Distinction Matter - Subscribed Feeds

  1. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 15 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    On Elites' Batshit-Crazy Dedication To Ideas Bent On Destroying The American Republic...

    Authored by James Howard Kunstler,

    Now You Know

    "Being mean or telling the truth is indistinguishable to far too many people." 

    - Mike Thompson on X

    Woke liberalism is exactly what Christopher Lasch predicted in The Revolt of the Elites, published in 1995 the year after his early death at 61. Lasch saw how the juvenile idealism of Boomer hippiedom would slide into the narcissistic, sado-masochistic degeneracy of open borders, drag queen story hours, Covid-19 despotism, DEI racism, showbiz Satanism, censorship, forever wars, and now, the legal insurrection of lawfare.

    In doing so, Lasch also predicted the “mass formation psychosis” described by Belgian psychologist Mattias Desmet, spawned by a crisis of meaning and purpose in the thinking classes of Western Civ. And now you know exactly how come a place like Boston, with its concentration of “elites” in universities, computer tech, and medical research displays a batshit-crazy dedication to ideas bent on destroying our political culture: the American republic.

    The word republic derives from the Latin, res publica: the public thing, the idea of a state dedicated to the common good. By “state” you can infer both a group of people in a certain place, but also the set of conditions they dwell in. You can’t have a common good without a common culture, which means a general agreement among citizens on values in that certain place — which is our country, the USA.

    You can’t overstate the importance of shared ideas and values in that enterprise of being a nation, we-the-people in our particular place. 

    The juvenile idealism of Boomer hippiedom wrecked the crucial idea of a common culture, and I will tell you exactly how that happened. 

    Two crusades: first, the civil rights campaign, and second, stopping the War in Vietnam, defined the era.

    The first of these climaxed in twin landmark legislative acts designed to abolish Jim Crow racism: the Civil Rights Act of 1964, prohibiting discrimination in public places, and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which prohibited unfair obstacles to voting. 

    The idealism in that moment of history was extreme. 

    The dominant old-school Liberal ethos displayed a sense of triumph. Its cardinal belief in human progress was validated in the new law-of-the-land. We were supposedly entering a utopia of racial harmony.

    It proved to be a huge disappointment, a failure. 

    In some fundamental ways, black and white America could not agree on certain values, especially language and behavior. These matters were so hypersensitive that discussing them became taboo, and when someone dared to — such as the rogue journalist Tom Wolfe in his book Radical Chic, which made fun of the cultural elites trying to socialize with the Black Panthers — he was buried in the most extreme censorious opprobrium by the elite good-thinkers of politics, academia, and the cultural media. They couldn’t believe old Tom dove clear through the Overton Window the way he did, head first.

    In fact, a big segment of black America after 1965 became much more overtly separatist and oppositional, while white America became more frantically confounded and depressed by it. The result was the elite’s solution to that quandary: multiculturalism! Which basically meant: we don’t need a common culture in the USA. (We don’t need an agreement about values, language, and behavior.) Each group in America can have its own menu of these things. This accomplished two ends: it allowed criminal behavior to explode; and it allowed the elites to excuse themselves from any serious further attempts to manage the res publica. The people of the ghettos were free to do their thing; while the elites turned their full attention to Boomer careerism and Gordon Gecko style financial moneygrubbing.

    As for the crusade to end the War in Vietnam, that was also an epic failure, never properly acknowledged. In fact, no one in the USA, no party or faction, ended the war. We simply lost the War in Vietnam. We just never said so, and still don’t. It ended in ignominy, with the last remnants of US officialdom in Saigon having to be rescued by helicopter from the roof of the American Embassy. The so-called “gooks” in their black pajamas beat the giant American “grunt” army with its bottomless supply of attack helicopters and napalm. Chalk up another “L” for old school Liberalism.

    You can’t overstate how demoralizing this was. And so. . . the serial reenactments of our forever wars of recent decades, mostly botches and failures despite our vaunted “defense” establishment, our glorious war technology, and our fake commitment to “spreading democracy.” We simply need to prove that we can’t possibly lose wars against more primitive people — though we have lost repeatedly, the fiasco in leaving Kabul in 2021 being even more ignominious than the flight from Saigon. This can only be understood, finally, as a species of national neurosis.

    As was absolutely everything about the George Floyd riots of 2020, Wokery-in-action, with the torching of cities, the looting flash-mobs, and the tearing down of statues honoring American heroes. Try understanding that as the latest chapter in civil rights egalitarianism gone awry, starting with the sanctification of the druggie thug George Floyd, who so perfectly personified the failures of multiculturalism. (What were his values? Ever ask yourself that?)

    Now, try (if you can) to understand what the election of Mr. Trump represents: the drive to restore a viable American common culture, to re-set our agreement on values, to repair the broken res publica

    And note how wildly that is resented and opposed by this corrupt and degenerate residue of idealism gone to hell (literally), this ragtag and bobtail of Democratic Party elites, consumed in their mass formation psychosis, addicted to lying and violence, and furious that they are no longer in command.

    So, now you know how all this works. An American common culture matters, and if we can’t put it together, we’re sunk. This is our chance to put it together.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 16:20
  2. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 15 hours ago
    Author: Katelynn Richardson

    After the Biden administration spent four years “weaponizing” her division, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon says that she needs more “energized attorneys” to help her spearhead new initiatives to protect rights that have been trampled on in the past years.

    The priorities pursued in the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) Civil Rights Division by her predecessor Kristen Clarke — prosecuting pro-life activists, suing states over election integrity efforts and targeting police departments — are going to change, Dhillon told the Daily Caller News Foundation during a Friday interview.

    Under her leadership, Dhillon said the Civil Rights Division will continue its core mission, while expanding to new areas of focus including defending the Second Amendment, ending race discrimination in employment, securing parental rights and fighting antisemitism on college campuses.

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    Some current and former career attorneys in the division are claiming the shifts in policy will undermine civil rights enforcement. Last week, around a dozen senior lawyers in the division were reassigned, Reuters reported.

    “We have changed the priorities, not the mission, the priorities, in each of the sections in the Civil Rights Division,” Dhillon told the DCNF. “Some personnel here have decided that they’d rather make their careers elsewhere.”

    The following interview has been edited for the sake of length and clarity.

    A lot of Americans were concerned over the past four years how this division has been one of the most weaponized in the DOJ. What did you walk into three weeks ago when you came in?

    The Civil Rights Division is one of the largest litigating departments of the United States Department of Justice, and you’re correct, a lot of the most notorious, headline-grabbing policies out of the Biden DOJ came from the Civil Rights Division.

    For example, the Civil Rights Division was responsible for challenging Georgia’s election laws. The DOJ took it upon itself to harass Georgia over doing the right thing. The DOJ Civil Rights Division spent a lot of resources persecuting Christians for praying outside abortion clinics, not violently, not in any way obstructing people, just praying. That’s outrageous, and we’ve dismissed those prosecutions. The Civil Rights Division has been bringing and maintaining, I think, pretty flimsy cases against police departments and other law enforcement agencies for alleged statistical anomalies in arrest rates, very small anomalies. Statistics are easily manipulated.

    We are here to absolutely punish misconduct by the police, by employers, by housing agencies that discriminate against people, by educational institutions that discriminate against students and a whole host of other civil rights statutes. There’s human trafficking, certain human trafficking statues come under our purview.

    We’re required to enforce the federal civil rights laws. So all of that is going to continue to be done under the Civil Rights Division, disability law and all of that, but the emphasis is going to be different. It isn’t going to be on opening up investigations and harassing people endlessly and maintaining 40-and 50-year-old consent decrees. It’s going to be examining wrongdoing or alleged wrongdoing and determining quickly whether it occurred or not. If it does, we’ll go after it. If it doesn’t, we’ll move on.

    More importantly, I think the rights of ordinary Americans over the last years have been stripped and violated. The First Amendment: during COVID, we saw so many violations of civil rights in every single area, which is something that I took on as a private lawyer. The FACE [Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances] Act can be used to protect clinics where women get counseling about their options for abortion, and 200 of those have been violently attacked, firebombed, picketed and otherwise been obstructed over the last few years with zero action from the DOJ. That’s going to change.

    We have changed the priorities, not the mission, the priorities, in each of the sections in the Civil Rights Division. Some personnel here have decided that they’d rather make their careers elsewhere. So there’ll be quite a bit of turnover here in the Civil Rights Division.

    What does that look like as far as staffing? Do you have enough attorneys to execute those new priorities that you’re hoping to focus on?

    Love more. We’re waiting for, you know, throughout the federal government, people are being offered an opportunity to take severance that pays them for five months, and they don’t have to work anymore. They still stay on our books, so, you know, from the bean counter’s perspective I have all those people.

    But reality is, not only are we going to continue the mission of the Civil Rights Division, the traditional, core functions, there are a lot of new functions that our president wants us to be looking at, and new functions that I want to do. For example, the Second Amendment is a civil right. The Civil Rights Division has never gone after states that systematically violate our right under Bruen and other Supreme decisions to carry weapons, to bear arms, to keep them in our homes. We’re going to be doing that in the Civil Rights Division.

    I mentioned the FACE act, different applications of the FACE act. Rampant antisemitism on college campuses is going to come to an end under our purview. Employers that discriminate against people on the basis of race and use quotas in hiring that are in no way justified, public sector employers, will be getting inquiries from us, and so that’s a new priority that wasn’t being done before. That’s almost every employer in America, unfortunately, certainly in the public sector. We’re taking on de-banking practices.

    These are all new things. I’m going to need new, energized attorneys dedicated to this mission. Once we finish this reorganization, and finish the severance process, we’ll be hiring again.

    What are some of the lessons you learned from your private practice in the past that you’re bringing into your role here?

    I am the rare thing of a conservative civil rights lawyer almost my entire career. So for 18 years, I had my own law firm. For six years, I had a nonprofit that I founded. Both of those, well, one, represented the president in his campaign and his personal life, and many prominent people whose speech rights were violated.

    That’s something I’m very passionate about, the First Amendment. But during COVID, we saw every American’s rights trampled on in so many different ways. I filed more lawsuits during COVID than any other lawyer in the United States to challenge governors and local officials stripping away people’s private rights. So these are some of the things that I intend to bring to bear here.

    I’ve been a lawyer for the Second Amendment community. I’ve been a lawyer for the pro-life community. Very passionate about all of those areas. I’m not here to do my priorities. I’m here to do the president’s priorities, which happen to overlap a lot with my priorities.

    Another priority that Trump signed an executive order on is child gender mutilation and the transgender issue. Could you address specifically what actions you might be taking in the future? How you might be dealing with doctors, medical malpractice cases?

    I can’t be specific because that wouldn’t be appropriate, but I can tell anyone to look at my record. In my private practice, in my nonprofit, I represented four prominent young women who detransitioned — Chloe Cole, Luka Hein, Clementine Breen and one other. These girls and their families were sold a package of lies. They were subjected to medical malpractice, and frankly, doctors looked the other way on their actual medical issues and put them on this conveyor belt. Thankfully, each of them realized they made a terrible mistake, and they’ll never get their breasts back. Thankfully, worse wasn’t done to them.

    The president and the attorney general have emphasized that we need to be using female genital mutilation statutes that bar female genital mutilation on girls under the age of 18, a barbaric practice that we condemn around the world, but do right here in the United States. That doesn’t protect boys, unfortunately, but we will aggressively be looking at the extent to which doctors, medical institutions, public institutions, UCSF, and you know, all these public institutions around the country, have been violating the civil rights of American families.

    Some states are systematically destroying parental rights, which is a civil right, by enabling the smuggling of children across the state borders to obtain this destructive treatment and surgery. That’s illegal, in my opinion, and it may violate human trafficking statutes. So there are a number of things that we’re going to look at.

    On the religious liberty front, I know you’ve spoken a lot about that. Earlier this week, there was a meeting of the anti-Christian Bias Task Force. What do you see as the biggest issue in the religious liberty space?

    Well there’s so many. I’ve mentioned some of them, but I think there’s open hostility to religion in many sectors of our society.

    We’ve had presidents mock people who cling to their faith. People who sought medical exemptions from the COVID vaccine during that terrible era, were fired from our military, were fired from jobs all over the United States. There’s active anti-Christian hostility in the military, in various government agencies. Chaplains are told not to preach their faith if they’re Christian. I mean, there’s so many things. Secretary Hegseth went over those at our meeting. And State Department Secretary Rubio talked about examples over there.

    We have federal statutes that protect religion, not just the First Amendment, but there’s the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act. We’ve brought several cases in the DOJ Civil Rights Division to protect houses of worship, Christian and others. It’s an important right that we have, and we need to protect people of faith, even in prisons. People who have committed crimes don’t lose their religious rights. I’m very passionate about that issue, and have spent my entire 32 year career working to represent the rights of people of faith.

    On election security, I also wanted to ask you, what can be done about states that are allowing non-citizens on voter rolls? What role will the Civil Rights Division have in those issues?

    We have a role. We administer the Voting Rights Act, the Help America Vote Act, the National Voter Registration Act. Those are specific statutes. What we are not is the all purpose law enforcement agency of elections. Americans need to understand that most of our election laws are based in the states. However, there are these federal laws.

    As a lawyer for many candidates over the years, and having been a candidate myself, I’m very passionate about that. And as an immigrant to this country, I think it’s outrageous that people conflate immigrant and illegal immigrant and [say] ‘nobody should be asking for anybody’s ID.’ It’s 2025. Everyone in America who’s here legally can easily get an ID. So that’s nonsense.

    I do think that we need to be enforcing voter ID laws, allowing them, enabling them and making it easier for anyone who is legally entitled to vote in the United States to vote easily. That’s the bottom line. So the hostility that we see from one side politically and from judges to this basic concept, we have to work around it. There may be legislative solutions that are required, but whatever we can do at the DOJ to make sure that our elections are fair, safe and reliable, we will be doing.

    You mentioned judges. There’s been a lot of talk about district court judges overriding the president, a lot of the executive orders. What do you think the answer is there?

    Oh, that’s the heavy one. And I have to appear in front of these judges, so I will not say exactly what I think about some of these judges and their rulings. What I will say is that we have a runaway trend of judges, you know, substituting their judgment for the president’s. That is not what separation of powers means. I’ll leave it at that. I’m involved in several active cases. I can’t really take a position any more than this.

    Finally, what would you say Americans should expect from the Civil Rights Division over the next four years? What’s your final message?

    Well, they can expect that we’ll be enforcing the federal civil rights statutes. They can expect that the emphasis of that enforcement is going to be more towards the president’s agenda. He has many executive orders out there that I fully agree with and he has a right as an executive, the person that the American people chose to be our president, to direct that agenda.

    Now, that doesn’t mean we’re going to stop doing traditional work, like the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) is an important statute. Discrimination is bad. Violence at any house of worship or any health care facility is unacceptable, and all those statutes are going to be enforced. But we will not be weaponizing the federal government against law abiding citizens, against law abiding employers, against police departments that are trying to do the right thing and are largely doing the right thing. But if you’re enabling violent and obstructive, antisemitic protests on your campus, and I have jurisdiction, you will not be doing that.

    LifeNews Note: Katelynn Richardson writes for Daily Caller. Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience.

    The post Harmeet Dhillon Needs Conservative Attorneys to Reform DOJ Office That Targeted Pro-Life Americans appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  3. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 15 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    US Treasury Unexpectedly Reports Sharp Drop In Debt Borrowing Needs, Rates Slide

    In our preview of today's Treasury borrowing estimate release, we said that we expect the Treasury to announce $507bn in Q2 borrowing, a "figure much higher than Treasury’s estimate of $123bn in February" and entirely due to a lower starting cash balance, which as regular readers know, has collapsed due to the debt ceiling impasse that has forced the Treasury to draw down on its TGA (cash) balance as well as use various extraordinary measures.

    We were off by a tiny $7 billion, $507BN vs $514BN as per the table below:

    Source: US Treasury

    At 3pm ET, ahead of Wednesday's Refunding statement, the Treasury published its debt borrowing estimates for calendar Q2 and Q3 and it was just as expected:

    • During the April – June 2025 quarter, Treasury expects to borrow $514 billion in privately-held net marketable debt, assuming an end-of-June cash balance of $850 billion. The borrowing estimate is $391 billion higher than announced in February 2025, primarily due to the lower beginning-of-quarter cash balance and projected lower net cash flows, partially offset by lower QT (i.e. debt redemptions) to the tune of $60 billion. 

    The above was completely expected, which means it is completely distorted due to the ongoing debt ceiling standoff. This is what we said earlier:

    Treasury issuance in Q2 will most likely end up short of the estimate if the debt ceiling remains unresolved this quarter. Similarly, Q3 estimate will assume a normal beginning-of-quarter cash balance, but actual issuance could end up materially higher once the debt ceiling constraint is lifted during the quarter and Treasury begins to rebuild its cash balance (and if it isn't, and the US begins to default, there will be much bigger problems at hand than termed-out debt issuance).

    Translation: the Treasury drew down its cash by $444BN from $850BN to $406BN, also as we said in our preview.

    What we didn't say, because we didn't know it (and neither did anyone else), is what the Treasury reported as an endnote to its borrowing needs paragraph, namely that "the current quarter borrowing estimate is $53 billion lower than announced in February" which indicates that DOGE is indeed working and the US funding needs are actually declining. 

    To be sure, this also should not be a huge surprise, because as we also reported just before the Treasury press release, "fiscal flows year-to-date are coming in better than expected (thank you DOGE). Gross receipts are tracking slightly above prior-year levels (adjusted for CBO forecasts for 2025), while outlays are closer to the bottom of the historical range, although sadly nowhere near enough to make a notable impression over the long-term."

    And while fiscal flows could deteriorate in the coming quarters - especially if there is a sharp recession - that risk is largely viewed as relatively low, for now. Meanwhile, DB economists estimate the deficit impact from TCJA extension and other Trump proposals could be largely offset by higher tariff revenues this year, before the deficit widens out more substantially relative to the CBO baseline next year and onward.

    Looking ahead to calendar Q3, or the July – September 2025 quarter, the Treasury now expects to borrow $554 billion in privately-held net marketable debt, assuming an end-of-September cash balance of $850 billion. It remains unclear if the Treasury will be able to restore cash to its "runrate" balance of $850BN, as that will depend entirely on when the debt ceiling deal will be concluded. As a reminder, earlier we highlighted the thoughts of DB's Steven Zeng who moved
    his x-date estimate from late July to mid-August, indicating that there is a modest buffer, but not enough to push the debt ceiling date into Q4 without major damage.

    Finally, looking at the historical data, during calendar Q1 which ended March 31, 2025 quarter, the treasury borrowed $369 billion in privately-held  net marketable debt and ended the quarter with a cash balance of $406 billion. In February 2025, Treasury estimated borrowing of $815 billion and assumed an end-of-March cash balance of $850 billion. The $446 billion difference in privately-held net market borrowing resulted primarily from the lower end-of-quarter cash balance. However, excluding the lower than assumed end-of-quarter cash balance, actual borrowing was $2 billion lower than announced in February.

    In other words, DOGE is working: in Q1, US debt funding needs were $2BN less than the Treasury forecast in February, and in Q2 the Treasury is expected to need $53 billion less than it forecast 3 months ago.

    This unexpected drop in pro forma debt issuance (because one way or another, the debt ceiling constraint will go away), may be the reason why yields have been sliding all day, and at 4.21% are at session lows.

    Source: US Treasury

    *  *  *

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    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 15:49
  4. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 15 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    China Extends Its Suspension Of US LNG Imports

    Authored by Irina Slav via OilPrice.com,

    China has not imported any liquefied natural gas from the United States since early February, data from Kpler cited by Nikkei has shown. 

    The last LNG cargo that left the Gulf bound for China set off on February 6, the data showed.

    The Chinese tariffs on U.S. goods, including energy products, and the broader trade war between the world’s two biggest economies could have long-term consequences on the ability of new U.S. LNG export projects to attract anchor offtake commitments, analysts have warned.

    The United States was never a major supplier of LNG to Chinese buyers, but after Beijing slapped retaliatory tariffs on U.S. energy imports, the flow ended completely.

    Following the tariff exchange, Chinese LNG buyers with long-term supply contracts with U.S. producers started reselling the cargos to Europe, Bloomberg reported in March, citing sources from the trading world. What’s more, Chinese traders have grown cold towards new long-term commitments for future supply from the United States, instead seeking long-term deals with gas producers in the Middle East and the Asia Pacific.

    The latest news in that space was for a 15-year supply deal for liquefied natural gas from Emirati Adnoc, at a rate of 1 million metric tons annually. 

    This made the contract the largest LNG supply deal for a Chinese company, ENN Natural Gas. ENN said the agreement will boost energy supply security and diversify its sourcing.

    The outlook for Chinese LNG imports in general appears to be bearish, with BloombergNEF forecasting last month that high levels of gas inventories will push demand lower for the year, leading to the first annual decline in LNG imports since 2022.

    The tariff push is now affecting the U.S. LNG industry in another way as well. 

    President Trump has slapped tariffs on Chinese-built ships calling at U.S. ports, aiming to stir U.S. energy companies towards using U.S.-built vessels, of which there are none yet.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 15:40
  5. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 16 hours ago
    Author: Jaryn Crouson

    The University of Colorado Boulder (CU) sought to partner with an abortion clinic to host a now-canceled “Sex Ed Summer Camp” for incoming 5th through 8th grade students.

    The event, hosted in part with the Boulder Valley Health Center, planned to cover topics such as “bodies beyond the binary” and “gender and sexuality.” The health center announced the camp was canceled due to “safety concerns,” the clinic’s website states.

    “Sex Ed Summer Camp is everything your camper won’t always get to learn in school!” the now-removed CU webpage exclaimed. The camp also promised to be “justice-rooted” and “affirming,” according to advertisements.

    The Boulder Valley Health Center specializes in “reproductive and sexual health,” its website boasts, highlighting abortion and “gender affirming care” on its frontpage. The clinic specifically mentions offering “confidential” services for minors.

    “We understand how important privacy, or confidentiality, is to accessing medical care,” the center’s teen clinic page asserts. “We will not talk to anyone else about your visit, results, medications, or any other aspect of your care unless you give us specific permission to do so. Patient confidentiality also applies to patients who are under the age of 18.”

    The teen clinic lists vast “affirming” resources for minors questioning their gender.

    The Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment was met with an automatic reply email repeating the same language as the website.

    “Due to safety concerns, the Boulder Valley Health Center – CU Boulder’s Renee Crown Wellness Institute’s Sex Ed Summer Camp for 5th – 8th graders has been cancelled,” the clinic stated. “The camp aimed to provide age-appropriate sex education to prevent unwanted pregnancies and emphasize the importance of sexual health for overall well-being. Any extrapolation about the camp’s intentions is incorrect.”

    Current Colorado law provides a “right” to abortion and “gender-affirming” procedures, including for minors.

    CU did not respond to the DCNF’s request for comment.

    LifeNews Note: Jaryn Crouson writes for Daily Caller. Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience.

    The post Colorado University Cancels “Sex Ed Summer Camp” for Kids appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  6. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 16 hours ago
    Author: Sarah Neely

    A new study published as the “largest-known study of the abortion pill” reveals that the abortion drug, mifepristone, is 22 times more dangerous than the drug label currently indicates.

    The Ethics and Public Policy Center (EPPC) just released a study based on “analysis of data from an all-payer insurance claims database that includes 865,727 prescribed mifepristone abortions from 2017 to 2023.” That pool is in stark contrast to the 10 clinical trials with a total of 30,966 participants the FDA currently relies on, as well as Danco Laboratories, the largest provider of mifepristone in the nation.

    According to the study, 11% of women experience sepsis, infection, hemorrhaging, or another serious adverse event within 45 days following a mifepristone abortion. And, while the label for mifepristone claims the rate of these adverse events is “less than 0.5 percent,” EPPC’s much broader study reveals the “real-world rate of serious adverse events following mifepristone” to be 22 times higher than that.

    SUPPORT LIFENEWS! If you want to help fight abortion, please donate to LifeNews.com!

    Figure 1, Ethics and Public Policy Center

    In 2024, Operation Rescue’s Annual Survey highlighted these same growing dangers surrounding the abortion pill – drawing attention to women who have died, to an alarming boom in unregulated providers, and calling out the FDA’s wilful lack of oversight.

    “In the last few years, both the FDA and the former Biden administration steadily stripped away any common sense restrictions for such a dangerous drug,” says Troy Newman, President of Operation Rescue. “In 2023, even a required in-person visit with a real doctor was permanently eliminated, opening the floodgates for what we call the ‘virtual back-alley’ – unregulated, online suppliers of abortion pills. The number of those suppliers tripled between 2023 and 2024.”

    OR’s Annual Survey also shows that, while the number of surgical clinics were decreasing, the number pill-only clinics were on a steady rise from 2017 to 2023, the same timeline EPPC’s study uses for analysis.

    This steady rise, along with the recent explosion in online suppliers and other dangerous telemed options, have resulted in chemical abortions now accounting for two-thirds of all abortions in America. And, as predicted, this new study shows the rate of chemical abortion complications is also much higher than women have been told.

    “America is saturated with this ‘kill pill,’” says Newman, “and the FDA has shown no care whatsoever for the devastating effects. Even when women die.”

    In light of its new research, the EPPC study calls for the FDA to immediately reinstate stronger safety protocols for mifepristone, to investigate the true rate of injuries, and to reconsider the approval of the drug altogether.

    “Operation Rescue takes it even further,” adds Newman. “This study clearly shows how harmful this drug has been to women, and we already know it’s intentionally lethal to an unborn child. Moreover, these new stats indicate a total lack of scientific integrity within the FDA, Danco Laboratories, and any other providers of the ‘kill pill.’ We call for mifepristone to be banned immediately. As this new study so truthfully states: ‘Women deserve better than the abortion pill.’ Let’s ban the ‘kill pill’ now, America.”

    LifeNews Note: This article was originally published by Operation Rescue, a leading pro-life, Christian activist organization dedicated to exposing abortion abuses, demanding enforcement, saving innocent lives, and building an abortion-free America. The author, Sarah Neely, is Chief Operating Officer for Operation Rescue.

    The post Abortion Pill 22 Times More Dangerous Than FDA Reports appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  7. Site: RadTrad Thomist
    2 days 16 hours ago


    The friends of Sister Lucy Truth that I have met in Rome so far, tried to provide me an answer to the question as to why, so many pilgrims of all ages, especially young people a couple of days ago, would be flocking to fawn on every aspect of Francis/Bergoglio, the viewing of his body, his funeral, and to view his awful grave that stands in stark contrast to the astounding beauty of St. Mary Major. A cement hole in the wall with Francis' abstract "crucifix" are the things that strike you the most when you visit. 
    My friends, who are traditionalists in the widest sense, say that what I am looking at is a facade. The Italian Left were big lovers of Francis, for the simple reason that he was one of them. The young people like the New Church doctrine of living together without marriage and no demand to believe in particular doctrines, especially the doctrine of Hell. Francis has culminated Vatican II by creating a "church" without definitive lines, both with regard to morality and doctrine, but, also, with regard to everyday behavior --- you cannot really tell that the "pilgrims" to, say St. Paul's Out Side the Walls, were in any way distinct in their dress or behavior from any other youth that you typically meet in the Roman metro system. One of my friend called them "blasphemers," and laughed at the idea that they go to church. He indicated that the local priest tells the young that it is fine, in light of Francis' teaching, to live together before marriage. This is something they very much appreciate. Apparently, from what they say, this is universally the case in Europe, with the sole exception of Poland. Polish pilgrims are all over Rome, I would even say that I hear Polish spoken in the streets here now as second only to Italian. 

    My friends that I have met here have said that many of those in attendance at this Francis event, are merely the curious. They are here anyways for the hight of the tourist season in Rome and for the Jubilee Year "pilgrimages" led by a colored Novus Ordo Priest and what must be every remaining nun on the face of the earth! The Bergoglian Church IS a Church without rational, moral, and doctrinal lines. It includes everything --- except Catholic Tradition --- and yet nothing at the same time. Man as a rational animal is meant to draw lines. That is how he thinks by distinguishing one thing from another. That is not the beast that Roncalli and Montini have created and Bergoglio given full-spectrum dominance. 

    The doughy and indistinct face of Sister Lucy II needed to replace the highly differentiated and unrepeatable face of the real Sister Lucy. One fit the amorphous mass of New Church, the other definitely did not!




  8. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 16 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Unhinged Billionaire Democrat Gov. Calls For "Mass Protests" & "Mobilization For Disruption" Against Republicans

    Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker — a far-left billionaire born into wealth as an heir to the Hyatt hotel fortune — has called for "mass protest and mobilization for disruption" against the Republican Party.

    "Never before in my life have I called for mass protests, for mobilization, for disruption. But I am now," Pritzker told the audience at the New Hampshire Democratic Party's annual McIntyre-Shaheen 100 Club Dinner on Sunday evening. 

    Pritzker continued: "These Republicans cannot know a moment of peace. They must understand that we will fight their cruelty with every megaphone and microphone that we have. We must castigate them on the soap box and then punish them at the ballot box."

    Pritzker calls for mass protests and disruption - “Republicans cannot know a moment of peace,” he says, swaying their portraits will one day be put in museums “reserved for tyrants and traitors” pic.twitter.com/BBBuL1Uz9O

    — Edward-Isaac Dovere (@IsaacDovere) April 28, 2025

    Pritzker's fiery speech last night at the 100 Club Dinner in New Hampshire strongly suggests he is considering a presidential run and testing the waters: 

    • New Hampshire is a critical early primary state, and the McIntyre-Shaheen Dinner is one of the biggest Democratic Party events in the state.

    • Presidential hopefuls typically use speeches there to build national visibility, court party insiders, and gauge grassroots support. 

    The billionaire Democratic governor is testing the waters after socialists Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders toured the country in private jets to campaign against "oligarchy" — a nationwide touring effort largely seen as a dud.

    Pritzker, who is an heir to the Hyatt Hotels fortune, has criticized the Trump administration's deportation efforts of illegal alien criminals, as well as Elon Musk's DOGE efforts to eliminate fraud and waste from the bloated federal government. 

    Publicly available data shows the wealthy Pritzker family and their connection with Hyatt.

    Pritzker might also be jumping into action after President Trump issued a presidential memorandum last week to target Democratic online donation platform, ActBlue, specifically cracking down on foreign contributions in American elections.

    The rudderless Democratic Party can't win with common sense, so they are doubling and tripling down on more protests funded by NGOs. As the saying goes, doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results is the definition of insanity.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 15:20
  9. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 16 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Generative AI Could Be Supercharging Freight Industry Fraud

    Authored by Mark LaBrosse via FreightWaves.com,

    We’ve all heard how emerging AI technologies will optimize the freight industry in ways we can only dream about. But the scary truth is that AI is already fueling our nightmares—by supercharging freight theft.

    Why aren’t more people talking about the dark side of AI? For one, most of the worries are centered on job loss and plagiarism. But perhaps it’s largely because it’s so good that it’s hard to detect. Regardless, it’s clear some strategies are already in play.

    What’s critical to know: Even those highly attuned to scams can fall victim as generative AI more closely mimics real business experiences and enables crime syndicates to operate at scale.

    This is an arms race. It will take good-guy tech fighting bad-guy tech and a coordinated human response to protect cargo from these modern cyber pirates.

    Discerning real from fake is getting increasingly difficult

    Crime syndicates can already evade detection and prosecution by operating outside the United States and creating new fraudulent documentation whenever they’re discovered. 

    With AI in play, these bad actors are orders of magnitude more effective.

    “Generative AI makes fraud an infinitely scalable and near-automatic process,” warns BAYNCORE senior consultant Dr. Richard Paul, who earned his PhD in computer simulation and artificial intelligence.

    “Anyone can now set up an AI bot to scan the internet for key fragments of information,” Paul explains. “When assembled, these simple AI tools can automatically create documents, emails, and text messages that appear legitimate.”

    Monitoring a freight industry awash in phishing scams, Brittany Graft, COO of fraud prevention platform Highway, shares Paul’s concern.

    “If we take phishing schemes, for example, we historically have been able to detect and avoid them because the English is broken, the grammar is poor, or a logo is misplaced. AI is going to help the bad guys create an experience that so closely replicates what brokers and carriers are used to,” says Graft, “that the discerning eye will have a harder time picking up that it’s a scam.”

    “Already, we’re seeing phishing attempts work because the imitations are so good,” Graft continues. “If we click some of these links, they look exactly like the legitimate site.”

    And once brokers and carriers enter their credentials into illegitimate login pages and websites, their accounts—even email inboxes—are immediately compromised. From there, it’s quick work for AI agents and those using the tools to insert themselves at every level, logging into load boards, capturing freight, and creating havoc.

    Complicating matters further, bad actors can use generative AI to beat the numbers game by creating tens or even hundreds of fraudulent carriers or brokers—complete with cloned sites, identical documents, and perfectly written emails. 

    One, two, even fifty fraudulent carriers could be caught, and it would barely be a dent in the coming cyber threat onslaught.

    “At the same time, freight brokers are being held to ever-higher standards of accountability in the court of law,” according to FreightWaves Group President, Kaylee Nix. “The situation has reached a crisis, and it’s time for the industry to come together to address this critical problem and share best practices on how to mitigate it.”

    In response, the logistics industry’s largest media platform is hosting a FreightWaves Fraud Symposium on May 14 to help brokers better protect their businesses and customers.

    FBI raising the alarm on deepfakes

    In December 2024, the FBI issued an alert, drawing attention to how criminals are using generative AI to scam the general public. These same tactics are also being deployed against freight industry businesses and their customers.

    In addition to creating fraudulent credentials, the FBI specifically cites how vocal cloning, audio bots, and generative video can falsely confirm the identity of the person you’re speaking to.

    Now classic verification methods, like a simple phone call to confirm identity, can be thwarted.

    “They can convince you they are from someone you know,” Paul says. “Complete with intimate details about you, in a familiar tone, even convincingly cloning a voice you know well.”

    Paul adds, “The content and messaging these custom AIs generate is near-perfect, even better than legitimate actors frequently create—and thus is very hard to detect.”

    Graft shares these concerns.

    “We go really deep on verifying the identities of motor truck carriers and the individuals who represent them,” she says. “We collect their driver’s license, ask them to take a live photo, and verify that their digital identity matches their physical identity.”

    “We’re aware of the potential for generative AI to replicate that live photo step and potentially try to brute force the system by creating multiple attempts to see which one will work,” Graft continues. “We’re bringing machine learning into that process to detect the visual signals on AI-generated photos and monitor the number of attempts.”

    It’s clear—we’ll need tech solutions like this to get ahead of AI-enabled fraud.

    Building trust face-to-face: The freight industry’s human response

    If you’re worried about strategic cargo theft, you’re not alone. A Freight Caviar poll found that double brokering was the leading fraud concern among brokers, topping outright theft and hijacking. 

    In this threat landscape, it’s highly likely that every broker and carrier in the country has already been targeted—or will be in short order. It’s the worst-kept secret in the industry. Unfortunately, victimized brokers and carriers have experienced a shocking lack of action when they’ve turned to the FMCSA. This rapidly rising fraud simply hasn’t been an agency priority.

    While the federal government has yet to take meaningful action, freight brokers and carriers aren’t standing idle. They are taking their own actions, adopting new tools, and opening up dialogue.

    Partly in response to this chaos, they’ve banded together and launched the Broker-Carrier Summit to deliver critical education, build relationships, and open up the lines of communication necessary to strengthen the industry and help fend off scammers.

    Fighting fire with fire: The freight industry’s tech response

    While emerging technologies have enabled a whole new level of criminality, brokers and carriers also leverage cutting-edge tech to protect against AI-powered scammers. In fact, tech-enabled fraud prevention tools have done more to combat this increasingly sophisticated threat than anything else out there.

    Graft agrees.

    “We’ll have to increasingly rely on technology to help us ascertain identities because AI is going to get better at impersonating reality,” she says.

    What tools do we have at our disposal?

    Digital identity wallets, like the well-established ID.me, are now taking direct aim at deepfakes, leveraging biometrics for facial verification and liveness detection. (Privacy concerns aside.)

    Carrier vetting platforms, including FreightValidate and Carrier411, surface an operator’s entire history—or, in the case of many bad actors, the lack of a legitimate history.

    Some carrier identity SaaS systems and plugins, like Highway, feature machine learning (ML) to monitor inbound phone calls and email inboxes, looking for various fraud signals, like spoofed phone numbers and email addresses.

    As this digital war rages on, some fraud detection tools are getting into a more proactive position, now executing real-time behavioral and intent monitoring—detecting increasingly subtle patterns.

    It’s a lot to take in, I realize. The growing scale of strategic freight theft—up 1,500% since 2021, according to the American Trucking Association—is enough to leave you breathless.

    We’ll need every human and tech-enabled arrow in our quiver to protect our supply chain.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 15:00
  10. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 17 hours ago
    The archbishop of Goa, 72, has chaired the Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences since the start of the year. He has been very attentive to the life of families whom he constantly encouraged in his ministry. As head of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India-Latin Rite, he promoted a broad consultation in the dioceses, which led to a document with 16 priorities, including Dalits and digital technologies.
  11. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 17 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Putin Declares Surprise 3-Day Ceasefire In Ukraine For WW2 Victory Day

    In an unexpected development on Monday Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered a temporary ceasefire in Ukraine on the occasion of Russia's Victory Day celebrations, coming next week.

    This year's observance will mark the 80th anniversary of the Soviet Union's victory over Nazi Germany in World War II. The Kremlin published a statement calling for the ceasefire to being at midnight on May 8, lasting until midnight on May 11. The Kremlin intends for all Russian military operations to be suspended.

    This full three-day ceasefire would mark the longest such pause in fighting of the war, following on the heels of this month's 30-hour Easter truce, which largely held but saw accusations of repeat violations hurled between both sides in some locales.

    Prior 'Victory Day' parade, via AP

    The ceasefire is “out of humanitarian considerations," the statement indicated. "Russia believes that the Ukrainian side should follow this example," the Kremlin added.

    "In the event of ceasefire violations by Ukraine, the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation will respond appropriately and effectively."

    Moscow further said it "reaffirms its readiness for peace negotiations without preconditions, aimed at addressing the root causes of the Ukrainian crisis and engaging constructively with international partners."

    Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha, was the first to respond on behalf of Kiev, and asked why there can't be an immediate ceasefire, if Moscow is willing to declare one for May 8.

    "Why wait until May 8th? If the fire can be ceased now and since any date for 30 days — so it is real, not just for a parade," Sybiha wrote on X. "Ukraine is ready to support a lasting, durable and full ceasefire. And this is what we are constantly proposing, for at least 30 days.”

    One Russian source has been quoted as pointing out this is largely about signaling the Trump administration:

    “We are sending a signal to the outside world: we are peace-loving, and they [in Ukraine] are terrorists — referring, for example, to the recent killing of General Moskalik,” said the official, who was granted anonymity to talk candidly about the situation.

    “Another intended recipient of this signal is the U.S. president himself: ‘Look, Mr. Trump, we are trying,’” the official added.

    Trump has been increasing the pressure not only on Zelensky but on Russia too, warning both sides that US patience will run out, and urging the forging of a ceasefire within days.

    But in reality neither side has budged, given also just on Monday FM Lavrov set forth maximalist demands to end the war: full recognition of Russian control over the four territories, 'deNazification', and a pledge for Ukraine to never joint NATO, along with protection of the Russian language in Ukraine.

    New on MoA:
    Russia Rejects Trump's Freeze Of The War In Ukrainehttps://t.co/Adz8e0loFS pic.twitter.com/Gxk7JTtvZ5

    — Moon of Alabama (@MoonofA) April 28, 2025

    However, Trump has lately suggested he thinks Zelensky is ready to give up Crimea, but there's been no official confirmation of this as of yet. The Ukrainian leader would face immense pushback from many of his own military commanders if he formally relinquishes territory.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 14:20
  12. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 17 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Trump Pinpoints Biden Operative Who Most Of All "Should Be In Jail..."

    Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

    President Trump has called for the person who was operating the autopen that signed many documents, and pardons, while Joe Biden was in office to be jailed.

    In a Truth Social post Sunday, Trump wrote “Hopefully ACTBLUE, the Democrats ILLEGAL SCAM used to raise money, including from not allowed “foreign contributions,” is being looked at by authorities. The Dems only know how to win by CHEATING, something which they do better than any group or party in history.”

    He added that “now, with their terrible policies and candidates, and with people like Crooked Adam Schiff, who demanded a full Pardon from Sleepy Joe, leading the way, it is almost impossible to reach their money goals. The USA is wise to these scoundrels and crooks.”

    Executive Orders were signed that Biden himself had no recollection of signing.
    Speaker of the House Mike Johnson has talked about this at length.
    It doesn't seem like Biden was actually in control of the Executive Branch ... which is concerning, to say the least.

    — The Conservative Alternative (@OldeWorldOrder) April 27, 2025

    “Also, why did the Auto Pen give Schiff a Pardon?” Trump continued, adding “Biden knew nothing about it. Who operated the Auto Pen? That is the biggest question being asked in D.C. They almost destroyed our Country. They should all be in jail!!!”

    The autopen scandal is a big deal. You can't have someone basically forging the President's signature on important documents.

    — Red Moon (@LSDSurvivor) April 27, 2025

    They weren't elected the President of the United States, and these people committed crimes that abused the elderly dementia victim Joe Biden's name plate.

    — AC Cibock (@CibockAc67066) April 27, 2025

    Last month, Trump declared that all of the pardons issued by ‘Joe Biden’ in the final days of his fake Presidency are void because he didn’t sign any of them.

    He added that anyone who receive a pardon should not rest assured that they are immune from investigation, adding “In other words, Joe Biden did not sign them but, more importantly, he did not know anything about them! The necessary Pardoning Documents were not explained to, or approved by, Biden.”

    “He knew nothing about them, and the people that did may have committed a crime,” Trump further urged.

    The autopen issue was revealed in findings from The Oversight Project.

    The organisation released further analysis finding that Biden’s pardons for family members, Anthony Fauci, General Milley, J6 Committee members, and Gerald Lundergan were all autopenned.

    The Oversight Project also found that two different autopens were used, pointing out that Neera Tanden was the White House Staff Secretary when Biden autopenned pardons from a golf course in the US Virgin Islands.

    You were White House Staff Secretary when Biden autopenned pardons from the golf course in USVI.

    This you? https://t.co/26z9C6cE7m pic.twitter.com/7btD2RTX0N

    — Oversight Project (@ItsYourGov) March 17, 2025

    *  *  *

    Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 14:00
  13. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 17 hours ago
    Author: Alex Schadenberg

    An article published in the Toronto Sun on April 25 and written by Brian Passifiume concerns David Baltzer, a Canadian veteran who was offered euthanasia instead of medical treatment in December 2019.

    Baltzer, a two tour Afghanistan combat veteran with the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry (PPCLI,) told the Toronto Sun that:

    he was offered MAID in Dec. 23, 2019 — possibly making him among the first Canadian soldiers offered therapeutic suicide by the federal government.

    “It made me wonder, were they really there to help us, or slowly groom us to say ‘here’s a solution, just kill yourself,”

    The Toronto Sun reported Baltzer as saying:

    “I was in my lowest down point, it was just before Christmas,” he told the Sun.

    Follow LifeNews.com on Instagram for pro-life pictures and videos.

    “He says to me, ‘I would like to make a suggestion for you. Keep an open mind, think about it, you’ve tried all this and nothing seems to be working, but have you thought about medical-assisted suicide?’”

    Baltzer said that the suggestion left him reeling. Passifiume reported that Baltzer was offered treatment for PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder) after returning from Afghanistan. The treatment was unsuccessful. Baltzer then turned to alcohol and substance abuse to deal with his trauma. Passifiume reported that:

    The story first came out when when he was interviewed by CAF veteran Mark Meincke, whose trauma-recovery podcast Operation Tango Romeo broke the story.

    Meincke said Baltzer’s story shoots down VAC’s assertions blaming one caseworker for offering MAID to veterans, and suggests the problem is far more serious than some rogue public servant.

    “It had to have been policy. because it’s just too many people in too many provinces,” Meincke told the Sun.

    Meincke and Baltzer are calling for a complete reform of the Veterans Affairs.

    Meincke said that he knows at least 5 veterans who were offered MAiD by veterans affairs.

    LifeNews.com Note: Alex Schadenberg is the executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition and you can read his blog here.

    The post Disabled Veteran With PTSD Offered Euthanasia Instead of Treatment appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  14. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 17 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Actor Jon Voight To Tell President Trump How To "Fix" Hollywood

    Actor Jon Voight and his manager, Steven Paul, are preparing to present President Donald Trump with proposals to boost U.S. film and TV production as soon as this week, according to Bloomberg.

    Beyond traditional state tax credits, their plan could include incentives for infrastructure, job training, and tax code changes.

    “It’s important that we compete with what’s going on around the world so there needs to be some sort of federal tax incentives,” Paul said. He added that their goal is to curb the current state-by-state competition for productions and bring business back from overseas.

    Bloomberg writes that film and TV production has declined in California and across the U.S. as studios cut back and other countries like the UK, Australia, Hungary, and Spain lure projects with tax incentives.

    “It’s been very, very difficult here,” Paul said. “We’re feeling the cries of people in town.”

    A California bill aiming to more than double state film incentives to $750 million annually is moving through the legislature. Voight, alongside actors Mel Gibson and Sylvester Stallone, was named by President Trump in January as a special ambassador to Hollywood. Scott Karol, president of SP Media Group, said Voight’s team has consulted studio executives, union leaders, and state officials for input.

    One proposal could involve extending and expanding Section 181 of the U.S. tax code, which currently allows $15 million in accelerated deductions for productions but is set to expire this year.

    Another idea is to incentivize long-term investments like sound stage construction, similar to Netflix’s 10-year deal in New Jersey. Paul, who produced Man With No Past with Voight, said he plans to shift three upcoming films to California and invest in a Los Angeles studio.

    * * *

    Grab a lighter / flashlight combo and a Knife for free shipping at ZH Store. 

     Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back

     

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 13:40
  15. Site: Henrymakow.com
    2 days 18 hours ago

    toys-tariffs.jpeg

    Please send links and comments to hmakow@gmail.com

    Trump will be forced to back down on tariffs as his popularity plummets.

    President Trump battered by brutal polls that show his approval sinking -- including one revealing the lowest ratings since World War II. 


    "In one poll from Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos, Trump's standing was the lowest of any president in the first 100 days of his term since 1945, with 39% saying they approve of his job performance while 55% disapprove."
    -
    China rejects Trump claims of Xi Jinping tariff phone call

    China and US 'have not engaged in consultations or negotiations regarding tariff issues,' foreign ministry says, as Beijing keeps up denials


    "Never interrupt your enemy whe he is making a mistake."




    Makow- China is hanging Donald Trump out to dry. Like his buddy Satanyahu, Trump's only way out may be to escalate. After all, this trade war is reallly about repatriating the supply chain in advance of WW3. 

    China shrugs off threat of U.S. tariffs to economy, says it has tools to protect jobs


    The officials who spoke Monday reiterated China's rejection of what leaders there call bullying.

    "They make up bargaining chips out of thin air, bully and go back on their words, which makes everyone see one thing more and more clearly, that is the so-called 'reciprocal tariffs' severely go against historical trends and economic laws, impact international trade rules and order and seriously impair the legitimate rights and interests of countries," said Zhao Chenxin, deputy director of the National Development and Reform Commission, the country's main economic planning agency.

    ----

    "Worse Than Trudeau: Canadians Should Expect Disaster With Carney In Charge" :

    " By most accounts, the majority of Canadians were ecstatic to see Trudeau exit the stage."

    "But what if they still haven't learned their lesson?  How is that even possible?"

    "Carney has rebranded himself as a "centrist" in order to win public favor, but nothing could be further from the truth.  Mark Carney is, in fact, worse than Trudeau on every level."



    -
    chinese-negotiations-psychiatrist.png
    On April 23, the White House released a statement revealing that foreign companies are investing billions of dollars in U.S.-based manufacturing. These include Swiss drug and diagnostics company Roche, which looks to invest $50 billion into manufacturing and R&D in the U.S.


    -

    Nova festival founder outed as Israeli intel collaborator involved in Gaza genocide



    --



    The Roots of Christian Zionism: The Scofield Bible Apostasy


    This "Roots of Zionism" presentation may be the first of its kind with a factual explanation of how Christianity's latest apostate epidemic was launched with the publishing of C. I. Scofield's reference Bible in 1909, and the influence of the notes in it.


    --
    1745696424905.jpg
    Hamdy Mig--"Today I am experiencing loss again. The occupation directly targeted my cousin, my friend, and my beloved, which led to his martyrdom. I said goodbye to him and buried him today."

    A Way to Help Gaza


    C'mon gold bugs!  Share some of your good fortune!


    For Greater Glory: Mexico's Cristeros Resistance


    "In 1914, President Carranza -- who put in place by the U.S. -- inaugurated a period of open persecution. Priests were massacred, including 160 killed in Mexico during February 1915. Nuns were abused and conscripted as camp followers and concubines of the warring factions roaming the country. John Lind, one of Woodrow Wilson's advisers, rejoiced over the news: "Great news! The more priests they kill in Mexico, the happier I shall be!"

    --

    rfk-shmuley-schneerson.jpg_jpg
    (RFK Jr. may be doing good things but he is posing with Rabbi Schmuley in gaze of Rebbe Schneerson)

    Having been called a liar by Anthony Fauci for saying that "not one of the 72 vaccines mandated for children has ever been safety tested", RFK Jr. sued Fauci.

    After a year of stonewalling, Fauci's lawyers admitted that RFK Jr. had been right all along.


    "There's no downstream liability, there's no front-end safety testing... and there's no marketing and advertising costs, because the federal government is ordering 78 million school kids to take that vaccine every year."

    "What better product could you have? And so there was a gold rush to add all these new vaccines to the schedule... because if you get onto that schedule, it's a billion dollars a year for your company."

    "So we got all of these new vaccines, 72 shots, 16 vaccines... And that year, 1989, we saw an explosion in chronic disease in American children... ADHD, sleep disorders, language delays, ASD, autism, Tourette's syndrome, ticks, narcolepsy."

    "Autism went from one in 10,000 in my generation... to one in every 34 kids today."

    -

    Feels like the Zionists have turned over a rock and all the drugged Demonrats are scurrying about in complete disarray.

    -

    Eckhart Tolle's Teachings are Consistent with Christ's


    -
    n-korea.jpeg
    It's a world war. 

    Putin thanks North Korean troops for assistance in retaking Kursk from Ukraine
    Pyongyang acknowledged for the first time its deployment of troops to assist Russia in its war against Ukraine


    In remarks released by the Kremlin, Putin praised the Korean People's Army (KPA) units for fighting "shoulder to shoulder with Russian fighters" to defend Russia's Kursk Oblast. "The Russian people will never forget the heroism of the DPRK special forces," Putin expressed, vowing to honor the sacrifices of the Korean soldiers who fought alongside Russian troops.



  16. Site: Mises Institute
    2 days 18 hours ago
    Author: Daniel Morena Viton
    The welfare state is supposed to signal the existence of the “compassionate” society that provides care for all. However, this “compassion” has resulted in the proliferation of social pathologies that undermine civilization itself.
  17. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Elevated by Pope Francis in 2022, the first East Timorese cardinal is a Salesian from a small Catholic country where young people make up 70 per cent of the population, marked by a long struggle for independence from Indonesia. Appointed bishop of Dili in 2016, he inaugurated the John Paul II Catholic University and promotes an 'open' and united Church. He remembers the joy of welcoming the pontiff before an immense crowd on Francis's trip last September.
  18. Site: Henrymakow.com
    2 days 19 hours ago


    Obby-Khan-and-Wally-Daudrich-e1742588352151.png

    by Larry Brandt
    (henrymakow.com)


    The Manitoba Progressive Conservatives are in freefall -- and it's no accident. Once a party grounded in personal freedom, fiscal responsibility, and common sense, it has abandoned its roots to chase the approval of special interest groups, lobbyists, and political
     insiders.

    The recent leadership race was a disaster that confirmed the rot. Instead of learning from the elitist failures of the past, the party doubled down. Only 10,990 memberships were sold -- nearly half of the previous race. Just 6,750 ballots were returned. Wally Daudrich won the popular vote with 3,387 votes to Obby Khan's 3,334 -- a clear one-person, one-vote victory. But the PC establishment had already stacked the deck with a manipulated "points system," allowing Khan to seize victory by weighting small ridings
     heavier than large ones. In places like Steinbach, Daudrich's strong showing was diluted. Meanwhile, Khan's wins in low-turnout ridings like The Maples translated directly into points.

    Even Premier Wab Kinew could see it coming. The fix was in.

    The will of the membership was thrown aside in favor of what insiders wanted. The result? A deeply divided party, rapidly shrinking, financially strained, and morally compromised.

    The scandals continue to pile up.

    • Over $2 million in consulting contracts were quietly funneled to the PC's failed campaign manager, Marni Larkin, through daycare projects while the PCs were in government.

    • The son of a major PC fundraiser was handed multimillion-dollar daycare construction contracts without competitive oversight.

    • A campaign "car rental" expense turned out to be a hidden payment to a known sex coach.

    • The Integrity Commissioner's pending report into the Sio Silica project looms over the party, with serious questions about attempted fast-tracking after electoral defeat.

    • Now, the party's newly installed leader, Obby Khan, faces a $400,000 lawsuit from a former business partner alleging financial wrongdoing.

    At the same time, the PCs -- led by figures like Khan -- are increasingly paralyzed in the face of street-level violence and campus protests where hatred toward Jews is openly displayed. They cannot -- or will not -- forcefully condemn the violent, hate-filled
     ideology taking root, because political Islam now lurks just beneath the surface of their new coalition.

    This is no accident. Political Islam, dressed as a religion, has destabilized the Middle East and Europe -- and now it's creeping into Canada. It does not coexist with Western freedoms. It seeks to dominate them. And with figures like Khan at the forefront,
     the Manitoba PCs have placed themselves on the wrong side of history, unable to defend the very principles our civilization was built upon.

    Unless the Manitoba Progressive Conservatives return to true conservative values -- courage, accountability, and loyalty to the people, not the elites -- they will not just lose power. They will lose their soul.

    For true conservatives -- for those who still believe in protecting our freedoms, in honest leadership, and in standing unapologetically for the people -- there is a better choice: the Keystone Party of Manitoba.

    The Keystone Party represents the future that the PCs abandoned: a movement built not for lobbyists or insiders, but for ordinary Manitobans who are tired of being sold out. It is the home for those who will no longer tolerate corruption, ideological drift,
     or moral cowardice.

    If you believe in real conservatism, if you want real leadership with real accountability -- then it's time to walk away from the broken PC establishment and build something better.

    It's time to come home. It's time to build Keystone.
  19. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    'They Lied To Us About Iraq's WMDs, But They've Taken It To Another Level With Ukraine...'; Hitchens

    Authored by Peter Hitchens via The Daily Mail,

    In my trade I have long grown used to the way governments lie and get others to lie for them. 

    It is what they do.

    But I have seldom seen such a cloud of lies as we face now. Hardly anyone in this country knows the truth about Ukraine. 

    There has been nothing like it since we were all lied to about the Iraq invasion, with bilge about fictional ‘Weapons of Mass Destruction’. The liars were caught out. 

    And they learned from it. They learned to lie more skillfully.

    Meanwhile, many of those in our society who knew how to challenge such lies died off or retired and were not replaced.

    We have never had a debate about the Ukraine crisis which started from the beginning. Did anyone in power ever tell you truthfully how, when or why this war began? No. Did anyone in power explain why Britain, crime blighted, decrepit, rubbish-strewn, rat-infested, broke Britain, had to get involved in it? Never.

    You have just been fed propaganda rubbish about ‘democracy’, freedom and an invented Russian menace. Here are some of the lies you have repeatedly been told.

    The war, they say, was not provoked. Seldom in history has a war been more provoked.

    Russians, nice ones like the liberal, democratic politician Yegor Gaidar, and nasty ones like the bloody despot Vladimir Putin, begged the West to stop trundling its military alliance, Nato, eastwards towards Russia.

    ALL Russians, including the great anti-Communist author Alexander Solzhenitsyn, had been shocked and angered when Nato in 1999 abruptly gave up its defensive posture and launched attacks on Yugoslavia – which had not attacked a Nato member.

    These protests reached their peak in February 2007, when Putin made a dramatic speech in Munich. He said Nato expansion was ‘a serious provocation that reduces the level of mutual trust. We have the right to ask: against whom is this expansion intended?’

    Look, if someone as gaunt as Putin spoke to you like that in a pub late in the evening, you’d take it as a warning that he was seriously riled. And unless you wanted a fight, you’d back off. But we didn’t back off.

    US President George W.Bush, the genius who invaded Iraq, deliberately raised the temperature the following year. Can it be that Bush likes wars?

    In April 2008, Bush said that Ukraine should be placed on the path towards joining Nato. Even the Guardian, the Liberal Warmonger’s Gazette, conceded that this was ‘likely to infuriate the Kremlin’. And so it did. I suspect we were on the path to war from that moment.

    I am always accused, when I say that, of making excuses for Putin. I am not. 

    I think he was stupid as well as wrong to be provoked. Wise men ignore provocations. But to claim he was not provoked is just to lie.

    Another lie we are repeatedly told is that Russia attacked Georgia later in 2008. But anyone can find, on the web, a 2009 Reuters news agency story headlined ‘Georgia started war with Russia: EU-backed report’.

    The dispatch summarises an inquiry by the respected Swiss diplomat Heidi Tagliavini. She had been asked by Brussels to look into that war. That is what she said. But, somehow or other, a lot of Western media outlets failed to find space for it. I still meet supposedly informed people who have never heard of Ms Tagliavini or her report.

    And then there is the claim that this is about democracy and freedom. It isn’t. The more the West claims to care for these things, the less it does to help them.

    Some examples: 

    Ukraine’s elected president was lawlessly overthrown by a mob in 2014. Britain and the USA condoned this shameful event because they preferred the illegal rebels to the elected government. You just can’t do that and pretend to be the guardian of democracy. But then, we aren’t anyway.

    You will search in vain for protests against the treatment of Romania’s presidential candidate, in a country that is in the EU and Nato.

    CALIN Georgescu’s election was annulled by judges in December when he looked like winning the first round. And he has been banned from standing in the second round – all because he has the wrong kind of politics. And if that’s not enough, look at the West’s deep, shaming silence over the frightening, thuggish behaviour of Turkey’s President Recep Erdogan.

    A few weeks ago, this Turkish Putin arrested and jailed Ekrem Imamoglu, an opposition politician who looked likely to beat him at the polls.

    Mr Imamoglu joined the many journalists and democrats who already rot in Turkish prisons.

    Erdogan has crushed free media, free speech and the freedom to protest. But his country is still allowed to stay in Nato, and Western states have made less noise than an angry vole guarding its nest. They’re scared of Erdogan.

    I won’t even try to explain how Germany recently recalled its old, dead parliament to push through laws the newly elected parliament would not pass. This was done to allow the spending of extra billions on the Ukraine war. But I hope you get my drift.

    Demand proper debate. Demand the truth. Don’t be dragged into more stupidity, or we will end up with bomb craters as well as potholes.

    *  *  *

    Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 12:00
  20. Site: The Remnant Newspaper - Remnant Articles
    2 days 19 hours ago
    May the Lord in His infinite mercy look upon the prayers, tears and sacrifices of all true Catholics who love our Mother Church, who in these days humbly and confidently implore the infinite Mercy of God to grant us a new Pope, who burning with the zeal for the glory of Christ and the salvation of souls, will “strengthen the brethren in faith” (Luke 22:32), being uncompromisingly faithful to his name and duty as Successor of Peter and Vicar of Christ on earth.
  21. Site: OnePeterFive
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Author: Bishop Athanasius Schneider

    May the Lord in His infinite mercy look upon the prayers, tears and sacrifices of all true Catholics who love our Mother Church, who in these days humbly and confidently implore the infinite Mercy of God to grant us a new Pope, who burning with the zeal for the glory of Christ and the salvation of souls, will “strengthen the brethren in faith” (Luke 22:32), being uncompromisingly faithful to his…

    Source

  22. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: John Stonestreet and Shane Morris

    The recent debates over in vitro fertilization and surrogacy have taught us that most Christians aren’t prepared with answers for what’s ahead. And that means we will be in even more trouble with crazier and more dystopian-sounding technology, which is surely on the way. If we do not embrace a robust theology of what it means to be human that includes the design and inherent goodness of the body, we’ll have no idea whether to reject, redeem, or participate in the innovations. 

    Just recently, an article in the MIT Technology Review explored growing human bodies without brains or consciousness in order to harvest their organs for transplant. According to the authors, who are three researchers at Stanford, the ability to create “spare bodies” for parts may be closer than we think. In fact, it’s close enough that, they said, the public and lawmakers must start thinking through the issue now.  

    SUPPORT LIFENEWS! If you want to help fight abortion, please donate to LifeNews.com!

    “Recent advances in biotechnology,” the article stated, “now provide a pathway to producing living human bodies without the neural components that allow us to think, be aware, or feel pain.” Such “bodyoids,” as they call them, are possible due to recent medical innovations like pluripotent stem cells that “mimic” embryos, “genetic techniques to inhibit brain development,” and “artificial uterus technology,” which could be used to grow the bodies. Combined, these techniques could result in “a potentially unlimited source of human bodies … that lack sentience or the ability to feel pain.” 

    The authors admit that many may find this possibility “disturbing” but, in a familiar refrain, argue that the potential benefits outweigh the risk. After all, bodyoids could enable faster approval of new drugs, shorter wait times for organ replacement, and many lives saved.  

    Yes, movies have been made to warn us against this kind of thing. Not least of which, Michael Bay’s The Island with its plot about clones grown in a sealed-off community so customers in the real world can harvest their organs, is chillingly prescient. In that film, the moral conflict comes when the “bodyoids” become conscious. But does that make a difference? What if they were grown not from actual embryos, but from adult stem cells that behave like embryos? What if they’re not whole bodies, but only collections of organs? Isn’t this the type of stem cell research that bioethicists were advocating for years ago?  

    Even if “bodyoids” would be mere spare parts, how many “spare parts” should we transplant into someone’s body and for what reasons? Is there a number of parts that is “too far”? Let’s say, for the sake of discussion, “bodyoids” reached the stage at which they could replace much or even most of a person’s body and were even better parts, possibly delaying or reversing aging. Is that something we should do? At what point does a quest for health become a quest for immortality? What even is a human body, if not the sum of its parts?  

    Behind the desire to have a ready supply of “replacement” body parts is a strong dose of the modern Gnosticism that divides humans up body and soul, along with the related assumption that a body is only a human being when conscious or able to feel pain. And that reveals the heart of this biotech crisis. Most Christians, specifically evangelical Protestants, lack the kind of ethical formation to even attempt answers to such questions. If we weren’t ready for IVF, surrogacy, or the debate around so-called “fertility” treatments, or the aftermath of the birth control pill and how it taught modern couples to view sex and children, we don’t have a prayer on this one.  

    In Catholic circles, documents such as Pope Paul XI’s Humanae Vitae and John Paul II’s Theology of the Body lectures proved helpful. We need not agree with everything in those works (and I don’t) to admit they represent deeply serious, theologically informed, and ethically and scientifically robust efforts to think through new technologies in light of the ancient truths of creation. And though it’s fair to say that much of the Catholic laity do not always live consistently with this theology, a greater confusion results in not having the theological clarity at all.  

    As science fiction-style technology accelerates, Christians must get serious about bioethics and the theology of being human. We won’t know what to do with brainless “bodyoids” if we are theology-less brains and bodies. Even worse, we won’t have any way to resist that which destroys, exploits, or dehumanizes God’s image.  

    Even the Stanford authors admitted that “the ethical and social issues are at least as important as the scientific ones. Just because something can be done does not mean it should be done.” They don’t mean that, at least according to everything else they wrote, but I couldn’t agree more. Let’s ask the hard questions and pursue God-honoring answers.

    LifeNews Note: John Stonestreet writes for BreakPoint.org. This article was originally posted here. This Breakpoint was co-authored by Shane Morris.

    The post Scientists Want to Grow Human Bodies Without Brains to Harvest Their Organs appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  23. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    The 51st State Goes To The Polls

    By Philip Marey, senior US strategist at Rabobank

    For now, Trump’s advisors seem to have talked him out of firing Powell, easing market stress last week. The VIX fell from almost 36 on Monday to 25 by the end of the week. However, as we warned a year ago and last month, the Fed and Trump are on a collision course and we are likely to see further confrontations as the Fed’s cutting cycle is slowed down by the inflationary impact of the tariffs. At a closed door IMF meeting on Friday, Powell is reported to have stressed that central banks must be shielded from politics to ensure they can focus on keeping inflation stable and employment high. While he drew applause for these remarks, his audience can do very little to keep him safe from Trump.

    On Saturday, the FOMC’s external communications blackout started. However, Powell has already made clear that May 7-8 is not a live meeting. This also means that we are not going to get Fed reactions to some interesting data points that are scheduled for this week, including Q1 GDP, March PCE inflation and April payrolls and unemployment. 

    Week ahead

    Today, the Canadians go to the polls. The two largest parties are the Liberals (Mark Carney) and the Conservatives (Pierre Poilievre). Justin Trudeau resigned as Prime Minister of Canada on January 6, following declining poll numbers and the resignation of Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland. Caretaker Prime Minister Mark Carney has called a snap election for today. 

    After Trudeau's resignation, Liberal Party support surged from 20% to 43% under Mark Carney, and the Liberals are leading polls for the first time since 2022. Carney's agenda focuses on economic growth, affordability, and global trade, including eliminating the carbon tax, ambitious housing plans, and infrastructure investment. 

     Tight Race in Canadian Election As Liberals Hang On | Statista 

    You will find more infographics at Statista

    Poilievre and the Conservatives, with the slogan "Canada first, for a change," aim to lower the lowest income bracket and introduce a tax cut to defer capital gains taxes when reinvesting within Canada, as their campaign gains momentum. 

    For more details on the Canadian election, please read the preview of the Canadian elections by Christian Lawrence and Molly Schwartz. 

    Meanwhile, the American interest in Canada has not waned. In an interview with Time magazine, published on Friday, US President Trump repeated his claim on Canada. He said: "I'm really not trolling. Canada is an interesting case.…  I say the only way this thing really works is for Canada to become a state."

    Tomorrow, we get the US goods trade balance for March, which turned more negative since December due to rising imports that are likely caused by front-loading because of the tariffs. In February, the trade deficit declined a little due to a rise in exports. Trump’s intended reciprocal tariffs are proportional to the trade deficits with the various trading partners, but many are now trying to negotiate their way out of them. Trump expects some results in a few weeks. Keep in mind that the specific part of the reciprocal tariffs (i.e. above the 10% universal tariff) were delayed until early July for most countries.

    We also get the Conference Board report on US consumer confidence, which has declined, also because of the tariffs. While the assessment of the present situation has fallen back to levels shortly before the November elections, the expectations index has plummeted to the lowest level since 2013. So American consumers are very pessimistic about the impact of Trump’s policies.

    On Wednesday, we get the Australian CPI for March and the Chinese PMIs for April. Eurozone CPI data for April and GDP growth for Q1 are also scheduled, with separate data for individual Eurozone countries.

    In the US, the advance estimate of Q1 GDP growth will be published. The consensus expectation is only 0.2% growth (this is at an annualized rate!), a substantial slowdown from 2.4% in the final quarter of last year. Strong imports, likely caused by front-loading the tariffs, have been a major drag on GDP growth in Q1.

    US personal income and outlays for March will also be published. This report includes the PCE deflator, the Fed’s preferred measure of consumer price inflation. The consensus expectation is a decline in headline PCE inflation to 2.2% in March from 2.5% in February. The core PCE deflator is expected to fall to 2.6% from 2.8%, which would suggest continued stickiness. Another data point that the FOMC usually pays attention to is the Employment Cost Index for Q1, which is expected to remain at 0.9%. However, both the ECI and the PCE may now be seen as rearview mirror data points in light of the anticipated inflationary effects from the tariffs.

    Finally, the ADP statisticians will publish their estimate of US employment growth in the private sector, which they think is informative regarding Friday’s payrolls. The ADP measure is expected to slow down to 128K in April from 155K in March.

    On Thursday, the Bank of Japan is expected to keep the target rate unchanged at 0.50%. However, the BoJ will publish its quarterly outlook, which will extend projections through March 2028.

    We also get the US initial jobless claims for the week ending on April 26. They have been moving sideways recently, hovering around the post-2021 average, so they have not been a cause for alarm yet.

    The ISM manufacturing report for April will also be published. Last month, the headline index fell below the neutral level again, but remains in the range it has been moving in since 2023. The employment sub-index has been sliding downward, albeit slowly, since 2021 as the Fed has tried to rebalance the labor market. In contrast, the prices paid sub-index has been on the rise since the elections.

    On Friday, all eyes will be on the US Employment Report for April, featuring the nonfarm payrolls and the unemployment rate. The consensus expectation is a slowdown to 130K in April from 228K in March. This would still be better than the slow first two months of the year. Unemployment is expected to remain unchanged at 4.2%. Average hourly earnings are also expected to remain stable at 0.3% month-on-month, which should lead to a modest increase to 3.9% from 3.8% in year-on-year terms. A report like this would certainly not make the Fed’s May meeting a live one. However, the Fed will stay alert for signs of deterioration in the labor market that would warrant a rate cut in June.

    Apart from these data points, the daily tariff news will likely move markets.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 11:20
  24. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Steven Ertelt

    A Nebraska teenager who slit her newborn son’s throat after giving birth in secret has been sentenced to 35 to 60 years in prison

    The terrible case is a reminder of the disregard for human life that abortion exacerbates.

    Chloe Coplen-Anderson, now 18, pleaded no contest to second-degree murder in the November 2023 death of her infant, an act that shocked the small community of Gordon.

    Police were called to a home in Gordon, Nebraska after getting a report that a newborn baby was not breathing. The police report indicates the officer met the girl’s father at the door and was told “it’s too late.”

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    The officer found a teen girl squatting inside a bedroom and the girls’ mother was holding a newborn baby wrapped in a towel. The girl’s mother was crying hysterically crying and told the officer “she hurt him,” and said “you can see the marks.”

    The officer observed that the baby’s throat had been slit or cut and the child had multiple stab wounds in his chest. The girls’ parents said they saw their daughter with a knife but the knife was missing at the time the baby was discovered.

    Sheridan County District Court Judge Travis O’Gorman handed down the sentence Thursday, ensuring Coplen-Anderson will be at least 51 before she is eligible for release. The case, detailed in court documents, revealed a grim scene: the newborn suffered a severed windpipe and multiple stab wounds to the chest, inflicted moments after birth in the teen’s bedroom.

    According to a Gordon Police Department report, officers responded to Coplen-Anderson’s home after her father claimed the baby was stillborn. However, her mother identified the teen as the killer, leading to the discovery of a blood-smeared bedroom and a knife hidden in a closet. The teen, then 16, had concealed her pregnancy, a factor her attorney, Todd Lancaster, cited as a mitigating circumstance.

    Lancaster argued that Coplen-Anderson was 15 when impregnated by a 19-year-old, constituting statutory rape under Nebraska law. He also presented evidence of her mental health struggles, including post-traumatic stress disorder and depression, and noted that no adults had intervened to support her during her pregnancy. Despite these claims, the court prioritized the gravity of the crime.

    The sentencing has sparked debate on social media, with some X posts calling it justice for the infant, while others questioned whether the teen’s age and circumstances warranted leniency.

    This was a deliberate act against a defenseless child who deserved protection. This tragedy highlights why we must support both mothers and their babies and ban abortions so people understand babies need protecting.

    Nebraska’s pro-life laws, strengthened since the 2022 Dobbs decision, include measures to support pregnant women through pregnancy resource centers and expanded social services. Advocates argue that such programs could prevent similar tragedies by offering counseling, medical care, and adoption options.

    Coplen-Anderson, who has spent two years in custody, will serve her sentence at the Nebraska Correctional Center for Women. Her legal team has not indicated whether they will appeal.

    The post Teen Who Slit Her Newborn Baby’s Throat Sent to Prison for 35+ Years appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  25. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Ukrainian Army Commander Openly Threatens Zelensky: Will 'Regret' Ceding Territory

    Russia on Monday made clear that it is sticking by initial demands raised by Moscow at the start of the war in February 2022, after President Putin last week issues statements which appeared open to compromise for the sake of peace talks.

    Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has declared that Russia will never give up its hold over Crimea, as well as the annexed regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson oblasts. He named as a condition for peace negotiations that Russia's control and sovereignty over these territories is vital and essentially non-negotiable.

    "The international recognition of Crimea, Sevastopol, the DPR, the LPR, the Kherson and Zaporozhye regions as part of Russia is another imperative," he said. "All the commitments Kiev assumes must be legally binding, contain enforcement mechanisms and be permanent," Lavrov added.

    Image: Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs

    "Russia proceeds from the premise that Kiev’s non-accession to NATO, as well as reaffirming its neutral and non-aligned status as per the 1990 Declaration on Ukraine’s State Sovereignty - these factors form one of the two pillars for a final settlement to the Ukraine crisis that would meet Russia’s security interests," he continue.

    The top Russian diplomat also demanded that Ukraine enact legislation that restores and protects Russian language, culture, and churches and monasteries in Ukraine. Some one-third of the country has long spoken Russian as their first language, and many more know it as a second language.

    Zelensky has been waging a state persecution campaign against the largest Orthodox Church in Ukraine, because it has not broken spiritual communion with the Moscow Patriarchate, at times outright seizing monasteries and churches, and arresting bishops and priests. Russian media broadcasts and media have also long been banned.

    Lavrov detailed of Moscow's demands, "The second pillar consists of overcoming the legacy of the neo-Nazi regime which took power in Kiev after the February 2014 putsch, including the initiative by its perpetrators to eradicate and cancel, in both physical and legislative terms, everything Russian, be it the Russian language, media, culture, traditions, or the canonical Orthodox faith," as conveyed in TASS.

    "Demilitarizing and de-Nazifying Ukraine is also on the agenda, along with lifting sanctions, withdrawing lawsuits and cancelling arrest warrants, as well as returning Russian assets subjected to the so-called freeze in the West," he emphasized.

    Of course, there's also the ban on Ukraine ever becoming a member of NATO, which is a key compromise already being offered by the Trump administration.

    Again, all of this is essentially identical to the demands articulated by Putin at the very beginning of the full-scale war. President Trump, coming off the brief Rome meeting with Zelensky, thinks he's ready to give up Crimea:

    US President Donald Trump has said he thinks Volodymyr Zelensky is ready to give up Crimea, despite his Ukrainian counterpart’s previous assertions on the Black Sea peninsula that was annexed by Russia in 2014.

    Speaking to reporters at an airport in New Jersey on Sunday a day after meeting with Zelensky at the Vatican, Trump said “Oh, I think so,” in response to a question on whether he thought Zelensky was ready to “give up” the territory.

    But is the Ukrainian leader really ready to do this and face attacks - possibly even assassination attempts - from within his own far-right paramilitaries and even army commanders? 

    A Ukrainian Army brigade commander openly threatens Zelensky on a Ukrainain TV show.

    He warns him not to negotiate with Russia, not to concede territory, or he will "Regret it"

    Open threats to the commander in chief from his own troops, Ukraine is a lawless basket case. pic.twitter.com/McN1GjlkIM

    — Chay Bowes (@BowesChay) April 28, 2025

    While the common Ukrainian populace is likely more willing to find compromise for the sake of peace, there are still Azov militants and their associates running the show in many places - and their position remains that no compromise whatsoever should be made and the fight must continue, even as Ukrainian forces are being beaten back.

    Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has warned in a media interview that if Washington imposes more sanctions on Russia, this basically assures more war for years to come. "The minute you start doing that kind of stuff, you're walking away from it, you've now doomed yourself to another two years of war and we don't want to see it happen," he said.

    He added: "There is no other country, there is no other institution or organization on the Earth that can bring these two sides together, no one else is talking to both sides but us and no one else in the world can make something like this happen but the president."

    * * *

    More headlines via Newsquawk... Geopolitics: Ukraine

    • US President Trump met with Ukrainian President Zelensky at the Vatican for 15 minutes which Zelensky’s staff said was constructive, covered a lot of ground and they agreed to meet again, while the White House said the meeting was very productive.
    • US President Trump said the meeting with Ukrainian President Zelensky went well and we'll see what happens in the next days, while Trump is very disappointed with Russia and wants Russian President Putin to stop shooting and reach a deal. Furthermore, Trump said the confines of a deal are there and that Zelensky is calmer now and wants to make a deal, while it was separately reported that President Trump said he thinks Ukrainian President Zelensky is ready to give up Crimea, according to Al Arabiya.
    • US President Trump said there was no reason for Russian President Putin to be shooting missiles into civilian areas, cities and towns over the last few days which makes him think that Putin doesn’t want to stop the war and is just ‘tapping’ him along, while Trump added too many people are dying and this has to be dealt with differently through banking or secondary sanctions.
    • US Secretary of State Rubio said Russia and Ukraine are generally closer to a peace deal than in the last three years and a peace deal needs to happen soon, while he added that the US has options to hold responsible those that don’t want a Ukraine peace deal, according to NBC.
    • Russian President Putin confirmed Russia’s readiness to negotiate with Ukraine without preconditions during a meeting with US envoy Witkoff, according to IFAX.
    • Russian President Putin said Kyiv’s adventure in the Kursk region completely failed and Chief of General Staff Gerasimov said Ukrainian saboteurs in Russia’s Belgorod region have been liquidated. Furthermore, Russia’s military commander told Russian President Putin that scattered remnants of Ukrainian forces in Russia’s Kursk region will be destroyed soon, according to RIA.
    • Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov said Russia will continue to target sites used by Ukraine’s military, foreign fighters and military instructors sent by Europe, while he added that Russia would be willing to store Iran’s enriched nuclear material if both the US and Iran believe that was useful.
    • Ukrainian military said Moscow’s assertion it has ended Ukraine’s incursion into the Kursk region is not true and operations inside Kursk continue, while its forces are still on active operations in the Belgorod region.
    • French President Macron said he had a very positive exchange with Ukrainian President Zelensky and that Ukraine is ready for an unconditional ceasefire, while the coalition of the willing will continue working on a ceasefire and lasting peace in Ukraine.
    • German Defence Minister Pistorius said US demands for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia are going too far.
    • North Korea confirmed troop deployment to Russia and said it will faithfully implement its agreement with Russia, according to Yonhap. Furthermore, South Korea said North Korea's confirmation of Russia troop deployment is an admission of a criminal act and the US State Department noted it is concerned by North Korea's direct involvement in Russia's war in Ukraine, while it added that North Korea's military deployment to Russia and any support provided by Russia to it in return must end.
    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 11:00
  26. Site: Ron Paul Institute - Featured Articles
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Ron Paul

    News this week that Elon Musk will soon be departing his “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) is a grim reminder of what happens when you challenge big spending DC. Unfortunately, the lesson once again is that when you challenge the empire, the empire eventually strikes back.

    President Trump rode into office with the help of Elon Musk’s ambitious plan to cut two trillion dollars in spending and slash useless and bloated government bureaucracies. Opinion polls demonstrated the huge popularity of the “Department.” Americans were excited when DOGE came to DC.

    The exposure of the real harm being done to the country by agencies like USAID and others reinforced the idea that much of the “Federal bureaucracy” was simply not needed. Although Musk became a figure of hate for the entrenched special interests, to the large chunk of America forced to pay for Washington’s excesses he became a hero.

    Many in Congress, seeing its popularity, actively embraced DOGE. Suddenly those who helped us rack up 37 trillion in debt were talking about making huge cuts and posing for photos with Musk.

    Unfortunately, after the photos were taken and the hoopla had died down, Congress returned to doing what it usually does: nothing. There is no way for a DOGE to succeed without the Legislative Branch enshrining those cuts in legislation. But when the massive “Big Beautiful” spending bill was introduced, the spending cuts were nowhere to be found.

    In the end it was the Beltway addiction to the global US military empire that may have hammered the final nail in DOGE’s coffin. The “Big Beautiful” spending bill actually increased military spending even after President Trump hinted that a 50 percent cut was possible. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth bragged about presiding over the “first” trillion-dollar defense budget. Starting a war on Yemen – at over a billion dollars a month – and saber rattling over Iran are the most obvious evidence that the empire has struck back. And of course the DC hawks want to “confront” China.

    This isn’t the first time a populist, popular movement to tame the Beltway beast was embraced then defeated by that same beast. The “Tea Party” movement was launched in December, 2007, with volunteers supporting my 2008 Presidential campaign holding a record-breaking 24 hour “money bomb” on the anniversary of the 1773 Boston Tea Party.

    Americans sick of deficit spending, over-reaching government, and the costly and counterproductive US military empire overseas, joined together to demand change. The “money bomb” success got Washington’s attention – money is the lifeblood of the political class – and before too long politicians of all stripes declared themselves to be part of the “Tea Party.”

    They loved the popularity of associating themselves with the “Tea Party.” But actually cutting government? Not so much.

    The first thing these newly-minted “Tea Party” members rejected was our demand for an end to the unsustainable, bloated military budget and our aggressive foreign policy. Eventually they backed away from other spending restrictions and within a few years the “brand” was diluted and tossed away.

    What is the lesson here? Is it all futile? Hardly. The popularity of DOGE shows that Americans still want a much smaller government. That is great news, and the country owes a debt of gratitude to Elon for reminding us of this. But until Americans elect Representatives who have the courage to follow through beyond photo-ops, we will sadly continue down the path toward bankruptcy and collapse.

  27. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    US Crypto Rules Like 'Floor Is Lava' Game Without Lights; Hester Peirce

    Authored by Ciaran Lyons via CoinTelegraph.com,

    SEC Commissioner and head of the crypto task force, Hester Peirce, says US financial firms are navigating crypto in a way that’s similar to playing the children’s game “the floor is lava,” but in the dark.

    “It is time that we find a way to end this game. We need to turn on the lights and build some walkways over the lava pit,” Peirce said at the SEC “Know Your Custodian” roundtable event on April 25.

    The lava is crypto, says Peirce

    Peirce explained that SEC registrants are forced to approach crypto-related activities like “the floor is lava,” where the aim is to jump from one piece of furniture to the next without touching the ground, except here, touching crypto directly is the lava.

    “A D.C. version of this game is our regulatory approach to crypto assets, and crypto asset custody in particular,” she said.

    Peirce said that, much like in the game, firms wanting to engage with crypto must avoid directly holding it due to unclear regulatory rules. 

    “To engage in crypto-related activities, SEC-registrants have had to hop from one poorly illuminated regulatory space to the next, all while ensuring that they never touch any crypto asset,” Peirce said.

    Source: US Securities and Exchange Commission

    Peirce said that investment advisers are often unsure which crypto assets qualify as securities, what entities count as qualified custodians, and whether “exercising staking or voting rights” could trigger custody violations.

    “The twist in the regulatory version is that it is largely played in the dark: burning legal lava and no lamps to illuminate the way.”

    Peirce also said that a broker or ATS that cannot custody or manage crypto assets will struggle to facilitate trading, making it unlikely for a “robust market” to develop.

    Echoing a similar sentiment, SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda said at the event that as more SEC registrants work with crypto assets, it’s essential that they have access to custodial options that meet legal and regulatory requirements.

    Uyeda said the agency should consider letting advisers use “state-chartered limited-purpose trust companies” with the authority to hold crypto assets as qualified custodians.

    Meanwhile, the recently sworn-in chair of the SEC, Paul Atkins, said that he expected “huge benefits” from blockchain technology through efficiency, risk mitigation, transparency, and cutting costs.

    He reiterated that among his goals at the SEC would be to facilitate “clear regulatory rules of the road” for digital assets, hinting that the agency under former chair Gary Gensler had contributed to market and regulatory uncertainty.

    “I look forward to engaging with market participants and working with colleagues in President Trump’s administration and Congress to establish a rational fit-for-purpose framework for crypto assets,” said Atkins.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 10:45
  28. Site: Euthanasia Prevention Coalition
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Alex Schadenberg
    Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

    New York state legislature.
    Action Alert: The New York assisted suicide Bill (A136 / SB 138) will be debated very soon.

    We urge you to contact members of the New York State Senate Health Committee (Link to Senate Health Committee) and the New York State Assembly Health Committee (Link to Assembly Health Committee) to express your opposition to assisted suicide Assembly Bill A136 and Senate Bill SB 138.

    An article by Vaughn Golden that was published in the New York Post explains that the issue of assisted suicide was brought up in a special budget meeting last week. Golden reports that supporters of assisted suicide claimed that they had the necessary votes to get the assisted suicide bill passed.

    The article doesn't specifically state that the assisted suicide bill was brought up as part of a political "trade off" to get the budget passed, but this would not be the first time that an assisted suicide bill was prioritised as part of budget negotiations.

    In 2023 I referred to New York York state assisted suicide Bill A0995 as a "trojan horse" bill since Paulin "tightened" the bill to get it passed with the stated intention of expanding the assisted suicide law later.

    While listening to a video of a conference promoting the New York state assisted suicide bill, Assemblywoman Amy Paulin, stated (starting at 18:40) that:
    No person can administer the medication to the patient. It has to be self-administered.

    We've been criticized by some organizations that actually want an expansion to that but we've held firm because... we want to get this passed first.

    And then perhaps if other states who have had more experience feel that there needs to be an expansion, and I don't think they will because Oregon has been doing this for a long time, then they can come back to us, but at this point and time we have no interest in expanding beyond a self-administered dose.
    In other words, Paulin was saying that she wants to legalize assisted suicide first and expand the bill later.

    The language of assisted suicide bills are part of a "bait and switch" tactic by assisted suicide advocates. They know that it is harder to pass an assisted suicide bill than to later expand a bill once it has been passed.

    More articles on this topic:

    • New York assisted suicide bill is a "bait and switch" bill (Link).
    • Nearly every state that has legalized assisted suicide has later expanded it's law (Link). 
  29. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Pakistan's Defense Chief Warns Military Incursion By India Is 'Imminent'

    After three consecutive days of reports of mutual gunfire at army outposts along the Line of Control (LOC) disputed border area, Pakistan's defense minister declared Monday that a military incursion by India is imminent.

    "We have reinforced our forces because it is something which is imminent now. So in that situation some strategic decisions have to be taken, so those decisions have been taken," Defense Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif told Reuters from Islamabad. This confirms Pakistani Army build-up along the border.

    Protest against the suspension of Indus Waters Treaty by India, in Karachi, Pakistan, via Reuters.

    A severe war of words has been on since last Tuesday's deadly militant attack on tourists in Kashmir, which saw 26 Indian tourists get executed after the gunmen sought to identify Hindus among the group. The Indian government promptly accused Pakistan of harboring the Islamist terrorists which committed the atrocity, which Islamabad angrily rejected.

    The nuclear-armed neighbors have already fought two historic wars over the Kashmir region, and fears are rising that another one may soon be on the horizon - also after both sides have sent military reinforcements to the respective regions they administer. Amid a massive manhunt, India identified two detained suspected militants as Pakistani.

    "Asif said India's rhetoric was ramping up and that Pakistan's military had briefed the government on the possibility of an Indian attack," Reuters continues of the defense chief's statements. "He did not go into further details on his reasons for thinking an incursion was imminent."

    And very alarmingly, the question of use of nuclear weapons was broached in the interview:

    Asif said Pakistan was on high alert and that it would only use its arsenal of nuclear weapons if "there is a direct threat to our existence".

    Khawaja Muhammad Asif, Pakistan’s defense minister

    The Indian army over the weekend announced there has been "unprovoked" firing "initiated by Pakistan" along the Line of Control (LOC) which divides Kashmir into two. Pakistan in the aftermath of the accusation neither confirmed nor denied.

    The New York Times described Saturday that "Pakistani solders fired at an Indian position first and India responded in kind, according to local news reports, which said that "the exchange was brief and that there were no casualties." Precise locations of these live fire incidents have not been disclosed.

    Soon after the crisis land borders were been shut, visas and military exchange programs mutually canceled, and a landmark water treaty was suspended. Pakistan blasted India's cancelation of the Indus Water Treaty as an "act of war" and warned it would respond accordingly if water flows are violated among the two rivals' shared rivers.

    Unverified videos like the below have been widely circulating online:

    Non stop Pakistan military movement to India’s border. pic.twitter.com/tUDsmhhHnI

    — Open Source Intel (@Osint613) April 28, 2025

    But if gunfire continues to be exchanged between the two militaries, also amid reports that Pakistani visa holders are being promptly booted from the country amid the diplomatic crisis - clashes could accelerate toward open war. 

    India's Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir Omar Abdullah has meanwhile said there must be a "decisive fight against terrorism and its origin." Indian officials have continued to heap accusations that ultimately Islamabad either supports these groups or at least turns a blind eye.

    Air Force and army activity along the border ramping up?

    Pakistan has activated its Swat & Skardu airbases amid tensions with India. The Airforce were seen conducting sorties today. pic.twitter.com/U5GK17xLAd

    — Clash Report (@clashreport) April 27, 2025
    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 10:25
  30. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Steven Ertelt

    A new study reveals that the abortion pill mifepristone carries a rate of serious or life-threatening complications 22 times higher than what the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the drug’s manufacturer, Danco Laboratories, have claimed.

    The study raises serious concerns about the safety of the dangerous abortion pill.

    The analysis, described as the “largest known study of the abortion pill,” was conducted by Ethics and Public Policy Center President Ryan Anderson and Director of Data Analysis Jamie Bryan Hall.

    The authors maintain this is the largest ever study of the abortion pill.

    It examined insurance claims data from Medicaid, TRICARE, Medicare, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and private insurers, covering 865,727 mifepristone prescriptions dispensed to 692,873 women between 2017 and 2023.

    Click here to sign up for pro-life news alerts from LifeNews.com

    According to the study, approximately 10.9% of these prescriptions—94,605 chemical abortions—resulted in “serious adverse events” such as emergency room visits, hemorrhages, sepsis, infections, or follow-up surgeries within 45 days of taking the drug. This rate starkly contrasts with the FDA’s reported complication rate, which pro-life advocates argue has been dangerously understated.

    “The women in our dataset receive (or fail to receive) pre- and post-abortion healthcare of the real-world quality that prevails in the U.S. today, not the carefully controlled regimen of care that ordinarily prevails in a clinical trial,” the study says

    “This study is the statistical equivalent of a category 5 hurricane hitting the prevailing narrative of the abortion industry,” Anderson said in a statement to The Federalist. “It reveals, based on real-world data, the shocking number of women who suffer serious medical consequences because of the abortion pill.”

    Pro-life medical professionals have long criticized the FDA’s approval of mifepristone, first granted in 2000 under an accelerated process intended for drugs treating serious or life-threatening conditions. Critics, including the Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, argue that pregnancy does not qualify as such a condition and that the agency overlooked significant risks to women’s health.

    “The FDA should reinstate the original patient safety protocols that were required when mifepristone was first approved. Doing so will likely reduce the harms to women and permit better monitoring to determine whether this drug should remain on the market,” the authors note. “The FDA should further investigate the harm this drug causes to women and, based on objective safety criteria, reconsider its approval altogether. Women deserve better than the abortion pill.”

    The study’s findings come amid ongoing legal and policy battles over mifepristone.

    In 2021, the Biden administration relaxed regulations, permanently allowing the dangerous abortion drug to be dispensed via mail and permitting pharmacies like Walgreens and CVS to distribute it. The FDA also reduced oversight, eliminating requirements for prescribers to report non-fatal adverse events unless a patient dies.

    Pro-life advocates argue these changes have exacerbated risks, particularly as women can now obtain mifepristone through a single telehealth visit and self-administer it without in-person medical supervision. The study warns that this lack of oversight increases the likelihood of undetected complications, such as ectopic pregnancies or Rh alloimmunization, which can lead to severe bleeding or future pregnancy complications.

    Last year, the Supreme Court declined to rule on the merits of mifepristone’s approval, citing a lack of legal standing for the challenging medical professionals. However, Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s opinion left open the possibility for future challenges, a prospect pro-life groups are pursuing in light of the new data.

    The study calls for the FDA to reinstate original safety protocols, such as mandatory in-person visits and adverse event reporting, to better monitor mifepristone’s risks. It also urges a reevaluation of the drug’s approval status.

    The post Massive Study Shows Major Complications From Abortion Pill 22 Times Higher Than FDA Says appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  31. Site: LES FEMMES - THE TRUTH
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: noreply@blogger.com (Mary Ann Kreitzer)
  32. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    "Here We Are Again": Federal District Courts Piling On Injunctions To Stop Trump

    Authored by Jonathan Turley,

    Here we are again.” 

    Those words of Senior U.S. District Judge William H. Orrick may be the only uncontested line in his opinion this week, enjoining the Trump Administration from withholding federal funds to “sanctuary jurisdictions.”

    In President Trump’s first term, efforts to implement sweeping changes on immigration and other issues were met by a slew of injunctions. 

    In 2017, one of those orders was from Judge Orrick, an Obama appointee in San Francisco.

    Trump has already faced a record number of national injunctions by district courts. 

    His administration has objected to forum- and judge-shopping by political opponents by bringing the majority of such challenges in overwhelmingly Democratic states like California.

    Such injunctions did not exist at the founding, and only relatively recently became the rage among district court judges. Under President George W. Bush, there were only six such injunctions, which increased to 12 under Obama.

    Both Democratic and Republican presidents have complained about district judges tying down presidents like so many judicial Lilliputians. However, when Trump came to office, the taste for national injunctions became a full-fledged addiction. Trump faced 64 such orders in his first term.

    When Biden and the Democrats returned to office, it fell back to 14. That was not due to more modest measures. Biden did precisely what Trump did in seeking to negate virtually all of his predecessors’ orders and then seek sweeping new legal reforms. He was repeatedly found to have violated the Constitution, but there was no torrent of preliminary injunctions at the start of his term.

    Now, however, with less than 100 days in office, Trump 2.0 has already surpassed that number for the entirety of Biden’s term.

    The Supreme Court bears some of the blame for this. Although a majority of justices, including liberal Justice Elena Kagan, have complained about district courts’ issuance of national injunctions, the high court has done little to rein in district court judges. On May 15, the justices are poised to consider the issue in a case involving birthright citizenship. Many hope that the justices will bring what they have consistently failed to supply to lower courts: clarity and finality.

    Some judges have already seen their stays lifted by appellate courts. 

    However, in just one day this week, three more major injunctions were issued on sanctuary cities, voter registration, and deportations.

    Some of these orders appear premature and overbroad. 

    Take Judge Orrick’s order. Again, Trump is targeting cities offering sanctuary to unlawful immigrants as imposing high costs on the country, including increasing burdens for federal programs and grants to these cities.

    Orrick previously stopped that effort in the first Trump term, and he was affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. However, the orders are not identical, and so far no action has been taken against these cities.

    Under one of the orders, titled “Protecting the American People against Invasion,” Trump has ordered the attorney general and the secretary of Homeland Security to “evaluate and undertake any lawful actions to ensure that so-called “sanctuary” jurisdictions, which seek to interfere with the lawful exercise of Federal law enforcement operations, do not receive access to Federal funds.”

    Orrick noted that the term “sanctuary jurisdiction” was not defined and dismissed the express reservation that such actions can only proceed to the extent that they are allowed under law.

    The irony is that the opinion itself is overly broad and imprecise. There are indeed cases limiting the ability of the federal government to “commandeer” states and cities into carrying out federal functions. However, there are also cases upholding the right to withhold federal funds that contravene federal laws and policies.

    The operative language in the order is the focus on sanctuary policies that “interfere” or prevent federal enforcement. There must be some accommodation for the federal government in refusing to pay for the rope that it will hang by.

    Justice Robert Jackson famously wrote in Terminiello v. City of Chicago that the Constitution cannot be construed as a “suicide pact.” I have never been fond of that quote, which has often been used to justify the curtailment of individual rights. But these cases could bring a new meaning to the quote in immigration cases.

    If one accepts the Trump administration’s data, then continued funding of these jurisdictions might be more akin to being forced to pay for your own hit man and then calling it suicide.

    There is a reason courts generally wait for these conflicts to become “ripe.” The administration could easily engage in impermissible “commandeering,” but it could also “evaluate and undertake” more focused and defensible withholdings of federal funds. Judge Orrick decided not to wait to find out.

    These are difficult questions, but the Supreme Court can reduce these cases by actually ruling with clarity. The court has often left these issues mired in ambiguity, kicking cases like cans down the road for any final resolution.

    Consider the order out of the District of Columbia blocking an effort to change federal voting forms to require proof of citizenship. Trump campaigned on the issue, and, according to a Gallup poll, 84 percent of U.S. adults are in favor of requiring voters to show such identification.

    Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly barred the federal government from changing the standardized national voter registration form and to have federal voter registration agencies “assess” the citizenship of individuals who receive public assistance before providing them a voter registration form.

    Kollar-Kotelly raises good-faith limits on presidents’ ability to regulate elections, a power mainly left to the states. However, this is a policy that does not necessarily impose a new condition on states.

    After all, non-citizens are barred from voting in federal elections in all states. Again, there must be some ability of the administration to act to address a national priority in the funding of election reforms and practices. 

    The question is whether the court will recognize such a federal interest.

    The problem with some of these orders is not that they are without foundation, but that courts appear on a hair-trigger to enjoin the Trump administration on any subject whatsoever. There is a need to deescalate in both branches as we expedite these appeals. We are indeed “here again,” but this is not a good place for anyone.

    *  *  *

    Jonathan Turley is the J.B. and Maurice C. Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at the George Washington University Law School. He is the author of best-selling book “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage.” 

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 10:05
  33. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 21 hours ago
    According to the SIPRI report, global military spending hit a new high in 2024, at US$ 2.7 trillion. China accounts for half of all military expenditures in Asia, with spending rising in the Far East Asia, especially by Japan. In the Middle East, Israel is investing 8.8 per cent of GDP in the military, the second-highest percentage in the world.
  34. Site: Mises Institute
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Ted Carpenter explains why NATO is now even more useless than before.
  35. Site: Steyn Online
    2 days 21 hours ago
    This is a big week for anglosphere elections: Canada today, Australia on Saturday, and, in between, England's local elections (except for the ones Sir Keir has cancelled) on Thursday. Don't worry, you sensitive types, in none of the three is there the
  36. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Key Events This Week: Peak Earnings Season, Canada Election, Payrolls, PCE, GDP... And Trade War Goes On

    This week will be the first for a while where data and earnings will compete with tariff headlines as it’s a bumper week on this front. According to DB"s Jim Reid, in terms of data the main highlights in the US are payrolls (Friday), core PCE inflation and US GDP (Wednesday), ISM manufacturing (Thursday) and the latest JOLTS and consumer confidence tomorrow.

    In Europe flash CPI numbers get released from Spain tomorrow, Germany, France and Italy on Wednesday, with the Eurozone aggregate on Friday (our economists’ preview is here). On Wednesday, Q1 GDP reports are due for Germany, France, Italy and the Eurozone. In Asia, the focus will be on the BoJ meeting (Thursday - our preview here) and April PMIs in China (Wednesday).

    Besides the macro, we get an avalanche of micro as we face the busiest week of Q1 earnings season with corporate reporting centering around results from Microsoft and Meta on Wednesday and Apple and Amazon on Thursday. This will contribute to a whopping 40% of S&P 500 market cap reporting this week. 

    It's fair to say that Mag-7 earnings will go a long way to dictating the tone of the week, and perhaps quarter, now that the worst of tariffs appears to be behind us. As Jim Reid mentioned last week, remember that before Liberation Day the main theme bubbling in the background was the Mag-7 underperforming due to DeepSeek, worries about extreme levels of Capex needed to power AI forward, valuations and a disappointing Q4 reporting season around the end of January. Three months on we'll see what earnings look like.

    Elsewhere we see the federal election in Canada today. Remember the ruling Liberal Party were frequently 25% behind in the polls in early-mid January even after Trudeau had announced his resignation as leader. However after the "51st state" rhetoric and aggressive tariffs, the rally round the flag movement has propelled the Liberals into a 3-4pp lead in current poll of polls which if replicated today would likely give them a small majority. So a remarkable turnaround. 

    Elsewhere in politics, Wednesday will mark President Trump’s first 100 days in office. So expect lots of reflections on this landmark. The UK holds local elections on Thursday with the main point of interest being how well the populist Reform Party does given they have recently edged ahead of the ruling Labour Party in national polls.

    So its fair to say it will be a busy week. 

    Let's go into more detail on some of the main data points. Firstly, in terms of payrolls, DB economists forecast that headline (+125k forecast vs. +228k previously) and private (+125k vs. +209k) payrolls will mean revert after a strong March, particularly within the leisure/hospitality and retail sectors. The bank's econ team point out that March and April can get whipped around due to the timing of Easter and school spring breaks. Unemployment should remain steady at 4.2% though.

    Wednesday's advance Q1 GDP will be interesting as the consensus suggests only +0.4% annualized growth in the quarter (+1.1% expected at DB vs. +2.4% in Q4) so that will raise some concerns if it materializes. At the same time DB sees March personal income (+0.5% DB vs. +0.4% last month) and spending (+0.6% DB vs. +0.4%) data. This will also contain the latest reading on the core PCE deflator (+0.1% vs. +0.4%) which is expected to be on the softer side this month. This will be welcome but remember this is all largely pre-tariffs.

    The day by day week ahead is at the end as usual, including the highlights from a busy week for earnings on both sides of the Atlantic. One final thing to note is the US Treasury’s updated borrowing estimates (today) and the subsequent refunding announcement (Wednesday). This normally gets released without too much fuss but remember that in Summer 2023 (end July/early August) this quarterly announcement helped cause brief but great stress in markets due to higher than expected borrowing and more long-dated issuance. Since then the Treasury has managed the process with a view to minimising market fears but in an era of large borrowings these events are always worth keeping an eye out for.

    Courtesy of DB, here is a day-by-day calendar of events

    Monday April 28

    • Data: US April Dallas Fed manufacturing activity, France Q1 total jobseekers
    • Central banks: ECB’s Rehn and Guindos speak
    • Earnings: Hitachi, Welltower, Waste Management, Cadence Design Systems, Deutsche Boerse, NXP Semiconductors, Domino's Pizza
    • Auctions: US Treasury updated borrowing estimates
    • Other: Canadian federal election

    Tuesday April 29

    • Data: US April Conference Board consumer confidence index, Dallas Fed services activity, March JOLTS report, advance goods trade balance, wholesale inventories, February FHFA house price index, Germany May GfK consumer confidence, Italy April consumer confidence index, manufacturing confidence, economic sentiment, March hourly wages, February industrial sales, Eurozone March M3, April economic, industrial, services confidence, Sweden Q1 GDP indicator
    • Central banks: ECB’s March consumer expectations survey, Holzmann and Cipollone speak, BoE’s Ramsden speaks
    • Earnings: Visa, Coca-Cola, Novartis, China Construction Bank, AstraZeneca, HSBC, Booking, S&P Global, Pfizer, Honeywell, Spotify, American Tower, Altria, Starbucks, Mondelez, Sherwin-Williams, UPS, BBVA, BP, Atlas Copco, Ecolab, Regeneron, PayPal, Royal Caribbean Cruises, Wal-Mart de Mexico, Universal Music Group, Hilton, Fair Isaac, adidas, GM, Corning, Kraft Heinz, CoStar, Ares

    Wednesday April 30

    • Data: US Q1 GDP, employment cost index, April ADP report, MNI Chicago PMI, March core PCE, personal income and spending, pending home sales, China April official PMIs, Caixin manufacturing PMI, UK April Lloyds Business Barometer, Japan March retail sales, industrial production, housing starts, Germany April CPI, retail sales, import price index, unemployment claims rate, Q1 GDP, France April CPI, March PPI, consumer spending, Q1 GDP, Italy April CPI, March PPI, Q1 GDP, Eurozone Q1 GDP, Canada February GDP, Australia Q1 CPI
    • Central banks: ECB’s Muller speaks, BoE’s Lombardelli speaks
    • Earnings: Microsoft, Meta, Samsung, Qualcomm, Caterpillar, TotalEnergies, Airbus, Iberdrola, Santander, UBS, KLA, Equinix, GSK, Tokyo Electron, MediaTek, Equinor, Mercedes-Benz Group, Credit Agricole, Barclays, Volkswagen, CaixaBank, Deutsche Post, Haleon, Robinhood, Societe Generale, Humana, eBay, GE HealthCare, ArcelorMittal, Evolution AB, Repsol, Norwegian Cruise Line, Albemarle, Wingstop, Etsy
    • Auctions: US Treasury quarterly refunding announcement

    Thursday May 1

    • Data: US April ISM index, total vehicle sales, March construction spending, initial jobless claims, UK March net consumer credit, M4, Japan April consumer confidence index, Canada April manufacturing PMI
    • Central banks: BoJ’s decision
    • Earnings: Apple, Amazon, Eli Lilly, Mastercard, McDonald's, Linde, Amgen, Stryker, KKR, MicroStrategy, CVS Health, Airbnb, Parker-Hannifin, Lloyds Banking Group, Howmet Aerospace, Dominion Energy, Roblox, Targa Resources, Block, Hershey, Live Nation Entertainment, Kellanova, Blue Owl Capital, Estee Lauder, Reddit, Cameco, Duolingo, Twilio, Juniper Networks, Maplebear, Moderna, United States Steel, Roku, Wayfair, Harley-Davidson
    • Other: UK local elections

    Friday May 2

    • Data: US April jobs report, March factory orders, Japan April monetary base, March jobless rate, job-to-applicant ratio, France March budget balance, Italy April manufacturing PMI, budget balance, new car registrations, March unemployment rate, Eurozone April CPI, March unemployment rate
    • Central banks: ECB’s economic bulletin
    • Earnings: Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Shell, Eaton, Cigna Group, Mitsubishi, Apollo, ING, NatWest, BASF, Standard Chartered, DuPont de Nemours

    * * *

    FInally, looking at just the US, Goldman writes that the key economic data releases this week are the Q1 advance GDP report and core PCE inflation on Wednesday and the employment report on Friday. Fed officials are not expected to comment on monetary policy this week, reflecting the blackout period ahead of the May FOMC meeting.

    Monday, April 28

    • There are no major economic data releases scheduled.

    Tuesday, April 29

    • 08:30 AM Advance goods trade balance, March (GS -$146.0bn, consensus -$143.0bn, last -$147.8bn);  We forecast that the advance goods trade deficit narrowed by $1.8bn to $146.0bn in the March advance report, reflecting a $10bn decline in gold imports that was offset by a $10bn increase in imports from major Asian trading partners.
    • 08:30 AM Wholesale inventories, March preliminary (consensus +0.7%, last +0.3%)
    • 09:00 AM FHFA house price index, February (consensus +0.3%, last +0.2%)
    • 09:00 AM S&P Case-Shiller 20-city home price index, February (GS +0.5%, consensus +0.4%, last +0.5%)
    • 10:00 AM JOLTS job openings, March (GS 7,400k, consensus 7,500k, last 7,568k): We estimate that JOLTS job openings edged down to 7.4mn in March based on the signal from online job postings.
    • 10:00 AM Conference Board consumer confidence, April (GS 90.0, consensus 87.0, last 92.9)

    Wednesday, April 30

    • 08:15 AM ADP employment change, April (GS +110k, consensus +124k, last +155k)
    • 08:30 AM GDP, Q1 advance (GS -0.2%, consensus +0.4%, last +2.4%); Personal consumption, Q1 advance (GS +0.9%, consensus +1.2%, last +4.0%); Core PCE inflation, Q1 advance (GS +3.32%, consensus +3.0%, last +2.6%): We estimate that GDP fell 0.2% annualized in the advance reading for Q1, following +2.4% annualized growth in Q4. Our forecast reflects a slowdown in consumption growth (+0.9%, quarter-over-quarter annualized), a sharp increase in imports growth (+24.0% vs. -1.9% in Q4), and a decline in residential investment (-8.2% vs. +5.5% in Q4), but a pickup in business fixed investment growth (+7.3% vs. -3.0% in Q4), stronger exports growth (+6.8% vs. -0.2% in Q4), and a rebound in inventory accumulation. We estimate that the core PCE price index increased 3.32% annualized (or 2.77% year-over-year) in Q1.
    • 08:30 AM Employment cost index, Q1 (GS +0.95%, consensus +0.9%, last +0.9%): We estimate the employment cost index rose by 0.95% in Q1 (quarter-over-quarter, seasonally adjusted), which would lower the year-on-year rate by two tenths to 3.6% (year-over-year, not seasonally adjusted). Our forecast reflects a sequential acceleration in wage and salary growth—reflecting the signal from the Atlanta Fed’s wage tracker—and slightly firmer ECI benefit growth—reflecting resets to start the year.
    • 09:45 AM Chicago PMI, April (consensus 46.0, last 47.6)
    • 10:00 AM Personal income, March (GS +0.2%, consensus +0.4%, last +0.8%); Personal spending, March (GS +0.5%, consensus +0.6%, last +0.4%); Core PCE price index, March (GS +0.08%, consensus +0.1%, last +0.4%); Core PCE price index (YoY), March (GS +2.67%, consensus +2.6%, last +2.8%); PCE price index, March (GS flat, consensus flat, last +0.3%); PCE price index (YoY), March (GS +2.32%, consensus +2.2%, last +2.5%): We estimate that personal income and personal spending increased by 0.2% and 0.5%, respectively, in March. We estimate that the core PCE price index rose by 0.08% in March, corresponding to a year-over-year rate of 2.67%. Additionally, we expect that the headline PCE price index remained unchanged from the prior month, corresponding to a year-over-year rate of 2.32%. Our forecast is consistent with a 0.15% increase in our trimmed core PCE measure (vs. 0.26% in February).
    • 10:00 AM Pending home sales, March (GS +7.0%, consensus +1.0%, last +2.0%)

    Thursday, May 1

    • 08:30 AM Initial jobless claims, week ended April 26 (GS 225k, consensus 225k, last 222k); Continuing jobless claims, week ended April 19 (consensus 1,860k, last 1,841k)
    • 09:45 AM S&P Global US manufacturing PMI, April final (consensus 50.7, last 50.7)
    • 10:00 AM ISM manufacturing index, April (GS 47.5, consensus 48.0, last 49.0): We estimate the ISM manufacturing index declined by 1.5pt to 47.5 in April, reflecting softer manufacturing surveys so far for April (GS manufacturing survey tracker: -3.1pt to 47.4) and a slight headwind from residual seasonality.
    • 10:00 AM Construction spending, March (GS +0.3%, consensus +0.2%, last +0.7%)
    • 05:00 PM Lightweight motor vehicle sales, April (GS 17.2mn, consensus 17.1mn, last 17.8mn)

    Friday, May 2

    • 08:30 AM Nonfarm payroll employment, April (GS +140k, consensus +130k, last +228k); Private payroll employment, April (GS +140k, consensus +120k, last +209k); Average hourly earnings (MoM), April (GS +0.25%, consensus +0.3%, last +0.3%); Unemployment rate, April (GS 4.2%, consensus 4.2%, last 4.2%): We estimate nonfarm payrolls rose 140k in April. On the positive side, big data indicators indicated a slower but still moderate pace of job creation. On the negative side, we expect unchanged government payrolls, reflecting a 15k decline in federal government payrolls that offsets a 15k increase in state and local government payrolls. We see mixed implications from potential seasonal distortions: while April nonfarm payroll growth has typically picked up when the Easter holiday falls in late April, uncertainty is likely to disproportionately weigh on employment growth in months where gross hiring is particularly elevated, such as April. We estimate that the unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.2% on a rounded basis. We estimate average hourly earnings rose 0.25% (month-over-month, seasonally adjusted), reflecting negative calendar effects.
    • 10:00 AM Factory orders, March (GS +5.0%, consensus +4.5%, last +0.6%)

    Source: DB, Goldman

     

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 09:55
  37. Site: Catholic Herald
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Eduardo Campos Lima/Crux

    SÃO PAULO – Among the social groups that have lamented Pope Francis’s death in Brazil, the Indigenous peoples seem to be especially impacted, with public pronouncements from several important leaders over the past week.

    Cacique Raoni Metuktire, one of the major advocates of Indigenous rights and environmental protection in the South American country, said he and Francis were friends, but he didn’t know that the pontiff was sick.

    “We talked about living in peace and about living well. Pope, wherever you are, hear me in spirit: May we grow even stronger. I’ll no longer be on this Earth for long and I want to meet you there with the Creator,” 93-year-old Raoni said in Kayapo language on a video released last week.

    The Indigenous leader visited the pontiff in the Vatican in May of 2024, when he handed in a letter to Francis regarding climate change and its impacts in Brazil.

    The Yanomami leader Davi Kopenawa, notorious in Brazil for his defense of the Amazon rainforest, also spoke of his pain for Francis’s death.

    “In April of 2024, I went to Rome. I wanted to take his hand and feel if he was truly committed to the environment and to us all. And he was. He defended my Yanomami people and nature. My soul is mourning,” Kopenawa said.

    Spanish-born missionary Luis Ventura, Secretary General of the Bishops’ Conference’s Indigenous Missionary Council (known as CIMI), said Pope Francis demonstrated unprecedented closeness to the Amerindian groups during his tenure in the Vatican.

    “First of all, he showed a genuine concern with all popular struggles in Latin America, especially with the Indigenous causes. He defended on several occasions their rights, including their land rights,” he told the Catholic Herald.

    Pope Francis saw them as “integral subjects, who have their own views, their own cosmogonies and cultures, and who have the right to survive in their own territories,” Ventura added.

    “He always emphasised that we have much to learn with the Indigenous peoples. During the preparation for the Amazon Synod, he insisted that they should be heard, no matter if they were Catholics or not,” he said.

    In documents like the post-synodal apostolic exhortation Querida Amazonia, the pontiff demonstrated that he had deeply paid attention to what the Indigenous groups had to say and even mentioned some of their remarks, Ventura said.

    “When it comes to Catholic Indigenous people, he incentivized the Church to dialogue with them about other ways to understand rituals, ministries, and living the faith,” he argued.

    Francis’s direct contact with Indigenous groups was strengthened in 2018, when he took part in a large meeting with Amazonian peoples in Puerto Maldonado, Peru. A two-handed road began to be built from then on, with Francis gaining unprecedented trust from several Indigenous peoples.

    In 2023, for instance, the Guarani-Kaiowá people, one of the most attacked Indigenous groups in Brazil, sent a letter to him in which they denounced the terrible situation they were facing. The pope answered it with a message read by Cardinal Leonardo Steiner in Nov. of 2023, in which Francis declared his closeness to the Guarani-Kaiowá and his wish that his clamor for their defense could be heard by the Brazilian authorities.

    The way the encyclical Laudato si’ was written, Ventura added, was accessible for Indigenous activists, reaffirming the idea that a real dialogue was going on.

    “I think the fact that he was from Latin America and was part of the Latin American Church – which has been following a path over the past decades towards the poor and the excluded – were fundamental for his stance regarding the Indigenous peoples,” Ventura said, emphasising that he was courageous enough to visit Canada and apologise for the crimes of the Catholic schools against First Nations children over 150 years.

    Sister Laura Manso, a nun of Indigenous origin who has been working with the Karipuna people for decades, defined Pope Francis’s stance on the Indigenous groups’ struggle as “prophetic”.

    “He was very well informed about the grave threats the Indigenous groups have been facing and would always denounce such situations of death with words of hope. He chose to live side by side with the last ones in society and raised his voice to defend the Amazon and our common home,” Manso, who is also a member of the Amazonian Ecclesial Conference, told the Catholic Herald.

    That’s why many Indigenous activists who are not Catholics had great admiration for the pope and now are mourning his death.

    “He was concerned with our cause and was deeply humane, he respected our culture. He was not only trying to convert us to Catholicism, like many religious leaders did in the past. He knew we have our own creeds and spirituality,” Indigenous leader Eronilde Fermin, a member of the Kambeba people, told the Catholic Herald.

    Fermin said she loved how Francis would defend minority groups all over the globe, not only Indigenous peoples.

    “We felt the presence of God – our culture’s God and his culture’s God – with him. We loved his humbleness and his strength to fight for us. We’ll really miss him,” she said.

    (Photo by Peter Summers/Getty Images)

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  38. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 22 hours ago
    Author: Steven Ertelt

    A new report has exposed widespread violations of informed consent laws by abortion facilities across the United States, providing another indication that abortion is the big business of selling babies – not health care.

    The findings, detailed in a comprehensive study by Americans United for Life (AUL), highlight failures by dozens of clinics, including Planned Parenthood, to provide women with critical information before performing abortions.

    The AUL report, titled “Unsafe,” reviewed over 25,000 pages of public documents, including 1,200 inspection reports from 39 states, spanning 2008 to 2020. It found that at least 86 abortion facilities in 21 states were cited for failing to adhere to informed consent requirements. These violations included not obtaining consent at the required time, neglecting to involve appropriately licensed staff, and failing to provide patients with contact information for complaint hotlines or visible license information.

    Click here to sign up for pro-life news alerts from LifeNews.com

    Among the cited facilities, 27 Planned Parenthood clinics were flagged for non-compliance.

    A notable case in Missouri involved a woman who underwent a botched surgical abortion at a Planned Parenthood in St. Louis in 2019. After a five-week gap, she returned for a second abortion but was not provided with updated informed consent, despite increased risks due to the pregnancy’s progression, according to a Missouri Department of Health report.

    The AUL findings also point to broader safety concerns, documenting over 2,400 health and safety deficiencies at more than 300 abortion facilities in 39 states. These include serious violations such as failure to monitor patients’ vital signs during abortions and inadequate handling of emergency situations, some requiring hospital transfers.

    Pro-life advocates argue that these revelations underscore the need for stricter oversight of abortion clinics in states where killing babies is still legal.

    The report has sparked calls for legislative action. AUL’s model legislation, the Women’s Right to Know Act, has been adopted in some form by 28 states as of 2020. The act mandates that physicians provide detailed information about abortion procedures, risks, and alternatives, and requires states to develop informational materials for patients.

    Critics of the abortion industry, including South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem and Louisiana Rep. Steve Scalise, have endorsed the AUL’s efforts.

    The AUL report comes as the debate over abortion regulation intensifies following the 2022 Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which returned abortion oversight to the states. Pro-life groups hope the findings will bolster efforts to enact stronger protections for women and unborn children.

    For more information, the full “Unsafe” report is available at aul.org.

    The post Dozens of Abortion Businesses Caught Violating Informed Consent Laws appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  39. Site: Ron Paul Institute - Featured Articles
    2 days 22 hours ago
    Author: Larry C. Johnson

    (Read part 1 here)

    The decade of 2000 marked the start of Ukraine becoming a de facto member of NATO. It not only participated in all of the main exercises, but it hosted many. In fact, between 2000 and 2010, Ukraine is ranked in the top six of countries that hosted a NATO or USEUCOM exercise. Ukraine and Georgia, who was ranked number seven, were not NATO members. What the hell? Two non-NATO countries hosted more NATO exercises than 22 of the member nations. This is prima facie evidence that the West, despite warnings from Russia, was intent on making Ukraine and Georgia official members of NATO.

    Only two things distinguished Ukraine from NATO members — it did not have a financial obligation to contribute to NATO and it was not covered by Article 5. Other than that, Ukraine was operating as a de facto member of NATO by 2010.

    Project Ukraine was not confined to military cooperation alone. US and UK intelligence organizations were actively involved in Ukraine and were coordinating operations and activities with both NATO and EUCOM. The CIA, for example, has intelligence officers assigned to NATO and USEUCOM headquarters. There job is to brief senior leaders on CIA operations and coordinate activities to ensure no wires get crossed. With the benefit of hindsight, it is now clear that during the period between 2000 and 2010, the US government, with collaboration from the UK, was working intently to split Ukraine away from Russia’s sphere of influence and capture it for the West.

    Note: My chats with Nima and Judge Napolitano are posted at the end of this article.

    2000

    Cooperative Partner 2000:

    The principal NATO-led military exercise conducted with Ukraine in 2000 was Exercise Cooperative Partner 2000. This exercise took place from 19 June to 1 July 2000 in the Black Sea and the area around Odessa, Ukraine. The exercise involved forces from NATO’s Standing Naval Force Mediterranean (STANAVFORMED) and the Standing Mine Counter-Measures Force Mediterranean (MCMFORMED), along with participants from ten NATO countries and six partner nations. Russia attended as an observer. The main objective was to train multinational forces to work together for peace support operations, enhancing interoperability and cooperation between NATO and partner countries.

    Peace Shield 2000 (May–June 2000)

    • Type: Command Post Exercise (CPX) + Field Training
    • Participants:
      • Ukraine (primary host)
      • NATO/PfP: U.S., UK, Germany, Poland, Canada, and others.
      • Observed by: Russia (under PfP, despite tensions over NATO-Ukraine cooperation).
    • Objectives:
      • Train for multinational peacekeeping operations (e.g., Kosovo-style scenarios).
      • Improve C4I (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence) interoperability.
      • Test Ukraine’s ability to integrate with NATO-standard procedures.
    • Notable Elements:

    Cooperative Determination 2000 (September 2000)

    • Type: Maritime/Search-and-Rescue (SAR) Exercise
    • Location: Odessa and Black Sea waters
    • Participants:
      • Naval forces: Ukraine, U.S. (USS Yorktown), Turkey, Romania, Bulgaria, Georgia.
      • USEUCOM provided P-3 Orion surveillance aircraft.
    • Objectives:
      • Counter-piracy, SAR, and maritime interdiction operations.
      • First major Black Sea exercise with Ukraine post-Cold War.
    • Political Context:Russia criticized the exercise as “NATO expansionism” but participated as an observer.
    • Demonstrated Ukraine’s push for Black Sea security partnerships amid rising regional tensions.

    Cossack Steppe 2000 (Summer 2000)

    • Type: Bilateral Field Training Exercise (FTX)
    • Location: Desna Training Center (Chernihiv Oblast) & other sites
    • Participants: Ukrainian Army + U.S. Army Europe (USAREUR) advisors.
    • Focus:
      • Peacekeeping tactics (e.g., convoy security, checkpoint operations).
      • Medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) and combat engineer drills.
    • Legacy:
      • Part of the U.S.-Ukraine Joint Contact Team Program (JCTP), launched in 1994 to aid Ukraine’s military reform.
      • Paved the way for future exercises like Rapid Trident (post-2006).

    In 2000, the United States European Command (USEUCOM) executed its first Military Contact Plan with Ukraine, following the transfer of responsibility for U.S. military engagement in Ukraine from the Joint Staff to EUCOM in late 1998. The 2000 plan was developed collaboratively with the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense and included a variety of military-to-military events, such as planning meetings, medical, legal, and chaplain exchanges, and other cooperative activities. These events were designed to align with specific objectives and priorities identified by both sides.

    2001

    Cossack Express 2001 (April–May 2001)

    • Location: Ukraine (multiple sites)
    • Participants: Ukrainian forces, U.S. Army Europe (USAREUR), and NATO advisors.
    • Focus: Logistics, medical training, and crisis response.
    • Significance: Aimed at improving Ukraine’s ability to support international peacekeeping missions.

    Sea Breeze 2001 (July 16–27, 2001)

    • Location: Black Sea (near Odessa and Crimea, Ukraine)
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM/NATO), and other NATO partners.
    • Focus: Maritime security, search and rescue (SAR), anti-submarine warfare (ASW), and amphibious operations.
    • Significance: Part of the annual “Sea Breeze” series (started in 1997), enhancing interoperability between Ukraine and NATO.

    Cooperative Determination 2001 (September 2001)

    • Location: Yavoriv Training Area, Ukraine (near Lviv)
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM), and NATO allies.
    • Focus: Peacekeeping operations (PKO), command post exercises (CPX), and joint maneuvers.
    • Significance: Part of the Partnership for Peace (PfP) program, improving Ukraine’s readiness for multinational operations.

    Clear Sky 2001 (October 2001)

    • Location: Starokostiantyniv Air Base, Ukraine
    • Participants: Ukrainian Air Force, U.S. Air Force (USAFE), and NATO partners.
    • Focus: Air defense, search and rescue (SAR), and airspace coordination.
    • Significance: Strengthened Ukraine’s air force interoperability with NATO standards.

    2002

    Cossack Express 2002″ (March–April 2002)

    • Location: Ukraine (multiple regions)
    • Participants: Ukrainian National Guard, U.S. National Guard (State Partnership Program), and other NATO advisors.
    • Focus: Disaster response, counter-terrorism, and crisis management.
    • Significance: Strengthened civil-military cooperation and emergency response coordination.

    Cooperative Partner 2002″ (June 2002)

    • Location: Yavoriv Training Area (Lviv region, Ukraine)
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM), NATO members (including Poland, Germany, Canada), and Partnership for Peace (PfP) countries.
    • Focus: Peacekeeping operations (PKO), command-post exercises (CPX), joint staff coordination.
    • Significance: Part of NATO’s Partnership for Peace (PfP) program, aimed at preparing Ukrainian forces for potential NATO-led peacekeeping missions.

    Sea Breeze 2002 (July–August 2002)

    • Location: Black Sea (near Odesa and Mykolaiv, Ukraine)
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM/NATO), and other NATO allies (including Turkey, UK, Greece, etc.)
    • Focus: Maritime security, amphibious operations, search and rescue (SAR), anti-submarine warfare (ASW).
    • Significance: Part of the annual “Sea Breeze” series (ongoing since 1997), enhancing interoperability between Ukraine and NATO naval forces.

    Other Engagements:

    • Ukraine also participated in NATO/PfP exercises such as “Cooperative Key” (a command-post exercise) and “Cooperative Nugget”, focusing on interoperability in peace support operations.

    2003

    In 2003, Ukraine participated in several notable military exercises with NATO and U.S. European Command (USEUCOM), reflecting its growing partnership with the Alliance and Western militaries. Some key exercises included:

    Cooperative Archer 2003 (June 2003 – Lithuania)

    • NATO Partnership for Peace (PfP) exercise focused on peacekeeping operations.
    • Involved Ukrainian troops training alongside NATO forces in command post and field exercises.
    • Aimed at enhancing interoperability between NATO and partner nations.

    Sea Breeze 2003 (July 2003 – Black Sea, Ukraine)

    • U.S.-Ukraine co-led maritime exercise under the Partnership for Peace program.
    • Focused on naval interoperability, search and rescue (SAR), and anti-submarine warfare (ASW).
    • Participating nations included the U.S. (USEUCOM), Ukraine, NATO allies, and other partners.

    Cossack Express 2003 (September 2003 – Ukraine)

    • command post exercise (CPX) involving Ukrainian forces and NATO/PfP partners.
    • Focused on crisis response and peace support operations.
    • Part of Ukraine’s efforts to align its military doctrines with NATO standards.

    Combined Endeavor 2003 (September-October 2003 – Germany)

    • large-scale communications and interoperability exercise led by USEUCOM.
    • Ukrainian forces participated alongside NATO and partner nations to improve military data-sharing and command systems.

    Clear Sky 2003 (October 2003 – Ukraine)

    • joint air defense exercise involving Ukrainian, U.S., and other NATO/PfP forces.
    • Focused on airspace coordination and air-missile defense cooperation.

    In March 2003, Ukraine finalized its 2003 Target Plan within the NATO-Ukraine Action Plan framework. This plan provided for intensified military cooperation, consultations, and preparation for large-scale military exercises, including international ones. These activities were part of a broader effort to align Ukraine’s military standards and procedures with those of NATO, as well as to test military equipment and armaments
    in a multinational context.

    2004

    In 2004, Ukraine participated in several significant military exercises with NATO and U.S. European Command (USEUCOM), reflecting its growing partnership with the Alliance and Western militaries following the 2002 NATO-Ukraine Action Plan. Key exercises included:

    Cossack Express 2004 (Spring 2004)

    • Location: Yavoriv Training Area, Lviv Oblast (Western Ukraine)
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. Army Europe (USEUCOM), and NATO partners.
    • Ukrainian Participants: 24th Mechanized Brigade (Yavoriv) – Trained with U.S. Army Europe’s 1st Infantry Division on peacekeeping logistics.
    • National Guard Units – Drilled on crowd control (later relevant during the Orange Revolution protests).
    • NATO Link: The Yavoriv Training Area later became the Combat Training Center for NATO partners (2015 onward).
    • Focus: Peacekeeping drills, command post exercises (CPX), and logistical coordination.
    • Significance: Aimed at preparing Ukrainian troops for potential contributions to NATO-led missions (e.g., Kosovo or Iraq).

    Rapid Answer 2004 (June 2004)

    • Location: Poland and Ukraine (joint border areas)
    • Participants: Ukraine, Poland (a newly NATO-acceded member), and other Allied forces.
    • Focus: Rapid deployment, crisis response, and interoperability with NATO forces.
    • Significance: Demonstrated Ukraine’s role in regional security alongside NATO’s eastern flank.

    Sea Breeze 2004 (July–August 2004)

    • Location: Black Sea (Odessa and Crimea regions)
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. Navy (USEUCOM), NATO allies (including Turkey, UK, France), and partner nations.
    • Focus: Maritime security, anti-terrorism, search-and-rescue (SAR), and naval interoperability.
    • Significance: Part of the annual “Sea Breeze” series (ongoing since 1997), enhancing Black Sea regional security cooperation.

    Cooperative Determination 2004 (August 2004)

    • Location: Crimea, Ukraine (Feodosia training area)
    • Participants: Ukrainian Armed Forces, NATO members (including the U.S., UK, Germany, Poland, and others)
    • Focus: Peacekeeping operations, interoperability with NATO standards.
    • Significance: Part of the Partnership for Peace (PfP) program, emphasizing joint command structures and crisis response.

    Political Fallout & Long-Term Impact

    • Russian Reaction:
      • Moscow accused NATO of “encroachment” and pressured Ukraine to join the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) instead.
    • Domestic Divide:
      • Pro-Western factions (e.g., Viktor Yushchenko’s bloc) praised the drills, while pro-Russian groups (Viktor Yanukovych’s Party of Regions) opposed them.
    • 2008 NATO Summit:
      • Ukraine’s 2004 exercises built momentum for its eventual Membership Action Plan (MAP) bid, though blocked by German/French hesitancy.

    2005

    Throughout 2005, NATO and Ukraine developed practical projects aimed at addressing Ukraine’s national security and defense needs. These included the launch of PfP trust funds to assist with the destruction of excess munitions and the retraining and resettlement of redundant military personnel . Additionally, there was the launch of a project to assist with the training of civilian personnel for Ukraine’s security and defense structures.

    Cooperative Archer 2005 (June 2005)

    • Location: Tbilisi, Georgia (but involved Ukrainian troops).
    • Participants: Ukraine, Georgia, NATO members, and PfP nations.
    • Focus: Crisis response, peacekeeping, and NATO interoperability (Ukraine contributed troops as part of PfP engagement).

    Rapid Trident 2005 (July 9–22, 2005)

    • Location: Yavoriv Training Area, Lviv region, Ukraine.
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM-led), NATO members, and PfP countries.
    • Focus: Peace support operations, joint command post training, and enhancing interoperability with NATO standards.
    • Significance: Part of the Partnership for Peace (PfP) program, helping Ukraine align with NATO procedures.

    Sea Breeze 2005 (July 18–29, 2005)

    • Location: Black Sea (near Odessa) and Mykolaiv regions, Ukraine.
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM/NATO), NATO allies (including Turkey, UK, France, etc.), and Partnership for Peace (PfP) countries.
    • Focus: Maritime security, amphibious operations, and interoperability between NATO and Ukrainian forces.
    • Details: Involved naval, air, and ground forces, with a focus on counterterrorism and peacekeeping scenarios.

    Cossack Steppe 2005 (September 2005)

    • Location: Ukraine (multiple training areas).
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S., and other NATO/PfP partners.
    • Focus: Command and staff training, peacekeeping operations, and logistical coordination.

    The first Rapid Trident exercise in Ukraine took place in 2005 at the Yavoriv training ground as part of the Partnership for Peace program, marking the beginning of this recurring multinational exercise.

    2006

    These exercises were part of Ukraine’s broader push for NATO integration following the Orange Revolution (2004).

    Cooperative Archer 2006 (June 2006)

    • Location: Tbilisi, Georgia (but involved Ukrainian troops)
    • Participants: NATO members, Ukraine, Georgia, and other PfP nations.
    • Focus: Command post exercise (CPX) simulating NATO-led crisis response operations.
    • Details: Aimed at improving Ukraine’s compatibility with NATO standards in crisis management.

    Sea Breeze 2006 (July 17–28, 2006)

    • Location: Black Sea (near Odessa and Crimea, Ukraine)
    • Participants: Ukraine (host), U.S. (USEUCOM/NATO), NATO allies (including Turkey, UK, France, Germany, etc.), and Partnership for Peace (PfP) nations.
    • Focus: Maritime security, anti-terrorism, search and rescue (SAR), and interoperability between NATO and Ukrainian forces.
    • Details: Involved naval maneuvers, amphibious operations, and air defense drills.

    Rapid Trident 2006 (July 17–28, 2006)

    • Location: Yavoriv Training Area, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM-led), NATO members, and Partnership for Peace countries.
    • Focus: Ground force interoperability, peacekeeping operations, and joint command procedures.
    • Details: Part of the U.S.-led Joint Multinational Training Group-Ukraine (JMTG-U) initiative to enhance Ukrainian military readiness.

    Cossack Steppe 2006 (September 2006)

    • Location: Southern Ukraine
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S., and other NATO partners.
    • Focus: Peacekeeping and stability operations training.

    2007

    In 2007, NATO and Ukraine conducted a notable command post exercise in Sevastopol and maintained a structured program of military cooperation under the NATO-Ukraine Military Work Plan and Annual Target Plan. The chiefs of defence from NATO and Ukraine met in May 2007 to assess progress under the NATO-Ukraine Military Work Plan for that year. They tasked their military representatives to begin preparations for the next cycle of cooperation, indicating ongoing planning and execution of joint activities. The NATO-Ukraine Annual Target Plan (ATP) for 2007outlined practical steps for cooperation in political, military, and security spheres, including exercises and advisory activities to improve Ukraine’s Euro-Atlantic integration . While the ATP itself is a planning document, it confirms that military exercises and collaborative activities were a significant part of the 2007 agenda.

    Cooperative Archer 2007 (May 9–18, 2007)

    • Location: Tbilisi, Georgia (but involved Ukrainian forces)
    • Participants: Ukraine, NATO members, and PfP partners.
    • Focus: Command post exercise (CPX) simulating NATO-led crisis response operations.
    • Note: Though held in Georgia, Ukrainian troops participated as part of NATO interoperability training.

    Cossack Steppe 2007 (June 2007)

    • Location: Ukraine
    • Participants: Ukraine with NATO advisors (including U.S. personnel)
    • Focus: Peacekeeping and stability operations training.

    Sea Breeze 2007 (July 16–27, 2007)

    • Location: Black Sea (near Odessa and Mykolaiv, Ukraine)
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM), NATO allies (including Turkey, Greece, Canada, and others)
    • Focus: Maritime security, anti-submarine warfare, search and rescue, and interdiction operations.
    • Significance: Part of the annual U.S.-Ukraine co-hosted exercise series under the Partnership for Peace (PfP) program.

    Rapid Trident 2007 (September 17–28, 2007)

    • Location: Yavoriv Training Area, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM), NATO members, and Partnership for Peace (PfP) countries.
    • Focus: Peacekeeping operations, interoperability, and joint command post training.
    • Significance: Part of the U.S.-led Joint Multinational Training Group-Ukraine (JMTG-U) initiative.

    2008

    The NATO-Ukraine Annual Target Plan for 2008 formalized cooperation, including joint exercises, training, and seminars . Ukraine’s participation in multinational exercises was part of its broader Euro-Atlantic integration efforts, as reaffirmed at the 2008 NATO Bucharest Summit . While Sea Breeze and Immediate Response were the most prominent multinational exercises involving Ukraine in 2008, other smaller joint training events and seminars were also conducted under the NATO-Ukraine partnership framework.

    These exercises occurred amid Ukraine’s push for a NATO Membership Action Plan (MAP) at the April 2008 Bucharest Summit. While NATO declined to grant MAP due to opposition from some members (e.g., Germany and France), it affirmed Ukraine’s future membership prospects, stating it “will become a member of NATO” eventually. Russia strongly opposed these developments, escalating tensions that later influenced its 2014 annexation of Crimea.

    Rapid Trident 2008

    • Date: June 2008
    • Location: Yavoriv Training Area, Ukraine (near Lviv)
    • Participants: Ukrainian Armed Forces, U.S. Army Europe (USEUCOM), NATO member & partner nations.
    • Focus: Interoperability, peacekeeping operations, and joint command procedures.
    • Significance: Part of the Partnership for Peace (PfP) program, enhancing Ukraine’s ability to work with NATO forces.

    Sea Breeze 2008

    • Date: July 2008
    • Location: Black Sea (Odessa region) & Southern Ukraine
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM/NATO), and other allied navies.
    • Focus: Maritime security, anti-terrorism, and disaster response drills.
    • Context: Annual U.S.-Ukraine naval exercise demonstrating NATO-Ukraine cooperation in the Black Sea.

    Combined Endeavor 2008

    • Date: September 2008
    • Location: Grafenwöhr, Germany (communications-focused exercise)
    • Participants: Ukraine joined NATO and partner nations.
    • Focus: Improving military communications interoperability with NATO standards.

    2009

    The exercises in 2009 were central to strengthening Ukraine’s military cooperation with NATO and the U.S., laying the groundwork for deeper defense ties in subsequent years These exercises were part of Ukraine’s NATO Partnership for Peace (PfP) program, which sought closer military cooperation without full membership. Russia strongly criticized these drills, particularly Sea Breeze, as encroaching on its sphere of influence. The training laid groundwork for future cooperation, especially after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, when Ukraine intensified NATO-linked exercises.

    These exercises also were part of the broader NATO-Ukraine cooperation, as outlined in the NATO-Ukraine Annual Target Plan for 2009, which emphasized joint training, equipment modernization, and increasing interoperability . USEUCOM (United States European Command) regularly supported and participated in these exercises, underscoring the U.S. commitment to European security and partnership with Ukraine.

    Sea Breeze 2009

    • Date: July 2009
    • Location: Black Sea (near Odessa and Crimea)
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM), NATO allies (including Turkey, Greece, Canada), and partner nations.
    • Focus: Maritime security, anti-piracy, amphibious operations, and interoperability between NATO and Ukrainian forces.
    • Details: Involved naval ships, aircraft, and special operations forces. Russia opposed the exercise, viewing it as NATO expansionism near its borders.

    Rapid Trident 2009

    • Date: September 2009
    • Location: Yavoriv Training Center (near Lviv, Ukraine)
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. Army Europe (USEUCOM), NATO members (including Poland, Germany), and Partnership for Peace (PfP) countries.
    • Focus: Peacekeeping operations, counterinsurgency, and joint command post training.
    • Details: Part of the U.S.-led Joint Multinational Training Group-Ukraine (JMTG-U) initiative to enhance Ukrainian military interoperability with NATO.

    Saber Guardian 2009″ (Part of the “Combined Endeavor” series)

    • Date: Conducted periodically (Ukraine participated in related interoperability drills)
    • Focus: Communications interoperability between NATO and partner nations.
    • Details: Aimed at improving secure data-sharing and command structures.

    2010

    2010 was part of Ukraine’s pro-NATO phase under President Viktor Yanukovych, who initially continued military cooperation, despite later rejecting NATO membership (2010–2014). The Ukrainian Cabinet of Ministers approved an action plan in June 2010 for annual cooperation with NATO, which included participation in NATO-led peacekeeping missions, joint exercises, and training of Ukrainian troops within NATO structures. Ukraine participated in NATO’s Operation Active Endeavour, a counter-terrorist maritime surveillance operation in the Mediterranean Sea. Ukraine deployed ships to support this operation six times between 2007 and 2010, including in 2010. The State Partnership Program (SPP) between Ukraine and the U.S. National Guard (California) continued, including joint training events.

    Rapid Trident 2010

    • Date: July 2010
    • Location: Yavoriv Training Area, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine
    • Participants: Ukraine, NATO members (including the U.S.), and Partnership for Peace (PfP) countries.
    • Focus: Joint multinational peacekeeping operations, interoperability with NATO forces.
    • Significance: Part of the annual U.S.-Ukraine cooperative military training program under the Joint Multinational Training Group-Ukraine (JMTG-U).

    Sea Breeze 2010

    • Date: July 2010
    • Location: Black Sea (near Odessa)
    • Participants: Ukraine, U.S. (USEUCOM/NATO), and other allied nations.
    • Focus: Maritime security, anti-piracy, search and rescue (SAR), and naval interoperability.
    • Significance: A long-standing U.S.-Ukraine naval exercise, enhancing Black Sea security cooperation.

    Saber Guardian/Rapid Reaction 2010

    • Date: Conducted in multiple phases (summer/fall)
    • Location: Ukraine and other Eastern European countries
    • Participants: Ukrainian forces alongside U.S. Army Europe (USAREUR) and NATO partners.
    • Focus: Rapid deployment, peace support operations, and joint command post exercises.

    Reprinted with permission from Sonar21.

  40. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 22 hours ago
    Author: Katrina Trinko

    “Have it your way” isn’t just for fast-food burgers anymore.

    It’s also for babies.

    Orchid, which labels itself as “the world’s most advanced whole genome screening for embryos during IVF,” was highlighted in a recent New York Times article headlined “This baby was carefully selected as an embryo.”

    Orchid, writes journalist Anna Louie Sussman, “screens embryos’ DNA for hundreds of conditions” and also “offer[s] what is known as polygenic screening, which gives parents what is essentially a risk profile on each embryo’s propensity for conditions, such as heart disease.”

    Click here to sign up for pro-life news alerts from LifeNews.com

    When I was in elementary school, my mom started going blind. Retinitis pigmentosa. No family history. No treatments. No cure.

    I got lucky. She didn’t. It led me to build @OrchidInc so my baby —and everyone else’s—gets to win the genetic lottery—avoid blindness— and hundreds of… pic.twitter.com/QPYC2FxmS7

    — Noor Siddiqui (@noor_siddiqui_) April 1, 2025

    Parents who opt to use Orchid get an extensive analysis of their embryos’ risk analysis for a variety of health conditions, including (but not limited to) autism, severe obesity, Alzheimer’s, inflammatory bowel disease, schizophrenia, diabetes, and breast cancer.

    In a 2024 video, Orchid founder Noor Siddiqui compares the screening of two of her 16 embryos. Embryo 2 and Embryo 3, Siddiqui notes, are both “chromosomally normal.” But Embryo 3 has an elevated risk for breast cancer. Embryo 2, she adds, has an elevated risk for celiac disease.

    Left unknown is whether either Embryo 2 or Embryo 3 will get a chance to grow up.

    Welcome to our brave new world.

    “The last thing that I would want is ‘Hey, we already today know that … this genetic disease exists, but … umm … I just didn’t bother just to see if that’s something that would affect my future child,’” Siddiqui says earnestly in the video.

    “I think, basically, sex is for fun and embryo-screening is for babies,” she adds. “I think that it’s going to become insane not to screen for these things.”

    Insane?

    The ugliness of Orchid is that once you do embryo-screening, you already have a human being.

    Don’t take my word for it. Take the word of Leah Culver, whose son Japhy was the first Orchid baby born. In the video, she shows her son, then three months old, a photo of him in his embryo stage.

    “That’s you, Bud,” Culver coos to her son. “That’s you when you were like five cells. … Five days old.”

    Lucky Japhy, whose genetic risks weren’t high enough to keep him mired in a frozen world forever, unable to grow and develop because of a parent’s fear that one day he might be fat or have digestive issues.

    Nor is Orchid alone in this. A competitor, Genome Prediction, offers similar testing, allowing you to look at your embryos’ respective risks for diseases, such as asthma and melanoma (skin cancer).

    Of course, it’s understandable that parents ideally want healthy children. No one wants to see their children suffer.

    Siddiqui cites her mother’s disease of retinitis pigmentosa, which causes blindness, as inspiring her to start Orchid. No doubt her mother’s suffering was awful.

    But would her mother have preferred to have remained a frozen embryo forever or have died, rather than be blind?

    And should parents’ goal be to ensure their children suffer as little as possible?

    Of course, parents shouldn’t seek out suffering for their children. But suffering is sometimes critical to producing certain types of great souls. That’s not a popular view in our hedonistic culture—or one that any of us easily accept. But while we should readily reject the idea of imposing suffering on anyone, we should also pause at the idea of saying life is only worth living if it’s unaccompanied by suffering.

    Furthermore, it’s not like these companies can guarantee success.

    Sure, parents may pick the lowest-risk embryo of the lot as the one that gets to stay alive and grow up. But that doesn’t guarantee control. That doesn’t guarantee that the child won’t lose a dear friend or loved one to a car accident or other early death. That doesn’t promise that the child will never be hurled into an era with political or violent upheaval. That doesn’t ensure the child will never be up at 3 a.m., eyes blinking, heart pounding from an unexpected nightmare and that bleak nighttime sense of despair.

    Parents, too, have the ability to use these services to screen for more than health.

    I highly recommend Simone and Malcolm Collins’ (@SimoneHCollins) Based Camp podcast for insights on the demographic crisis and the future from many angles.

    They are extraordinarily hard-working and prolific, with an episode almost every day. 1/2 pic.twitter.com/zgKVmIBP1T

    — More Births (@MoreBirths) August 13, 2024

    Take Malcolm and Simone Collins, who publicly advocate for large families and have produced over 40 embryos, some of whom they have screened.

    Writing of their experience, Sussman reports that Simone Collins says “[a]necdotally, the tests’ predictive power for behavioral traits—one of the metrics guiding their choice to implant the two embryos that are now their daughters—appears to be strong.”

    “The Collinses said they wanted daughters who were ‘low stress,’ and lo and behold, Ms. Collins said, ‘ultimately both of our daughters are extremely chill and genial,’” Sussman adds.

    How wonderful.

    Isn’t that what parenthood is about, plucking the child out who best fits your preferences and discarding the rest?

    Why should parenthood be something where the parents are challenged, where they are given children who stretch them with personalities that differ from their own or their own favored personalities? Why not just kick back and order some kids who seem to fit your desires for having a certain kind of parenthood experience?

    It’s easy to see how this technology quickly creates a universe where children, like wedding venues and houses and cars and designer goods, are just another way for a couple to showcase their personality and preferences. That’s a stark contrast to the Judeo-Christian view of children as being given by God to parents, a blessing from above, not a lifestyle enhancement carefully selected to fit, not upend, a way of life.

    Embryo screening is also a bleak way of looking at our technological future. We have made tremendous advances in medicine in the past 100 years. Who’s to say that there won’t be a cure or at least significantly better treatment for, say, breast cancer and Alzheimer’s by the time these children are old enough to potentially be affected?

    We’re better than this—or should be.

    All children, all embryos deserve love and a chance to grow up, regardless of their risks for irritable bowel syndrome or obesity, schizophrenia or cancer. That shouldn’t be a radical statement. But in our bleak times, it apparently isn’t an uncontroversial stance.

    LifeNews.com Note:  Katrina Trinko writes for The Daily Signal. Reprinted with permission from the Daily Signal.

    The post Should Parents Kill Some Unborn Babies to Get the Perfect Child? appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  41. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 22 hours ago
    Despite the average age is still around 31, seniors over 65 are already 8.1 per cent of the more than 35 million Malaysians. Their share is bound to grow rapidly due to the combined effect of longer life expectancy and ageing in a society where care for the elderly is still almost entirely delegated to families.
  42. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 23 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Futures Erase Losses As Markets Brace For Earnings Avalanche

    US equity futures are little changed, reversing earlier losses as much as 0.5%, as global markets are broadly in the green amid a burst of positive sentiment, which even pushed JPM's recently bearish trading desk to turn tactically bullish this morning (more in a subsequent post). As of 8:00am ET, S&P and Nasdaq futures are down 0.1%, but well off session lows. Nvidia shares fell 1% in premarket after the Wall Street Journal reported China’s Huawei Technologies is getting ready to test a new and powerful artificial intelligence processor that the company hopes can replace some products made by Nvidia; other Mag7 names are mixed with Cyclicals/Semis under pressure and Defensives catching a bid. Europe's Estoxx advanced 0.5% over early London session with gains led by info tech and consumer staples; Asian stocks were also broadly higher with Japan erasing all post-Liberation day losses.  US equities are focused this week on the tech sector, with Microsoft, Apple, Meta and Amazon all reporting earnings. The week also includes the April US jobs report, due Friday. Bond yields are higher as the curve bear steepens and the USD starts the session stronger. This is a data-heavy week but today’s focus is on regional Fed activity but the key’s this week are NFP, JOLTS, ISM-Mfg, and 25Q1 metrics.

    In premarket trading, Nvidia shares slip after the WSJ reported that Huawei is getting ready to test an artificial intelligence processor that the Chinese tech giant hopes can replace some Nvidia products; others Mag7 stocks are Alphabet 0.06%, Meta Platforms +1%, Amazon +0.1%, Tesla +0.8%, Nvidia -1.5%, Microsoft -0.2%, Apple 0.6%. Boeing rises 1.5% as Airbus SE agreed to take over some assets and sites from Spirit AeroSystems, clearing the way for Spirit to be acquired by Boeing. Also, Bernstein upgraded Boeing to outperform, noting that the aircraft maker is now “making the progress it needed for the growth trajectory.” Eli Lilly slips 1.6% after HSBC double downgraded the stock to reduce — a sell-equivalent rating — from buy, saying the drugmaker’s risk-reward “is not attractive.” Here are some other notable premarket movers:

    • CG Oncology (CGON) soars 40% after presenting data on cretostimogene grenadenorepvec monotherapy data at the American Urological Association annual meeting.
    • Jack in the Box (JACK) rises 4% after Stifel upgrades to buy, saying new CEO Lance Tucker “has created a viable plan to strengthen the balance sheet.”
    • Peloton Interactive (PTON) gains 6% after Truist Securities upgraded the fitness company to buy, saying the stock is finally nearing a point where the company’s improving fundamentals should support a recovery in shares.
    • Revolution Medicines (RVMD) climbs 5% after presenting initial data from a Zoldonrasib study in patients with non-small cell lung cancer.

    US futures posted modest moves as investors awaited reports from American companies worth $20 trillion, including four mega tech names AAPL, AMZN, MSFT and META, and watched for progress in US trade talks with Asian partners. Wild gyrations sparked by Trump’s April 2 tariff announcements have eased somewhat, but investors will be scrutinizing this week’s key company reports for the earnings impact of US trade policies. Fresh readings on the state of the American economy may support hopes of earlier-than-expected Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts. 

    Four of the Mag 7, Microsoft, Apple, Meta and Amazon,  are due to report earnings this week. Analysts expect the group to deliver an average of 15% profit growth in 2025, a forecast that’s barely budged since the start of March despite the flareup in trade tensions. In terms of market capitalization, it’s the busiest week of the year for earnings, with S&P 500-listed companies worth $20 trillion reporting.

    Investors are also watching for any signs of progress in US trade negotiations after Trump suggested another delay to his higher tariffs was unlikely. Asian economies, facing some of the highest US “reciprocal” tariffs, are leading the way over their western counterparts in talks with the administration.

    “Ultimately, it seems that we’re moving towards a place where these policies start to make a little more sense,” Themistoklis Fiotakis, global head of FX strategy at Barclays Plc, told Bloomberg TV. “If this starts shaping up in a place where markets can understand it, can quantify it, then I think that things are going to normalize.”

    To help manage the next steps, the Trump team has drafted a framework to handle negotiations with about 18 countries, including a template that lays out common areas of concern to guide the discussions. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the administration is working on bilateral trade deals with 17 key partners, not including China. Bessent reiterated the administration’s argument that Beijing will be forced to the negotiating table because China can’t sustain Trump’s latest tariff level of 145% on Chinese goods. Its standoff with China will likewise limit the potential benefits the US can reap from deals with Asian trading partners, according to Phoenix Kalen, global head of emerging markets research at Societe Generale SA.

    “Already there has been a lot of investor sentiment and positioning for some deals to be done, especially with Japan, especially with South Korea,” Kalen told Bloomberg TV. “But the scope is going to be relatively limited and hampered. The concern especially for Asian trade partners around how China will respond to the terms will limit the extent to which they can agree to certain terms with the Trump administration.”

    Meanwhile, Friday’s US non-farm payrolls figures will also turn attention to the health of the American economy. “In general I think this week’s data won’t be too bad for the economy because it really precedes the announcement of tariffs,” Kathy Jones, chief fixed income strategist at Charles Schwab & Co., told Bloomberg TV. “The inflation numbers shouldn’t be too bad. But I’ll really be watching the ISM numbers at the end of the week and of course, the jobs data where we could see some softness.”

    The S&P 500’s recovery month-to-date from a 14% drop to -1.5% as of Friday’s close is one of the best rebounds since 1950. Still, the bounce has been too narrow to instill much confidence in a sustainable longer-term rally. Traders may stay cautious as gains have been largely headline and short-covering driven. Volatility is abating but remains elevated. It’s also coming up to the 100-day mark for Trump’s presidency.

    In Europe, the Stoxx 600 is set to extend its winning streak to a fifth session as it climbs 0.7%, boosted by M&A news out of Italy as Mediobanca made a €6.3 billion ($7.1 billion) offer for the wealth management arm of Italian insurer Assicurazioni Generali SpA.  Food & beverage, travel & leisure and bank stocks are leading gains while real estate and industrials lag. Here are some of the biggest movers on Monday:

    • Deliveroo stock soars as much as 18% to 173p after the food-delivery firm said that DoorDash has made a cash takeover proposal at 180p a share, and it would be “minded to recommend such an offer” to shareholders.
    • Traton shares rise as much as 5.5% after the German truckmaker posted first-quarter results, with analysts welcoming a strong order intake.
    • Interpump shares rise as much as 4.1% in Milan trading after BNP Paribas Exane analysts upgraded the Italian hydraulics and pumps manufacturer, saying it is “an overlooked M&A story with positive risk/reward.”
    • ITV shares drop as much as 3.8% after a report that France’s Banijay Group is working on plans for a takeover offer for the entire broadcaster or its studio arm. Analysts note reports of interested bidders are building, but a deal isn’t a certainty.
    • Fraport drops as much as 4.5% after Jefferies downgrades the airport services provider to underperform from hold, saying it’s overexposed to slowing transatlantic and business traffic.
    • Nagarro shares fall as much as 16%, to a record low, after the German IT services firm postponed the publication of its full-year results.
    • BoneSupport falls as much as much as 6.6% after the company announced its CEO Emil Billback is stepping down after more than seven years in the role.
    • Valneva shares drop as much as 20% after French regulators decided to suspend the use of its chikungunya vaccine Ixchiq for people aged 65 years and older.

    Earlier in the session, Asian shares also rose as focus shifted to a slew of major earnings from the region, while signs that trade tensions may have peaked, at least for now, helped sentiment.  The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose as much as 0.8%, adding to last week’s 2.2% gain. Japanese benchmarks outperformed following a report on Toyota Motor Corp. chairman’s proposal to buy out Toyota Industries. Indian shares resumed their climb amid foreign inflows, while Chinese stocks were range-bound as officials reiterated their plan to strengthen support for employment and the economy. The flood of tariff-related headlines has slowed somewhat, and investors are turning their attention to earnings to gauge how Asian firms are prepared to tackle higher levies. The region is facing its busiest earnings week this season, with China’s biggest banks including Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. and Bank of China Ltd. set to release results. 

    “Broadly, we’re seeing some relief positioning as there is some refocusing on fundamentals, which I would say is tariff fatigue,” said Billy Leung, senior investment strategist at Global X ETFs in Australia. On China’s earnings, markets want to see more commentary from corporates on domestic confidence, he added.

    In rates, treasuries were cheaper across the curve, with futures extending a drop into the early US session as investors digest news around US trade talks with Asian partners.  US yields were cheaper by 2bp to 5bp across the curve, with intermediates underperforming slightly, flattening 5s30s spread by 2bp on the day. US 10-year yields traded around 4.27%, down 4 bps from Friday's close; European bonds also decline with bunds lagging by 1bp and gilts outperforming 1bp. Next Treasury coupon auction is scheduled for May 5.  

    In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is flat; New Zealand dollar lags G-10 peers and the pound leads gains, rising 0.3% against the greenback.

    In commodities, spot gold falls $42 to around $3,278/oz. Oil prices are steady with WTI just below $63 a barrel. 

    In crypto, bitcoin rose 1.1% to $95,344.86; ether rose 0.9% to $1,819.53.

    Looking at the US economic calendar, it's quiet - we only have the April Dallas Fed manufacturing activity at 10:30am. Fed officials are quiet due to blackout period. This week also includes JOLTS, consumer confidence, PCE, GDP, ISM manufacturing and April payrolls. Fed’s external communications blackout ahead of the May FOMC meeting started Saturday.

    Market Snapshot

    • S&P 500 mini -0.2%
    • Nasdaq 100 mini -0.2%
    • Russell 2000 mini -0.3%
    • Stoxx Europe 600 +0.6%
    • DAX +0.7%
    • CAC 40 +0.8%
    • 10-year Treasury yield +3 basis points at 4.26%
    • VIX +0.7 points at 25.51
    • Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1226.26
    • Euro -0.2% at $1.1347
    • WTI crude -0.2% at $62.92/barrel

    Top Overnight News

    • Trump posted on Truth that “When Tariffs cut in, many people’s Income Taxes will be substantially reduced, maybe even completely eliminated. Focus will be on people making less than $200,000 a year. Also, massive numbers of jobs are already being created, with new plants and factories currently being built or planned. It will be a BONANZA FOR AMERICA!!! THE EXTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE IS HAPPENING!!!”. Trump also posted that “…this is a crucial week to work on “THE ONE, BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL,” which will contain Massive Tax Cuts, Strong Border Security Measures, Major Military Advancements, Dramatic Deregulation, Powerful Spending Reforms, and more!”
    • Trump will meet with House Speaker Johnson at 2pm ET and will be signing executive orders focused on restoring law and order and securing the homeland at 5pm ET on Monday.
    • Mark Carney is seeking a fourth Liberal win in Canada in today’s election. Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives chipped away at his lead in the final days of the campaign, but surveys still point to a probable Liberal victory. BBG
    • Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskiy said he’s hopeful for a lasting peace after talking with Trump, who questioned whether Vladimir Putin genuinely wants to end the war, and floated further sanctions. BBG
    • Huawei is developing an AI processor that it hopes may replace some Nvidia products, the WSJ reported. BBG
    • Trump’s trade war with Beijing is starting to affect the wider US economy as container port operators and air freight managers report sharp declines in goods transported from China. FT
    • The drastic reduction in goods from China hasn’t been felt by many Americans yet, but that’s about to change. By the middle of May, thousands of companies — big and small — will be needing to replenish inventories. Giant retailers such as Walmart Inc. and Target Corp. told Trump in a meeting last week that shoppers are likely to see empty shelves and higher prices. BBG
    • China’s top economic officials said the country could do without American farm and energy imports as they vowed to achieve a 5% GDP growth target for the year despite the trade war with the US. FT
    • China has rejected US President Donald Trump’s claims that he received a phone call from Chinese leader Xi Jinping. The Trump administration has repeatedly asserted over the past week that the US president had spoken by phone with Xi and trade talks took place. SCMP
    • A senior South Korean government official ruled out on Monday that Seoul would agree to a trade package with Washington by the time the country holds a presidential election on June 3, and flagged challenges to reaching a deal even before early July. RTRS

    Tariffs/Trade

    • Chinese President Xi and US President Trump have not had a call recently, according to China's Foreign Ministry; says the US and China have not conducted negotiations and consultations on tariffs.
    • USTR’s office was reported on Friday to have prepared a framework for staggered reciprocal trade negotiations aimed at streamlining talks with 18 partners on a rolling basis over the next 2 months until the US’s July 8th deadline, according to WSJ.
    • US Treasury Secretary Bessent said he had interaction with his Chinese counterpart in Washington last week and thinks the Chinese will see the tariff level as unsustainable and he also thinks there is a path to an agreement with China on tariffs, according to ABC News. It was separately reported that Bessent had met with Japanese Finance Minister Kato on Thursday and held productive discussions across a broad range of bilateral issues including reciprocal trade, while he was said to be encouraged by discussions with South Korean officials that focused on an ‘expanded equilibrium’ which encourages rather than restricts trade.
    • US Agriculture Secretary said the US is holding daily conversations with China over tariffs.
    • China has reportedly quietly exempted some US-made products from tariffs with Beijing said to have been canvassing companies and waiving duties on US goods in sectors where there is a lack of alternatives, according to WSJ.
    • Shein is said to have raised US prices on some items by as much as 377% ahead of tariff increases, according to Bloomberg.
    • Fox’s Gasparino posted on X that the Trump Administration would like to roll out trade deals this week, at least the outlines that have been agreed upon, citing sources close to the matter.” However, he also noted there are a lot of moving targets that could delay matters, while the deals on deck include India, Japan and maybe South Korea and Australia, although the White House spokesperson didn’t respond to a request for comment.
    • Pershing Square CEO Ackman posted on X that the US could choose to unilaterally pause China tariffs to better facilitate US companies transitioning supply chains out of China, while he believes the US and China are incentivised to take tariffs down to more reasonable levels of 10%-20% as quickly as possible.
    • South Korean's Vice Industry Minister says no chance of reaching an agreement on a trade package with the US before the June 3rd snap elections.

    A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

    APAC stocks were mixed amid a lack of major catalysts from over the weekend and with a very quiet calendar to start a busy week of earnings results and key data releases including the latest US NFP report. ASX 200 was led higher by outperformance in tech, healthcare and energy, while miners lagged after mixed production updates. Nikkei 225 advanced at the open as participants digested earnings releases and M&A news in which Toyota Motor's  chairman and founding family made a takeover proposal for Toyota Industries. However, the index has since pulled back from today's peak after failing to sustain a brief return above the 36,000 level. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp lagged amid some disappointment from Beijing's press conference on policies and measures for stabilising employment, ensuring stable growth and promoting high-quality development which was conducted by the deputy heads of government agencies and the PBoC and lacked any major concrete policy measures. Japan's TOPIX Index erases all losses since the April 2nd US tariff announcement.

    Top Asian News

    • China held a press conference about policies and measures on stabilising employment, ensuring stable growth and promoting high-quality development which was attended by deputy heads of Chinese government departments and the PBoC.
    • PBoC Deputy Governor said China will cut RRR and interest rates at an appropriate time, as well as guide financial institutions to guarantee financing demand for foreign trade firms. Furthermore, the PBoC is studying plans to enrich policy kits and will roll out new policies when needed, while it will boost financing support for private firms, allowing private firms to issue more debts.
    • MOFCOM Vice Minister Sheng said China will further improve the second-hand car markets and will smooth consumption of used car market this year, while China will push the expansion of healthcare and childcare services and actively expand imports.
    • China NDRC vice chief said will closely monitor domestic and external changes and improve policy toolkits, while they will unveil new policies based on changes in the economic situation and some new policies will be rolled out in Q2.
    • China’s Finance Minister said China will adopt more proactive macroeconomic policies to promote the realisation of the growth target and that China is willing to further open up its super large markets to the world to achieve mutual benefits.
    • China’s Cabinet passed the draft law of China’s medical security and will submit it to the NPC Standing Committee for deliberation, while it also approved the Sanmen nuclear power plant in Zhejiang province.
    • China issued a notice on further improving tax refund policies for foreign tourists to boost inbound consumption and will promote the expansion of tax refund stores at shopping centres, scenic spots, airports and hotels.
    • Chinese President Xi said China will use various policies to support development, while he urged for the healthy and orderly development of AI.
    • China’s top market regulator said regarding a media report of separating the Panama Port from the CK Hutchison (1 HK) deal, that they are paying close attention to the transaction and will review it in accordance with the law. Furthermore, the regulator said parties to the transaction must not use any means to avoid a review.
    • TikTok owner ByteDance plans to enter online shopping in Japan as it seeks to expand outside of the US.
    • Huawei approached some Chinese tech companies about testing the technical feasibility of the new chip called Ascend 910D, according to WSJ.
    • Rumours were circulating in social media that DeepSeek’s R2 AI model is nearing release which is set to feature double the parameters of R1.
    • Following the Politburo statement on Friday, which flagged further interest rate cuts, a Reuters source close to the PBoC said it was in no rush to trim rates as the impact of tariffs is still unclear.
    • BoJ Quarterly Schedule of Outright Purchases of JGBs: pace maintained for May.

    European bourses (STOXX 600 +0.4%) opened modestly firmer across the board, and have traded rangebound throughout the morning thus far given limited fresh macro drivers. European sectors hold a strong positive bias, but with the breadth of the market fairly narrow. Food Beverage & Tobacco takes the top spot, joined closely by Autos. Real Estate sits at the foot of the pile, given the relatively higher yield environment today.

    Top European News

    • BoE Governor Bailey and US Treasury Secretary Bessent held discussions on financial markets and the regulatory environment.
    • ECB’s Centeno said uncertainty is dominating economic analysis which was largely being caused by US trade policy.
    • ECB’s Kazaks urged cautious steps and said the ECB should only lower interest rates into accommodative territory if the growth outlook continues to deteriorate much further, according to Bloomberg.
    • ECB's Knot said the ECB June meeting is going to be really complicated, according to European press cited by Bloomberg.
    • ECB’s Simkus said the ECB may have to cut rates a couple of more times as US tariffs weigh on economic growth and as inflation continues to slow, according to Bloomberg.
    • ECB's Villeroy says he "does note see any extra inflation for Europe; says we still have margin for rate cuts in Europe".
    • ECB policymakers reportedly are becoming increasingly confident about a rate cut in June although there is little to no appetite for a big move, according to six sources cited by Reuters. It was also reported that the central bank established a task force to simplify banking regulation.
    • SNB adjusts the remuneration of sight deposits; lowers the threshold factor to 18 (prev. 20), effective June 1st.

    FX

    • A choppy session for the Dollar, but ultimately flat on spot month end in what has been the quiet before the storm in terms of news flow thus far, with the rest of the week packed with risk events including the first look at Q1 USD GDP and the US labour market report. There was minimal major and new tariff news, but US consumers may soon feel the impact (e.g. Shein raising prices by up to 377%, logistics slowdown in air freight and imports). DXY currently resides in a relatively tight 99.46-99.84 range.
    • EUR is subdued, albeit marginally, against the backdrop of a string of relatively dovish ECB rhetoric, whereby policymakers are becoming increasingly confident about a rate cut in June. EUR/USD resides in a 1.1330-80 range.
    • Flat trade for the JPY amidst a lack of major updates over the weekend. US Treasury Secretary Bessent met with Japanese Finance Minister Kato on Thursday and held productive discussions across a broad range of bilateral issues including reciprocal trade. USD/JPY resides in a 143.29-143.90 range.
    • GBP is slightly firmer in a quiet session thus far to start the week. In terms of UK trade headlines, UK Chancellor Reeves said she met with US Treasury Secretary Bessent, says the goal is reaching an agreement that is in both their national interests. GBP/USD trades in a 1.3280-1.3346 range.
    • Antipodeans are lower intraday amid the cautious risk tone alongside ongoing tariff uncertainty between the world's two largest economies, whilst domestic updates have been light. AUD/USD dipped under Friday's trough in a 0.6369-0.6406 intraday range.

    Fixed Income

    • USTs are contained, but do hold a downward bias. Newsflow on the tariff/trade front included indications of a potential path to a US-China agreement, however, specifics have been light with major catalysts ex-geopols a touch light. Amidst this, USTs find themselves in a thin 111-14+ to 111-22+ band. Ahead, the docket is focussed on the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Business Index before the Treasury Financing Estimates ahead of Wednesday’s Quarterly Refunding.
    • Bunds are in-fitting with USTs and as such are also in a relatively modest 131.32 to 131.76 band. Developments for the bloc, ex-earnings, have been light. The slight underperformance seen in EGBs vs USTs/Gilts is likely a function of some concession into upcoming EZ supply where over EUR 5bln is expected to be sold across three lines. On the ECB front, Reuters reported that officials are increasingly confident on a June move, though there is little/no appetite for a big move.
    • Gilts are essentially unchanged in a very narrow 93.10 to 93.33 band. As above, updates light as we await further details on the meeting between US Treasury Secretary Bessent and BoE Governor Bailey, a discussion on regulation and financial markets which was reported as being “good”.

    Commodities

    • Crude benchmarks have been trading very choppy on either side of the unchanged mark, as traders digest the latest US-Iran talks and Ukraine peace talks. On the former, talks are reportedly progressing, but there is still a lot of work to do. WTI and Brent trade at USD and 63.50 and 65.70/bbl respectively.
    • Gold is softer, and underperforms within the metals space in a continuation of the sell-off from record highs, printed Tuesday at USD 3500/oz, currently, the yellow metal is trading either side of the USD 3,280/oz mark, with eyes on the USD 3300/oz mark, a level which it retreated from overnight.
    • Base metals are mixed, given the flimsy risk tone and after China's press briefing on policy underwhelmed. 3M LME Copper sits in a busy USD 9,316.15-9,402.85/t range.
    • China is stockpiling oil amid Trump tariff shocks impacting crude prices as imports of crude to China surged in March and continued to accelerate in April with imports at nearly 11mln BPD vs 8.9mln BPD in January, according to FT citing Kpler data.
    • China Q1 gold consumption fell around 6% Y/Y to 290.5 metric tons and gold production rose 1.5% Y/Y to 87.2 metric tons, according to the China Gold Association.

    Geopolitics: Middle East

    • Israel's Defence Minister said Israel conducted an attack on a site in Lebanon’s capital of Beirut which stored precision missiles.
    • Qatar’s PM said he saw some progress in Thursday’s Gaza talks.
    • Iran’s Foreign Minister Araqchi said the next round of nuclear talks with the US could occur next Saturday with the venue to be decided by Oman, while he added that both sides are showing seriousness and determination. Furthermore, a senior US official said the third round of nuclear talks with Iran were positive and productive with progress made on getting a deal but noted there is still much to do.
    • Oman’s Foreign Minister said US-Iran talks will continue with a further high-level meeting provisionally scheduled for May 3rd and core principles, objectives and technical concerns were all addressed in US-Iran talks on Saturday.
    • Israeli PM Netanyahu called for the complete dismantling of Iran's nuclear programme, insisting that any deal with Tehran must also address its ballistic missile capabilities, according to AFP News Agency.
    • A huge explosion at a key Iranian port killed at least 40 and injured around 800 others. It was separately reported that an Iranian Defence Ministry spokesperson said there was no military material in the port affected by the blast, while - Russia will send several planes to Iran to help extinguish the fire at Iran’s port.

    Geopolitics: Ukraine

    • US President Trump met with Ukrainian President Zelensky at the Vatican for 15 minutes which Zelensky’s staff said was constructive, covered a lot of ground and they agreed to meet again, while the White House said the meeting was very productive.
    • US President Trump said the meeting with Ukrainian President Zelensky went well and we'll see what happens in the next days, while Trump is very disappointed with Russia and wants Russian President Putin to stop shooting and reach a deal. Furthermore, Trump said the confines of a deal are there and that Zelensky is calmer now and wants to make a deal, while it was separately reported that President Trump said he thinks Ukrainian President Zelensky is ready to give up Crimea, according to Al Arabiya.
    • US President Trump said there was no reason for Russian President Putin to be shooting missiles into civilian areas, cities and towns over the last few days which makes him think that Putin doesn’t want to stop the war and is just ‘tapping’ him along, while Trump added too many people are dying and this has to be dealt with differently through banking or secondary sanctions.
    • US Secretary of State Rubio said Russia and Ukraine are generally closer to a peace deal than in the last three years and a peace deal needs to happen soon, while he added that the US has options to hold responsible those that don’t want a Ukraine peace deal, according to NBC.
    • Russian President Putin confirmed Russia’s readiness to negotiate with Ukraine without preconditions during a meeting with US envoy Witkoff, according to IFAX.
    • Russian President Putin said Kyiv’s adventure in the Kursk region completely failed and Chief of General Staff Gerasimov said Ukrainian saboteurs in Russia’s Belgorod region have been liquidated. Furthermore, Russia’s military commander told Russian President Putin that scattered remnants of Ukrainian forces in Russia’s Kursk region will be destroyed soon, according to RIA.
    • Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov said Russia will continue to target sites used by Ukraine’s military, foreign fighters and military instructors sent by Europe, while he added that Russia would be willing to store Iran’s enriched nuclear material if both the US and Iran believe that was useful.
    • Ukrainian military said Moscow’s assertion it has ended Ukraine’s incursion into the Kursk region is not true and operations inside Kursk continue, while its forces are still on active operations in the Belgorod region.
    • French President Macron said he had a very positive exchange with Ukrainian President Zelensky and that Ukraine is ready for an unconditional ceasefire, while the coalition of the willing will continue working on a ceasefire and lasting peace in Ukraine.
    • German Defence Minister Pistorius said US demands for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia are going too far.
    • North Korea confirmed troop deployment to Russia and said it will faithfully implement its agreement with Russia, according to Yonhap. Furthermore, South Korea said North Korea's confirmation of Russia troop deployment is an admission of a criminal act and the US State Department noted it is concerned by North Korea's direct involvement in Russia's war in Ukraine, while it added that North Korea's military deployment to Russia and any support provided by Russia to it in return must end.

    Geopolitics: Other

    • US President Trump said American military and commercial ships should be allowed to travel free of charge through the Panama and Suez Canals, while he asked Secretary of State Marco Rubio to immediately take care of and memorialise this situation.
    • India test-fired missiles on Sunday as tensions rise with Pakistan following the Kashmir attack.
    • China’s move to claim sovereignty over a disputed reef in the Spratly Islands by planting a flag triggered a stand-off with the Philippines in which the latter sent navy, coastguard and maritime police officers to Sandy Cay and two neighbouring sandbanks to uphold its sovereignty, rights and jurisdiction and displayed the national flag there, according to FT.

    US Event Calendar

     

    DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

    It was a joyous but painful weekend as Liverpool won the Premier League for only the second time in my adult life but I broke a toe cooking the kids’ dinner! Given you’re no doubt wondering how, I basically caught my right little toe on the kitchen island as I was walking round it. It was extremely painful and ballooned up to nearly the size of a golf ball.
    While trying to take my mind off the pain, this week will be the first for a while where data and earnings will compete with tariff headlines as it’s a bumper week on this front. In terms of data the main highlights in the US are payrolls (Friday), core PCE inflation and US GDP (Wednesday), ISM manufacturing (Thursday) and the latest JOLTS and consumer confidence tomorrow. In Europe flash CPI numbers get released from Spain tomorrow, Germany, France and Italy on Wednesday, with the Eurozone aggregate on Friday (our economists’ preview is here). On Wednesday, Q1 GDP reports are due for Germany, France, Italy and the Eurozone. In Asia, the focus will be on the BoJ meeting (Thursday - our preview here) and April PMIs in China (Wednesday).

    An avalanche of corporate earnings will centre around results from Microsoft and Meta on Wednesday and Apple and Amazon on Thursday. This will contribute to a whopping 40% of S&P 500 market cap reporting this week. It's fair to say that these Mag-7 earnings will go a long way to dictating the tone of the week. As I mentioned last week remember that before Liberation Day the main theme bubbling in the background was the Mag-7 underperforming due to DeepSeek, worries about extreme levels of Capex needed to power AI forward, valuations and a disappointing Q4 reporting season around the end of January. Three months on we'll see what earnings look like.

    Elsewhere we see the federal election in Canada today. Remember the ruling Liberal Party were frequently 25pp behind in the polls in early-mid January even after Trudeau had announced his resignation as leader. However after the "51st state" rhetoric and aggressive tariffs, the rally round the flag movement has propelled the Liberals into a 3-4pp lead in current poll of polls which if replicated today would likely give them a small majority. So a remarkable turnaround. Elsewhere in politics, Wednesday will mark President Trump’s first 100 days in office. So expect lots of reflections on this landmark. The UK holds local elections on Thursday with the main point of interest being how well the populist Reform Party does given they have recently edged ahead of the ruling Labour Party in national polls.

    So its fair to say its a busy week. Let's go into more detail on some of the main data points. Firstly, in terms of payrolls, our economists forecast that headline (+125k forecast vs. +228k previously) and private (+125k vs. +209k) payrolls will mean revert after a strong March, particularly within the leisure/hospitality and retail sectors. Our econ team point out that March and April can get whipped around due to the timing of Easter and school spring breaks. Unemployment should remain steady at 4.2% though.

    Wednesday's advance Q1 GDP will be interesting as the consensus suggests only +0.4% annualised growth in the quarter (+1.1% expected at DB vs. +2.4% in Q4) so that will raise some concerns if it materialises. At the same time we see March personal income (+0.5% DB vs. +0.4% last month) and spending (+0.6% DB vs. +0.4%) data. This will also contain the latest reading on the core PCE deflator (+0.1% vs. +0.4%) which is expected to be on the softer side this month. This will be welcome but remember this is all largely pre-tariffs.

    The day by day week ahead is at the end as usual, including the highlights from a busy week for earnings on both sides of the Atlantic. One final thing to note is the US Treasury’s updated borrowing estimates (today) and the subsequent refunding announcement (Wednesday). This normally gets released without too much fuss but remember that in Summer 2023 (end July/early August) this quarterly announcement helped cause brief but great stress in markets due to higher than expected borrowing and more long-dated issuance. Since then the Treasury has managed the process with a view to minimising market fears but in an era of large borrowings these events are always worth keeping an eye out for. Our strategists’ preview and forecasts are here.

    Asian equity markets are mixed this morning with local markets mostly higher but US futures notably lower. As I check my screens, the S&P/ASX 200 (+0.81%), the Nikkei (+0.51%) are comfortably higher with the KOSPI (+0.15%) seeing more minor gains. Chinese equities are mostly trading around the flatline but S&P 500 (-0.52%) and NASDAQ 100 (-0.60%) futures are lower.

    Recapping last week now and markets put in a strong performance thanks to several factors. First, Trump signalled that he wanted to make a deal with China, and he said that tariffs on China could fall “substantially” from the 145% level at present. Second, Trump rowed back on his previous criticisms of Fed Chair Powell, saying that he had “no intention” of firing him, which reassured investors concerned about central bank independence. And third, there were increasing signs that the US economy was still holding up relatively well in the circumstances, as data like the weekly jobless claims and the April flash PMIs weren’t signalling a recession.

    Against that backdrop, the S&P 500 recovered +4.59% over the week (+0.74% Friday) to close at its highest level since Liberation Day. In fact, the latest moves now leave the index just -2.57% beneath its level on April 2. That move was supported by a very strong performance for the Magnificent 7, which surged +9.17% (+2.86% Friday). And that strength wasn’t just confined to the US, as last week also saw gains for the STOXX 600 (+2.77%), the Nikkei (+2.81%) and the MSCI EM index (+2.67%).

    That easing in market stress was evident from several other indicators last week. For instance, US HY credit spreads tightened for a third consecutive week, falling -38bps (-8bps Friday) to 360bps. US real yields also fell back, with the 10yr real yield down -12.3bps (-4.8bps Friday) to 1.97%, closing beneath 2% for the first time in over two weeks. In addition, the VIX index of volatility was down for a third consecutive week, ultimately falling -4.81pts (-1.98pts Friday) to 26.33pts, marking its lowest closing level since Liberation Day.

    With the more positive headlines on tariffs and the economy, US assets more broadly began to stabilise, including the US Dollar itself. That saw the dollar index finally post a modest weekly gain after 4 consecutive declines, up +0.24% (+0.09% Friday). Similarly, US Treasury yields moved lower, particularly at the long-end of the curve, and the 10yr yield fell -8.9bps over the week (-8.0bps Friday) to 4.24%, marking its second consecutive weekly decline.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 08:26
  43. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 23 hours ago
    UN agencies estimate that around 17 million people have been affected in some way by the earthquake, with the death toll standing at 3,700. Fears for the rainy season now approaching. Official statements on the ceasefire have been disregarded: hundreds of bombings have taken place in recent weeks.Fundraising continues, promoted by the PIME Foundation.
  44. Site: Mises Institute
    2 days 23 hours ago
    Author: D.W. MacKenzie
    Foreign direct aid has failed to alleviate worldwide poverty. Nations with secure property rights have prospered.
  45. Site: Novus Motus Liturgicus
    2 days 23 hours ago
    At a time of turmoil, nothing could be better or more important than rooting ourselves more deeply in the Catholic tradition. One of my favorite quotations is by St. Prosper of Aquitaine (390-455), writing in his own age of chaos: “Even if the wounds of this shattered world enmesh you, and the sea in turmoil bears you along in but one surviving ship, it would still befit you to maintain your Peter Kwasniewskihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02068005370670549612noreply@blogger.com0
  46. Site: Rorate Caeli
    2 days 23 hours ago
    On Easter Sunday, the Holy Father Francis, visibly weakened, once again gave the Easter blessing Urbi et Orbi. On Easter Monday, he died in the early hours of the morning as a result of a stroke. This Easter Monday is traditionally associated with the Gospel that contains the story of the journey taken by two disciples, still deeply affected by the shadow and supposed failure of Good Friday, fromPeter Kwasniewskihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05136784193150446335noreply@blogger.com
  47. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 23 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Worse Than Trudeau: Canadians Should Expect Disaster With Carney In Charge

    Justin Trudeau's far-left regime in Canada has finally come to an end as the politician exits leadership in disgrace.  His legacy includes authoritarian governance during the pandemic, whereby he threw Christian church goers and pastors in prison for refusing to stop congregations.  He called for mass forced vaccinations, and he locked the bank accounts of protesters speaking out against the covid mandates.  His admin compared people donating to the cause to "terrorists". 

    His socialist economic policies helped to exacerbate Canada's inflation crisis and his open immigration policies greatly expanded the the flood of third-world foreigners, driving up housing prices, crushing the labor market and straining social services.  By most accounts, the majority of Canadians were ecstatic to see Trudeau exit the stage. 

    But what if they still haven't learned their lesson?  How is that even possible?

    According to recent polls for the 2025 election set for April 28th, it is likely that Canadians have very short memories or they're gluttons for punishment.  Why?  Because Mark Carney and the Liberal Party are projected to make considerable gains.  Carney has rebranded himself as a "centrist" in order to win public favor, but nothing could be further from the truth.  Mark Carney is, in fact, worse than Trudeau on every level.

    What should Canadians expect under a Carney regime?  More mass immigration, not less.  Higher inflation and a suffocating housing market.  Increasing political and economic tensions with the US, which Canada is dependent on for 75% of its export market (and there is no replacement).  Policies pressuring Canadians into a cashless system.  The detrimental institution of carbon controls and climate change rules for industry and energy.  And, even less national sovereignty as Canada is made more beholden to the EU.

    Lets start with immigration...

    While Carney claims he wants caps on immigration, his advisor choices suggest Canadians will get more of the same.  The central banker has tapped Mark Wiseman, co-founder of the Century Initiative lobby group as part of his policy council.  The Century Initiative under the former BlackRock executive publicly endorsed the Trudeau government’s moves to take in 500,000 new immigrants per year by 2025. 

    It should be noted that as Canada increased immigration their economy suffered exponential decline. Between 2015 and 2024, Canada’s ranking in the Human Development Index plummeted from 9th to 18th, while the country fell behind Italy in the average growth of real GDP per capita.  Canada's housing market and social services are essentially broken.

    And how about individual freedom?

    It's no secret that the Liberal Party widely supported the lockdowns and mandatory vaccinations.  However, where did Carney stand on the issue?  

    Carney acted as an "informal adviser" to Trudeau throughout the covid event and supported the mandates wholeheartedly.  In an opinion article for The Globe And Mail titled 'It’s Time To End The Sedition In Ottawa By Enforcing The Law And Following The Money',  Carney wrote in reference to the Trucker Protests against the mandates:

    "No one should have any doubt...This is sedition. That’s a word I never thought I’d use in Canada. It means incitement of resistance to or insurrection against lawful authority.” 

    “The constant blaring of horns at all hours, the harassment of people, the culture of fear have been making residents’ lives hell, will bankrupt our businesses and if left unchecked would help achieve the Convoy’s goal of undermining our democracy...Anyone sending money to the Convoy should be in no doubt: you are funding sedition. Foreign funders of an insurrection interfered in our domestic affairs.”  

    These are the words of an authoritarian, using "democracy" as a cover to institute a sweeping crackdown on public freedoms. 

    Where does Carney stand on the economy?

    Mark Carney is a long time Davo elitist, and as such he is an adherent of Klaus Schwab's "4th Industrial Revolution" theory and the concept of the "Great Reset".  Specifically, Carney is an avid champion of the WEF's climate change agenda and their efforts to make "climate consciousness" inseparable from business culture.  Meaning, Carney will undoubtedly bury Canada in climate controls and carbon taxes, snuffing out their industry and energy base just as the globalists have been doing in Europe.   

    Furthermore, Carney is deeply involved in the push for national and global Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs).  In his 2021 book 'Values", Carney calls for revolutionary centralization of the global monetary system and the launch of CBDCs as the new standard.  He has actively campaigned against cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and any form of decentralized money, claiming instead that the future requires a global digital currency to replace the dollar system (NOTE: Carney did not come up with this idea, this has been a ongoing plan within the BIS and IMF for decades).

    “If properly designed, a CBDC could serve all the functions to which private cryptocurrencies and stablecoins aspire while addressing the fundamental legal and governance issues that will, in time, undermine those alternatives...”

    At bottom, Carney is calling for a cashless society controlled by the banking oligarchy.  Without cash or an independent form of trade, all personal economic freedom dies.  Carney licks his chops over this prospect when he states (in reference to the covid crisis):

    “With fear on the march, people were willing to surrender to Hobbes’ ‘Leviathan’ such basic rights as the freedom to leave their homes. And so it is with money. People will support the delegation to independent central banks of the tough decisions that are necessary to maintain the value of money provided the authorities deliver monetary and financial stability..."

    This is not the man Canadians should be voting for if they have any interest in changing the current Orwellian path their country is on.  Critics claim that it's Donald Trump's tariffs that are to blame for the shift in the polls in Carney's favor. Yet, if Carney is elected he would be the most disastrous choice in negotiating a settlement with the US.  The situation will only become more ugly for Canada in every way.

    This is not a "new boss, same as the old boss" scenario.  Carney is far higher up on the totem pole of degradation than Trudeau and much more devious.

    Psst... click here for a preview of our new partnership at ZH Store.

    Tyler Durden Mon, 04/28/2025 - 08:00
  48. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    2 days 23 hours ago
    Author: pcr3

    Yet another Disastrous Consequence of the Digital Revolution

    Paul Craig Roberts

    The nerds who brought us the digital revolution did so without any thought to the obvious consequences.  Americans addicted to scrolling their cell phones and enjoying social media are suffering from the numerous threats that the digital revolution brings to them.  Not just government spying on them and, if government wishes, setting them up for prosecution.  Not just from being dispossessed of their identity and left with massive bills.  Not just from theft of their bank and retirement accounts. The digital revolution allows thieves to steal our homes. 

    Assuming it is not another hoax, the Daily Mail provides the FBI’s account of how it works:  https://www.dailymail.co.uk/real-estate/article-14567729/fbi-warning-scam-victims-24-hours-save-home.html 

    To protect yourself from the easy theft of your home, you should sign up for a notification alert at the registry of deeds, which will alert you when a document is recorded for your property.  You are most vulnerable if your property is debt free with no mortgage.  If you have no mortgage, take out a small one as your property cannot be transferred from your ownership until the mortgage is paid, if my understanding is correct.  So having to clear a mortgage provides you with a warning that your home is in the process of being stolen.

    The digital revolution is the worst thing except for nuclear weapons that humans have ever devised. The Tech morons who gave us this disaster failed to anicipate the disastrous consequences of their work.

    Read the report:  https://www.dailymail.co.uk/real-estate/article-14567729/fbi-warning-scam-victims-24-hours-save-home.html 

    PUBLISHED: 18:27 EDT, 26 April 2025 | UPDATED: 02:04 EDT, 27 April 2025

    Urgent FBI warning about cruel scam suffered by thousands that leaves you with just 24 hours to save your home

    The FBI is sending an urgent warning to homeowners to be aware of ‘title theft,’ the latest of various moves fraudsters make in order to steal a property owner’s identity and sell their land out from under them. 

    The land theft is on the rise, with the FBI saying the scammers tend to prey on the elderly.

    ‘Our elderly population [are more at risk] because they are more likely to own vacant pieces of land that they have had for quite some time, and they are also more likely to own homes without any mortgages on them,’ FBI Special Agent Vivian Barrios told CBS.

    ‘Because those have the biggest benefit to the criminal actor.’

    In Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island, 2,301 victims lost more than $61.5 million from 2019 to 2023.

    According to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center, nationwide, from 2019 through 2023, 58,141 victims reported $1.3 billion in losses relating to real estate fraud.

    In the Boston Division – which includes all of Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island – during the same period, 2,301 victims reported losing more than $61.5 million. In Maine 262 victims lost $6,253,008. In Massachusetts, 1,576 people lost $46,269,818. In New Hampshire 239 people lost $4,144,467. In Rhode Island 224 people lost a combined $4,852,220. 

    Time is of the essence and as soon as a victim finds out this has happened, they need to report it, ideally within 24-hours. That makes it easier for the feds to get the money back to the victims.

    Plymouth, Massachusetts resident John Grimes got a call from a local attorney about his ‘sale.’

    Title pirates got Plymouth, MA, resident John Grimes, who nearly lost his home after he found out it was for sale.

    Grimes bought his home six years ago but in September 2024 got a call from local attorney Alan Sharaf informing him his home was for sale. Grimes was shocked.

    He filed a fraud report with the FBI. He also signed up for a notification alert at the registry of deeds. That alert is free and will let him know when a document is recorded for his property.

    Sharaf said he was looking at a purchase and sale agreement that was supposedly signed by Grimes. He wanted to make sure he was actually selling the home to the ‘buyer,’ who was located in Montreal and had made an all cash over. No one ever answered the phone number listed for the buyer.

    Grimes loves his home, which backs onto a cranberry bog, isn’t selling it, and never signed sale papers. 

    ‘I got a phone call from a lawyer just outside of Boston and he had gotten a request asking him to facilitate a closing with an e-signature. And everything was all set. But it wasn’t my real signature,’ Grimes told the Daily Mail. 

    Grimes said if he hadn’t gotten that call, it would have been too late. The lawyer told him that another attorney would have shown up at the registry of deeds, filed a record of a fraudulent deed by Grimes, and he would have had his house taken away. He would have gotten it back but only after months of fighting and tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees. 

    ‘He advised me to check my credit, contact the FBI, which I did immediately and I had to give them a bunch of detailed information,’ Grimes says. 

    ‘The bank looks, oh you’ve got a deed, it’s been recorded at the registry as a sale,’ Grimes says.

    Once the sale was flagged as fraudulent, the ‘buyers’ disappeared. 

    The FBI explained to Grimes how exactly these scammers pull this off. Because most contracts today are done electronically, it’s easy for thieves to do.

    First they target a property in the US at random. They send a fake deed they’ve made electronically to a local lawyer they ‘hire’ to ‘close’ on the sale. 

    If they’re lucky the lawyer will do business as usual, easily sign off on it, and send them back a purchase and sale agreement. The scammers then claim to the bank that they rushed to pay all cash in competition with other buyers, and now want to take out a loan, which often gets approved because the house is an asset they now ‘own.’ Then they run away with the loan cash, which oftentimes is hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    ‘You’re the owner. They get a loan and take off with the money. And then I would get a notice that there’s an overdue loan on my property,’ he added. 

    The FBI has since sent out a note to realtors and homeowners about the scam, and told elderly people especially to be aware. 

    Lisa Vesperman Still, a title underwriter and past president of the New England Land Title Association, said the scammers are so sophisticated with technology it’s become easy to dupe lawyers who are bogged down with work or in a rush.

    ‘Seller impersonation fraud by title pirates is happening quite a bit now, and unfortunately a landowner doesn’t often know until the deed from the fraudster to the innocent purchaser gets recorded,’ Still told the Daily Mail.

    ‘The fraudsters also impersonate vacant land owners, owners of empty vacation rentals or second homes that are mortgage free, using fake identification and information combed from public websites, and reach out to unsuspecting real estate agents wanting to sell “their” property.’

    She adds they state it all has to be done remotely, that they can’t meet or appear on a video chat – and certainly can’t come to the closing. 

    ‘Any ID they provide is a very well done forgery, there are often features on the fake ID that are slightly off from an authentic one, but so slightly off that one has to very closely examine every feature. They need their money wired, and want the property sold quickly, almost always at a price well below market value,’ she added.

    Seller impersonation fraud and title piracy are just two of the types of real estate fraud included within those statistics.

    The National Association of Realtors has offered tips to help real estate agents and homeowners avoid getting caught in this scam.

    Avoid remote closings, if possible, they advise. Ask for in-person identity checks. Request copies of documents that only the property owner would have, including a copy of the most recent tax bill, utility bill, or survey from when the property was purchased, in addition to the individual’s ID.

    Send a certified letter to the address of record on the tax bill. Look up the phone number by reverse search or through the phone carrier. Call to verify the public notary and confirm he/she attested to the documents.

    They also suggest homeowners sign up for a notification alert at the registry of deeds, which will alert someone when a document is recorded for their property.

  49. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    2 days 23 hours ago
    Author: pcr3
  50. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    2 days 23 hours ago
    Author: pcr3

    Democrat  Arizona state official arrested for smuggling Mexicans into the US 

    Democrats have ceased to be Americans and have become traitors.

    https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2025/04/katie-hobbs-arizona-agriculture-employee-arrested-alleged-human/ 

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