House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.) rebuked Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R., N.C.) for calling Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, whose country is under attack by Russia, a “thug.”

“Madison is wrong,” Mr. McCarthy said at a press conference. “If there’s any thug in this world, it’s Putin.”

A spokesman for Mr. Cawthorn didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Mr. Cawthorn’s remarks, at an event in North Carolina, were first aired by WRAL News. In the video, he said: “Remember that Zelensky is a thug. Remember that the Ukrainian government is incredibly corrupt and it is incredibly evil and it has been pushing woke ideologies.”

Asked if he supported Mr. Cawthorn’s re-election, Mr. McCarthy said yes. Mr. McCarthy headlined a fundraiser for Mr. Cawthorn in early February at the Conservative Partnership Institute.

Mr. Cawthorn is one of a handful of House Republicans who have drawn attention for their comments related to Russia’s invasion, amid broader bipartisan unity on backing Ukraine and continuing to send weapons and other aid.

Some have also expressed skepticism about the U.S. getting more deeply involved in a foreign war.

When the House voted Thursday to end normal trade ties with Russia, eight Republicans voted against the legislation. The “no” votes were Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona, Dan Bishop of North Carolina, Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Matt Gaetz of Florida, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Glenn Grothman of Wisconsin, Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Chip Roy of Texas.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/russia-ukraine-latest-news-2022-03-18

LVIV, Ukraine—Rescuers in Mariupol evacuated 130 people from the wreckage of a theater hit by an airstrike this week and searched for more survivors, as Russia expanded its air assaults on Ukraine’s west, striking an aircraft-repair facility near the Polish border, officials said.

“Hundreds of Mariupol residents are still under the debris,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said during an address to the nation. “Despite the shelling, despite all the difficulties, we will continue rescue work.”

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/russian-missiles-hit-aircraft-facility-in-western-ukraine-11647600764

Officials from the Biden administration met with Florida LGBTQ students and their families in a virtual roundtable concerning the now-dubbed “Don’t Say Gay” bill and other legislative efforts advocates deem anti-LGBTQ.

U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona and Rachel L. Levine, assistant secretary for health at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, listened to the students and their family members discuss concerns and fears about the impact of such bills.

The two were advised on what resources could be provided to support the Florida LGBTQ community.

“Laws around the country, including in Florida, have targeted and sought to bully some of our most vulnerable students and families, and create division in our schools,” Cardona said in a statement.

He added: “My message to you is that this Administration won’t stand for bullying or discrimination of any kind, and we will use our authorities to protect, support, and provide opportunities for LGBTQI+ students and all students.”

The Parental Rights in Education bill, dubbed the “Don’t Say Gay” bill by LGBTQ activists, would limit what classrooms can teach about sexual orientation and gender identity.

Under this legislation, these lessons “may not occur in kindergarten through grade 3 or in a manner that is not age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students in accordance with state standards.”

The bill would also allow parents to sue school districts that engage in these topics. The bill is awaiting a decision from Gov. Ron DeSantis.

The Biden administration has denounced the efforts as “hateful.”

“Every parent hopes that our leaders will ensure their children’s safety, protection, and freedom,” the White House said in a statement Feb. 8.

It continued: “Today, conservative politicians in Florida rejected those basic values by advancing legislation that is designed to target and attack the kids who need support the most – LGBTQI+ students, who are already vulnerable to bullying and violence just for being themselves.”

After the bill was passed by the Florida House and Senate, Cardona slammed the legislators responsible for its passage.

“The Department of Education has made clear that all schools receiving federal funding must follow federal civil rights law, including Title IX’s protections against discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity,” Cardona said.

Levine and Cardona also shared with students and families the mental health resources and support that are currently available for these students.

“We need to support LGBTQI+ youth, their parents and families to help them achieve the good health and quality care they deserve,” Levine said. “Our communities have a champion in President Biden. The President supports equality and works to ensure everyone is represented. And that gives people a voice, a chance to effect change, to help people understand the diverse needs of our nation.”

Legislation targeting the LGBTQ community has sent shockwaves throughout the U.S.

States continue to debate whether trans youth should receive gender-affirming health care, whether trans girls should be allowed to play girls’ sports, or whether LGBTQ content can be taught in schools.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/biden-administration-meets-florida-lgbtq-community-dont-gay/story?id=83525944

Smoke billows over a street near the airport in Lviv after Russian airstrikes hit a jet repair facility.

Claire Harbage/NPR


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Smoke billows over a street near the airport in Lviv after Russian airstrikes hit a jet repair facility.

Claire Harbage/NPR

LVIV, Ukraine — A repair facility for fighter jets in Lviv was struck by Russian missiles early Friday morning, the city’s mayor said.

The strike on the Lviv State Aircraft Repair Plant was the closest yet to the western city of Lviv, which has served as a relative safe haven since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began last month.

“Several missiles hit the aircraft repair facility. Its buildings were destroyed by the strikes. Active work at the plant had been stopped in time, so as of yet, there are no casualties,” said Mayor Andriy Sadovyi.

Minutes before the strike, air raid sirens rang throughout the city. A plume of smoke could be seen over the airport at sunrise. Hours later, the area of the facility was still smoking.

Authorities said that Russia had launched six cruise missiles at the facility, two of which were intercepted by Ukrainian defense forces.

“The missiles, which were fired from the Black Sea area, were partially shot down. But four of them hit the aircraft repair plant,” said Maksym Kozytskyy, the head of Lviv’s military administration.

An archived version of Lviv State Aircraft Repair Plant website describes it as Ukraine’s “leading aircraft maintenance company.” Operated by the Ukrainian state-owned defense company Ukroboronprom, the facility primarily services MiG-29s, the Soviet-made fighter jet used by Ukraine’s air force.

Friday’s strike was just over 4 miles from Lviv’s city center, by far the closest the war has come to the western city. The facility sits on the edge of the Danylo Halytskyi International Airport, the civilian airport in Lviv.

With so much of the fighting concentrated in the eastern and southern regions of Ukraine, Lviv had become a bastion of relative normalcy in a country stricken by war and something of a central station for humanitarian aid and refugees.

The prospect of the violence coming here, too, is terrifying, residents of the area told NPR.

“We all heard the explosions, and once we did, we all ran into the bomb shelter,” said Yevhen Halakhov, a resident of a building near the airport, who added that he was awoken by screams from family members in another room. Still, he had no plans to move, he said as he pushed his grandson on a swing set a few hours after the strike.

The calculus may be different for the more than 200,000 people who have come to Lviv after fleeing violence in other parts of Ukraine.

“We left Kyiv because it got very hot there, so we came here instead. But it’s obvious now that we can’t stay here, because we don’t know what will be next,” said a woman who gave her name only as Diana.

She and her daughter are staying with family in an apartment near the airport, she said. But the early morning strike — “the entire building shook, the glass and the windows shook,” she said — had her considering leaving the country altogether, as 3 million other Ukrainians have done, according to the U.N.

Elsewhere in Ukraine, Russian missile strikes and shelling continued Thursday night and Friday morning, including in the capital Kyiv. In Kharkiv, which has been under near-constant bombardment since the invasion began nearly a month ago, Ukrainian authorities reported that shelling had killed at least 10 people overnight.

And apartment buildings in Kramatorsk, a city in the Donbas region, were also hit by rockets, according to regional officials.

Additional reporting by NPR’s Julian Hayda in Lviv.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/03/18/1087460874/russian-missiles-hit-a-fighter-jet-repair-facility-in-the-closest-strike-yet-to-

In a state that is home to the nation’s highest poverty rate, the most billionaires and a shrinking middle class, who deserves cash relief when prices are soaring?

That question is at the center of ongoing discussions inside the state Capitol as California grapples with a surge in gasoline costs and is projected to have a record-high budget and surplus.

A group of Democrats is proposing sending a $400 rebate to every California taxpayer regardless of income or if they own a gas-powered car. Republican lawmakers have pushed for a suspension of the gas tax, an approach they say would mean faster relief and less negotiations. Gov. Gavin Newsom made a vague promise to “put money back in the pockets” of Californians but has backed off a pitch to tie rebates to vehicle ownership.

While a universal checks-for-all program is likely to be well-received by the general public, lawmakers have to decide how far to stretch potential funding as they track revenue in the coming months, along with the best way to address the hierarchy of California’s many needs.

Advocates across the state say that relief should begin with more for those who need it the most instead of an equal share for all.

One idea is to send extra state funds to low-income residents already enrolled in safety-net programs or receiving the state’s Earned Income Tax Credit. The credit currently gives up to $3,160 to tax filers earning less than $30,000.

Democratic leaders have signaled their support for a plan that is tailored to income level, noting the state’s vast wealth gap.

“That’s exactly the type of thing I’m in favor of,” Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Lakewood) said in an interview with The Times on Wednesday. “Providing direct checks to CalWorks recipients or even sending a check to tax filers of a certain level — all of those are the type of things that could be great.”

A proposed $400 tax rebate to help Californians deal with high gas prices draws support, but don’t expect to see any checks in the mail next week.

Rendon said in a statement Thursday that the $400-for-all plan “eliminates some of the pitfalls of other proposals such as a gas tax holiday,” which Democrats have said would not help consumers as much as a cash payment they can spend on groceries, rent and other necessities. Democratic legislators also support a plan that is not specific to drivers, citing climate concerns.

The speaker said the latest plan, spearheaded by Assemblymember Cottie Petrie-Norris (D-Irvine), “shows Californians that the Legislature aims to have their backs.” But he also said Wednesday that he would not support a proposal to send checks to the very wealthy, naming as an example Los Angeles-based billionaire philanthropist Gary Michelson, whom he called a friend.

“[Michelson] is a sweetheart of a man, but he doesn’t deserve a check either,” Rendon said. “A lot of people have suffered recently. A lot of Californians have been struggling, and we’re looking for a solution to provide financial support for those Californians in particular.”

Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins (D-San Diego) said earlier this week she’s pushing for “substantial relief, especially for lower- and middle-income Californians” and “not just those who are drivers.”

A new report by the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California found that higher-income families spend more on gas and would receive the largest benefit of any gas tax rebate or tax holiday.

Republican lawmakers voiced support for the $400 plan but are still pushing for a gas tax cut in addition to a rebate. They argue that all taxpayers deserve a cut of the state’s flush budget, especially as the wealthiest contribute more in taxes.

“It’s a common-sense response,” Assemblymember Kevin Kiley (R-Rocklin) said at a news conference Thursday. “We have this surplus, what should we do with it? Maybe we should return it to the folks that we got it from.”

Mike Herald, director of policy advocacy for the Western Center on Law & Poverty, sees the fairness question differently.

The price of gas is the same for everyone, even as incomes vary, he said. While some living in poverty cannot afford to own a car, low-income Californians are less likely to have an option to work from home during the pandemic, and a car is a lifeline.

“We do things like this a lot, where we enact policies that have a disproportionate impact on lower-income folks and then when we get into these kind of crisis situations, we don’t always make sure that the folks that are already paying too much are the first ones to get relief,” Herald said.

Questions about equity have placed Democrats pushing the universal rebate plan in a tough spot.

The hesitation to tinker with California’s steep gas excise tax of 51 cents per gallon demonstrates just how politically sensitive the issue remains.

Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel (D-Encino), who supports the plan, said it doesn’t have to be a rebate for all or a rebate only for low-income residents — it can be both.

“The size of the surplus allows us to do both,” Gabriel said at a news conference Thursday. “This is not going to be the only proposal on the table. This is not the only thing we’re going to be able to do.”

If state officials adopt as a template the “Golden State Stimulus” pandemic relief model from last year, only tax filers earning up to $75,000 a year would receive a payment.

But according to poverty measures adjusted for California’s cost of living, middle-class income for a family of four renting in Los Angeles County could reach more than $227,605 and up to $261,623 in parts of the Bay Area.

“We know of course [the $75,000 limit] is not high enough to be middle class in many parts of the state, and I suspect that’s part of the tension that the administration is focusing on — trying to address that there are low-income Californians that are affected very negatively by risings costs but also middle-income Californians challenged by the state’s cost of living,” said Chris Hoene, director of the California Budget & Policy Center. “The reality is there’s lots of different ways that folks with different incomes struggle to get by in this state.”

Hoene, whose group advocates for programs aimed at the state’s lowest-income residents, called the Golden State Stimulus “well structured,” and said his primary concern is cutting into the state budget to benefit the wealthy.

“What we want to try to avoid is, in essence, wasting the state’s resources by giving the credit to Californians who aren’t in need at this time,” he said.

Newsom administration officials said details on his tax rebate plan will come next week, and pointed to pre-existing initiatives that are “focused on improving affordability,” including state-funded healthcare and child care.

“The governor is committed to bringing real relief to struggling Californians. We are working on a proposal that helps Californians with rising gas prices and provides funding to public transit so they can provide direct relief for riders,” spokesperson Erin Mellon said Thursday.

More than a third of Californians are living at or near the poverty line. At the same time, almost 1 in 4 tax returns filed in 2019 came from taxpayers with an annual adjusted gross income of more than $100,000, according to data compiled by the state Franchise Tax Board.

Families in the state’s lowest income bracket spend a larger portion of their budgets on gasoline than other income brackets, according to the PPIC report. Middle-income families also spend more of their budgets on gas than high-income families, according to the report.

Sarah Bohn, an economy and poverty researcher for the institute, said a more targeted approach for the lowest-income families is best, but a check for all would likely be easier for the state to administer — and some middle-class Californians who do not qualify for public assistance could also use the help.

“The ideal way to do it, in my view, is to target those who are really burdened by higher prices and haven’t seen rising earnings as much as other groups. But it’s difficult to do, we don’t have a lot of mechanisms for that,” Bohn said. “Many middle-class families are actually spending most of their resources on basic things in their budget and then they don’t have a ton left over.”

The discussion over rebates has sparked a slew of debates about the type of changes to government policy California needs in the face of a record-high budget, with interest groups clamoring for more permanent action instead of cutting one-time checks.

Climate advocates said any reward for gas-powered vehicle owners contradicts California’s environmental goals.

Matthew Lewis, a spokesperson for California YIMBY — which stands for “Yes, in my back yard” — used the moment to urge state officials to rethink housing policy and workers’ dependence on commuting.

“It’s good policy to help lower-income people by giving them money, but honestly if the state wants to get serious about what those people really need, it’s affordable housing closer to their jobs. Giving people gas tax rebates won’t solve this problem,” he said. “This is a climate policy. The amount you charge for gasoline is a climate policy, so let’s treat it that way.”

Gas prices are high across California, and it’s unclear when prices will go down. But, there are ways to save money on gas. Here are some tips.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-03-18/struggling-californians-advocates-say-need-a-rebate-more-than-wealthy-drivers

The father of a college golfer killed in Tuesday’s fiery Texas crash that claimed nine lives ripped the dad who allowed his 13-year-old to drive the pickup truck that caused the wreck.

“That is the very picture of lunacy — to allow a 13-year-old behind the wheel of a pickup traveling down the road at 70 miles per hour at night. That has got to be the zenith of lunacy,” Gary Raines, father of Karisa Raines, who died in the crash, told The Post on Friday.

Karisa, a 21-year-old from Fort Stockton, Texas, was two months away from graduating with a bachelor’s degree from the University of the Southwest, her father said. Instead, her family is planning her memorial service.

Karisa was one of nine people killed in the crash near Midland, Texas. She was in a van carrying members of the men’s and women’s golf teams from the University of the Southwest.

Karisa Raines was one of nine people killed in a crash after a 13-year-old boy driving a pickup truck lost control of the vehicle and collided with her van.
AP
The 13-year-old boy lost control of the pickup truck after a tire blew out.
AP
Ricky Siemens, 13, and his father, Henrich Siemens, 38, were among nine people who died in Tuesday’s crash.
Facebook / Agatha Siemens

Around 8:17 p.m., a pickup truck driven by a 13-year-old boy lost control after a tire blew out, said the National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating the crash. The boy’s father, Henrich Siemens, was also in the truck. Both of them were among the dead.

“(Henrich Siemens) was guilty of not only stupidity and lunacy, but he was also guilty of child abuse, in my opinion. Do I blame the kid for the wreck — I do not. Do I blame the father for the wreck, I do not. I blame the father for not having better sense,” said Gary Raines.

The mother of Laci Stone, who also died in the crash, told The Post she’s not sure what to make of knowing a 13-year-old was behind the wheel of the truck that killed her daughter.

Karisa Raines’ father, Gary Raines, says that allowing a 13-year-old to drive was the “zenith of lunacy.”
Facebook / Gary Raines

“Everything happens for a reason. It’s just a very unfortunate accident. I’m not going to blame anybody for a decision they made. In the moment, they obviously didn’t know what would happen, so I can’t focus too much on that part of it right now,” said Chelsi Stone.

Both families tell The Post they’re being uplifted by the people in the small Texas towns they live in and by messages of love and support from strangers across the country. Both families are making funeral arrangements.

“I must tell you that my prayers are with the family of that (13-year-old) child. My prayers are with all of those who lost their lives because we’re not the only family that’s grieving right now. There’s a bunch of folks who are grieving and they all deserve our prayers,” said Gary Raines, who said his daughter’s number one passion was her relationship with Jesus Christ.

Karisa Raines was two months away from graduating from the University of the Southwest.
AP
The boy’s father was also in the truck, and both were killed in the crash.
AP

The 13-year-old, identified as Ricky by friends and family, was remembered on social media by his mother. Agatha Siemens posted his photo on her Facebook profile yesterday. She spoke to The Post briefly by phone Thursday, revealing that on the night of the crash, her husband and son were going to pick up a truck her husband had purchased.

Today, she wouldn’t answer phone calls from The Post, but shared by text message that a memorial fund for her husband and son has been set up at First United Bank under her name.

Ricky was responsible for a fire that burned down his family’s home just three months ago.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2022/03/18/zenith-of-lunacy-father-of-golfer-killed-in-horrific-crash-unloads-on-dad-who-allowed-teen-to-drive/

WASHINGTON—President Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping conferred Friday amid growing hostility over Ukraine and what the U.S. says is Beijing’s failure to join other leading nations in denouncing Russia’s military assault on Ukraine.

During a nearly two-hour-long videoconference, Mr. Xi sought to present China as a peacemaker. “The Ukraine crisis is something we don’t want to see,” he told Mr. Biden, according to China’s official Xinhua News Agency. “Conflict and confrontation are not in the interests of anyone.”

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/biden-xi-talk-as-u-s-threatens-actions-if-china-backs-russia-in-ukraine-war-11647611124

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2022/03/18/ukraine-russia-invasion-live-updates/7087167001/

LONDON, March 18 (Reuters) – Russian President Vladimir Putin justified the invasion of Ukraine before a packed soccer stadium on Friday but coverage of his speech on state television was unexpectedly interrupted by what the Kremlin said was a technical problem with a server.

Speaking on a stage at the centre of Moscow’s Luzhniki Stadium, Putin promised to tens of thousands of people waving Russian flags and chanting “Russia, Russia, Russia” that all of the Kremlin’s aims would be achieved.

“We know what we need to do, how to do it and at what cost. And we will absolutely accomplish all of our plans,” Putin, 69, told the rally from a stage decked out with slogans such as “For a world without Nazism” and “For our president”.

Many of the Russian slogans used at the rally incorporated the “Z” symbol that Russian forces have used as a motif in Ukraine. One read “Za Putina” – “for Putin”.

Dressed in a turtleneck and coat, Putin said the soldiers fighting in what Russia calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine had demonstrated the unity of Russia.

“Shoulder to shoulder, they help each other, support each other and when needed they shield each other from bullets with their bodies like brothers. Such unity we have not had for a long time,” Putin said.

As he was talking, state television briefly cut away from his speech mid-sentence and showed earlier pre-recorded footage of patriotic songs, but he later appeared back on state television.

RIA news agency cited Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov as saying a technical fault on a server was the reason state television had suddenly cut away from Putin.

It was not immediately clear why the server issue led to such an abrupt and unusual interruption.

THUNDERSTORMS

Putin says the operation in Ukraine was necessary because the United States was using the country to threaten Russia and Russia had to defend against the “genocide” of Russian-speaking people by Ukraine.

Ukraine says it is fighting for its existence and that Putin’s claims of genocide are nonsense. The West says claims it wants to rip Russia apart are fiction.

Before Putin spoke, Russia’s stirring national anthem, with the words “Russia is our sacred state” boomed out across the stands of the stadium used in the 2018 Soccer World Cup along with more modern pop hits such as “Made in the U.S.S.R.”.

Putin’s favourite Russian band, Lyube, sang patriotic songs about war, sacrifice and the honour of those fighting for Russia.

Pan-Slavist poetry by Fyodor Tyutchev, whose verses warned Russians that they would always be considered slaves of the Enlightenment by Europeans, was read out.

Russia has lost any illusions about ever relying on the West and Moscow will never accept a world order dominated by the United States which is acting like a sheriff seeking to call all the shots in a saloon bar, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said. read more

Putin, speaking as U.S. President Joe Biden talked with Chinese President Xi Jinping by telephone about the Ukraine crisis, quoted Russia’s 18th century naval commander, Fyodor Ushakov.

“He once said that these thunderstorms will bring Russia glory,” Putin said. “That is the way it was then, that is the way it is now and it will always be that way.”

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/putin-hails-russias-special-operation-ukraine-thousands-packed-stadium-2022-03-18/

LVIV, Ukraine—Workers evacuated 130 people from the wreckage of a theater in Mariupol following a Russian airstrike on the southern port city, Ukraine’s ombudsman said Friday.

About 1,300 remained trapped in the basement of the theater, Lyudmyla Denisova said. She said it was difficult to be certain of the number of survivors and she declined to confirm any casualties.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/russian-missiles-hit-aircraft-facility-in-western-ukraine-11647600764

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2022/03/18/ukraine-russia-invasion-live-updates/7087167001/

Putin’s ominous speech on Wednesday likened opponents to “gnats” who try to weaken the country at the behest of the West — crude remarks that set the stage for sweeping repressions against those who dare to speak out against the war in Ukraine.

His rant appeared to reflect his frustration about the slow pace of the Russian offensive, which bogged down on the outskirts of Kyiv and around other cities in northeastern Ukraine. Russian forces made comparatively bigger gains in the south, but they haven’t been able to capture the strategic port of Mariupol on the Sea of Azov, and their advance along the Black Sea coast also has stalled.

Meanwhile, Russia has been battered by devastating Western sanctions that cut the government’s access to an estimated half of the country’s hard currency reserves and dealt crippling blows to many sectors of the economy.

With his hopes for a blitz in Ukraine shattered and economic costs mounting swiftly, Putin unleashed a venomous diatribe at those who oppose his course.

“The Russian people will always be able to distinguish true patriots from scum and traitors and will simply spit them out like a gnat that accidentally flew into their mouths — spit them out on the pavement,” Putin said during Wednesday’s call with top officials. “I am convinced that such a natural and necessary self-purification of society will only strengthen our country, our solidarity, cohesion and readiness to respond to any challenges.”

The coarse language carried ominous parallels for those familiar with Soviet history. During show trials of Stalin’s Great Terror, authorities disparaged the declared “enemies of the people” as “reptiles” or “mad dogs.”

His voice strained by anger, Putin charged that Russians who oppose the war in Ukraine were a “fifth column” obsequiously serving Western interests and ready to “sell their own mother.”

“I don’t condemn those who have villas in Miami or the French Riviera, those who can’t live without foie gras, oysters or so-called gender freedoms,” Putin said. “It’s not a problem. The problem is that many of those people are mentally there (in the West) and not here with our people, with Russia. They don’t remember or just don’t understand that they are just … expendables used for the purpose of inflicting the maximum damage on our people.”

As he spoke, the Russian State Investigative Committee announced the opening of criminal probes against several people accused of spreading “false information” about the military action in Ukraine.

The first person singled out by the country’s top investigative agency was Veronika Belotserkovskaya, a popular blogger and socialite who has written books about French and Italian cuisine and divides her time between Russia and southern France. She appeared to be a target conveniently fitting Putin’s scathing description of cosmopolitan Russians who love fancy food and are seemingly at odds with the broad masses.

The investigative committee said it would move to issue an international arrest warrant for Belotserkovskaya, alleging her Instagram posts “discredited” state authorities and the military.

Belotserkovskaya responded by writing: “I have been officially declared to be a decent person!”

She is being investigated under new legislation fast-tracked on March 4 by the Kremlin-controlled parliament, a week after Putin launched the invasion. It envisions prison terms of up to 15 years for posting “fake” information about the military that differs from the official narrative.

Putin and his lieutenants describe the war in Ukraine as a “special military operation” intended to uproot alleged “neo-Nazi nationalists” and remove a potential military threat against Russia— goals that most of the world has rejected as bogus.

Russian officials have attributed the offensive’s slow pace to their desire to spare civilians, even as the military pummeled Mariupol, Kyiv, Kharkiv and other Ukrainian cities with indiscriminate barrages and airstrikes, killing untold numbers of civilians.

With the action in Ukraine in stark contrast with official declarations, the authorities acted quickly to control the message, shutting access to foreign media websites, along with Facebook and Instagram and moving to outlaw their parent company Meta as an “extremist” organization.

The tight lids on information have helped the Kremlin rally support of broad layers of the population who rely on state-controlled television as their main source of news. State TV programs carried an increasingly aggressive message against those who oppose the war.

Asked about incidents in which the apartment doors of war critics were spray-painted with the letter “Z” — a sign used to mark Russian military vehicles in Ukraine that has been heavily promoted by the state — Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov described it as an “emotional” move by Putin’s supporters.

The campaign in support of the war saw Russian cities flooded with “Z” posters and vehicles emblazoned with it. School children were shown standing in groups in the shape of the letter or wearing clothes marked with a “Z.”

Despite the draconian new laws, tight controls on information and increasingly aggressive propaganda, however, thousands of Russians showed up at antiwar protests across the country to face immediate arrest.

In a powerful symbol of defiance, an employee of state television interrupted a live news program, holding a handmade sign protesting the war. Marina Ovsyannikova was fined the equivalent of $270, but still faces a criminal probe that could land her in prison.

One loud voice of dissent was that of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, Putin’s fiercest political foe who is serving 2 1/2 years in prison and now faces a trial that could hand him a 13-year sentence.

In a speech at his trial Tuesday, Navalny warned that the war will lead to the breakup of Russia, saying that “everyone’s duty now is to oppose the war.”

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/putin-likens-opponents-gnats-signaling-repression-83522812

Sen. Dick Durbin, chair of the Judiciary Committee, will preside over next week’s confirmation hearings at the U.S. Supreme Court.

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Sen. Dick Durbin, chair of the Judiciary Committee, will preside over next week’s confirmation hearings at the U.S. Supreme Court.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

When Senate confirmation hearings open on the Supreme Court nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson next week, there will be a new face in the center chair. Presiding over the hearing will be Illinois Democrat Dick Durbin. Though he has served in the House and the Senate for a total of 39 years, his influence has largely been behind the scenes. Until now.

He has been No. 2 in the Senate Democratic leadership since 2007, a job that involves knowing senators well enough to be able to count and corral votes, and knowing how to broker a deal.

Durbin was raised in the working-class city of East St. Louis, Ill. On the Black side of town, people had come north in the Great Migration to work in factories. On the white side of town, the population was largely Catholic immigrants, like his mother, who came to the U.S. from Lithuania at age 2. Both his parents had only an eighth-grade education and both worked for the railroad, his mother in the office and his father as a night watchman, who worked his way up to a chief clerk’s position.

“My church was kind of the center of my life. It was not only my school but it’s where I went to play sports and, you know, dances and everything else,” Durbin remembers. “I kind of focused on the Catholic side of life in East St. Louis.”

That came to a grinding halt when his father died. “He was in the hospital for 100 days before he passed away. And there I was, a 14-year-old kid standing by his bed, seeing this man gasping for air at age 53, two packs of Camels a day.”

His father’s death led to what, decades later, Durbin calls his proudest accomplishment: his leadership in the fight against tobacco. In 1987, as a junior member of the House, he introduced a bill to ban smoking on airplane trips. Although the entire Democratic and Republican leadership was against the measure, amazingly it passed, on a bipartisan roll call vote.

“Why?” Durbin asks rhetorically. “Because the House of Representatives was the biggest frequent-flyer club in America.” But in fact it was more than that, he says. “It was a tipping point I didn’t see coming.” A tipping point in public opinion. The bill passed the Senate and was signed into law after the key Senate committee chairman, who was up for election that cycle, polled the question and found that banning smoking on planes and in other public places was very popular.

Working with Republicans

So, how did a boy from East St. Louis, with no financial means, get to college, law school, and the U.S. House of Representatives? To start with, Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., was lot cheaper in those days.

“I could work all summer in the slaughterhouse in East St. Louis, make $1,200 a summer,” and with a part-time job during the school year, and a $1,000 loan each year, he made ends meet.

One of the part-time jobs Durbin took was working for Sen. Paul Douglas, a famous liberal lion of his times, whose photo sits on the wall in Durbin’s Capitol office. “Douglas fought the battle for civil rights…against all the Southern Democrats in the Senate. It went on and on for years,” Durbin recalls, noting that his mentor was usually on the losing side, but “he never gave up.”

Now Durbin holds the Senate seat that Douglas once did. Not only is he the assistant majority leader, he is the first whip to also be the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. He persuaded the Democratic caucus to let him do these two full time jobs by giving up other significant committee assignments.

He is intent on trying to break the committee’s gridlock where he can. Everything has to be a compromise to succeed because the committee, and the Senate, is evenly split.

Durbin is something of a master at getting along with the opposition whenever possible. He is friends with the Judiciary Committee’s ranking Republican, Sen. Chuck Grassley, and is trying once again this year to win passage of the DREAM Act that he first proposed 20 years ago. It would allow undocumented immigrants brought here by their parents as children to win legal status. His ally in that, most of the time, has been Republican Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.

“That’s the nature of the Senate,” he observes. “There are a lot of titanic egos on a very small boat, and the fellow you push overboard today may be the one that’s going to save your life tomorrow.”

There are, of course, some Republicans on the committee whom he sees as implacable. For Democrats, Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas, Josh Hawley of Missouri, and Tom Cotton of Arkansas are particularly problematic. Cotton in particular makes a practice of holding up U.S. Attorney, U.S. Marshall, and other law enforcement nominees, not because he objects to them in particular, but because of an unrelated policy grievance with the Justice Department.

Now Durbin is about to preside over confirmation hearings for the first African American woman nominated for a seat on the U.S Supreme Court, and he is proud of this moment, “I hope we get it done, fingers crossed. If she can make it, it’s historic.”

The fate of the filibuster

But he is reflective enough– and candid enough– to look back and see that partisanship can lead to misjudgments.

He seems to be of two minds about the Democrats’ decision in 2013 to abolish the filibuster after Republican leader Mitch McConnell blocked all three nominees to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

“McConnell just decided that he would do everything in his power to stop us from filling vacancies,” he recalls. “And that’s when [Majority Leader] Harry Reid said, ‘I can’t let him do that. That’s an important court and we’ve got to have a mechanism to appoint someone.'”

At the time, Reid explicitly preserved the filibuster for Supreme Court nominees, but just over three years later, when Donald Trump was elected, McConnell abolished the filibuster for Supreme Court nominees, allowing for the quick confirmation of three conservative Supreme Court Justices—Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett.

Does Durbin regret taking the first step to blowing up the filibuster? The Democrats think McConnell would have abolished it for Supreme Court nominees anyway. But the lack of the filibuster “has changed the Supreme Court a lot,” Durbin says, and not for the better. “When you needed 60 votes to make it on the Supreme Court, you had to have a nominee that could pick up some votes of the minority party, whatever it might be,” he observes, “and that, I think, moves you toward a more centrist person. And we no longer have that element in the equation.”

As to his own votes on Supreme Court nominations, does he have any regrets? Durbin was one of 22 Democratic votes against John Roberts nomination to be chief justice.

“I’ve thought about that more than anyone,” Durbin admits. “I would say if it came to me again, I would reconsider. I respect him for so many things…although a majority of his opinions I definitely would disagree with.”

If that remark seems measured, don’t look for more like it next week when Judge Jackson’s nomination hearings begin.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/03/18/1087242646/dick-durbin-a-low-key-senate-veteran-to-preside-over-supreme-court-hearings

Cases and deaths from Covid-19 have fallen in the US, but warning signs and rises in other countries are prompting experts to take future and existing variants of the virus seriously – and they are warning that America has not yet reached the endemic phase.

It’s important to prepare now for the next surge or variant, whether that’s BA.2 or a different one, experts say.

While it’s not yet clear if BA.2, a sublineage of Omicron, will cause another surge so soon on the heels of the first Omicron outbreak, it shows worrying signs of being able to reinfect those who previously recovered from Covid, like its sibling BA.1.

Several countries in Europe are seeing another surge now, and early indicators, such as wastewater monitoring, show that cases may start to tick back up in the US. But it’s not clear whether the reason for the surge is because of the variant’s increased transmissibility or its ability to evade immunity, or countries’ relaxed precautions and waning immunity – or all of the above.

“​​That’s a really, really hard one to answer definitively, because everything’s happening at the same time,” said Aris Katzourakis, a professor specializing in virus evolution at the University of Oxford. But he and other researchers warned on Monday that other variants will emerge, and they could be more severe than variants we’ve seen before.

While Omicron is less severe than Delta, Delta was more severe than previous variants.

Scientists are watching BA.2 especially closely for signs that it is adept at reinfection after previous bouts with Covid.

“That is the most important and challenging scientific question right now in the field of Sars-CoV-2 epidemiology,” said Samuel Scarpino, a mathematical epidemiologist and managing director of pathogen surveillance at the Rockefeller Foundation’s Pandemic Prevention Institute.

“It’s very unusual to see a surge followed by another surge in rapid succession. When that happens, it’s almost always a sign of some kind of immune evasion.”

The US is frequently three to four weeks behind surges in the UK, Scarpino said. “I think the signs are all pointing towards there being a surge of BA.2 in the US, but what we’re seeing in Europe has just started to happen over the past week and a half – so it’s still early days, which means there’s a lot of uncertainty.”

It’s not yet clear how bad such a wave would be, especially given prior immunity from the recent surge and changes in behavior.

“There are more unanswered questions about this than any previous variant,” he said.

Understanding the nature of new variants is more complicated than it was when Covid first emerged, he added. Now huge swaths of the population have very different levels of protection, whether from vaccination or from previous infection, which may have occurred one or two years ago and begun to fade. Only 44% of the US population has been boosted.

That makes vaccination and booster campaigns all the more important in preparation for coming surges, Scarpino said. “It takes weeks to build up the immunity; sometimes it takes weeks and weeks to get the campaigns rolled out. We really need to be moving on this now.”

That’s because there will undoubtedly be another variant of concern, even if BA.2 fizzles, he said.

There is “a real and credible risk that there could be another surge coming, and we just need to make sure people are aware of this and that we have plans in place to respond to make sure that we’re not back in the middle of all this again in a month”.

Yet the Biden administration has announced that it is running low on Covid funds, which could create massive gaps in its ability to respond to this and other variants.

Joe Biden gets his booster at the White House in September last year. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

Amid messages of optimism about falling cases from top health officials, momentum on funding Covid initiatives – including testing, treatments, research, wastewater monitoring, hospitalization costs and vaccination – is stalling. Funds could run out by the end of the month for some of these programs.

Part of the problem centers around a misunderstanding of what happens when a virus becomes endemic.

Endemicity has a very narrow definition in epidemiology. A pathogen is considered endemic when the number of people who are susceptible to the virus balances out the reproduction number, creating a steady number of cases each year.

In other words, it’s regular and predictable enough, because populations have a certain level of immunity, that experts have some ability to anticipate what’s going to happen.

Some commentators have suggested that the US has already reached this state – and, perhaps more worryingly, have assumed that the virus will inevitably evolve to become milder.

“Both of those are problematic,” said Katzourakis, who has also written about the harms of endemic viruses. This virus is still surging out of control, and “we don’t know what and when it’s going to come next”.

“Endemic” also doesn’t mean “safe”, Scarpino said – and it doesn’t mean that officials give up on battling the virus.

There are many diseases, such as malaria, rotavirus and hepatitis C, that are endemic but still deadly, Katzourakis said. “And we also try our best to manage them – we don’t just let them do their thing.”

Endemic viruses, like influenza, also regularly mutate to create epidemics or even pandemics, he said. And “the more the virus circulates uncontrollably in the population, the higher the chance of another variant that’s going to scupper our optimistic hopes will be”.

The biggest concern now is that officials seem to be relinquishing control of the virus. “It seems a very, very risky situation to be in,” Katzourakis said. “That’s the real danger here – accepting that we shouldn’t be doing something to control the virus. That part then becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy where, by not doing anything, we’re creating a situation that gets ahead of ourselves and causes us even more problems.”

That’s one reason why closely monitoring viruses is still important even after they’ve become embedded in human populations.

Scarpino compares this kind of work to weather forecasting. “People complain about the accuracy of weather reports a lot, but weather reporting is actually pretty darn accurate,” he said. If schools close due to inclement weather, they usually have an idea of how long those closures will last – think days, not months.

The US needs a similar system for pathogen forecasting, he said. “If you have real-time information, we can keep schools open … We can save lives.”

A major part of that is having very up-to-date information that’s communicated clearly. Right now, CDC data lags by about two weeks, making it difficult to grasp what’s happening.

“I would never decide to carry an umbrella or not, based on a weather forecast from two weeks ago,” Scarpino said.

“We know that people will take real-time action on weather data, from things as small as carrying an umbrella or putting on a raincoat to things much bigger like evacuating to get out of the way of a hurricane. We know people will do that. Now we know that that requires delivering data to people in real time, in a trusted way, through formats that they have access to.”

Understanding that viruses like Sars-CoV-2 will evolve to pose new threats, and monitoring them carefully, gives leaders time to prepare for major surges.

“Early action is always better,” Scarpino said. “If we start to see cases surging, we may need to take more measures.

“As much as I and everybody else wants this to be over, it’s not over.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/mar/18/us-covid-next-surge-variant-ba2

The 13-year-old Texas boy who was behind the wheel during a horrific high-speed crash that killed nine people — including six college golfers — burned down his family home just three months ago, a friend of the family said.

Ricky Siemens was illegally driving when he died alongside his dad, Heinrich Siemens, 38, when the spare tire on their 2007 Dodge 2500 blew out and sent the vehicle careening onto the opposite side of a two-lane highway.

It crashed head-on with a Ford Transit van carrying golfers from the University of the Southwest, six of whom died alongside their 26-year-old coach, while two Canadian players in critical condition were airlifted to hospitals.

The young teen driver — a member of the Mennonite Evangelical Church in his hometown, Seminole — was also behind a devastating accident in December that left his family homeless and killed one of their dogs, a friend said.

Ricky Siemens was driving illegally when the crash occurred.
Facebook / Agatha Siemens
The aftermath of the fiery crash.
AP
Officials say the accident was clearly the result of a high-speed collision.
AP

“Just before Christmas, their house burned down … The 13-year-old made some eggs and forgot about it,” the family friend, Aganetha, told DailyMail.com

“I couldn’t imagine going through all that and then to have this happen,” she told the outlet. “It’s just so sad.”

She said no one was hurt in the blaze, although an online fundraiser said that “they lost one dog in the fire.”

Heinrich Siemens died alongside his son.
Facebook / Agatha Siemens

“Their home burned down with all of their personal belongings inside,” said the fundraiser, which sought $30,000 and raised just over a third of that.

“Some of the children ran out of the house without shoes. It’s hard to restart for this family of 6,” it said.

Ricky’s mom, Aggie Siemens, posted an “in loving memory” tribute to her husband and son on Facebook, where she also changed her status to “widow.”

Six college golfers were killed alongside their coach.
The University of the Southwest
University of the Southwest golf coach Tyler James was killed in the collision.
AP

She had referred to the house fire in a post seeking tech help on Dec. 14, noting that her “laptop was in the house during the fire.”

Her son was driving illegally at the time of the crash in the Lone Star State, where you have to be 14 to start taking classroom courses for a learner’s license and 15 to receive that provisional license to drive with an instructor or licensed adult in the vehicle.

While it’s not unusual for young teens to drive in that region, “that was dumb” for a 13-year-old to be behind the wheel on a busy two-lane roadway, said Gib Stevens, who leads area trucking operations for an oilfield servicing company.

People attend a memorial for golfer Jackson Zinn on March 17.
AP
All six golfers and their coach were from the University of the Southwest.
AP

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said Thursday it still hopes to retrieve enough information from the vehicle’s recorders, if they survived, to understand what happened. 

Although it was unclear how fast the two vehicles were traveling, “this was clearly a high-speed collision,” NTSB vice chairman Bruce Landsberg said.

With Post wires

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2022/03/18/kid-driver-in-horror-texas-smash-had-burned-down-family-home/

A man walks on Thursday near a block of flats destroyed in the besieged Ukrainian city of Mariupol.

Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters


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Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters

A man walks on Thursday near a block of flats destroyed in the besieged Ukrainian city of Mariupol.

Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters

As Thursday draws to a close in Kyiv and in Moscow, here are the key developments of the day:

The bomb shelter beneath the Mariupol theater withstood Wednesday’s airstrike, and rescue teams began to pull out survivors. The number of casualties remains unclear. Russia denies conducting the strike on the civilian shelter. Failed cease-fires keep disrupting evacuations from the besieged city, but 15 large buses managed to leave Mariupol on Wednesday.

The U.S. is working with allies on potentially delivering more effective air defense systems to Ukraine, a senior Pentagon official says. This followed a public offer from Slovakia’s Defense Minister Jaroslav Nad to send the S-300 air defense system if Slovakia is guaranteed a replacement.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivered a scathing address to Germany’s parliament, saying the country was “dragging [its] feet on Ukraine’s admission to the EU.” The U.N. Security Council holds an emergency meeting to discuss the war in Ukraine and respond to Russia’s military aggression.

President Biden will speak with Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Friday. The U.S. believes China may be considering military help for Russia, said Secretary of State Antony Blinken. He also said Russia may be setting the stage for a chemical weapon attack to blame on Ukraine. The State Department separately confirmed that a U.S. citizen was killed in Ukraine, without disclosing the person’s identity.

A Russian court has extended the detention of basketball star Brittney Griner until late May, according to state-owned news agency TASS. Griner was arrested at a Moscow-area airport for allegedly transporting vape cartridges containing hashish oil in her luggage.

In-depth

Deepfake video of Zelenskyy could be the “tip of the iceberg” in info war, experts warn.

How some people are trying to make art, not war, in Ukraine right now.

The number of Ukrainians who have fled to Poland is equal to the population of Warsaw.

The World Health Organization says Ukrainian health care is under attack, and it needs more funds to help.

Without sending troops, the U.S. wages “hybrid warfare” against Russia.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken sets a standard for lifting sanctions: an “irreversible” Russian withdrawal.

Writer-photographer Yevgenia Belorusets documents Kyiv’s displaced.

Earlier developments

You can read more news from Thursday here, as well as more in-depth reporting and daily recaps here. Also, listen and subscribe to NPR’s State of Ukraine podcast for updates throughout the day.

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Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/03/17/1087186668/russia-ukraine-war-what-happened-today-march-17

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/2022/03/17/arnold-schwarzenegger-russia-ukraine-video/