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NY GOP Rep. Tom Reed ‘Sorry,’ Retiring Amid Misconduct Claim

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FILE - In this June 4, 2013 file photo, Rep. Tom Reed, R-N.Y., speaks during a House Ways and Means Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington. Reed is drafting a proposal that would require college endowments of more than $1 billion to spend at least 25 percent of their profits every year on financial aid. Reed's goal is to help lower tuition costs for students from working-class families. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

Rep. Tom Reed, R-N.Y., who was accused last week of rubbing a female lobbyist’s back and unhooking her bra without her consent in 2017, apologized to the woman Sunday and announced he will not run for reelection next year.

Reed, 49, said in a statement the incident involving then-lobbyist Nicolette Davis occurred “at a time in my life in which I was struggling.” He said he entered treatment that year and realized he was “powerless over alcohol.”

Reed apologized to his wife and children, and to Davis, and said he planned “to dedicate my time and attention to making amends for my past actions.”

Reed, who was first elected to Congress in 2010, had been among the members of Congress calling for the resignation of Democrat Gov. Andrew Cuomo over sexual harassment allegations. In late February, Reed said he was seriously considering running for governor against Cuomo should the Democrat seek a fourth term next year.

Reed said in his statement Sunday he would not seek any elective office in 2022.

The announcement came two days after The Washington Post reported the allegations from Davis, who was 25 and a lobbyist for insurer Aflac when she said Reed, seated next to her at a Minneapolis bar, unhooked her bra from outside her blouse and moved his hand to her thigh.

“A drunk congressman is rubbing my back,” she texted a co-worker at Aflac that evening, adding later, “HELP HELP.”

Reed released a statement Friday saying, “This account of my actions is not accurate.”

In his statement Sunday he said, “In reflection, my personal depiction of this event is irrelevant. Simply put, my behavior caused her pain, showed her disrespect and was unprofessional. I was wrong, I am sorry, and I take full responsibility.”

A former mayor of Corning, New York, Reed is co-chair of the House of Representatives’ bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus.

He voted against impeaching former President Donald Trump in January but voted in favor of certifying the 2020 election of Democrat Joe Biden.

Massachusetts School Officials Deny Firing Football Coach Over Political Differences

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Dedham High School Football Coach David Flynn | Tony McLeish, Facebook

 -(Free Beacon) 

A Massachusetts high school denied allegations that they fired a football coach after he expressed concerns about his daughter’s seventh-grade world history curriculum.

Former Dedham High School head football coach David Flynn sued Dedham Public Schools in February after the district refused to renew his contract following a disagreement with school officials. Flynn and his wife had previously contacted Dedham superintendent Michael Welch about their daughter’s world history class, in which the teacher asked students to analyze a cartoon that depicted police officers as a “risk” to black people.

Welch, Dedham High School principal Jim Forrest, and athletic director Stephen Traister denied that they fired Flynn as a result of the conflict, according to new court documents reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon. Dedham Public Schools spokeswoman Sara Errickson declined to answer a Free Beacon inquiry into the nature of Flynn’s firing.

The school officials confirmed details of Flynn’s lawsuit in the new filings but denied that they fired him as a result of the disagreement. A prior announcement from the district, however, claimed Flynn was fired because he “expressed significant philosophical differences” with school officials. Michael Bekesha, a senior attorney for Judicial Watch—the group working on Flynn’s case—told the Free Beacon that he looks forward to squaring that discrepancy at an upcoming court-ordered conference.

“The only thing [the district officials] really deny is that Flynn was provided any indication for the reason for his firing … and they deny it without providing any context,” Bekesha said. “Everything else is admitted. It seems to strengthen or at least show that Flynn’s lawsuit is based on facts.”

The Dedham community has rallied around Flynn since his firing. Members of a Facebook group called “Save Coach Flynn” have sent letters to the district, calling on them to “right their injustice and reinstate Flynn as head coach.” Supporters have held rallies outside of Dedham High School continually for the past two months.

A former Dedham high school football player told WCVB News in January that he was “devastated” over Flynn’s departure.

“Coach Flynn is an awesome guy and we’re all devastated that they fired him,” Kevin O’Leary said. “Coach Flynn and Dedham football, it’s like broccoli and cheese sauce, can’t have one without the other.”

Last fall, Flynn and his wife emailed Welch and school committee members to express concerns about their daughter’s history class. Flynn claims in his lawsuit that parents were not notified of changes to the seventh-grade world history curriculum that included work on bias and race. Flynn and his wife argued that the coursework was “not suitable for twelve- and thirteen-year-olds.”

Middle school history teacher Kim Randall taught the online class via Google Classroom, in which she allegedly created an avatar of herself that donned a Black Lives Matter T-shirt. In one lesson, Randall asked students to evaluate a cartoon that depicted police officers as “risks” to black people, and black people as “risks” to white people.

The Flynns emailed district officials about their daughter’s class on several occasions. They decided to remove their two children from Dedham schools in October after they felt their concerns fell on deaf ears, which they believed had resolved the controversy.

Then in January, Forrest, Traister, and Welch called Flynn into a meeting to inform him that the district would not renew his contract. Flynn had “never been provided any indication” that he would be fired prior to that meeting. The former coach claims in his lawsuit that the district retaliated against him in violation of his First Amendment right to freedom of speech.

Flynn is seeking damages for loss of pay, harassment, and emotional damages as a result of his firing. He began coaching at Dedham High School in 2002 and was promoted to head coach in 2011. Flynn also teaches special education students in a town outside of Dedham.

The first court-ordered conference regarding the case is scheduled for April 26.

Former US Olympians Form Company Geared Towards Promoting Women’s Sports in Media & Commerce

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According to a CNN report, Chloe Kim, Simone Manuel, Alex Morgan and Sue Bird, (all former US Olympians) have joined forces in the formation of TOGETHXR, a media and commerce company aimed at Gen Z and young millennial women, according to the CNN report. Photo Credit: TOGETHXR

Edited by: TJVNews.com

Now that women’s professional sports has once again dominated the headlines because of the challenges that it would face with the inclusion of transgendered athletes, it appears that a new company that is comprised of US Olympic athletes has been formed.

According to a CNN report, Chloe Kim, Simone Manuel, Alex Morgan and Sue Bird, (all former US Olympians) have joined forces in the formation of TOGETHXR, a media and commerce company aimed at Gen Z and young millennial women, according to the CNN report.

Speaking to CNN, chief content officer Jessica Robertson said, “This brand is certainly for this generation, it’s for our co-founders and their teammates, and this collective women’s sports landscape, but it’s really for the next generation. It’s so young girls can see themselves reflected in the stories that we tell, that they have a place to go that feels like they’re bigger than themselves, gives them something to aspire to, and to be seen and heard and recognized.”

CNN reported that Robertson came to TOGETHXR after working at The Players’ Tribune, which was founded by legendary New York Yankees’ shortstop Derek Jeter.

Despite the fact that the number of professional female athletes has significantly increased over the years, she said that what still persists is that men’s sports are given the lion’s share of coverage on the media.

In an e-mail to CNN, Nicole M. LaVoi, the director of the The Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women in Sport at the University of Minnesota said that, “The paradox is coverage has gone down while more and more girls and women are playing sports And now high profile women athletes, like those in TOGETHXR, are taking this lack of coverage into their own hands and disrupting the existing landscape of media coverage that has benefited and overrepresented men.”

She added that many of their best stories came from female athletes, but women’s sports get only a fraction of the coverage of men’s sports.

“When you have low visibility, it’s really hard to grow your fan base and grow interest. Less people are buying tickets, literally, there aren’t people in the seats,” Robertson said. “If there’s not a lot of fandom and a want to see the stories or watch these games, then there’s a lack of investment from corporations and big brand partners.”

The company will create short-form content for Instagram, TikTok and other social media channels, according to Robertson. They will also create original content for their YouTube channel and other streaming services, according to the CNN report.

Supplying financing for this venture is a private equity-backed holding company known as Magnet Companies. They are both funding and operating TOGETHXR.

Manuel, who won four medals at the 2016 Olympics and became the first Black American woman to win an individual gold medal in swimming, shared her excitement on Twitter, according to the CNN report.

“I can’t wait to share everything we have in store,” she wrote. “There has never been a place for women that exist like this. It’s about damn time.”

Morgan plays for the Orlando Pride professional woman’s soccer team and has won two World Cup championships and an Olympic gold medal with the US Women’s National Soccer team.

Israel Needs the B-52 and MOP in Order to Deter Iran

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By: Ehud Eilam

US President Joe Biden’s administration seeks to negotiate with Iran. If it does not work, the US will have to deter Iran from producing nuclear weapons. Another scenario is that the 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, might survive and even be improved following future negotiations.

It would include strict monitoring of Iran’s nuclear program, but this will not be sufficient. Deterrence will also be required. Negotiations will deficiently be needed when the JCPOA expires – or even before that if Iran assumes it has the opportunity to produce the bomb. This could happen if the US is deeply busy with a major crisis somewhere, such as with China. Either way deterrence, based on boosting Israel’s military capabilities, should be part of the effort to make sure Iran does not try to produce a nuclear weapon

Israel can help, especially since the US wants to reduce its commitments in the Middle East. In a way, Israel could replace the US in deterring Iran. It will make it easier for the US and actually for Israel too. Although Israel needs its American patron relying on Israel’s strength works for Israel. It has been its traditional approach: to depend on itself as much as possible, particularly in military affairs. It requires having a big stick i.e. holding the arsenal needed to deter Iran.

In late 2020 there was a bipartisan bill in the US congress aimed at providing Israel with a giant bunker-buster bomb capable of destroying Iran’s heavily protected nuclear sites. Israel also needs the B-52 to carry that huge bomb. Knowing Israel can destroy their nuclear sites will deter Iran from trying to produce a nuclear weapon.

If Iran tries to produce a nuclear weapon, Israel will rush to attack with its available arsenal out of desperation. It might not be enough to destroy heavily protected Iranian sites. The US does not want to urge Israel to attack Iran let alone if this raid escalates into a war, one that might drag the US into it. If Israel is better armed it might not be necessarily bring a strike against Iran. Instead, Israel can deter Iran from producing a nuclear weapon to begin with.

Iran’s best fighters – such as the MIG-29 and F-14 – are almost obsolete. They would not be much of a match to Israel’s superior aircraft. The Israel Air Force has also advanced air-to-air missiles and worldwide reputation in air to air combat. The IAF can reach Iran and overcome Iran’s air defenses and air force. Israel’s main problem will be to penetrate Iran’s highly protected nuclear sites, such as the one in Fordow. The IAF has bunker buster bombs, the GBU-28, but they can’t crack the fortification of targets like Fordow. For that mission the IAF requires the MOP (Massive Ordnance Penetrator), a US made bomb that weighs 30,000 pounds.

Israel needs its American patron to provide the IAF not only with the MOP, but also with a heavy bomber to carry that huge bomb. The IAF does not have heavy bombers, only fighter-bombers: the F-15, F-16 and F-35.  Israel should not ask for the B-2, but for the B-52. The veteran B-52 is quite old, which will make it easier for the US to give a few B-52s to Israel.

Israel should at least get the MOP. Getting the B-52 faces difficulties of arms control.

Even without the B-52, the IAF might manage to drop the MOP from its C-130, a transport plane. Iran’s air defense, mostly its advanced systems, the S-300, will jeopardize the B-52 or C-130, but the IAF might be able to suppress antiaircraft fire. It will be a dangerous and complicated mission, but the IAF took high risks in the past. It is worth it, considering the importance of the task.

The IAF should receive the MOP – let alone the B-52 – as soon as possible since it will take time, maybe even a few years, to assimilate the B-52. The IAF is capable and skilled enough to quickly adjust, but it will be a toll order to be ready to use the B-52 in a short time. The idea is to prepare if the talks with Iran fail or if the JCPOA, in its current version or an improved one, expires and Iran rushes to have nuclear weapons. When the IDF is ready, Israel can deter Iran from producing nuclear weapons. It can prevent an Israeli attack on Iran and even a war. This will serve a basic interest of both Israel and the US. (JPost.com)

The writer has been dealing and studying Israel’s national security for more than 25 years. He served in the IDF and later worked for the Defense Ministry as a researcher. He has a PhD and has published six books in the US and UK.

(This article originally appeared in the Jerusalem Post)

Demonstrators Gather at Home of Get Refuser Dovid Wasserman in Monsey as Plight of Agunos Take Center Stage

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Get Refuser Dovid Wasserman looks out of window of Monsey home as demonstrators gather to demand that they give a get to his estranged wife Nechama. He has kept her chained for nearly 7 years and his family is protecting him. Photo credit: VIN

Edited By: TJVNews.com

On Sunday night, crowds of demonstrators gathered outside the home of a man who has refused to give his wife a get (bill of Jewish Divorce) in Monsey. Dozens of vocal protestors gathered outside the home of Dovid Wasserman at 4 Hilltop Lane in Monsey to demand that the recalcitrant husband give his estranged wife Nechama a get after keeping her chained for nearly seven years.

According to the report on the VIN web site, “Nechama Wasserman has made it remarkably easy for Dovid to give her a Get. As soon as they were separated, she arranged a very generous custody deal, which saw Dovid get 40% of custody. Besides for that, she is not requesting any child support or alimony. The only thing she has asked for is the right to move on with her life. Yet for 7 years, Dovid has refused to allow her that right. He also refused to ever come to Beis Din. Multiple Siruvim have been issued to this effect.”

The report also indicated that to this day, “Dovid interacts with his children all the time. Nechama also has not ever received a dime of child support, nor is she asking for that now. All she is asking for is the right to move on from a dead marriage, something that Dovid continues to deny her.”

The report continued by saying, “What is perhaps even more disturbing in some ways, is that Dovid’s family has allegedly actively supported him these entire 7 years, without showing any evidence of trying to compel him to unchain his wife. In fact, VINnews was told that they went as far as to ask Nechama to pull out of the court process.”

On Sunday night, VIN reported that Dovid’s mother, Rivka Wasserman is complicit in Dovid’s Get refusal, as she is harboring Dovid rent free and allowing him to be supported by a family trust fund. This is directly enabling Dovid to continue to keep Nechama trapped without a care in the world.”

The report indicated that the Wasserman siblings have not only not responded to requests from the Beis Din and various rabbonim to enter into a peaceable dialogue with them on how this situation can be resolved, but Shmuel Wasserman (Dovid’s brother) has released a statement  that unfortunately contained many untruths about the situation and about Nechama herself. These things are verifiably false, and VINnews has taken the time to pursue the evidence.

Anonymous sources have told the Jewish Voice that thus far, very positive results have been achieved in obtaining Gets for chained women because people have joined forces in unity and have organized daily demonstrations outside of the homes of those men who refuse to give their wives a get. In addition, the community’s use of social media platforms has been yet another decisive tool in achieving results as the messages are going out far and wide and on a continual basis.

 

 

 

 

Chaos in Miami: Stampedes, Street fights and Gunshots, Officials Extend Curfew, Declare State of Emergency

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AP

By Fern Sidman and A.P

Street fights, gunshots, and a wild stampede at spring break in Miami resulted in an extended curfew until April 12th, as police were totally unprepared to handle the out-of-control crowd who took over the beach and created a total atmosphere of lawlessness.

Pointing to over 1,000 arrests in one of the nation’s top party spots, Miami Beach officials warned Sunday that the unruly spring break crowd gathering by the thousands, fighting in the streets, destroying restaurant property, and refusing to wear masks has become a serious threat to public safety, AP reported.

During a last-minute meeting Sunday, city officials voted to extend a highly unusual 8 p.m. curfew for another week along famed South Beach, with the possibility of extending it well into April if needed, and stressed this isn’t the typical spring break crowd, AP reported

Officials said it’s not college students, but adults looking to let loose in one of the few states fully open during the pandemic according to AP but if you look at the video of the wild street brawl, it was clearly a younger crowd, regardless of what AP reported.

AP reported:

More than half of the more than 1,000 arrests were from out of state, said City Manager Raul Aguila, adding many are coming “to engage in lawlessness and an anything goes party attitude.” He also noted that the crowds weren’t eating at restaurants or patronizing businesses generating badly needed tourism dollars, but merely congregating by the thousands in the street.

Officers in bullet-proof vests dispersed pepper spray balls Saturday night into a defiant, but mostly non-violent crowd, refusing to submit to the curfew that had only been enacted four hours earlier. Some people responded by jumping on top of cars, twerking and throwing money into the air.

The Clevelander South Beach, announced it was temporarily suspending all food and beverage operations until at least March 24 after crowds crammed Ocean Drive, breaking out into street fights.

After gunshots were fired, a young woman cut her leg so badly in a stampede that she was transported to the hospital where they initially thought she had been shot, police said.

Miami Beach Interim City Manager Raul J. Aguila has declared a State of Emergency throughout the City in light of the Miami Beach Police Department’s significant concerns relating to larger than expected spring break crowds.

According to a report in the Miami Herald, Aguila said that the sudden orders — which some business owners worry could cripple venues banking on the crush of tourists to help them bounce back from the pandemic — constituted the most far-reaching restrictions on spring break partying that Miami Beach City Hall has imposed in recent memory. “These crowds are in the thousands,” Aguila said. “We’re at capacity.”

Aguila told the Miami Herald that he recommends keeping the emergency measures in place through April 12, or the end of spring break. The emergency orders will expire Tuesday evening unless extended by the Miami Beach City Commission, which is scheduled to hold an emergency 3 p.m. Sunday meeting.

According to the Declaration of a State of Emergency, “during Spring Break 2021, multiple fights, brawls, melees, and other public displays and disturbances of the peace have occurred, resulting in numerous injuries to civilians and police officers, and causing extensive property damage to both public and private property.”

The declaration also stated that “in response to unruly behavior exhibited by these large crowds during Spring Break 2021, the City has required the assistance of additional police officers from various law enforcement agencies, such as the Miami-Dade County Police Department, Miami Gardens Police Department, Coral Gables Police Department and the Florida Highway Patrol, in an attempt to control the unruly crowds and maintain law and order in the City.”

In terms of Covid-19 restrictions, the declaration stated that “in addition, many of the City’s visitors during Spring Break 2021 continue to gather and socialize in extremely close proximity to one another without any facial coverings or regard for appropriate social distancing, which poses a direct threat to the health of themselves, their families and others, in violation of Miami-Dade County Emergency Orders and City Emergency Orders.”

In response to the emergency, and in order to safeguard the public health, safety, and welfare of residents and visitors, the Interim City Manager has implemented the following emergency measures, effective immediately, for a period of three consecutive days unless otherwise determined by the Miami Beach City Commission.

  • Effective each night, from 8 p.m. through 6 a.m., a curfew shall be imposed in the area bounded by 5 Street on the south, 16 Street on the north, Pennsylvania Avenue on the west, and Ocean Drive on the east (the “High Impact Zone”). Restaurants within the High Impact Zone shall be permitted to continue to operate until 12 a.m. for delivery services only. Pursuant to Section 26-33(a)(1) of the City Code, the curfew shall not apply to the provision of designated essential services, such as fire, police and hospital services, including the transportation of patients thereto, utility emergency repairs, and emergency calls by physicians.
  • Eastbound lanes on the MacArthur Causeway and Julia Tuttle Causeway shall be completely CLOSED to traffic from 9 p.m. through 6 a.m., except to City residents, guests of hotels in the City, and employees of business establishments in the City.
  • Eastbound lanes on the Venetian Causeway shall be completely CLOSED to traffic from 9 p.m. through 6 a.m., except to City residents.
  • Effective each night, from 8 p.m. through 6 a.m., Ocean Drive shall be CLOSED to pedestrian and vehicular traffic, except to City residents requiring access to or from their homes, guests of hotels requiring access to or from their hotels, and employees of business establishments. Other public roads within the High Impact Zone may be closed as deemed necessary by the Interim City Manager or Chief of Police.
  • Effective each night, from 7 p.m. through 6 a.m., all sidewalk café operations, including expanded outdoor restaurant seating, shall be SUSPENDED in the High Impact Zone, pursuant to the City’s High Impact Ordinance and City Commission Resolution No. 2021-31599. All sidewalk café operators are directed to stack or remove tables and chairs no later than 8 p.m. each night.

Any violation of these emergency measures shall subject the individual, operator, business entity, or organization to arrest and criminal prosecution pursuant to Section 26-36 and Section 1-14 of the City Code.

The City strongly urges all businesses in the High Impact Zone to close voluntarily during the State of Emergency.

The Mayor has called an emergency meeting of the City Commission on Sunday, March 21, 2021 at 3 p.m. to discuss and take action with regard to the Declaration of a State of Emergency. Please click the following link to join the webinar: https://miamibeachfl-gov.zoom.us/j/81392857671. The Webinar ID is 813 9285 7671.

This Declaration of a State of Emergency and the measures set forth are separate from and in addition to the emergency measures currently in effect related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The foregoing measures shall be in place for a period of up to 72 hours, unless determined otherwise by the Mayor and City Commission.

 

Crown Heights Women Discuss Israeli Elections

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This past week, Crown Heights Women for the Safety & Integrity of Israel held an online event discussing the upcoming elections in Israel and how the Rebbe’s views of shleimus ha’aretz would reflect on the parties running.

By Tamar Adelstein, Coordinator -Crown Heights Women for the Safety & Integrity of Israel

Earlier this week, Crown Heights Women for the Safety & Integrity of Israel broadcast a second event in its on-line series called Security and Sovereignty Over the Land of Israel.  Our first program featured prominent speakers and activists engaged in bringing the Lubavitcher Rebbe’s message for true peace to fruition in word and deed.

This time Rabbi Mendy Mirocznik, executive vice president of Igud HaRabbonim, the Rabbinical Alliance of America joined us for an in-depth discussion about the Halachic (Jewish Law’s) priorities concerning security and sovereignty and how they reflect in the upcoming Israeli election which is scheduled for next week on March 23rd.

We covered a wide range of topics from the way in which Halacha views the State of Israel and its administration to considerations in choosing whom to vote for to Jewish Law’s response to terrorism to Israel’s diplomatic relationship with the United States and others.

Interspersed throughout the discussion was the Rebbe’s incisive analysis and approach towards security and sovereignty in which the Rebbe reiterated the principal Halachic foundations for the State of Israel which are Shleimus HaAretz (territorial integrity) and Pikuach Nefesh (protecting Jewish lives).  Jewish Law requires a Jewish community to come together to form a framework to protect and save Jewish lives from danger; in the State of Israel that is its government.

We asked Rabbi Mirocznik why the Rebbe often used the expression Shleimus HaAretz, Shleimus HaAm and Shleimus HaTorah in that order.  Wouldn’t it make sense, we wondered, to begin with the Jewish People and the Torah being united first and then focusing together on making the Land of Israel intact?

The answer is an important one that reflects the entire Chassidic weltanschauung going back to the holy Baal Shem Tov whose Ahavas Yisroel, love for his fellow Jews, was legendary.

At a time when the Jewish People were terribly downtrodden by the Chmielnicki pogroms, grinding poverty and the Shabbatai Tzvi debacle, the Baal Shem would first seek ways to relieve their physical plight and then closely follow by reviving their ailing spirit.

True peace, then, must begin, in our time, with Shleimus HaAretz – ensuring Jews are safe, secure and stable in Eretz Yisroel, the Land of Israel.

Thus, whoever leads the State of Israel and serves in the Knesset must be willing to publicly say this and demonstrate their commitment to Shleimus HaAretz and Pikuach Nefesh.  Like the Rebbe said, “Giving away security and land is non-negotiable!

We asked about the Joint Arab List, which is the third largest political faction in the Knesset, and which supports terrorism, Hamas and Hezbollah.  The Arab Joint List was appointed by Blue and White last year to the Knesset Welfare Committee which is tasked with overseeing services to wounded and disabled IDF and terror victims AND also charged with confiscating PA Slay to Pay salaries to terrorists and their families.

Halacha’s answer is unequivocal: appointing the Arab Joint List to such a committee contravenes Jewish Law.

To quote Rabbi Mirocznik: “Empowering a fifth column that supports terrorism, Hamas, Hezbollah and BDS is no better than appointing a wolf to be the shepherd or the lion to be the zookeeper!”  Indeed, the silence and inaction by Knesset members to prevent their appointment is shameful and is a threat to all decent people in Israel whether Jewish, Muslim or Christian.

We brought up the on-going saga of Malki Roth’s parents to bring Achlan Tamimi who masterminded the August 9, 2001 S’barro pizza shop bombing in which Malki, HY”D, died.

Tamimi was released in the Gilad Shalit swap in 2011 and repatriated to Jordan where she has since used every opportunity to incite further violence against Jews.

U.S. law provides for the extradition of terrorists who murder an American citizen on foreign soil to be brought to justice in the United States.  Despite signing an extradition treaty with the U.S. in 1995, Jordan has refused to acknowledge it or turn Tamimi over.

Our question was as follows:  Since Israel also signed an extensive peace treaty with Jordan in 1994, al pi Halacha – according to Jewish Law – may the State of Israel continue in its so-called friendly relationship with Jordan, and, thereby, let it get away with the argument:  Press Jordan and any other country Israel has a treaty with on matters like these and the sky will fall!  Rock the boat and peace might be lost at the border; the Oslo Accords, the Deal of the Century, The Abraham Accords, the Two-State Solution could easily disband and then what?!

Rabbi Mirocznik responded first by saying that American citizens should use every opportunity to press American public officials for Tamimi’s extradition.  He pointed out that the Rebbe expressed concern about Israel taking foreign money and aid and that it was better for the State of Israel to rely on HaShem’s help and stand on its own two feet.

He quoted a beautiful medrash (commentary) from Shir HaShirim about why the verses say that when the Jews crossed the Red Sea the waters surrounded them from the right and from the left rather than simply saying the waters surrounded them.

The answer is that the Torah is the best seller.  When it comes to Pikuach Nefesh, ensuring safety, don’t look to the policies of the right or to the policies of the left, but rather look up Above to G-d Almighty for help.  Policies can change, politicians and governments come and go, but the Torah will always remain the same.

Pikuach Nefesh is paramount and not something to play around with.  A bad deal can and should be reevaluated and redone or dropped as needed to ensure that Jewish lives are protected, and justice is served.

With regards to Halacha’s position to the proposed revival of the ancient Silk Trade Route that would link the Gulf States to ports in Haifa and Ashdod by a central free trade zone in the Jordan Valley and to the efforts being made in creating functional peace in Judea and Samaria, Pikuach Nefesh must be the foundation these kinds of endeavors.

It is our sincere hope that readers will take the time to view the program in its entirety and also to open the attached Resources of Interest that follow on the Thank You page.

We hope that the candidates running for office will align their goals with the Torah, Halacha and, of course, the Lubavitcher Rebbe’s directives for security, sovereignty, and true peace.

To view the recording of the full program, click here: https://youtu.be/h9iXmqbeMCw

Biden gives cartel human-smugglers an ‘assist’ by handing out free hotel rooms to illegal migrants

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. Photo Credit: AP

Monica Showalter(AMERICAN THINKER)

Well, that was deluxe.

After riding through Mexico under car seats, inside sweltering trucks, stuffed in packed trunks, shimmying through rat-infested tunnels, crossing rivers, and on the tops of trains, illegal migrant families (or “families”) who make it illegally across to the states get free hotel rooms, courtesy of Joe Biden and the U.S. taxpayer.

That’s what Biden has mandated in his self-created border crisis that didn’t exist until he started offering immigration line-cutters benefits, and not surprisingly, the migrants are pouring over. Now some new goodies await at the finish line.

According to Axios, cited by Daily Caller, illegal migrant families can now look forward not to migrant jails but to free hotel rooms once they make it across without papers.

The Biden administration has awarded an $86 million contract for hotel rooms near the border to hold around 1,200 migrant family members who cross the U.S.-Mexico border, DHS officials confirmed to Axios.
Why it matters: It’s a sign of growing numbers of migrant families trying to come to the U.S. — in addition to already overwhelming numbers of kids crossing the border without their parents or legal guardians. Both trends appear to be straining government resources.
  • The contract through Endeavors, a Texas-based nonprofit, is for six months but could be extended and expanded. The hotels will be near border areas, including in Arizona and Texas.

That’s a lot more than legal immigrants get. That’s a lot more than an American abroad who’s been robbed and goes to a U.S. embassy for help gets. That’s a lot more than even irresponsible people who’s gone into the wilderness against advice and trigger costly rescues get — they usually have to pay for their rescues. And don’t even think about an American who can’t pay his taxes, he’s not getting free rides, either. Not even most of the homeless, judging by the blue-city streets, get free hotel rooms. (San Francisco has been an exception.)

Anybody paying for these free hotel rooms? Like maybe someone with a spare $6,000 to pay a cartel human smuggler? Doesn’t sound like it. This one’s on the taxpayer.

Yet here’s what Biden said ahead of it:

“I can say quite clearly, ‘Don’t come over,’” Biden said regarding the rise in border crossings. “Don’t leave your town or city or community.”

With five thousand people and counting getting across each day and some now know there are free hotel rooms, sounds like nobody is listening.

What is amounts to is Joe Biden trying to hide the crisis by throwing money at NGOs and hoping no one notices the unvetted illegals, some with COVID, filling up border town hotel rooms. No kids in cages pictures seems to be the aim, given Biden’s effort to cover up such news from the media. Now with the migrants scattered about in private hotel rooms in border towns, the Biden logic is that perhaps the media will go away.

That’s a service-added for the cartels, which do entice migrants to leave their homes based on such goodies and not surprisingly they make lots of money off these crossings. The free hotels will add more. Thanks, Joe.

At a minimum, busting a cartel and using its “earnings” from migrants ought to be mandated to pay for these hotels. And not just them, but the governments of the countries that permits these exoduses to benefit from billions in remittances as well as reduced public pressure to reform themselves to make their countries liveable. Anybody there paying? Nope, they get free money from Uncle Sam, too. And as for Mexico, well, they’ve managed to persuade bumbling Biden that they just don’t have space to accommodate. Kind of saves them some trouble, doesn’t it?

Strange how the federal government, in paying for free hotel rooms with taxpayer dollars is incentivizing more illegal immigration.

Let’s take a look at Endeavors, the non-profit based in San Antonio, which appears to be fairly respectable with ties to various city governments and the United Way, with a reported 10% spent in overhead (which is low), though it doesn’t disclose its total money-size in its last-posted 2019 Annual Report.

The group, founded by five Presbyterian churches around 1975 took various names until settling on its current one, and specializes in helping the drug-addicted homeless, including homeless vets and ex-cons, get back into society, which is obviously a costly process involving a lot of hand-holding. It’s helped a grand total of 250 families (or, 800 individuals) over 15 years through its shelter project for them. Which is rather tiny, but remember, these projects are intensive. Here is a success story it reports in this video. Its 2019 Annual Report doesn’t mention migrants.

But somehow, in the last one or two months, with the migrant surge, it’s gotten itself this $86 million hotel contract, which sounds a little sudden, and a bit big as contracts go, for all the known indicators of its size, too. And it doesn’t indicate in its report any specialty with migrants, though it has a minor migrant section on its website navbar under ‘What We Do.’ Migrants are going to want free lawyers, free phone calls, free meals, and free bus or plane tickets to their destinations of choice. Are they going to help with that, do they have enough bilingual staff that can be taken from their current hand-holding duties, or is someone else? They will probably have to hire people at pricey NGO salaries, raising their overhead.

Was there competitive bidding? Why did this take so little time, and why so much to a non-migrant group so small? There may be legitimate answers, or maybe it was cronyism, but unless the site tells us — they actually say nothing about this on their website, it looks a little funny.

Now let’s look at the size of this contract:

How many free hotel rooms for illegal aliens will $86 million buy? Well, here’s a back of the envelope calculation:

Six months is 180 days of hotel rooming. The average hotel room cost in Arizona and Texas border cities — I looked it up, is about $70 for Nogales, Arizona, and $108 for McAllen, Texas. Other border cities checked — El Paso, Laredo, Tucson, and Douglas, are all between those ranges, with the Texas cities a bit above $100, and the Arizona towns around $90.

If $90 is the median, then the hotel room cost, divided evenly is about $478,000 a day, and extended over 180 days, brings us to $86 million. That would house about 5,000 families, which squares well with the Axios estimates for family sizes of two to three people. Maybe they get bulk rates or cheaper hotels and can house more, but this is unknown. Federal contracts are prized, after all, because they often pay full fare. Lots of $6,000 toilet seats, after all. But most families are supposedly staying only about 3 days, so the $17,200 figure for 5,000 people at a time would be for the entire six month duration. You can bet there will be a lot more than 5,000 people served if every illegal alien family only stays three days.

Bottom line, all of these new services for illegal border crossers are bonanzas, not just for the NGOs who benefit, they are benefits for human smuggling rackets, who can now advertise these wares as part of their illegal alien benefit packages and use the news of them to draw more business. Biden is helping that bunch ultimately with these free-hotel contracts even Americans in distress don’t get. Cartels will use this incentive to drum up more business.

‘I’m going to turn Israel into a world superpower’: An interview with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

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AP

 It used to be the norm for a right-wing prime minister on the campaign trail to visit settlements. Times have changed; A trip to Bedouin town of Tuba-Zangaria in northern Israel is now more appealing than a stop in Alon Shvut—as is the drive.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is certainly enjoying the view. Enjoying it? Excited by it—he exclaims at every sight that pops up as his armored car passes it—look at that crane, look at the interchange built here, look at the construction. He really does seem moved, and yet these things are something I (and most Israelis) take for granted.

On my way to the Prime Minister’s Residence earlier, the taxi driver claimed that if we were a less privileged country, Netanyahu would be assured of 50 seats in Tuesday’s election.

“Instead of saying thank you to Bibi, people whine,” he said.

Q: You’re flourishing in the [polls]. 

A: I like to meet with people in the field more than being walled in or running from meeting to meeting.

Q: How do you rate this campaign, compared to others? 

A: High. The public is throwing itself into it. I would enjoy it more if we could fill auditoriums, because at every election event hundreds of people wait outside, and in my assessment, there are eight seats’ worth of voters we can’t guarantee will vote on election day. We have an opportunity to establish a true right-wing government with a large Likud at its head, emerge from the rotation mess, and found the national government we always dreamed of.

Q: Why “dreamed”? You’ve been in power for 12 years. 

A: There has never been a national government that could balance things the way we wanted, there was always someone who spoiled it. [Bayit Yehudi leader] Naftali Bennett formed an alliance with [Yesh Atid head] Yair Lapid and didn’t allow me to bring in the haredim. As a result, we got a bad finance minister and we couldn’t pass the reforms we wanted to. In my opinion, Bennett has already made a deal with Lapid.

Q: Bennett has been the problem for 12 years? 

A: There’s always someone who blocks. Ever since the “brotherhood” we’ve been prevented from making changes whose time has come, that need to be made. It’s time to change this and we have a one-time opportunity to do it, with one leader who will jump-start the Israeli economy.

Q: But the prime minister was able to get vaccines, he’ll surely be able to set up a right-wing government. 

A: If we had a presidential system, it wouldn’t be a problem. I would have beaten [Hatnuah Party leader] Tzipi Livni and Bennett and [Labor head] Isaac Herzog and Lapid. But the system here is a parliamentary one. When [veteran Channel 12 journalist] Amnon Abramovich and other left-wing commentators praise Bennett and [Yamina No. 2] Ayelet Shaked and [New Hope leader] Gideon Sa’ar, they split the right-wing vote. There are 70-80 seats for the right, and the “Channel 12 Party” is trying to lull the right-wingers into not showing up to vote, as well as convince them to vote for parties that will eventually join the left-wing bloc.

Q: Do you really think they’ll join the left? 

A: Yes. When I said the same about [Yisrael Beiteinu leader] Avigdor Lieberman back in the day, people said, “No way, he’s right-wing, he lives in [the settlement] Nokdim.” I told them, “you’ll see, it will happen.” And you see.

Q: Let’s say you’re out of the picture, and the other candidates remain. What will things look like here? 

A: The people vying for the crown are usually ones who failed to win elections in the true democratic party, the Likud, and are looking for a way to vent their frustration, and the media pumps them up. Other than Channel 20, most of the media has enlisted just like another party. There are people here and there who deviate from the line in secret, but for the most part, they pump up everyone who appears as the [next[ great hope, knowing that he will ultimately be under the left.

Q: What about the future of the Likud? 

A: There are important forces who have joined and are joining the Likud, and I intend to promote a new leadership.

Q: Is there anyone specific you’ve spotted? 

A: I’m not mentioning names at this stage, but there are young men and women who could lead the country in the future. One of my goals is to invest in them.

Q: What’s the coolest thing about being prime minister? 

A: I like taking an undercover convoy to the beach or an orchard and getting out of the car and just walking. And I do that, it’s no big deal. In the Jerusalem hills, the Sataf spring. I like that best.

Q: You could have asked someone else to make the phone calls to Pfizer. 

A: [Pfizer CEO Albert] Bourla told me that was the difference between Israel and 200 other countries. We were successful with the vaccines because they sent advisers, and I carried out the mission myself. Obsessive, but in the positive sense. And I will be about the economy, now, too.

[On March 11, Bourla praised Netanyahu’s “obsessive” efforts to secure vaccines for Israel, telling Channel 12 the Israeli premier had called him “30 times” on the subject.]

Q: And about Israeli sovereignty, or has that run its course? 

A: It hasn’t, and I raised the issue from the very start and I’m continuing with it. From the beginning, I’ve said that I’ll implement sovereignty in a consensus because we will have to deal with resolutions by the United Nations Security Council and an American veto.

Q: What is the hardest thing about being prime minister? 

A: The price my family pays. Because people here can’t manage to get rid of the prime minister at the polls, they try to do it through other means, legal witch-hunts and slander in the media.

Q: Do your wife and children ever complain? Do they ever say, “What do we need this for, you can make a lot of money anywhere in the world without us suffering, let’s just be a happy family?” 

A: Yes, obviously that’s come up. We’ve talked about it. But in the end, it’s a joint decision. I was blessed with a wonderful family, and that’s very lucky. If I wanted to concentrate on my own home, I could, but my family feels that they’re part of the mission. We aren’t trying to get people to like us or win approval from pundits in studios. We are proud of our legacy and our national outlook.

Q: Don’t you ever feel like quitting? 

A: Now, certainly not. We are on the verge of great successes with the economy, with peace, in technology. I’m going to turn Israel into a world superpower. The Times of London wrote that the surprise tourist destination of the world was going to be Israel. That wasn’t because of any Likud talking points. In Europe, no one can make restaurant reservations because of lockdowns, but in Israel, you can’t reserve a table even when the restaurants are packed.

Q: Because it’s hard to bring people back from furlough to uncertain employment. 

A: Furloughs were necessary and saved people from starving. Now I have a new economic plan whose first point is to encourage businesses to bring back furloughed workers and encourage people on unemployment to get back to work. After the election, I’ll set up a COVID economics cabinet with me as chairman. It’s a 15 billion shekel [$4.5 billion] plan. Aside from that, we expect a drastic tax cut and the start of 40 billion shekels [$12.1 billion] worth of mega-projects that I have agreed on with the United Arab Emirates.

Q: The self-employed are afraid they’ll have to return their grants. 

A: They won’t be asked to. We are going to see 7 percent growth.

Q: The Treasury projections call for 5 percent. 

A: I dispute the Treasury’s projections. I always have, and I’ve always been right. Five percent is the projection for global economic growth. We’ll be at 7 percent and possibly 8 percent. We are the fastest-growing western economy.

Q: You once referred to Arabs going to the polls “in droves.” 

A: You know those weren’t my exact words, right? In the last election, I was in Qalansawe, in Fureidis [majority-Arab towns]—the list is long. The historic novelty is that we broke the Palestinian veto on the peace process and the perverse formula of territory in exchange for peace. We changed the relations between Jews and Arabs outside of Israel, as well as in it. I’m proud of that change and I want to complete it, as well as stop Iran from getting nuclear weapons. These are my missions.

This is an edited version of an article that first appeared in Israel Hayom.

Iran threatens US Army Post and Top General

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n this Friday, March 19, 2021 photo, a District of Columbia Fire Boat checks buoys in the waterway next to Fort McNair, seen in the background, in Washington.(AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

(AP) – Iran has made threats against Fort McNair, an Army post in the U.S. capital, and against the Army’s vice chief of staff, two senior U.S. intelligence officials said.

They said communications intercepted by the National Security Agency in January showed that Iran’s Revolutionary Guard discussed mounting “USS Cole-style attacks” against the Army post, referring to the October 2000 suicide attack in which a small boat pulled up alongside the Navy destroyer in the Yemeni port of Aden and exploded, killing 17 sailors.

The intelligence also revealed threats to kill Gen. Joseph M. Martin and plans to infiltrate and surveil the installation, according to the officials, who were not authorized to publicly discuss national security matters and spoke on condition of anonymity. The Army post, one of the oldest in the country, is Martin’s official residence.

The threats are one reason the Army has been pushing for more security around Fort McNair, which sits alongside Washington’s bustling newly developed Waterfront District.

City leaders have been fighting the Army’s plan to add a buffer zone of about 250 feet to 500 feet (75 meters to 150 meters) from the shore of the Washington Channel, which would limit access to as much as half the width of the busy waterway running parallel to the Potomac River.

The Pentagon, National Security Council and NSA either did not reply or declined to comment when contacted by The Associated Press.

As District of Columbia officials have fought the enhanced security along the channel, the Army has offered only vague information about threats to the installation.

At a virtual meeting in January to discuss the proposed restrictions, Army Maj. Gen. Omar Jones, commander of the Military District of Washington, cited “credible and specific” threats against military leaders who live on the Army post. The only specific security threat he offered was about a swimmer who ended up on the installation and was arrested.

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, the district’s sole representative in Congress, was skeptical. “When it comes to swimmers, I’m sure that must be rare. Did he know where he was? Maybe he was just swimming and found his way to your shore?” she said.

Jones conceded that the swimmer was “not a great example there, but our most recent example” of a security breach.

He said the Army has increased patrols along the shoreline, erected more restricted area signs and placed cameras to monitor the Washington Channel.

Puzzled city officials and frustrated residents said the Army’s request for the buffer zone was a government overreach of public waterways.

Discussions about the Fort McNair proposal began two years ago, but the recent intelligence gathered by the NSA has prompted Army officials to renew their request for the restrictions.

The intercepted chatter was among members of the elite Quds Force of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard and centered on potential military options to avenge the U.S. killing of the former Quds leader, Gen. Qassem Soleimani, in Baghdad in January 2020, the two intelligence officials said.

They said Tehran’s military commanders are unsatisfied with their counterattacks so far, specifically the results of the ballistic missile attack on Ain al-Asad airbase in Iraq in the days after Soleimani’s killing. No U.S. service members were killed in that strike but dozens suffered concussions.

Norton told the AP that in the two months since the January meeting, the Pentagon has not provided her any additional information that would justify the restrictions around Fort McNair.

“I have asked the Department of Defense to withdraw the rule because I’ve seen no evidence of a credible threat that would support the proposed restriction,” Norton said. “They have been trying to get their way, but their proposal is more restrictive than necessary.”

She added: “I have a security clearance. And they have yet to show me any classified evidence” that would justify the proposal. Norton pointed out that the Washington Navy Yard and Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling, which also have access to district waters, do not have restricted zones along their shorelines and have not requested them.

The proposed changes, outlined in a Federal Register notice, would prohibit both people and watercraft from “anchoring, mooring or loitering” within the restricted area without permission.

The notice specifies the need for security around the Marine Helicopter Squadron, which transports American presidents, and the general and staff officers’ quarters located at the water’s edge. The southern tip of Fort McNair is home to the National War College, where midlevel and senior officers gunning for admiral or general study national security strategy.

The Washington Channel is the site of one of the city’s major urban renewal efforts, with new restaurants, luxury housing and concert venues. The waterway flows from the point where the city’s two major rivers, the Potomac and Anacostia, meet.

It’s home to three marinas and hundreds of boat slips. About 300 people live aboard their boats in the channel, according to Patrick Revord, who is the director of technology, marketing and community engagement for the Wharf Community Association.

The channel also bustles with water taxis, which serve 300,000 people each year, river cruises that host 400,000 people a year and about 7,000 kayakers and paddleboarders annually, Revord said during the meeting.

Residents and city officials say the restrictions would create unsafe conditions by narrowing the channel for larger vessels traversing the waterway alongside smaller motorboats and kayakers.

Guy Shields, a retired Army infantry colonel and member of the Capitol Yacht Club who opposes the restrictions around Fort McNair, said during the meeting that waterway restrictions wouldn’t boost security.

“Those buoys aren’t going to do anything to enhance security. It will increase congestion in an already congested area,” Shields said. “And I’ll say, signs do not stop people with bad intentions.”

It’s unclear whether the new intelligence will change the city’s opposition to the Army’s security plan. Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment Sunday. Iranian state media did not immediately acknowledge the AP report.

___

De Blasio Heckled, Chased Off During Anti-Asian Crime Vigil

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. Photo Credit: AP

Embattled New York Mayor Bill de Blasio was chased away by a hostile crowd during an ant-Asian crime vigil on Friday.

The Democrat mayor’s attempt to express solidarity with the Asian community following a tragic shooting in Atlanta was derailed by angry participants questioning his leadership.

Charles Barkley’s hora at his daughter’s Jewish wedding went fine

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AP

(INN) Earlier this month, Charles Barkley confessed to Jimmy Kimmel that he wasn’t sure he’d make it through the hora at his daughter’s wedding.

He needn’t have worried.

Standing 6-foot-5 and weighing around 250 lbs., the retired NBA hall-of-famer was concerned that the wedding guests wouldn’t be able to lift him in a chair during the traditional Jewish celebratory dance. His daughter, Christiana Barkley, was to wed Ilya Hoffman, who is Jewish, at a Scottsdale, Arizona resort.

“I’ve been really working out hard because apparently, they’ve got to pick me up in a chair,” Barkley told Kimmel on his talk show on March 4. “Listen, I need all Jewish people on deck, brother. Cause I can only get so skinny by Saturday, man.”

But according to a write-up of the wedding in The New York Times, the chair-lifting went just fine. The dancing followed a wedding officiated by John Linder, who leads Temple Solel, a Reform congregation near Scottsdale.

“He really was scared, but he got in the chair, and next thing you know he and my mom were up there,” Christiana Barkley told the Times. “They had a blast.”

Hoffman, a marketing executive, met Barkley, the writing director for a college consulting company, in 2016 at a party following a replay of a college basketball championship game. Barkley won Hoffman’s grandmother over through love of her chicken soup, according to the Times.

Trump Will Be Launching His Own Social Media Platform in the Next Few Months

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Former President Donald Trump’s senior advisor Jason Miller said Sunday on Fox News Channels “MediaBuzz” that Trump will be launching a social media platform in the next few months.

Host Howard Kurtz asked, “Donald Trump obviously has been booted off Twitter and Facebook and Instagram, which were a great megaphone for him. Does he plan to get back on social media perhaps with some new outfit?”

Miller said, “I do think we’re going to see President Trump returning to social media and probably about two or three months here with his own platform. This is something that I think will be the hottest ticket in social media. It’s going to completely redefine the game. Everyone will be waiting and watching to see what exactly President Trump does. But it will be his own platform.”

Kurtz asked, “Just to follow up, will this be a platform that the former president will create himself, working with another company? Obviously, he’ll be starting from scratch. He won’t start out with 88 million Twitter followers.”

Miller said, “I can’t go much further than what I was able to just share. I can say it will be big once he starts. There have been a lot of high-powered meetings he has been having at Mar-a-Lago with teams of folks that have been coming in. I got to tell you it’s not just one company that’s approached the president. There have been numerous companies. I think the president knows what direction he wants to head here. This new platform is going to be big, and everyone wants him. He’s going to bring millions and millions, tens of millions of people to this new platform.”

 

Breitbart

Biden Administration in Disarray as Border Spins Out of Control

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19 February 2021, Mexico, Tijuana: Migrants wearing masks wait at the "El Chaparral" border crossing. Following the announced change of direction in US migration policy, large numbers of migrants have gathered at the border between Mexico and the US amid the Corona pandemic. Photo by: Stringer/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images

(AP) As migrants surge at the U.S.-Mexico border, President Joe Biden’s administration has been caught on its heels and is now scrambling to manage a humanitarian and political challenge that threatens to overshadow its ambitious agenda.

Administration officials say Biden inherited an untenable situation that resulted from what they say was President Donald Trump’s undermining and weakening of the immigration system.

But with Congress pivoting to taking up immigration legislation, images and stories from the border have begun to dominate the headlines, distracting from the White House’s efforts to promote the recently passed $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill.

The White House dispatched Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas to four Sunday news shows in an effort to stress that it was working to get things under control.

“Our message has been straightforward — the border is closed,” Mayorkas said. “We are expelling families. We are expelling single adults. And we’ve made a decision that we will not expel young, vulnerable children.”

The White House has steadfastly refused to call the situation a “crisis,” leading to a Washington battle over the appropriate description of the tense situation. Career immigration officials had warned there could be a surge after the November election and the news that Trump’s hard-line policies were being reversed.

In the first days of his term, Biden acted to undo some of Trump’s measures, a rollback interpreted by some as a signal to travel to the United States. While the new administration was working on immigration legislation to address long-term problems, it didn’t have an on-the-ground plan to manage a surge of migrants.

“We have seen large numbers of migration in the past. We know how to address it. We have a plan. We are executing on our plan and we will succeed,” Mayorkas said. But, he added, “it takes time” and is “especially challenging and difficult now” because of the Trump administration’s moves. “So we are rebuilding the system as we address the needs of vulnerable children who arrived at our borders.”

Officials are trying to build up capacity to care for some 14,000 migrants now in federal custody — and more likely on the way. Critics say the administration should have been better prepared.

“I haven’t seen a plan,” said Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas. “They have created a humanitarian crisis down here at this border that you have seen now. And the reason why they are coming is because he says words do matter, and they do. The messaging is that if you want to come, you can stay.”

The administration also has been pressed as to why it will not allow media to see the facilities at the border. Mayorkas said the government was “working on providing access so that individuals will be able to see what the conditions in a Border Patrol station are like.”

Since Biden’s inauguration on Jan. 20, the U.S. has seen a dramatic spike in the number of people encountered by border officials. There were 18,945 family members and 9,297 unaccompanied children encountered in February — an increase of 168% and 63%, respectively, from the month before, according to the Pew Research Center. That creates an enormous logistical challenge because children, in particular, require higher standards of care and coordination across agencies.

Among the reasons for the surge: thousands of Central American migrants already stuck at the border for months and the persistent scourge of gang violence afflicting Northern Triangle countries — Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

Migrant children are sent from border holding cells to other government facilities until they are released to a sponsor. That process was slowed considerably by a Trump administration policy of “enhanced vetting,” in which details were sent to immigration officials and some sponsors wound up getting arrested, prompting some to fear picking up children over worries of being deported. Biden has reversed that policy, so immigration officials hope the process will speed up now.

The White House also points to Biden’s decision to deploy the Federal Emergency Management Agency to support efforts to process the growing number of unaccompanied migrant children arriving at the border.

Mayorkas appeared on “Fox News Sunday,” ABC’s “This Week,” CNN’s “State of the Union” and NBC’s “Meet the Press,” while McCaul was on ABC.

Some NY Nursing Homes Proved Helpless in Face of Virus Surge

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Families of Covid-19 victims who passed away in New York nursing homes gather in front of Cobble Hill Heath Center to demand New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo apologize for his response to clusters in nursing home during pandemic on October 18, 2020 in Brooklyn, New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

(AP) As the coronavirus made an end-of-the-year surge across New York, few nursing homes escaped unscathed. But some proved especially helpless at stopping the spread of COVID-19, despite having nine months to stockpile protective equipment and refine preventative measures.

At least 15 homes each saw at least 30 patients die between November and early February, with most of the deaths occurring in a matter of weeks, recently released public records show. Seven homes had more than 40 patients die, a tally that does not include specialized nursing homes that treat only COVID-19 patients.

The unusually swift and deadly outbreaks stand out in a state where the great majority of nursing homes reported fatalities in the single digits during that time period.

The Commons on St. Anthony, a 300-bed home in Auburn, was among those hit hardest. It held the virus at bay for months, making it to Christmas Day without a single COVID-19 death. But by the end of January, the disease had claimed 57 lives — just as vaccinations were beginning.

Nursing homes had nearly a year to refine visitation policies, ramp up testing programs and hone infection-control practices. Yet the virus still got into facilities like the Commons, where 90-year-old Constance Cuddy, a former nurse being treated for Alzheimer’s disease, died Jan. 17 from COVID-19 complications, according to her family.

“She worked hard her whole life,” said Cuddy’s daughter, Jody Courtemanche. “And I just wish that she could have gone on her own terms when she was ready to go, and not have COVID come in and grab her.”

Until recently, the full extent of New York’s surge was partially obscured because Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administration did not disclose data on thousands of nursing home residents who died outside of their facilities, a scandal that predates the accusations that he sexually harassed female aides.

While the state has made some statistics on nursing home fatalities available since last spring, more complete information on where and when patients died was only released in February after an order from a judge in a public records case brought by the Empire Center for Public Policy, a nonpartisan think tank.

The latest records provide more details on deaths at the Commons as well as homes outside Buffalo, Syracuse and Rochester that suffered more than 40 resident deaths each during the late autumn and early winter surge.

The Elcor Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, about 60 miles (97 kilometers) south of the Commons, had 62 residents die from November through early February, despite precautions that included sanitizing arriving mail, administrator Edward Linsler said.

The situation has improved substantially in recent weeks as most of the nation’s nursing home population has been vaccinated.

Tracing how the coronavirus breaches any facility can be difficult. Public health experts say adherence to infection protocols and proper staffing can make a difference. Larger facilities with shared rooms, which the Commons offers, can be more susceptible to outbreaks.

“More than 99 percent of facilities in the country have had at least one case, and most of that has happened in this winter surge when we’ve known what to do,” said Tamara Konetzka, a research professor at the University of Chicago, who specializes in long-term care. “That just says to me that it’s really almost impossible to keep the virus out completely.”

Loretto, the company that operates the Commons, said it took many steps to keep the virus out. Employees wore gowns, gloves and face shields when working with residents. Family members could only see their loved ones through a plate-glass window.

The state Department of Health conducted six on-site infection-control inspections there along with another by the federal government between May and Feb. 3 and found no deficiencies.

Cayuga County did not see its first major outbreak until the fall. Loretto spokesperson Julie Sheedy said “out of control” spread of the virus in the surrounding community overwhelmed the nursing home’s defenses.

Commons resident Kathleen Grader, 86, tested positive after getting the first of two planned vaccination shots in late December. The mother of 10, who was “always busy” even past the onset of Alzheimer’s disease, died of COVID-19 complications Jan. 12, said her daughter Theresa Smithler.

“The only way these residents got the virus was from an employee,” Smithler said, noting that even at Christmas, visitors had been banned. Over the holiday, Smithler and her sister sang carols into a cellphone with their mother on the other side of a window at the home.

The Commons tested and screened employees. But those procedures cannot catch every infected worker in time, especially if they do not have symptoms.

By January, infections were surging among the staff, with 42 positive cases in three weeks, federal data shows.

Kaylee Gabak, a 24-year-old certified nursing assistant, tested positive on Christmas after she went to a hospital to deliver her first child. The baby girl, Charlotte, was born healthy, but Gabak was soon back at the hospital in critical condition.

Her mother, Cortney Haberlau, believes her daughter was infected at the Commons in mid-December, just before her maternity leave. She battled internal bleeding, a brain abscess and other complications and returned home this month.

After Gabak awoke at the hospital in early February, her mother said she was soon using her phone to look up the obituaries of “her people,” the residents of the Commons.

“She was really sad about it because a lot of her residents that she cared for, and cared about, were deceased,” Haberlau said.

© Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

Bronx Council Race Double-Header Ad Blitz Pushes Real Estate Developers’ Ranked Choice Slat

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Bronx City Council candidates Eric Dinowitz, left, and Dan Padernacht. | Eric Dinowitz for City Council, Dan Padernacht for City Council/Facebook

Claudia Irizarry Aponte and Clifford Michel, THE CITY

Logo for THE CITY
This article was originally published by THE CITY

Bronx City Council candidates Eric Dinowitz, left, and Dan Padernacht.
Bronx City Council candidates Eric Dinowitz, left, and Dan Padernacht. | Eric Dinowitz for City Council, Dan Padernacht for City Council/Facebook

In a ranked choice voting first, an outside spending group is promoting two rival candidates for City Council — directing voters to choose Eric Dinowitz first and Daniel Padernacht second in a special election for an open Bronx seat.

Voters of NYC, a Super PAC funded by developer William L. Zeckendorf and other real estate industry players, disclosed Tuesday that it had sent a mailer and bought a newspaper ad featuring the names and faces of both candidates.

The promotions include an image of the ranked choice ballot along with directions for how to select the two candidates in order.

The group put out a combined $21,668.50 on the double-header promotions, which thanks to the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision are not subject to the city’s strict campaign finance raising and spending limits.

In its accounting to the city Campaign Finance Board, Voters of NYC attributed $6,428 of that spending to Padernacht and the rest to Dinowitz.

THE CITY reported earlier this week that Voters of NYC spent $34,000 on mailers supporting Dinowitz only — and that the world’s richest woman, Walmart heir Alice Walton, is pouring money into influencing the special election contest in a nearby district.

City Campaign Finance Board filings show multiple contributions to Voters of NYC totaling $185,000 from real estate firms — including $100,000 from Zeckendorf’s WLZ Properties, Inc.

Voters of NYC, Inc.
An independent group paid for an ad showing voters how to use ranked choice voting to support Eric Dinowitz and Daniel Padernacht.

In-person early voting is underway and concludes on Sunday for the March 23 special election in the 11th District, a swath of the north Bronx including Bedford Park, Kingsbridge, Wakefield, Woodlawn and Riverdale. The seat was vacated when former Councilmember Andrew Cohen was elected to a Bronx Supreme Court judgeship last year.

Dinowitz is a local Democratic Party district leader and son of longtime Bronx Assemblymember Jeffrey Dinowitz. Padernacht is an attorney specializing in real estate transactions, according to his law firm’s website.

No Thanks

Dinowitz said in a statement to THE CITY that he isn’t aligned with real estate interests and that he isn’t cross-endorsing Padernacht.

“The real estate interests behind this mailer obviously don’t know me very well. I stand with labor, not real estate, and I haven’t endorsed a #2 in the race,” Dinowitz wrote. “I don’t want or need the support of anyone who doesn’t share my values — and that means anyone in real estate. I’m a proud labor candidate and a neighborhood candidate.”

The Voters of NYC mailers advocate passionately for the pair.

“Please be sure to vote Eric Dinowitz for City Council: the leadership and experience we need in the City Council,” reads the mailer, which was registered with the CFB on March 16. “If you don’t vote, the community loses!”

The back page features an inset photo of Dan Padernacht as “2nd Choice,” and a mock-up of the ranked ballot, on which the names of the other four candidates besides Dinowitz and Padernacht are blurred.

Padernacht’s campaign did not respond to THE CITY’s request for comment.

The independent expenditure group is also boosting John Sanchez for the seat vacated by Rep. Ritchie Torres after he was elected to Congress last year. District 15 includes central Bronx neighborhoods East Tremont, Fordham, Belmont, Allerton and West Farms.

The group heavily funded by Walton, New Yorkers for a Balanced Albany, has blitzed central Bronx voters with more than $90,000 worth of mailers, internet ads and live phone calls boosting Sanchez as of Thursday, campaign finance records show.

News of the wealthy outsiders’ big spending in the largely working- and middle-class districts drew ire from candidates in both races.

Two candidates, Mino Lora in the 11th District and Elisa Crespo in the 15th, plan to hold a joint virtual event Friday morning alongside tenant advocates “to protest the attempt by wealthy real estate interests to elect candidates” in the borough.

“The money speaks for itself. If you go back and you track the money in rezonings, in development, in land use — this is what they, as corporations and as consultants, are interested in,” said Lora, a former nonprofit executive.

“And that we know — because we have seen that impact at the state level — is against tenants’ rights, is against expanding rent stabilization, against expanding stability for tenants, and that is the majority of our residents,” Lora added.

Outside Money Influence Grows

Political observers said that voters should expect to see more independent spending on behalf of candidates just like in 2013, the last time the majority of the City Council was up for reelection.

That year, a political action committee called Jobs for New York, which was spawned by the Real Estate Board of New York, spent $4.9 million supporting candidates running for City Council during their primary races.

Out of the 47 candidates it backed — with its spending in some races exceeding $250,000 — 20 ended up winning Council seats.

“It has happened, but I have a feeling that this time it’ll be a lot more,” said Eli Valentin, a political analyst and lecturer at Union Theological Seminary.

With six candidates running in the 11th District race, there’s a chance that ranked choice voting will play a role in deciding who holds the seat.

Under New York City’s new voting system, voters’ second or lower choices could impact the race if no candidate reaches a 50% threshold. If that’s the case, the candidate with the fewest first slot votes is removed from the race.

Then, each ballot’s vote is automatically reallocated to other candidates according to order of preference until there are two candidates left.

Valentin said that Voters of NYC is likely making a calculated decision on who their funders could work well with in the City Council, while trying to lock out more progressive candidates with anti-development stances.

“They’re probably looking at candidates willing to engage folks that represent their interests and — in the case of Dinowitz, given that his father has been an elected official for a long time and is a higher up in the Bronx Democratic machine — they may see a person who is more willing to sit at the table with them,” Valentin said. “As opposed to Mino Lora, who’s endorsed by the more progressive folks.”

He added: “I don’t think they see an opportunity to even engage in conversations with someone like that.”

Gary Axelbank, who hosts BronxTalk and The Bronx Buzz on local cable TV channel BronxNet, said that outside spenders are likely investing in candidates they see as front-runners — and looking to cash in on the potential return of The Bronx’s pre-pandemic real estate boom.

“They’re hedging their bets on who they see as favorites and who they want to curry favor to — and the reason they want to curry favor is that they see the Bronx as fertile ground for development,” he said. “It will be up to the candidates to hold the line on gentrification or other non-community-friendly projects.”

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