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CNN’s Chris Cuomo Says White People’s Kids Need to ‘Start Getting Killed’ to Prompt Police and Gun Reform

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Jared Evan

In an unhinged, irresponsible, and racist rant, CNN host Chris Cuomo says that there won’t be police reform or gun control until “your kids start getting killed. White people’s kids start getting killed.”

“Shootings, gun laws, access to weapons. Oh, I know when they’ll change,” said Cuomo during a monologue on his show Cuomo Prime Time. “[When] your kids start getting killed. White people’s kids start getting killed.”.

In an opinion-based rant, which should not even be on a network that still markets itself as a “news authority”, Cuomo was talking about recent police shootings, which have been in the news,  and pivoted for a moment to gun control.

There have been many, many white victims of shootings and also victims of police shootings.  The Sandy Hook shootings, Parkland shootings, are the first that comes to mind in which “white people’s kids” got killed.

As far as police killing “white people’s kids”-, a few of the more widely reported victims include Jeremy Mardis(who was 6 years old ) Ciara Meyer( 12 years old), Logan Simpson(16 years old), and only last week in Maryland, Peyton Ham, who was a 16-year-old honor student.  There are hundreds of other cases of white people of all ages being killed by cops, but the irony is unbelievable considering only last week a 16-year-old “white kid” was killed by police, and a news anchor on “CNN- the most trusted name in news”  was either unaware of this case or ignored it on purpose.

Chris Cuomo and the entire crew at CNN are dangerous race-baiters, who contribute nothing positive, enlightening, or truthful on their alleged news network. They are sowing hatred and disseminating a dangerously false narrative. CNN’s viewers are victims, as this network continues to market itself as “news”, the casual victim is misinformed, dumbed down, and deprived of factual reporting.

Here is Mr.Cuomo’s racist and intellectually dishonest rant.

 

 

 

NYC Mayoral Candidate Shaun Donovan Faces Public Funding Review Over Dad-Backed PAC

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Samantha Maldonado, THE CITY

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

Mayoral Candidate Shaun Donovan gathers signatures in Downtown Brooklyn to get on the ballot, March 2, 2021.
Mayoral Candidate Shaun Donovan gathers signatures in Downtown Brooklyn to get on the ballot, March 2, 2021. | Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY

Democratic mayoral hopeful Shaun Donovan took a double hit on some key numbers  Thursday as the primary campaign headed into its final 10 weeks.

The former secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development didn’t get any matching funds from the city — at least not yet. And he ended up in the second-to-last ballot position out of the 12 Democratic mayoral candidates to make the cut.

The city Campaign Finance Board on Thursday rained more than $10 million in matching funds on six of the Democratic mayoral candidates. But the board opted to wait on giving any to Donovan until taking a closer look at whether the New Start NYC political committee, backed with $2 million of his father’s money, violates campaign finance rules.

“The Board is deferring its decision on whether to pay public funds to the Donovan campaign today, but it has not made a determination on public funds payments nor on whether there has been a violation,” Frederick Schaffer, chair of the city’s Campaign Finance Board said in a statement. “The board will seek further information in this matter from the Donovan campaign and from New Start NYC and will review that information promptly.”

Under the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling, super PACs can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money on behalf of candidates but are not allowed to coordinate with campaigns. What coordination means — and how it applies to a candidate’s relationship with a deep-pocketed dad — is unclear.

If the board finds evidence of coordination, contributions to the Donovan-backing PAC may actually be considered to be in-kind donations to his campaign. If that’s the case, Donovan may not be eligible for public matching funds due to individual donation limits.

“We are confident that this will be resolved quickly. We look forward to working with the Campaign Finance Board, because we believe that New York City’s campaign finance laws are a model for the nation,” Brendan McPhillips, Donovan’s campaign manager, said in a statement. “We are grateful to the thousands of New Yorkers who donated to us knowing that their hard-earned dollars would be a part of this system. We believe that in short order our matching funds will be released.”

A Matching Funds Boost

The city provides $8 for every $1 qualifying candidates raise, which can boost campaigns and keep spending on a more even playing field. While Donovan hasn’t seen any matching funds from the city, six other candidates benefitted.

Andrew Yang received the most in this round: $3,724,112. Former Sanitation Commissioner Kathryn Garcia got $2,265,561, while former nonprofit executive Dianne Morales notched $2,247,681. None of the three had qualified for matching funds in the first round.

Via the city Campaign Finance Board
Payments approved on April 15, 2021, by the city Campaign Finance Board

In a statement, Morales said the funds “will expand the reach of our organizing power and help fuel this movement … to transform our city into one of dignity, care and solidarity.”

Garcia’s campaign manager, Monika Hansen, touted the funds as proof of “the energized, people-driven campaign.”

Maya Wiley, former counsel to Mayor Bill de Blasio, received $906,437 this round, adding to the more than $1.9 million in public funds she’d already reaped. City Comptroller Scott Stringer got $589,230 this time, adding to nearly $4.7 million in public funds he’d acquired earlier. Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams got $317,295 to put on top of the $5.2 million in previous public funds.

Getting into Position

The candidates also found out where they would appear on the ballot, a factor that may hold some sway over undecided voters faced with a list of a dozen Democratic mayoral candidates and ranked choice voting, which will get its first citywide test in the June 22 primary.

The candidates’ ballot positions were determined by a lottery conducted Thursday by the city Board of Elections. The dozen were whittled down from nearly 50 City Hall hopefuls based on preliminarily meeting the threshold for ballot petition signatures.

Morales won the second spot on the list.

“Regardless of the ballot order’s impact, we’re excited for New Yorkers to quickly find Dianne’s name in the No. 2 spot when ranking her No. 1 on their ballot,” said Lauren Liles, a spokesperson for her campaign.

Yang, who found himself last, tweeted that it felt “like grade school where I was always last alphabetically.”

Via the New York City Board of Elections
The city Board of Elections held a lottery Thursday to determine the order candidates will appear on the ballot in the June 22 primary.

Jeremy Edwards, a spokesperson for Donovan, said the campaign is “looking forward to giving Andrew Yang some company at the bottom of the ballot, while understanding that wherever we are doesn’t change our plans to continue communicating Shaun’s plans for NYC to voters in every borough.”

The top line of the ballot will go to Aaron Foldenauer, an attorney who is “still working” on securing endorsements — and has not qualified for matching funds after raising just $16,360 in private funds as of mid-March, according to the Campaign Finance Board.

In contrast, Councilmember Carlos Menchaca, who dropped out of the race in March, had raised more than $87,000 and enjoyed broader name recognition.

But Foldenauer — willing to test the limited influence of the coveted premiere spot on the ballot — is not about to follow suit.

“I’m in this race to win it and I’m not dropping out of the race. I’m on the ballot. I’m not going anywhere,” Foldenauer told THE CITY. “The list of candidates in the Democratic primary reads like a veritable phonebook and thus winning top ballot position is a huge deal.”

THE CITY is an independent, nonprofit news outlet dedicated to hard-hitting reporting that serves the people of New York.

Israeli, Palestinian films to battle it out at the Oscars

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shutterstock

By Paul Shindman, World Israel News

The Palestinian film hoping to beat out its Israeli competitor at the Oscars got a boost when it won in the Best Short Film category at the annual British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) awards in London on Sunday.

British-Palestinian film director Farah Nabulsi accepted the award for her film, “The Present,” about the trials and tribulations of a father and his young daughter trying to buy an anniversary present of a new refrigerator and stock it with some groceries.

“Absolutely blown away!!! A BAFTA!!!,” Nabulsi tweeted after winning the award.

Done entirely from the Palestinian perspective of having to go through an IDF checkpoint to get to and from a shopping trip, the film review website Indie Film describes it as “heartbreaking without laying it on too thick,” although acknowledging that Nabulsi “employed guerrilla filmmaking tactics.”

The IDF soldiers in the film appear to have been Hebrew-speaking Palestinian actors, as their identities are omitted from the credits. The Israelis are portrayed as brutal and heartless. As with other Palestinian films, the context of why there are checkpoints is entirely left out of the film, with no mention of suicide bombers, weapons smuggling by terrorists at checkpoints, or any other background to the conflict.

“The Present” will compete against an Israeli short film and three others at the Academy Awards that take place on April 25.

The Israeli short film “White Eye” by director Tomer Shushan deals with an Eritrean migrant in Tel Aviv who is accused by an Israeli of stealing his bicycle.

Shushan’s is the third Israeli film to be nominated in the category. The film “Aya” by Oded Binnun and Mihal Brezis was a runner-up in 2014, and in 2018 Israeli director Guy Nattiv won an Oscar for his short film “Skin.”

Other Israeli Oscar winners include Jerusalem-born actress Natalie Portman for her performance in the 2010 film “Black Swan” and sound engineer Niv Adiri, who won the Oscar in 2013 for Best Sound for the movie “Gravity.”

Over the years, Israelis and Israeli films have been nominated 21 times for Oscars

One of last remaining Jews in Egypt dies at age 91

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By JNS

Egyptian activist Albert Arie, who was born Jewish and known for his opposition to Israel and the Zionist movement, died on Thursday at age 91.

He was born into a Jewish family in Egypt but converted to Islam in the 1960s to marry a Muslim woman.

Arie was one of the last members of Egypt’s Jewish community to remain in the country and the oldest Jew in Cairo, according to Arutz Sheva.

Part of a group of anti-Zionist Jews who joined the Egyptian nationalist movement, he was “celebrated by Egyptians for his refusal to move to Israel,” according to the Jewish blog Elder of Ziyon. In the 1950s, Arie reportedly fought for communist causes and was imprisoned for 11 years for his involvement in the communist Party.

Ahram Online wrote in 2015 that Arie resided in the same downtown apartment where his parents married and lived since the early 1930s.

Insistent on Jewish heritage being preserved in Cairo and the country at large, he told the publication at the time: “Today, there are only a few elderly and a couple of middle-aged people, and this will all be gone in a matter of a very few decades. The thing to do now is to make sure that the history of Egyptian Jews, which is basically part of the history of Egypt, should be well-documented and their monuments should be preserved so that maybe one day the full story will be accurately told, away from the purposes of political propaganda or commercial gains.”

Arie’s granddaughter, Magda Haroun, is the current president of the Egyptian Jewish community. She said the remaining Jewish community is so small it doesn’t even have enough men for a minyan.

Princes William & Harry Seen Chatting Together After Funeral of Prince Philip; Reconciliation Hoped For

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(Gareth Fuller/Pool via AP)

By: Sylvia Hui

A year after they last saw one another, Prince William and his brother Prince Harry put their fraught relationship aside as they said farewell to their grandfather at his funeral on Saturday.

The brothers were somber and silent as they walked together in a procession behind Prince Philip’s coffin before his funeral at Windsor Castle along with their father, Prince Charles, and other close relatives. They were seen chatting and walking together after the service concluded.

It was the first time the brothers had been together in public since Harry stood down from royal duties and moved to the U.S. with his wife Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, and their son Archie in early 2020.

Tensions between Harry, 36, and William, 38, came to the fore after Harry and Meghan gave a revealing interview to U.S. talk show host Oprah Winfrey last month. The couple portrayed the royal family as indifferent to Meghan’s mental health struggles, and Harry described his relationship with William as “space at the moment.”

On Saturday, William and Harry walked in silence on either side of their cousin, Peter Phillips, as they joined other senior royals in Philip’s funeral procession. At one point Phillips fell behind slightly to allow the brothers to walk side by side — a visual echo of the moment the pair, as boys in 1997, walked behind the coffin of their mother Princess Diana in another royal funeral televised around the world.

The brothers sat opposite each other in St. George’s Chapel for the funeral, which was attended by only 30 people because of coronavirus restrictions. While William sat next to his wife Kate, Harry was on his own because Meghan is pregnant with their second child and was advised by her doctor not to make the long trip.

Afterwards, Harry, William and Kate strolled together outside the chapel. Moments later, the brothers walked together alone while Kate spoke to Zara Tindall, another of Queen Elizabeth II’s eight grandchildren who is William and Harry’s cousin.

Rumors of a rift between the brothers — William, the heir, and Harry, the “spare” — have rumbled at least since 2019. That’s when Harry and Meghan separated from the Royal Foundation, originally set up as the brothers’ joint charitable venture, to set up their own platform. That year, Harry said he loved his brother dearly but they were “on different paths” and have “good days” and “bad days.”

Many believe that William was angered and hurt by Harry’s decision to speak so publicly about the royal family’s issues during the Winfrey interview. In one explosive allegation, they said a family member — not the queen or Philip — had expressed “concerns” about Archie’s possible skin color before he was born. Meghan has a Black mother and a white father.

Days after the interview aired, William insisted “we are very much not a racist family,” and said he had not spoken to Harry since the broadcast.

It’s unclear whether the passing of their grandfather will help the brothers heal their rift. It wasn’t immediately clear how long Harry, who has been self-isolating in line with the U.K.’s coronavirus restrictions since arriving from California early this week, will stay in his home country.

Saturday’s funeral was limited to only 30 people, who all had to wear masks, sit in family bubbles and remain socially distanced in the same church that had hosted hundreds of people for Harry and Meghan’s royal wedding in 2018. And Britain’s continued coronavirus restrictions may limit how much opportunity the brothers will get to smooth over their differences.

“Because of the restrictions of COVID, it’s difficult to get down to decent conservations,” said royal biographer Penny Junor. “It’s probably quite difficult to sit down as they normally would over a beer and discuss things.” (AP)

 

UNRWA Caught Teaching Terrorism, Jew Hatred as Biden Admin Resumes Taxpayer Funding

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(FREE BEACON)

The United Nations’ Palestinian refugee agency is promoting violence against Israel and using educational materials that call for the Jewish state’s destruction, according to video evidence and copies of lesson plans being taught to children before and during the coronavirus pandemic.

The U.N. Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), which is in charge of providing education to scores of Palestinian children, has done little to root out anti-Semitism and the glorification of terrorism from its official lesson plans, although it has repeatedly pledged to do so.

The Biden administration moved almost immediately to restart U.S. funding for UNRWA despite underlying concerns about the agency’s radical educational materials—fears that have been raised by U.S. lawmakers on both sides of the aisle in recent years. After aid was resumed earlier this month, UNRWA promised the Biden administration it will root out violence and anti-Semitism, though officials could not explain precisely how the agency would do this after decades of using anti-Israel materials.

A State Department spokesman told the Washington Free Beacon that UNRWA uses the Palestinian Authority’s curriculum and works “to address the problematic content and provides instructions for its staff to educate students about why the content is problematic.” UNRWA, the official said, “must respect neutrality, exclude anti-Semitism, and oppose violence.”

“The United States is completely committed to working with UNRWA to ensure that any inappropriate material is identified and removed,” the spokesman said. ”Our resumption of assistance will allow us to serve as a partner to UNRWA to uphold the highest level of neutrality and commitment to tolerance in its educational materials.”

The State Department spokesman did not address UNRWA’s decades-long failure to better police its content despite the organization’s repeated promises to do so.

Undercover videos taken at several UNRWA facilities during the past year show children participating in militant displays and calling for Israel’s destruction. Teachers have also been documented over Zoom, which replaced in-classroom learning in the wake of the pandemic, using lesson plans that deem Israel illegitimate and brand Jews as “foreign settlers” who must be violently removed from the region.

The latest evidence, unearthed by the Center for Near East Policy Research, an Israeli watchdog group that has investigated UNRWA for years, was presented late last month to a bipartisan group of congressional staffers just before the Biden administration moved forward with a controversial plan to send $150 million in U.S. aid to UNRWA. Funding to the organization had been frozen since 2018 after the Trump administration determined UNRWA’s anti-Semitic and anti-Israel agenda was too toxic to support.

Sen. Jim Risch (R., Idaho) and Rep. Michael McCaul (R., Texas), lead Republicans on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the House Foreign Affairs Committee, respectively, blasted the administration for ignoring longstanding congressional concerns by resuming “funding for UNRWA without securing any reforms from the organization,” according to a joint statement from the lawmakers. They also have placed what is known as a hold on the money, essentially stopping it from being allocated to UNRWA in the short term.

The latest UNRWA curriculums are “based on Jihad, martyrdom and the ‘right of return by force of arms,’” said David Bedein, the Center for Near East Policy Research’s director. The U.S. government, he said, must demand the aid agency “cease paramilitary training in all UNRWA schools” and “insist that UNRWA dismiss employees affiliated with Hamas”—calls that have been ignored for years as UNRWA continues to take U.S. and European funding.

UNRWA lesson plans captured during the past year also present maps of “Palestine” that depict the fictional country as existing across all of the territory that comprises modern day Israel.

Images obtained by the Center for Near East Policy Research

The term “Zionist occupation” is consistently used instead of “Israel” in UNRWA schoolbooks, according to Arabic language passages from a 2020 10th-grade textbook obtained by the Center for Near East Policy Research and shared with Congress and the Free Beacon. Judaism’s connection to the biblical land of Israel also is whitewashed in these textbooks in order to forward the idea that Jews are interlopers in the region.

UNRWA curriculum materials obtained by the Center for Near East Policy Research

Jews are also presented as perpetrators of genocide. “The Zionists have founded their entity on terror, extermination and colonialism,” states another 10th-grade textbook from 2020.

UNRWA facilities in the Gaza Strip also have been used by the Hamas terrorist group to stash weapons and missiles.

The Biden administration’s decision to resume UNRWA funding without any strings attached drew a scathing and rare public rebuke from the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C., and Jewish groups typically aligned with the Democratic White House.

“Israel is strongly opposed to the anti-Israel and anti-Semitic activity happening in UNRWA’s facilities,” said Gilad Erdan, Israel’s ambassador to the United States. “In conversations with the U.S. State Department, I have expressed my disappointment and objection to the decision to renew UNRWA’s funding without first ensuring that certain reforms, including stopping the incitement and removing anti-Semitic content from its educational curriculum, are carried out.”

Pro-Israel groups from across the ideological spectrum also have begun petitioning lawmakers on Capitol Hill to force the administration to take a tougher line on UNRWA and its anti-Israel bias. They say UNRWA is fundamentally broken and only fosters hatred among Palestinian youths, according to a letter recently blasted across Capitol Hill.

“It is critical that we stand together to demand systemic reform to educational materials used by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) before one more child is taught from textbooks riddled with hateful lessons,” wrote several leading Jewish and pro-Israel groups, including Hadassah, the Anti-Defamation League, Christians United for Israel, the Zionist Organization of America, and B’nai B’rith International.

The groups are asking Congress to pressure U.N. secretary-general Antonio Guterres into forcing UNRWA to undertake significant reforms, including a total revamp of its educational materials.

UNRWA did not return a request for comment.

U.N. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield Tells Al Sharpton Group: ‘White Supremacy’ in America’s ‘Founding Documents and Principles’

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pool photo

JOEL B. POLLAK

U.N. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told Al Sharpton’s National Action Network (NAN) on Wednesday that “the original sin of slavery weaved white supremacy into our founding documents and principles.”

Thomas-Greenfield addressed the NAN’s 30th annual summit, praising Sharpton for a “lifetime of activism” and thanking him for “never backing down.” She did not mention Sharpton’s history of antisemitic, racist, and homophobic rhetoric, or his role in inciting riots against Jews.

Instead, Thomas-Greenfield recited a familiar theme from Critical Race Theory, which holds that America was founded upon white supremacy, and that racism infects all of America’s institutions as a result.

In her prepared remarks, Thomas-Greenfield said:

I spoke on the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. That day – and commemoration – was personal for me. So, I told the UN some personal stories. I told them about how my great-grandmother Mary Thomas, born in 1865, was the child of a slave. Just three generations back from me. I grew up in the segregated South. I was bussed to a segregated school. On weekends, the Klan burned crosses on lawns in our neighborhood.
I shared these stories and others to acknowledge, on the international stage, that I have personally experienced one of America’s greatest imperfections. I have seen for myself how the original sin of slavery weaved white supremacy into our founding documents and principles. But I also shared these stories to offer up an insight, a simple truth I’ve learned over the years: Racism is not the problem of the person who experiences it.
Those of us who experience racism cannot, and should not, internalize it, despite the impact it can have on our everyday lives. Racism is the problem of the racist. And it is the problem of the society that produces the racist. And in today’s world, that is every society.
In America, that takes many forms. It’s the white supremacy that led to the senseless killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and so many other Black Americans. It’s the spike in hate crimes over the past three years – against Latino Americans, Sikh and Muslim Americans, Jewish Americans, and immigrants. And it’s the bullying, discrimination, brutality, and violence that Asian Americans face everyday, especially since the outbreak of COVID-19. That’s why the Biden-Harris administration has made racial equity a top priority across the entire government. And I’m making it a real focus of my tenure at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations.
But when I say racism is a problem in every society, that means looking beyond America’s borders too. Across four decades and four continents in the foreign service, I experienced racism in countless international contexts. From overly invasive searches at airports, to police racially profiling my son, to being made to wait behind white patrons for a table at a restaurant. Racism was and continues to be a daily challenge abroad. And for millions, it’s more than a challenge. It’s deadly.

Some of the cases Thomas-Greenfield cited, including the Breonna Taylor case, have no evidence of racial bias whatsoever. Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron — the state’s first black attorney general — announced last September that no charges would be filed against police officers in the case because they knocked first before Taylor fired his weapon at them.

Thomas-Greenfield also boasted that President Joe Biden “immediately re-engaged with the Human Rights Council, and have announced our intention to seek election to that body, so that we can advance our most-cherished democratic values around the globe.”

President Donald Trump withdrew the U.S. from the U.N. Human Rights Council in 2018 precisely because it sheltered undemocratic regimes while obsessively criticizing Israel. China is among the council’s members.

“Roughly 80 times, this past decade, the United Nations Human Rights Council has denounced Israel while ignoring many of the worst human rights abuses anywhere in the world,” then-President Trump recalled in an address in 2019. To call out this egregious hypocrisy, I withdrew the United States from the U.N. Human Rights Council.”

 

During her confirmation process, Thomas-Greenfield faced scrutiny for her praise of China during a speech to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-funded Confucius Institute at Savannah State University in Georgia in 2019. She praised China’s role in Africa, saying that critics of its “predatory lending” needed to acknowledge that “the United States and the West is [sic] not showing up or offering viable alternatives.” She did not criticize China’s human rights record on that occasion, either in Africa or within China itself. (She later told the Senate that she regretted accepting the invitation to speak.)

Thomas-Greenfield’s outreach to Sharpton and NAN is notable. As Breitbart News has reported, then-candidate Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) refused to have anything to do with Sharpton in 2008, but reached out to him when the Obama White House sought allies in the black community.

In 2012, Sharpton and NAN helped inflame national outrage over the death of Trayvon Martin, claiming inaccurately that the suspect, George Zimmerman, was “white.” Since then, he has become even more powerful within the Democratic Party.

Breutbart

Worldwide COVID-19 death toll tops a staggering 3 million

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FILE - In this April 13, 2021, file photo, the remains of a woman who died from complications related to COVID-19 are placed into a niche by cemetery workers and relatives at the Inahuma cemetery in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The global death toll from the coronavirus topped a staggering 3 million people Saturday, April 17, 2021, amid repeated setbacks in the worldwide vaccination campaign and a deepening crisis in places such as Brazil, India and France. (AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo, File)

(AP) — The global death toll from the coronavirus topped a staggering 3 million people Saturday amid repeated setbacks in the worldwide vaccination campaign and a deepening crisis in places such as Brazil, India and France.

The number of lives lost, as compiled by Johns Hopkins University, is about equal to the population of Kyiv, Ukraine; Caracas, Venezuela; or metropolitan Lisbon, Portugal. It is bigger than Chicago (2.7 million) and equivalent to Philadelphia and Dallas combined.

And the true number is believed to be significantly higher because of possible government concealment and the many cases overlooked in the early stages of the outbreak that began in Wuhan, China, at the end of 2019.

When the world back in January passed the bleak threshold of 2 million deaths, immunization drives had just started in Europe and the United States. Today, they are underway in more than 190 countries, though progress in bringing the virus under control varies widely.

While the campaigns in the U.S. and Britain have hit their stride and people and businesses there are beginning to contemplate life after the pandemic, other places, mostly poorer countries but some rich ones as well, are lagging behind in putting shots in arms and have imposed new lockdowns and other restrictions as virus cases soar.

Worldwide, deaths are on the rise again, running at around 12,000 per day on average, and new cases are climbing too, eclipsing 700,000 a day.

“This is not the situation we want to be in 16 months into a pandemic, where we have proven control measures,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, one of the World Health Organization’s leaders on COVID-19.

In Brazil, where deaths are running at about 3,000 per day, accounting for one-quarter of the lives lost worldwide in recent weeks, the crisis has been likened to a “raging inferno” by one WHO official. A more contagious variant of the virus has been rampaging across the country.

As cases surge, hospitals are running out of critical sedatives. As a result, there have been reports of some doctors diluting what supplies remain and even tying patients to their beds while breathing tubes are pushed down their throats.

The slow vaccine rollout has crushed Brazilians’ pride in their own history of carrying out huge immunization campaigns that were the envy of the developing world.

Taking cues from President Jair Bolsonaro, who has likened the virus to little more than a flu, his Health Ministry for months bet big on a single vaccine, ignoring other producers. When bottlenecks emerged, it was too late to get large quantities in time.

Watching so many patients suffer and die alone at her Rio de Janeiro hospital impelled nurse Lidiane Melo to take desperate measures.

In the early days of the pandemic, as sufferers were calling out for comfort that she was too busy to provide, Melo filled two rubber gloves with warm water, knotted them shut, and sandwiched them around a patient’s hand to simulate a loving touch.

Some have christened the practice the “hand of God,” and it is now the searing image of a nation roiled by a medical emergency with no end in sight.

“Patients can’t receive visitors. Sadly, there’s no way. So it’s a way to provide psychological support, to be there together with the patient holding their hand,” Melo said. She added: “And this year it’s worse, the seriousness of patients is 1,000 times greater.”

This situation is similarly dire in India, where cases spiked in February after weeks of steady decline, taking authorities by surprise. In a surge driven by variants of the virus, India saw over 180,000 new infections in one 24-hour span during the past week, bringing the total number of cases to over 13.9 million.

Problems that India had overcome last year are coming back to haunt health officials. Only 178 ventilators were free Wednesday afternoon in New Delhi, a city of 29 million, where 13,000 new infections were reported the previous day.

The challenges facing India reverberate beyond its borders since the country is the biggest supplier of shots to COVAX, the U.N.-sponsored program to distribute vaccines to poorer parts of the world. Last month, India said it would suspend vaccine exports until the virus’s spread inside the country slows.

The WHO recently described the supply situation as precarious. Up to 60 countries might not receive any more shots until June, by one estimate. To date, COVAX has delivered about 40 million doses to more than 100 countries, enough to cover barely 0.25% of the world’s population.

Globally, about 87% of the 700 million doses dispensed have been given out in rich countries. While 1 in 4 people in wealthy nations have received a vaccine, in poor countries the figure is 1 in more than 500.

In recent days, the U.S. and some European countries put the use of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine on hold while authorities investigate extremely rare but dangerous blood clots. AstraZeneca’s vaccine has likewise been hit with delays and restrictions because of a clotting scare.

Another concern: Poorer countries are relying on vaccines made by China and Russia, which some scientists believe provide less protection than those made by Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca.

Last week, the director of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention acknowledged the country’s vaccines offer low protection and said officials are considering mixing them with other shots to improve their effectiveness.

In the U.S., where over 560,000 lives have been lost, accounting for more than 1 in 6 of the world’s COVID-19 deaths, hospitalizations and deaths have dropped, businesses are reopening, and life is beginning to return to something approaching normalcy in several states. The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits tumbled last week to 576,000, a post-COVID-19 low.

But progress has been patchy, and new hot spots — most notably Michigan — have flared up in recent weeks. Still, deaths in the U.S. are down to about 700 per day on average, plummeting from a mid-January peak of about 3,400.

In Europe, countries are feeling the brunt of a more contagious variant that first ravaged Britain and has pushed the continent’s COVID-19-related death toll beyond 1 million.

Close to 6,000 gravely ill patients are being treated in French critical care units, numbers not seen since the first wave a year ago.

Dr. Marc Leone, head of intensive care at the North Hospital in Marseille, said exhausted front-line staff members who were feted as heroes at the start of the pandemic now feel alone and are clinging to hope that renewed school closings and other restrictions will help curb the virus in the coming weeks.

“There’s exhaustion, more bad tempers. You have to tread carefully because there are a lot of conflicts,” he said. “We’ll give everything we have to get through these 15 days as best we can.”

NYPD: Driver Throws Bleach, Molotov Cocktail At Officer

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(AP) — A driver who ran a red light threw a chemical liquid at a New York City police officer, drove away and then tossed a flaming Molotov cocktail as officers pursued him Saturday morning, authorities said.

Body camera footage shows the driver tossing a liquid — later identified as bleach — at an officer who had pulled him over in Brooklyn.

Authorities said the man sped off and then suddenly stopped, tossed the Molotov cocktail at the officers, before fleeing a second time. He later crashed his car and was arrested. An additional Molotov cocktail was found inside the vehicle, according to Police Chief Rodney Harrison.

“Fortunately, our officers weren’t injured,” the New York Police Department said in a tweet, noting how the incident “proved once again that no traffic enforcement is ‘routine.’”

Harrison tweeted Saturday evening that the liquid thrown at the officer was bleach.

The incident happened just before 8 a.m. Charges are pending for the 44-year-old driver, whose name was not immediately released, 1010 WINS AM reported. The officer splashed with the chemical substance, according to the report, was treated for minor chemical burns.

Police Commissioner Dermot Shea on Saturday suggested anti-police sentiment may have played a role in the incident.

“Words matter,” he wrote in a statement posted on Twitter. “Earlier this week we said that again after graffiti that proclaimed ‘kill cops.’ This morning, a Molotov cocktail thrown at an occupied marked police car. Now more than ever is the time to come together, to move forward together.”

Mahmoud Abbas To Address J Street Conference

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(VIN) Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas will deliver a prerecorded address to J Street’s annual conference, a signal of the determination among progressives to place the Palestinian issue at the forefront of U.S. policy,

Abbas will thank President Joe Biden for resuming assistance to the Palestinians cut off by President Donald Trump, according to The Times of Israel, which first reported Abbas’ plans, as well as criticize what he will say are Israeli obstructions to peace, including settlement expansion.

J Street, a liberal Jewish Middle East policy group, is spearheading a bid to keep Biden to his promise of restoring U.S. relations with the Palestinians, and to advance from there to the resuscitation of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

There have been reports that Biden, while eager to roll back Trump’s marginalization of the Palestinians, is not enthusiastic about returning to the Obama-era focus on getting to a peace deal unless the initiative comes organically from the Israelis and Palestinians. Foreign policy progressives, led by J Street, are determined to keep Israeli-Palestinian peace an administration initiative.

The J Street conference, which will be held virtually Sunday and Monday, will feature leaders of Israeli parties advocating for Palestinian engagement and top progressive Democrats in Congress. Also, senior administration officials, including U.N. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield and Cedric Richmond, the top Biden official directing outreach to minority and special-interest groups.

The conference also will feature an award for former President Jimmy Carter, a sharp critic of Israel’s Palestinian policies. J Street confirmed this week that it was backing a bill in Congress that would seek oversight to ensure that Israel is not spending U.S. assistance on detaining Palestinian minors, destroying Palestinian homes or annexing territory.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said this week that the Biden administration is committed to expanding the Abraham Accords, the Trump-brokered normalization agreements last year between Israel and four Arab states. The Huffington Post reported this week that Rep. Michael McCaul, the senior foreign policy Republican in the U.S. House of Representatives, told AIPAC last week that the Trump administration had a policy of marginalizing the Palestinians.

Iran names suspect in Natanz attack, says he fled country

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In this image made from April 17, 2021, video released by the Islamic Republic Iran Broadcasting, IRIB, state-run TV, shows the portrait of a man identified as Reza Karimi alleged saboteur of the incident that damaged a centrifuge hall at the Natanz Uranium Enrichment Facility on Sunday, April 11, some 200 miles (322 km) south of the capital Tehran, Iran. Iran named the suspect Saturday in the attack saying he had fled the country "hours before" the sabotage happened. (IRIB via AP, File

 

(AP) — Iran named a suspect Saturday in the attack on its Natanz nuclear facility that damaged centrifuges there, saying he had fled the country “hours before” the sabotage happened.

While the extent of the damage from the April 11 sabotage remains unclear, it comes as Iran tries to negotiate with world powers over allowing the U.S. to re-enter its tattered nuclear deal and lift the economic sanctions it faces.

Already, Iran has begun enriching uranium up to 60% purity in response — three times higher than ever before, though in small quantities. The sabotage and Iran’s response to it also have further inflamed tensions across the Mideast, where a shadow war between Tehran and Israel, the prime suspect in the sabotage, still rages.

State television named the suspect as 43-year-old Reza Karimi. It showed a passport-style photograph of a man it identified as Karimi, saying he was born in the nearby city of Kashan, Iran.

The report also aired what appeared to be an Interpol “red notice” seeking his arrest. The arrest notice was not immediately accessible on Interpol’s public-facing database. Interpol, based in Lyon, France, declined to comment.

The TV report said “necessary actions” are underway to bring Karimi back to Iran through legal channels, without elaborating. The supposed Interpol “red notice” listed his foreign travel history as including Ethiopia, Kenya, the Netherlands, Qatar, Romania, Turkey, Uganda and the United Arab Emirates.

The report did not elaborate how Karimi would have gotten access to one of the most secure facilities in the Islamic Republic. However, it did for the first time show authorities acknowledging an explosion struck the Natanz facility.

There was a “limited explosion of a small part of the electricity-feeding path to the centrifuges’ hall,” the TV report said. “The explosion happened because of the function of explosive materials and there was no cyberattack.”

Initial reports in Israeli media, which maintain close relations to its military and intelligence services, blamed a cyberattack for the damage.

The Iranian state TV report also said there were images that corroborated the account of an explosion rather than cyberattack offered by security services, but it did not broadcast those pictures.

The report also showed centrifuges in a hall, as well as what appeared to be caution tape at the Natanz facility. In one shot, a TV reporter interviewed an unnamed technician, who was shown from behind — likely a safety measure as Iranian nuclear scientists have been assassinated in suspected Israeli-orchestrated attacks in the past.

“The sound that you are hearing is the sound of operating machines that are fortunately undamaged,” he said, the high-pitched whine of the centrifuges heard in the background. “Many of the centrifuge chains that faced defects are now under control. Part of the work that had been disrupted will be back on track with the round-the-clock efforts of my colleagues.”

In Vienna, negotiations continued over the deal Saturday with another meeting of diplomats from Iran and the five powers that remain in the deal, with expert-level working groups on sanctions-lifting and nuclear issues set to continue activities through to next week.

Iran’s negotiator told state TV that the talks had entered a new phase, adding that Iran had proposed draft agreements that could be a basis for negotiation.

“We think that the talks have reached a stage where parties are able to begin to work on a joint draft,” Abbas Araghchi said. “It seems that a new understanding is taking shape, and now there is agreement over final goals.”

Enrique Mora, the European Union official who chaired the talks, tweeted that “progress has been made in a far from easy task. We need now more detailed work.”

The 2015 accord, which former President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew the U.S. from in 2018, prevented Iran from stockpiling enough high-enriched uranium to be able to pursue a nuclear weapon if it chose in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.

Iran insists its nuclear program is peaceful, though the West and the IAEA say Tehran had an organized military nuclear program up until the end of 2003. An annual U.S. intelligence report released Tuesday maintained the longtime American assessment that Iran isn’t currently trying to build a nuclear bomb.

Iran previously had said it could use uranium enriched up to 60% for nuclear-powered ships. However, the Islamic Republic currently has no such ships in its navy.

The attack at Natanz was initially described only as a blackout in its electrical grid — but later Iranian officials began calling it an attack.

One Iranian official referred to “several thousand centrifuges damaged and destroyed” in a state TV interview. However, no other official has offered that figure and no images of the aftermath have been released.

___

Associated Press writers Jon Gambrell in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Geir Moulson in Berlin contributed to this report.

 

George W. Bush Renews Amnesty Push for Illegal Immigrants

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AP

CHARLIE SPIERING

Former President George W. Bush urged Americans Friday to join him in supporting widespread amnesty for illegal immigrants brought to the United States as children and those living in the country illegally.

“Americans who favor a path to citizenship for those brought here as children, known as ‘dreamers,’ are not advocating open borders,” Bush wrote in a Washington Post op-ed.

Bush pointed to former President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) amnesty program and called for a permanent amnesty for recipients.

Bush argued DACA recipients were “fundamentally American” and did not know any other home than the United States.

“They ought not be punished for choices made by their parents,” he wrote.

Bush is on a media tour promoting Out of Many, One, his book of stories and paintings of immigrant Americans.

He said that amnesty for millions of illegal immigrants in the United States would “fundamentally unfair” but still supported amnesty for illegals who “earned” citizenship.

He proposed amnesty for illegal immigrants in the United States who had proof of work history, paid a fine and back taxes, the ability to speak English, possessed knowledge of American history, and passed a criminal background check.

“The United States is better off when talented people bring their ideas and aspirations here,” he wrote.

The former president also called for increasing legal immigration, calling it “a choice that both parties should be able to get behind” and proposed also increasing temporary immigrant visas for seasonal work.

Bush tried to pass widespread amnesty for illegal immigrants in 2007 with the support of late Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and late Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA).
But the bill failed miserably in the Senate after only 33 Senate Democrats, 12 Senate Republicans, and one independent voted to support the bill. Fifteen Senate Democrats joined 37 Senate Republicans and one independent in voting against it.

In a recent interview with Norah O’Donnell, Bush agreed that failure to pass immigration reform was one of the biggest disappointments of his presidency.

Breitbart

IDF attacks Hamas targets in Gaza

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(INN) Israeli Air Force planes on Friday night attacked a series of Hamas terror targets in Gaza, in response to rocket fire on Israeli civilians.

 

Earlier on Friday evening, air raid sirens had sounded in the Israeli towns of Holit and Sdei Avraham, and a rocket exploded in an open area in the Eshkol Regional Council. No physical injuries or damages were reported.

According to an IDF spokesperson, one missile was identified as having been fired from Gaza into Israel. The IDF scanned the area where the missile fell, and there were no injuries.

In a statement, the Eshkol Regional Council said: “A short time ago, air raid sirens sounded in two towns in the Council (Holit and Sdei Avraham). It seems that one missile fell in an open area, outside a town. Right now there are searches by the military. There were no bodily injuries and it is not known that there was damage. We will update later.”

On Thursday evening, air raid sirens sounded in southern Israel, after a rocket was fired from Gaza into Israeli territory.

NYC mayoral candidate: Israel is an ‘apartheid’ state

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dianne.nyc

(INN) New York City mayoral candidate Dianne Morales called Israel an “apartheid state,” The Forward reported Saturday.

In a December recording obtained by The Forward, Morales can be heard speaking with Jewish high school students, saying that she “cannot advocate for equity and justice in New York City and turn a blind eye to the challenges around those issues in Israel and with the folks living in Gaza and in Palestine.”

“I think everybody has a right to live in dignity, everybody has a right to a home, everybody has a right to their land. No one has the right to do that at the expense of someone else, someone else’s freedom in particular. And that’s problematic to me.”

In addition to her claims of apartheid, she said that although she would not rule out future trips to Israel, she would also not participate in “propaganda trips,” such as the one she went on in 2015, which was arranged by the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York, The Forward added.

Morales, a former non-profit CEO and public school teacher, is currently polling at approximately three percent.

CNN Viewership Down By Half Since Biden Took Office, 60% In Key Demo

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(TJVNEWS.COM) CNN viewership has fallen over 50% in multiple categories since President Biden took office, according to Fox News.

In the first three weeks of 2021, the network averaged 2.2 million viewers – only to plummet to just one million viewers – a decline of 54%. Among the key advertising demographic of adults age 25-54, ratings are down 60%. From December 28 through Inauguration day, viewership went from 617,000 viewers in that demographic to just 244,000 since Biden took office.

CNN’s liberal primetime hosts Anderson Cooper, Chris Cuomo and Don Lemon haven’t been able to keep their audiences under the new administration, either.
CNN averaged 3.1 million viewers from 8-11 p.m. from Dec. 28 through Inauguration Day but only 1.4 million since for a whopping 55-percent decline. Over the same time period, CNN’s primetime lineup lost 63 percent of its viewers among the crucial demo. –Fox News

CNN also fared worse than liberal competitor MSNBC, which lost ‘only’ 34% of its total-day viewers, and 30% of primetime viewers under Biden. Fox News points out, of course, that their viewership has remained mostly flat – as declines remained in the single digits.

Arrogant CNN entertainer/anchor Don Lemon, who had been previously accused of sexually harassing a male bartender and was sued; appearing on a NY Times Podcast, let his bias fully be known to the entire world.

When asked if he was worried about the rating disaster, Lemon told the New York Times’ podcaster “Sway”:

No. I’m not worried about it … Trump was a horrible person. And he was terrible for the country. And it is better for all — for the world that he is no longer the President of the United States,” adding “So if that means that cable news ratings go down? Aww. So I’m not really that concerned about it. I would prefer that my ratings go down and Trump not be in office than my ratings be sky-high and him be there. That’s the honest truth.”

As Project Veritas exposed, CNN is in the propaganda business, not the news business, and Lemon’s statements further expose CNN.

 

“Walking While Black”: Viral Video of White Army Sgt. Pushing Black Man, Exposed as “Hate Hoax”

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social media

Jared Evan

Footage went viral of Army Sergeant Jonathan Pentland confronting the man who was walking in front of his home near Columbia, South Carolina. Millions of “anti-racists” on Twitter shared the video of this allegedly racist, bigoted, monster of a white man, kicking a harmless black man out of “his neighborhood”.

Pentland is seen threatening him with violence, at one point, shoving the young man hard in the shoulder, causing him to almost fall to the ground after telling him to leave the neighborhood. The stage was set for a crucifixion of an innocent man.

Pentland, 42, who was an active U.S. Army Sergeant assigned to Fort Jackson, has been charged with third-degree assault and battery and has been released from jail on a $2,125 personal recognizance bond, he was also suspended from his military job, Newsweek reported.

Turns out, there was more than meets the eye, and another “hate hoax” was perpetrated by taking a video, making it go viral, with no pretext.

Because of the Twitter  leftists, spreading the video, Pentland’s family was terrorized by a violent BLM mob who protested outside their suburban home in Columbia, South Carolina with megaphones, attacked his house with a baseball bat, splattered an unknown substance on his driveway, and garage door and threw a hammer through his second-floor window while “three people were upstairs at the time.”

The violent mob quickly emerged because of irresponsible and sloppy reporting, and Pentland’s arrest seems hardly justified after further details emerged.

The Washington Post actually reported the important details surrounding the viral video.

The filmed confrontation took place shortly after the “victim” allegedly approached “several neighbors in a threatening manner” and neighbors ran to Pentland’s house and begged him to help protect them.

All the evidence suggests Pentland was acting as a good Samaritan.

The story gets better.

WACH FOX 57 reported that the individual only identified in reports and social media as Deandre was harassing people in the area for several days. The Washington Post article also confirmed the Fox57 report below:

According to one incident report, an African-American man approached a woman walking in the area on April 8, put his hand around her waist and then put her hand down the side of her shorts. The woman then pushed away and when she did, her shorts partially came down. As she pulled her shorts back up, the man put his arm around her waist for a second time, according to the incident report. The woman then ran back into her home.
A second incident report showed on April 10 a woman was walking when an African-American man approached her and picked up a baby who was with her. The woman said he tried to walk away with the baby but she grabbed the child back. She said this happened three times before she told the man it was not her baby and she “did not have the right to allow people to hold the child.” She then went home and said she wanted to prosecute, but no charges have been filed, according to the incident report.

The Daily Mail(LINK)  reported Friday night that the alleged victim, who is being identified only as “Deandre,” is mentally ill and has now been committed to a facility. His prior  trespassing and animal cruelty charges were reportedly dropped after it was determined he is “mentally incapable of standing trial.”

In other words, a good samaritan, defending his neighbors from a mentally ill man, who tried to snatch a baby, who had been harassing women, trespassing, and abusing animals, was demonized on social media and by the media, for nothing.

Social media leftists and the compliant media are hungry for any story which can demonize caucasian Americans, without any fact-checking or verification. This is an unhealthy and dangerous pattern creating disharmony and racial tension across the nation.

Deandre was not confronted by Pentland because he is black, he was confronted because he was a threat to the community.