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Wednesday, September 11, 2024

'Suspicious' Attack Hits US Base At Baghdad Airport Ahead Of Iranian President's Visit

 Via The Cradle

The US embassy’s logistical support center at Baghdad International Airport came under attack late Tuesday. "The shelling, the nature of which has not yet been determined, whether by missiles or mortar shells, took place near the US embassy’s logistical support headquarters at Baghdad airport," an Iraqi security source told Sputnik. He added, "There is no information about human losses so far."

"The strike, which may have involved rockets or mortars, also impacted areas near the headquarters of the Anti-Terrorism Agency," a security source told Shafaq news agency on Wednesday. 

Tuesday’s attack on the logistical center at Baghdad airport came hours before Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian’s visit to Iraq. Later on Wednesday Pezeshkian met with Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani and Iraqi President Abdul Latif Rashid. 

A spokesperson for the Kataib Hezbollah resistance faction, Jaafar al-Husseini, described the attack’s timing as "suspicious."

"Those behind the attack on Baghdad airport at this particular time have suspicious motives. The aim is to disrupt the visit of the Iranian president to Baghdad," Husseini said, calling on Iraqi security forces to "expose those responsible."

Iraqi resistance factions banded together after the start of the war in Gaza in October, forming a coalition dubbed the Islamic Resistance in Iraq (IRI). These groups started carrying out drone and rocket attacks on US bases in Iraq and Syria, both in solidarity with the Palestinian resistance and to pressure US forces present in Iraq. 

The Iraqi operations were officially halted in January after a drone attack killed three US soldiers on the Jordan–Syria border. 

This followed intensive pressure from the Iraqi government, which over the past two years has been involved in a diplomatic effort with Washington, said to be aimed at a withdrawal of US forces from the country. Iran also reportedly played a role in pressuring the Iraqi resistance to de-escalate. 

However, as the war in Gaza continues to rage and as troop withdrawal talks between Baghdad and Washington continue to stall, these attacks have witnessed a gradual and unofficial resumption in recent months

A drone attack on the Kharab al-Jir base in northeastern Syria injured several US and coalition personnel on August 10th. US bases in Iraq and Syria also witnessed a few attacks in late July

Washington has shown no intention of withdrawing its forces from Iraq. The negotiations themselves have not touched on an actual pullout of US forces but instead an end to the combat role of the US coalition operating in Iraq. This would see their presence transition into an advisory one, and US forces would remain in Iraq to coordinate with Baghdad on "security" matters. 

Reuters reported on Saturday, citing sources, that Baghdad and Washington have agreed on a late 2026 deadline for US troop withdrawal. The Cradle’s Iraq correspondent rejected the report as untrue

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/suspicious-attack-hits-us-base-baghdad-airport-ahead-iranian-presidents-visit

Conservative Billionaire Wants To 'Crush' Leftist Media

 by Dmytro "Henry" Aleksandrov via Headline USA,

Leonard Leo, a conservative billionaire activist who was responsible for the driving force behind the conservative movement to reshape the American legal system, recently started a $1 billion campaign to “crush liberal dominance” in American corporations, mass media and the entertainment industry.

Leo, who became famous for helping to make the Supreme Court conservative during Donald Trump’s first presidential term, said his non-profit group, the Marble Freedom Trust, is prepared to make the government and the private sectors conservative.

“We need to crush liberal dominance where it’s most insidious, so we’ll direct resources to build talent and capital formation pipelines in the areas of news and entertainment, where leftwing extremism is most evident,” Leo told the Financial Times.

According to him, the company would achieve this by helping anti-woke organizations.

Expect us to increase support for organizations that call out companies and financial institutions that bend to the woke mind virus spread by regulators and NGOs so that they have to pay the price for putting extreme leftwing ideology ahead of consumers,” Leo said.

Trending Politics reported that Leo is a prominent conservative figure in American politics primarily known for reshaping the American legal system.

Leo, a lawyer and political consultant with deep ties to conservative activism, particularly in the judicial nomination process, was crucial in recommending and advancing conservative judges for federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court. The news source added that he did this through his work with the Federalist Society, a well-known legal organization that promotes originalism and textualism in judicial interpretation.

He told the Financial Times that his goal was to discover “very leveraged, impactful ways of reintroducing limited constitutional government and a civil society premised on freedom and personal responsibility and the virtues of Western civilization.”

The $1 billion operation now supports the conservative agenda against private institutions, challenging diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, climate and social considerations in investments and the “debanking” of conservative customers. According to Leo, this also extends to the public sector.

He stated that Leo plans to invest in a local media company in the U.S. over the next year, though he hasn’t yet chosen which one.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/conservative-billionaire-wants-crush-leftist-media

Effectiveness of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Bivalent Vaccine

 , , , , ,  

doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad209

Abstract

Background

The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether a bivalent coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccine protects against COVID-19.

Methods

The study included employees of Cleveland Clinic in employment when the bivalent COVID-19 vaccine first became available. Cumulative incidence of COVID-19 over the following 26 weeks was examined. Protection provided by vaccination (analyzed as a time-dependent covariate) was evaluated using Cox proportional hazards regression, with change in dominant circulating lineages over time accounted for by time-dependent coefficients. The analysis was adjusted for the pandemic phase when the last prior COVID-19 episode occurred and the number of prior vaccine doses.

Results

Among 51 017 employees, COVID-19 occurred in 4424 (8.7%) during the study. In multivariable analysis, the bivalent-vaccinated state was associated with lower risk of COVID-19 during the BA.4/5-dominant (hazard ratio, 0.71 [95% confidence interval, .63–79]) and the BQ-dominant (0.80 [.69–.94]) phases, but decreased risk was not found during the XBB-dominant phase (0.96 [.82–.1.12]). The estimated vaccine effectiveness was 29% (95% confidence interval, 21%–37%), 20% (6%–31%), and 4% (−12% to 18%), during the BA.4/5-, BQ-, and XBB-dominant phases, respectively. The risk of COVID-19 also increased with time since the most recent prior COVID-19 episode and with the number of vaccine doses previously received.

Conclusions

The bivalent COVID-19 vaccine given to working-aged adults afforded modest protection overall against COVID-19 while the BA.4/5 lineages were the dominant circulating strains, afforded less protection when the BQ lineages were dominant, and effectiveness was not demonstrated when the XBB lineages were dominant.


https://academic.oup.com/ofid/article/10/6/ofad209/7131292

Chaos in Aurora: How the federal government subsidized the migrant madness

 Aurora, Colorado, is normally a quiet, nondescript suburb 30 minutes outside Denver. In recent months, however, the city has been at the center of a national scandal.

Beginning last year, a large influx of Venezuelan migrants, some of them members of the notorious Tren de Aragua street gang, reportedly had “taken over” a series of apartment buildings in Aurora—and unleashed terror. Last month, Venezuelan migrants were allegedly implicated in an attempted homicide, an arrest of purported gang members, and shocking security footage that showed heavily armed men forcibly entering one of the apartments. In response to the chaos, police mobilized en masse and vacated one of the complexes after the city, alleging code violations, deemed it uninhabitable.

An obvious question: How did members of Venezuelan gangs suddenly find themselves in suburban Colorado? To answer this, we have conducted an exclusive investigation, which leads to a troubling conclusion: the Biden administration, in partnership with Denver authorities and publicly subsidized NGOs, provided the funding and logistics to place a large number of Venezuelan migrants in Aurora, creating a magnet for crime and gangs. And, worse, some of the nonprofits involved appear to be profiting handsomely from the situation.

The story begins in 2021, when the Biden administration signed the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) into law, allocating $3.8 billion in federal funds to Colorado. The City of Denver, which had declared itself a “welcoming city” to migrants, drew on this reservoir of money to launch its Emergency Migrant Response resettlement program, with the goal of housing and providing services to a massive flow of migrants.

Denver, in turn, signed multimillion-dollar contracts with two local NGOs, ViVe Wellness and Papagayo, to provide housing and services to more than 8,000 predominantly Venezuelan migrants. These NGOs are run, respectively, by Yoli Casas and Marielena Suarez, who, according to professional biographies, do not appear to have previous experience in large-scale migrant resettlement.

Nevertheless, the city flooded them with cash. According to public records, between 2023 and 2024, ViVe Wellness and Papagayo received $4.8 million and $774,000, respectively; much of this funding came from the Migrant Support Grant, which was funded by ARPA. Then, in 2024, ViVe secured an extra $10.4 million across three contracts, while Papagayo received $2.9 million from a single contract to serve migrants; two of those five contracts were awarded to implement the Denver Asylum Seekers Program, which promised six months of rental assistance to nearly 1,000 migrants.

With this funding in hand, the two NGOs began working with landlords to place migrants in housing units and to subsidize their rent. One of these organizations, Papagayo, worked with a landlord called CBZ Management, a property company that operates the three apartment buildings at the center of the current controversy: Edge of Lowry, Whispering Pines, and Fitzsimons Place, also known as Aspen Grove.

We spoke with a former CBZ Management employee, who, on condition of anonymity, explained how the process worked. Last summer, the employee said, representatives from Papagayo began working with CBZ Management to place Venezuelan migrants in the company’s Aurora apartment complexes. When a Venezuelan individual or family needed housing, the NGO would contact the regional property manager, who then matched them with available apartments.

It was a booming business. According to the employee, Papagayo arranged hundreds of contracts with the property manager. The NGO provided up to two months of rental assistance, as many migrants did not have, or were unable to open, bank accounts. Within six months, according to the employee, approximately 80 percent of the residents of these buildings were Venezuelan migrants. The employee also noted that the buildings saw gang activity and violence.

The employee, however, alleges that these agreements were made on false pretenses. To convince the hesitant employee to accept the migrants, Papagayo made assurances that the tenants had stable jobs and income. With limited English and facing a minimum six-month wait for work permits, though, many migrants were ineligible for legal employment, struggled to find stable jobs, and ultimately fell behind on rent.

This was only the beginning. As the Venezuelan migrants settled in the apartments, they caused lots of trouble. According to a confidential legal report we have obtained, based on witness reports, the apartments saw a string of crimes, including trespassing, assault, extortion, drug use, illegal firearm possession, human trafficking, and sexual abuse of minors. Each of the three apartment complexes has since shown a localized spike in crime.

Volunteers who spoke with us on condition of anonymity said they were initially eager to assist with migrant resettlement but grew disillusioned with the NGOs running it. “I am passionate about helping migrants and I have been honestly shocked at the way the city is sending funds to an organization that clearly is not equipped to handle it,” one volunteer said.

The City of Denver, for its part, appears to be charging ahead. It recently voted to provide additional funding for migrant programs and, according to the right-leaning Common Sense Institute, the total cost to Denver could be up to $340 million, factoring in new burdens on schools and the health-care system. And the city also appears to have no qualms about exporting the crisis to the surrounding suburbs, including Aurora, which, in 2017, had declared itself a non-sanctuary city.

The truth is that there is no sanctuary for a city, a county, or a country that welcomes—and, in fact, attracts—violent gang members from Venezuela. This is cruelty, not compassion. Unfortunately, it might take more than the seizure of an apartment building, a dramatic rise in crime, and a grisly murder for cities like Denver to change course.

Youngkin blames Harris for ‘shocking’ reality of illegal immigrants in Virginia

 Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R-VA) underscored the “shocking” state of illegal immigration in Virginia and blamed Vice President Kamala Harris for it.

The governor cited a recent report that stated Enrique Ramirez Cabrera, an alleged illegal immigrant from Peru, was accused of abducting a girl in Manassas, Virginia, by impersonating a police officer. Youngkin also cited other instances of illegal immigrants within the commonwealth, including a man from El Salvador in Fairfax County and two other illegal immigrants who attempted to ram the front gates of Marine Corps Base Quantico using a box truck.

“Sean, this is unbelievable that we’re even having this conversation, and yet you do have Kamala Harris, who was the border czar, who continues to advocate for decriminalizing illegal immigration,” Youngkin said on Fox News’s Hannity. “That is where the nation is.”

Youngkin explained that in Virginia’s Department of Corrections, there are approximately 950 illegal immigrants who have “an open immigration detention order.” Of these immigrants, “nine out of 10” had been previously arrested and incarcerated for “violent felonies,” such as murder, rape, and assault.

The Virginia governor added that it is “unbelievable” that this level of illegal immigration is happening in the United States. He claimed that former President Donald Trump will “fix this” should he win the election. 

Last week, Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares slammed Harris for “putting her political agenda above the safety of American citizens,” referencing the report of the abduction in Manassas. He added that the abduction happened because of “betrayal,” not negligence.


Ahead of the 2024 election, Youngkin issued an executive order to “protect legal voters and accurate counts” to fortify the state’s election integrity. The order was made over a month before early voting will start in Virginia on Sept. 20.

Gov. Greg Abbott (R-TX) has similarly sought to tighten the state’s election integrity, stating last month that over 1.1 million “ineligible” voters were removed from Texas’s voter rolls. Among those removed, over 457,000 were people who had died, and over 463,000 were people on the state’s suspense list.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/3148831/youngkin-blames-harris-illegal-immigrants-virginia/

'Persons with childbearing potential': American, Euro med groups erase women in new guide

 The inclusion of gender complicates clinical practice both for healthcare professionals and patients," says new European document on women, irregular heart rhythm and stroke. Journal of the American Medical Association cites "The Radical Copyeditor" as an authority.

Doctors already struggling to consistently use their patients' preferred gender pronouns and account for sex-based differences in treatment for those who present as the opposite sex are facing potentially greater confusion courtesy of American and European medical groups.

The American Medical Association's Manual of Style Committee is accepting feedback through month's end on draft guidance on "reporting gender, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation and age" in medical and scientific publication, following its similar guidance for "inclusive language" on race and ethnicity three years ago.

The draft guidance includes definitions for 12 variations of "gender" alone, starting with gender itself, which runs 15 sentences and about half a page. (Each page features the header "DO NOT CITE. DO NOT DISTRIBUTE" despite the Journal of the American Medical Association seeking public comment.)

The European Society of Cardiology erased women as a group at elevated risk for strokes in its finalized guidelines for management of atrial fibrillation, an irregular heart rhythm, developed with the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery and released at the recently concluded ESC Congress in London.

"Female sex is an age-dependent stroke risk modifier rather than a risk factor per se," the guidelines state. The next two sentences: "The inclusion of gender complicates clinical practice both for healthcare professionals and patients. It also omits individuals who identify as non-binary, transgender, or are undergoing sex hormone therapy."

The AMA draft, published in JAMA three days before the ESC guidelines appeared in its European Heart Journal, has drawn more U.S. attention. 

Medical advocacy group Do No Harm asked supporters to file comments that oppose "codifying the most extreme manifestations of gender ideology," noting its summer poll that found 93 percent of black adults prefer "mother" to "birthing person" – the latter advocated in the draft.

"Despite being a scientific organization, the AMA is promoting ideology over biological reality," Do No Harm said, by discouraging the terms "born, biological or biologically, or genetic or genetically" to describe sex at birth because they can be "inaccurate and have negative implications." (The guidelines make an exception for "reports of prenatal genetic testing.")

AMA media relations coordinator Robert Mills stressed to Just the News that its "staff and leaders are not involved in the project" and that JAMA is "editorially independent" from the AMA itself. 

The draft guidelines explicitly credit themselves to "the committee of the AMA Manual of Style," however. 

"This draft guidance is from the JAMA Network editors, which is editorially independent from the AMA," Jen Zeis, director of JAMA Network communications and engagement, wrote in an email. "As said in the editorial, the guidance is available for public review and comment and the rationale for the guidance is included in it."

Zeis did not answer two requests to explain the presence of the header "DO NOT CITE. DO NOT DISTRIBUTE."

Swiss interventional cardiologist Catherine Gebhard, who runs a lab on sex- and gender-specific medicine at the University Hospital Inselspital Bern's Women's Heart Center, sounded the alarm on LinkedIn shortly after the ESC guidelines came out. (She used X for the first time in nearly a year to promote the LinkedIn post.)

"I am #speechless," Gebhard wrote in a post with more than 400 reactions and more than 60 comments and reposts each. "There are almost 4 billion #women on this planet—are we really saying it is too complicated to address their medical needs?"

She suggested her LinkedIn followers reach out "to members of the writing committee to understand their rationale for omitting female sex from the risk score" and write a letter to the editor "to highlight why this omission is problematic, along with arguments for its inclusion."

The ESC corresponding authors didn't respond to Just the News queries.

Gender is a "social construct, separate from gender identity" and sex, "that typically ascribes qualities of masculinity and femininity to people," which "can also be gender neutral," according to the JAMA draft guidance.

Much of that definition cites the World Health Organization, American Psychological Association, University of California Berkeley's Centers for Educational Justice & Community Engagement and GLAAD, formerly the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation. The latter two said "gender characteristics can change over time and differ between cultures."

The draft also tells report authors and contributors to use "nongendered" terms for pregnancy and parenting – such as "people" and "parent" instead of "pregnant woman," "mother" and "father" – unless "an individual’s gender identity is known or when discussing a study that involves only cisgender women or men," meaning those who identify with their sex.

It goes so far as to replace "women" with "persons with childbearing potential" even while discouraging "overly clinical descriptions" that have previously drawn mockery, such as "people with uteruses." The term "birthing parent" can be used "for clarity in contexts where simply using 'parent' could be confusing or too vague," the guidelines say.

"Maternal" is appropriate when referring to "a person during pregnancy, childbirth, and parenting" and especially "as a population descriptor, such as in maternal morbidity and mortality," but authors generally should "use judgment and context to determine whether general or specific terms are more suitable for the material being discussed."

Do No Harm, which previously challenged new antiracism curriculum standards in medical education cosponsored by the AMA, pointed to one of the draft's cited authorities, "The Radical Copyeditor’s Style Guide for Writing About Transgender People," created by language consultant and Unitarian Universalist lay minister Alex Kapitan.

The draft warns against saying a person "identifies as" a specific gender or gender identity, rather than using "the verbs 'is' or 'are' (or 'was' or 'were')," because the former "implies a choice or something that is nonstandard or not normal." (Not explained: how a person involuntarily loses a gender identity.)

The draft also cites The Radical Copyeditor to warn against using the term "minority," at least as a noun, to describe an LGBTQ group because it "can be confusing, inaccurate, pejorative, or unacceptable" and "does not always indicate numerical proportion among subg[r]oups."

Kapitan says there's no "single best term for everyone who isn’t cisgender," which means identifying with one's sex. Even "trans" is too limiting, because "the more we work to extricate ourselves from those [patriarchal, heterosexist, racist, classist, ableist gender] norms, the more ways we will find to describe the infinite galaxies of possibility."

Female sex is not a minor consideration in the risk-calculation score for atrial fibrillation known as CHA₂DS₂-VASc, the subject of the ESC change, University of California San Francisco epidemiologist Vinay Prasad wrote in his newsletter this week

Only being older than 75 and having a prior stroke carry more weight in the score than being a woman, which carries the same risk as an age between 65-74.

"The only justification I could imagine to remove women from the algorithm is if a) being a woman is not a independent risk factor for stroke (current evidence suggests it is, and the ESC authors don’t dispute it), or b) if women are more likely to experience harms of anti-coagulation (what the score is used to decide)," wrote Prasad, also a hematologist-oncologist.

"Medicine risks becoming co-opted by political movements if we change the practice of medicine to suit political correctness, rather than the best available care based on the data," he also said. 

Gebhard, who cowrote a 2022 paper in Nature Reviews Cardiology on the effects of sex and gender on cardiovascular disease, said the change appeared to be influenced by a new EHJ paper based on a large U.K. analysis that was also presented at ESC Congress.

The paper found no difference between men and women for stroke risk and atrial fibrillation but this "contrast[s] with much of the previous evidence," and it also conflates gender and sex, Gebhard wrote.

University of New South Wales cardiovascular medicine professor Alta Schutte, who also co-chairs Australia's hypertension task force, responded in the comments that she had spoken to a female author of the guidelines.

This AF expert "assured me that this change to the guideline is to ensure more equality in women who were disadvantaged and undertreated with the current formulation of the CHA₂DS₂-VASc Score," Schutte wrote.

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/health/persons-childbearing-potential-american-european-medical-groups-erase-women

A Bias for Panic: How the New York Times stoked Covid alarmism

 A 2018 Gallup poll found that 62 percent of Americans believe the media is biased. Did such bias affect coverage of the Covid-19 pandemic? I run a research team in the department of epidemiology at the University of California–San Francisco. In our report, the first to analyze a newspaper systematically, we found significant evidence of bias in the New York Times, considered by some to be the newspaper of record, on pandemic coverage—skewed toward overstating the threat posed by the virus.

Our study examined all corrections issued by the New York Times to articles relating to the Covid-19 pandemic. Between 2020 and 2024, the newspaper issued 576 corrections for 486 articles. Naturally, in times of crisis, facing uncertain and evolving information, reporters will get facts wrong. Sometimes they may, for instance, over- or underreport the number of children who have died or misstate the effectiveness of interventions like lockdowns. If news organizations are unbiased, one would expect such errors to occur with relatively equal frequency.

That’s not what we found. Instead, the paper’s errors tended to exaggerate the harm of the virus (or the effectiveness of interventions). Corrections were made for such errors nearly twice as frequently as for errors that downplayed harms. Fifty-five percent of errors overstated the harm of the virus, while only 24 percent understated (the rest were equivocal). In other words, when the New York Times got things wrong, it tended to do so in a way that falsely stoked fear and encouraged harmful social restrictions.

In October 2021, a particularly notable correction read as follows—inviting questions as to how such a remarkable mistake could make it into print at all:

An article on Thursday . . . misstated the number of Covid hospitalizations in U.S. children. It is more than 63,000 from August 2020 to October 2021, not 900,000 since the beginning of the pandemic.

Glad they could straighten that out.

Not all reporters were equally culpable; some required more corrections than others. One in particular, Apoorva Mandavilli, was responsible for 7 percent of all corrections. When the “science and global health reporter” erred, she tended to exaggerate the risk of the virus:

This same reporter is known for inserting her feelings into her content. In 2021, she tweeted the following: “Someday we will stop talking about the lab leak theory and maybe even admit its racist roots. But alas, that day is not yet here.” To my knowledge, the New York Times has not reassigned any reporter on the Covid-19 beat for getting things wrong—even when those errors appear to be byproducts of the author’s underlying prejudice.

Over the last few years, the newspaper has faced more scrutiny of its ideologically skewed coverage. Opinion editor James Bennet, dismissed for publishing an op-ed by Senator Tom Cotton in the summer of 2020, wrote a lengthy article in the Economist documenting how progressive ideology has captured the newsroom. Don McNeil was dismissed as chief science reporter for comments he had made years before. McNeil, it's worth noting, was open to the possibility of the lab-leak theory, having published essays that reignited mainstream interest in the subject—in contrast with his successor, Mandavilli.

In any event, the newspaper’s distortions are skewed in the same direction as its political bias. When it came to Covid-19, Republicans tended to be more skeptical of sweeping governmental and public-health interventions like lockdowns, masking young children, and closing schools, and more concerned about their negative consequences. Florida governor Ron DeSantis reopened his state’s schools in the spring of 2020, against the advice of experts like Anthony Fauci, and opposed masking kids. Democrats, meantime, came to embrace stronger government policies, such as vaccine mandates. The Biden administration enforced the masking of toddlers in Head Start programs. The New York Times’s tilt on these matters appeared consistent with its traditional political sympathies.

It should concern all of us that legacy media displayed such a strong bias during an unprecedented pandemic. Perhaps our research can prompt an internal audit at the Times to assess the paper’s role in intensifying fear and legitimizing harmful social policies. At a minimum, newspapers should implement more substantive checks and balances to ensure more balanced coverage—and avoid unduly promoting panic the next time a crisis strikes.