Limited hospital access disproportionately harms people incarcerated in rural areas

People incarcerated in rural jails and prisons will be disproportionately hurt by hospital closures, according to a new analysis from the Prison Policy Initiative. The post Limited hospital access disproportionately harms people incarcerated in rural areas appeared first. Continue reading Limited hospital access disproportionately harms people incarcerated in rural areas

Predictable Betrayal: Oklahoma VA Closing Non-Profit Due To Lack Of Funding

Veterans continue to learn how quickly Donald Trump will turn his back on them. He no longer needs their vote, their support or their involvement in his MAGA movement. He doesn’t even have to fake it. Predictable Betrayal, yet again. KOCO reports that the group being betrayed is the National Association for Black Veterans. The non profit, based out of Oklahoma City, will be closing at the end of November due to funding cuts from the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services. The non-profit was built by veterans and for veterans and it is a true loss to the community that they are having to shutter their doors after 23 years purely due to funding cuts. Veterans, of all groups, need our support. But clearly this is not a priority to the Trump Administration. KOCO reports that “the closure is part of a larger cut affecting up to 300 programs after the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services reduced contracts to address a budget shortfall.” Hopefully those who served can find an alternative safe space to connect with other veterans. It is critical that they find people like them that they can share their experiences with. Sad, for everyone. Continue reading Predictable Betrayal: Oklahoma VA Closing Non-Profit Due To Lack Of Funding

Gov. Newsom blasts Trump administration for not attending climate conference in Brazil

Gov. Gavin Newsom is in Brazil for the United Nations Climate Change Conference, known as COP30, where he’ll spend the week promoting California’s clean air efforts and criticizing President Donald Trump. In São Paulo on Monday, while speaking at Milken Institute’s Global Investors Symposium, Newsom repeatedly blasted the Trump administration for not even sending “a note-taker.”. Continue reading Gov. Newsom blasts Trump administration for not attending climate conference in Brazil

American Christian Leaders Issue Plea to Trump Ahead of White House Meeting

American Christian Leaders Issue Plea to Trump Ahead of White House Meeting Continue reading American Christian Leaders Issue Plea to Trump Ahead of White House Meeting

Illegal immigrant dodges deportation for decade before allegedly killing man in DUI hit-and-run

Illegal immigrant with 2012 deportation order arrested for fatal DUI hit-and-run in Orange County after killing 71-year-old pedestrian Barry Tutt. Continue reading Illegal immigrant dodges deportation for decade before allegedly killing man in DUI hit-and-run

Trump administration demands that states ‘undo’ full SNAP benefit payments

A new order from the Trump administration tells states to “undo” any full SNAP benefit payments made in November. Continue reading Trump administration demands that states ‘undo’ full SNAP benefit payments

Reports say Trump is replacing ICE leaders with Border Patrol. The move raises questions about both agencies

The possible moves suggest that despite efforts to arrest immigrants en masse, the administration believes ICE isn’t being aggressive enough. Continue reading Reports say Trump is replacing ICE leaders with Border Patrol. The move raises questions about both agencies

Trump’s team may have committed a major Supreme Court ‘blunder’: analysis

President Donald Trump and his legal team may have made a huge “strategic blunder” in defending the president’s “reciprocal tariffs” scheme at the Supreme Court this week, Adam Liptak wrote for The New York Times in an analysis published on Friday and it could have big implications for the outcome of the case. Trump imposed the tariffs months ago, bypassing congressional approval and causing enormous chaos in markets, and invoked as his authority the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) despite the fact that this law doesn’t even mention the word “tariffs.”The problem, Liptak argued, is that for months now, Trump has been bragging about how much money the tariffs will raise for the government, but “before the Supreme Court on Wednesday, his lawyer said something different. The tariffs were tools to achieve policy goals, said D. John Sauer, the solicitor general. ‘The fact that they raise revenue,’ he said, ‘is only incidental.’The difference was legally significant. If the Supreme Court finds that the tariffs are, at bottom, a kind of tax, it is likely to rule against them, since the Constitution gives Congress, not the president, the power to tax,” wrote Liptak. “If the justices agree that the tariffs are diplomatic tools, they may sustain them, as part of the president’s foreign policy prerogative.”In general, Liptak wrote, the justices don’t pay much attention to political statements made in public, but this time they might, and there’s a very significant reason why: “the disconnect at Wednesday’s argument was more complicated than in the earlier cases because, in an unusual move, the introduction to the government’s main brief quoted and so adopted some of Mr. Trump’s public statements. ‘One year ago,’ the brief said, quoting Mr.'”This means, he continued, that not only do the administration’s legal arguments contradict the president’s own words, they contradict themselves. Legal experts broadly think the oral argument in the tariff case went poorly for the president, with many of the right-wing justices skeptical that Trump has the ability to create tariffs out of thin air with no input from Congress. Continue reading Trump’s team may have committed a major Supreme Court ‘blunder’: analysis

Inflows of New Liquidity Have Dried Up: Crypto Daybook Americas

The post Inflows of New Liquidity Have Dried Up: Crypto Daybook Americas appeared com. By Omkar Godbole (All times ET unless indicated otherwise) Bitcoin BTC$102,920. 99 continues to chop around $103,000, struggling to extend Wednesday’s recovery from under $100,000. The CoinDesk 20 Index is up 2% in 24 hours alongside 18% gains in ZEC, ICP and QNT. The crypto market currently resembles a game of musical chairs: Liquidity is shifting from one token to another, without any new influx, in what Wintermute calls a “self-funded mode.” New inflows have been slowing for months across all three channels through which capital enters the ecosystem: stablecoins, ETFs and digital asset treasuries (DATs), Wintermute said. U. S.-listed spot ETFs, for example, registered cumulative outflows of over $1. 5 billion in less than two weeks and demand from digital asset treasury firms has dropped sharply from third-quarter peaks. Interestingly, the absence of fiat inflows comes even as the M2 money supply in major countries continues to rise. This may be because the M2 increase, driven by fiscal spending, is aimed at stimulating a global capital expenditure cycle focused on technology, particularly AI, infrastructure, and boosting domestic demand. The key question is when will liquidity start flowing in again? Perhaps soon, as the Fed is “easing into a bubble,” as Ray Dalio described in his X post, calling it inflationary. Elevated inflation could sustain demand for gold and gold-like assets such as bitcoin. Altcoins involved in AI or those linked to beneficiaries of fiscal stimulus may also perform well, while others may struggle. For now, traders should watch bitcoin’s interaction with its 50-week simple moving average, a crucial bull market support since early 2023. A strong rebound here could signal new record highs. In other news, crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN) urged the U. S. Treasury to ensure its upcoming rules for the GENUIS stablecoin act do not exceed statutory requirements. Decentralized exchange Lighter, which recently experienced. Continue reading Inflows of New Liquidity Have Dried Up: Crypto Daybook Americas