Sunday, October 27, 2024

'We're going to fight': Labrador residents protest expensive airfares, call for action

CBC
Sat, October 26, 2024 

Dena Rumbolt says she was prompted to protest airfares in Labrador after her husband needed to fly to St. John’s to be with his ill mother, but the flight was cancelled twice. (Darryl Dinn/CBC - image credit)

About 100 people holding Labrador flags and signs rallied outside the Wabush Airport on Saturday, calling for more affordable airfares and action from PAL Airlines and government.

The protest was about standing up for the needs of Labrador residents, who are fed up with paying expensive fares to fly in and out of the region, said organizer Dena Rumbolt.

"We need it, we deserve it. We're going to fight for it," Rumbolt told CBC News.

"There's power in numbers and everybody is backing this. Everybody is backing it because now the lead has started, so we'll see where it goes," she said.

Airfare costs in Labrador have risen by 33 per cent over the last five years, according to a fare analysis report commissioned by the Goose Bay Airport Corporation.

A crowd of 100 turned up at the Wabush Airport to protest high airfare and lack of services.

A crowd of 100 people turned up at the Wabush Airport to protest high airfare and lack of services. (Darryl Dinn/CBC)

There is a bigger financial impact for people flying out of Wabush, the home of Labrador's second largest airport, where prices have risen by 47 per cent.

There is also little competition in the region. PAL Airlines and its partner Air Borealis are the only carriers providing Labrador residents with air travel.

Family struggle

Rumbolt heard stories over the years about people's struggles with flying, she said. But it struck home when her mother-in-law, who was in St. John's, had a medical emergency. She booked her husband a flight but it was cancelled twice.

"We were like, 'OK, you know what? We're not going to get to see our mom now,'" she said. "That's what they were thinking before she passed."

The experience was frustrating and it prompted Rumbolt to start the protest, she said.

Noreen Careen says it is a financial struggle for seniors to fly in and out of Labrador.

Noreen Careen says it is a financial struggle for seniors to fly in and out of Labrador. (Darryl Dinn/CBC)

Noreen Careen also came out for the protest to show her support for getting more affordable airfare for the region, especially for seniors.

"Sometimes trying to get a senior out of here for medical appointments — it's practically impossible. We have to do fundraising at times," said Careen.

She has to fly for a medical appointment in November and is in the process of filing out the provincial medical transportation assistance program form to cover costs.

"I'm anxious to see how well it's going to work," said Careen.

She wants to see financial relief brought in to tackle the cost of airfare.

"It's practically gouging, what's taking place," said Careen, adding that there are people who can't afford to fly out of the region.

Kelley Albert said she recently saw a one-way ticket to St. John's for $953.

"That's just highway robbery," she said.

Her family will drive to another city, like Montreal, if they want to fly anywhere for vacation, she said.

Albert also wants to see more flights available. Sometimes, she said, people trying to fly because of family emergencies can't book a flight for days.

PAL meeting scheduled

On Friday, Premier Andrew Furey posted on social media that he met with PAL representatives and is seeking a meeting with federal Transport Minister Anita Anand to discuss airfare costs.

Labrador MP Yvonne Jones has also arranged a meeting between government representatives and PAL next week in St. John's. Rumbolt said she will be in attendance, too.

"We're going to fight hard," said Rumbolt.

NDP MHA Jordan Brown, who represents Labrador West, said he has not been invited to the meeting, alleging that the issue is being politicized.

He said he has been raising this issue for years.

Labrador West MHA Jordan Brown says he was not invited to a meeting between government, residents and PAL Airlines scheduled for next week.

Labrador West MHA Jordan Brown says he was not invited to a meeting between government, residents and PAL Airlines scheduled for next week. (Darryl Dinn/CBC)

"This has been a long-standing issue for Labradorians and we've been making a lot of noise — but now want to make more noise because we just had enough," he said.

It's the federal government that needs to step up to solve this problem, said Brown, adding that unequal air access impacts northern and rural communities across Canada, not just Labrador.

"They have to do their part, but it's just falling on deaf ears," said Brown.

Wabush Mayor Ron Barron also attended Saturday's protest to support the cause. He said people want an inquiry into airfare costs.

"Our provincial counterparts should be pushing for that inquiry," Barron said.

A Wabush town councillor will be in St. John's to attend the meeting with PAL, he said, but suggested regional MHAs should be invited as well.

Google to develop AI that takes over computers, The Information reports
Illustration shows Google logo and AI Artificial Intelligence words 

Reuters
Sat, October 26, 2024

(Reuters) - Alphabet's Google is developing artificial intelligence technology that takes over a web browser to complete tasks such as research and shopping, The Information reported on Saturday.

Google is set to demonstrate the product code-named Project Jarvis as soon as December with the release of its next flagship Gemini large language model, the report added, citing people with direct knowledge of the product.

Microsoft backed OpenAI also wants its models to conduct research by browsing the web autonomously with the assistance of a “CUA,” or a computer-using agent, that can take actions based on its findings, Reuters reported in July.

Anthropic and Google are trying to take the agent concept a step further with software that interacts directly with a person’s computer or browser, the report said.

Google didn’t immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

(Reporting by Urvi Dugar, Editing by Franklin Paul)
Commonwealth nations adopt their first ocean declaration

KEIRAN SMITH and AYAKA MCGILL
Updated Sat, October 26, 2024 

Samoa's Prime Minister Afioga Fiame Naomi Mata'afa addresses the final press conference at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)

APIA, Samoa (AP) — Commonwealth countries adopted Saturday their first ocean declaration during their summit held for the first time in the Pacific island nation of Samoa as calls from some of Britain’s former colonies for reparatory justice for the trans-Atlantic slave trade grew louder.

The Apia Ocean Declaration was announced during the closing session of the 27th Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, or CHOGM, and calls on all 56 Commonwealth nations to protect the ocean in the face of severe climate, pollution and overexploitation.

More than half the Commonwealth members are small countries like Samoa, many face significant, some even existential, threats from rising seas.



While the environmental threat was foreshadowed as a predominant theme going into the summit, the transatlantic slave trade from Britain’s colonial history dominated the discourse through the opening days.

‘A line in the sand’ declaration

The Apia Commonwealth Ocean Declaration for One Resilient Common focuses on recognizing maritime boundaries amid sea-level rise, protecting 30% of oceans and restoring degraded marine ecosystems by 2030, and urgently finalizing the Global Plastics Treaty. It also calls for ratifying the high-seas biodiversity treaty, developing coastal climate adaptation plans, and strengthening support for sustainable blue economies.

Samoa Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata’afa said in a statement released by her office that it was fitting for “our first ocean declaration” to be adopted "in the Blue Pacific continent given climate change has been recognised as the single greatest threat to the security and well-being of our people.”



The Commonwealth represents a third of the world’s population, and 49 of its 56 countries have a coastline. The organization says 25 of its members are increasingly impacted by climate change, rising sea levels, growing temperatures and increasing ocean acidity – impacting sea life, ecosystems and the communities that depend upon them.

Mata’afa said the declaration must become “a line in the sand” for the world to collectively transform “ocean exploitation into protection and sustainable stewardship.”

Outgoing Commonwealth Secretary-General, Patricia Scotland said in a statement they were “immensely proud of this achievement” which "sets the standard for forthcoming international meetings, generating momentum for ocean protection as we head towards COP29 in Azerbaijan in November, and next year’s UN Ocean Conference"."

Slavery justice conversation to continue



Calls from some of Britain's former colonies for a reckoning over its role in the transatlantic slave trade was the thorniest issue at the summit and specifically reparatory justice.

At its height in the 18th century, Britain was the world’s biggest slave-trading nation and transported more than 3 million Africans across the Atlantic. Its legacy is interwoven in some of the country’s richest and most revered institutions — from the Church of England to the insurance giant Lloyd’s of London to the monarchy itself.

King Charles III, who attended his first Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting as sovereign, said in his address on Friday history couldn't be changed but that he understood “the most painful aspects of our past continue to resonate.”

Although he stopped short of mentioning financial reparations, which some leaders at the event urged, his remarks were seen as an acknowledgment of how strongly many felt about the issue in countries that Britain once colonized.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer had entered the summit vowing the U.K. would not offer an apology for slavery or discuss reparations. He left with that promise mostly intact, though the final communique called for discussion of the matter.

The 52-point official Leaders Statement on Saturday included a paragraph that urged a “meaningful, truthful, respectful conversation” to build a fair future. The communique also directed the Commonwealth secretary-general to engage governments and stakeholders in reparatory justice consultations, with a special focus on the impact on women and girls.

Earlier in the week, Starmer suggested that opening the door to a conversation about reparations could lead to “very, very long endless discussions.”

“(The communique) agrees that this is the time for conversation,” Starmer said at a press conference in Apia on Saturday. “But I should be really clear here. In the two days we’ve been here, none of the discussions have been about money. Our position is very, very clear in relation to that.”

“Let me first be clear that the slave trade, slave practice, was abhorrent, and it’s very important we start from there. Abhorrent is the right word.”

Earlier Saturday, Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, the Ghanaian foreign minister, was announced as the incoming secretary-general of the Commonwealth.

Botchwey, who has urged financial reparations for the past enslavement of colonized people, replaces Patricia Scotland of the United Kingdom, who had been in the post since 2016.

Antigua and Barbuda was also announced as the host for the next CHOGM in 2026.



Smith reported from Newcastle, Australia. Associated Press writers Charlotte Graham-McLay in Wellington, New Zealand, and Brian Melley in London, contributed to this report.



Malta's Minister of Foreign Affairs Ian Borg, left, and Samoa's Prime Minister Afioga Fiame Naomi Mata'afa attend the final press conference at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese arrives for the Leaders' Retreat during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

From left to right, Malaysia's Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan, Malta's Minister of Foreign Affairs Ian Borg, Samoa's Prime Minister Afioga Fiame Naomi Mata'afa, Commonwealth Secretary General Patricia Scotland and Rwanda's Minister of Foreign Affairs Olivier Nduhungirehe attend the final press conference at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer, center, attends the Leaders' Retreat during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese arrives for the Leaders' Retreat during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

New Zealand's Prime Minister Christopher Luxon arrives for the Leaders' Retreat during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

Singapore's Prime Minister Lawrence Wong arrives for the Leaders' Retreat during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

Samoa's Prime Minister, Afioga Fiame Naomi Mata'afa addresses the Leaders' Retreat during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

Samoa's Prime Minister Afioga Fiame Naomi Mata'afa addresses the Leaders' Retreat during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

Samoa's Prime Minister Afioga Fiame Naomi Mata'afa, center, addresses the final press conference, flanked by Malaysia's Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan, left, Malta's Minister of Foreign Affairs Ian Borg, second left, Commonwealth Secretary General Patricia Scotland, second right, and Rwanda's Minister of Foreign Affairs Olivier Nduhungirehe at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

New Zealand's Prime Minister Christopher Luxon arrives for the Leaders' Retreat during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

From left to right, Malaysia's Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan, Malta's Minister of Foreign Affairs Ian Borg, Samoa's Prime Minister Afioga Fiame Naomi Mata'afa, Commonwealth Secretary General Patricia Scotland and Rwanda's Minister of Foreign Affairs Olivier Nduhungirehe attend the final press conference at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

From left, Samoa's Prime Minister Afioga Fiame Naomi Mata'afa, Commonwealth Secretary General Patricia Scotland and Rwanda's Minister of Foreign Affairs Olivier Nduhungirehe attend the final press conference at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS

Malta's Minister of Foreign Affairs Ian Borg, left, and Samoa's Prime Minister Afioga Fiame Naomi Mata'afa, center, and Commonwealth Secretary General Patricia Scotland attend the final press conference at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS
Commonwealth Secretary General Patricia Scotland, left, chats with Rwanda's Minister of Foreign Affairs Olivier Nduhungirehe during the final press conference at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (William West/Pool Photo via AP)ASSOCIATED PRESS


Ukrainian official says full Russian withdrawal needed to establish peace

THE BOTTOM LINE

Reuters
Fri, October 25, 2024 

Copenhagen Democracy Summit

(Reuters) - Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's chief of staff said on Friday that a full withdrawal of Russian troops, and not just peace talks, were essential to ending his country's more than 2-1/2-year-old war against Moscow.

The chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, was addressing an international meeting devoted to implementing a peace plan, one of several gatherings staged as a follow-up to last June's world "peace summit" hosted by Switzerland.

"Don't expect this war to end when the warring sides begin to talk to each other," Yermak told the gathering, according to the president's website. "Don't be deceived. This war will end when the last soldier of the occupying army returns home."



The gathering was attended in person in Kyiv and online by representatives of 56 countries and organisations.

Yermak told the meeting that concerted international pressure on Russia should set a precedent.

"This will prove to the entire world that the pursuit of international conquests in the 21st century is immoral and senseless. Whatever has been seized will have to be returned to the rightful owners," he was quoted as saying.

The international community, he said, had to prove stronger than any aggressor, "however strong that aggressor might be".

The conference has been devoted to the points of Zelenskiy's "peace formula" first presented in late 2022, which also include restoration of Ukraine's 1991 post-Soviet borders and a means to bring Russia to account for its invasion.

In his nightly video address, Zelenskiy restated his determination to hold a second summit to help bring a "just end" to the war. He has called for a meeting to be held by the end of 2024.

Russia, uninvited to the June summit, has said it will attend no similar meetings, though Zelenskiy has said he wants Moscow to be present at the next gathering.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, speaking prior to the June summit, said Russia was willing to hold talks but Ukraine must first recognise as Moscow's territory the four Ukrainian regions it annexed months after the February 2022 invasion.

Moscow has since ruled out any talks while Ukrainian troops remain in Russia's southern Kursk region, where it launched an incursion in August.

(Reporting by Ron Popeski and Oleksandr Kozhukhar; Editing by Leslie Adler)
AMERIKA
1960s civil rights protesters who staged historic sit-in finally have arrest records cleared

JEFFREY COLLINS
Fri 25 October 2024 

  
Charles Barr, foreground, speaks to Judge Robert Hood during a hearing where Barr's record was cleared after he was arrested in 1960 for sitting at an all-white South Carolina lunch counter on Friday, Oct. 25, 2024, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Collins)

Simon Bouie told his mother and grandmother he wasn't going to get in trouble back in 1960. Then the Black Benedict College student sat at a whites-only lunch counter in South Carolina and got himself arrested.

Finally on Friday, that arrest and the records of six of his friends were erased as a judge signed an order during a ceremony in a Columbia courthouse just a few blocks from where he sat at that segregated table some 64 years before.

Bouie remembered that promise as he went into the Eckerd Drug Store. He knew the governor at the time had warned African American college students not to get involved with "hot-headed agitators" and “confused lawyers” who were insisting all people were equal no matter the color of their skin.

“We had a desire to fight for what was right and nobody could turn us around. We walked in that building with our heads held high and sat down,” Bouie said.

Sitting down changed the world. Columbia wasn't where the first sit-in, an act of disobedience, happened. The movement started in Greensboro, North Carolina, and spread through the South in the early 1960s.

Several Southern cities have held similar expungement ceremonies in recent years as the young people who risked arrest and marring their record are now older men and women. U.S. Rep. and one-time House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn loved to tell the story of how he met his wife of nearly six decades, Emily, in jail after they were both arrested at a protest.

Back then, Black people would sometimes sit at an all-white lunch counter and refuse to leave. They were often arrested and then refused to pay bail. Jails became crowded. They were put on chain gangs. There was pressure to speak up and change the laws. And segregation was slowly, and sometimes violently, chipped away.

Only two of the seven men arrested over two days of protests in Columbia are still alive. On Friday, Bouie and Charles Barr both walked slowly around the Richland County courtroom with canes. The other five men — David Carter, Johnny Clark, Richard Counts, Milton Greene and Talmadge Neal — have since died, so were represented at another table at the front of the courtroom by white roses.

Barr remembered the fear that day riding in the back of a police car not sure if he was going to be taken to jail or somewhere else. He had heard stories. He left the state for a while because of the racial strife. But then he came back.

“It made me feel good we were a part of this movement that had helped to make everything easier for everyone to get along a little better in South Carolina,” Barr said.

University of South Carolina professor Bobby Donaldson spoke on behalf of the five men who died. He said they were true Americans, putting the importance of the Constitution and equality over their own freedom to ensure a better life for the next generation.

“In 1960 they were victimized. Today they are vindicated. In 1960 they were prosecuted. Today they are praised. In 1960 they were convicted. Today they are exonerated,” Donaldson said.

The arrests and convictions of the seven men went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. Justices threw out their convictions just days before the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was signed into law. But the arrests remained on their records.

Solicitor Byron Gipson handled the paperwork to investigate the arrests and get the expungement before a judge.

“These men stood bravely — sat bravely, quite frankly — in the face of adversity, in the face of threats, in the face of death," Gipson said. “They did it because they wanted to guarantee the Constitution applied to all Americans.”

Gipson then walked the paperwork up to Judge Robert Hood who signed it to applause from the packed courtroom of around 150 people.

“These heroes stood firm against oppression often at great personal cost. They dared to dream of a world where equality is not an aspiration, but a reality. Their unwavering commitment to justice serves as a beacon of hope and inspiration to us all," Hood said.

The arrests didn't keep the men from finishing college and leading successful lives. But Bouie said there was one place he was reminded of it.

“When I would get in trouble at home, my wife would say to me, ‘now you talk to me that way again, I’m going down to Richland County court. You have a case. And you're in big trouble. I don't want to hear another word,'" Bouie said to laughter. "That went on for 53 years.”


RRRRRRRRR








Harvard temporarily suspends library privileges for faculty involved in 'study-in' protests

STEVE LeBLANC
Fri, October 25, 2024

FILE - Graduating students hold Palestinian flags and chant as they walk out in protest over the 13 students who have been barred from graduating due to protest activities, during commencement in Harvard Yard, at Harvard University, in Cambridge, Mass., Thursday, May 23, 2024. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)


CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) — In the latest wave of pro-Palestinian protests at Harvard University, students and faculty members have engaged in “study-in” actions at university libraries, as protests at other campuses nationwide have also begun to pull in teachers.

About two dozen Harvard faculty members who participated in an Oct. 16 “study-in” in support of students who had been temporarily banned from the library for holding a similar demonstration were themselves given two-week library suspensions, according to the student paper The Harvard Crimson.

The practice involves protesters silently reading materials related to free speech while propping up signs about dissent and University policy next to them or taped to the back of their laptops. Pro-Palestinian protests have roiled and divided Harvard and other campuses for much of the year.



Kerry Conley, director of communications for Harvard Library, said, “We do not comment on individual matters related to library access or privileges."

Faculty members were told their borrowing privileges from the library had not been affected and that they would still be able to access other locations in the library system. However, they would not be allowed inside Widener — the University’s flagship library, according to the Crimson.

The paper said library administrators charged faculty members with gathering in the library “with the purpose of capturing people’s attention through the display of tent-card signs," which administrators said violated library policies.

The group Harvard Out of Occupied Palestine said the school issued library suspensions to more than 60 Harvard Law School students for a similar pro-Palestinian study-in.

In response, the group said more than 50 additional students, faculty, and staff joined a study-in Thursday to speak out against what protesters have described as Harvard’s “complicity in Israel’s genocide in Palestine and campus repression.”

Thursday's study-in is the fourth of the semester, activists said.

During last week's protest, students, many wearing keffiyeh scarves, studied quietly in the library’s reading room with papers taped to their laptops displaying messages like “FREE PALESTINE” and “HARVARD DIVEST FROM DEATH," according to the group.

Dr. Karameh Kuemmerle, an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, participated in the protest, according to a press release from protest organizers.

“What was meant to be a quiet hour of studying meaningful texts with colleagues, in an undisruptive form of solidarity against the genocide of my own people, has instead been — in shamelessly bad faith — characterized as an immature attempt to seek attention,” Kuemmerle said. “Silence in the face of genocide in Palestine is deadly. Harvard chooses to silence us.”

University Librarian Martha Whitehead said in an essay that libraries “are deeply committed to upholding the rights of all members of our communities.”

“An assembly of people displaying signs changes a reading room from a place for individual learning and reflection to a forum for public statements,” she wrote. “If our library spaces become a space for protest and demonstration – quiet or otherwise, and no matter the message – they will be diverted from their vital role as places for learning and research.”

Opinion
Trump Embraces ‘Dark MAGA’ With Garish Fashion Statement

Emell Derra Adolphus
Sat, October 26, 2024 at 8:25 AM 

Anna Moneymaker

Donald Trump has seemingly come out in full support of the “Dark MAGA” alt-right conspiracy movement with his latest campaign swag.

The GOP presidential nominee arrived at his rally in Traverse City, Michigan, on Friday sporting a MAGA cap that was blacked out with gold accents instead of its usual red. The style, seen on Elon Musk and other die-hard Trump supporters, has become a dog whistle of sorts for people who believe that Trump must return to the White House at all costs—even if by force.

The Tesla CEO and billionaire gleefully told the audience at Trump’s last rally in Butler, Pennsylvania that he was “not just MAGA.” He added, pointing to a blacked out MAGA hat, “I’m Dark MAGA.”


Following her son’s lead, Musk’s mother Maye proved that the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree with her own Dark MAGA post seemingly calling for her millions of followers to commit voter fraud.

“The Democrats have given us another option. You don’t have to register to vote,” she wrote on the app Saturday. “On Election Day, have 10 fake names, go to 10 polling booths and vote 10 times. That’s 100 votes, and it’s not illegal. Maybe we should work the system too.”

The former president arrived hours late to his Traverse City rally, reported the Detroit News, because he was recording his highly-anticipated appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast. But his lateness didn’t sit right with many supporters.


Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump reacts during a campaign rally in Traverse City, Michigan, U.S., October 25, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

“Tonight is a reminder that Donald Trump only cares about himself, even if that means leaving thousands of people out in the cold for hours on end,” said Shafeeqa Kolia, a rapid response director for Harris’ Michigan campaign.

But the faithful MAGA fans stayed to hear him run through all his usual wild and baseless claims.

“The United States is now an occupied country,” he claimed in reference to immigration in his nearly 70-minute address.

He added, “Nov. 5, 2024 will be liberation day in America.”
Sanders asks whether Trump would be working for Musk in hypothetical second term

Sarah Fortinsky
Sun 27 October 2024 at 8:26 am GMT-6·1-min read



Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) expressed concern about the potential extent to which tech billionaire Elon Musk could influence the government and its policy if former President Trump is elected to a second term.

Sanders, in an interview on NBC News’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday, was asked about recent reporting in the Wall Street Journal that said Musk and Russian President Vladimir Putin have been in touch since late 2022 and have had conversations on a range of issues, including “personal topics, business and geopolitical tensions.”

“No, I don’t think it’s appropriate,” Sanders told Welker in the interview before raising concerns about his potential influence in a hypothetical second Trump administration.


“Look, Musk is a very smart, aggressive guy. He is the wealthiest person in the world, and what really interests me is – if, God forbid, Trump would win – whether it would be Elon Musk running the government and Trump working for him, or the other way around,” Sanders said.

“But the idea that you have somebody like Musk, who has massive amounts of federal contracts, campaigning hard, putting huge amounts of money into Trump’s campaign,” he continued. “Man, if there’s ever been a conflict of interest, that’s it.”

Musk has played an active role in the former president’s campaign for a second term. He has held events for the former president, donated large sums of money to the effort, and used his platform on X to help push the former president’s message and bash his political opponents.

The Hill has reached out to the Trump campaign for comment.

Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. 
Elon Musk Was Illegal Migrant Worker Who Abused his Student Visa

Hugh Dougherty
DAILY BEAST
Sat, October 26, 2024 

MediaNews Group/The Mercury News

Elon Musk worked illegally on a student visa and faced concerns he would be “deported” when he started life in the United States, a bombshell report revealed Saturday.

The billionaire South African-born immigrant also admitted in an email that he “had no legal right to stay in the country” when he ditched his studies and founded a company which he later sold for more than $300 million, The Washington Post reported. His brother was also here illegally, committing what one expert called “fraud upon entry.”

The revelation comes after Musk, the Tesla, X, SpaceX and Starlink CEO went all-in on supporting Donald Trump and repeatedly accused Democrats of trying to flood the country with immigrants who cross the border illegally, a conspiracy theory which has become mainstream in the Republican party. Bloomberg called him “X’s biggest promote of anti-immigrant conspiracies.”


His ally Trump is advocating the mass deportation of millions of undocumented migrants. The former president has also ranted about “chain migration.”

But The Post’s detailed reporting about Musk’s own immigration journey shows that the world’s richest man abused his student visa to found his first company, Global Link Information Network, which became Zip2. Investors were so concerned that he could be “deported” that they sought advice from an immigration attorney.

Musk was born in South Africa and, aged 18, obtained Canadian citizenship through his Canada-born mother, Maye. He first studied in Canada, then transferred to the University of Pennsylvania, which gave him a student visa.

In 1995 he moved to Palo Alto where he had a place at Stanford University, which would have given him another student visa. Student visas give holders the right to work part-time to support their studies.

But The Post revealed that Musk never enrolled at all–which would had invalidated his student visa. Instead he worked on his start-up. Dropping out of education to work, even if technically unpaid, is straightforwardly illegal, Leon Fresco, a former immigration attorney at the Department of Justice told the newspaper.

Tesla CEO and X owner Elon Musk reacts next to Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. president Donald Trump.

“If you do anything that helps to facilitate revenue creation, such as design code or try to make sales in furtherance of revenue creation, then you’re in trouble,” Fresco said.

Musk has said he recruited his brother to help him run the company. But Kimbal has said he actively lied to border agents, having previously been refused entry at an airport on the grounds that he was working illegally in the U.S. when he was trying to return from visiting their mother in Canada. He got a friend to drive him over the border and lied that they were going to see David Letterman’s show so that he could make what he has described in an interview with journalist Graham Bensinger as a critical meeting with investors.

“That’s fraud on entry,” Ira Kurzban, the former president and general counsel of the American Immigration Lawyers told The Post. “That would make him inadmissible and permanently barred from the United States,” he said, unless the penalties were waived. Additionally, hiring someone without the legal right to work in the U.S. is a federal crime.

The Musks' illegal status worried one investor, Mohr Davidow Ventures, so much that when, in 1996, it put $3 million into the company the agreement included a clause giving the brothers and a third person 45 days to obtain legal status.

Derek Proudian, who was on the Zip2 board and later became CEO told The Post the sentiment of investors was, “We don’t want our founder being deported.” He added, “Their immigration status was not what it should be for them to be legally employed running a company in the U.S.”

Another investor told the newspaper anonymously, “Perhaps naively we never examined whether he was a legal citizen.”

The Post reported that the attorney used by the company told both men not to tell the full truth about their “leadership” roles and to scrub their resumes of American addresses.

At this 2013 panel talk, Kimbal Musk said he had Elon had been

Zip2 was sold to Compaq in 1999 for $305 million, with Musk netting $22 million. The company set him on a path which saw him become the CEO of PayPal which in turn led to his involvement in Tesla and founding of SpaceX. He is currently worth $274 billion, according to Forbes. He became a U.S. citizen in 2002. False statements about past immigration status in a citizenship application are illegal and can be grounds for revocation. It is unknown if Musk made any false statements.

In 2005, in an email to Tesla’s co-founders which was submitted to a California court, Musk wrote about going to Stanford, “Actually, I didn’t really care much for the degree, but I had no money for a lab and no legal right to stay in the country, so that seemed like a good way to solve both issues.”

In 2013 the Musk brothers appeared on a panel at the Miliken Institute conference where Kimball said they had been “illegal immigrants,” and Musk jumped it to say it was “a gray area.”

The Beast has asked Musk‘s attorney, Alex Spiro, for comment. The Post said that he, Musk and the manager of Musk’s family office had not responded to their request for comment.

Biden calls out Musk over report that the Tesla CEO once worked in the US illegally

The Associated Press
Sun, October 27, 2024 


NEW YORK (AP) — President Joe Biden slammed Elon Musk for hypocrisy on immigration after a published report that the Tesla CEO once worked illegally in the United States. The South Africa-born Musk denies the allegation.

“That wealthiest man in the world turned out to be an illegal worker here. No, I’m serious. He was supposed to be in school when he came on a student visa. He wasn’t in school. He was violating the law. And he’s talking about all these illegals coming our way?” Biden said while campaigning on Saturday in Pittsburgh at a union hall.

The Washington Post reported that Musk worked illegally in the country while on a student visa. The newspaper, citing company documents, former business associates, and court documents, said Musk arrived in Palo Alto, California in 1995 for a graduate program at Stanford University “but never enrolled in courses, working instead on his startup. ”


Musk wrote on X in reply to a video post of Biden’s comments: “I was in fact allowed to work in the US.” Musk added, “The Biden puppet is lying.”

Investors in Musk’s company, Zip2, were concerned about the possibility of their founder being deported, according to the report, and gave him a deadline for obtaining a work visa. The newspaper also cited a 2005 email from Musk to his Tesla co-founders acknowledging that he did not have authorization to be in the U.S. when he started Zip2.

According to the account, that email was submitted as evidence in a now-closed California defamation lawsuit and said that Musk had applied to Stanford so he could stay in the country legally.

Musk is today the world’s richest man. He has committed more than $70 million to help Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and other GOP candidates win on Nov. 5, and is one of the party’s biggest donors this campaign season. He has been headlining events in the White House race’s final stretch, often echoing Trump’s dark rhetoric against immigration.

Trump has pledged to give Musk a role in his administration if he wins next month.

There was no immediate response to messages left with X and Tesla seeking Musk’s comment.

Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. 




Elon Musk worked in US illegally in 1995 after quitting school – report

Edward Helmore
Sat, October 26, 2024

Elon Musk in Beverly Hills, California, on 6 May 2024.Photograph: David Swanson/Reuters


Elon Musk briefly worked illegally in the US after abandoning a graduate studies program in California, according to a Washington Post report that contrasted the episode with the South African multibillionaire’s anti-immigration views.

The boss of Tesla and SpaceX, who has in recent weeks supported Donald Trump’s campaign for a second presidency while promoting the Republican White House nominee’s opposition to “open borders” on his X social media site, has previously maintained that his transition from student to entrepreneur was a “legal grey area”.

But the Washington Post reported Saturday that the world’s wealthiest individual was almost certainly working in the US without correct authorization for a period in 1995 after he dropped out of Stanford University to work on his debut company, Zip2, which sold for about $300m four years later.


Legal experts said foreign students cannot drop out of school to build a company even if they are not getting paid. The Post also noted that – prior to the September 11 terrorist attacks agains the US in 2001 – regulation for student visas was more lax.

“If you do anything that helps to facilitate revenue creation, such as design code or try to make sales in furtherance of revenue creation, then you’re in trouble,” Leon Fresco, a former US justice department immigration litigator, told the outlet.

But the Post also acknowledged: “While overstaying a student visa is somewhat common and officials have at times turned a blind eye to it, it remains illegal.”

Musk has previously said: “I was legally there, but I was meant to be doing student work. I was allowed to do work sort of supporting whatever.”

Musk employs 121,000 people at Tesla, about 13,000 at SpaceX and nearly 3,000 at X. The scrutiny of his immigration status after dropping out of Stanford comes after Trump has touted his desire for Musk to play a high-profile role focused on government efficiency in a second Trump administration if voters return him to office at the expense of Kamala Harris in the 5 November election.

Musk in turn has accused the vice-president and her fellow Democrats of “importing voters” through illegal and temporary protected status immigration. During a recent Trump campaign appearance, he compared the US-Mexico border to a “zombie apocalypse” – even as he had also previously described himself as “extremely pro immigrant, being one myself”.

Bloomberg News recently published an analysis of more than 53,000 posts sent from Musk’s X account, finding that the entrepreneur’s output turned increasingly political this election year.

“In 2024, immigration and voter fraud has become Musk’s most frequently posted and engaged with policy topic, garnering about 10bn views,” the outlet said. “Musk posted more than 1,300 times about the topic overall, with more than 330 posts in the past 2 months alone.”

Bloomberg described Musk – who paid $44bn for X, then Twitter, in 2022 – as the platform’s single most important influencer and has reportedly ordered site engineers to push his posts into users’ feeds. That makes Musk “the most widely read person on the site today”, Bloomberg said.