Author Topic: News you do not hear from U.S. sources  (Read 233 times)

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Offline Bob Riebe

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News you do not hear from U.S. sources
« on: March 07, 2022, 07:13:09 PM »
I used to ignore Al Jazzera but they still cover other news.

Myan­mar de­fec­tors de­scribe mil­i­tary cul­ture of abuse, fear
A soldier (R) carries a sniper rifle during a demonstration against the military coup where security forces fired on protesters in Mandalay on February 20, 2021.
De­fec­tors say at least 2,500 sol­diers have de­sert­ed Myan­mar’s mil­i­tary since last year’s coup.
Published On 8 Mar 20228 Mar 2022

As Ukraine urges no-fly zone, of­fi­cials and ex­perts warn of spi­ralling es­ca­la­tion if NATO gets di­rect­ly in­volved in war.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Is there still a chance of sav­ing the Malayan tiger?
Few­er than 150 wild tigers re­main in Malaysia’s forests, where 3,000 once roamed in the 1950s.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022.

Rus­sia’s UN en­voy an­nounces new cease­fire for Tues­day, says Ukraini­ans can choose ‘where they want to be evac­u­at­ed to’.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Bloomberg logo
Stocks fall, com­modi­ties surge as war angst in­ten­si­fies

The tur­moil on glob­al fi­nan­cial mar­kets in­ten­si­fied Mon­day as US stocks plunged the most in 17 months.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Ukraine says Russ­ian shelling pre­vent­ed the evac­u­a­tion of civil­ians from cities in­clud­ing Kyiv, Mar­i­upol and Kharkiv.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Bank Audi pres­sures dual na­tion­als to agree to waive their rights to take for­eign cur­ren­cy, or risk los­ing the ac­counts.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Navy and civilian water quality recovery experts through the tunnels of the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility, near Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
US mil­i­tary’s de­ci­sion comes af­ter thou­sands were sick­ened by jet-fuel-con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed wa­ter at Pearl Har­bor.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Boat car­ry­ing 300 Hait­ian mi­grants cap­sizes near Flori­da coast
Of­fi­cials said women and chil­dren were aboard the wood­en boat, and 163 peo­ple swam to the US shore.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Ex­perts say dry con­di­tions and shred­ded trees left by a 2018 hur­ri­cane in the US state are to blame for the blazes.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Biden to sign cryp­to or­der as in­dus­try faces pres­sure

The US ap­proach to cryp­tocur­ren­cy has at­tract­ed new at­ten­tion in re­cent weeks as Wash­ing­ton levies sanc­tions on Rus­sia.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Metal barricades placed to the streets as part of defense preparations due to ongoing Russian attacks on Ukraine, in the southern Ukrainian city of Odessa
Ukrain­ian Pres­i­dent Volodymyr Ze­len­skyy warned on Sun­day that Moscow was ‘prepar­ing to bomb Ode­ssa’.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Near­ly 400 civil­ians killed in Afghanistan un­der Tal­iban rule: UN
It is the first ma­jor hu­man rights re­port since the Tal­iban seized pow­er from the for­mer US-backed gov­ern­ment in Au­gust.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Supreme Court de­clines to re­view de­ci­sion that freed Bill Cos­by

Cos­by has claimed he re­lied on a US pros­e­cu­tor’s promise of im­mu­ni­ty when he gave po­ten­tial­ly in­crim­i­nat­ing tes­ti­mo­ny.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Iran says won’t en­dan­ger na­tion­al in­ter­ests af­ter Russ­ian de­mand
An agree­ment on Iran’s nu­clear deal ap­peared im­mi­nent, but a new Russ­ian de­mand has cast doubt over the talks.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Analysts say Iran is counting on Russia’s support in the international arena, given the increasing hostilities between Iran and the West on a range of issues including its nuclear programme and regional influence [File: Dmitry Azarov/Sputnik via Reuters]

Tunisia's President Kais Saied gives a speech at the government's swearing-in ceremony at the Carthage Palace outside the capital Tunis
Pres­i­dent Kais Saied ap­points tem­po­rary top ju­di­cial coun­cil, a body he dis­solved last month amid wide­spread crit­i­cism.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Turk­ish for­eign min­is­ter says the two top diplo­mats agreed to meet on the side of a fo­rum in south­ern Turkey.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Soar­ing food prices threat­en emerg­ing-mar­ket cur­ren­cies
Ris­ing food prices can be huge­ly desta­bi­liz­ing.
Published On 7 Mar 20227 Mar 2022

Offline Dee

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Re: News you do not hear from U.S. sources
« Reply #1 on: March 08, 2022, 01:41:16 AM »
You don't here much about our own southern borders either. Especially from Al Jazzera.
You may all go to hell, I will go to Texas. Davy Crockett

Offline Bob Riebe

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Re: News you do not hear from U.S. sources
« Reply #2 on: March 08, 2022, 05:37:16 AM »
You don't here much about our own southern borders either. Especially from Al Jazzera.
That is true to the extreme, I found this one item: From February 14, and I checked every headline on the U.S.

US: Tough border rhetoric dominates in lead-up to Texas election


Despite tensions over the economy and the coronavirus pandemic dominating politics in the United States, immigration remains a powerful galvanising issue for the Republican Party, particularly in the state of Texas.

In the past year, Texas’s Republican Governor Greg Abbott has deployed thousands of National Guard troops to the southern US border with Mexico to stem arrivals, begun building a new border barrier, and arrested migrants for allegedly trespassing on private property.

The two-term governor has taken the lead in opposing Democratic President Joe Biden’s immigration reforms, earning him an endorsement by former President Donald Trump.

But as Abbott runs for a third term, conservative candidates challenging him in a March 1 Republican nominating contest contend he is still not tough enough on immigration.

Allen West, a former Republican US congressman, says Texas should arrest and deport immigrants who enter the US without documentation – something states do not have the power to do – if the federal government refuses to act.

The “porous border” shows how Abbott’s approach has failed, West has said.
Migrants walking
Liberal advocacy groups say Republicans are demonising asylum seekers who come to the US seeking refuge

Don Huffines, a businessman and former state senator, wants to close Texas’s bridges with Mexico to most inbound traffic and deploy the entirety of the state’s National Guard to the border.

Observers say the tougher border proposals pushed by Abbott’s challengers demonstrate how Republican candidates are trying to out-Trump each other on an issue that remains a powerful galvanising force for the party’s voters.

“No issue grabs the attention of Republicans like immigration and border security do,” said James Henson, director of the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas, who added that Republican primary voters have a seemingly “unlimited appetite” for tough immigration measures.

Trump rewrote the party’s immigration playbook after he successfully campaigned in 2016 on building a border wall with Mexico to stop migrants from coming, banning Muslims from the US, and blocking the entry of refugees.

The current election cycle shows Trump’s influence persists even after losing the presidency in 2020, and that some candidates are going further.

Meanwhile, arrivals of asylum seekers at the US-Mexico border have reached record highs.

Although Biden has kept in place several Trump-era immigration restrictions that allow the US to turn away most people arriving at the border, Republican officials have seized on Biden’s policy changes and the growing number of arrivals.

Biden has dropped a Trump-era rule that would have denied green cards to immigrants who use public benefits, abandoned plans for a border wall, and eliminated a travel ban on visitors from several predominantly Muslim countries.

But the Biden administration has also received sharp criticism from progressives for continuing to expel asylum seekers under a pandemic-related authority first invoked by Trump and for continuing to make them wait in Mexico for hearings in US court.

Some 68 percent of Republicans in Texas say border security or immigration are the top issues facing the state, according to an October 2021 University of Texas poll. And while Republicans broadly approve of Abbott’s immigration policies, according to surveys, the polling suggests they want even more action.

Republicans across the country have made immigration a major focus heading into the November 8 congressional election, where Democrats risk losing control of Congress, stymieing Biden’s legislative agenda.

Liberal advocacy groups, meanwhile, say Republicans are demonizing asylum seekers who come to the US seeking refuge, distorting the economic effects of immigration, and trying to capitalize on xenophobic sentiment.