, is self-funding his campaign and refusing to take donations. CBS News estimates his wealth to be more than $50 billion. Bloomberg, who is taking a non-traditional approach to campaigning, is skipping the first four early-voting states and diverting significant resources to the Super Tuesday delegate-heavy states like California. 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/mike-bloomberg-drops-vendor-who-was-using-prison-labor-for-his-presidential-campaign/

A new batch of Boeing internal documents related to the 737 Max jetliner paint “a very disturbing picture” regarding employees’ concerns about safety, a House committee reported Tuesday.

The latest documents were sent over late Monday, the same day Boeing said CEO Dennis Muilenburg resigned effective immediately after a string of troubling disclosures about the development of the latest version of the 737 jetliner grounded worldwide after two crashes.

Both the Federal Aviation Administration and the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, which has held a series of hearings about the 737 Max, acknowledged receiving the Boeing documents. They did not disclose the contents, saying they are under review.

But the Seattle Times reported the documents include more internal communications involving former Boeing 737 chief test pilot Mark Forkner, who, in records previously disclosed, described problems in the development of the flight-control system blamed in the two crashes. His 2016 missive to a colleague also talked of “basically” but unknowingly, lying to regulators.

A statement from the committee said the documents raise new, serious questions about the 737 Max.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/12/24/boeing-reveals-new-very-disturbing-documents-737-max-jetliner-faa-house/2743402001/

Eagle-eyed social media users roasted Rudy Giuliani on Tuesday for claiming on Facebook that he once served as Attorney General of the United States — a position he never held.

Giuliani, 75, was called on his apparent retroactive promotion after he tweeted out a link to his Facebook page, where the “About” page lists him as “Former Attorney General of the United States,” as well as a current “Government Official.”

The former two-term mayor of New York, who now acts as President Trump’s personal lawyer, did serve as Associate Attorney General from 1981 to 1983 during the Reagan administration, but never held the land’s highest legal post — a fact of which users were quick to remind him.

“Rudy Giuliani has never been Attorney General,” wrote @nycsouthpaw.

“1) You were never the Attorney General of the United States,” added @mvandemar. “2) You definitely are *not* currently a Government Official.”

The snark also flowed on the Facebook page itself.

“You were NEVER Attorney General of the United States,” wrote Ellen Spilka. “What is this?”

The blunder blew up one day after the publication of a rambling interview with Giuliani in New York magazine.

“If they’re investigating me, they’re a–holes,” he told the magazine of prosecutors in the Manhattan US Attorney’s Office, who he believes are out to get him over his role in the president’s Ukraine imbroglio. “They’re absolutely a–holes if they’re investigating me.”

Giuliani did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/12/24/rudy-giuliani-ripped-for-claiming-to-be-ex-us-attorney-general/

A New Jersey company’s work with Oklahoman prisoners made headlines Tuesday after a report revealed a prison call center was used in billionaire Michael Bloomberg’s 2020 presidential campaign.

A third-party vendor working with the campaign hired ProCom, a Vineland-based company, to make the calls, according to The Intercept.

The report also noted the calls were to California from a minimum-security women’s prison in Oklahoma.

Bloomberg’s campaign ended the contract after receiving questions from the news site.

Most prison labor is paid pennies per hour, and the average maximum daily wage for prisoners is down to $3.45, according to Prison Policy Initiative.

ProCom co-founder John Scallan told The Intercept the company pays the prison call center workers $7.25 per hour, which is Oklahoma’s minimum wage.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @JBrandt_NJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Source Article from https://www.nj.com/cumberland/2019/12/south-jersey-companys-prison-call-centers-used-in-bloomberg-campaign-report-says.html

Image copyright
EPA

Image caption

Pope Francis last week introduced sweeping changes to remove the rule of “pontifical secrecy”

Pope Francis has ushered in Christmas by saying God loves everyone – “even the worst of us”.

He was speaking to thousands of people during Christmas Eve Mass in St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican.

“You may have mistaken ideas, you may have made a complete mess of things… but the Lord continues to love you,” the Argentine pontiff said.

This will be interpreted by some as a reference to Church scandals, including sex abuse, our correspondent says.

Pope Francis will return to St Peter’s Basilica later on Christmas Day to deliver the traditional papal message to the world.

Among those taking part in the Mass were children chosen from countries including Venezuela, Iraq and Uganda.

The BBC’s Rome correspondent Mark Lowen says this is a clear gesture from the leader of 1.3 billion Catholics who often focuses on the plight of migrants and victims of war, as well as on extending the reach of the Church to its periphery.

What did the Pope say?

“Christmas reminds us that God continues to love us all, even the worst of us. To me, to you, to each of us, he says today: ‘I love you and I will always love you, for you are precious in my eyes,'” the 83-year-old pontiff said.

“God does not love you because you think and act the right way. He loves you, plain and simple. His love is unconditional; it does not depend on you.”

And the Pope also alluded to the clerical abuse and financial scandals afflicting the Church.

“Whatever goes wrong in our lives, whatever doesn’t work in the Church, whatever problems there are in the world, will no longer serve as an excuse.”

What’s the context?

From Australian country towns to schools in Ireland and cities across the US, the Catholic Church has faced a catalogue of child sexual abuse accusations in the past few decades.

High-profile cases and harrowing testimony given to public inquiries have continued to keep the issue in the headlines.

Media captionGeorge Pell is the most senior Catholic cleric to be convicted of such crimes

In the most recent of these, Cardinal George Pell was convicted of abusing two choir boys in Melbourne in 1996. He is Australia’s highest-ranking Catholic, and was previously Vatican treasurer – meaning he was widely seen as the Church’s third most powerful official.

Last week, the Pope introduced sweeping changes to remove the rule of “pontifical secrecy” that has pervaded the issue of clerical child abuse.

The Church previously shrouded sexual abuse cases in secrecy, in what it said was an effort to protect the privacy of victims and reputations of the accused.

But new papal documents lifted restrictions on those who report abuse or say they have been victims.

The Pope also changed the Vatican’s definition of child pornography, increasing the age of the subject from 14 or under to 18 or under.

Pope Francis has faced serious pressure to provide leadership and generate workable solutions to the crisis, which has engulfed the Church in recent years.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50908016

A cold winter storm will bring widespread rain and mountain snow to Southern California late Wednesday into Thursday, the National Weather Service said.

Snow levels will dip as low as 2,500 feet, and up to 8 inches could accumulate in the Antelope Valley. The Cuyama Valley could receive 3 inches of snow. Higher elevations of the L.A. and Ventura county mountains could see up to 2 feet of snow, especially above 6,000 feet.

The biggest impact from this storm is likely to be low snow levels affecting major roads and communities, including the Antelope Valley, the weather service warned, adding that the storm is similar in pattern to the one last month over Thanksgiving.

Travel delays because of road closures and whiteout conditions caused by blowing snow could cause significant travel delays through mountain passes, including the 5 Freeway over the Grapevine. Snow levels are expected to lower rapidly. The summit of the Tejon Pass, over which Interstate 5 carries traffic through the Tehachapis to the Central Valley, is 4,144 feet. The Cajon Pass is 3,776 feet where Interstate 15 heads out toward Barstow and then on to Las Vegas.

Winter storm watches will be in effect for most mountain areas beginning Wednesday. Strong, gusty northeasterly winds will develop across much of the area on Thursday.

The storm will peak Wednesday night into Thursday. At lower elevations, heavy rain totaling up to 2 inches could cause flash flooding and shallow debris flows near burn scars. Power outages are also possible with the heavy rain and strong winds.

Cold, breezy and icy conditions will follow the storm. The coasts and valleys are likely to see temperatures from 35 to 45 degrees on Friday morning, with 20s and 30s in the mountains and deserts.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-12-24/southern-california-christmas-weather-cold-winter-storm-snow-mountains