Wednesday, March 30, 2022

AMERICAN PROPAGANDA 
How China’s TikTok, Facebook influencers push propaganda

By AMANDA SEITZ, ERIC TUCKER and MIKE CATALINI

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Clint Watts, president of Miburo, a research firm that tracks foreign disinformation operations, works at his desktop at company headquarters, on March 15, 2022, in New York. Some of China's state media reporters are identifying as travel bloggers and lifestyle influencers on U.S.-owned social media platforms such as Instagram, Facebook and YouTube, racking up millions of followers from around the globe. The Associated Press has identified dozens of these accounts, which are part of a network of profiles that allow China to easily peddle propaganda to unsuspecting social media users.
 (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)


WASHINGTON (AP) — To her 1.4 million followers across TikTok, YouTube, Instagram and Facebook, Vica Li says she is a “life blogger” and “food lover” who wants to teach her fans about China so they can travel the country with ease.

“Through my lens, I will take you around China, take you into Vica’s life!” she says in a video posted in January to her YouTube and Facebook accounts, where she also teaches Chinese classes over Zoom.

But that lens may be controlled by CGTN, the Chinese-state run TV network where she has regularly appeared in broadcasts and is listed as a digital reporter on the company’s website. And while Vica Li tells her followers that she “created all of these channels on her own,” her Facebook account shows that at least nine people manage her page.

That portfolio of accounts is just one tentacle of China’s rapidly growing influence on U.S.-owned social media platforms, an Associated Press examination has found.

As China continues to assert its economic might, it is using the global social media ecosystem to expand its already formidable influence. The country has quietly built a network of social media personalities who parrot the government’s perspective in posts seen by hundreds of thousands of people, operating in virtual lockstep as they promote China’s virtues, deflect international criticism of its human rights abuses and advance Beijing’s talking points on world affairs like Russia’s war against Ukraine.

Some of China’s state-affiliated reporters have posited themselves as trendy Instagram influencers or bloggers. The country has also hired firms to recruit influencers to deliver carefully crafted messages that boost its image to social media users.

And it is benefitting from a cadre of Westerners who have devoted YouTube channels and Twitter feeds to echoing pro-China narratives on everything from Beijing’s treatment of Uyghur Muslims to Olympian Eileen Gu, an American who competed for China in the most recent Winter Games.


The influencer network allows Beijing to easily proffer propaganda to unsuspecting Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube users around the globe. At least 200 influencers with connections to the Chinese government or its state media are operating in 38 different languages, according to research from Miburo, a firm that tracks foreign disinformation operations.

“You can see how they’re trying to infiltrate every one of these countries,” said Miburo President Clint Watts, a former FBI agent. “It is just about volume, ultimately. If you just bombard an audience for long enough with the same narratives people will tend to believe them over time.”

____

While Russia’s war on Ukraine was being broadly condemned as a brazen assault on democracy, self-described “traveler,” “story-teller” and “journalist” Li Jingjing took to YouTube to offer a different narrative.

She posted a video to her account called “Ukraine crisis: The West ignores wars & destructions it brings to Middle East,” in which she mocked U.S. journalists covering the war. She’s also dedicated other videos to amplifying Russian propaganda about the conflict, including claims of Ukrainian genocide or that the U.S. and NATO provoked Russia’s invasion.

Li Jingjing says in her YouTube profile that she is eager to show her roughly 21,000 subscribers “the world through my lens.” But what she does not say in her segments on Ukraine, which have tens of thousands of views, is that she is a reporter for CGTN, articulating views that are not just her own but also familiar Chinese government talking points.

Most of China’s influencers use pitches similar to Li Jingjing’s in hopes of attracting audiences around the world, including the U.S., Egypt and Kenya. The personalities, many of them women, call themselves “travelers,” sharing photos and videos that promote China as an idyllic destination.

“They clearly have identified the ‘Chinese lady influencer’ is the way to go,” Watts said of China.

The AP identified dozens of these accounts, which collectively have amassed more than 10 million followers and subscribers. Many of the profiles belong to Chinese state media reporters who have in recent months transformed their Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube accounts — platforms that are largely blocked in China — and begun identifying as “bloggers,” “influencers” or non-descript “journalists.” Nearly all of them were running Facebook ads, targeted to users outside of China, that encourage people to follow their pages.

The personalities do not proactively disclose their ties to China’s government and have largely phased out references in their posts to their employers, which include CGTN, China Radio International and Xinhua News Agency.

Foreign governments have long tried to exploit social media, as well as its ad system, to influence users. During the 2016 U.S. election, for example, a Russian internet agency paid in rubles to run more than 3,000 divisive political ads targeting Americans.

In response, tech companies like Facebook and Twitter promised to better alert American users to foreign propaganda by labeling state-backed media accounts.

But the AP found in its review that most of the Chinese influencer social media accounts are inconsistently labeled as state-funded media. The accounts — like those belonging to Li Jingjing and Vica Li — are often labeled on Facebook or Instagram, but are not flagged on YouTube or TikTok. Vica Li’s account is not labeled on Twitter. Last month, Twitter began identifying Li Jingjing’s account as Chinese state-media.

Vica Li said in a YouTube video that she is disputing the labels on her Facebook and Instagram accounts. She did not respond to a detailed list of questions from the AP.

Often, followers who are lured in by accounts featuring scenic images of China’s landscape might not be aware that they’ll also encounter state-endorsed propaganda.

Jessica Zang’s picturesque Instagram photos show her smiling beneath a beaming sun, kicking fresh powdered snow atop a ski resort on the Altai Mountains in China’s Xinjiang region during the Beijing Olympics. She describes herself as a video creator and blogger who hopes to present her followers with “beautiful pics and videos about life in China.”

Zang, a video blogger for CGTN, rarely mentions her employer to her 1.3 million followers on Facebook. Facebook and Instagram identify her account as “state-controlled media” but she is not labeled as such on TikTok, YouTube or on Twitter, where Zang lists herself as a “social media influencer.”

“I think it’s likely by choice that she doesn’t put any state affiliations, because you put that label on your account, people start asking certain types of questions,” Rui Zhong, who researches technology and the China-U.S. relationship for the Washington-based Wilson Center, said of Zang.

Peppered between tourism photos are posts with more obvious propaganda. One video titled “What foreigners in BEIJING think of the CPC and their life in China?” features Zang interviewing foreigners in China who gush about the Chinese Communist Party and insist they’re not surveilled by the government the way outsiders might think.

“We really want to let more people ... know what China is really like,” Zang tells viewers.

That’s an important goal in China, which has launched coordinated efforts to shape its image abroad and whose president, Xi Jinping, has spoken openly of his desire to have China perceived favorably on the global stage.

Ultimately, accounts like Zang’s are intended to obscure global criticisms of China, said Jessica Brandt, a Brookings Institution expert on foreign interference and disinformation.

“They want to promote a positive vision of China to drown out their human rights records,” Brandt said.

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TO COUNTER AMERICAN IMPERIALIST PROPAGANDA


Li Jingjing and Zang did not return messages from the AP seeking comment. CGTN did not respond to repeated interview requests. CGTN America, which is registered as a foreign agent with the Justice Department and has disclosed having commercial arrangements with several international news organizations, including the AP, CNN and Reuters, did not return messages. A lawyer who has represented CGTN America did not respond either.

A spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, Liu Pengyu, said in a statement, “Chinese media and journalists carry out normal activities independently, and should not be assumed to be led or interfered by the Chinese government.”

China’s interest in the influencer realm became more evident in December after it was revealed that the Chinese Consulate in New York had paid $300,000 for New Jersey firm Vippi Media to recruit influencers to post messages to Instagram and TikTok followers during the Beijing Olympics, including content that would highlight China’s work on climate change.

It’s unclear what the public saw from that campaign, and if the social media posts were properly labeled as paid advertisements by the Chinese Consulate, as Instagram and TikTok require. Vippi Media has not provided the Justice Department, which regulates foreign influence campaigns through a 1938 statute known as the Foreign Agents Registration Act, a copy of the posts it paid influencers to disseminate, even though federal law requires the company to do so.

Vipp Jaswal, Vippi Media’s CEO, declined to share details about the posts with the AP.

In other cases, the money and motives behind these Facebook posts, YouTube videos and podcasts are so murky that even those who create them say they weren’t aware the Chinese government was financing the project.

Chicago radio host John St. Augustine told the AP that a friend who owns New World Radio in Falls Church, Virginia, invited him to host a podcast called “The Bridge” with a team in Beijing. The hosts discussed daily life and music in the U.S. and China, inviting music industry workers as guests.

He says he didn’t know CGTN had paid New World Radio $389,000 to produce the podcast. The station was also paid millions of dollars to broadcast CGTN content 12 hours daily, according to documents filed with the Justice Department on behalf of the radio company.

“How they did all that, I had no clue,” St. Augustine said. “I was paid by a company here in the United States.”

The station’s relationship with CGTN ended in December, said New World Radio co-owner Patricia Lane.

The Justice Department recently requested public input on how it should update the FARA statute to account for the ephemeral world of social media and its transparency challenges.

“It’s not leaflets and hard copy newspapers anymore,” FARA unit chief Jennifer Kennedy Gellie said of messaging. It’s “tweets and Facebook posts and Instagram images.”

___

A growing chorus of English-speaking influencers has also cultivated an online niche by promoting pro-Chinese messaging in YouTube videos or tweets.

Last April, as CGTN sought to expand its network of influencers, it invited English speakers to join a months-long competition that would end with jobs working as social media influencers in London, Nairobi, Kenya or Washington. Thousands applied, CGTN said in September, describing the event as a “window for young people around the world to understand China.”

British video blogger Jason Lightfoot raved about the opportunity in a video on YouTube advertising the event.

“So many crazy experiences that I’ll never forget for the rest of my life, and that’s all thanks to CGTN,” Lightfoot said in a video he said was filmed from China tech company Huawei’s campus.

Lightfoot, who did not respond to requests for comment, does not disclose this relationship with CGTN on his YouTube profile, where he has accrued millions of views with headlines like “The Olympics Backfired on USA — Disastrous Regret” and “Western Media Lies about China.”

The video topics are often in sync with those of other pro-China bloggers such as Cyrus Janssen, a U.S. citizen living in Canada. During the Olympics, Janssen and Lightfoot both shared videos celebrating Gu’s three-medal win, using identical images of the Olympian, though Lightfoot also poked fun at President Joe Biden.

“USA’s boycott failure ... Eileen Gu Wins Gold!” Lightfoot posted on Feb. 10. That same day, Janssen uploaded a video titled “Is Eileen Gu a Traitor to America? American Expat Shares the Truth.”

In emails to the AP, Janssen said his videos are intended to educate people about China and said he’s never accepted money from the Chinese government. But when pressed for details about some of his partnerships, which include Chinese tech firms, Janssen responded only with questions about an AP’s reporter salary. The AP also found videos that show him appearing on CGTN broadcasts.

The Western influencers routinely decry what they see as distorted American media coverage of Beijing and life there. Some posts, for instance, have ridiculed Western concerns over the safety of Chinese tennis player Peng Shuai, who disappeared from view after leveling sexual assault allegations against a former high-ranking member of China’s ruling Communist Party. She resurfaced around the Olympics in a controlled interview in which she vigorously denied wrongdoing by Chinese officials and said her initial allegations had created an “enormous misunderstanding.”

Her abrupt about-face prompted skeptical reactions in the West, which YouTuber Andy Boreham mocked in a video in which he invoked language reminiscent of the MeToo movement. “I wonder what happened to #BelieveAllWomen,” he said.

Boreham is a New Zealander and columnist for Shanghai Daily. Twitter recently labeled his account as Chinese-state affiliated media. His YouTube account remains unlabeled. In a statement, YouTube said it only applies state-affiliated media labels to organizations, not individuals who work for or with state-funded media.

In a YouTube post last year, Lightfoot, who has more than 200,000 subscribers, marveled at video footage of what he said were “clean, modern, peaceful, pleasant” streets of China. The post then cut to video of gritty, trash-strewn streets he said were in Philadelphia.

“When I first saw this video,” he says by way of narration, “I actually thought it was from a movie. I thought it was from a zombie movie or some kind of end-of-the-world movie. But it’s not. This is real. This is America.”

YouTubers Matthew Tye, an American, and Winston Sterzel, who is from South Africa, believe that, in many cases, China’s paying for videos to be created.

Their evidence?

The pair was included last year on an email pitch to numerous YouTube influencers from a company that identified itself as Hong Kong Pear Technology. The email asked the influencers to share a promotional video for China’s Hainan province, a tourist beach destination, on their channels.

Tye and Sterzel, who spent years living in China and became vocal critics of its government, assume they were probably included on the pitch by mistake.

But, intrigued, they engaged in a back-and-forth with the company while feigning interest in the offer. The company representative soon followed up with a new request — that they post a propaganda video that claimed COVID-19 did not originate in China, where the first case was detected, but rather from North American white-tailed deer.

“We could offer $2000 (totally negotiable considering the nature of this type of content) lemme know if u are interested,” an employee named Joey wrote, according to emails shared with the AP.

After Tye and Sterzel asked for articles that would back up the false claim, the emails stopped.

In an email to the AP, a Pear Technology employee confirmed he had contacted Tye and Sterzel, but said he did not know much about the client, adding “it might be from the government??”

Tye and Sterzel say the exchange pulls back the curtain on how China pushes propaganda through influencers who profit from it.

“There’s a very easy formula to become successful,” Sterzel said in an interview. “It’s simply to praise the Chinese government, to praise China and talk about how great China is and how bad the West is.”

___

Catalini reported from Trenton, New Jersey.
Oscar wins for ‘CODA’ bring tears, elation to Deaf community
DEAF VICTORY SLAPPED DOWN IN MEDIA BY NEWS ABOUT MR. SMITH

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 Eugenio Derbez, from left, Sian Heder, Marlee Matlin, Troy Kotsur, Emilia Jones, Daniel Durant and Amy Forsyth, winners of the award for best picture for "CODA," pose in the press room while signing "I love you" at the Oscars on March 27, 2022, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. The three Oscar wins for the film “CODA” has provided an unprecedented feeling of affirmation to people in the Deaf community. 
(Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)


When “CODA” won the Oscar for best picture in Los Angeles, movie stars from Samuel L. Jackson to Nicole Kidman waved their hands instead of clapping — recognition of a culture and community that proudly calls itself Deaf. At home in suburban New York, Laurie Ann Barish cried, overcome by what she said was a long overdue feeling of acceptance.

Like the film’s acronymic title, Barish was raised by a deaf parent, her mother, now 85. She said she saw her own life in the story about a Massachusetts family “that wants to be heard” and to be seen as no different from anyone else.

“The deaf world is finally unmuted,” said Barish, a 61-year-old personal assistant who lives in Long Beach, New York. “I wish this happened when I was younger, for my mom. It was a wonderful gift. It was for the world to see that we’re all the same. We’re all the same.”
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“CODA” is a tender, coming-of-age tale about the only hearing member in a deaf family that became a crowd-pleaser and earned widespread critical acclaim to become the first film with a largely deaf cast to win best picture. It stars a trio of actors who are deaf, while offering an authentic depiction of Deaf life. For many in that community, the Oscar win provides an unprecedented feeling of affirmation, while offering a measure of Hollywood’s recent progress.

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“CODA” was the first film that “allowed Deaf people to be normal, hard-working individuals trying to raise a family, and navigate the world,” said William Millios, who is deaf and works in freelance videography and web development in Montpelier, Vermont.

“It showed their very real frustrations, without making them into pitiable objects that needed to be saved,” the 56-year-old added.

The film won two other Oscars. Troy Kotsur won best supporting actor to become the first male deaf actor to win an Oscar, and only the second deaf actor to do so, joining his “CODA” co-star Marlee Matlin. The film also won for best adapted screenplay.

Howard A. Rosenblum, CEO of the National Association of the Deaf, said the Oscars show that “excellence lies in taking on a different persona to convincingly and powerfully convey a story rather than acting disabled.”

“For too long, the industry has rewarded actors and directors who have exploited the trope of faking sympathetic disabilities to win awards for themselves without bringing in Deaf people or people with disabilities to ensure authenticity,” Rosenblum said.
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Three of the movie’s actors, including Kotsur, have ties to Gallaudet University, which serves students who are deaf and hard of hearing. There was a palpable sense of elation at its campus in Washington on Monday, said Robert B. Weinstock, the university’s spokesman.

Weinstock said it finally feels like people in the Deaf community are being recognized by the film industry. And he hopes there will be more employment opportunities in the performing arts and elsewhere.

“One thing that we do not have yet is a strength in numbers,” he said of Hollywood. “Not that many deaf people are involved in the industry at this time. There are not that many deaf roles in front of and behind the camera. ... So hopefully that will change.”

In the meantime, people who grew up in the Deaf community say the movie offers a window into the intricacies of their lives, which are unknown to many in the hearing world. For instance, the film shows how much the parents who are deaf can depend on children who can hear.

Matt Zatko, 49, an attorney who lives in western Pennsylvania, remembers spending a lot of time as a kid helping his dad, who was deaf and worked as a painter and a wallpaper hanger.

“I remember answering the phone from people who wanted him to do jobs and me talking with them and signing to my dad at the same time,” Zatko said. “It was our lives. It’s what we did. But to see someone make a movie of it ... I laughed. I cried.”

The movie also showed the challenges that parents who are deaf face when visiting their kids at school, said Tony VonDolteren, who is Zatko’s cousin, and grew up with deaf parents.

VonDolteren, who lives in St. Augustine, Florida, remembers his dad cheering for him at a baseball game.

“It was louder than most and off tone,” said VonDolteren, 46, now the national youth director for Perfect Game, a scouting service for youth travel baseball. “It would startle you. And people are like, ‘Man, what’s wrong with that guy,’ until they find out my dad’s deaf.”

John D’Onofrio, 80, who is deaf and lives in Boynton Beach, Florida, said he’s in awe of the Oscar win for “CODA” and is grateful that more people are learning what life is like for people in the Deaf community. His stepdaughter is Barish, the personal assistant who lives in New York.

D’Onofrio said he wanted to be an architect as well as a carpenter when he grew up but was told he couldn’t do either. Instead, he worked for 35 years as a printer in a newspaper press room, a noisy place where many people who are deaf had earned a living.

“It’s such a big win,” he said of the film’s Oscars. “For the Deaf community. For deaf people. For everyone.”
METFORMIN
Babies whose fathers took diabetes drug had higher risk for birth defects


By Amy Norton, HealthDay News

The rate of birth defects was roughly 5% among babies whose fathers had used metformin in the three months before they were conceived, a new study showed. Photo by Free-Photos/Pixabay

Babies born to fathers who were taking the common diabetes drug metformin may have a slightly increased risk of certain birth defects, a large new study suggests.

Among over 1 million babies born in Denmark, just over 3% had a birth defect of some kind. But that rate was roughly 5% among babies whose fathers had used metformin in the three months before they were conceived, the findings showed.

In particular, the medication was tied to a higher risk of genital birth defects, all in baby boys, according to the report published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

Experts stressed that the study does not prove metformin is to blame, and there is no known mechanism to explain the connection. And men should not stop using their medication based on a single study, they added.

"We know metformin works well for controlling diabetes," said senior researcher Dr. Michael Eisenberg, a professor of urology at Stanford University School of Medicine in California.

But the results do bring up a "signal" that should be studied further, Eisenberg said. On a broader level, he added, the study highlights the importance of understanding fathers' influence on birth defect risks.

Metformin is an oral medication widely used for controlling high blood sugar in people with Type 2 diabetes -- a common disease that is often related to obesity.

In the United States alone, more than 37 million people have diabetes, most of whom have Type 2, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While it is most common in people older than 45, the agency says, Type 2 diabetes is increasingly being diagnosed in younger adults and even children and teenagers.

Studies have found that when pregnant women have poorly controlled diabetes, their babies' risk of birth defects rises.

Meanwhile, some research has tied diabetes in men to poorer sperm quality. But it has not been clear whether fathers' diabetes is related to the odds of birth defects in their children.

Even then, Eisenberg said, a key question would be whether it is because of the diabetes or the medications used to treat it?

For the new study, the researchers turned to Denmark's national birth registry, analyzing data on over 1 million babies born between 1997 and 2016.

The investigators found that when fathers had used metformin within the three months before conception, their babies' risk of birth defects was about 40% higher, on average, versus the study group as a whole.

There was a particular link to genital birth defects, all among boys: Of all babies whose fathers used metformin in the three months before conception, 0.9% had a genital birth defect, versus just over 0.2% of the overall group.

That three-month window is critical, Eisenberg said, because sperm take roughly that long to develop.

The researchers dug into other factors that might explain the link, including parents' age, education level and smoking habits. But fathers' metformin use remained tied to birth defect risk.

That still left the question of whether it was the medication, or the diabetes.

There were some strikes against that notion, Eisenberg said. For one, there was no clear link between birth defects and fathers' metformin use in the year before or after the three-month window before conception.

The researchers also looked at two other types of diabetes medication used by fathers in the study: insulin and drugs called sulfonylureas. Insulin use was not tied to birth defects.

On the other hand, there was an elevated rate of birth defects when fathers used sulfonylureas. But the finding was not "statistically significant" once the researchers weighed other factors -- meaning it could have been due to chance

However, an expert not involved in the study said the metformin finding could also easily be due to chance, or "confounding" due to other factors.

Dr. Anthony Scialli is a member of the Organization of Teratology Information Specialists. The group runs MotherToBaby, a free service that provides research-based information on the effects of medications during pregnancy.

Scialli explained that the study made many different comparisons, which increases the odds of chance findings. Beyond that, he said, genetic factors could be at play.

Scialli noted that the genital birth defects in boys would mostly be hypospadias, where the opening of the urethra is on the underside of the penis rather than the tip. And hypospadias, he said, often runs in families.

The researchers did do a comparison to try to account for genetics: They found that babies "exposed" to fathers' metformin use had a higher rate of birth defects than their siblings who were not exposed.

But, Scialli pointed out, that difference was not statistically significant once the researchers adjusted for other variables.

"So both chance and confounding could explain these results," Scialli said. "Causation seems unlikely given the lack of a plausible mechanism."

Eisenberg agreed that the mechanism is unknown, and more research is needed. He also said the findings need to be replicated in other countries, including ones more diverse than the relatively homogenous Denmark.

The bigger point is that fathers' health and exposures, and their potential impact on their children, should not be ignored, Eisenberg said.

"The health of fathers matters, too," he said.

More information

MotherToBaby has more on fathers' exposures and pregnancy.

Copyright © 2021 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Job openings, quits in U.S. up near record high in February

A "now hiring" sign is seen outside a fast-food restaurant in Wilmington, Calif., on January 27, 2021. The Labor Department said Tuesday that hiring increased while quits remained at an elevated level in February. File Photo by Jim Ruymen/UPI | License Photo

March 29 (UPI) -- U.S. companies hired nearly 6.7 million people last month and people quitting their jobs remained at an elevated level -- nearly 4.4 million, the Labor Department said in its monthly report Tuesday.

The report said 4.352 million quit their jobs in February, well over the 3.439 million who voluntarily left their jobs at the same time in 2021.

The department said that there were 11.3 million job openings by the end of February, which changed little from January and was slightly down from December.

Officials said that retail saw the largest number of quits with 74,000, followed by durable goods manufacturing at 22,000 and state and local government education at 14,000.

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The report said more than 75,000 were hired in construction in February to lead all sectors while hiring remained steady in all four regions of the country. Hiring decreased by 29,000 in the information sector.

Tuesday's report -- known as the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or JOLTS -- is separate from the department's monthly jobs report. Earlier this month, the department's jobs report showed close to 700,000 new hires were added in February. The department will release its jobs report for March on Friday

"The labor market is still raring to go with strong employer demand and increased worker mobility," Daniel Zhao, senior economist at the job review site Glassdoor, told The Washington Post. "We're still seeing very strong job openings and quits, as well as layoffs at record lows."

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Hiring has held steady, increasing in February to 6.689 million, from 6.426 million in January. Hiring reached 6.705 million last November.

Those numbers remain above the 6.028 million hired at this point in 2021.

"Over the 12 months ending in February 2022, hires totaled 77 million and separations totaled 70.6 million, yielding a net employment gain of 6.4 million," the Labor Department said in the report.

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"These totals include workers who may have been hired and separated more than once during the year," the department said.

FOR PROFIT HEALTHCARE INC.

UnitedHealth to acquire LHC Group in $5.4 billion deal

UnitedHealth building in Minnesota. Photo courtesy of UnitedHealth.

March 29 (UPI) -- UnitedHealth, the largest healthcare insurance company in the United States, announced Tuesday that it intends to purchase LHC Group, a leader in home healthcare services, for approximately $5.4 billion.

The transaction, in which UnitedHealth said it would pay $170 in cash for each share of LHC stock, is expected to close later this year.

Based in Lafayette, La., and founded in 1994, LHC Group employs 30,000 people in 37 states and the District of Columbia. The deal will combine LHC Group with UnitedHealth's Optum health services company.

The companies produced a video about the deal as part of the announcement.

"LHC Group's sophisticated care coordination capabilities and its warm, human touch is so important for home care, and will greatly enhance the reach of Optum's value-based capabilities along the full continuum of care, including primary care, home and community care, virtual care, behavioral health and ambulatory surgery," said Dr. Wyatt Decker, the CEO of Optum Health, a subsidiary of UnitedHealth.

LHC Group chairman and CEO Keith G. Myers said in a joint statement with Optum Health that "working together as organizations committed to caring for the most vulnerable in society will help us more effectively and efficiently deliver high quality and increasingly value-based care in the home.

Last month, the U.S. Department of Justice sued UnitedHealth in an antitrust action to block its $13 billion acquisition of Change Healthcare, Inc. The suit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia along with the attorney generals from New York and Minnesota.

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    Applebee's franchise exec fired after leaked email about gas prices, wages

    An Applebee's franchise executive was fired after sending an email to managers saying high gas prices could allow them to pay lower wages. Photo by Ezio Petersen/UPI | License Photo

    March 29 (UPI) -- An executive for a Midwest Applebee's franchise has been fired after suggesting in a leaked email that higher gas prices could turn the labor market in employers' favor.

    Wayne Pankrantz, who was director of operations for Apple Central LLC, said in the widely distributed email on March 9 that high gasoline prices will put pressure on employees' disposable income -- and that could present an opportunity for managers to lower wages as employees seek more hours.

    He wrote: "Most of our employee base and potential employee base live paycheck to paycheck. Any increase in gas price cuts into their disposable income. As inflation continues to climb and gas prices continue to go up, that means more hours employees will need to work to maintain their current level of living."

    The email, which has since spread online, was first circulated among employees -- including some who quit their jobs after seeing it.

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    "The individual has been terminated by the franchisee who owns and operates the restaurants in this market," Kevin Carroll, chief operations officer at Applebee's, said in an emailed statement to CBS News.

    Carroll added that Pankrantz's email was "the opinion of an individual, not Applebee's." He said that the company's employees "are the lifeblood of our restaurants, and our franchisees are always looking to reward and incentivize team members, new and current, to remain within the Applebee's family."

    Scott Fischer is director of communications for Apple Central, which is located in Kansas City, Mo., and has 47 Applebee's restaurants in the Midwest. He called the email "embarrassing."

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    Meanwhile, Applebees's Facebook page on Tuesday included criticism of Applebee's as some people attached links to the leaked email by Pankrantz.

    Applebee's, founded in 1980, is owned by Dine Brands Global, Inc., which also owns the IHOP brand.

    The parent company says it has over 3,400 restaurants combined in 16 countries and approximately 350 franchisees.

    N.Y. AG says she has 'significant evidence' Trump Organization misstated asset values

    The office of New York Attorney General Letitia James said it has uncovered "significant evidence" that the Trump Organization misstated property values for decades to falsely inflate Donald Trump's net worth. 
    File Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo

    March 29 (UPI) -- The New York attorney general's office said it has "uncovered significant evidence" that the Trump Organization relied on misleading valuations of its real estate assets to "secure economic benefits" for more than a decade.

    In a court filing late Monday, the office of New York Attorney General Letitia James said that the company owned by former President Donald Trump used misleading valuations and "other misrepresentations" to secure benefits such as "loans, insurance coverage and tax deductions -- on terms more favorable than the facts warranted.

    "These misrepresentations appear to have been aimed at portraying Mr. Trump's net worth and liquidity as higher than the true facts warranted, to secure economic benefits to which Mr. Trump might not otherwise have been entitled," the filing states.

    In one instance, the Trump Organization's 2010-2012 statements "collectively valued" rent-stabilized apartment units owned at $49.59 million, more than 66 times the $750,000 total value an outside appraiser assigned to the units, according to the filing.

    In a period spanning 2012-2016, the Trump Organization's financial statements said Trump's triplex apartment in Trump Tower in Manhattan "exceeded 30,000 square feet, and valued the apartment at up to $327 million based on those dimensions," the filing said.

    However, in 2017 -- Trump's first year as president -- the filing noted that the company "slashed the apartment's value by two-thirds, sizing the residence at just under 11,000 square feet," consistent with the figure specified in the offering plan for the building.

    Monday's filing came in response to an appeal by the Trump Organization and Trump of an order by a Manhattan state court judge directing his adult children Donald Trump Jr., who runs the business along with his brother Eric Trump, and Ivanka Trump, who previously served as a company executive, to hold interviews with James' investigators.

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    The filing also notes that from 2011 to 2013, Ivanka Trump held an option to buy the Trump Park Avenue penthouse, where she lived, for $8.5 million, while the Trump Organization valued the unit at up to $25 million.

    Similarly, in 2014 she acquired an option to buy a larger apartment for $14.3 million when the ensuing year's statement lowered the apartment's value from its previously assigned $45 million.

    James, who has concurrent civil and criminal investigations into the Trump Organization ongoing, said that she issued the subpoenas to "help reach a final determination about whether there has been civil fraud" committed in connection with the asset valuations as well as "who may be responsible for such fraud."

    Lawyers for Trump and his children earlier this year argued that testimony in the civil case could be used against them in the criminal case, and that allowing such testimony without providing protections that New York law would require if they testified before a grand jury in a criminal case would set a "dangerous precedent."

    James' office, however, countered that "civil subpoenas do not compel appellants to provide information that may be used against them in a future criminal case."

    FTC sues Intuit to stop ads claiming TurboTax is 'free' 

    The Federal Trade Commission has filed a lawsuit against TurboTax owner Intuit, calling on a judge to force the company to stop running ads that claim the tax filing software is free. Photo by Mike Mozart/Flickr

    March 29 (UPI) -- The Federal Trade Commission has sued Intuit, alleging it has deceived consumers for years by marketing its TurboTax tax filing software as free and subsequently charging most users.

    The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California on Monday, asks a federal court to "put an immediate halt to Intuit's false advertising" in which the company frequently uses the word "free" to advertise its produc

    "TurboTax is bombarding consumers with ads for 'free' tax filing services, and then hitting them with charges when it's time to file," Samuel Levine, director of the Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a statement. "We are asking a court to immediately halt this bait-and-switch, and to protect taxpayers at the peak of filing season."

    In its complaint, the FTC cites one ad in which an auctioneer repeatedly says the word "free," a second "in which a court stenographer recorded a legal proceeding in which 'free' was the only word used," and another "in which an exercise class instructor chants 'free' while leading a group workout."

    "In several ads, the word 'free' is repeated over 40 times in a 30-second ad," the complaint states.

    The FTC, however, alleges that the "freemium" version of TurboTax is only available to users with what Intuit describes as "simple" tax returns while others are required to upgrade to paid versions of TurboTax.

    Additionally, the definition of a "simple" return changes yearly, the FTC said. In 2021, Intuit identified simple returns as ones that can be filed on a Form 1040 with limited attached schedules.

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    The suit alleges that about two-thirds of tax filers were unable to use TurboTax's free product in 2020.

    It also notes that until 2021, TurboTax was offered for free online to taxpayers with $39,000 or less in adjusted gross income as part of the IRS Free File program, a public-private partnership formed in 2002 that allows low-income Americans to file their taxes for free online.

    Intuit issued a statement responding to the lawsuit on Monday, saying that the claims made by the FTC are "simply not credible" while noting that nearly 100 million Americans have filed their taxes for free with TurboTax in the past eight years, including 17 million in 2021, up from 11 million in 2018 before the ad campaign launched.

    "Far from steering taxpayers away from free tax preparation offerings, our free advertising campaigns have led to more Americans filing their taxes for free than ever before and have been central to raising awareness of free tax prep," said Kerry McLean, executive vice president and general counsel for Intuit.

    McLean also noted that the FTC's lawsuit did not take into account the fact that Intuit complied with IRS requirements while part of the Free File program.

    "The fact that Intuit complied with the rules and regulations of one government agency, but is now being targeted by another, demonstrates a significant disconnect," McLean said. "With the FTC's action, companies will be much less willing to enter into public-private partnerships with the government that benefit consumers."

    Edmonton school board trustee Nathan Ip vying for NDP nomination in effort to unseat Madu


    Edmonton Public School Board trustee Nathan Ip is joining the race for the provincial NDP nomination in Edmonton-South West.
    © Provided by Edmonton Journal Edmonton Public School Board trustee Nathan Ip is joining the race for the provincial NDP nomination in Edmonton-South West.

    Labour and Immigration Minister Kaycee Madu currently represents the riding — the only UCP MLA who holds a seat in the city. While the NDP has not yet scheduled a date for its vote, Ip is now one of four candidates vying for the nomination, along with Chand Gul, Mohammad Ali Kamal, and Ben Acquaye.


    Making the announcement at the legislature Tuesday, Ip said he’s running to protect publicly funded education, help build new schools, and provide leadership that serves community needs.

    “I am concerned about the direction our province is heading, and the challenges that we face as a community,” said Ip, who flagged cuts to funding supports that impact vulnerable learners, and education funding that doesn’t keep pace with growth under the UCP government.

    “We can do better,” he said.

    The three-term trustee said he is the only candidate with the experience to defeat Madu.

    Madu said he looks forward to running in the 2023 election against whomever the NDP ends up nominating.

    “I am optimistic that the people of South West would vote in our community’s best interests — ultimately, they are the ones who decide who represents them,” he said.

    When asked what he thinks it means that four people are seeking the NDP nomination, Madu said, “we live in a democracy, and I think the more people the merrier.”

    If nominated, Ip plans to continue as a school board trustee and to take an unpaid leave of absence during next year’s election campaign, a Tuesday news release said.

    The Superdeath of God

    Stefan Bolea, 
    Babes-Bolyai University

    ACADEMIA
    Letters

    1. Deaths of God

    In The Essence of Christianity (1841), Feuerbach argues that theology is disguised anthropology, claiming that the human being has created God in his own image and likeness. He notes, however, that there are circumstances where the existence of God is no longer “a living truth” (Feuerbach 1841/ 1989, 203): “Where … the fire of the religious imagination is extinct …there the existence [of God] becomes a dead, self-contradictory existence” (Feuerbach 1841/ 1989, 203).

    Secularization brings along the death of God, which probably hides the death of the human being: the end of theology highlights the end of anthropology. We no longer believe (we only believe we believe) in the divinity (and the humanity) of the human being. We have “retired” from numinosity like Nietzsche’s last pope. 

    Feuerbach seems to think that the construction of anthropology is still possible upon the ruins of theology. One can see the human being either as an enemy and vanquisher of God, or as an ally of Him, a consubstantial entity, who shares his creative traits and attributes. In the latter case, the human being is an anointed “mini-God”, the authorized servant of a powerful master. In the former instance, the godless nihilist desires to become something else entirely, perhaps a Nietzschean “superman” or a Cioranian “not-man”. 

    Max Stirner seems to prefigure this line of thought in The Ego and Its Own (1844): “At  the entrance of the modern time stands the ‘God-man’. At its exit will only the God in the God-man evaporate? And can the God-man really die if only the God in him dies? They did not think of this question, and thought they were finished when in our days they brought to a victorious end the work of the Enlightenment, the vanquishing of God: they did not notice that man has killed God in order to become now- ‘sole God on high’…God has had to give place, yet not to us, but to – man. How can you believe that the God-man is dead before the man in him, besides the God, is dead?” (Stirner1844/ 1995, 139) 

    Man has killed God in order to become God (a satanic complex, if we read nihilism though the lenses of religious psychology): “God is dead, therefore I am God”/Deus est mortuus, ergo ego sum Deus. But if we understand Stirner correctly, this is only part of the story: the God-man will only have died after the combined deaths of God and the human being. 

    "God has died and his death was the life of the world”/ Gottistgestorben und sein Todwar das Lebender Welt, enigmatically wrote the post-Schopenhauerian philosopher Philipp Mainländer in his Die Philosophie der Erlösung (1876/ 1996, 108). He also argued that although "we have existed in God” (1876/ 1996, 108), we “no longer are in God”, because we have moved from the world of destroyed “unity” [Einheit] to a universe of multiplicity [Vielheit].The passage from transcendent unity to immanent multiplicity is, in Mainländer’s vision, the secret of the creation of the world

    Leaving these aside, Feuerbach argued that when the religious “Fire” is extinct, the existence of God becomes “dead”, and Stirner imagined that the death of God is a prequel to the God of man (what if Stiner's Ego also dies after the death of the “God-man”?). Furthermore, Mainländer is not mainly interested in cosmogony: in the macabre ending of Die Philosophie der Erlösung he changes the focus from God (and I include the human being in the definition/constitution of God) to death. Therefore, the question of divinity (and mankind) becomes insignificant in the context of the absolute hegemony of death, Schopenhauer’s nihil negativum reaching its nuclear point: “Nothing will be anymore, Nothing, Nothing, Nothing! – O, this glance in the absolute emptiness! –”/
    Nichts mehr wird sein,
    Nichts, Nichts, Nichts! –
    O dieser Blick in die absolute Leere!
    – (1886/ 1996, 511).