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Holocaust Remembrance Day back-to-back with Independence Day in Israel

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Every year, Jewish worshippers look forward to the third day of Passover when thousands of gather at Jerusalem’s Western Wall plaza to attend a special “priestly blessing” prayer known as Birkat Kohanim. Photo Credit: Wikipedia

By: Ron Jager

The days following Pesach are always an emotionally charged period in Israel. From celebrating the redemption of the Jewish nation during Pesach, we move on to Yom Hashoah, Israel’s annual Holocaust Remembrance Day. We then move on to Yom Hazikaron when Israelis pay tribute to the country’s fallen soldiers during a solemn day of mourning. On this official Memorial Day, Israel also mourns the loss of civilians who were killed as a result of terrorism. For most of us in Israel, this time period encompasses the price that we pay for being Jews, then and now.

To date; 23,816 soldiers have died since the establishment of the State of Israel. On this day, we commemorate each and every one of them. We witness how a whole country ceases to work and remembers those who have given their life to defend the State of Israel.

Yet, as evening approaches, and the sun begins to set once again, the country undergoes a transformation. The streets are suddenly filled with people celebrating Yom Haatzmaut, Israel’s Independence Day. The celebrations continue into the night and the following day.

Making the switch so suddenly has always seem to me as odd. Have we forgotten that but moments before, our hearts were heavy with grief for the family and friends that we lost, and continue to lose every year?

Yom Hazikaron and Yom Haatzmaut are purposely back-to-back for a purpose. The celebrations of Independence Day (Yom Haatzmaut) are incomplete by themselves. We celebrate these two events with the acute awareness that without the incredible sacrifice of those we have lost, there would be no State of Israel. Yom Hazikaron gives our Yom Haatzmaut meaning and perspective. We are forced to confront and remember the terrible price we have had to pay for our existence as a Jewish state, and because of this price, we value that freedom all the more intensely.

Yom Haatzmaut also gives Yom Hashoah a greater meaning than ever before. We in Israel are defending and dying on the front lines on behalf of every Jew in the world. For the Jews of the diaspora, Israel has become a very real safe haven for every Jew and essentially come home, only because he is a Jew. This is the very opposite of the not-so-distant past when entrance to a safe haven was denied only because one was a Jew.

Unfortunately, historical events as earth-shattering and history-ending as they seem at the time, they can eventually fade from the forefront of public consciousness and become just a lingering memory.

When Holocaust survivors will no longer be around, and when there is no more opportunity to let children and educators hear firsthand testimony of the Holocaust, will the Holocaust be just another event studied in world history classes? With all of the effort that has gone into recording testimonies of the Holocaust be enough to preserve historical memory in terms of the magnitude and uniqueness of the Holocaust? At the recent ceremony, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke passionately about the failure of today’s democracies to learn the lessons of the Holocaust. In doing so, he directly compared appeasement of the Nazis with contemporary efforts to engage Iran and its nuclear threat via diplomacy.

However, it is likely that much of what passes for liberal and enlightened opinion in both Europe and the United States will dismiss these analogies between the Shoah and the modern day existential threat that Iran poses for the future security of the State of Israel. Prime Minister Netanyahu is absolutely right when he points out that talk about the horrors of the Holocaust and vowing “never again” is meaningless when it is bound by policies that essentially empower those who not only deny the reality of the Shoah but also seek the means to perpetrate a new one.

Iran is not Germany, but on a day when the lessons of history should be uppermost in our minds, the burden of proof lies with those defending appeasement of a government that seeks to complete the work Hitler started, not with those lamenting this disgraceful attempt to make a devil’s bargain with a violent hate-filled theocratic regime. We are unable to escape the modern day interconnectedness between Yom Hashoah, Yom Hazikaron, and Yom Haatzmaut.

In Israel, Jews are a sovereign power and enjoy the dignity of Jewish self-government: they are keepers of their own land, speakers of their own language, and shapers of their own national destiny. The old-world problems of the Jews—living in segregated conditions, burdened by humiliating legal restrictions, often impoverished and dispirited—are no longer Jewish problems in the modern State of Israel.

The message of the Passover Haggada, the event that began this period of Yom Hazikaron and Yom Haatzmaut is that there are no shortcuts to freedom. To gain and keep it, you have to be willing to fight for it. You must be willing to make the ultimate sacrifice.

As Eric Cohen has written: “In this light, the sheer existence of modern Israel is an incredible fact and to some nothing short of a miracle. That from a few fragile settlements, and out of the ashes of the Holocaust, it has in only a few decades become the center of the Jewish people is one of the greatest political achievements in human history. This new Jewish civilization has created a permanent fighting force to defend itself. It survives through military strength, but hardly through that alone. Its real strength resides in the spirit of its people, one of the most optimistic, enterprising, and resilient citizenries on earth.”

Brooklyn A.G Gonzalez Tosses 90 Convictions From Crooked NYPD Narcotics Detective

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. Photo Credit: AP

Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez today announced that his Conviction Review Unit will be asking the Court to vacate and dismiss 27 felony convictions and 63 misdemeanor convictions that were directly based on the work of former undercover New York City Police Department Detective Joseph Franco. The former detective has been indicted in Manhattan for perjury, official misconduct and other charges in connection with four incidents whereby he allegedly framed numerous individuals for making narcotics transactions. A review by Brooklyn’s CRU did not uncover misconduct, but the District Attorney has lost confidence in cases where the detective was an essential witness, i.e., cases that could not have been prosecuted without him, and is requesting that those convictions be dismissed.

District Attorney Gonzalez said, “Knowingly and repeatedly framing innocent people obliterates the credibility of any police officer and proving perjury in such circumstances is rare. After a grand jury reviewed the evidence and indicted former Detective Franco, I have lost confidence in his work. His cases in Brooklyn are over a decade old, which limited our ability to reinvestigate them, but I cannot in good faith stand by convictions that principally relied on his testimony. Integrity and credibility are at the heart of the justice system and prerequisites for community trust.”

The District Attorney’s Office today is asking Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Matthew D’Emic to vacate 27 felony convictions (plus 13 misdemeanor convictions that were taken in Supreme Court), mostly for criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third or fifth degree, and to dismiss the underlying indictments. It is also asking Criminal Court Judge Keshia Espinal to vacate 50 misdemeanor convictions, mostly for criminal possession of a controlled substance in the seventh degree, and to dismiss the underlying complaints. The dismissals are pursuant to a writ of error coram nobis and the court proceedings are expected to continue over the next few days. In all, 27 felony convictions and 63 misdemeanor convictions will be vacated.

Those cases stemmed from arrests that happened when Det. Franco was assigned to Brooklyn commands, between 2004 and 2011. All but one of the 90 convictions were obtained by way of a guilty plea. Most of those convicted for a felony were sentenced to between six months and a year in jail, with the longest sentence being three years in prison. Most of those convicted for a misdemeanor were sentenced to terms ranging from time served to 90 days in jail.

The Conviction Review Unit reviewed all convictions where Det. Franco was involved. Cases where he was the primary undercover and his testimony was necessary for a potential hearing or trial were flagged for dismissal. Defense lawyers and the Court have been notified of the new allegations and the dismissals.

In April 2019, a New York County grand jury indicted Det. Franco on 16 counts of first-degree perjury and related charges. In July 2019, a grand jury indicted him on 10 additional counts of first-degree perjury and related charges. He is awaiting trial on both indictments and was fired from the NYPD in May 2020.

The case review was conducted by Assistant District Attorney Eric Sonnenschein, Deputy Chief of the District Attorney’s Post-Conviction Justice Bureau, and Assistant District Attorney Rachel Nash, Deputy Chief of the District Attorney’s Conviction Review Unit, under the supervision of Assistant District Attorney Mark Hale, Chief of the Post-Conviction Justice Bureau.

BREAKING: COVID Variant most common in the United States…

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CDC Director Dr. Rachelle Walensky, says that a variant of the Coronavirus first identified in Britain, formally known as B.1.1.7, is “now the most common lineage circulating in United States”.

Two Migrant Children Abandoned by Smugglers Found in California Wilderness near Border

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Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/San Diego Sector

BOB PRICE

San Diego Sector Border Patrol agents found two small children after human smugglers abandoned them near Jacumba, California. The children were alone and crying when agents found them.

Agents patrolling the border near Jacumba observed a man and woman walking along the Mexican side of the border. The agents continued watching the couple who also had two small children with them, according to information obtained from San Diego Sector Border Patrol officials.

The agents observed the couple hoisting two children over large boulders in an area where the border wall ends. The side of the mountain abuts the large boulders.

Agents moved in and found the two children alone and crying. The agents determined the boy to be six years old and the girl to be five years old. The children could not communicate except to provide their names.

Agents transported the children to the station for care and processing. While examining the children, the agents found a handwritten note containing the mother’s name and phone number. The children also had the mother’s phone number and name written on their forearms with a marker.

Following the examination, the agents contacted the mother and obtained additional information about the children. When space becomes available, the children will be turned over to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services officials for temporary housing.

“It is unconscionable that anyone would abandon these small children and those responsible for smuggling events like this will be aggressively prosecuted,” San Diego Sector Chief Patrol Agent Aaron Heitke said in a written statement.  “Thankfully, our agents were able to quickly rescue these siblings.”

Breitbart

Policy Changes Drive Orthodox Jews from Amazon

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AP image

(Free Beacon) 

Rule changes to one of Amazon’s major programs for small sellers have driven many Orthodox Jews out of the program, confirming their fears when the rules were first announced.

The changes to Seller Fulfilled Prime—billed as improving Amazon customer experience—have made acceptable performance metrics harder to achieve. As the Washington Free Beacon reported last February, Orthodox Jewish sellers are especially hard hit by six-day shipping requirements that make it more difficult to observe the Sabbath and maintain high one-day shipping numbers. Orthodox Jews make up a disproportionate number of the small sellers on the retail platform, with one estimate suggesting they are 15 percent of all small sellers. At the time, participants warned the changes would drive them off the platform.

Months later, those fears are being validated. One informal poll in a private group of Seller Fulfilled Prime participants found only 5 percent of users understood how to meet the new metrics. Another poll found over half of a group of Orthodox Jewish participants had been suspended from the program in the past two months.

The Seller Fulfilled Prime program allows small sellers to list their own items for Amazon Prime. But in February, Amazon required that sellers list items for two-day delivery on six days of the week. Orthodox Jews cannot work on Saturday, and many sellers report local carriers will not pick up packages on Sunday.

One Orthodox Jewish seller who asked not to be named said his shipping costs had jumped since the rule change, and that he was eliminating expensive items from Prime in response. “I don’t understand what Amazon gains by shutting out millions of items from SFP,” he said. Other sellers complained that Amazon had put the additional pressure to satisfy consumers on them, rather than lobbying UPS and other carriers to ship items on Sunday.

Amazon describes the changes as needed to improve the Prime experience for customers by further standardizing when packages are received. One seller told the Free Beacon that the driving force behind the changes was consumer demand: “They think if they order it Friday, they will get it on Wednesday.” But the changes have also driven speculation, with some sellers alleging that Amazon is purposefully looking to squeeze them off the platform. Others fear that Amazon would prefer sellers to use programs that require items be shipped to an Amazon warehouse first so that the seller can’t also list items on Amazon rivals like Walmart.

Saul Cohen, who mainly sells large items like cribs for babies, said the rule change hasn’t affected him as much as it has sellers of smaller objects, who will lose more money by rush shipping across the country. “That’s a very large group, obviously,” he said.

Orthodox Jews have asked Amazon to allow them to toggle the Prime designation off during the weekend, but Amazon has resisted and announced it will suspend accounts that regularly turn off Prime. One small seller reported an Amazon SFP agent told him that Amazon “would come after” anyone avoiding turning on Prime on the weekends. An organization lobbying Amazon on behalf of sellers said the company is stonewalling and has not responded to multiple messages.

Some Orthodox sellers are considering a religious workaround that would involve selling a portion of their business to a non-Jew who can work on Saturdays. But it would be a radical and probably illicit step, says Rabbi Yosef Kushner of the Bais HaVaad Halacha Center.

Teachers’ Union Head Rips Jews in Interview on School Reopening

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(American Thinker) 

Union leader Randi Weingarten criticized Jews as “part of the ownership class” dedicated to denying opportunities to others in an interview released on Friday.

Weingarten—who is herself Jewish and draws a six-figure salary as head of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT)—took aim at American Jews in an interview with the Jerusalem Post. When asked about parents critical of the AFT’s resistance to school reopening, Weingarten took aim squarely at Jewish critics.

“American Jews are now part of the ownership class,” Weingarten said. “Jews were immigrants from somewhere else. And they needed the right to have public education. And they needed power to have enough income and wealth for their families that they could put their kids through college and their kids could do better than they have done.”

“What I hear when I hear that question is that those who are in the ownership class now want to take that ladder of opportunity away from those who do not have it,” she said.

Weingarten’s comments come after months of political conflict about whether to reopen school system as vaccinations ramp up and the coronavirus crisis recedes.

A major Jewish advocacy group ripped Weingarten for being “inaccurate and dangerous” in her generalizations about the Jewish community. StandWithUs, a pro-Israel advocacy organization, said the union boss was “out of touch” with the experience of Jewish students and came close to trafficking in anti-Semitism.

“As a non-partisan Israel education organization, StandWithUs takes no position on the debate over when schools should reopen,” Roz Rothstein, cofounder and CEO of StandWithUs, said. “We work with many Jewish students and parents in Los Angeles and are extremely disappointed by Randi Weingarten’s inaccurate and dangerous generalizations about our community.

“Her comments are shockingly out of touch with the actual experiences of countless Jewish families before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, give undue legitimacy to antisemitic stereotypes, and do nothing to help bring people in Los Angeles together during this difficult time.”

The American Federation of Teachers, which did not respond to a request for comment, is the second largest teachers’ union in the country and one of the Democratic Party’s largest financial backers. The 1.5 million-member union spent more than $20 million on the 2020 election, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Parents have overwhelmingly supported the effort to open schools. A February Gallup poll found that nearly 80 percent of parents of all religions have expressed support for in-person instruction for their children.

“Cancel Culture” Grips Corporate America; Georgia Under Attack for Voting Laws

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Truist Park lost the 2021 All-Star Game on Friday, April 2, 2021, when Major League Baseball decided to move the game to Coors Field in Denver over the league’s objection to Georgia’s sweeping new election law that critics say restricts voting rights. (AP Photo/John Amis, File)

Edited by: TJVNews.com

After much publicized controversy, it has been reported that the 2021 Major League Baseball All-Star Game will be played at hitter-friendly Coors Field in Denver, Colorado on July 13th.

An AP report indicated that Major League Baseball officially announced the new venue Tuesday after pulling the Midsummer Classic from Atlanta over objections to extensive changes to Georgia’s voting laws. Coors Field last hosted the All-Star Game in 1998.

In a statement posted on the Major League Baseball web site on Tuesday, Commissioner Robert D. Manfred, Jr. said: “Major League Baseball is grateful to the Rockies, the City of Denver and the State of Colorado for their support of this summer’s All-Star Game. We appreciate their flexibility and enthusiasm to deliver a first-class event for our game and the region. We look forward to celebrating our sport’s best players and entertaining fans around the world.”

“We are excited to host this year’s All-Star festivities at Coors Field,” said Rockies Chief Operating Officer Greg Feasel. “We are confident that our organization along with the city, state, VISIT DENVER and the Denver Sports Commission are capable of putting on this premier event in a relatively quick time frame because of the preparations that had already been done. Summer in Colorado is something everyone in the country should experience, and we embrace this opportunity to show off our beautiful ballpark and everything our city, state and region have to offer.”

MLB decided to move the game from Truist Park in Atlanta in response to Georgia voting rules signed into law by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp on March 25, as was reported by AP. Critics, including the CEOs of Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines and Coca-Cola, have condemned the changes as being too restrictive.

The Hill reported that Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey has also called the restrictions “unacceptable” and “a step backwards,” and Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said the law “includes provisions that will make it harder for many underrepresented voters, particularly Black voters, to exercise their constitutional right to elect their representatives.”

The Georgia law includes new limits on voting by mail and greater legislative control over how elections are run, amid a push in Republican-led states to reduce voting options after former president Donald Trump made claims of widespread fraud in last year’s election, according to an AP report.

Colorado has a Democratic governor in Jared Polis and a Democratic-controlled legislature. AP reported that The Rockies presented a detailed blueprint for hosting the game, from providing hotels to security.

Manfred made the decision to move the All-Star events and the amateur draft from Atlanta after discussions with individual players and the Players Alliance, an organization of Black players formed after the death of George Floyd last year, the commissioner said in the statement.

On Tuesday, AP reported that White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki defended voter access in Colorado and noted that it allows registration on election day and widespread voting by mail.

Kemp has vowed to defend Georgia’s measures, and other Republicans have criticized MLB’s move, according to the AP report. Texas Governor Greg Abbott backed out of throwing the first pitch at the Texas Rangers’ home opener Monday and said the state would not seek to host the All-Star Game or any other special MLB events.

With its spacious outfield and thin air, Coors Field has become a hitter’s paradise. The baseballs will be flying out of the stadium, especially in the Home Run Derby, as was reported by AP. The Los Angeles Dodgers will host the 2022 All-Star Game.

Fox Business reported that Coca-Cola has released a statement condemning Georgia’s new voting legislation, but the company requires valid ID to be admitted to its annual meeting of shareholders.

“At the entrance to the meeting, we will verify your registration and request to see your admission ticket and a valid form of photo identification, such as a driver’s license or passport,” the company wrote in reference to its 2020 annual meeting of shareholders, held before the coronavirus pandemic.

Georgia’s new voting law requires a drivers’ license or state ID number be listed to submit an absentee ballot to vote, among other new reforms, as was reported by Fox Business. The state already required ID to vote in person. It had previously relied on signature matching to verify ballots.

Coca-Cola is based in Atlanta. This week, the beverage company, among other Georgia-based companies, issued statements condemning the new legislation after threats of boycott.

Activists were in the midst of organizing a boycott of major Atlanta-based corporations such as Coca Cola over their initial refusal to condemn the GOP-backed elections bill, according to the Fox Business report.

Days ago, Fox Business reported that the AME Sixth Episcopal District said it would be calling for a statewide boycott of Coca-Cola until it expressly comes out against the legislation.

Bishop Reginald Jackson told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that if “Coca-Cola wants Black and brown people to drink their product, then they must speak up when our rights, our lives and our very democracy as we know it is under attack.”

Fox Business reported that the bill, which passed the Georgia General Assembly’s House of Representatives last Thursday, would create new voter ID laws and limit ballot drop boxes. It would also shorten the timeframe for runoff elections, required when no candidate reaches 50% of the vote in Georgia, from nine weeks to four weeks. The state Senate will now debate the bill, which must be finalized by Wednesday, the end of the year’s legislative session in the state.

“We will speak with our wallets,” said Jackson, who leads more than 400 churches in Georgia.“This past summer, Coke and other corporations said they needed to speak out against racism. But they’ve been mighty quiet about this.”

Jackson said boycotts are also possible for companies like Home Depot and Delta Airlines, according to the Fox Business report.

Coca-Cola has come under increasing pressure to take a definitive stance against the legislation. Earlier this month activists held a die-in at the company’s tourist attraction in downtown Atlanta.

The New York Times reported that Coca-Cola ultimately issued a carefully worded statement saying that “voting is a foundational right in America” and pledging to “work to advance voting rights and access in Georgia and across the country.” But it didn’t publicly weigh in on the legislation before Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, signed it into law last Thursday.

On February 23rd, the New York Post reported that Coca-Cola employees were urged to be “less white” as part of the company’s alleged diversity training — but the material was taken offline following a viral whistleblower post.

The “Confronting Racism” course in question was offered by LinkedIn Education and allegedly utilized by Coca Cola, according to the NY Post report.

“In the U.S. and other Western nations, white people are socialized to feel that they are inherently superior because they are white,” reads one of the slides, allegedly sent from an “internal whistleblower” and posted on Twitter by YouTube commentator Karlyn Borysenko.

The Post also reported that another slide suggests “try to be less white” with tips including “be less oppressive,” “listen,” “believe” and “break with white solidarity.”

Borysenko, who describes herself as a supporter of banning critical race theory, said the screenshots were sent to her from an “internal whistleblower” from Coca-Cola, who told her the course was “required.”

On Friday, it was reported that President Biden called the new Georgia election law “Jim Crow in the 21st century,” likening its provisions to racially discriminatory laws cast aside in the 1960s.

“More Americans voted in the 2020 elections than any election in our nation’s history. In Georgia we saw this most historic demonstration of the power of the vote twice — in November and then again in the runoff election for the U.S. Senate seats in January. Recount after recount and court case after court case upheld the integrity and outcome of a clearly free, fair, and secure democratic process,” Biden said in a statement.

Biden continued by saying: “Yet instead of celebrating the rights of all Georgians to vote or winning campaigns on the merits of their ideas, Republicans in the state instead rushed through an un-American law to deny people the right to vote.”

He added that, “Among the outrageous parts of this new state law, it ends voting hours early so working people can’t cast their vote after their shift is over. It adds rigid restrictions on casting absentee ballots that will effectively deny the right to vote to countless voters. And it makes it a crime to provide water to voters while they wait in line — lines Republican officials themselves have created by reducing the number of polling sites across the state, disproportionately in Black neighborhoods.”

The New York Times reported that last Thursday, hours after the Georgia voting restrictions were signed into law that protesters at the Atlanta airport called for a boycott of Delta Airlines, Georgia’s largest employer. In front of the Delta terminal, they lobbied for employees to pressure their employer and urged the airline’s chief executive, Ed Bastian, to use his clout to sway the debate.

Delta is a major corporate supporter of the gay community, and was among the many major companies that last year said it stood with the Black community after the death of George Floyd at the hands of the police, according to the NYT report. At the time, Delta said it would look for ways to “make an impact and take a stand against racism and injustice, from programs to policy changes.”

Fox Business reported that while Democrats claim the bill is “anti-voting” legislation, Republicans say the bill would expand voting accessibility, with two mandatory early voting days on Saturdays and giving counties the option to hold early voting on two Sundays. Earlier versions of the bill had limited early voting on Sundays, a popular time for Black churchgoers to head to the polls.

Gov. Brian Kemp has publicly endorsed a provision of the bill that requires ID for absentee voting, but has not otherwise weighed in, according to the Fox Business report.

Meanwhile, The Hill web site reported that former President Donald Trump called for a boycott of Major League Baseball after it decided to move its All-Star Game out of Georgia in protest of the state’s new bill signed into law that tightens voting restrictions.

“Baseball is already losing tremendous numbers of fans, and now they leave Atlanta with their All-Star Game because they are afraid of the Radical Left Democrats who do not want voter I.D., which is desperately needed, to have anything to do with our elections,” Trump said in a statement released by Save America PAC.

“Boycott baseball and all of the woke companies that are interfering with Free and Fair Elections. Are you listening Coke, Delta, and all!” he added, referencing other companies that have criticized the new law.

The Hill reported on Tuesday that Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) is calling on Republicans to boycott Coca-Cola. “If they want to boycott us why don’t we boycott them,” Paul said during an appearance on Fox News on Tuesday. “This is the only thing that will teach them a lesson. If Coca-Cola wants to only operate in Democrat states and have only Democrats drink them, God love ‘em. We’ll see how well they do when half the country quits drinking Coca-Cola.”

The New York Post also reported on Tuesday that Florida Senator Marco Rubio addressed the issue in a scathing letter to MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, saying his decision “reeks of hypocrisy.”

“I write to ask you whether you intend to maintain your membership at Augusta National Golf Club,” Rubio challenged Manfred in the letter Monday, according to the Post report. “As you are well aware, the exclusive members-only club is located in the State of Georgia.”

The Hill reported that Kemp also challenged the top brass at Major League Baseball over the announcement, casting it as “cancel culture” and added that the league caved to Democratic pressure.

“Georgians–and all Americans–should fully understand what the MLB’s knee-jerk decision means: cancel culture and woke political activists are coming for every aspect of your life, sports included. If the left doesn’t agree with you, facts and the truth do not matter,” Kemp said in a statement, according to The Hill.

The Hill also reported that Rep. Jeff Duncan (R-S.C.) said that he is instructing his staff to cobble together legislation that would strip MLB of its federal antitrust exception.

Trump in particular has claimed repeatedly that Georgia experienced widespread voter fraud after Biden won the state by just over 11,000 votes. His loss there marked the first time since 1992 that a Republican presidential contender lost Georgia, according to The Hill.

NY Lawmakers Move to Raise Income, Corporate Taxes by $4.3 Billion

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New York lawmakers are moving towards a budget deal which will make the city’s top earners pay the highest combined local tax rate in the United States. Photo Credit: AP

By: Ilana Siyance

New York lawmakers are moving towards a budget deal which will make the city’s

top earners pay the highest combined local tax rate in the United States.

As reported by the Wall Street Journal, on Saturday Democratic leaders of the state Assembly and Senate rolled out their plan which would increase corporate and income taxes by $4.3 billion annually. As part of Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s roughly $200 billion state budget, income-tax rates would swell from 8.82 percent to 9.65 percent for single filers reporting over $1 million in income, and joint filers reporting over $2 million. The proposed plan would also add two new tax brackets—in which income over $5 million would be taxed at 10.3 percent, and income over $25 million would be taxed at 10.9 percent, until 2027. If the legislation is passed, NYC’s top earners would have a combined state and city income tax of between 13.5% and 14.8%, beating California which currently has the highest top income-tax rate, at 13.3% on income over $1 million.

Tax increases would also be doled out to New York’s corporate franchises under the new budget. Corporate franchise tax would jump to 7.25% from 6.5% till 2023.

The budget bills should be finalized and voted on early this week, as per the WSJ. The added tax revenue would be utilized to increase school aid and add funds for undocumented immigrants, small businesses and tenants who are behind on their rent, as per the WSJ.

The pending budget is also likely to include an agreement on legalizing mobile sports betting in New York, as per a legislative official. Gov. Cuomo has said that could eventually bring in up to $500 million annually for the state. Such an initiative, along with the other programs, would bring an estimated total of $5 billion in new revenue for the state budget, the official told the WSJ.

The changes would mark the first time the income taxes were increased under the tenure of Gov. Cuomo, who has held the office since 2011. Business leaders have often cautioned lawmakers that increasing taxes for the upper class would lead the residents to flee the city which has already suffered an exodos due to the pandemic and remote work options. The departure of these high-rollers would leave the state in red, as the highest-earning 5 percent of tax filers bring in an estimated 60 percent of the total income taxes raised.

NYPD Ordered to Ignore People Smoking Marijuana in Public Since Legalization Took Effect

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The new stench in New York City is hard to notice. Of late, the Big Apple streets smell of urine as well as weed. The repugnant and powerful reek is not expected to improve any time soon. Photo Credit: AP

By: Ilana Siyance

The new stench in New York City is hard to notice. Of late, the Big Apple streets smell of urine as well as weed. The repugnant and powerful reek is not expected to improve any time soon.

Governor Andrew Cuomo signed a new law legalizing the recreational use, sale and growing of marijuana, last Wednesday. After that, a four-page memo was distributed to police instructing them as to the implications of the new state law. Enforcement is not an option. As reported by Fox News, cops who see adults light up and smoke weed in public, should ignore any exchange unless money is directly being paid. Persons above the age of 21 may legally smoke weed “almost anywhere that cigarette smoking is allowed including on sidewalks, on front stoops and other places.” The memo says that smoking “in any of these locations is not a basis for an approach, stop, summons, arrest or search.”

Police will no longer be authorized to search vehicles based on the smell of marijuana. Police also may not “approach, stop or detain” a parolee for smoking or possessing pot, “even if they know the ex-con isn’t supposed to be getting high” as per Fox News. In such an event, cops may merely “notify the relevant parole officers”. If a driver appears clearly wasted and stinks of weed or admits to “having smoked recently,” cops may search only the vehicle’s passenger compartment, but not the trunk “unless the officer develops separate probable cause to believe the trunk contains evidence of a crime (e.g. gun recovered from under driver seat)”, the memo to law enforcement reads.

The new law, which has mostly gone into effect immediately, also includes rules which will be phased in gradually. This includes leniencies on how much licensed dispensaries will be allowed to sell. The new law stipulates that adults can grow as many as 12 pot plants per household and keep a five-pound stash at home. Five pounds is enough to roll over 3,330 joints, based on data from a 2010 study by the medical journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence.

The situation will likely lead to more than just foul-smelling streets, according to some. One NYPD source told Fox News that the new tolerance could spell disaster for the public safety of New York citizens. “We always say, ‘Drugs equal guns. When you smelled weed, you could pull a car over. Now, you can’t pull them over…that’s bad, especially with all the gun violence going on.”

NY Socialite Jocelyn Wildenstein’s Trump World Tower Condo Sold by Creditors

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Jocelyn Wildenstein, a socialite known as ‘Catwoman’ for her looks following extensive plastic surgery, had her residence sold by creditors. Credit: Yahoo

By Benyamin Davidsons

Jocelyn Wildenstein, a socialite known as ‘Catwoman’ for her looks following extensive plastic surgery, had her residence sold by creditors. As reported by the NY Post, one of three condo units she owned at the Trump World Tower in Midtown Manhattan has been sold. An administrator appointed by her creditors sold the single unit on the 51st floor of the Midtown East tower for $2 million.

Wildenstein, formerly a big spender, had owned three units at the luxury tower and combined the units, demolishing several walls, to create a five-bedroom, 5,160-square-foot single residence. The unit was sold gutted, and stripped of all its former glory, beautiful fixtures and furniture.

Swiss-born Wildenstein, 80, had been married to the late billionaire and art dealer Alec Wildenstein. The couple had a messy divorce in 1999, and she was reportedly awarded a whopping $2.5 billion in the divorce settlement. Somehow, she made it from billionaire to bankrupt.

The combined three units at the Trump World Tower, located at 845 United Nations Plaza between 47th and 47th streets, were first put up for sale by Wildenstein in 2015 asking $17.5 million. The residence didn’t sell and was relisted for $13 million in February 2017, but to no avail. By 2018, Wildenstein filed for bankruptcy. The two remaining units, from her combined apartment are still up for sale, for a total price of $5.6 million, but they can also be sold individually. The apartments are side-by-side but not connected, and they boast views of the Empire State Building, the East River, and the Chrysler Building.

The 72-floor luxury apartment building, completed by Donald Trump in 2001, reportedly has 376 units and has boasted apartment sales to many well-known rich and famous figures. Some of the illustrious names to have owned apartments in the building include Bill Gates, Harrison Ford, Sophia Loren, Yankees Star Derek Jeter and Kellyanne Conway. The building was briefly the tallest all-residential tower in the world. It was also once famed as the New York City’s most valuable condo tower, getting assessed at $238 million in 2016.

As per the Real Deal, the last major apartment sold at the posh building was in mid-December 2020, with a $9 million unit sold to Steven Maksin, CEO of Moonbeam Capital Investments, and his wife Natalie.

Protesters Call on Cuomo to Approve $3.5B Fund for “Excluded Workers”

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At the protest on Sunday, Jumaane Williams accused Cuomo of leaning on his “privilege” throughout the pandemic. “We all understand that this governor probably doesn’t understand sacrifice,” he said to a cheering crowd. Photo Credit: Wikipedia

By Hellen Zaboulani

An Easter protest was organized on Sunday outside of Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s Midtown Manhattan office. As reported by the NY Post, dozens gathered to demand that the governor approve a $3.5 billion fund for “excluded workers” who have not yet benefited from aid doled out during the pandemic.

The procession, which bore flowers to celebrate the holiday of Easter, was organized by immigrant-advocacy group Make the Road New York. The protesters called on Gov. Cuomo to allocate aid for workers who went to work all throughout the coronavirus pandemic but were ineligible to claim economic aid — including undocumented immigrants.

“At the beginning of the pandemic, Andrew Cuomo made some decisions,” New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams told the crowd at the event. “He said that black and brown people, primarily, had to go to work. They were essential, they’re important. They had to go to work. They had no choice. This is New York State. There should not be anything called an ‘excluded worker,’ ” continued Williams. “No one should be excluded in New York State.”

The topic has caused a rift within Democrats in the state legislature, over whether or not billions in funds should be earmarked for undocumented immigrants. Needless to say, Republicans have balked at the notion of using much needed taxpayer coffers for illegal residents. The fund seeks to provide 187,000 immigrants and 87,000 recently incarcerated people with an average of $12,600 each. The talks are already late for the past due state budget talks, which were due on April 1st.

As per a source for the Post, Cuomo also opposes the measure. At the protest on Sunday, Williams accused Cuomo of leaning on his “privilege” throughout the pandemic. “We all understand that this governor probably doesn’t understand sacrifice,” he said to a cheering crowd. “Because he uses privilege to get … his friends a test when other people couldn’t get it. He used his privilege to have state workers help him write a book on a pandemic on leadership while he was lying about people dying in nursing homes.” Williams added that some of the workers who attended the rally were conducting a weeks-long hunger strike to raise awareness for their predicament. Cuomo “is telling the folks who are literally on a hunger strike they don’t deserve assistance, on Easter Sunday,” he said.

Spokespersons for Cuomo have said that staffers only helped out with his book on a volunteer basis. Cuomo’s office did not immediately respond on Sunday to a request for comment on the Excluded Workers Fund.

NYS Budget Talks Continue with Bid to Open NYC Casino

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State Senator Joseph Addabbo (D-Queens), who chairs the committee overseeing gambling issues, confirmed that licensing of a downstate casino is being mulled as part of the budget talks. Photo Credit: nysenate.gov

By: Hadassa Kalatizadeh

The New York State Budget, which was due April 1st, has yet to be completed, and a bid to open a new casino in NYC has emerged. The 11th hour state budget talks between Gov. Andrew Cuomo and legislative leaders hope to raise more income to balance the overdue budget. As reported by the NY Post, Legislative sources said Cuomo was behind a proposal to form a “community advisory board” in the City to find a location for a casino, possibly in Manhattan. State Senator Joseph Addabbo (D-Queens), who chairs the committee overseeing gambling issues, confirmed that licensing of a downstate casino is being mulled as part of the budget talks. “It’s being discussed. It’s part of budget negotiations,” said Addabbo. As is, the law allows that beginning in 2023, up to three casinos be authorized in the downstate region— an area which includes the city, the lower Hudson Valley and Long Island.

Back in January, as part of his executive budget plan, Cuomo had proposed sending out scouts to assess preliminary interest in casinos. Now, in order to add revenue, Cuomo and lawmakers are considering fast tracking that process and formally request proposals and license a casino or two as part of the 2021-2022 budget.

As per the Post, Addabbo said once it gets rolling, a casino license could bring in up to an estimated $500 million in income for the state. Many city lawmakers oppose opening a casino in their territory, however, because of all the negatives it would bring. “There’s a lot of opposition to opening a casino in Manhattan,” said Addabbo.

The proposed bill would form a NYC community advisory board to review casino applications consisting of 20 members. Five members would be appointed by each the governor, the senator majority leader and assembly speaker. The last five members would be appointed by the 15 appointees, once they are on the board.

Potential casino sites being considered include Willets Point in Queens, the Belmont Park development in Long Island, and Staten Island’s St. George neighborhood. Large casino companies including Wynn Resorts, Bally’s Corp. and Las Vegas Sands have been eagerly preparing to compete for a NYC-area casino license. The gambling parlors at Aqueduct and Yonkers racetracks, which now only have electronic slot games, may also apply to convert into full-scale casinos with live table games.

Despite the $12.6 billion in stimulus funds which the federal government recently earmarked for NYS, state leaders are also expected to legalize app-based, mobile sports betting in order to generate more state income.

Former Trump Housing Official Sanctioned Over NYC Campaign Video

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The admission by Lynne Patton came as part of a civil settlement with the U.S. Office of Special Counsel that bars Patton from holding a federal job for four years and imposes a $1,000 fine. Photo Credit: AP

Edited by TJVNews.com

A former federal official admitted she abused her authority in a publicity stunt that tricked New York City public housing residents into sounding supportive of former President Donald Trump, ethics oversight officials said Tuesday, according to an AP report.

The admission by Lynne Patton came as part of a civil settlement with the U.S. Office of Special Counsel that bars Patton from holding a federal job for four years and imposes a $1,000 fine.

AP reported that Patton “improperly harnessed the authority of her federal position to assist the Trump campaign in violation of the Hatch Act,” said a statement released by the special counsel office.

Patton had repeatedly denied she misled the housing residents.

As an administrator for the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Patton got permission to live in public housing run by the New York City Housing Authority to draw attention to living conditions there, as was reported by AP.

She used her access to do interviews with residents that were edited into a video — shown at the Republican National Convention — in a way designed to credit Trump for improving the conditions while slamming New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat, according to the AP report.

Some residents later told The New York Times that were never told their comments would be showcased in such a manner. One insisted: “I am not a Trump supporter.”

The nonprofit Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington responded by filing a complaint against Patton.

CNN reported that this is not the first time Patton has been reprimanded by OSC over a Hatch Act violation.

In September 2019, Patton was issued a warning letter by OSC for violating the Hatch Act’s prohibition of certain political activities by federal employees after an investigation found that she had “liked” four partisan political tweets from her official Twitter account following a complaint from Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. The investigation also found that she displayed a red “USA” campaign hat in her HUD office, but neither Patton nor HUD ethics counsel had realized then President-Donald Trump’s campaign was selling the hat until after the allegation was made public, according to the CNN report. Patton removed the hat from display when she became aware it was an item sold by the campaign, the letter said.

CNN reported that she was advised that if she violates the act again it will be considered a willful and knowing violation of the law and could result in further action, according to the letter.

(AP & CNN)

Harvey Weinstein Appeals Rape Conviction in NY; Lawyers Take Aim at Judge

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(AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

By: AP

More than a year after Harvey Weinstein’s rape conviction, his lawyers are demanding a new trial, arguing in court papers Monday that the landmark #MeToo prosecution that put him behind bars was buoyed by improper rulings from a judge who was “cavalier” in protecting the disgraced movie mogul’s right to a fair trial.

In a 166-page brief filed with a state appellate court, Weinstein’s lawyers took repeated aim at Manhattan Judge James Burke, arguing that he swayed the trial’s outcome with repeated rulings favorable to prosecutors — including a decision allowing additional accusers to testify about allegations that never led to criminal charges.

Weinstein’s lawyers also challenged Burke’s refusal to remove a juror who had written a novel involving predatory older men, as well as his decision to allow prosecutors to have an expert on victim behavior and rape myths testify while rejecting testimony on similar subjects from defense experts.

“Mr. Weinstein had a right to a fair trial by an impartial jury,” lawyers Barry Kamins, John Leventhal and Diana Fabi-Samson wrote in the brief.

“The trial court should have exercised the utmost vigilance in protecting this most important right of the defendant,” they wrote. “Instead, the trial court was cavalier in its obligation to safeguard this right and the consequences for Mr. Weinstein were disastrous.”

Weinstein, 69, was convicted in February 2020 of a criminal sex act for forcibly performing oral sex on a TV and film production assistant in 2006 and rape in the third degree for an attack on an aspiring actress in 2013.

He was acquitted of first-degree rape and two counts of predatory sexual assault stemming from actor Annabella Sciorra’s allegations of a mid-1990s rape — testimony that his lawyers said Monday was so dated it should never have been allowed.

Burke sentenced Weinstein to 23 years in state prison, which his lawyers argued Monday was “unduly harsh and excessive.” Given his previously clean criminal record, renowned career as an Oscar-winning movie producer and history of charitable giving, Weinstein’s lawyers argued he deserved a significantly lighter sentence.

Weinstein is also charged in California with assaulting five women in Los Angeles and Beverly Hills from 2004 to 2013. His extradition has been delayed because of the pandemic. Weinstein tested positive for the coronavirus shortly after arriving at the maximum security Wende Correctional Facility near Buffalo last spring.

(AP)

Broadway Raises Curtain with Limited “NY PopsUP” Shows; Offers Hope for Theater Return

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Actor Nathan Lane performs to the small audience at Broadway’s St. James Theater on Saturday. PHOTO: NINA WESTERVELT FOR NY POPSUP

By: Jared Evan

The first Broadway theatre reopened its doors yesterday for a special performance as part of NY PopsUp. The St. James Theater welcomed Nathan Lane and Savion Glover who performed for a group of staff members from The Actors Fund and Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS

Wall Street Journal reported: many of the attendees at Saturday’s event were invited because of their work with two nonprofit organizations, the Actors Fund and Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, with deep ties to the theater community. But like Mr. Bullock, an office manager with Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, they were also there as fans.

This is exciting news; however, this event barely resembled a normal performance on Broadway.

Experts in the industry told TJV that until 100% capacity is allowed in NY venues, Broadway productions will not be able to financially operate, and they estimate this may not occur until the fall. Broadway would be one of the last industries open in the state, and Broadway employees, some of the last to finally return to work.

The event came during the first weekend that arts and entertainment venues were allowed to reopen in New York state, with strict limits of 33% capacity and up to 150 people indoors as per Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The program was presented as part of NY PopsUp, a state-led initiative to bring the arts community back to life during the pandemic recovery.

A requirement that attendees show proof of vaccination or a recent negative Covid-19 test for admission and a system of staggered entry for theatergoers that helped serve to avoid any crowding. Audience members were also seated well apart from each other in the spacious theater, WSJ Reported.

According to sources, TJV has learned that these NY PopsUp will be visiting many more of the 41 Broadway houses that comprise the legitimate theater circuit in NYC, leading up to a normal Broadway schedule and a grand re-opening.

The closing of the Broadway circuit in March of 2020 at the start of the pandemic has had a devastating effect on NYC’s economy. To get an idea of how important Broadway is to NYC, here are some statistics from Broadway League.

  • In the 2018–2019 season, Broadway shows welcomed 14.8 million admissions, an all-time high.
  • Approximately 35% of those attendances were by people from the New York City metropolitan area.
  • Sixty-five percent of admissions were made by tourists: 46% from the United States (but outside New York City and its suburbs) and 19% from other countries.
  • This represents the highest number of attendances by foreign visitors in history— 2.8 million.

During the 2018-2019 season, the Broadway industry contributed $14.7 billion to the economy of New York City and supported 96,900 jobs. Total Broadway grosses were $1.758 billion.

WeWork’s Adam Neumann Plotting Secret New ‘Post-Pandemic’ Biz

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Adam Neumann, the former WeWork CEO is down but not out. Photo Credit: AP

By: Serach Nissim

Adam Neumann, the former WeWork CEO is down but not out.

The 41-year-old Israeli-American former billionaire and co-founder of the shared workspace giant may have a new mystery business up his sleeve. As reported by the NY Post, Neumann is planning his next venture— a post-pandemic business. “It involves what happened in the world because of the pandemic,” an insider told the Post. “He’s got big plans and he’s waiting for the right time to announce them.”

Since his high-profile exit from We Work in September 2019, when he was blamed for the failed IPO and exaggerated valuation, he has not made public speeches and has tried to keep out of the limelight. He has been laying low in New York with his wife, Rebekah, and five children, tending to his properties in Greenwich Village and the Hamptons, and reportedly working on some bold new venture.

Neumann has reportedly not watched the trending new Hulu documentary “WeWork: Or the Making and Breaking of a $47 Billion Unicorn”, which depicts his remarkable rise and fall as CEO of the sizzling office-space startup. The documentary portrays him as magnetic but deluded, who convinced financial frontrunners, including Chase Bank’s Jamie Dimon and SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, to team up with him and invest billions into WeWork before it all went awry. Neumann has had friends tell him about the show, but as a rule doesn’t watch or read things about himself, as per a source for The Post.

Neumann’s name may have suffered a blow, and he has reportedly sold at least three of six properties in his estimated $90 million portfolio, including one of their homes in the Hamptons, one in Westchester and a luxe Gramercy Park complex. His net worth has plummeted from a high of $14 billion to $750 million, knocking him off Forbes’ billionaires list in 2020. Still, people who know Neumann, know he is far from done. Neumann, who grew up for a time on a kibbutz in Israel, has already invested in several startups including a residential concierge service named Alfred, a tech-enabled mortgage service, and some Israeli companies.

“He does feel he made mistakes but he also feels the media made a sensation out of certain elements of the story,” an inside source told The Post. “The $47 billion valuation was probably a mistake. But WeWork is still a good company and he built it … It’s got hundreds of locations. I don’t know too many people who can build a company like that in 10 years.”