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(Reuters) – A 13-year-old girl’s escape from a rural home, where she was held captive for three months by a 21-year-old Wisconsin man charged with murdering her parents, helped break the case and she should be treated as a hero, the local sheriff said on Friday.

Thousands of volunteers and hundreds of law enforcement officers had searched around the clock around the small town of Barron after Jayme Closs’ parents were found shot dead in their home, the front door open and the girl gone.

Relying on what Barron County Sheriff Chris Fitzgerald called “the will of a kid to survive,” a disheveled Closs escaped a house in the tiny town of Gordon where she had been held captive, about 60 miles north of Barron. She was found by a woman walking her dog on Thursday afternoon.

“Jayme is the hero in this case. She’s the one who helped us break this case,” Fitzgerald told reporters on Friday.

Barron County Sheriff Chris Fitzgerald holds up the booking photo of Jake Thomas Patterson, who allegedly kidnapped Jayme Closs, during a news conference, Friday, Jan. 11, 2018, in Barron, Wis. Closs, a 13-year-old northwestern Wisconsin girl who went missing in October after her parents were killed, was found alive in the rural town of Gordon, Wis., about about 60 miles north of her home in Barron. Investigators believe Patterson, who was taken into custody shortly after Closs was found, killed her parents because he wanted to abduct her. (Jean Pieri/Pioneer Press via AP)

Barron County Sheriff Chris Fitzgerald speaks during a news conference, Friday, Jan. 11, 2018, in Barron, Wis., regarding the arrest of Jake Thomas Patterson, who allegedly kidnapped Jayme Closs, Closs, a 13-year-old northwestern Wisconsin girl who went missing in October after her parents were killed, was found alive in the rural town of Gordon, Wis., about about 60 miles north of her home in Barron. Investigators believe Patterson, who was taken into custody shortly after Closs was found, killed her parents because he wanted to abduct her. (Aaron Lavinsky/Star Tribune via AP)

Barron County Sheriff Chris Fitzgerald speaks during a news conference, Friday, Jan. 11, 2018, in Barron, Wis., regarding the arrest of Jake Thomas Patterson, who allegedly kidnapped Jayme Closs, Closs, a 13-year-old northwestern Wisconsin girl who went missing in October after her parents were killed, was found alive in the rural town of Gordon, Wis., about about 60 miles north of her home in Barron. Investigators believe Patterson, who was taken into custody shortly after Closs was found, killed her parents because he wanted to abduct her. (Aaron Lavinsky/Star Tribune via AP)

Barron County Sheriff Chris Fitzgerald holds up the booking photo of Jake Thomas Patterson, who allegedly kidnapped Jayme Closs, during a news conference, Friday, Jan. 11, 2018, in Barron, Wis. Closs, a 13-year-old northwestern Wisconsin girl who went missing in October after her parents were killed, was found alive in the rural town of Gordon, Wis., about about 60 miles north of her home in Barron. Investigators believe Patterson, who was taken into custody shortly after Closs was found, killed her parents because he wanted to abduct her. (Aaron Lavinsky/Star Tribune via AP)

Community members listened as representatives from various Wisconsin law enforcement agencies speak during a news conference, Friday, Jan. 11, 2018, in Barron, Wis., regarding the arrest of Jake Thomas Patterson, who allegedly kidnapped Jayme Closs. Closs, a 13-year-old northwestern Wisconsin girl who went missing in October after her parents were killed, was found alive in the rural town of Gordon, Wis., about about 60 miles north of her home in Barron. Investigators believe Patterson, who was taken into custody shortly after Closs was found, killed her parents because he wanted to abduct her. (Aaron Lavinsky/Star Tribune via AP)

Kristin Kasinskas, who lives on S. Eau Claire Acres Circle with her husband, Peter, speak with the media Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, in Gordon, Wis. Kristin Kasinskas called 911 on Thursday, to report that Jayme Closs, 13, had been found after another neighbor out walking her dog encountered her and brought her to Kasinskas’ house. Closs went missing in October after her parents were killed. (Richard Tsong-Taatarii/Star Tribune via AP)




Both the woman and the neighbor recognized the teen immediately on Thursday due to the enormous public campaign following her disappearance, Fitzgerald said.

Less than 15 minutes later, Jake Patterson, 21, was in custody after police pulled over his vehicle, based on Closs’ description.

“The suspect was out looking for her when law enforcement made contact with him,” Fitzgerald told a news conference, adding police were not seeking any other suspects in the case at this time.

TARGETED JAYME

Patterson, an unemployed resident of Gordon, was charged on Friday with kidnapping and with murdering James and Denise Closs with a shotgun. Their bodies were discovered on Oct. 15.

“The suspect had specific intentions to kidnap Jayme and went to great lengths to prepare to take her,” said Fitzgerald.

Patterson was being held in the Barron County jail, and it was not yet clear whether he had a lawyer. He faces an initial court hearing on Monday.

More than 200 law enforcement officials were on the ground day and night following Closs’ disappearance, sifting through thousands of tips but finding little to go on.

(Jake Patterson via Reuters)

The search stretched across cornfields and wooded areas and drew 1,500 volunteers — nearly half as many people as the entire 3,400-person population of Barron, which sits about 90 miles (145 km) northeast of Minneapolis.

Hundreds of locals had attended a Christmas tree-lighting ceremony at Riverview Middle School, which Closs attended, in her honour last month. The “tree of hope” was decorated with messages and lighted in blue, Closs’ favourite colour, and green to symbolize missing child awareness, the Star Tribune reported.

Closs was speaking to investigators on Friday after spending a night in the hospital for evaluation. Authorities did not offer any details about the conditions of her captivity or how she had managed to escape.

She was due to be reunited with her extended family later on Friday.

“I just cried … lots of happy tears,” Jen Smith, the girl’s aunt, told ABC’s “Good Morning America” programme.

FEW DETAILS

Authorities have released few details about Patterson, who has no previous criminal record in Wisconsin, saying they were unsure whether he had known Closs.

Attempts to reach Patterson’s relatives and neighbours on Friday were unsuccessful.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, citing neighbours, reported that Patterson had been raised in Gordon. Police said Patterson had ties to Barron but did not elaborate.

The president of the Jennie-O Turkey store in Barron, where James and Denise Closs had worked for decades, said Patterson had been an employee for a single day three years ago. He quit the next day, saying he was moving, Steve Lykken said.

“We are still mourning the loss of longtime Jennie-O family members Jim and Denise, but our entire team is celebrating with the community, and the world, that Jayme has been found,” Lykken said.

The superintendent of the local school district, Jean Serum, said Patterson was a nice kid who was a member of his high school’s quiz bowl team. He graduated in 2015.

About 350 people under the age of 21 are kidnapped by strangers in the United States each year, according to FBI data.

Closs is not the first kidnapping victim to survive months in captivity.

Elizabeth Smart, who was held captive for nine months as a teenager after her 2002 abduction in Utah, posted a photo of Closs on Instagram, praising the “miracle” that she had been found.

“No matter what may unfold in her story let’s all try to remember that this young woman has SURVIVED and whatever other details may surface the most important will still remain that she is alive,” Smart wrote.

(Reporting by Joseph Ax and Gabriella Borter in New York; Additional reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta and Andrew Hay in New Mexico; Editing by Bill Tarrant and Sandra Maler)

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/01/11/jayme-is-the-hero-sheriff-says-of-wisconsin-girl-who-escaped-captor/23640470/

Nov 23 (Reuters) – A federal jury in Charlottesville, Virginia, on Tuesday found the organizers of the 2017 “Unite the Right” white nationalist rally liable for injuries sustained by counter-protesters and awarded approximately $26 million in damages.

The nine plaintiffs in the case said they suffered physical or emotional trauma at the rally, including four who were struck when a self-described neo-Nazi, James Fields, drove his car into a crowd of counter-protesters, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer.

After a four-week trial, the jury found in favor of the victims on four of six counts but was unable to come to a unanimous verdict on the other two, according to court filings.

The rally followed months of protests over the city’s plan to remove a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee. Hundreds of white nationalists traveled to Charlottesville in August 2017, with some marching on the University of Virginia campus carrying torches and chanting “Jews will not replace us!”

Then-President Donald Trump was criticized for initially saying there were “fine people on both sides” after the rally devolved into violent clashes.

President Joe Biden has frequently cited the torch-lit march and Trump’s response as the event that precipitated his decision to mount another run for the White House, after two previous unsuccessful campaigns.

“We are thrilled that the jury has delivered a verdict in favor of our plaintiffs, finally giving them the justice they deserve after the horrific weekend of violence and intimidation in August 2017,” the plaintiffs’ co-lead lawyers, Roberta Kaplan and Karen Dunn, said in a statement.

The two dozen defendants included Jason Kessler, the main organizer; Richard Spencer, who originated the term “alt-right,” a loose network of groups characterized by a rejection of mainstream politics that includes white supremacists and neo-Nazis; and several white nationalist groups.

Joshua Smith, one of the defense lawyers, told reporters he viewed the jury’s inability to reach a consensus on two federal conspiracy counts as a “victory” given the disparity in resources between the plaintiffs’ and defendants’ legal teams.

The victims sued for assault and battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress and violations of both Virginia and U.S. civil rights laws.

The defendants argued that they were exercising their constitutional rights and had secured a legal permit for the rally, blaming the deadly violence on Fields, the driver who killed Heyer, and others.

Fields was sentenced to life in prison after being convicted of murder and hate crimes.

The lawsuit received financial support from a nonprofit civil rights group, Integrity First for America.

In a statement released by the organization, the plaintiffs said, “Our single greatest hope is that today’s verdict will encourage others to feel safer raising our collective voices in the future to speak up for human dignity and against white supremacy.”

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/us/jury-awards-12-million-damages-over-2017-charlottesville-rally-nbc-news-2021-11-23/

Hurricane Julia weakened to a tropical storm on Sunday.

According to the National Hurricane Center, portions of Central America could experience flash flooding and mudslides through Monday.

As of Sunday night, Julia was 95 miles southeast of San Salvador, El Salvador.

Julia had winds of 40 mph, and the system was moving west at 15 mph.

“Julia did a rare crossover from the Atlantic to Pacific basin today. The last storm to do that was Bonnie earlier this year in July,” WESH 2’s Cam Tran said.

“On the forecast track, the center of Julia will move close to and parallel to the Pacific coasts of Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala overnight and on Monday,” the National Hurricane Center wrote. “Additional weakening is forecast, but Julia is expected to remain a tropical storm near the Pacific coast of Central America through early Monday.”

Julia is forecast to dissipate by Monday night. This storm is not expected to impact Florida.

SUMMARY OF WATCHES AND WARNINGS IN EFFECT:

A tropical storm warning is in effect for…

* Pacific coast of Nicaragua from Puerto Sandino northward to the Honduras border

* Pacific coast of Honduras

* Coast of El Salvador

A tropical storm watch is in effect for…

* Pacific coast of Guatemala

A tropical storm warning means that tropical storm conditions are expected somewhere within the warning area within 36 hours.

A tropical storm watch means that tropical storm conditions are possible within the watch area.

KNOW WHAT TO DO WHEN A HURRICANE WATCH IS ISSUED

  • Stay tuned to WESH 2 News, WESH.COM, or NOAA Weather Radio for storm updates.
  • Prepare to bring inside any lawn furniture, outdoor decorations or ornaments, trash cans, hanging plants, and anything else that can be picked up by the wind.
  • Understand hurricane forecast models and cones.
  • Prepare to cover all windows of your home. If shutters have not been installed, use precut plywood.
  • Check batteries and stock up on canned food, first-aid supplies, drinking water, and medications.

The WESH 2 First Warning Weather Team recommends you have these items ready before the storm strikes.

  • Bottled water: One gallon of water per person per day
  • Canned food and soup, such as beans and chili
  • Can opener for the cans without the easy-open lids
  • Assemble a first-aid kit
  • Two weeks’ worth of prescription medications
  • Baby/children’s needs, such as formula and diapers
  • Flashlight and batteries
  • Battery-operated weather radio

WHAT TO DO WHEN A HURRICANE WARNING IS ISSUED

  • Listen to the advice of local officials. If you are advised to evacuate, leave.
  • Complete preparation activities.
  • If you are not advised to evacuate, stay indoors, away from windows.
  • Be alert for tornadoes. Tornadoes can happen during a hurricane and after it passes over. Remain indoors, in the center of your home, in a closet or bathroom without windows.

HOW YOUR SMARTPHONE CAN HELP DURING A HURRICANE

A smartphone can be your best friend in a hurricane — with the right websites and apps, you can turn it into a powerful tool for guiding you through a storm’s approach, arrival and aftermath.

Download the WESH 2 News app for iOS | Android

Enable emergency alerts — if you have an iPhone, select settings, then go into notifications. From there, look for government alerts and enable emergency alerts.

If you have an Android phone, from the home page of the app, scroll to the right along the bottom and click on “settings.” On the settings menu, click on “severe weather alerts.” From the menu, select from the most severe, moderate-severe, or all alerts.

PET AND ANIMAL SAFETY

Your pet should be a part of your family plan. If you must evacuate, the most important thing you can do to protect your pets is to evacuate them too. Leaving pets behind, even if you try to create a safe space for them, could result in injury or death.

  • Contact hotels and motels outside of your immediate area to see if they take pets.
  • Ask friends, relatives and others outside of the affected area whether they could shelter your animal.

Source Article from https://www.wesh.com/article/hurricane-weakens-tropical-storm-julia/41567845

Democratic presidential contender Mayor Pete Buttigieg was put on the defensive over a fundraiser he hosted inside a Napa Valley “wine cave” earlier this month, after rivals Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders seized on the event during Thursday night’s Democratic debate to criticize his high-dollar fundraising practices.

“We made the decision many years ago that rich people in smoke-filled rooms should not pick the next president of the United States. Billionaires in wine caves should not pick the next president of the United States,” Warren fired off at the Los Angeles forum.

Surrogates for Sanders, a Vermont progressive, donned shirts displaying a URL that referenced the wine cave and linked to a Sanders donation page.

Buttigieg defended his fundraising practices, arguing that he was the only Democrat on stage who was not a millionaire or billionaire, and rejecting what he called Warren’s “purity” test.

“Senator, your net worth is 100 times mine,” he said to Warren. “We need the support from everybody who is committed to helping us defeat Donald Trump.”

Businessman Andrew Yang, who generally avoids criticizing his rivals, noted at one point in the debate that if Americans had more disposable income, candidates wouldn’t have to “shake the money tree in the wine cave.”

Read more: Here are the top moments from the sixth Democratic debate in Los Angeles

Buttigieg has proven to be an effective fundraiser despite his little experience on the national stage before his presidential bid. He raised more than $19 million during the last reported quarter. Warren raised almost $25 million, while Sanders raised $25 million.

A Buttigieg spokesperson said that 98% of the campaign’s donations are under $200 and that the average contribution last quarter was $32. The spokesperson said Buttigieg will pursue campaign finance reforms as president, such as pushing to overturn the 2010 Supreme Court decision Citizens United and creating a small-dollar public financing system.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/12/20/pete-buttigiegs-wine-cave-what-to-know-about-the-napa-fundraiser.html

President Trump proposes changes to the National Environmental Policy Act at the White House in January. The final rules aims to speed approval of pipelines and other infrastructure.

Evan Vucci/AP


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Evan Vucci/AP

President Trump proposes changes to the National Environmental Policy Act at the White House in January. The final rules aims to speed approval of pipelines and other infrastructure.

Evan Vucci/AP

Updated 4:40 p.m.

In Atlanta today, President Trump announced a “top to bottom overhaul” of the regulations that govern one of the nation’s most significant environmental laws. The aim is to speed up approval for major projects like pipelines and highways, but critics say it could sideline the concerns of poor and minority communities impacted by those projects, and discount their impact on climate change.

Speaking at a UPS facility, Trump decried the “mountains and mountains of bureaucratic red tape in Washington, D.C.,” and recalled being frustrated by it as a builder in New York. He said one of the first projects to benefit from his streamlining would be the expansion of a freeway south of Atlanta.

“We are reclaiming America’s proud heritage as a nation of builders and an nation that can get things done,” he said.

The 50-year-old National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA, was signed into law by President Richard Nixon. It requires federal agencies to consider the environmental effects of proposed projects before they are approved. It also gives the public and interest groups the ability to comment on those evaluations.

The administration’s new regulations are expected to reduce the types and number of projects that will be subject to review under the NEPA, shorten the timeline for reviews, and drop a requirement that agencies consider the cumulative environmental effects of projects, such as their contribution to climate change.

The changes weaken a law that’s played a major role in limiting the Trump administration’s agenda of “energy dominance.” In just the last week, environmental reviews have sidelined a series of controversial oil and gas pipeline projects, including the Keystone XL, the Dakota Access and the Atlantic Coast pipelines.

But environmental groups warn the new rules will sideline the environmental effects of pipelines, highways and other projects.

“What the Trump administration is doing is fundamentally changing those regulations and really gutting them,” says Sharon Buccino, a senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

What’s more, Buccino says the law was designed to give a voice to communities long hurt by pollution from highways, pipelines and chemical plants that are disproportionately located in their neighborhoods.

“NEPA gives poor and communities of color a say in the projects that will define their communities for decades to come. Rather than listen, the Trump administration’s plan aims to silence such voices,” says Buccino.

Trump announced the proposed rules at the White House in January and said he wanted to streamline an “outrageously slow and burdensome federal approval process” that can delay major infrastructure projects for years. He said the country’s infrastructure used to be the envy of the world but red tape has delayed projects making the U.S. “like a Third World country.”

The average times for agencies to complete an environmental impact statement is currently 4 ½ years, says Mary Neumayr, chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality. When the proposal was announced, she said this delay “deprives Americans of the benefits of modernized bridges and roads that enable them to get home to their families.”

The American Petroleum Institute was among the industry groups that sent a letter to the administration last November urging the White House to streamline NEPA reviews.

“NEPA modernization will help America streamline permitting to move job-creating infrastructure projects off the drawing board and into development,” says API President and CEO Mike Sommer.

The administration’s rule changes set a strict two-year time limit for agencies to issue environmental impact statements. The new regulations also require comments be submitted more quickly, and limit the topics that can be covered in those comments.

Buccino and other environmental lawyers believe the new regulations are illegal and say they will be challenged in court. That means if Trump loses his reelection bid in November, it’s likely the new rules would not take effect before he leaves office.

The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has said he would reverse environmental rollbacks like this one. And he has set a very different tone from the Trump administration on environmental issues.

Biden outlined his climate change plan Tuesday, vowing to invest $2 trillion to boost clean energy and rebuild infrastructure. His plan includes environmental justice components with language that suggests he would reject Trump’s NEPA regulations. One section reads, “Biden will ensure that frontline and fenceline communities are at the table when enforcement, remediation, and investment decisions affecting those communities are made.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/07/15/891190100/trump-overhauls-key-environmental-law-to-speed-up-pipelines-and-other-projects


Los ejercicios se describen como “una masiva inspección sorpresiva” para revisar la preparación para combate.

Las fuerzas armadas rusas comenzaron un enorme ejercicio militar con cerca de 250 aviones y 12.000 efectivos, indicó el Ministerio de Defensa de ese país.

El ministerio describió las maniobras de cuatro días como “una masiva inspección sorpresa”, para revisar la preparación para combate.

Las pruebas comenzaron el mismo día en que la OTAN y algunos de sus países miembros también iniciaron un ejercicio de entrenamiento en el Ártico.

Lea: Cómo Rusia quiere dominar el Ártico

Las acciones de Rusia en Ucrania, y sus incursiones en el espacio aéreo occidental, han llevado a un incremento de tensiones con Occidente.


Desde la anexión de Crimea se han incrementado las tensiones entre Rusia y Occidente.

Según informes de las agencias de noticias rusas Interfax y Tass, la inspección del grupo de aviación y fuerzas de defensa aérea en el distrito militar central involucra casi 700 armas y piezas de equipo militar.

Pruebas de misiles

Durante el ejercicio, se espera que los aviones de largo alcance de Rusia lleven a cabo disparos con misiles de crucero contra blancos de práctica en la república de Komi.

La corresponsal de la BBC en Moscú, Caroline Wyatt, afirma que estos ejercicios se llevan a cabo como preparación de un conjunto de maniobras más amplias, conocidas como Centro-2015, que tendrán lugar en los próximos meses.


Los aviones rusos llevaron a cabo en meses recientes varias incursiones en el espacio aéreo de otros países.

Cuando en una entrevista en la TV se le preguntó al viceprimer ministro Dmitry Rogozin sobre la autoafirmación de Rusia, éste bromeó: “Los tanques no necesitan visas”.

El franco funcionario, quien está en las “listas negras” de la Unión Europea y EE.UU. como parte de las sanciones impuestas a Rusia por la anexión de Crimea el año pasado, tiene limitadas sus opciones de viaje.

Rusia ha sido severamente criticada en meses recientes por el incremento en su actividad aérea en los países nórdicos, la cual ha incluido varias violaciones del espacio aéreo.

El ejercicio de entrenamiento de dos semanas de la OTAN –el llamado Ejercicio de Desafío Ártico–, que comenzó el mismo día que las pruebas rusas, tendrá lugar en el norte de Noruega, Suecia y Finlandia.


“Los tanques no necesitan visas” bromeó Dmitry Rogozin.

En este participarán 115 aviones de combate y 3.600 soldados de nueve países.

Las maniobras también involucrarán a soldados y aviones de Estados Unidos, Reino Unido, Alemania, Francia y Holanda –todos miembros de la OTAN– y Suiza, que es neutral.

Este es el segundo ejercicio de este tipo. El primero fue llevado a cabo en 2013.

Los ministros de Defensa de Noruega, Suecia, Finlandia y Dinamarca, junto con el canciller de Islandia, firmaron una declaración conjunta en abril en la cual califican a la agresión militar rusa como “el mayor desafío a la seguridad europea”.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.co.uk/mundo/noticias/2015/05/150526_rusia_ejercicios_militares_men

  • Gaetz and Luckey met in March 2020 at the Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida, Luckey told the Daily Mail.
  • Gaetz is currently under federal investigation for sex crimes across multiple states.
  • Former Rand Paul staffer Sergio Gor officiated the ceremony. 

US Rep. Matt Gaetz announced on Twitter that he and Ginger Luckey eloped to Southern California over the weekend, sharing a picture of the pair with the caption, “I love my wife!”

Luckey, 26, works as an analyst for biotech company Apeel Sciences and is the sister of Palmer Luckey, founder of Facebook-acquired Oculus VR, who supported and hosted fundraisers for former President Donald Trump. She met Gaetz in March 2020 at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida, where they eventually got engaged 10 months later, Luckey told the Daily Mail.

Following a few campaign stops in the Midwest with US Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Gaetz and Luckey tied the knot in a small ceremony on Catalina Island, just 22 miles off the coast of Southern California, Vanity Fair reported.

Only a few dozen attended, including former Rand Paul staffer Sergio Gor, who was both the officiant and DJ. Other attendees included Palmer Luckey and his wife, “Bannon’s War Room” hosts Raheem Kassam and Natalie Winters, and Nestor Galban, Gaetz’s adopted son, according to Vanity Fair.

Gaetz, a Republican who has represented Florida’s 1st Congressional District since 2017, is currently being investigated as part of a sex trafficking probe alongside his former right-hand man, Joel Greenberg. The New York Times reported that the inquiry is focusing on their interactions with “multiple women who were recruited online for sex and received cash payments” across multiple states.

Greenberg was indicted on 33 criminal counts and struck a plea deal in May, pleading guilty to six felony counts of sex trafficking, wire fraud, identity theft, conspiracy, and stalking.

Gaetz has denied any wrongdoing and has not been charged with a crime.

 

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/matt-gaetz-ginger-luckey-elope-california-married-catalina-island-2021-8

Friday may be remembered as the largest global demonstration ever in the fight against climate change. Inspired by Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, young people around the world have organized to skip school and protest in the street over the climate crisis and the adults who aren’t doing enough to transition off fossil fuels.

Thunberg and her group Fridays for Future aren’t alone: they’ll be joined by adult climate activists, indigenous groups, workers from companies like Amazon and Google, and really anyone who feels like the world is overdue for dramatic action on climate change.

They event is truly global: There are 2,500 events scheduled in over 150 countries.

Let’s take a look at what’s happening around the globe:

Australia


Young children dressed in traditional dress representing the Pacific Island get ready to march in Melbourne, Australia.
Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images

Bangladesh


School students and protesters gather in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Allison Joyce/Getty Images

Belgium


Protesters march in Brussels.
Jack Taylor/Getty Images

Germany


In Hamburg, Germany, climate strikers fill one of the city’s main streets.
CityNewsTV/Picture Alliance/Getty Images

Greece


Students demonstrate in central Athens, Greece.
Nicolas Koutsokostas/NurPhoto/Getty Images

India


Students wearing masks hold signs as they protest against governmental inaction towards climate breakdown in Guwahati, India.
Biju Boro/AFP/Getty Images

Indonesia


Schoolgirls call for action on climate change in Jakarta, Indonesia.
Ed Wray/Getty Images

Japan


Climate strikers hold signs in Tokyo, Japan, near United Nations University.
Yuichi Yamazaki/Getty Images

Philippines


Flipino indigenous youth, students, and environmental activists take part in the Global Climate Strike in Quezon City, Philippines.
Ezra Acayan/Getty Images

South Africa


Young people march to Parliament in Cape Town, South Africa.
Brenton Geach/Gallo Images via Getty Images

Thailand


Thai youth take part in a “die-in”, where strikers lie on the ground and pretend to die, symbolizing the impact of climate change in Bangkok, Thailand.
Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images

United Kingdom


Students listen to speakers as they attend the Global Climate Strike in London, United Kingdom.
Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/energy-and-environment/2019/9/20/20875523/youth-climate-strike-fridays-future-photos-global



















 

 

LOS ANGELES, July 30, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — KWHY-TV Noticias 22, the MundoFOX Los Angeles television network affiliate’s award-winning newscast, Noticias 22, “La voz de Tu Ciudad,” “The voice of your city”, scored as the fastest growing late Spanish language newscast in Nielsen’s recently completed July 2015 Sweeps for Los Angeles, the city with the largest Hispanic market in the nation.

“Our growth is a strong statement of relevance and support to our news team and editorial direction,” stated Palmira Perez, Noticias 22 MundoFOX News Anchor. “Noticias 22 continues to produce the most engaging, compelling news and information daily for our community, and as part of Meruelo Media, together we’re committed to journalistic excellence,” added Otto Padron, President of Meruelo Media.

KWHY-TV Noticias 22 MundoFOX Los Angeles July 2015 Sweeps Highlights:

  • KWHY-TV Noticias 22 MundoFOX at 10:00 p.m. posted significant “year-to-year” growth in average ratings among the key demographic Adults 18-49, up 35% from the July 2014 Sweeps.
    • All the other Spanish-language late local newscasts were down, including those on KRCA/Estrella (-22%), KVEA/Telemundo (-1%) and KMEX/Univision (-2%). (Based on Monday to Friday average ratings.)
  • Among Adults 25-54, ratings for KWHY-TV Noticias 22 MundoFOX at 10:00 p.m. were up 34% from the July 2014 Sweeps, more than the late newscast on KMEX/Univision (+15%) and KVEA/Telemundo (+7%), with KRCA/Estrella falling 19%.

Source: Los Angeles NSI Ratings, July 2015

For more information on KWHY-TV Noticias 22 MundoFOX, please visit www.mundofox22.com.

About Meruelo Media

Meruelo Media (MM) is the media division of The Meruelo Group.  MM currently operates two Southern California Legendary media platforms; the classic hip-hop and R&B radio station, 93.5 KDAY and one of Los Angeles’ oldest Hispanic TV stations, KWHY-TV Canal 22, which is currently the flagship of MundoFOX Television Network.  MM also owns the first and only US Hispanic Super Station, Super 22, airing on its KWHY-TV second digital stream and reaching over 6 Million Homes over various multiple video delivery providers.  MM also broadcasts in Houston and Santa Barbara.  The Meruelo Group is a minority owned, privately-held management company serving a diversified portfolio of affiliated entities with interests in banking and financial services; food services, manufacturing, distribution and restaurant operations; construction and engineering; hospitality and gaming; real estate management; media, public and private equity investing. For more information please visit www.meruelogroup.com.

Rebekah Salgado
rsalgado@meruelogroup.com 
562.228.8191

 

 

 

SOURCE Meruelo Group / Meruelo Media

RELATED LINKS
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Source Article from http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/kwhy-tv-noticias-22-mundofox-reigns-as-las-fastest-growing-late-spanish-newscast-in-july-2015-sweeps-300121156.html

Trump has publicly invoked “treason” or “treasonous” on 26 occasions, according to the Factba.se compilation of Trump utterances. That’s in addition to various and sundry “traitor” references. He began by accusing the likes of Bowe Bergdahl, Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning, then moved on to include the executives of Univision and Macy’s, Republicans who didn’t support him, Democratic lawmakers who didn’t applaud him, the failing New York Times, the media generally, people in his administration who leak, and Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, John Podesta, Eric Holder, Loretta Lynch, Huma Abedin, James Comey, James Clapper, Rod J. Rosenstein, Robert Mueller, Andrew McCabe, Lisa Page and Peter Strzok.

Source Article from https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/commentary/2019/04/16/dana-milbank-its-season/

President Biden has a message for members of Congress: the U.S. response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will be in coordination with U.S. allies.

Why it matters: Biden used the first part of his appearance before House Democrats on the last day of their retreat in Philadelphia Friday to defend his decisions on Russia — and the timing and scope of his actions.

What he’s saying: “Literally I spend hours and hours and hours and hours keeping our alliance together. You, NATO, our allies — including our Asian allies,” Biden said.

  • The president acknowledged that Congress wanted to revoke Russia’s most favored nation trade status earlier, but defended his decision to consult key allies before moving ahead with such a decision.
  • “But folks, I know I’ve occasionally frustrated, but more important than moving when we want to is making sure all of NATO is together,” he added.
  • “They have different vulnerabilities than we do. Just like in the oil embargo. […] Without Russian oil, they’re going to find themselves choked off in ways that far exceeds anything we do. So it took a long time sitting with my counterparts.”
  • “I said look, w’ere going to block oil, but I’m not going to ask you to do it […] You do what you can, and we’re going to help you get energy.”

The big picture: Over the past three weeks, Congress has largely been a step ahead of the Biden administration in terms of calling for punitive actions against Russia.

The bottom line: “I want to be clear though, we’re going to defend every inch of NATO territory,” Biden said leaning into the podium. “But we will not fight a Third World War.”

  • “The idea that we’re going to send in offensive equipment and planes and tanks and trains with American pilots and American crews — don’t kid yourself, no matter what you all say — that’s called World War III. Ok?”

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Source Article from https://www.axios.com/biden-defends-russia-sanctions-invasion-ukraine-4c02b09b-3bcf-44b1-b687-3f626ca220f1.html

China’s Xi is expected to present Trump with terms for settling…

China will demand that the U.S. remove its ban on the sale of U.S. technology to Huawei Technologies, Chinese officials tell the Journal.

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/06/27/chinas-xi-to-present-trump-with-terms-for-settling-trade-deal-wsj.html