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Sunday, June 22, 2025

Communist group slams Mamdani for ‘deceiving working class,’ making ‘false promises’

 Even commies don’t want free groceries from Zohran Mamdani.

The Revolutionary Communists of America recently ripped the socialist mayoral candidate over his ties to the Democratic Party in an article called “Why Communists Can’t Support Zohran Mamdani.”

“Rather than building the influence of socialism, he is tainting that word through false promises and associating himself with the rotten and discredited Democratic Party,” the controversial group, also known as RevCom, railed.

The Revolutionary Communists of America, seen above at a May protest, published an article entitled, “Why Communists Can’t Support Zohran Mamdani.”Gina M Randazzo/ZUMA / SplashNews.com

It added that the 33-year-old mayoral hopeful — and current state assemblyman — is “consciously trying to strengthen that flailing party.”

RevCom is the US branch of Revolutionary Communist International, according to its website, a far left group founded in 1992 as the Committee for a Marxist International. Protestors with RevCom made headlines for burning American flags and chanting “F–k the US” outside a Jason Aldean concert in 2023.

The group, in its May article, said the card-carrying Democratic Socialist of America pol’s support of congestion pricing and his plans to freeze rents, make public buses free and open city-owned grocery stores would “divide the working class against one another.”

RevCom argued that Mamdani is trying to “strengthen” the “flailing” Democratic Party.via REUTERS

“Despite his nice-sounding words, Zohran is ultimately a reformist seeking to make minor tweaks to the New York City budget,” the article claimed. “In the process, he is deceiving the working class about the role of the Democratic Party and about the possibility of achieving meaningful improvements under capitalism.”

The lefty group called instead for a candidate without ties to the two major political parties to push its socialist agenda.

RevCom members seen at an Earth Day demonstration in New York City protesting President Trump’s policies on migration and the environment.Aristide Economopoulos
Mamdani is currently polling just 10 percentage points behind Democratic frontrunner Andrew Cuomo in the upcoming primary, which is scheduled for June 24.

His campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

https://nypost.com/2025/06/22/us-news/communist-group-slams-zohran-mamdani-for-deceiving-working-class/

'Some consumer names could face backlash in the Middle East'

 The strike by the United States on Saturday night against Iranian nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan could impact certain multinational companies in the consumer sector, especially if an extended war continues in the region.

Last year, McDonald's (NYSE:MCD) noted that it was negatively impacted by the war in the Middle East. "These external pressures certainly weighed on our performance for the quarter, with declines in comparable sales globally and across each of our segments," highlighted management during a Chicago-based company's earnings conference call.

Yum! Brands (NYSE:YUM) has repeatedly warned of Middle East backlash in its earnings reports and conference calls. The fast-food giant has attributed declines in sales and operational challenges directly to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East and related consumer boycotts. Notably, Yum! Brands’ (NYSE:YUM) CEO David Gibbs has stated that "top-line sales were impacted by the conflict in the Middle East region, with varying degrees of impact across markets in the Middle East, Malaysia and Indonesia."

Meanwhile, Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) warned in the past of “headwinds” and “ongoing boycotts” in the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and parts of Europe as factors that negatively affected sales and brand perception.

Procter & Gamble (P&G) has also referenced the Middle East as a source of sales pressure in the past. During a recent earnings conference call, the household products company reported that sales in the Middle East were negatively affected by ongoing geopolitical tensions and conflict in the region. The CFO specifically noted that volume trends in markets such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey "have remained soft since the start of the heightened tensions in the Middle East". Colgate-Palmolive (NYSE:CL) and Kimberly-Clark (NASDAQ:KMB) have also mentioned in a more general way that geopolitical turmoil has impacted sales in international markets.

In the beverage sector, Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) and PepsiCo (NASDAQ:PEP) have faced consumer boycotts in certain Middle East nations amid rising tension. Analysts have pointed to a loss of market share in Middle Eastern nations as a potential risk to global sales. 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/stocks-to-watch-these-consumer-names-could-face-backlash-in-the-middle-east/ar-AA1HchTn

'Global Fertilizer Market Thrown In Chaos After Mideast War Shutters Iran Urea Production'

 Agri-Pulse's Oliver Ward reports that renewed conflict in the Middle East has shuttered urea production in Iran, sending ripples through global fertilizer markets and adding to existing uncertainty around Russian and Chinese supplies, analysts tell Agri-Pulse.

“Tensions flared between Iran and Israel on Friday when Israel launched what it called a preemptive missile strike targeting Iran’s nuclear program and military leadership. Four days later, both sides are reeling from attacks on key infrastructure and shuttered industries, including in the fertilizer sector,” AgriPulse notes. “‘Iran has shut down seven of its urea and ammonia plants,’ said Mark Milam, senior editor for fertilizers at Independent Commodity Intelligence Services, over concerns that they could be potential Israeli targets.”

“Josh Linville, vice president of fertilizers at commodities analysis firm StoneX, said that attacks on the country’s natural gas infrastructure – which is used in the production of urea – is also keeping operations offline,” Ward reported.

“Iran was the third-largest urea exporter in 2024, according to StoneX, with export volumes of around 4.5 million tons – about the size of China’s. The country has a production capacity of around 8.9 million tons a year, Milam added, serving markets in Turkey, Brazil and Argentina, among others. It is also an exporter of ammonia.”

“In addition to knocking Iranian urea production offline, the attacks also brought Egypt’s operations to a standstill,” Ward reported. “Israel reduced its natural gas flows to the country on Friday, prompting Egypt to cease production.”

AgWeb’s Margy Eckelkamp reported that “Linville’s colleague at StoneX, Arlan Suderman, details why this conflict is being watched so carefully if the concern isn’t in those two countries’ production. ‘There’s a lot of other producers of fertilizer in the Middle East and a lot of it also passes through the Strait of Hormuz, which will be at risk going forward now,’ Suderman says. From a global supply standpoint, Suderman also points out the Ukrainian attack of one of Russia’s largest nitrogen fertilizer plants two weeks ago.”

With ongoing and new conflicts and strikes in key fertilizer production areas, Linville foresees needing to be focused on the potential outcomes,” Eckelkamp reported. “‘For now, we don’t believe there’s going to be much in the effect in terms of fertilizer production from either country, though it would be a little silly to not consider it, so we’re watching very, very closely,’ he says.”

Until then, BYD and its rivals may continue to dominate Brazil’s green-car movement from across the Pacific, even as the long-promised benefits of local EV manufacturing remain out of reach for many Brazilian workers.

Separately, Ward reported that “compounding availability and price worries, the analysts said, is China’s continued pullback from exporting fertilizers. Both China’s phosphate and urea exports are lagging historical levels. China typically exports around 5.5 million tons of urea annually, but this year, Linville said, Beijing will only allow around 2 million in exports.”

“‘You’ve got so many different pieces,’ Linville said, driving uncertainty over urea supplies,” Ward reported. “U.S. farmers are somewhat insulated from short-term price shocks given many will not be buying fertilizer in earnest until later in the year. But Milam said that if supply uncertainties persist, it could create ‘all kinds of complications’ for U.S. buyers.”

“‘It’s hard to say whether that that’ll happen,’ Milam said,” according to Ward’s reporting. “China’s market retreat should be ‘a decent concern’ for farmers hoping for price stability come 2026, Linville said.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/global-fertilizer-market-chaos-after-mideast-war-shutters-iran-urea-production

Don’t fall for the lies about the GOP’s plan for Medicaid: We’re actually STRENGTHENING it

 President Donald Trump has asked Congress to follow through on his domestic-policy agenda by extending tax cuts for Americans, investing in our military and border security and cutting waste, fraud and abuse in entitlement spending, which threatens the solvency our nation’s safety-net programs.

For my House Committee on Energy and Commerce, this meant hitting a 10-year savings target of $880 billion across our jurisdiction — energy, environment, telecommunications and health care — which I knew could only be reached through careful consideration and resolve.

The committee came through, and then some: The most recent estimate from the Congressional Budget Office found that our efforts will save nearly $1.1 trillion.

More than a quarter of this amount, $344 billion, comes from new community-engagement rules (i.e., work requirements) for able-bodied adults who receive Medicaid benefits but choose not to work.

The rules will promote greater accountability and refocus Medicaid to better serve the most vulnerable.

What exactly do these community-engagement requirements consist of?

If you’re an able-bodied, unemployed adult who receives Medicaid, they ask that you demonstrate that you are either working, volunteering, in job training or in school for an average of 80 hours per month.

Health care and work are inextricably linked in this country: Nearly half of all Americans get their health insurance through their jobs, seniors get Medicare after years of contributing payroll taxes and members of our military and our veterans get their coverage through their service to our country.

To require Medicaid recipients who are able-bodied and unemployed to either work, go to school or volunteer in their communities in order to continue receiving subsidized health insurance should be a no brainer.

You may have heard misinformation that work requirements are really just a sneaky way to take health care away from hard-working Americans, or even people with disabilities.

Let me set the record straight: This policy applies only to able-bodied, unemployed adults who have chosen not to work.

Our bill couldn’t be clearer about that; it includes a long list of exempted individuals. For instance:

  • If you’re pregnant, a member of a federally designated tribe, a caregiver or parent, under 19 or over 65, you’re exempt from the requirements.
  • You’re exempt if you’re medically frail, which includes anyone who’s blind, disabled, battling a chronic substance-use disorder or living with a serious and complex medical condition like cancer.
  • If you meet work requirements for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (food stamps) or Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (welfare), you’re also relieved of the requirements.
  • If you’re in jail, prison or were released from incarceration within the past 90 days, you’re exempt.
  • And if you’re a former foster youth under 26, the requirements don’t apply.

Plainly, the policy is targeting just a subset of fully able adults who are voluntarily choosing not to work or give back to their communities.

There are strong grounds for this policy: A new study from the American Enterprise Institute found that able-bodied, unemployed adult Medicaid recipients without dependents average 6.1 hours a day — 184 hours a month — watching television and socializing.

That figure is 50% higher than for employed beneficiaries.

These individuals spend less than a combined one hour a day looking for work or caring for others.

And we’re only asking that, in return for their Medicaid coverage, they choose from an array of options — work, go to school or volunteer — for just 80 hours per month.

That’s eminently reasonable, and can help them become more self-reliant and productive.

Note, too, that a sizable number — 38% of beneficiaries, per a new White House Council of Economic Advisors study — are able-bodied, working-age adults.

There’s no good reason for them not to be contributing to their communities or at least on a path to becoming productive.

Americans are smart enough not to fall for the false narratives, lies and smears against work requirements.

They share Republicans’ desires to purge government programs of rampant waste, fraud and abuse.

Our requirements help do just that, strengthening Medicaid for those who truly need it.

Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.) is chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.

https://nypost.com/2025/06/22/opinion/dont-buy-the-lies-about-the-gops-plan-for-medicaid-were-actually-strengthening-it/

US bases on high alert for possible retaliation after Trump’s Iran strikes

 The US has several bases and military assets in the Middle East that Iran could target in retaliation for the strikes President Trump ordered on Saturday.

Here are a few of the ones Iran may target:

  • Al Udeid Air Base: The base is located in Qatar and is the largest US military base in the Middle East
  • US Navy Fifth Fleet: The headquarters are in Bahrain and are a critical asset in the Persian Gulf
  • Al Asad Air Base: A US base in Iraq that Iran targeted in 2020 after the killing of Quds Force leader Qasem Soleimani. The installation houses thousands of American troops and is the site of the largest US deployment in the country
  • Harir Air Base: The base in Erbil, Iraq, has been on the receiving end of Iranian-proxy group drone attacks
  • Al Tanf Garrison: A US military base in southern Syria, near the borders of Iraq and Jordan. An Iranian-backed militia attack on the Tower 22 outpost, just 12 miles south of Al Tanf, killed three US service members in January 2024
  • Ali al-Salem Air Base: An air base in Kuwait and about 20 miles from the Iraqi border that houses members of the Air Force’s 386th Air Expeditionary Wing
  • Al Dhafra Air Base: Located in the United Arab Emirates, the installation is home to the Air Force’s 380th Air Expeditionary Wing, which operates F-22 Raptor fighter jets and several kinds of surveillance planes and drones
Donald Trump addresses the military audience in Qatar on May 15.AP
Aerial view of Ain al-Asad air base in Iraq.AP

There are several other key bases and assets in the region but Iran could also hit US embassies in nearby countries such as Iraq, the United Arab Emirates or even Israel.

Although not a US asset per se, Iran could also try to close the Strait of Hormuz, a critical potential chokehold where about 25% of the world’s oil consumption and roughly a third of the world’s liquefied natural gas flows.

There are about 40,000 active-duty US troops stationed in the Middle East and on ships in the region, a US official said earlier this month. 

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth stressed Wednesday that the Pentagon was prioritizing the safety of American troops in the region, while also advising Trump on Iranian strike options. 

This satellite image from Planet Labs PBC shows Al Udeid Air Base outside of Doha, Qatar, after many aircraft on its tarmac left, Wednesday, June 18, 2025.AP
Map depicts nuclear facilities in Iran and the ones struck by the US.Rob Jejenich / NY Post Design
US Navy E-2C Hawkeye landing on the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower on Jan. 3, 2010.AFP/Getty Images
“We have maximum force protection in the region at all times being maintained,” Hegseth noted during his testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Earlier this month, the Pentagon chief authorized the voluntary exit of all US military dependents from locations across the Middle East. 

https://nypost.com/2025/06/21/world-news/here-are-some-of-the-us-bases-and-assets-iran-could-target/