Sunday, January 08, 2023

ROGUE NATION U$A
Op-Ed: Enough with the political games. Migrants have a right to asylum


Karen Musalo
Fri, January 6, 2023 

Migrants walk past razor wire fencing to be taken by the Border Patrol after crossing the Rio Grande at Eagle Pass, Texas, in May. 
(Dario Lopez-Mills / Associated Press)

President Biden’s seemingly chaotic policy toward asylum seekers at the U.S. border is no accident. It’s carefully crafted to minimize political fallout. The administration should keep it simple instead, by following the law and doing the right thing — admitting those who arrive at our borders seeking asylum.

Give voters a chance, Mr. President. The American people value decency. They don’t respect craven and calculated inconsistency.

This week, the Biden administration announced an expansion of a Trump-era policy to turn away individuals fleeing persecution who reach our borders. This began with a pretext of limiting the spread of COVID-19, using a public health law known as Title 42. Now it’s just a sop to people who oppose immigration.

Until the Trump administration used Title 42 in this way, the nation had honored its obligation to asylum seekers for 40 years, under the 1980 Refugee Act. It grants the right to seek protection. Abrogating that right has resulted in the untold suffering, the return of refugees to persecution and death, and chaos at the U.S.-Mexico border.

In April 2022, the Biden administration stated its intent to end Title 42. Litigation delayed the termination, but in mid-November, a federal judge ruled the policy unlawful, and ordered it to end by Dec. 21. The Supreme Court has stayed that order until it hears arguments next month.

Now, in a head-spinning turn of events, Biden has announced the expansion of Title 42 to Haitians, Nicaraguans and Cubans — nationalities that had not previously been subject to summary expulsion at the border.

If this were not enough of a contradiction, the administration also plans to resurrect another Trump-era policy which Biden had previously denounced, the “transit ban.” This rule bars from asylum any migrants who do not apply for and receive a denial of asylum from the countries they pass through on their way to the U.S.

This “outsourcing” of our refugee obligations to countries of transit, which a federal court found unlawful when implemented by the Trump administration, is ludicrous on its face. The asylum seekers who arrive at our border pass through countries such as Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, with human rights conditions as dire as in the migrants’ nations of origin.

To date, the only country with which we legally have such an arrangement is Canada — which makes sense because it has a robust refugee protection system and an admirable human rights record. And even if there are other countries of transit, such as Costa Rica, that have a well-developed framework for the protection of refugees, and solid records on human rights, they are already taking in numbers of asylum seekers that far exceed their capacity.

At the same time as the Biden administration rolls out plans for these and other anti-asylum policies, it has announced a number of laudable measures, two particularly worthy of mention.

First, the administration will create a special “parole” program for Nicaraguans, Haitians and Cubans, similar to one created for Venezuelans. This program will allow the entry of up to 30,000 individuals from the four countries each month — if they have a sponsor in the U.S. These individuals will be permitted to remain in the United States for two years, with authorization to work.

Second, the administration will increase to 20,000 from 15,000 the number of refugees from Latin America and the Caribbean whom it admits for resettlement in fiscal years 2023 and 2024.

These are positive developments, but modest compared with the unlawful and punitive anti-immigrant measures in this package deal.

It is no secret that the Republicans are highly motivated to make the border an issue. They will continue to do so, regardless of the reality. Rather than crack down on asylum seekers to woo the votes of anti-immigrant constituencies, Biden should uphold our legal obligations and make the case for why it is the right thing to do.

Doing so is the principled and moral path. It is also good politicsPolling consistently shows strong support for protecting asylum seekers, across party lines. It is not too late for the administration to change course, to uphold our national ideals, and to be an example to other nations around the world.

Biden will be criticized either way. He might as well be criticized for doing the right thing.

Karen Musalo is a law professor and the founding director of the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies at UC Law, San Francisco. She is also lead co-author of “Refugee Law and Policy: A Comparative and International Approach.”

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Immigration advocates slam Biden’s new border rules: ‘It’s a wealth test.’


Jacqueline Charles, Michael Wilner, Nora Gámez Torres
Fri, January 6, 2023

Soon after taking office, President Joe Biden sent legislation to Congress to reform America’s immigration system, promising to restore fairness and compassion and reverse Trump-era policies that made it difficult for fleeing migrants to seek protection in the United States.

But rather than the sweeping immigration reforms promised, the Biden administration is instead being accused of stripping away migrants’ rights to seek asylum at U.S. borders and expanding the use of hard-line Trump-era policies like Title 42, the pandemic-era measure used during the last three years to quickly expel hundreds of thousands of migrants for public-health reasons back to Mexico or their home countries.

On Thursday, the administration announced that anyone seeking asylum at a U.S.-Mexico border checkpoint will now need to first book an appointment online by downloading a Customs and Border Protection app called CBP One. If an appointment is granted, asylum seekers will then need to go to a specified port of entry in Arizona, Texas or California. Also, the U.S. announced it will accept up to 30,000 legal migrants a month from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela while expelling others who illegally cross the border under Title 42. To apply, the migrants from those four countries, who will be allowed in for two years and allowed to work, will need to go online.

While advocates welcomed the opening of the new legal pathway for migrants from the four nations, they heavily criticized the administration’s new border policies, calling them “a wealth test” that ignores the United States’ obligation to protect vulnerable people who are fleeing persecution and now requiring refugees to get a smartphone and data plan.

“We also must ask how implementing a system that requires migrants to have a smartphone with internet access and have a certain level of digital navigation skills to set their immigration appointments impact those desperately seeking safety, especially those who don’t speak English, or Spanish, or don’t manage a written language,” said Tessa Peti, executive director of the Florida Immigrant Coalition.

‘Imminent threats’

Melissa Crow of the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies at University of California Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco, said as Biden noted during his announcement about the new policies on Thursday, traveling to the U.S. to seek asylum is not a decision that any person takes lightly.

“People arriving at our border are often fleeing imminent threats to their lives. Not to mention that they may not have cellphones, reliable internet access or even be aware of the CBP One app,” she said, adding that Thursday’s announcement “represents a total abandonment of President Biden’s campaign promises.”

“It’s been deeply disturbing to hear the president affirm that seeking asylum is legal and have him pledge to create a safe and humane process at the border and then turn around and announce policies that further undermine access to asylum,” Crow, director of litigation, said Friday during a call with some of the 100 advocates who are part of the #WelcomeWithDignity Campaign for asylum rights. “These reckless policy decisions will exact a horrific human toll and will leave a lasting stain on the president’s legacy.”

As humanitarian groups criticized the new policy announcement Friday, John Kirby, coordinator for strategic communications at the National Security Council in the White House, pushed back Friday.

“Obviously, we take a different view,” Kirby told reporters at a press briefing. “What we would say is this is a president who understands that safe and legal immigration into this country is a key cornerstone of our own security and prosperity, and that he is advancing ways to improve those legal pathways to entry.”

“He increased — dramatically increased — the number of refugees that we’re willing to take in from nations in the hemisphere. He also improved the process by which people seeking asylum can do that in, again, a legal, safe way,” Kirby added. “And we’re also, obviously, having to make sure that it’s legal migration that we’re focused on, and that illegal migration is curbed as best as we can through more stringent enforcement mechanisms. So it’s a balance.”

Cuban migration to the U.S. surged in 2022

According to U.S. Customs and Border Patrol data, migration from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela has increased following a lull after the implementation of Title 42, a policy to expel migrants implemented during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Since then, total numbers of migrants coming each country month have fluctuated, often seasonally or following political events or policy changes specific to migrants from a particular country of origin. Data show migration from Cuba increased the most since the beginning of 2022.


Source: U.S. Customs and Border Protection data for "nationwide encounters." Data include “U.S. Border Patrol Title 8 apprehensions, Office of Field Operations Title 8 inadmissibles, and all Title 42 expulsions” for fiscal year 2020 through December 2022 when these data were last updated, according to CBP.
Susan Merriam | McClatchy and Ana Claudia Chacin | Miami Herald


In announcing the changes, Department of Homeland Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas insisted that the administration is still preparing for the end of Title 42, and that the new measures are to provide for safe and orderly processes at the 2,000-mile U.S. Mexico border, where migrant surges often convey images of chaos and confusion.

Mayorkas said the new rules are a reflection of an administration that is “doubling down” on its collaboration with other countries in the region following last year’s Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles. During the summit, regional leaders along the migratory chain, which stretches from South to Central America to Mexico, agreed to create legal pathways for migrants and better enforce their borders.

‘Inhumane’ policy


But even Biden’s own congressional supporters, like Democratic U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey, who sponsored his comprehensive immigration overhaul bill in the Senate, aren’t completely on board with the new changes. Menendez and three other Democratic senators have condemned the policy announcement, which includes a potential asylum ban for those who fail to apply for asylum in a third country while in transit to the United States.

In a joint statement, the senators said while they welcomed the increased possibility of the U.S. allowing Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans into the country under the new parole program, the new measures still make migrants vulnerable to traffickers.

U.S. Sen. Bob Menéndez

“This narrow benefit will exclude thousands of migrants fleeing violence and persecution who do not have the ability or economic means to qualify for the new parole process,” Menendez said in the statement with senators Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico, Alex Padilla of California and Cory Booker of New Jersey.

The continued used of Title 42, “a failed and inhumane Trump-era policy,” will do nothing to restore the rule of law at the border, the lawmaker said, adding that they are “deeply disappointed by the Biden administration’s decision to expand” use of the public health rule.

“Instead, it will increase border crossings over time and further enrich human smuggling networks,” the statement said.

At issue for most critics is the continued and expanded use of Title 42, whose controversial use by the Trump administration was criticized by Biden on the campaign trail and whose termination last month was blocked in court by Republican governors in border states. The U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments on March 1.

“Title 42 was a kind of somewhat cynical effort by the Trump administration to prevent people from crossing into the United States or even applying for asylum. It was a sweeping over-extension of what was a public health measure, to deal with an immigration crisis,” said Michael Posner, a former Obama administration official who is currently the director of the New York University Stern Center for Business and Human Rights. “I think to the extent that the Biden administration is continuing to use Title 42, is a mistake.”

Posner said the border policies announced by the Biden administration this week can best be described as “a piecemeal approach to a crisis” whose responsibility for resolution rests partly with the Biden administration and a Congress, which refuses to look at comprehensive immigration reform.

Asylum backlog


For 50 years, Posner said, U.S. law has allowed people who come to the border to apply for asylum to seek protection from persecution. He acknowledges that, with an asylum application backlog of 1.7 million cases that can take at least four years to resolve, the system is broken and needs addressing.

“President Biden is going to the border next week and it’s going to heighten public attention to these issues,” Posner added. “But this is a moment for the Biden administration to basically stand up for the principle of asylum; stand up and push to Republicans who are in disarray to provide the kinds of resources to fix the asylum paralysis, so that it is a viable alternative and you don’t have people taking advantage of that system, because it’s broken. We need a system that allows genuine refugees to apply for asylum but filters out those who are simply using the law as a way to get into the United States and don’t have a viable claim.”

Immigration advocates agree.


Amnesty International condemned the administration’s new measures as an “attack on the human right to seek asylum.”

Amy Fischer, Amnesty International USA Advocacy Director for the Americas, said the Biden administration has “fully reversed course on its stated commitment to human rights and racial justice by once again expanding the use of Title 42, announcing rule-making on an asylum transit ban, expanding the use of expedited removal, and implementing a new system to require appointments through a mobile app for those desperately seeking safety.”

“These new policies will undoubtedly have a disparate impact on Black, Brown, and Indigenous people seeking safety,” she said. “In fact, Amnesty International previously found that the cruel treatment of Haitians under Title 42 subjected Haitian asylum seekers to arbitrary detention and discriminatory and humiliating ill-treatment that amounts to race-based torture.”

Eleanor Acer, senior director for refugee protection at Human Rights First, said Friday that despite the Biden administration’s “plans to add some tweaks to their asylum ban at the end of the day, it’s an asylum ban, which is a policy straight out of Trump’s playbook.”

“The pursuit of an asylum ban would be a tremendous political miscalculation that will play into the hands of allies of the former administration by bolstering their messages and normalizing their agenda,” Acer said. “It will cause disorder rather than order, turn away Black and Brown refugees who suffer great harm, separate families and subvert refugee law and human rights.”

Citing a December 2020 report by the group, Acer said Human Rights First tracked over 13,400 reports of kidnapping, torture, rape and other brutal attacks against asylum seekers who were blocked by the U.S. or expelled back into Mexico under Title 42 since Biden took office two years ago.

Also of concern is that the United States is outsourcing its obligations to countries that don’t necessarily have a good track record with asylum claims, or the treatment of migrants. For example, while Mexico was the world’s third most popular destination for asylum-seekers in 2021 after the U.S. and Germany, according to the United Nations, studies show that Haitians and Cubans have low approval acceptances.

Immigration advocates say while the administration has touted that the new parole program for Cubans, Haitians and Nicaraguans is being based on the “success” of a similar program for Ukrainian and Venezuelan refugees, they remain concerned that only middle-class individuals with valid passports, access to the internet and the ability to purchase their tickets to the U.S. will be able to benefit.

Acer said Human Rights First has found flaws in the Venezuela parole program, which remains inaccessible to many of the most vulnerable refugees in need of protection.

“That is a humanitarian disaster. Far from being a success, the Biden administration’s decision to expand use of Title 42 to expel people seeking asylum from Venezuela has also been a humanitarian disgrace. So too will be an expansion of Title 42 to expel people seeking asylum from Cuba, Haiti and Nicaragua,” she said

. “We recommend that the Biden administration do all it can to restore refugee law at ports of entry and along the borders; maximize its capacity to process asylum seekers swiftly through ports of entry [and] increase an improved safe pathway for migrants seeking travel to this country.”


Border bishop takes lead role in Catholic migrant ministry






AP Photo/Giovanna Dell'Orto)

GIOVANNA DELL'ORTO
Fri, January 6, 2023 


EL PASO, Texas (AP) — With a cheerful “soy Marcos” – “I’m Mark,” in Spanish – Bishop Mark Seitz introduced himself to migrants eating soup in the shelter on the grounds of the Catholic Diocese of El Paso, less than two miles from the U.S.-Mexico border.

The migration crisis roiling the borderlands is literally in the backyard of the new chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ migration committee, a ministry started a century ago. Seitz will be the first border bishop to serve in this role in at least two decades; he says it will allow him to bring “a new energy to this work from someone who sees it pretty much every day.”

“Immigrants have had the experience of leaving everything that helped them to feel at home and secure in this life behind, and to depend utterly on God as they journey," Seitz told The Associated Press a few days before Christmas. “They have so much to teach us about how God will accompany us on our journey.”

In the simple shelter that day, 65 migrants, mostly Nicaraguans, rested after being released by U.S. immigration authorities. Volunteers helped families make arrangements to reach sponsors across the United States – from new clothing to plane tickets to shampoo packets small enough to carry past airport security.

El Paso's role in the migration crisis will be highlighted on Sunday when it will be Joe Biden's destination on his first trip to the southern border as president.

On both sides of the border, faith-based organizations have historically done most of the work caring for migrants. Their efforts are particularly visible when unprecedented numbers of new arrivals overwhelm local and federal authorities in cities like El Paso, leaving thousands in the streets.

The Catholic Church often leads these humanitarian efforts. Ministering to migrants and refugees has been a priority for Pope Francis, who in December referred to the Virgin of Guadalupe, much-beloved among Latin American faithful, as “in the middle of the caravans who seek freedoms walking to the north.”

The Vatican, Catholic nonprofits and bishops' conferences across the world collaborate to advocate at all political levels “for just and humane policies,” said Bill Canny, who leads the USCCB's Department of Migration and Refugee Services.

Border bishops like Seitz are “critically important” to that mission because they provide “a real-time perspective,” Canny added.

The political advocacy of U.S. bishops stems from their mission to care for the most vulnerable, said Steven Millies, a professor at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago. However, Millies said the USCCB tends to be most visible in its anti-abortion fight and other “culture wars,” getting entangled in partisan divisions that can undermine its advocacy for other causes.

To Seitz, who was chairman-elect of the migration committee for a year before starting his three-year term in November, a stronger and nuanced Catholic response to migration “can be something that brings the church to life.”

“I think most people would be surprised, and I hope pleasantly surprised, to see the degree of unanimity among the bishops on this question of immigration,” Seitz said. “So many of the bishops have come up to me and expressed … a concern about how we need to do better to welcome (migrants).”

A Milwaukee native who served as bishop of El Paso for the past decade -- which saw three U.S. administrations struggle to manage surges of arrivals of families from Central America and beyond -- Seitz knows the challenges first-hand.

As he spoke to the AP, he was notified the Supreme Court had issued a stay for pandemic-era restrictions on asylum-seekers.

Seitz had been working with churches and civil authorities “for a scenario in which higher numbers may be coming across than we’ve ever seen” if restrictions were lifted as expected on Dec. 21 – but the stay offered no relief.

“These are, by definition, not the kind of people who can make an application and wait five years to be able to cross,” Seitz said. “And we’re not even asking those questions right now with Title 42. We don’t ask, why did you come? We simply say, turn around and go back somewhere. And we’re sending them into some of the more unstable and dangerous places in the world.”

Places like Ciudad Juarez, a sprawling metropolis just across the border from El Paso, where thousands of migrants were made to wait for their U.S. asylum appointments during the Trump administration and more have been waiting out Title 42 recently, amid organized crime cartels that routinely prey on them.

Seitz created a relief fund that donated hundreds of thousands of dollars, notably for food and medicine, to shelters there. This fall, it helped open a medical clinic in Juarez’s largest migrant shelter, said Dylan Corbett, director of Hope Border Institute, which manages the clinic.

“It’s really hard, because patterns and policies are constantly evolving,” Corbett said. “We’re in an acute situation at the border.”

Even with Title 42 in place, U.S. officials apprehended and released more than 50,000 asylum-seekers in El Paso from the beginning of October, said the Rev. Michael Gallagher, a Jesuit priest and attorney.

“Bishop Seitz urged parishes to open up empty spaces” like halls as temporary shelters, Gallagher added. His downtown church, Sacred Heart, has been hosting nearly 200 migrants nightly in the gym.

“As people who have been called by Jesus and the Gospel to serve … this sounds like it’s right up our alley,” Seitz explained.

His ministry extends beyond sheltering. For more than a year, he’s been celebrating Mass at a federal shelter for unaccompanied minor migrants and he wears on his right wrist friendship bracelets woven by some of them.

He’s just added a new one, from a mid-December trip to Guatemala to learn from grassroots organizations what pushes so many people on their dangerous northward journey.

That’s an area where Seitz believes the bishops’ conference can make an impact, providing guidance on how the United States can facilitate stability and job creation in origin countries.

Another priority for Seitz focuses on the church’s role in building better understanding between Americans far beyond the borderlands and new immigrants.

“Why do we tend to look at them and say, ‘I think they’re probably criminals,’ instead of to look at them and say, ‘I think they’re probably people in need’?” Seitz said, adding that he also sees a need for “a more orderly process for people to be able to cross.”

His advice starts small – encouraging the faithful to attend Spanish-language Masses, which are increasingly common across the country, and meet migrant churchgoers.

“In that simple act, you will be accomplishing a lot more than you could imagine to help us to welcome and integrate the people who are joining our communities,” Seitz said.

___

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

Cubans crossing into US stunned to hear of new asylum limits






Biden BorderPresident Joe Biden speaks about border security in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023, in Washington.
 (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

ELLIOT SPAGAT
Fri, January 6, 2023 

YUMA, Ariz. (AP) — Migrants who entered the U.S. illegally under moonlit skies and waist-deep cold water Friday were devastated to learn they may be sent back to Mexico under expanded limits on the pursuit of asylum.

About 200 migrants who walked in the dark for about an hour to surrender to Border Patrol agents in Yuma, Arizona, included many Cubans — who were stunned to hear that a ban on asylum that previously fell largely on other nationalities now applies just as much to them. Several were political dissidents of the Cuban government who were driven to leave by longstanding fears of incarceration and persecution and a new sense of economic desperation.

President Joe Biden announced Thursday that Cubans, Nicaraguans, Haitians and Venezuelans will be expelled to Mexico if they enter the U.S. illegally, effective immediately. At the same time, he offered humanitarian parole for up to 30,000 people a month from those four countries if they apply online, pay for their airfare and find a financial sponsor.

Mario Enrique Perez, 32, said he would rather be incarcerated in the U.S. than be returned to Mexico, where, he said, he and his wife endured many slights and poor treatment during a two-month journey across the country. They frequently had to get off buses to avoid shakedowns at government checkpoints, slowing their pace.

The vast majority of Cubans reach the U.S. by flying to Nicaragua as tourists and make their way to the U.S. border with Mexico. Perez said they trade information “like ants” about which routes are safest and easiest, which is why he picked Yuma.

Nelliy Jimenez, 50, said she rode horses on her three-month journey through Mexico to avoid shakedowns at government checkpoints. Her son, whom she described as an active dissident, fled to Spain years ago. She held out in Cuba despite links to her son — even getting jailed during the July 2021 protests — but held out until economic desperation forced her to sell her convenience store in the city of Cienfuegos to finance her trip to the United States.

She hopes to settle with relatives in Nebraska.

“I did not see this coming,” Jimenez said of the new limits on asylum.

Niurka Avila, 53, said the Cuban government surveils her and her husband, who are known dissidents. She spoke with disgust of Cuban officials, saying she couldn’t bring herself to wear traditional guayabera dress because they do. They “appropriated” it, she said.

Avila, a nurse in Cuba, said that Mexico was not an attractive option and that she and her husband hope to join family in Florida.

“(Mexico) is a violent place, and our family is here,” she said.

The new rules expand on an existing effort to stop Venezuelans attempting to enter the U.S., which began in October and led to a dramatic drop in Venezuelans coming to the southern border. Together, they represent a major change to immigration rules that will stand even if the Supreme Court ends a Trump-era public health law that allows U.S. authorities to turn away asylum-seekers.

“Do not, do not just show up at the border,” Biden said as he announced the changes, even as he acknowledged the hardships that lead many families to make the dangerous journey north.

“Stay where you are and apply legally from there,” he advised.

Biden made the announcement just days before a planned visit to El Paso, Texas, on Sunday for his first trip to the southern border as president. From there, he will travel on to Mexico City to meet with North American leaders on Monday and Tuesday.

At the U.S.-Mexico border, migrants have been denied a chance to seek asylum 2.5 million times since March 2020 under Title 42 restrictions, introduced as an emergency health measure by former President Donald Trump to prevent the spread of COVID-19. But there always has been criticism that the restrictions were used as a pretext by the Republican to seal off the border.

Biden moved to end the Title 42 restrictions, and Republicans sued to keep them. The U.S. Supreme Court has kept the rules in place for now. White House officials say they still believe the restrictions should end, but they maintain they can continue to turn away migrants under immigration law.

On Friday, spokesperson Boris Cheshirkov of UNHCR, the U.N. refugee agency, welcomed the expansion of safe and regular pathways that will now be available to an “unprecedented number” of people trying to enter the United States, but said the agency also wants more details about how the new process will be implemented.

"These are quite significant and multifaceted announcements,” he told reporters in Geneva at a regular U.N. briefing. “We’re analyzing what has been announced and especially the impact that these measures may have — including on the situation and the thousands of people that are already on the move.”

Cheshirkov reiterated the U.N. agency's long-running concerns about the use of Title 42 because of the risk that many people may get sent back to Mexico “without considerations of the dangers that they fled and the risks and hardships that many of them may then face.”

“What we’re reiterating is that this is not in line with the refugee law standards,” he added. “Seeking asylum is a fundamental human right.”

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Jamey Keaten in Geneva; Colleen Long, Zeke Miller and Rebecca Santana in Washington; and Gisela Salomon in Miami.


Biden finally stops looking the other way on Cuban, Haitian and Nicaraguan immigration | Opinion


Denise DePasquale/Special to the Miami Herald


Fabiola Santiago
Fri, January 6, 2023 

President Biden, apparently, isn’t out to lunch on immigration anymore.

When the fragile ecosystem of Dry Tortugas, a national park off Florida’s coast, becomes a port of entry for hundreds of Cubans sailing rickety homemade boats, the time to act was yesterday.

So, with a quarreling, do-nothing Congress as a backdrop — and an unrelenting number of asylum seekers arriving every day — the Biden administration finally has taken serious steps to address unrestricted immigration to South Florida and the Mexico border.

Months of record-breaking arrivals later, even Democrats are conceding, privately and publicly, that free-for-all Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan and Venezuelan immigration is impossible to sustain, both politically and in terms of resources.

Some Dems praise Biden’s mix of new, legal open doors with his crackdown on arrivals aided by illegal activity.

“The new border actions Biden rolled out expand legal pathways while also putting into effect deterrents for illegal immigration and the smuggling and human trafficking that have existed,” said Felice Gorordo, a Biden ally, CEO of tech-hub eMerge Americas and co-founder of the U.S.-Cuba relations nonprofit Roots of Hope.

However, prominent Democrats including Sens. Bob Menéndez of New Jersey, Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico, Alex Padilla of California, and Cory Booker of New Jersey think stricter rules will encourage more shady dealings, not stem migration.

In a joint statement, they condemned what they called “a transit ban” at the southern border and the extension of ex-President Trump’s loathed Title 42 pandemic-era summary expulsions to include Cubans and Nicaraguans.

Indeed, the rules pose a profound shift politically. No more Biden looking the other way.

READ MORE: U.S. will step up expulsions of Cubans, Haitians and Nicaraguans at the border, expand legal pathway

‘Carrot & stick’ policy


Immigrant advocates also rejected new policies that will end up turning away asylum seekers despite the creation of legal and safer pathways. Legal entry will include documentation and two-year work permits for the 30,000 vetted and paroled each month.

But, says the immigration advocacy group America’s Voice, Biden’s “carrot and stick approach” is “unbecoming of a pro-immigration president.”

Yet, without a Congress willing to overhaul of the broken immigration system and Americans increasingly upset over illegal crossings, what other choices did Biden really have?

Republicans constantly use xenophobia to score political points. They’re united in the desire to see Biden fail at everything but, notably, his actions left them speechless. (Though probably not for long).

A White House fact sheet Touted: “Unlike some Republican officials playing political games and obstructing real solutions to fix our broken immigration system, President Biden has a plan and is taking action.”
Voiceless most affected

Unfortunately, the most tragically affected by the change in policy will be people caught en route, risking their lives at sea or on dangerous multi-country treks to flee collapsing homelands like Haiti and failing regimes like Cuba’s and Nicaragua’s.

Will domestic immigration policy make any difference when the root causes of mass migration remain in place at home? When immigration is instigated by regimes like Cuba’s to get rid of the opposition and repress with more impunity?

Immigration is a profitable venture for the Cuban and Venezuelan dictatorships, and crucial support to gang-ruled Haiti. Cubans who leave ended up supporting relatives, according to estimates, to the tune of $2 billion to 3 billion in remittances during pre-pandemic years.

No Mariel comparison

No doubt, the unprecedented number of Cuban migrants in the Florida Keys finally catapulted border issues to the top of Biden’s priority list. Only a few days ago, the president walked away from a reporter asking about a crisis many see as another Mariel.

But forget allusions to the Mariel boatlift of 1980 under President Jimmy Carter.

The comparison sheds little light on the current Cuban immigration crisis testing the Biden administration’s election-time commitment to operate a humane, legal immigration system accessible to asylum seekers — and one that, on the other hand, doesn’t make a mockery of the nation’s borders.

This Cuban exodus has broken all-time records and continues into 2023 despite deaths and disappearances at sea.

Some 125,000 Cubans arrived in South Florida shores in a period five months during Mariel, then it all ended as suddenly as it started. Back then, Haitians, too, were fleeing the Duvalier regime, but not in huge, visible numbers.

This exodus has been open-ended for years. During the last year alone, 2% of Cuba’s 11 million population has fled, most of them to the United States.

Cubans with resources fly to a third country, cross into Mexico and ask for asylum at the border. Cubans with nothing but homemade, barely floating vessels had, perhaps until now, no other option than to risk it all in the treacherous Florida Straits.

READ MORE: We mark another Thanksgiving in South Florida with modern-day pilgrims dying at sea

There’s less of an incentive to come here illegally with the opening of legal avenues.

But poor people from remote towns and provinces may not have the access, nor the ability to articulate need — and surely they will be first in line for expulsion under Biden’s repatriation rules.

It’ll be hard to change what has been working for them. What do they have to lose trying besides their lives? Now, a five-year ban from trying again.

Most of the people arriving are young, driven by guts, hope and dreams of a better future. This is the exodus of “los primos,” the cousins, someone with his ear to the ground tells me.

When constant blackouts spoil what little food they hustle for their family, when the thought police constantly accosts, it’s impossible not to see migration as the only option.

It’s a never-ending story, an unbearable reality no Republican or Democratic rainmaker in Washington can change.

What you need to know about the new program for migrants from Cuba, Haiti and Nicaragua

Jacqueline Charles
Thu, January 5, 2023 

The Biden administration announced Thursday it will sharply step up the expulsion of migrants from Cuba, Nicaragua and Haiti who show up illegally at the U.S.-Mexico border. The administration also unveiled a new program to allow as many as 30,000 migrants from those countries to live and work in the U.S.

If they want to immigrate legally, migrants from the three countries — as well as Venezuelans, for whom there’s been a similar program in place since October — need to have an eligible sponsor in the United States willing to provide financial and other support. Both the migrants and their sponsors will need to pass background checks.

For now, a totally online process via a Customs and Border Patrol app will allow migrants to schedule a time to come to a port of entry in the U.S. to seek an exception from being deported back to Mexico or to their home country under the Title 42 public health regulation.

Venezuelan migrants wait for assistance outside of the Mexican Commission for Refugee Aid in Mexico City, Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022. This group of migrants interrupted their trek in Mexico City after the U.S. announced that Venezuelans who walk or swim across the border will be immediately returned to Mexico without the right to seek asylum.

The Department of Homeland Security said it will publish a new rule that will require migrants who are on their way to the U.S. to first apply for asylum in a third country before reaching the U.S. border. Anyone who fails to do so would be barred from seeking asylum in the U.S. (Immigration advocates have criticized the proposal, saying that it is similar to former President Donald Trump’s “transit ban” for immigrants, which was blocked by a federal appeals court in 2020.)


Migrants who arrive at the U.S.-Mexico border, or at Florida’s coast, without getting advanced authorization face being expelled back to their countries or Mexico.

It is unclear how Cubans who arrive by boat in the Florida Keys would be expelled absent an accord with the Cuban government to take migrants back. For now, Cubans are being issued an “expedited order of removal,” which advocates say is “irregular” because it means the migrants did not have the opportunity to show they have a credible fear of persecution if they are returned to Cuba.

Haitians who arrive in the Florida Keys and the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico have also been returned to Haiti if they did not touch land. Those who have jumped off boats have been processed into the U.S., but it is still unclear how the new policy will affect them should they make it to land, like a recent boatload did on Tuesday in Key Largo.

Here’s what you need to know about the new measures:

How a migrant can apply to enter the U.S.

Migrants will need to download the free CBP One mobile application to schedule appointments to present themselves at a port of entry to facilitate their safe and orderly arrival. The CBP One application is available in the Apple and Google App Stores as well as at https://www.cbp.gov/about/mobile-apps-directory/cbpone.

Does a migrant need to be at the border to schedule an appointment?

No. The CBP One mobile app’s access has been expanded into Central Mexico in order to discourage migrants from congregating near the U.S.-Mexico border in unsafe conditions.

What is the process after applying?

Through the online process, individuals seeking advance authorization to travel to the U.S. will be considered on a case-by-case basis for a temporary grant of parole for up to two years, including employment authorization.

What are the requirements for a migrant to be considered?

All applicants must pass rigorous biometric and biographic national security and public safety screening and vetting; have a supporter in the U.S. who commits to providing financial and other support, and complete vaccination and other public health requirements.

How soon can someone apply to support a migrant?

Starting Friday, potential supporters can apply to Homeland Security to support eligible individuals via www.uscis.gov/CHNV. Individuals and representatives of organizations seeking to apply as supporters must declare their financial support, and they must pass security background checks to protect against exploitation and abuse.

Ports of entry where migrants will need to show up once they have an appointment:

▪ Arizona: Nogales

▪ Texas: Brownsville, Hidalgo, Laredo, Eagle Pass, and El Paso

▪ California: Calexico and San Ysidro

What you need to know about COVID-19:

During the inspection process, migrants must verbally attest to their COVID-19 vaccination status and provide, upon request, proof of vaccination against COVID-19 in accordance with Title 19 vaccination requirements.

A civilian notified Sector Key West watchstanders of this migrant vessel about 40 miles southwest of Key West, Florida, July 8, 2022. They were repatriated to Cuba on July 10.

What happens if a migrant tries to enter the U.S. without authorization?

Individuals will either be returned to Mexico, which has agreed to accept 30,000 individuals a month, or back to their home country.

What about those migrants who cannot be expelled under the Trump-era public health rule known as Title 42, which has been used to quickly expel thousands of Haitians at the southern U.S. border?

They will be deported under another statue known as Title 8 that allows for long-term bans from re-entering the United States. Such migrants, including Haitians arriving at the Florida coast, could find themselves deported at the end of this process after failing to pass so called credible-fear interview with an asylum officer.

What happens if a migrant is removed under Title 8 statue?

The migrant faces a five-year ban on admission to the U.S. and possible criminal charges should they seek to reenter the United States.

If I am currently in Haiti or Cuba can I apply for this parole program today?

No. Only migrants already in transit will be able to apply through the CBP One app.

How else can I raise my hand to sponsor someone from Haiti, Cuba, Nicaragua or Venezuela?

Welcome.US is working to rapidly expand its Welcome Connect tech platform to expand its functionality to go live in late January. Americans interested in sponsoring newcomers from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua or Venezuelans can sign up now at Welcome.US to be added to the platform as soon as it is ready. The platform currently facilitates connections between potential sponsors in the U.S. and displaced Ukrainians.

A guide to the common types of visas that allow foreign workers into the U.S.


Rich Sugg/rsugg@kcstar.com

Dalia Faheid
Sat, January 7, 2023


In Texas, immigrants comprise 17% of the population, but 22% of the state’s workforce, the latest data says.


Immigrants who do come to the U.S. to work have a number of different visa options. This guide will explain the most common types of work visas and eligibility criteria for each.

The four most common types of work visas are: Temporary Non-Immigrant Visa, Permanent Workers, Student and Exchange Visitors and Temporary Visit for Business.

Temporary Non-Immigrant Visa

These visas are for foreigners looking to work in the U.S. for a fixed period of time. A prospective employer files a petition with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, then the employee applies for a visa prior to coming to the U.S., according to Boundless Immigration. Spouses and family need to file for their own visas prior to coming to the U.S. These visas take 5 to 7 months to process, according to VisaPlace.

These are the most common types of temporary non-immigrant visas, per Boundless Immigration:

H visas: H-1B visas, with a residency cap of three years, are for people who want to work in a specialty occupation and have a college degree or equivalent work experience. To be eligible, you would need a job offer from a U.S. employer for a role that requires specialty knowledge, proof of a bachelor’s degree or equivalent in that field and your employer must show a lack of qualified U.S. applicants for the role. The cap is at 65,000 H-1B visas per fiscal year. It can be extended for a maximum of six years. H-1B visa holders can apply for a green card, but there may be lengthy delays. H-2A and H-2B visas lasting up to a year are for temporary or seasonal workers in an agricultural or non-agricultural setting. H-3 is for those seeking training within the United States.




I visas: These indefinite visas are for members of the press including reporters, film crews and editors from a foreign media outlet.


L visas: These are for people who are temporarily transferring within a company they work at, either at the executive/management level (L-1A, 3 years) or through specialized expertise (L-1B, 1 year). The L-1 visa is granted for an initial period of three years that can be extended up to seven years. L-1A visa holders can file for a green card in the EB-1 category, which speeds up the process so you can get it within a year. L-1B visa holders must complete the Permanent Labor Certification under the EB-2 category, which can take years.


O visas: This visa is for individuals with extraordinary ability or achievement. The three-year visa can be extended in one-year increments.


P visas: These visas are for those who excel in entertainment, athletics or the arts and last for the entirety of an event.


R visas: Religious workers who are members of a religious denomination that holds nonprofit status in the U.S. use this visa. They work either directly for that denomination or an associated nonprofit.


TN NAFTA: Under the North American Free Trade Agreement, qualified Canadian and Mexican citizens can seek temporary entry into the U.S. for business. Professionals are granted an initial stay of three years with an extension of three years.
Permanent Workers

Every year, people can apply for the 140,000 employment-based green cards available. These usually require an existing offer of employment from an employer who has U.S. Department of Labor certification. Through ETA Form 9089 (Application for Permanent Employment Certification), the employer needs to verify that there are both insufficient workers with this skill set in the U.S. and that hiring does not take a job away from a citizen, per Boundless Immigration. Your employer then files a petition with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Employment-based green cards can take 6 to 33 months for processing, per VisaPlace.

Here are the key types of employment-based green cards:

EB-1: This covers those with “extraordinary ability,” outstanding professors and researchers and multinational executives and managers.


EB-2: These are available to professionals holding an advanced degree, have at least ten years experience in a field, or whose employment is in the national interest of the U.S.


EB-3: EB-3 green cards are for professionals holding a bachelor’s degree as well as workers who have a non-temporary offer of employment from a U.S. employer.


EB-4: This is a specialized category. It encompasses certain religious workers, employees of U.S. foreign service posts, retired employees of international organizations and noncitizen minors who are wards of courts in the U.S.


EB-5: For the Immigrant Investor Program, green cards are available to people who make either an investment of $1.8 million in a new commercial enterprise that employs at least 10 full-time U.S. workers, or $900,000 in a new commercial venture in a targeted employment area that employs at least 10 full-time U.S. workers. Investors and their families are eligible to apply for green cards.

After USCIS approves the petition, it is sent to the National Visa Center, which will assign a case number for the petition. After the application form is completed and fees are paid, you submit the necessary immigrant visa documents, including application forms and civil documents.

Your spouse and children may apply for immigrant visas with you. They must also fill out required application forms, obtain required civil documents, pay the required fees and undergo medical examinations.
Student and Exchange Visitors

Academic students, vocational students and exchange students can apply for this visa. Many of those who obtain a student visa have the chance to adjust their status to a green card.

F visas: These are for students enrolled at accredited academic institutions. Students can work as long as they’re studying. They cannot work off-campus during the first year. F-2 visas are for the family of the student, including their spouse and children. F-3 visas are for Canadian or Mexican students who commute.


M visas: These are available for students at vocational or other recognized nonacademic institutions. M-2 visas are available for the family of the student, including their spouse and children. M-3 visas are for Canadian or Mexican students who commute.


J visas: J visas are for exchange visitors involved in work- and study-based programs, like au pairs, camp counselors, trainees and interns. Programs must promote cultural exchange and applicants must meet eligibility criteria, including English language proficiency. J-2 visas are for dependents.
Temporary Visit for Business

For short-term business trips, this visa is utilized. They may be negotiating a contract, attending a convention or settling an estate.

B-1 visas are for those doing limited, short-term business in the U.S. They’re usually given for a one- to six-month period, with possible extension of six months. They rarely last longer than a year.

The WB Temporary Business Visitor under Visa Waiver Program allows nationals of 39 countries specified by the State Department to travel to the U.S. for business or tourism without a visa for a period of 90 days or less.
How to adjust temporary status to green card

If you don’t qualify for permanent residency, you can adjust your status in the future. Here’s how to do so, according to VisaPlace:

Determine if you are eligible for a U.S. green card.


File your immigrant petition.


Check visa availability.


File Form I-485.


Attend your biometrics appointment.


Go to your immigration interview, if needed.


Submit additional supporting documents, if needed.

Saturday, January 07, 2023


Florida TD Bank manager masterminded $30 million COVID loan fraud and kickback scheme

Jay Weaver
Fri, January 6, 2023

Daniel Hernandez held a key position at TD Bank, overseeing 80 employees at 27 branches in Miami-Dade County.

But the regional manager’s job also gave him the opportunity to fleece a massive U.S. government loan program meant to help struggling businesses survive the COVID-19 pandemic — by exploiting his bank from the inside, federal authorities say.

In less than a year, authorities say, Hernandez lined his pockets with kickback-like “commissions” as he collaborated with TD Bank customers, a former bank employee and other associates to submit falsified paperwork for more than 80 loans worth $30 million under the Paycheck Protection Program — all guaranteed by the Small Business Administration. Hernandez also directed others to apply for another $7 million in pandemic benefits from the Small Business Administration under its Economic Injury Disaster Loan program.

In total, Hernandez and his illicit network received more than $17 million in fraudulent loans approved by TD Bank and one of his previous employers, Bank of America, as well as by the SBA itself — in one of the most brazen pandemic relief cases involving two major U.S. banks, authorities say.

The 50-year-old Hernandez, who was fired from his TD Bank job before his arrest in August, pleaded guilty to a wire fraud conspiracy charge in December and now faces up to 10 years in prison at his sentencing in March. He is among dozens of pandemic hustlers in South Florida and thousands nationwide who have been convicted of fraud since Congress approved the $813 billion loan programs just after the coronavirus swept the country in March 2020.

In a report released last year, the SBA’s inspector general found there were about 70,000 fraudulent PPP loans totaling $4.6 billion nationwide, calling the trend “unprecedented” — but that those figures were based on an analysis in August 2020. The level of COVID-19 relief fraud in the SBA’s loan programs is now believed to be much higher.

In Hernandez’s case, a federal criminal affidavit accused the former TD Bank manager of masterminding an inside job to recruit bank customers to apply for PPP loans and to help them fill out their applications with fabricated information about the number of employees, payroll expenses and gross revenues. He allegedly used his position at TD Bank to try to ensure that their business loan applications were processed by his employer, though he was not directly involved in approving them.

“In return, Hernandez received a commission on every loan issued,” according to the affidavit filed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s Office of Inspector General.

New Jersey-based TD Bank, which is in the process of acquiring First Horizon Bank, said it investigated Hernandez’s misconduct and assisted federal investigators and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami.

“To protect our customers and the bank, TD has strong processes in place to identify, investigate, and deter potential fraud,” the bank said in a statement provided to the Miami Herald on Friday. “In this matter, we initiated an internal investigation, cooperated with law enforcement, and terminated Mr. Hernandez prior to his arrest.”

Hernandez’s defense attorney, Henry Bell, said that his client had never been in trouble with the law before his fraud offense and accepted responsibility early in the process by pleading guilty just months after his arrest. “You can rest assured he will never again involve himself in anything like this again,” Bell told the Herald.

Three of Hernandez’s co-conspirators in the TD Bank fraud case have also been charged by prosecutor Eli Rubin in the U.S. Attorney’s Office:

▪ Armando Ariel De Leon, a former TD Bank employee in Miami-Dade, admitted in his plea agreement that he conspired with Hernandez to help customers open accounts at TD Bank and apply for phony PPP loans from the bank as well as other benefits from the Small Business Administration. De Leon received kickbacks from customers and Hernandez, court record shows. De Leon, 51, who was fired from TD Bank in 2021, pleaded guilty to a wire fraud conspiracy in October.

▪ William Alexander Posada Sandrea, president of Autenticos Auto Sales Corp. in Miami-Dade, also collaborated with Hernandez and others to file falsified PPP loan applications for his company and other businesses. Posada, 43, pleaded guilty to a bank fraud conspiracy in July but failed to show up for his sentencing in November, court records show. He’s at large.

▪ Erich Javier Alfonso Barata, the president of two Miami-Dade companies, Black Hookah Inc. and EJ Networking & Security Service, is accused of collaborating with Hernandez and submitting bogus PPP loan applications. According to court records, Barata, 49, is expected to plead guilty to a wire fraud conspiracy.

The Paycheck Protection Program approved by Congress in 2020 was designed to help businesses following shutdowns caused by the rapid spread of the coronavirus. The program, under the CARES Act, allowed for the loans to be forgiven, as long as borrowers followed criteria laid out by the SBA to use the funds for payroll and other overhead.

Determined to inject money quickly in the faltering economy, the U.S. government waived many traditional requirements that lenders normally check before issuing business loans — and that policy, according to the SBA’s inspector general, led to an “unprecedented level of fraud activity” because of the lack of controls.

As the nation’s No. 1 fraud capital, South Florida has led the financial crime wave that followed the passage of the CARES Act, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

After losing billions of dollars in COVID-19 relief funds due to phony claims, the U.S. government in September started deploying investigative teams in South Florida, California and Maryland to zero in on criminal organizations that are suspected of stealing from public programs offering small business loans and unemployment insurance. The strike forces are working out of U.S. attorney’s offices.


Valesky Barosy, 28, pictured here on his Instagram page, was convicted of fraudulently obtaining pandemic-relief loans to buy a Lamborghini, among other luxury goods.

Meanwhile, federal prosecutions of individuals and their businesses continue unabated in South Florida.

This week, Derek James Acree, an attorney in Palm Beach County, was sentenced to nearly 3 1/2 years in prison for submitting fraudulent loan applications seeking more than $1.6 million under the SBA’s pandemic relief programs. Acree, 47, who pleaded guilty to a wire fraud conspiracy in October, filed the bogus loans for companies he owned: National Financial Holdings Inc., NFH Florida LLC, DBA Finova Financial LLC, and National Financial Holding Technology LLC. The loans misrepresented the number of employees, payroll and revenues, authorities said.

After obtaining the loan proceeds, Acree transferred some of the money to others and used another portion to make a down payment on his home and repairs on his boat.

Also this week, Alexander Blaise of Plantation and his brother, Dumarais Blaise of Georgia, pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy charges in Fort Lauderdale federal court stemming from a bogus $356,000 PPP loan application for a South Florida business, Acute Care Coordinating Systems PA. Alexander Blaise admitted that he was assisted by his brother, Dumarais Blaise, a tax preparer, in obtaining the pandemic loan and that the proceeds were deposited into another business, Blaise Podiatry, court records show. The brothers then split the illicit funds.

Last month, a Miami man charged with swindling millions from the government’s PPP loan program was found guilty of nine counts of wire fraud, money laundering and aggravated identity theft. Now, Valesky Barosy, 28, faces 20 years or more in prison at his sentencing in February.

Barosy was not shy about showing off his exploits while ripping off the SBA’s pandemic program, posting social media shots of himself driving an exotic Lamborghini and flying on a private jet.
OLDE FASHION CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
China suspends social media accounts of COVID policy critics
 




A vendor wearing a face mask checks her smartphone at her store selling Chinese Lunar New Year decorations in Beijing, Saturday, Jan. 7, 2023. China has suspended or closed the social media accounts of more than 1,000 critics of the government's policies on the COVID-19 outbreak, as the country moves to further open up. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

Fri, January 6, 2023

BEIJING (AP) — China has suspended or closed the social media accounts of more than 1,000 critics of the government’s policies on the COVID-19 outbreak, as the country moves to further open up.

The popular Sina Weibo social media platform said it had addressed 12,854 violations including attacks on experts, scholars and medical workers and issued temporary or permanent bans on 1,120 accounts.

The ruling Communist Party had largely relied on the medical community to justify its harsh lockdowns, quarantine measures and mass testing, almost all of which it abruptly abandoned last month, leading to a surge in new cases that have stretched medical resources to their limits. The party allows no direct criticism and imposes strict limits on free speech.

The company “will continue to increase the investigation and cleanup of all kinds of illegal content, and create a harmonious and friendly community environment for the majority of users," Sina Weibo said in a statement dated Thursday.

Criticism has largely focused on heavy-handed enforcement of regulations, including open-ended travel restrictions that saw people confined to their homes for weeks, sometimes sealed inside without adequate food or medical care. Anger was also vented over the requirement that anyone who potentially tested positive or had been in contact with such a person be confined for observation in a field hospital, where overcrowding, poor food and hygiene were commonly cited.

The social and economic costs eventually prompted rare street protests in Beijing and other cities, possibly influencing the party's decision to swiftly ease the strictest measures.

As part of the latest changes, China will also no longer bring criminal charges against people accused of violating border quarantine regulations, according to a notice issued by five government departments on Saturday.

Individuals currently in custody will be released and seized assets returned, the notice said.

The adjustments “were made after comprehensively considering the harm of the behaviors to the society, and aim to adapt to the new situations of the epidemic prevention and control," the official China Daily newspaper website said in a report on the notice.

China is now facing a surge in cases and hospitalizations in major cities and is bracing for a further spread into less developed areas with the start of the Lunar New Year travel rush, set to get underway in coming days. While international flights are still reduced, authorities say they expect domestic rail and air journeys will double over the same period last year, bringing overall numbers close to those of the 2019 holiday period before the pandemic hit.

The Transportation Ministry on Friday called on travelers to reduce trips and gatherings, particularly if they involve elderly people, pregnant women, small children and those with underlying conditions.

People using public transport are also urged to wear masks and pay special attention to their health and personal hygiene, Vice Minister Xu Chengguang told reporters at a briefing.

Nonetheless, China is forging ahead with a plan to end mandatory quarantines for people arriving from abroad beginning on Sunday.

Beijing also plans to drop a requirement for students at city schools to have a negative COVID-19 test to enter campus when classes resume Feb. 13 after the holiday break. While schools will be allowed to move classes online in the event of new outbreaks, they must return to in-person instruction as soon as possible, the city education bureau said in a statement Friday.

However, the end to mass testing, a highly limited amount of basic data such as the number of deaths, infections and severe cases, and the potential emergence of new variants have prompted governments elsewhere to institute virus testing requirements for travelers from China.

The World Health Organization has also expressed concern about the lack of data from China, while the U.S. is requiring a negative test result for travelers from China within 48 hours of departure.

Chinese health authorities publish a daily count of new cases, severe cases and deaths, but those numbers include only officially confirmed cases and use a very narrow definition of COVID-related deaths.

Authorities say that since the government ended compulsory testing and permitted people with mild symptoms to test themselves and convalesce at home, it can no longer provide a full picture of the state of the latest outbreak.

On Saturday, the National Health Commission reported 10,681 new domestic cases, bringing the country's total number of confirmed cases to 482,057. Three new deaths were also reported over the previous 24 hours, bringing the total to 5,267.

The numbers are a fraction of those announced by the U.S., which has put its death toll at more than 1 million among some 101 million cases.

But they're also much smaller than the estimates being released by some local governments. Zhejiang, a province on the east coast, said Tuesday it was seeing about 1 million new cases a day.

China has said the testing requirements being imposed by foreign governments — most recently Germany and Sweden — aren’t science-based and has threatened unspecified countermeasures. Its spokespeople have said the situation is under control, and reject accusations of a lack of preparation for reopening.

Despite such assertions, the Health Commission on Saturday rolled out regulations for strengthened monitoring of viral mutations, including testing of urban wastewater. The lengthy rules called for increased data gathering from hospitals and local government health departments and stepped-up checks on “pneumonia of unknown causes."

If a variant emerges in an outbreak, it is found through genetic sequencing of the virus.

Since the pandemic started, China has shared 4,144 sequences with GISAID, a global platform for coronavirus data. That’s only 0.04% of its reported number of cases — a rate more than 100 times less than the United States and nearly four times less than neighboring Mongolia.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong also plans to reopen some of its border crossings with mainland China on Sunday and allow tens of thousands of people to cross every day without being quarantined.

The semi-autonomous southern Chinese city has been hard-hit by the virus and its land and sea border checkpoints with the mainland have been largely closed for almost three years. Despite the risk, the reopening is expected to provide a much-needed boost to Hong Kong’s tourism and retail sectors.






 
Chinese-made mRNA vaccine starts trial production


China's vaccine specialist CanSino Biologics Inc in Tianjin


Fri, January 6, 2023 

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China's CanSino Biologics Inc has entered "test production phase" for its COVID-19 mRNA booster vaccine, the company said in a post on its social media account late on Thursday.

The vaccine, known as CS-2034, targets new Omicron variants of the virus, which are responsible for the vast majority of infections that have swept across China since the country began dismantling strict COVID curbs last month.

Until now, China has relied on nine domestically-developed COVID vaccines approved for use, including inactivated vaccines, but none have been adapted to target the highly-transmissible Omicron variant and its offshoots that are currently in circulation.

The CanSino booster vaccine is one of China's first home-grown potential vaccines based on mRNA technology similar to that employed in vaccines produced internationally by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna.

On Thursday, CanSino also reported "positive" interim data from a mid-stage clinical trial in a filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange.

According to CanSino, the first phase of its mRNA vaccine production could produce 100 million doses.

(Reporting by Casey Hall; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)
POSTMODERN MCARTHYISM 


DeSantis seeks conservative overhaul at Florida liberal-arts college

Rebecca Blackwell/Associated Press


Ana Ceballos, Jeffrey Solochek
Fri, January 6, 2023 

Gov. Ron DeSantis appointed a group of hard-line conservative loyalists Friday into leadership positions at the New College of Florida, a move that comes as the Republican governor plots a remake of the state’s higher education system.

Several of the appointees are vocal opponents of gender- and race-related education issues that have fueled the right’s culture wars in schools. They were picked as DeSantis, who is eyeing a potential 2024 White House run, vows to fight “philosophical lunacy” in the schools.

The new appointees will now help oversee the Sarasota college, which has a reputation for being one of the most progressive higher-education institutions in the state.

Of the six appointed by DeSantis, the marquee names are Christopher Rufo, a conservative activist who helped turn critical race theory into a conservative rallying cry, and Matthew Spalding, a government professor at Hillsdale College, a conservative Christian college in Michigan.

Rufo and Spalding have backed DeSantis’ proposals targeting critical race theory, a 1980s academic legal concept holds that racial disparities are systemic in the United States, not just a collection of individual prejudices.

DeSantis also appointed:

▪ Charles R. Kesler, the editor of the conservative Claremont Institute’s publication, The Claremont Review of Books;

▪ Eddie Speir, the superintendent of Inspiration Academy, a private Christian school in Bradenton that has as its mission to “cultivate, nourish and inspire students, using a mentorship model to develop an integrated life of faith from the inside out, in an environment of family, care and love.”

▪ Mark Bauerlein, a pro-Donald Trump English professor at Emory University, whose latest book, “The Dumbest Generation Grows Up,” casts a critical eye on education for giving up on the classical canon and instead allowing students to choose for themselves what they want to learn.

▪ Debra Jenks, a New College alumna who currently is a securities mediation lawyer in Palm Beach County.

These individuals were picked, in part, because New College needs a new direction, DeSantis spokesperson Taryn Fenske told the Herald/Times in an email.

“NCF needs new leadership that sends a clear and attractive signal to students, throughout Florida and nationwide, that this is an institution intending to remain humble in size yet nation-leading in its approach to ‘innovation’ and ‘excellence,’” Fenske said.

Rufo celebrated the appointment by declaring: “We are recapturing higher education.”
‘Recapturing higher education’

As DeSantis kicked off his second term in office on Tuesday, he made clear that he plans to focus on reshaping the state’s higher education. In particular, he said, he wants to make sure his administration eradicates “trendy ideologies” from the classroom.

“We must ensure that our institutions of higher learning are focused on academic excellence and the pursuit of truth, not the imposition of trendy ideology,” DeSantis said during his inaugural speech at the steps of the historic Florida Capitol in Tallahassee.

Then, DeSantis’ office made public a memo that it had sent out to state colleges and universities asking the for information about resources they are putting into activities and program related to diversity, equity and inclusion and critical race theory.

“As the Executive Office of the Governor prepares policy and budget proposals ahead of the 2023 Legislative Session, it is important that we have a full understanding of the operational expenses of state institutions,” Chris Spencer, the director of DeSantis’ Office of Policy and Budget, wrote in a memo Dec. 28.

The information need to be submitted by Jan. 13. It remains unclear exactly what will be done with the information once it is collected.

Signs of a major shake-up

As word spread of DeSantis’ appointment to New College on Friday, reaction from academics came swiftly via social media.

“Terrible news,” tweeted Ohio State University political science associate professor Benjamin McKean. “DeSantis is aiming to destroy New College.”

Acadia University politics instructor Jeffrey Sachs wrote, “With leadership like this, how could college NOT educate freethinkers?”

Rufo lives in the Pacific Northwest with his wife and three sons, according to his website. He caught the attention of national figures, like DeSantis, during the pandemic after frequently appearing on conservative media outlets to criticize the concept of critical race theory.

Eventually, the ire against the theory became a rallying cry for conservatives, many of them in Florida. And DeSantis tapped into those ideas to build a reputation as a warrior. He has often declared that Florida is where “woke goes to die.”

When Rufo tweeted his enthusiasm for the appointment, he drew a barrage of congratulations from conservatives, including Erika Donalds, the wife of U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, who was nominated this week for U.S. House speaker.
Hillsdale connection

Spalding’s appointment to marks another instance in which Hillsdale College is helping DeSantis reshape the state’s higher education system.

“I am honored by the appointment and look forward to advancing educational excellence and focusing New College on its distinctive mission as the liberal arts honors college of the State of Florida,” Spalding said in a statement Friday. “A good liberal arts education is truly liberating and opens the minds and forms the character of good students and good citizens.”

Hillsdale President Larry P. Arnn called DeSantis “one of the most important people living,” during the Hillsdale National Leadership Seminar in Naples last February. And the Times/Herald found that the private Christian college was among several national groups that helped the governor develop a civics education training program for teachers that some educators said was seeped in “Christian fundamentalist” overtones.

READ MORE: DeSantis’ ‘full armor of God’ rhetoric reaches Republicans. But is he playing with fire?

DeSantis chief of staff James Uthmeier told the National Review that the administration intends to convert the college, which has under 700 students, to a classical model akin to that of Hillsdale College.

Twelve years ago, Hillsdale College set out to reshape public education through the growth of charter schools and in recent years has expanded its reach in Florida’s education system.

And in Florida, Hillsdale’s influence has been seen in the state’s rejection of math textbooks over what DeSantis called “indoctrinating concepts,” the state’s push to renew the importance of civics education in public schools, and the rapid growth of Hillsdale’s network of affiliated public charter schools in Florida.

Arnn, Hillsdale’s president, was appointed by Trump to chair the president’s Advisory 1776 Commission, which was formed to “advise the president about the core principles of the American founding and to protect those principles by promoting patriotic education,” according to Spalding, who Trump appointed as the commission’s executive director.

Spalding is also the vice president for Washington operations and the dean of the Van Andel Graduate School of Government at Hillsdale’s Washington, D.C., extension

Hillsdale’s digital digest, Imprimis, features the writing of conservative thinkers like Christopher Rufo, who has worked with DeSantis to combat issues like critical race theory and gender identity. The publication also includes articles with titles, like “The January 6 Insurrection Hoax,” “The Disaster at Our Southern Border,” “Gender Ideology Run Amok.” “Critical Race Theory: What it is and How to Fight it,” and “Who is in Control? The need to Rein in Big Tech.”



Gov. Ron DeSantis seeks conservative overhaul at Sarasota’s New College of Florida


Ana Ceballos, Jeffrey Solochek
Fri, January 6, 2023 



Gov. Ron DeSantis appointed a group of hard-line conservative loyalists Friday into leadership positions at the New College of Florida, a move that comes as the Republican governor plots a remake of the state’s higher education system.

Several of the appointees are vocal opponents of gender- and race-related education issues that have fueled the right’s culture wars in schools. They were picked as DeSantis, who is eyeing a potential 2024 White House run, vows to fight “philosophical lunacy” in the schools.

The new appointees will now help oversee the Sarasota college, which has a reputation for being one of the most progressive higher-education institutions in the state.

Of the six appointed by DeSantis, the marquee names are Christopher Rufo, a conservative activist who helped turn critical race theory into a conservative rallying cry, and Matthew Spalding, a government professor at Hillsdale College, a conservative Christian college in Michigan.


Rufo and Spalding have backed DeSantis’ proposals targeting critical race theory, a 1980s academic legal concept holds that racial disparities are systemic in the United States, not just a collection of individual prejudices.

DeSantis also appointed:

▪ Charles R. Kesler, the editor of the conservative Claremont Institute’s publication, The Claremont Review of Books;

▪ Eddie Speir, the superintendent of Inspiration Academy, a private Christian school in Bradenton that has as its mission to “cultivate, nourish and inspire students, using a mentorship model to develop an integrated life of faith from the inside out, in an environment of family, care and love.”

▪ Mark Bauerlein, a pro-Donald Trump English professor at Emory University, whose latest book, “The Dumbest Generation Grows Up,” casts a critical eye on education for giving up on the classical canon and instead allowing students to choose for themselves what they want to learn.

▪ Debra Jenks, a New College alumna who currently is a securities mediation lawyer in Palm Beach County.

These individuals were picked, in part, because New College needs a new direction, DeSantis spokesperson Taryn Fenske told the Herald/Times in an email.

“NCF needs new leadership that sends a clear and attractive signal to students, throughout Florida and nationwide, that this is an institution intending to remain humble in size yet nation-leading in its approach to ‘innovation’ and ‘excellence,’” Fenske said.

Rufo celebrated the appointment by declaring: “We are recapturing higher education.”
‘Recapturing higher education’

As DeSantis kicked off his second term in office on Tuesday, he made clear that he plans to focus on reshaping the state’s higher education. In particular, he said, he wants to make sure his administration eradicates “trendy ideologies” from the classroom.

“We must ensure that our institutions of higher learning are focused on academic excellence and the pursuit of truth, not the imposition of trendy ideology,” DeSantis said during his inaugural speech at the steps of the historic Florida Capitol in Tallahassee.

Then, DeSantis’ office made public a memo that it had sent out to state colleges and universities asking the for information about resources they are putting into activities and program related to diversity, equity and inclusion and critical race theory.

“As the Executive Office of the Governor prepares policy and budget proposals ahead of the 2023 Legislative Session, it is important that we have a full understanding of the operational expenses of state institutions,” Chris Spencer, the director of DeSantis’ Office of Policy and Budget, wrote in a memo Dec. 28.

The information need to be submitted by Jan. 13. It remains unclear exactly what will be done with the information once it is collected.
Signs of a major shake-up

As word spread of DeSantis’ appointment to New College on Friday, reaction from academics came swiftly via social media.

“Terrible news,” tweeted Ohio State University political science associate professor Benjamin McKean. “DeSantis is aiming to destroy New College.”

Acadia University politics instructor Jeffrey Sachs wrote, “With leadership like this, how could college NOT educate freethinkers?”

Rufo lives in the Pacific Northwest with his wife and three sons, according to his website. He caught the attention of national figures, like DeSantis, during the pandemic after frequently appearing on conservative media outlets to criticize the concept of critical race theory.

Eventually, the ire against the theory became a rallying cry for conservatives, many of them in Florida. And DeSantis tapped into those ideas to build a reputation as a warrior. He has often declared that Florida is where “woke goes to die.”

When Rufo tweeted his enthusiasm for the appointment, he drew a barrage of congratulations from conservatives, including Erika Donalds, the wife of U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, who was nominated this week for U.S. House speaker.
Hillsdale connection

Spalding’s appointment to marks another instance in which Hillsdale College is helping DeSantis reshape the state’s higher education system.

“I am honored by the appointment and look forward to advancing educational excellence and focusing New College on its distinctive mission as the liberal arts honors college of the State of Florida,” Spalding said in a statement Friday. “A good liberal arts education is truly liberating and opens the minds and forms the character of good students and good citizens.”

Hillsdale President Larry P. Arnn called DeSantis “one of the most important people living,” during the Hillsdale National Leadership Seminar in Naples last February. And the Times/Herald found that the private Christian college was among several national groups that helped the governor develop a civics education training program for teachers that some educators said was seeped in “Christian fundamentalist” overtones.

READ MORE: DeSantis’ ‘full armor of God’ rhetoric reaches Republicans. But is he playing with fire?

DeSantis chief of staff James Uthmeier told the National Review that the administration intends to convert the college, which has under 700 students, to a classical model akin to that of Hillsdale College.

Twelve years ago, Hillsdale College set out to reshape public education through the growth of charter schools and in recent years has expanded its reach in Florida’s education system.

And in Florida, Hillsdale’s influence has been seen in the state’s rejection of math textbooks over what DeSantis called “indoctrinating concepts,” the state’s push to renew the importance of civics education in public schools, and the rapid growth of Hillsdale’s network of affiliated public charter schools in Florida.

Arnn, Hillsdale’s president, was appointed by Trump to chair the president’s Advisory 1776 Commission, which was formed to “advise the president about the core principles of the American founding and to protect those principles by promoting patriotic education,” according to Spalding, who Trump appointed as the commission’s executive director.

Spalding is also the vice president for Washington operations and the dean of the Van Andel Graduate School of Government at Hillsdale’s Washington, D.C., extension

Hillsdale’s digital digest, Imprimis, features the writing of conservative thinkers like Christopher Rufo, who has worked with DeSantis to combat issues like critical race theory and gender identity. The publication also includes articles with titles, like “The January 6 Insurrection Hoax,” “The Disaster at Our Southern Border,” “Gender Ideology Run Amok.” “Critical Race Theory: What it is and How to Fight it,” and “Who is in Control? The need to Rein in Big Tech.”

New College of Florida campus

DeSantis aims to create 'Hillsdale of the south' with conservative overhaul of a Florida college's board



Zac Anderson
Fri, January 6, 2023 

New College of Florida

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis overhauled the board of Sarasota's New College on Friday, bringing in six new members, including prominent conservative activist Christopher Rufo and a dean of conservative Hillsdale College, in a move his administration described as an effort to shift the school in a conservative direction.

"It is our hope that New College of Florida will become Florida's classical college, more along the lines of a Hillsdale of the south," DeSantis Chief of Staff James Uthmeier told the conservative Daily Caller website.

The shakeup of the 11-member board is certain to create major tensions at New College, an institution that started as a progressive private school before becoming the state's liberal arts honors college. The small school's student body and faculty have a reputation for leaning left politically.

Turning New College into a Florida version of Hillsdale would amount to turning it upside down, a wholesale transformation that many current students and faculty are likely to resist.

Rise of Christopher Rufo:How critical race theory went from conservative battle cry to mainstream powder keg

Rufo:What I discovered about critical race theory in public schools and why it shouldn't be taught

Rufo has gained prominence for his activism on transgender and racial issues, making him a leader in the new wave of conservative culture wars. He joined DeSantis when the governor signed HB 1557, the Parental Rights in Education Act, which is derided by critics as the "Don't Say Gay" bill.

'Woke mind virus'? 'Corporate wokeness'? Why red America has declared war on corporate America

Rufo recently applauded DeSantis on Twitter for requesting information on diversity, equity and inclusion and critical race theory at all Florida colleges and universities.

"Gov. DeSantis is going to lay siege to university 'diversity, equity, and inclusion' programs," Rufo wrote.



Joining Rufo on the New College board is Matthew Spalding, a professor of constitutional government at Hillsdale College and the dean of the college's graduate school of government in Washington, D.C.

Hillsdale is a small Christian college in Michigan that has been active in conservative education politics.

"As Gov. DeSantis stated in his second inaugural speech: 'We must ensure that our institutions of higher learning are focused on academic excellence and the pursuit of truth,'" DeSantis spokesman Bryan Griffin told the Daily Caller. "Starting today, the ship is turning around. New College of Florida, under the governor's new appointees, will be refocused on its founding mission of providing a world-class quality education with an exceptional focus on the classics."

DeSantis spoke at Hillsdale's National Leadership Seminar last year and has tapped the school to help reshape Florida's education system.

At least seven states have passed laws restricting the teaching of critical race theory at institutions of higher education. The portion of Florida's law affecting colleges is temporarily blocked, but some professors who teach the subject are canceling those courses, ProPublica reported this week. Penn State abandoned plans made following the murder of George Floyd to create a Center for Racial Justice when its leadership turned over last year.

Critical race theory: What is it and how did it become a political dividing line?

What is wokeness? What does it mean to be 'woke,' and why does Florida Governor Ron DeSantis want to stop it?

The other new board members at New College are Charles Kesler, a professor of government at Clermont-McKenna College, Mark Bauerlein, who teaches at Emory University, Debra Jenks, a New College alum and attorney, and Jason "Eddie" Speir, the co-founder, chairman and superintendent of Inspiration Academy, a Christian school in Bradenton.

The new DeSantis appointees make up a majority of the board and will be able to control the school's direction.

New College routinely ranks well on higher education "best of" lists, having been singled out as a good value and among the best public liberal arts colleges. It is known for attracting accomplished students to an intimate setting that blends academic rigor and quirky experimentalism.

DeSantis’ targeting of race and diversity at Florida universities seen as political ploy

Gerren Keith Gaynor
Fri, January 6, 2023

Education Secretary Miguel Cardona dismissed Gov. Ron DeSantis’ latest action as “an attempt to get a national name for himself.”

Democrats are slamming Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ recent targeting of critical race theory (CRT) and diversity, equity and inclusion programs at public universities, and have dismissed his latest action as a ploy to boost his political ambitions.

DeSantis, in continuing his “Stop W.O.K.E. Act” despite a court injunction limiting its reach, has requested state public universities to submit a “comprehensive list of all staff, programs and campus activities,” including funding, associated with diversity or CRT. The Florida governor has become a leading national Republican figure for his very public condemnations of issues he believes are rooted in “trendy” and “woke” ideologies influenced by the political left.


Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at a November rally in Orlando in November before his reelection. In his first term, the Republican signed bills restricting classroom lessons. Now he is targeting public university programs.
 (Photo by Octavio Jones/Getty Images)

Since taking office in 2019, DeSantis, a former two-term Republican congressman, has signed bills restricting instructions on race and LGBTQ+ identity in school classrooms. Similar bills have been introduced or passed by Republican-controlled legislatures across the country since late 2021. What’s more, the targeting of race, sexuality and gender identity in academia has been analyzed as a political strategy used by Republicans to win elections.

During a recent sit-down interview with theGrio, U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said he believes the latest move by DeSantis, who is reportedly mulling a run for president in 2024, is “an attempt to get a national name for himself.”

Cardona said that rather than “supporting efforts to limit universities from doing what they do best,” DeSantis and other Republican governors should be more focused on working with the Biden-Harris administration to make sure that universities “have what they need to get students back into the classrooms, learning at high levels and graduating without tremendous debt.”

Florida State Sen. Shevrin Jones warns that DeSantis’ continuous aim at race and diversity in the classroom could have impacts that extend beyond simply earning political points.

“Governor DeSantis and his team are on an all-out national marketing campaign. And all of it is being done at the expense of people’s lives,” Jones told theGrio. “What this confusion is doing is creating havoc within university systems.”

The Florida governor’s office has not disclosed why they are seeking information from public institutions of higher education or what they plan to do with it; however, Jones said he would not be surprised if DeSantis used that data to penalize institutions that offer coursework or programs related to race and diversity.


Florida A&M University is the only HBCU in Florida. State Sen. Shevrin Jones said he is especially concerned about its programs in the face of Gov. Ron DeSantis’ efforts. / AdobeStock

“If they’re looking for controversy in DEI and CRT, which is taught at our university system, then they’re going to find it, and they’re going to cut the funding for that. I will bet you that that’s the route that the [state] department of education and the governor’s office is going down,” he said.

The Miami-Dade lawmaker, who has been a vocal critic of DeSantis since taking office, said he is especially concerned about what impact any blowback could have on Florida A&M University, which is the state’s only HBCU that is a public university and offers programs on African American studies.

“Deans and presidents are now confused themselves on what can be taught and what can’t be taught, and teachers don’t want to teach it because they don’t want to get in trouble,” explained Jones. What’s worse, he said, “They’re creating this chaos and havoc within these systems, because they can.”

But Jones cautioned that this recent action from DeSantis is only the beginning from him and Republicans, both within the Sunshine State and nationally.

“What Gov. DeSantis and the Republicans are about to do in this next legislative session, mark my words, they are going to try to set a national tone not just here in Florida when it comes to our university systems — all across the country,” he said. “This will now become the Republicans’ next issue to harp on.”


Christopher Rufo in Seattle, Washington.
Contributing: Nirvi Shah, USA TODAY
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Gov. Ron DeSantis wants conservative overhaul at Sarasota's New College of Florida


Gov. DeSantis asks Florida universities for names of all staff, programs linked to diversity and CRT


TheGrio Staff
Thu, January 5, 2023 

Faculty union officials said they are concerned that any material provided by institutions in response to the governor’s request could be used to retaliate against educators, particularly those who teach about race.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wants colleges around the state to produce a detailed list of all personnel, programs, campus activities and funds associated with critical race theory and diversity initiatives.

While a DeSantis spokesperson said to “stay tuned” when asked why the state requested the material, the governor has vowed to fight against what he views as “woke” philosophy in higher education, the Orlando Sentinel reported.

“We must ensure that our institutions of higher learning are focused on academic excellence and the pursuit of truth, not the imposition of trendy ideology,” DeSantis said at his second inauguration Tuesday, according to the Sentinel.

A Dec. 28, 2022 memo — written by the governor’s budget director Chris Spencer and forwarded to Chancellor Ray Rodrigues of the State University System of Florida and Education Commissioner Manny Diaz — says the governor’s office needs the information for budget planning.

It also references the governor’s controversial “Stop Woke Act.”

Universities that disobey the law’s prohibition against teaching that someone is “inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive” because of their gender or ethnicity, whether knowingly or unintentionally, risk losing state support.

Last month, Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker granted a preliminary injunction to suspend the “Stop Woke Act,” declaring it to be “positively dystopian” and in violation of the First Amendment. The state challenged Walker’s decision, asking that the injunction be suspended.

Faculty union officials said they are concerned that any material provided by institutions in response to the request by the governor’s office could be used to retaliate against educators, particularly those who teach about race.

University of Central Florida union chair Robert Cassanello, who joined one of the legal actions opposing the “Stop Woke” ordinance, said some faculty members already have revised their course material or decided not to teach specific courses because they fear retribution, the Sentinal reported.

He said he anticipates that the school will flag a spring class he is teaching about Jim Crow in the United States.

“What it sounds like to me is Gov. DeSantis plans to punish universities over what they may or may not be teaching in classes or through programs or initiatives,” Cassanello said, according to the Sentinel.

Andrew Gothard is president of the United Faculty of Florida, a union representing more than 25,000 faculty members across the state. He wants colleges and universities to disregard the state’s request, which he believes builds on previous threats by the governor to cut funding to organizations that do not support his values and interests.

“It continues his efforts to chill the freedom of speech rights of faculty, students and staff, especially those who disagree with his ideological viewpoints and stances,” Gothard said, according to the Sentinel.

The University of Florida and UCF officials said they were working on the state’s request, which Board of Governors spokesperson Renee Fargason said all 12 state universities still needed to fulfill. They have until Jan. 13 to respond.

“Our hope is that the institutions don’t comply,” Gothard added, according to the Sentinel. “At some point, we as citizens of a democratic society have to stand up and say, ‘That’s enough.’ You can’t just target people and antagonize and brutalize them because they disagree with you. That’s not democracy. That’s not America. And it shouldn’t be Florida.”


In ‘free state of Florida’ dodgy COVID-19 research is welcomed, critical thinking muzzled | Opinion



The Miami Herald Editorial Board
Thu, January 5, 2023 

In the “free state of Florida,” academics have plenty of freedom to contest the efficacy and need for COVID-19 vaccines, but they are muzzled if they question the belief that America is a color-blind society where systemic racial injustice doesn’t exist.

This double standard is the inevitable result of a state government that handpicks the kind of speech that’s allowed at state universities and colleges. The same state government that, under the heavy hand of Gov. DeSantis, complains about “censorship” of conservatives by privately run social-media platforms, yet engages in the same tactics it decries.

Florida has ordered its public colleges and universities provide “a comprehensive list of all staff, programs and campus activities related to diversity, equity and inclusion and critical race theory.” The latter is an academic theory that, among other things, studies how racism is embedded in American institutions and laws. Conservatives have turned CRT into a scarecrow to repel anything that makes white people feel they are personally blamed for racism.

The state’s request comes as the governor’s office prepares its budget proposals ahead of the 2023 legislative session. The message is clear: CRT courses and diversity initiatives can put a university’s state funding on the chopping block.

This chilling effect appears to be the intent of DeSantis’ promise to end “wokeness” in Florida. And it’s working. A University of Central Florida sociology professor told ProPublica he’s canceled courses on race, which included a reading on the “the myth of a color-blind society,” out of fear he might lose his job. UCF’s provost blatantly told faculty the school would take disciplinary action against professors who repeatedly violated Florida’s “Stop W.O.K.E. Act” to avoid losing funding. The law prohibits classroom instruction that purportedly makes students feel guilty for past discrimination by members of their race (a subjective standard, to say the least). It also bars portraying racial colorblindness — which the law calls a virtue — as racist.

This is a blatant attack on free speech and academic freedom. Not surprisingly, a federal judge barred the law from being enforced in public universities, calling it “positively dystopian.” The DeSantis administration is appealing the case, ProPublica reported.

While CRT is treated as the abomination that Florida must root out, our university system continues to bankroll Florida’s chief vaccine denier, Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo. Appointed by DeSantis in the midst of the pandemic, he has peddled debunked treatments for the virus, such as hydroxychloroquine, and describes the scientific community as intolerant to different points of view on pandemic response. It turns out the administration he works for lives in a glass house.

Ladapo, a tenured professor at the University of Florida College of Medicine, recommended men aged 18-39 do not get mRNA COVID-19 vaccines. The guidance was based on a study by the Department of Health, which answers to Ladapo, on the health risks of the vaccines for men in that age group. A seven-page report authored by a committee of UF College of Medicine professors criticized the study, calling its research of “highly questionable merit” and relying on cherry-picked data to support an anti-vaccine hypothesis.

UF has no plans to investigate the study, the Tampa Bay Times reported this week. Its vice president for research, David Norton, told the Times that Ladapo oversaw the research in his role as surgeon general and not as a faculty member. Then, perhaps not sensing the irony, Norton said via a statement that his office “continues to strongly support the freedom afforded to university researchers to independently pursue topics and present findings.”

Those who toe DeSantis’ line appear to have ample freedom to pursue their academic and research interests, no matter their questionable methods or the harm they may cause. Those who question DeSantis’ belief on race and racism aren’t so fortunate.

In the end, the real losers aren’t university professors who are often vilified as leftist indoctrinators. The real losers are students, adults who should have the option to take a college course on critical race theory.

The state of Florida acts as if it’s protecting students from what DeSantis labeled “trendy ideology.” But it’s more like a helicopter parent who prevents their children’s exposure to perhaps uncomfortable truths. In doing so, Florida denies young people the tools to question their place in society and have their own beliefs questioned.

Perhaps keeping them in the dark is exactly the end game.

-Putin praises Russian Orthodox Church for backing troops in Ukraine


*

Putin issues congratulatory Orthodox Christmas message

*

Hails Russian Orthodox Church as important unifying force

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Praises its support for 'military operation' in Ukraine


Andrew Osborn
Sat, January 7, 2023

Jan 7 (Reuters) - President Vladimir Putin on Saturday praised the Russian Orthodox Church for supporting Moscow's forces fighting in Ukraine in an Orthodox Christmas message designed to rally people behind his vision of modern Russia.

The Kremlin issued Putin's message after the Russian leader attended an Orthodox Christmas Eve service on his own inside a Kremlin cathedral rather than joining other worshippers in a public celebration.

In his message, accompanied on the Kremlin website by an image of him standing before religious icons, Putin made it clear he saw the Russian Orthodox Church as an important stabilising force for society at a time he has cast as a historical clash between Russia and the West over Ukraine and other issues.

"It is deeply gratifying to note the enormous constructive contribution of the Russian Orthodox Church and other Christian denominations in unifying society, preserving our historical memory, educating youth and strengthening the institution of family," said Putin.

"Church organisations prioritise ... supporting our warriors taking part in the special military operation (in Ukraine). Such massive, complex and truly selfless work deserves sincere respect."

On Friday, Putin ordered a 36-hour ceasefire for the celebrations, but Kyiv rejected it as Moscow's ploy to buy time and regroup and Russian and Ukrainian forces exchanged artillery fire after the announcement.



Many Orthodox Christians celebrate Christmas on Jan. 7, but the Russian Orthodox Church's backing for Moscow's war in Ukraine has angered many Ukrainian Orthodox believers and splintered the worldwide Orthodox Church.

Of 260 million Orthodox Christians in the world, about 100 million are in Russia itself and some of those abroad are in unity with Moscow.

Others are strongly opposed, however, and reject Moscow's assertion that its Feb. 24 invasion last year was an essential pre-emptive strike to defend its own security and that of Russian speakers in Ukraine.

Ukraine has about 30 million Orthodox believers, divided between the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate and two other Orthodox Churches, one of which is the autocephalous, or independent, Ukrainian Orthodox Church.

In a service on Friday, Patriarch Kirill of Moscow criticised Ukraine for cracking down on the branch of the Orthodox church with longstanding ties to Moscow.








Mercedes and Chargepoint team up to build 400 North American charging hubs

They'll be available to all EVs with Benz drivers receiving added benefits.





Andrew Tarantola
·Senior Editor
Thu, January 5, 2023 

In July, GM announced that it was partnering with EVGo to establish a "coast-to-coast" charging network for its electric vehicles. On Thursday, Mercedes Benz announced that it will be building a network of its own — at least, in partnership with Chargepoint — that will be accessible no matter what make or model of EV you drive.

Mercedes and Chargepoint plan to establish 400 new charging hubs throughout the US and Canada — that's 2,500 new DC fast chargers in all — "in key cities and urban population centers, along major highway corridors and close to convenient retail and service destinations," according to Thursday's announcement. The automaker and MN8 Energy will finance the scheme while Chargepoint will supply the hardware and infrastructure. Chargepoint in 2020 partnered with NATSO for a billion-dollar project to install its chargers along rural highways. Those effort continue.

The hubs and DC fast chargers will all be accessible by EV drivers of all stripes, regardless of their vehicle type — the inverse of Tesla's proprietary network. But since Mercedes is pulling the purse strings, its customers can look forward to a few extra perks when they pull into a hub. That includes being able to reserve a space ahead of time and automatic vehicle-station handshake authentication.

Each charger can deliver up to 500V of power, allowing 400V-architecture vehicles like the Rivian R1T to take full advantage of the increased power transmission while 800V vehicles like the Audi A6 e-tron, the Porsche Taycan, Hyundai's Ioniq 5 and Kia's EV6 will see improved charge times though not the upper limit of what their electrical systems can handle. The company notes that these chargers are, "designed to easily scale to meet future demand as EV adoption and vehicle capability grows."
Macron to overhaul France's struggling health care system







French President Emmanuel Macron delivers his New Year speech to medical workers at the Centre Hospitalier Sud Francilien Hospital in the southern Paris suburban city of Corbeil-Essonnes, Friday Jan. 6, 2023. Emmanuel Macron visits a pediatric hospital and gives a new year's speech to medics, amid protests and anger over long-unresolved funding and hiring issues in France's health care system.
( Ludovic Marin, Pool via AP)

Fri, January 6, 2023 

PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron announced an overhaul of France’s struggling health system Friday, including new funding methods for doctors and hospitals, more hiring and other organizational changes.

Macron’s speech came as many hospitals in France have reported major difficulties in recent weeks, with emergency units overwhelmed by patients with flu, COVID-19 and bronchiolitis infections.

Family doctors also went on strike during the end-of-year holiday to call for an increase in their consultation fees — currently set to 25 euros ($26) — and better working conditions.


In a speech at a hospital in Evry, a southern suburb of Paris, Macron vowed to “respond to the concerns of many of our fellow citizens (who want) to get health care within a short time ... and to the concerns, anxiety, tiredness of health care professionals.”

He announced the recruitment of thousands of medical assistants to help doctors.

“Our collective challenge in the short-term is to free up some time for doctors to take care of patients ... both in private practice and at hospital,” he said.

Macron announced major changes in the way hospitals get funding so that they are not penalized anymore when they do complex, time-consuming activities.

He also vowed to increase fees of doctors on condition they are involved in ensuring the continuity of health care in their area and accept new patients. Details of the changes are to be worked out in the coming months, he said.

Talks are also to be held by June about working time rules in hospitals, he said, saying the current system is inefficient.

Considered one of the best in the world, the French health care system has for many years years suffered from a shortage of doctors and other professionals, a situation aggravated by the COVID-19 crisis.

Recent changes allowed the country to train more doctors and nurses, yet it will take years to see the impact of such measures, Macron stressed.

France's health care system involves a state-funded health insurance that reimburses patients most of the cost of consultations, medical interventions and medicines prescribed by a doctor. In addition, the French can also apply to private insurance to increase their health coverage.