Search This Blog

Monday, March 23, 2026

UK summons Iranian ambassador

 The United Kingdom's government said on Monday that Iranian ambassador Seyed Ali Mousavi was summoned to the Foreign Office after an Iranian and a British-Iranian dual national were accused of carrying out hostile surveillance on London's Jewish community.

"National security remains our top priority, and we take threats posed by Iran and those who do its bidding extremely seriously," the Foreign Office stated. "This government will take all measures necessary to protect the British people, including exposing Iran’s reckless and destabilising actions at home and abroad," it said.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/UK-summons-Iranian-ambassador/65930956

Blasts said to shake Bahrain

 Several explosions shook Bahrain on Monday, Iran's semi-official Tasnim News Agency reported. Earlier in the day, the media said the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched a new attack on US military bases in the Middle East.

Bahrain's Ministry of Interior previously warned citizens to seek shelter after air alarms were activated in the island-nation.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Blasts-said-to-shake-Bahrain/65931164

Israel hits IRGC headquarters in Tehran

 The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said on Monday that it attacked the headquarters of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which it claimed was established within civilian infrastructure in Tehran.

"The headquarters was used by the Revolutionary Guards to synchronize the regional units responsible for controlling government order and internal security. In addition, the Iranian terrorist regime commanded the battalions of the Basij unit from the headquarters that was attacked," the IDF stated.

The Israeli military noted that the strike was a part of the latest wave of attacks carried out by the IDF's Air Force in Iran's capital city, adding that "many steps were taken to reduce harm to civilians" prior to the attack.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Israel-hits-IRGC-headquarters-in-Tehran/65931350

Ghalibaf denies talks took place with US

 

Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf (pictured) said on Monday that his country's officials are not engaged in any negotiations with the United States, denying previous reports.

"Iranian people demand complete and remorseful punishment of the aggressors. All Irainan officials stand firmly behind their supreme leader and people until this goal is achieved. No negotiations have been held with the US, and fakenews is used to manipulate the financial and oil markets and escape the quagmire in which the US and Israel are trapped," Ghalibaf said in a post on X, echoing the statement by Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei.

Ghalibaf's comments follow US President Donald Trump's claims that the two countries were involved in negotiations over the past two days, with Israeli media reporting that the Iranian Parliament speaker was leading Iran's negotiating team.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Ghalibaf-denies-talks-took-place-with-US/65930684

California's Billionaire Tax Won't Save Hospitals

 by Veronique de Rugy

I try to be fair to people I disagree with. Emmanuel Saez—the famous UC Berkeley economist who's considered an architect of California's proposed billionaire wealth tax—is someone I read carefully, even when I find his income inequality work unconvincing. So, when I say that his arguments for the wealth tax are not just biased or misleading but egregiously wrong, I'm not being careless. I mean it.

In a recent debate at Stanford University, Saez offered his central justification (apart from, you know, "billionaires are unfairly rich"): California's hospitals need it because the federal government cut Medicaid through last year's One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB).

As Economic Policy Innovation Center researchers have repeatedly documented, under the Biden administration, Medicaid spending expanded by almost 60 percent, going from roughly $409 billion before the pandemic to $656 billion by 2025. Using the most recent Congressional Budget Office numbers reflecting the OBBB—the supposed instrument of destruction—these researchers now project Medicaid spending to reach $905 billion in 2034. Calling a 38 percent increase between 2024 and 2034 a "cut" is not an honest argument.

California's hospital funding crisis has nothing to do with whether the state adds a billionaire tax. It's driven by a third-party payment system in which roughly 90 cents of every American health care dollar is paid by someone other than the patient, removing incentives to discipline costs or question whether services are even worth their price.

Then there's a financing structure that rewards expanding the program and punishes restraint. The federal government also happens to cover 90 cents of every dollar spent by states on Affordable Care Act expansion enrollees (including able-bodied adults without dependents). That gives states an irresistible incentive to grow the program, but it doesn't provide funding at a level that covers the cost of care.

California's leaders have taken the bait, expanded Medi-Cal aggressively and covered populations well beyond the traditional needy Medicaid population. Eager to achieve universal coverage, the state eliminated its asset test, enabling middle-class retirees to qualify for a program designed for the poor. Eligibility was phased in for undocumented immigrants over the last decade. Unfortunately, the program has no comparable mechanism to fund what it has promised.

The financial consequences of its growth are now impossible to ignore. Last year, California was $6.2 billion over its Medi-Cal budget. One government report places the cost of covering immigrants without legal status alone as a $10 billion drain from the General Fund—double what the state initially estimated.

Advocates for more Medicaid respond by saying the cost overruns prove the program is working and more people are covered. It's also evidence of a system that will continue to deteriorate fast. Hospitals that are serving growing numbers of Medi-Cal patients and covering the gap between what the program pays and what the care costs will face the same cost pressures after the tax is implemented.

So, what did the OBBB actually cut from Medicaid? It closed a financing shell game that states like California had been running for years: taxing Medicaid insurers, reimbursing them for what they paid, and pocketing the federal match based on inflated figures. California alone extracted $19 billion in federal money over three years while contributing essentially nothing of its own. It used those funds, in part, to cover the enrollee extension that's now blowing a hole in its budget. Taxpayers should be furious.

It's become clear that the revenue math being used by Saez and the wealth tax crowd is wrong too.

Stanford's Joshua Rauh and several coauthors find that the California wealth tax's projected revenue is a fantasy. Supporters advertised $100 billion in collections. Building on sound analysis as opposed to wishful thinking, Rauh's team saw billionaires already leaving and, as a result, other future tax revenues disintegrating. By driving high earners out permanently, the most likely "net present value" of the wealth tax is negative $24.7 billion.

Whether politicians and voters want to admit it or not, the real problem is still spending. California's revenue has surged by 55 percent since 2019, but Sacramento has expanded state spending commitments by 68 percent. It patched budget deficits in three consecutive years ($27 billion, $55 billion, and $15 billion) not by fixing the underlying problem but by drawing down reserves and applying onetime fixes. The Legislative Analyst's Office now projects a fourth consecutive deficit, this time reaching nearly $18 billion in 2026-27 and growing to $35 billion annually by 2027-28. Medi-Cal alone will hit an all-time high, taking $49 billion from the General Fund.

The wealth tax will not save the hospitals. It will not fix Medi-Cal. It will accelerate the departure of a taxpayer base California is already dangerously dependent on. Real fiscal problems require honesty. Contrary to what you are told by eminent economists, this wealth tax isn't one.

https://reason.com/2026/03/19/californias-billionaire-tax-wont-save-hospitals/

Novabay Name Change to Stablecoin Development, Initial Staking Rewards, Token Holdings Update



Stablecoin Development Corporation (formerly NovaBay Pharmaceuticals, NYSE: NBY → SDEV) will change its name and ticker, effective April 3, 2026. The company raised approximately $134 million in a January 2026 private placement and holds ~2.06 billion SKY tokens (≈8.78% supply) as of March 16, 2026.

SDEV reported cumulative staking rewards of ~26.6 million SKY, acquired ~1.09 billion SKY on-market at ~$0.065 each using ~$70.7 million, and says warrants carry a weighted-average exercise delay of ~9.9 months.

TN Congressman asks for National Guard in Nashville as Trump to discuss Memphis Task Force

 While President Trump arrives in Memphis to discuss the Memphis Safe Task Force, Congressman Andy Ogles is pushing for the National Guard to come to Nashville.

Congressman Ogles' spokesperson told FOX 17 News Ogles is currently with President Trump.

President Trump is expected to discuss the success of the National Guard in bringing down the crime rate in Memphis.

https://fox17.com/news/local/tennessee-congressman-asks-for-national-guard-in-nashville-as-president-donald-trump-to-discuss-memphis-task-force