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SURFSIDE, Fla—In the days before the collapse of Champlain Towers South, condo owners and the property manager were pressing Surfside officials to approve additional construction work that the owners intended to complete as part of the building’s 40-year recertification, according to documents released Sunday by the town.

The documents shed light on the building’s final days, as condo owners prepared for a long-awaited remediation to address the property’s structural problems and as town officials reviewed the owners’ plans.

The emails show that condo owners and town officials frequently communicated online and that the property manager wanted faster responses to their queries.

They add to a growing picture of long-running disagreements and delays before the collapse of Champlain Towers South on June 24, which killed at least 24 people and left about 120 unaccounted for.

As early as May, condo owners had requested approval for additional parking and a gas line, the records show. Frank Morabito, an engineer hired by the condo association, wrote in a May 20 email to town officials that resolving the parking issue for residents was critical to commencing 40-year recertification-related construction, including repairs of deteriorated concrete. Engineers have pointed to damaged concrete as a contributing factor in the building’s collapse.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/miami-area-condo-owners-pushed-town-for-construction-approvals-days-before-collapse-11625489092

RUSKA LOZOVA, Ukraine, May 15 (Reuters) – Russia pummelled positions in the east of Ukraine on Sunday, its defence ministry said, as it sought to encircle Ukrainian forces in the battle for Donbas and fend off a counteroffensive around the strategic Russian-controlled city of Izium.

At a meeting in Germany, the secretary-general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) said Ukraine could win the war, calling for more military support and fast-track approval of expected bids by Finland and Sweden to join the alliance.

Ukraine has scored a series of successes since Russia invaded on Feb. 24, forcing Russia’s commanders to abandon an advance on the capital Kyiv before making rapid gains to drive them from Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-biggest city.

Moscow’s invasion, which it calls a “special operation” to disarm Ukraine and protect it from fascists, has jolted European security. Kyiv and its Western allies say the fascism assertion is a baseless pretext for an unprovoked war of aggression.

The president of Finland, which shares a 1,300 km (800 mile) border with Russia, confirmed on Sunday that his country would apply to join NATO, a major policy shift prompted by Russia’s invasion. Sweden’s ruling party followed suit. read more

Since mid-April, Russian forces have focused much of their firepower on trying to capture two eastern provinces known as the Donbas after failing to take Kyiv.

An assessment by British military intelligence said Russia had lost about a third of the ground combat force deployed in February. Its Donbas offensive had fallen “significantly behind schedule” and was unlikely to make rapid advances during the coming 30 days, the assessment said.

“Russia’s war in Ukraine is not going as Moscow had planned,” NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said.

Ukraine received a morale boost with victory in the Eurovision Song Contest on Saturday night, a triumph seen as sign of the strength of popular support for Ukraine across Europe. read more

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy welcomed the win, but said the situation in Donbas remained very difficult and Russian forces were still trying to salvage some kind of victory in a region riven by conflict since 2014.

“They are not stopping their efforts,” he said. read more

‘NOWHERE TO BURY ANYONE’

Russia said on Sunday it had struck Ukrainian positions in the east with missiles, targeting command centres and arsenals as its forces seek to surround Ukrainian units between Izium and Donetsk. Reuters was not able to independently confirm the reports. read more

Izium straddles the Donets river, about 120 km (75 miles) from Kharkiv on the main highway heading southeast.

If Ukraine can sustain pressure on Izium and Russian supply lines, that will make it harder for Moscow to encircle battle-hardened Ukrainian troops on the eastern front in the Donbas.

“The hottest spot remains the Izium direction,” Ukrainian regional governor Oleh Sinegubov said in comments aired on social media.

“Our armed forces have switched to a counteroffensive there. The enemy is retreating on some fronts.”

In Ruska Lozova, a village set in sweeping fields between Kharkiv and Ukraine’s border with Russia, Ukrainian commanders said they believed Moscow was redeploying troops to defend Izium while keeping their opponents pinned down with artillery fire.

“The Russian attack on Kharkiv has been destroyed and they understand this,” said Ihor Obolensky, who commands the National Guard and volunteer force that captured Ruska Lozova eight days ago. “They need to try for a new victory and want to hold Izium.”

But Ukraine’s military also acknowledged setbacks in an update on Sunday morning: “Despite losses, Russian forces continue to advance in the Lyman, Sievierodonetsk, Avdiivka and Kurakhiv areas in the broader Donbas region.”

In western Ukraine near Poland, missiles destroyed military infrastructure overnight on Saturday and were fired at the Lviv region from the Black Sea, Ukrainian officials said. read more

Nine civilians were wounded in Russian shelling of Sievierodonetsk hospital yesterday evening, Serhiy Gaidai, governor of the eastern Luhansk region, said on the Telegram messaging application.

Another 10 civilians were wounded in the southern region of Mykolaiv in the last 24 hours, the regional council said, without providing details. The reports could not be independently verified.

There was also no let-up on Sunday in Russia’s bombardment of the steel works in the southern port of Mariupol, where a few hundred Ukrainian fighters are holding out weeks after the city fell into Russian hands, the Ukrainian military said.

Brightly burning munitions were shown cascading down on the steel works in a video posted by a pro-Russian separatist commander. read more

A large convoy carrying refugees from the ruins of Mariupol arrived in the Ukrainian-controlled city of Zaporizhzhia after nightfall on Saturday after waiting days for Russian troops to allow them to leave. read more

Iryna Petrenko, a 63-year-old in the convoy, said she had stayed initially to take care of her 92-year-old mother, who subsequently died.

“We buried her next to her house, because there was nowhere to bury anyone,” she said.

MORE WEAPONS

Finland and Sweden have both said they see NATO membership as a way of bolstering their security, though Russia has warned that it would be a mistake for Helsinki to abandon its neutrality.

Sweden’s ruling Social Democrats came out in favour of the country joining NATO on Sunday, paving the way for an application and abandoning decades of military non-alignment. read more

NATO’s Stoltenberg and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken both expressed confidence that concerns from Turkey about the bids by the Baltic states could be overcome, with Stoltenberg indicating that an accelerated accession process and interim security arrangements would be possible. read more

As well as losing large numbers of men and much military equipment, Russia has been hit by economic sanctions, while Western states have provided Ukraine with military aid.

Ukraine has deployed many of its new U.S. M-777 howitzers at the front lines and Washington has delivered all but one of the 90 artillery pieces they were due to send, the U.S. embassy in Kyiv said. read more

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/frontlines-moving-battle-donbas-ukraine-mounts-counter-offensive-2022-05-15/

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When India Landry was expelled for refusing to stand during the Pledge of Allegiance, her mom launched a legal battle against the Houston school. But the Texas Attorney General is fighting against her.
USA TODAY

An 11-year-old student in Florida refused to stand for the Pledge of Allegiance and was arrested for a resulting confrontation with a teacher and police officer. 

The boy was arrested for causing a disruption and refusing repeated instructions from school staff and law enforcement, Polk County Public Schools spokesperson Kyle Kennedy said in a statement. He was not arrested for refusing to participate in the pledge — even though students have the right to do so by Florida law and district policy.  

The sixth grader from a Tampa suburb allegedly told his substitute teacher the flag is “racist” and the national anthem is offensive to black people, Bay News 9 reported citing a statement the teacher gave the district. 

In response, the teacher said she asked the student why not go to another place to live if it was “so bad here.” She said he answered, “They brought me here.” 

The substitute, identified by district officials as Ana Alvarez, said, “Well, you can always go back, because I came here from Cuba and the day I feel I’m not welcome here anymore I would find another place to live.”

Alvarez said she called the office on Feb. 4 because she did not want to keep “dealing with him,” according to her statement. She no longer works as a substitute in the district, Kennedy said, and did not know students weren’t required to participate in the Pledge of Allegiance. The district will also review training for substitutes, Kennedy said. 

Related: Student who refuses to stand for the Pledge of Allegiance expelled, Texas attorney general backs school

More: Atlanta charter school drops morning Pledge of Allegiance

The Lawton Chiles Middle Academy student was charged with disrupting a school function and resisting arrest without violence, The Ledger reported. The Lakeland Police Department cannot comment on the case because it involves a minor facing misdemeanor charges, public information officer Gary Gross told USA TODAY on Sunday.

Officers would not arrest a student for not standing during the Pledge of Allegiance, Gross said, but, in general, would arrest a student for screaming, yelling and making threats. 

Dhakira Talbot, the boy’s mother, told Bay News 9 that she wants the charges dropped. She denied the arrest affidavit accusing her son of threatening to beat the teacher, the station reported. 

“She was wrong. She was way out of place,” Talbot told Bay News 9. “If she felt like there was an issue with my son not standing for the flag, she should’ve resolved that in a way different manner than she did.”

First Amendment rights prevent schools from requiring students to recite the pledge or salute the flag, the Supreme Court ruled in 1943.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2019/02/17/florida-student-11-arrested-after-refusing-pledge-allegiance/2900253002/

Gov. Kate Brown activated the Oregon National Guard to help police protests in Portland early Wednesday evening after some demonstrators smashed windows of downtown businesses, officials said.

The damage by a small group of protesters also spurred the joint law enforcement command authorized by Brown to declare that gathering a riot. Dozens of state troopers responded and ordered people to leave. Officers said police arrested at least 10 people, including one person accused of throwing a Molotov cocktail toward police. Police said they also sized a rifle, ammunition, a knife, hammers and fireworks from some people arrested.

Yet as police and protesters clashed in one part of downtown, a peaceful protest for racial justice took place several blocks away. The demonstrations collectively attracted a few hundred people as the nation awaited the presidential election results.

President Donald Trump has regularly criticized the Portland demonstrations, which have occurred most nights since the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd in late May. Trump sent in federal officers who frequently respond with force or clouds of tear gas.

Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler is a vocal critic of the federal response. But many protesters are also critical of Wheeler for failing to take swifter action to reform the city’s police response.

Wheeler won a second term Tuesday. The presidential race remains too close to call.

Brown had said she might send in Oregon National Guard members to respond to potential unrest after the election. Officials said the Guard would help in support roles such as processing arrests and blocking traffic. Several Humvees carrying National Guard members arrived in downtown after 8 p.m.

“Oregon National Guard members are civilian community members helping to protect us,” said a statement issued by Brown’s joint command. “We don’t take this decision lightly.”

The statement said the Oregon National Guard would help “keep the community safe” and that members are trained in crowd control. They will wear military uniforms and work beside police, the statement said.

The governor’s decision comes hours after she extended her order giving control of policing protests to a joint law enforcement command led by Oregon State Police and the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office. The agencies issued a statement cautioning people not to engage in criminal activity, or risk being tear gassed.

The demonstrations began at two separate points, one in Northwest Portland and one in Southeast Portland. Both events began as rallies and evolved into marches as the sun set.

The Northwest Portland gathering, held in the North Park Blocks downtown, was billed as the first in a post-election week of action. About 200 people started marching from the park around 5:20 p.m.

At the same time, a similarly sized group marched west across the Morrison Bridge toward the downtown waterfront. People carried signs that said “Count every vote.”

“Hey, hey! Ho, ho! Donald Trump has got to go!” marchers shouted.

By 5:45 p.m., both marches had reached Southwest Naito Parkway. The two groups converged beneath the Burnside Bridge.

Leaders of the separate groups urged marchers to unite and set aside philosophical differences about how to protest, namely whether or not to carry out “direct actions,” typically meant to draw out police. Many organizers in the Black-led march from Southeast Portland have criticized direct action tactics such as damaging police buildings, because they believe that takes away from the message of Black Lives Matter.

But the union between the distinct marches was brief. About 150 people affiliated with the direct action march left the area and began walking west. Some people in the crowd broke windows of a hotel and a church, among other buildings.

Brown authorized a joint state and county command to police the protests, and Lines of dozens of police officers wearing riot gear arrived and forced people to move. Some people continued to break windows at nearby businesses, including at least two small businesses. Police declared the gathering a riot around 7 p.m., as the group walked near Southwest 12th Avenue and Alder Street. Some people threw gas bottles at officers responding to the scene.

The standoff between state police and protesters ended after several minutes, but not before prompting the Portland Streetcar to cancel service for the rest of the night.

Brown’s joint command also announced her decision to send in the Oregon National Guard. The exact details of their assignment remains unclear.

Meanwhile, about 150 people remained at the downtown waterfront demonstration near the Skidmore Fountain, where they listened to speeches and musical performances by people of color. The demonstration was entirely peaceful, and it had a distinctly different tenor than the march that unfolded simultaneously several blocks west.

Police retreated from that group around 7:30 p.m., but then returned 20 minutes later to force the crowd to leave. Police pressed people several blocks east, then north. Officers surrounded several dozen protesters on Southwest Five Avenue, approaching from Alder and Washington streets. The two sides faced off for several minutes. Protesters shouted at officers, who eventually forced people farther west. Police pushed some people and detained at least two others.

“There is criminal activity occurring in this crowd affecting the safety of others and causing immediate property damage,” one officer said on a loudspeaker.

By 8:30 p.m., dozens of demonstrators remained downtown, chanting as a police line looked on. After police pulled back, about 150 people marched several blocks to the Justice Center, a city-county building that has been at the center of protests.

People mostly stood around in the parks across Third Avenue from the building until 10 p.m., when the crowd began marching north and west. Police approached after the crowd walked several blocks, and after a brief standoff, ordered people to leave. Marchers moved north on Broadway, where some people shattered the windows of a Starbucks inside Pioneer Courthouse Square.

Demonstrators also gathered Tuesday night, including at an hours-long march that wrapped through Southeast Portland. Protesters often chant a list of demands, including Wheeler’s resignation and $50 million in cuts to Portland police.

The City Council will likely vote Thursday on $18 million in proposed cuts. But it’s unclear whether Commissioners Jo Ann Hardesty and Chloe Eudaly will gain the necessary third vote to approve the cuts.

Jayati Ramakrishnan, Sean Meagher and Brooke Herbert contributed to this report, which will be updated throughout Wednesday.

— Dave Killen, Shane Dixon Kavanaugh, Beth Nakamura and Jim Ryan

Subscribe to The Oregonian/OregonLive newsletters and podcasts for the latest news and top stories.

Source Article from https://www.oregonlive.com/portland/2020/11/marches-rallies-for-racial-justice-resume-wednesday-in-portland.html

Barbara Corcoran is speaking out about the recent death of her brother, John.

Corcoran’s rep told ET on Wednesday that John died in late April in the Dominican Republic of what is believed to be natural causes. Still, the news was alarming given the recent reports of multiple American tourists’ deaths while they were vacationing at resorts in Punta Cana.

But Corcoran took to Instagram on Thursday to share that her brother actually had an existing heart condition, and she also gave her condolences to the families of the tourists who have recently died in the Dominican Republic.

“It’s made it to the news by now that my dear brother John passed away in the Dominican Republic back in April,” the 70-year-old Shark Tank star wrote. “He loved the DR and vacationed there frequently.”

“My brother had an existing heart condition and we believe he died of natural causes, but you’re still never ready for the death of a loved one,” she continued. “I’m overwhelmed with sadness for the lost lives in the DR and my thoughts are with the families who have lost their loved ones. Thank you for all of your thoughts and good wishes. I appreciate your love and kindness.”

Corcoran previously told TMZ that 60-year-old John was found dead in his hotel room by his friend he was vacationing with, and that she was told he died of a heart attack. John — who was one of Corcoran’s nine siblings — was retired after owning and operating a successful roofing company in New Jersey. According to the outlet, he was waiting on the arrival of his girlfriend in the Dominican Republic before he died.

SHARK TANK – ‘Episode 901’ – Chris Gronkowski from Colleyville, Texas, his brother Rob Gronkowski from the New England Patriots, and the rest of the Gronk brothers bring an insulated sports bottle to the Tank. Mark Cuban and Alex Rodriguez offer sage advice to a 17-year-old from St. Louis, Missouri, who devised a tool to quickly soothe foot pain; an entrepreneur from Phoenix, Arizona, with a nutrition and culinary background, has a sweeter way to eat a popular snack; and a man from Los Angeles, California, hopes to lock up a deal with his innovative way to keep belongings safe, on ‘Shark Tank,’ airing SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15 (9:00-10:00 p.m. EDT), on The ABC Television Network. (Michael Desmond/ABC via Getty Images)
BARBARA CORCORAN

SHARK TANK – ‘Episode 513′ – A former pro football player from Avon, Ohio tries to sell the Sharks on his delicious boneless baby back ribs which can be cooked in 2 minutes in the microwave-but will a strong pitch and tasty food be enough for the Sharks to bite? Two moms from Bayonne, New Jersey have a line of detachable mohawks to dress up kids’ safety helmets and entrepreneurs from Los Angeles sell whimsical animal themed hat/scarf combinations on ‘Shark Tank.’ Houston entrepreneur has a first-of-its-kind reality interface for video gamers, allowing users to be completely immersed in their game experience–and Shark Robert Herjavec can’t wait to try it out. Plus, Sharks Mark Cuban and Daymond John travel to Washington, D.C. to be panelists at the Kingonomics Entrepreneurship and Investment Conference, an event for minority-owned businesses which also includes a casting call, on ‘Shark Tank,’ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6 (9:00-10:01 p.m., ET) on the ABC Television Network. (Photo by Michael Ansell/ABC via Getty Images)
BARBARA CORCORAN, ROBERT HERJAVIC




Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/entertainment/2019/06/14/barbara-corcoran-shares-brother-had-an-existing-heart-condition-prior-to-his-death-in-dominican-republic/23749746/

Columbia University clinical professor Dr. Irwin Redlener, a disaster preparedness expert, told “Tucker Carlson Tonight” Tuesday that many actions by local authorities in response to the coronavirus outbreak amount to “guesswork” until more guidance is given by federal authorities.

Redlener was discussing the “containment zone” in the town of New Rochelle, N.Y., announced earlier Tuesday by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The one-mile-radius zone has been set up around a portion of the town where a cluster of coronavirus infections have materialized.

BIDEN PROJECTED TO WIN MISSISSIPPI AND MISSOURI PRIMARIES

According to the New York Post, there have been 108 coronavirus cases in Westchester County, where New Rochelle is located, as of Tuesday.

Redlener said the New Rochelle ‘containment zone’ is not being placed on lockdown, but is where “very special attention [is] being paid to identifying as many people as possible who have been in contact with the index case, and making sure the contacts are free of disease or evidence of disease.”

“There could be a larger zone, I guess, if the governor so chose, and it could be different in other states and other attempts to create areas where we can contain the disease and hopefully get it under control,” the doctor added.

CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

For his part, Cuomo has urged the public to use common sense and take preventative measures against the virus but underlined that there is no reason to downplay the severity of the illness itself.

Redlener warned that New York City, though largely spared from a large-scale outbreak thus far, will not likely be immune for long.

“A lot of the restrictions and public health interventions are pretty much guesswork,” he said. “And it is sort of every man for himself, so to speak, what they were doing in Washington [state], in Seattle, is different what they doing in Orlando, New Rochelle, New York City et cetera.”

“And what we are looking for now is to really have some definitive firm recommendations from the CDC … Not ‘we recommend this’, but ‘Here is what we need to do to control this in the country.’,” Redlener said.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/irwin-redlener-coronavirus-outbreak-guesswork

This photo provided by the North Korean government shows what it says a test launch of a hypersonic missile on Jan. 11.

Korean Central News Agency/AP


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Korean Central News Agency/AP

This photo provided by the North Korean government shows what it says a test launch of a hypersonic missile on Jan. 11.

Korean Central News Agency/AP

The U.S., Russia and China all have them. And now, North Korea claims to as well: hypersonic weapons.

These aerial vehicles go a step further than the kind of ballistic missiles that Pyongyang has periodically tested over the years. They can fly fast and maneuver in ways that make them extremely difficult to detect and destroy.

It’s a developmental leap that North Korea appears to have quickly bridged. If fully realized, the new capability could present a significant challenge to U.S.- and South Korean-based missile defense systems.

This week Pyongyang conducted several ballistic missile tests, including more of a hypersonic missile, thought to be either a further development of the Hwasong-8 it first launched in September, or possibly an entirely new weapon.

The Biden administration responded on Wednesday with its first sanctions on the Northeast Asian nation — against several North Korean nationals, a Russian and a Russian firm that Washington says helped Pyongyang “illegally procure goods for weapons.” Four of the sanctioned North Koreans are living in China.

What are hypersonic weapons and who has them?

There are basically three types of hypersonic weapons — guided ballistic missiles, with warheads that can be steered to a target; hypersonic glide vehicles, launched by a rocket before gliding to a target; and hypersonic cruise missiles, that are powered by high-speed, air-breathing engines.

These weapons can have a variety of ranges and can carry either conventional or nuclear warheads, depending on their design.

Despite the name, it is the ability of hypersonic weapons to make quick course changes on their “terminal phase” near a target that is more important in evading countermeasures than is speed. By definition, hypersonic weapons fly at five times or more the speed of sound, or Mach 5. But an article in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists notes that the V-2, the first modern ballistic missile developed by Nazi Germany during World War II, was capable of a speed just under Mach 5. “More modern intermediate and long-range ballistic missiles travel much faster—Mach 15 and higher,” according to the Bulletin.

North Korea’s first test in September is believed to have been of a guided ballistic missile. Also known as a maneuverable reentry vehicle, it is the least sophisticated of the three types and they’ve been found in the arsenals of the major military powers for decades. However, the latest North Korean test is thought to have been of a more advanced boost-glide vehicle.

James Acton, co-director of the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, acknowledges that if the map of the flight path put out by North Korea is accurate, this week’s test represents “a somewhat more sophisticated capability than I was expecting North Korea to have tested.”

Acton tells NPR that he doesn’t think Pyongyang’s capabilities match those of the U.S., Russia or China, but “if their propaganda reflects what actually happened in the test … there is a notable degree of capability.”

An Avangard ballistic missile lifts off from a truck-mounted launcher somewhere in Russia, in an undated photo from footage distributed by Russian Defense Ministry Press Service.

Russian Defense Ministry Press Service/AP


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Russian Defense Ministry Press Service/AP

An Avangard ballistic missile lifts off from a truck-mounted launcher somewhere in Russia, in an undated photo from footage distributed by Russian Defense Ministry Press Service.

Russian Defense Ministry Press Service/AP

Russia has already fielded the Avangard, a hypersonic glide vehicle. The Kremlin claims it can fly at Mach 27, or 27 times the speed of sound and it is thought to be capable of turning sharply in flight to evade interception. Last month, Russia says it carried out multiple successful tests from surface ships and submarines of an even more sophisticated hypersonic cruise missile, known as Zircon.

Meanwhile, in China, the DF-17, a ballistic missile designed to boost a hypersonic glide vehicle, was shown off at a military parade in 2019. And last summer, Beijing tested a nuclear-capable hypersonic glide vehicle that flew into low-Earth orbit, according to U.S. intelligence sources cited by The Arms Control Association.

To understand China’s orbital weapon, “imagine the space shuttle, put a nuclear weapon in the cargo bay and then don’t bother with the landing gear,” Jeffrey Lewis, a professor at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, told NPR in October.

While Russia has generally boasted about the new capabilities, China has mostly stuck to denials.

By contrast, the U.S. has lagged well behind in hypersonics in recent years. In October, Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, described China’s development curve as “very close to” a “Sputnik moment,” referring to the Soviet launch of the world’s first artificial satellite that spurred a space race with the U.S.

Chinese military vehicles carrying DF-17 ballistic missiles roll during a parade to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the founding of Communist China in Beijing, Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2019.

Mark Schiefelbein/AP


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Mark Schiefelbein/AP

Chinese military vehicles carrying DF-17 ballistic missiles roll during a parade to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the founding of Communist China in Beijing, Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2019.

Mark Schiefelbein/AP

Commenting last month on a report about China’s test in July, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters that such tests “will only increase tensions in the region.”

“China is a challenge, and we’re going to remain focused on that,” Austin said.

Why are hypersonic weapons so dangerous?

From a technical standpoint, the speed, but mostly the maneuverability, of such weapons gives them the potential to evade defensive systems. Not only are they difficult to detect, but their ability to make radical course changes as they get close to a target is meant to evade interception.

“If you can’t deter it and you can’t defend against it, then the only other option is preemption,” says Victor Cha, a senior vice president and Korea chair at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

It’s notable that after the recent tests, South Korean presidential candidate Yoon Suk-yeol this week suggested just such an option. “Missiles that travel at speeds over Mach 5, if they are loaded with nuclear warheads, will reach the Seoul metropolitan area in less than a minute. Interception is practically impossible,” Yoon said.

“In that case, the only method to prevent them is conducting a preemptive strike when we detect signs [of a launch],” he said, although he also emphasized the need “to keep pressuring North Korea through diplomacy.”

Cha, who served on the National Security Council during the George W. Bush administration, says U.S. missile defense systems, are “good,” but they are mostly “geared towards stopping a handful of fairly primitive missiles from North Korea.”

“[T]hey would need to be improved to be able to handle more sophisticated sorts of missiles,” he tells NPR.

Inevitably, Pyongyang’s development of hypersonic weapons “will raise discussions about whether … the South Koreans or the U.S. and South Korea should have more offensive strike capabilities,” Cha says.

How significant is the short-term threat?

Despite the apparent alarm at North Korean advances, there are experts who say that the threat may be overwrought.

Acton says that he’s not convinced that hypersonic weapons are substantially harder to intercept than conventional ballistic missiles.

“Intercepting ballistic missiles is by no means straightforward,” he acknowledges. With some modifications, the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system, or THAAD, a U.S. missile defense system that’s been deployed to South Korea, might be able to work against hypersonics, too, he says.

“[I]t’s not clear to me that is going to be that much less effective against maneuvering hypersonic systems than against ballistic missiles,” he says.

Others have noted that technologies such as the orbital weapon China tested last year are not new at all. Russia tested one six decades ago, during the Cold War.

Adam Mount, director of the Defense Posture Project at the Federation of American Scientists, suggests that hypersonic weapons would be something akin to just another quiver in North Korea’s arsenal, albeit potentially a pretty effective one.

“North Korea has a range of options for defeating U.S. missile defenses,” he tells NPR. “They could saturate those missile defenses with large salvos of weapons, and they have other options for trying to evade missile defenses.” Hypersonic weapons, he Mount says, have “the ability to do this with smaller salvos of weapons, and so they don’t have to fire as many missiles to have a high confidence in being able to hit protected targets.”

John Tierney, a former Massachusetts representative who now serves as the executive director for the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, calls hypersonics “shrug worthy,” adopting a term coined by writer Fred Kaplan in a column in Slate last year following up Gen. Milley’s “Sputnik moment” remark.

“It’s shrug worthy by objective standards,” Tierney tells NPR. “But of course, it’s very useful to people in the defense industry and the military to hype it up, because that’s how you get more money in the budget.”

Tierney cautions that Pyongyang’s claims may be exaggerated and suspects that the real value for North Korea to hype hypersonic weapons is propaganda, not military efficacy.

However, others are more circumspect. Cha points out that North Korea’s capabilities have been repeatedly underestimated in the past — much to the West’s chagrin. First cold water was poured on Pyongyang’s nuclear program. Then ballistic missiles. And even cyber warfare.

“They will test something. It won’t work and the experts will say, ‘Oh, you know, they’re trying to achieve some capability, but they’re still a long way off,'” he says. “Then they do it.”

“North Korea is very clear about its intentions,” he cautions. “It wants to develop hypersonic capabilities and it will develop hypersonic capabilities.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/01/15/1072385995/north-korea-is-testing-hypersonic-weapons-should-the-west-be-worried


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Los misiles intercontinentales de Corea del Norte podrán dentro de dos años transportar una carga de 500 kilogramos y alcanzar el este de California, indicó el ingeniero John Schilling en el sitio 38 North, especializado en el país. El Estado de México, Nuevo León, Guanajuato, Coahuila y Jalisco generaron 51.3% del valor total de producción de la industria manufacturera en el país y Donald Trump regresó de su viaje por Europa con el ánimo encendido para tuitear.

1. Misiles de Corea del Norte alcanzarán San Diego

Dentro de dos años, los misiles intercontinentales de Corea del Norte podrán “probablemente” transportar una carga de 500 kilogramos y alcanzar San Diego (al este de California), según el ingeniero John Schilling en el sitio 38 North, especializado en la información sobre el hermético país.

Esto luego de que la semana pasada Corea del Norte lanzó con éxito un misil balístico intercontinental presentado por el líder Kim Jong-Un como un regalo para los “bastardos estadounidenses”.

2. “Tormenta” de tuits, a su regreso del G20

El presidente Donald Trump regresó de su viaje por Europa con el ánimo encendido para tuitear. Al parecer en Alemania no tuvo el suficiente tiempo para defenderse de lo que para él son las fake news.

Como ya es costumbre, ayer Trump lanzó una cadena de varios nuevos tuits para abordar temas variopintos: una comparación entre Ivanka, su hija, con Chelsea Clinton; retuiteó un comentario de Carrie Sheffield de su programa favorito Fox&Friends; les recriminó a senadores republicanos su lentitud en la votación de su plan de salud; habló de un informe que revela filtraciones de James Comey (otrora director del FBI despedido por Trump); dijo que Angela Merkel estuvo de acuerdo con la presencia de Ivanka en el sillón del presidente en la cumbre del G20 y escribió sobre las responsabilidades del alcalde de Nueva York en la muerte de una policía.

3. Manufactura en los estados, con su mayor aumento en siete años

En los primeros cuatro meses del año, creció 11.7% a tasa anual real, el valor de producción de la industria manufacturera en las entidades del país, su mayor nivel, para un mismo periodo, en los últimos siete años, de acuerdo con datos del Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía (Inegi).

Así, cinco estados generaron 51.3% del total en el país, que ascendió a 2.3 billones de pesos: el Estado de México (12.2%), Nuevo León (11.3%), Guanajuato (10.9%), Coahuila (10.7%) y Jalisco (6.2 por ciento).

En este tenor, el dinamismo manufacturero fue consecuencia, principalmente, del comportamiento de dichos territorios. En términos reales y anuales, Guanajuato aceleró su valor de producción (de 10.1% en el primer cuatrimestre del 2016 a 17.0% en igual lapso de este año).

4. ¿Qué tan importante es para ti estar “siempre” disponible?

Los habitantes de Rusia, China, Turquía y México son los más propensos del mundo a hacer todo lo posible para siempre mantenerse disponible, aunque eso implique tener cerca del teléfono móvil en todo momento.

Según la Organización Mundial de la Salud, uno de cada cuatro personas sufre algún trastorno de conducta relacionado con las nuevas tecnologías. Se puede hablar de adicción en todos aquellos casos en los que la afición interfiere en la vida diaria, o cuando se practica esa afición para no pasarlo mal en vez de para pasarlo bien. ¿Qué estás dispuesto a hacer por estar disponible?

5. Pepenador

Un cartón de Nerilicón.

@davee_son

javier.cisneros@eleconomista.mx



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Source Article from http://eleconomista.com.mx/politica/2017/07/11/5-noticias-dia-11-julio

Democrats immediately panned the executive actions. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, appearing Sunday morning on ABC News’ “This Week,” called them “paltry.”

“Unfortunately, the president’s executive orders, described in one word, could be paltry; in three words, unworkable, weak and far too narrow,” the New York Democrat said. “The event at the country club is just what Trump does, a big show, but it doesn’t do anything.”

A White House official on Saturday said the president had the “upper hand” by moving forward with actions and showing how little the Democrats were willing to actually negotiate.

“It just shows Trump is willing to get things done and work on the weekends, unlike Chuck and Nancy,” said Jason Miller, a Trump campaign adviser, referring to the minority leader and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

But throughout negotiations the president himself was largely missing, although he said he was updated regularly by his chief of staff, Mark Meadows, and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. And while the country has been rocked by the pandemic, the president has not spoken to Pelosi since last year, and suggested he wouldn’t anytime soon.

“We’ll see what happens, but right now they’re not ready,” Trump said, referring to Democratic lawmakers. “And they’re not ready because, frankly, I don’t think they care about people.”

The president was happy with how the news conferences went, according to aides, especially in the company of members from his club. Some came straight from happy hour holding glasses of wine.

Ahead of the first news conference, according to CNN, the president was heard on a microphone telling members: “You’ll get to meet the fake news tonight. You’ll get to see what I have to go through. Who’s there? Oh, all my killers are there, wow. So you’ll get to see some of the people that we deal with every day.”

People in the room booed and hissed when a reporter asked why members at his club appeared to be flaunting New Jersey guidelines by crowding into the room. Trump called it a “peaceful protest” at his country club.

“You know, you have an exclusion in the law. It says peaceful protest or political activity, right?” Trump said. “I call it a peaceful protest because they heard you were coming up and they know the news is fake, they know it better than anybody.”

The weekend was meant to help Trump reset. On Friday, the president met with his top campaign advisers, including Bill Stepien and Jason Miller, at Bedminster, and spent time Friday and Saturday with one of his closest allies, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.). On Saturday morning, Trump and Graham called into a South Carolina Republican Party meeting, according to a person familiar. First lady Melania Trump and their son Barron spent the weekend at Bedminster, too.

The weekend away was also part of a big fundraising push by the Republican National Committee. RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel traveled with the president on Marine One and accompanied him at exclusive fundraisers on Thursday in Ohio, and then over the weekend in the Hamptons and New Jersey. On Saturday, Trump got a boost from hobnobbing with friends at fundraisers at the ritzy homes of the Wall Street billionaire John Paulson and Trump’s eldest son, Donald Jr., in the Hamptons that raised $15 million for Trump Victory.

His Sunday fundraiser took place on the shore of New Jersey in Long Branch, where people acted as if there was no pandemic. Supporters, not socially distanced and without masks, crowded along the side of the road to see the president.

But even though the pandemic seemed far away for some of the public in New Jersey, the president had a gut-wrenching reminder of the virus’s toll when he visited. His final fundraiser of the weekend was held at the home of Stanley Chera, an old friend of the president’s and a fellow real estate tycoon who died of the coronavirus this spring.

“A great person, and a very early supporter,” Trump said. “Unfortunately, he didn’t make it.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/08/09/trump-executive-orders-golf-club-393050

“It is certain that the U.S. chief executive made a big blunder in the light of the present-day viewpoint,” Kwon said. “Now that the keynote of the U.S. new DPRK policy has become clear, we will be compelled to press for corresponding measures, and with time the U.S. will find itself in a very grave situation.”

Kwon still didn’t specify what steps North Korea would take, and his statement could be seen as an effort to apply pressure on the Biden administration as it’s shaping up its North Korea policy.

The White House said Friday administration officials had completed a review of U.S. policy toward North Korea, saying Biden plans to veer from the approaches of his two most recent predecessors as he tries to stop North Korea’s nuclear program. Press secretary Jen Psaki did not detail findings of the review, but suggested the administration would seek a middle ground between Donald Trump’s “grand bargain” and Barack Obama’s “strategic patience” approaches.

Kwon’s statement didn’t mention Psaki’s comments.

After a series of high-profile nuclear and missile tests in 2016-17, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un launched summit diplomacy with Trump on the future of his growing nuclear arsenal. But that diplomacy remains stalled for about two years over differences in how much sanctions relief North Korea could win in return for limited denuclearization steps.

In January, Kim threatened to enlarge his nuclear arsenal and build more high-tech weapons targeting the U.S. mainland, saying the fate of bilateral ties would depend on whether it abandons its hostile policy. In March, he conducted short-range ballistic missile tests for the first time in a year, though he still maintains a moratorium on bigger weapons launches.

“If Pyongyang agrees to working-level talks, the starting point of negotiations would be a freeze of North Korean testing and development of nuclear capabilities and delivery systems,” Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul, said. “If, on the other hand, Kim shuns diplomacy and opts for provocative tests, Washington will likely expand sanctions enforcement and military exercises with allies.”

Also Sunday, an unidentified North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman vowed a strong, separate response to a recent State Department statement that it would push to promote “accountability for the Kim regime” over its “egregious human rights situation.” He called the statement a preparation for “all-out showdown with us.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/05/02/north-korea-biden-speech-485196

Officials reveal new details about the 3 sets of human remains found at Lake Mead

The West’s historic drought is threatening hydropower at Hoover Dam

Experts say the term ‘drought’ may be insufficient to capture what is happening in the West

Steep water cuts are coming for the Southwest as Colorado River shrinks and Lake Mead’s level plummets

The Colorado River irrigates farms, powers electric grids and provides drinking water for 40 million people. As its supply dwindles, a crisis looms

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/08/16/us/colorado-river-water-cuts-lake-mead-negotiations-climate/index.html

A gunman killed three people and injured eight others at Pensacola Naval Air Station on Friday. It was the second shooting on a U.S. Naval Base in a week.

Josh Brasted/Getty Images


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A gunman killed three people and injured eight others at Pensacola Naval Air Station on Friday. It was the second shooting on a U.S. Naval Base in a week.

Josh Brasted/Getty Images

The family of Joshua Kaleb Watson has identified him as one of the three people killed Friday by a gunman at Naval Air Station Pensacola. Authorities say the gunman, a Saudi aviation student, also injured eight others before a sheriff’s deputy killed him.

Neither the Navy nor law enforcement officials have released the names of victims or the gunman.

Late Friday, several hours after the shooting took place, Adam Watson of Anniston, Ala., confirmed the death of his youngest brother in a Facebook post, calling him “a hero.”

“Joshua Kaleb Watson saved countless lives today with his own,” Watson writes. “After being shot multiple times he made it outside and told the first response team where the shooter was and those details were invaluable.”

He adds: “He died a hero and we are beyond proud but there is a hole in our hearts that can never be filled.”

In an interview with the Pensacola News Journal, Watson’s father told the paper his 23-year-old son was shot at least five times.

Benjamin Watson said it was his son’s dream to one day become a Navy pilot and he reported to flight training in Pensacola two weeks ago. He told the paper, “He died serving his country.”

Joshua Kaleb Watson grew up in Enterprise, Ala. He became a captain on the rifle team while at the Naval Academy, according to a Navy bio page, which says “he competed 13 times during his senior season and started 13 times in smallbore and twice in air rifle.”

Asked his preference between the two, he replied “smallbore for sure” in a interview with Navy Sports Magazine posted to YouTube in January.

Smallbore competition requires the shooter to fire a series of 20 rifle rounds from three separate positions — lying down, standing and kneeling.

Watson said growing up in Alabama, he handled firearms all the time, but says he was surprised the Navy had a rifle team.

“Wow the Naval Academy has a shooting team, maybe this is a great way to get there,” Watson said.

He was later asked about his goals and plans following graduation.

“I was selected for Navy pilot,” Watson said. “So hopefully heading down to Pensacola … right now I’m slated for November.”

He had a clear focus on his trajectory once he arrived.

“Get through flight school and maybe go fly jets. That’ll be pretty cool,” Watson said.

In another Facebook post on Saturday, Watson’s sister-in-law, Jennifer LeAnn Watson, thanked those offering condolences and asked for prayers for the family who is “hurting deeply.”

“My brother in law did not die in vain he was and has always been a hero amongst everyone he touched and loved!” She continued, “His accomplishments and dedication to this country will never be forgotten!”

Watson graduated from Enterprise High School in 2014, according to a report by Dothan, Alabama-based WDHN, an ABC affiliate. It adds Watson was “known for his involvement in the JROTC program, the National Honor Society, and the French National Honor Society.”

An entry on the Enterprise High School Facebook page called Watson’s death “tragic” and described him “an incredible young man.”

“Josh was an incredible young man with an incredibly bright future. Our thoughts and prayers are with the Watson family and other families dealing with this horrible act of violence. We truly lost an incredible young man that would have made this country, this world a better place.”

According to WTVY, a CBS affiliate in Dothan, William Cooper, the mayor of Enterprise, asked Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey to lower flags to half-staff until the Watson is laid to rest.

Questions about the shooter’s motive and about the foreign national being on a military base continue to go unanswered.

NPR’s Debbie Elliott reporting from Pensacola, told Weekend Edition Saturday, “the base commander and state officials did confirm that the gunman was an aviation student from Saudi Arabia — one of about 200 foreign students — part of allied forces who regularly train at Naval Air Station Pensacola.

Elliott said authorities confirmed the Saudi aviation student possessed a handgun, even though firearms are prohibited on base.

Some media outlets have reported the shooting may have been terrorism-related.

“No I can’t stay it’s terrorism at this time,” Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said Saturday when asked about the incident at the Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley, Calif.

“I think we need to let the investigators, the FBI, do its work … get us the facts and we’ll move out from there,” Esper said.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/12/07/785878146/family-of-pensacola-navy-base-shooting-says-victim-saved-countless-lives

Police on the hunt for Brian Laundrie have reportedly discovered a recently used campsite at the sprawling Florida park where the fugitive in the Gabby Petito case told his parents he was going on a hike.

Meanwhile, authorities also have investigated several reported sightings of the 23-year-old in North Carolina, according to a report.

A source close his family told CNN’s Chris Cuomo late Wednesday that authorities said they “found fresh traces of a campsite” at the sprawling, 25,000-acre Carlton Reserve in Sarasota.

News of the discovery came as the family’s lawyer announced that Laundrie’s father, Chris, would be joining the massive manhunt.

The North Port Police Department emphatically denied requesting the dad’s assistance, but the lawyer, Steven Bertolino, was adamant that “law enforcement” wants the family’s help and suggested it may have been the FBI that made the request.

The feds declined to comment.

Bertolino told CNN that Chris Laundrie was asked to assist North Port cops in their search but that police had to postpone.

The Sarasota County Sheriff’s Department says it has found evidence of a recent camp in the Carlton Reserve that may have been made by Brian Laundrie.
Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack

“Chris Laundrie was asked to assist law enforcement in their search for Brian at the preserve today,” Bertolino said in a statement.

Search teams fan out at Carlton Reserve park to search for Brian Laundrie.North Port Police Department via AP

“Since the preserve has been closed to the public Chris has not been able to look for Brian in the only place Chris and Roberta believe Brian may be,” he told The Post.

“Unfortunately North Port police had to postpone Chris’ involvement but Chris and Roberta are hopeful there will be another opportunity to assist,” the lawyer added.

A helicopter aids crews with the FBI and North Port police and Sheriff’s Department.
Andrea Melendez/Naples Daily News via AP
The FBI along with local law enforcement brings swamp buggies into the Carlton Reserve during the search for Brian Laundrie.
Dennis A. Clark

When asked on CNN whether Laundrie’s parents believe he’s in the reserve or another area, Bertolino said: “No, they don’t believe he’s in another area. They believe he is in the preserve.”

On Tuesday, a spokeswoman with the Haywood County Sheriff’s Office in North Carolina told NBC News that multiple tipsters had reported sightings of the fugitive in the western part of the state near the Tennessee border.

Those reports include a 911 call early Saturday from Dennis Davis, a hiker on the Appalachian Trail who reported that he was “99.99 percent sure” he had spoken with Laundrie.

“He was talking wild. He said that his girlfriend left him and he had to go out to California to see her,” Davis told the Haywood County dispatcher, according to audio of the call released Monday.

“He was acting funny. And I wasn’t sure what he looked like. And then … I went and parked and pulled up the photographs of him. And I’m 99.99 percent sure that was him,” he said.

Authorities in Canada, Alabama and Montana also have received reports of Laundrie sightings, according to the news outlet.

Laundrie reportedly went hiking at the reserve on Sept. 13 and never returned to his parents’ nearby North Port home.

Brian Laundrie is wanted for questioning about the death of his girlfriend, Gabby Petito, after returning from a cross-country trek alone.
Instagram

Laundrie is the sole person of interest in the disappearance of his slain 22-year-old girlfriend. He had returned home early from the couple’s cross-country trip on Sept. 1 without Petito.

Federal authorities in Wyoming issued an arrest warrant for Laundrie on Sept. 23 for allegedly fraudulently using Petito’s debit card.

Brian Laundrie disappeared on Sept. 14, 2021, after telling his parents he was going on a hike in the nearby Carlton Reserve.
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Petito had been reported missing on Sept. 11 and her body was found Sept. 19 at a remote campsite at the Bridger-Teton National Forest in Wyoming, with a coroner later declaring her death a homicide.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/10/07/police-searching-for-brian-laundrie-find-fresh-camp-in-carlton-reserve/

May 18 at 5:08 PM

President Trump’s 2020 campaign spokeswoman joined other Republicans in her disapproval of Alabama’s ban on almost all abortions, and suggested the president shared her view.

During an appearance on MSNBC on Saturday, Kayleigh McEnany said she disagreed with Alabama’s decision not to allow exceptions for pregnancies caused by rape and incest. The law will permit abortions only if the mother’s life is at risk.

“You know, I personally am for the exceptions,” McEnany said. “The president has been clear since the last campaign he’s for exceptions for rape and incest and life of the mother.”

When asked if the president would openly criticize the law, McEnany said she didn’t know, but reiterated that “he’s said repeatedly he’s for those three exceptions.”

Though the issue dominated headlines this week, Trump remained uncharacteristically silent. But other antiabortion conservatives have spoken out that the Alabama law goes too far. Those include televangelist Pat Robertson, who called it “extreme,” and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who said it “goes further” than what he believes.

Other Republicans have tried to avoid the contentious issue with many dodging questions by saying it’s a states issue. The White House, when asked for Trump’s opinion about the law, changed the subject to focus on Democrats and late-term abortions.

“Unlike radical Democrats who have cheered legislation allowing a baby to be ripped from the mother’s womb moments from birth, President Trump is protecting our most innocent and vulnerable, defending the dignity of life, and called on Congress to prohibit late-term abortions,” the White House said in a statement.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2019/05/18/trump-spokeswoman-suggests-hes-opposed-parts-alabamas-abortion-ban/

Still, most of the Republican Party’s rank-and-file voters have shown little sign of deserting Trump and his political movement. And over the past week, top G.O.P. lawmakers have started reconciling themselves to that fact.

Senator Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader, voted on Tuesday with all but five members of his party in the Senate to dismiss Trump’s impeachment trial, even after privately indicating to colleagues that he thought the former president deserved to be impeached.

This dynamic — of Democrats joined by most independents, but Republicans staunchly on the other side — plays out in some key results from a Pew Research Center poll released last week. Pew asked Americans to weigh in on their top priorities for the new administration. On some issues, the partisan differences weren’t especially strong. But on the most talked-about matters facing the country, Republicans and Democrats split decisively.

Although a majority in both parties saw it as important for the federal government to confront the coronavirus pandemic, Democrats and independents who leaned toward the Democratic Party were 33 percentage points more likely to say so than Republicans and G.O.P.-leaning independents. On climate change, a top priority for the Biden administration, the split was even greater: Three in five Democrats thought it was a pressing concern, but just 14 percent of Republicans did.

There was a similar gulf on racial justice. While 72 percent of Democrats said that addressing issues around race should be a top policy concern, only 24 percent of Republicans said so. While there have always been differences between Republicans and Democrats on the importance of addressing racial disparities — and on the federal government’s role in doing so — the gap may now be larger than ever.

That is partly because Democrats and Democratic-leaning independent voters, particularly white people, have evolved a great deal on these issues in the past few years. Meanwhile, Republicans, egged on by Trump’s politics of hostility, have only become more skeptical of arguments for racial justice.

Of the top policy issues facing the country, only on one — handling the economy and jobs — did wide majorities in both parties say the government should be investing a lot of energy. Eighty-five percent of Republicans said handling the economy should be a top priority, as did 75 percent of Democrats.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/01/us/politics/biden-approval-rating-trump.html