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Saturday, March 2, 2024

How faith-based charities are complicit with migrant traffickers

 The road to hell is paved with good intentions — as the involvement of American religious organizations with human traffickers across our southern border demonstrates. 

Witness Annunciation House, a Catholic NGO being sued by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton over its failure to comply with document demands related to its alleged stateside role in the migrant crisis caused by President Biden’s disastrous policies

Annunciation House offers shelter to migrants; Paxton wanted to know if the group was crossing the line into enabling actual human smuggling itself and called for relevant documents. Annunciation House refused to comply — and Paxton’s suit seeks to strip the group of its ability to operate in Texas. 

Whatever the outcome, the issue raises thorny questions. 

Yes, helping the vulnerable is a noble goal. And yes, illegal migrants are among the most vulnerable groups in the nation. 

But their vulnerability comes precisely from their refusal to follow the law: They constitute a large and growing population without the real ability to work legally and usually without significant resources. 

Worse, migrants in many cases pay human traffickers to get them to the US border and across it. 

These traffickers are often employed by narco cartels.

Unfortunate as it is, the cartels’ business model depends on a massive infrastructure on this side of the border ready to help the migrants across and then along into destinations around America’s interior. 

Wittingly or not, in other words, Annunciation House (and numerous other charities involved in migrant aid at the border) may be indirectly aiding the cartels by helping illegal entrants — providing a goal at the end of the expensive and dangerous journey the traffickers extract their profits from. 

Don’t forget about groups like Catholic Charities, which not only shelters migrants but then helps buy them bus or plane fare (in numbers that exceed Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s wildest dreams) — and gets taxpayer money via FEMA for doing so.

More broadly, a host of nonprofit-paid activists have spread the word far and wide on just what to say to have enough of an asylum claim to get released into the US interior.

But trafficked migrants often enter the country indebted to their traffickers, debts that must be repaid under threat of violence to the migrants or their family members.

Does aiding the progress of human beings into violent debt slavery count as a good work

And at what point does providing yet another way station in this process shade into actual complicity?

Keep in mind that the compassion these groups and their backers invoke as their guiding principle doesn’t show up very visibly in the result of their actions. 

Encouraging an influx that’s crushing small border towns to the breaking point, hurting big cities across the nation, and driving horrible crimes isn’t compassionate

Nor is greasing a path into sex work or the gray economy of app deliveries.

When progressives start shouting about compassion, in other words, beware: Human degradation is all but certain to follow

https://nypost.com/2024/03/02/opinion/how-ngos-help-migrant-traffickers-at-the-us-border/

'Universities giving no-loan packages 'like candy''

 Nearly two dozen universities have promised to meet 100% of their undergraduates' financial needs without loans, CNBC reported Feb. 28. 

The universities — all on the Princeton Review's list of the "389 best colleges," and largely located on the East Coast — have completely eliminated student loans from their financial aid packages. But that doesn't mean their education will be completely free. Students might still have to pay for an expected family contribution, books and other fees — and depending on the school, they might be required to participate in a work study. 

"Post-Covid, more schools are rolling out no-loan policies mostly on the back of Princeton, which had the money in its endowment to do something," Menaka Hampole, PhD, an assistant professor of finance at New Haven, Conn.-based Yale School of Management, told CNBC. "Princeton takes the lead and other schools follow suit — but it's the top universities that can afford to do this."

Ms. Hampole added that these universities, including Yale, are "giving [no-loan packages] out like candy now." 

One such university is Lafayette College in Easton, Pa., where families with household incomes up to $200,000 have their financial needs met through grants and work study — no loans attached. Though national college enrollment has been declining since COVID-19, the no-loan policy has helped Lafayette gain new applicants, according to Forrest Stuart, PhD, its vice president for enrollment management. 

"Typically, you will see a fairly sizable increase in the number of admissions applications [with a no-loan policy]," Mr. Stuart said. "It puts your school on the map. The more you can have your name out there, the more robust class we can put together."

Student debt has been a topic of national discussion as President Joe Biden continues to forgive billions of dollars in loans. Healthcare has a particularly concerning debt-to-income ratio; a recent survey from Laurel Road found that nurses' student debt loan amounts to 50% of their annual income before taxes, and physicians' debt comprises 58% of their annual income before taxes. Montefiore's Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City recently announced that it would offer free tuition in perpetuity following a $1 billion gift from Ruth Gottesman, EdD, chair of its board of trustees. 

"This donation radically revolutionizes our ability to continue attracting students who are committed to our mission, not just those who can afford it," Yaron Tomer, MD, the Marilyn and Stanley Katz Dean at Einstein, said in a news release shared with Becker's.  

These 23 universities have committed to fully meeting students' calculated financial needs sans loans, according to CNBC:

  • Amherst (Mass.) College
  • Bowdoin College (Brunswick, Maine) 
  • Brown University (Providence, R.I.) 
  • Colby College (Waterville, Maine)
  • Dartmouth College (Hanover, N.H.) 
  • Davidson (N.C.) College
  • Duke University (Durham, N.C.) 
  • Grinnell (Iowa) College 
  • Harvard College (Cambridge, Mass.) 
  • Lafayette College 
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Cambridge) 
  • Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.) 
  • Pomona College (Claremont, Calif.) 
  • Princeton (N.J.) University
  • Smith College (Northampton, Mass.) 
  • Swarthmore (Pa.) College
  • University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia) 
  • Vanderbilt University (Nashville, Tenn.) 
  • Vassar College (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.) 
  • Washington University in St. Louis
  • Wesleyan University (Middletown, Conn.) 
  • Williams College (Williamstown, Mass.) 
  • Yale University

Change Healthcare offers funding program, prescribing workaround after cyberattack

 Optum's Change Healthcare continued to deal with outages March 1, nine days after a ransomware attack took its systems offline. Here are seven updates.

1. Change implemented an e-prescribing workaround for pharmacies March 1. The new instance of Rx ePrescribing launched after a successful round of testing with vendors and retail pharmacies. Change's e-prescribing feature for providers, however, remained offline March 1.

2. Change introduced a temporary funding assistance program March 1 to help providers affected by payer system outages. The money is available to affected providers with no fees, interest or other costs. Some physician practices said they could be at risk of closing because they had been unable to bill payers and were struggling with cash flow. Change Healthcare estimated that about 85% of claims are being processed with workarounds implemented; of the remaining number, 8% involve claims to payers exclusive to Change.

3. Change set up a website March 1 with updates on the cyberattack and information for providers, pharmacies and chief information security officers.

4. Microsoft and Amazon Web Services are assisting Change Healthcare with an "additional scanning of our cloud environment," the company said March 1.

5. West Des Moines, Iowa-based UnityPoint Health is the latest health system to disconnect from Change Healthcare, the Quad-City Times reported March 1. "This has impacted the ability of our outpatient pharmacies to submit prescription claims to insurance plans," UnityPoint told the news outlet. "We are doing our best to fill urgent prescriptions, but please know there may be an additional wait time and payment requirements until Change Healthcare's system is restored."

Previous systems to remove their connections to the vendor include Danville, Pa.-based Geisinger; Dallas-based Baylor Scott & White Health; Helena, Mont.-based St. Peter's Health; and Buffalo, N.Y.-based Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center. The American Hospital Association has advised health systems to disconnect from applications affected by the cyberattack. Change said March 1 that its "most impacted partners are those who have disconnected from our systems and/or have not chosen to execute workarounds."

6. The American Hospital Association is staying in "close contact at the highest levels" with Optum and Change Healthcare parent company UnitedHealth Group to minimize disruptions to hospitals, AHA President and CEO Rick Pollack wrote Feb 29. He said the AHA hosted a call on the incident Feb. 23 with nearly 3,000 hospital leaders.

Mr. Pollack called the cyberattack the "most serious incident of its kind leveled against a U.S. healthcare organization."

7. Cybersecurity experts are predicting the outage could last weeks. The Joint Commission and AHA have said hospitals and health systems should prepare for about a month of downtime after a ransomware attack. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago's IT and phone systems were still down March 1 following a Jan. 31 cyberattack.

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/cybersecurity/change-healthcare-ransomware-attack-7-updates.html

Trump says Biden's border policies are a 'conspiracy to overthrow' the US

 Republican frontrunner Donald Trump accused President Joe Biden on Saturday of engaging in a "conspiracy to overthrow the United States" through lax security policies that have allowed millions of migrants to stream across the U.S. border with Mexico.

Speaking at a campaign rally in Greensboro, North Carolina, Trump appeared to be suggesting, as he has in the past, that Democrats are hoping to convert migrants who enter the country illegally into reliable voters.

Biden's administration, Trump contended, seeks "to collapse the American system, nullify the will of the actual American voters and establish a new base of power that gives them control for generations." He did not elaborate.

In past statements, Trump has suggested that Democrats are purposefully allowing migrants into the country to grow their political support, a longstanding claim espoused on the far-right known as the "great replacement theory."

The Biden campaign did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

Only U.S. citizens can vote in federal elections. But Trump has made border security a central tenet of his campaign as polls show voters in both parties becoming increasingly concerned about the steady stream of migration.

Both Biden and Trump toured the southern border along Texas in separate visits on Thursday, a sign they each view the issue as politically potent.

At the North Carolina rally, Trump called the influx of migrants an "invasion" and said Biden would "turn our public schools into migrant camps."

"We are not going to let them turn the USA into a crime-filled, disease-ridden dumping ground," Trump said.

Under pressure from Republicans who accuse him of failing to control the border, Biden called on Congress last year to provide more enforcement funding and said he would "shut down the border" if given new authority to turn back migrants.

Trump was campaigning in North Carolina ahead of its primary on Tuesday, one of 16 nominating contests that will be held across the country that likely will push him close to clinching the Republican presidential nomination.

https://www.marketscreener.com/news/latest/Trump-says-Biden-s-border-policies-are-a-conspiracy-to-overthrow-the-US-46080575/

NerdWallet says it did not file for bankruptcy, cites fraudulent filing

 NerdWallet Inc said on Saturday that it did not file for bankruptcy, saying a fraudulent filing appeared on an electronic public access service for U.S. federal court documents.

"NerdWallet did not file for bankruptcy. This is a fraudulent filing and we are actively investigating the situation," the company said in a statement.

The filing that appeared earlier on Saturday was signed by Robert Johnson and listed an address in Buffalo, New York.

The corporate address provided appeared to belong to a residence.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/NERDWALLET-INC-128898691/news/NerdWallet-says-it-did-not-file-for-bankruptcy-cites-fraudulent-filing-46080555/

Republican Steve Garvey pulls ahead of Democrat Adam Schiff in California Senate race poll

 Looks like Adam Schiff's big-dollar campaign of weirdly nice attack ads against Republican Steve Garvey in the California Senate race is not quite having the effect he thought it would have.

According to a left-leaning poll from the Los Angeles Times and UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies, seen on RealClearPolitics:

In the primary, Garvey is favored by 27% of likely voters, Schiff 25% and Porter 19%. Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Oakland) garners 8%, while 12% of likely voters pick a different candidate and 9% are undecided.

 That's right: Garvey is now ahead of Schiff in a year when President Trump is leading all polls.

So Schiff's campaign to knock Democrat rival, Katie Porter, out of the top-two-on-the-ballot in November setup isn't working. Schiff put out television ads and mailers breathlessly saying Garvey voted for Trump twice, favors the border wall, and is "too conservative for California" to get Republicans to knock his Democrat rival out of the race. However, that may be working just a little too well, with Garvey now pulling ahead of Schiff in the multi-candidate race.

A poll like this looks like the campaign may have shot itself in the foot.

Sure, it seems to be an old California blue-state machine-politics trick for the top leftist to goose the Republican vote now that the election setup is to hold an open primary and then put the top two vote-getters onto the November ballot.

My own congresswoman, Qualcomm billionaire heiress Sara Jacobs, has been accused of this cynical election maneuver in San Diego back when she was first elected in 2020, apparently boosting the Republican candidate on the sly in a bid to get him into the second-place slot to sideline her other Democrat rivals and scarf up all Democrat votes, preventing a split. It didn't work because the Republican wasn't trying very hard to win, so the other Democrat, Georgette Gomez, ended up on the ballot anyway at the final vote. Jacobs won anyway, and I wrote about that here

Gomez, though, wasn't done, and she filed an FEC complaint saying the pro-GOP mailers didn't say who they came from, amounting to illicit campaign spending of some kind. I have not found the result of that complaint, but in this matter, Schiff avoided that little issue by not hiding anything.

Here is my mailer from Schiff telling me, a registered Republican, that Garvey is "too conservative for California."


Apparently, Schiff thinks Republican voters are stupid and won't see the cynicism of what's going on. Like Eddie Haskell, he'd like them to know, Mrs. Cleaver, that Garvey is rising in the polls, and he's just too conservative for California, which, between us, he can't be because it's not allowed.

Of course, he wants to goose Republican turnout.

It's just that that's a risky game when jackasses play it. He must be counting on all the Californians who fled his state to propel him into certain victory with the remaining blue voters.

But in the Jacobs case, the GOP candidate only managed to get 10% of the vote. This 27% that Garvey has -- coming from a leftwing pollster and a much lower base in previous polls -- suggests Schiff may have motivated more Garvey support than he meant to. There is no way he would like to see polls with this much rocketing support for Garvey (topping even his own) with such a poll.

I won't say it won't work at this point, given that Schiff's vote is divided between many leftist candidates who are likely to pick Schiff over Garvey if those two emerge as the top two in November. But stranger things have happened in politics and this may be a wave year for President Trump. Could the unwaveringly pro-Trump Garvey ride those coattails as Democrats stay home, not wanting to give their votes to senile Joe Biden?

It's possible because anything is possible at this point. Schiff may be in the comeuppance of his life now that Garvey's voters now top his, and they haven't stopped rising.  

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2024/03/brutal_republican_steve_garvey_pulls_ahead_of_democrat_adam_schiff_in_california_senate_race_poll.html

House GOP demand Google reveal what role US government had in developing woke Gemini AI

 House Republicans are demanding documents from Google in an effort to learn what involvement the US government had in influencing the company’s woke artificial intelligence program, Gemini.

On Saturday, the House Judiciary Committee sent a letter to Alphabet, the parent company of Google and YouTube, insisting that all communications between the feds and Alphabet relating to Gemini be turned over to the committee by March 17.

“In light of new reporting regarding how Alphabet intentionally biased its AI model, Gemini, by giving it instructions that distort the results shared with Americans . . . we write to inform you that the committee views the subpoena as covering material relating to this technology,” said the letter, penned by committee chair Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan.

Jordan said he was alarmed by internal reports from within the Gemini team that it had followed Biden White House guidance stipulating that AI must advance “equity” — a left wing idea which argues that black people and other historically marginalized groups should be promoted and spotlighted ahead of white people and other groups not historically marginalized — regardless of merit.

Google’s Gemini came in for widespread mockery after it emerged the system refused to produce images of white people and instead spat out “diverse” portrayals of the Founding Fathers, popes and Vikings.

“Given that Alphabet has censored First Amendment-protected speech as a result of government agencies’ requests and demands in the past, the Committee is concerned about potential First Amendment violations that have occurred with respect to Alphabet’s Gemini model,” the letter continued.

Google’s AI Gemini created many images like this “woke” diversity pope.
Woke AI has made a point of prioritizing social justice and “equity” over truth and accuracyGoogle Gemini

Imgesu Cetin, founder of Genie AI, which focuses on data analysis, said woke AI is a serious issue on the tech horizon.

“It says don’t write anything racist or sexist, but then you start affecting the truth. George Washington was not a black guy. So it’s really big danger, manipulating reality,” she told The Post.

https://nypost.com/2024/03/02/us-news/house-republicans-demand-answers-from-google-on-woke-gemini-ai/