Home Blog Page 18

HORRIFIC TRAGEDY IN GAZA: 24 IDF Soldiers Killed in Deadliest Day Since Start of Gaza Combat

0

Twenty-four Israel Defense Forces soldiers were killed in the Gaza Strip on Monday, the deadliest single day for the Israeli military since the start of its ground operation against Hamas on Oct. 27.

Twenty-one soldiers were killed in central Gaza when two buildings collapsed due to a blast, IDF Spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said on Tuesday morning.

The incident occurred 600 meters (2,000 feet) from the Israeli border, near the northwestern Negev community of Kibbutz Kissufim, as Israeli forces were working on clearing Hamas infrastructure and buildings to establish a buffer zone.

According to Hagari, around 4 p.m., terrorists fired a rocket-propelled grenade at a tank securing the forces. At the same time, two two-story buildings collapsed as a result of an explosion while most of the troops were inside or near them. The blast was apparently caused by explosives placed by the Israeli forces, intended to destroy the buildings in a controlled event.

He added that a “very complicated” rescue operation took place involving commanders and rescue workers who quickly arrived at the scene.

“War has a very painful and heavy price. The dedicated reservists, who stood up for the flag, sacrificed the most precious of all, for the security of the State of Israel and so that we can all live here safely,” said Hagari.

War Cabinet ministers—Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and Minister-without-Portfolio Benny Gantz—issued a joint statement about the incident on Tuesday afternoon.

“We bow our heads in memory of our fallen, and yet we do not for a moment stop striving for an irreplaceable goal—the achievement of absolute victory,” they said.

Earlier on Tuesday, Netanyahu called Monday “one of the most difficult days since the outbreak of the war,” saying that he was sending strength to the bereaved families.

“I mourn for our fallen heroic soldiers. I hug the families in their time of need and we all pray for the peace of our wounded,” the premier continued, adding that the IDF had opened an investigation into the incident.

“We must learn the necessary lessons and do everything to preserve the lives of our warriors. In the name of our heroes, we will not stop fighting until absolute victory,” said Netanyahu.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog on Tuesday called it “an unbearably difficult morning, in which more and more names of the best of our sons … are added to the gravestones of heroes.”

Herzog continued, “Behind every name is a family whose world has fallen, a family whose pain and sorrow we feel in our hearts. At the same time, we feel pride for the heroism of our generation, for the mission to combat evil, for sticking to the goal and for the love of our people and homeland.”

Gallant said, “Our hearts are with the dear families in their most difficult time,” adding, “This is a war that will determine the future of Israel for decades to come—the fall of the soldiers compels us to achieve the goals of the fighting.”

The IDF initially released for publication the names of 10 of the soldiers killed in the incident. The families of the remaining 11 were notified. The military later in the morning allowed for the publication of the names of seven additional soldiers and then the remaining four in the afternoon.

They are:

Sgt. Maj. (res.) Matan Lazar, from Haifa;

Sgt. First Class (res.) Hadar Kapeluk, from Mevo Beitar;

Sgt. Maj. (res.) Sergey Gontmaher, from Ramat Gan;

Sgt. First Class (res.) Elkana Yehuda Sfez, from Kiryat Arba;

Sgt. First Class (res.) Yoval Lopez, from Alon Shvut;

Master Sgt. (res.) Yoav Levi, from Yehud-Monosson;

Sgt. First Class (res.) Nicholas Berger, from Jerusalem;

Sgt. First Class (res.) Cydrick Garin, from Tel Aviv;

Sgt. Maj. (res.) Rafael Elias Mosheyoff, from Pardes Hanna-Karkur;

Sgt. Maj. (res.) Barak Haim Ben Valid, from Rishon Letzion;

Sgt. First Class (res.) Ahmad Abu Latif, from Rahat;

Capt. (res.) Nir Binyamin, from Givatayim;

Master Sgt. (res.) Elkana Vizel, from Bnei Dakalim;

Sgt. First Class (res.) Israel Socol, from Karnei Shomron;

Capt. (res.) Ariel Mordechay Wollfstal, from Elazar;

Sgt. First Class (res.) Sagi Idan, from Rosh Ha’ayin;

Sgt. Maj. Mark Kononovich, from Herzliya;

Sgt. Maj. (res.) Itamar Tal, from Mesilot;

Sgt. Maj. (res.) Adam Bismut, from Karnei Shomron;

Sgt. Maj. (res.) Shay Biton Hayun, from Zichron Yaakov; and

Sgt. Maj. (res.) Daniel Kasau Zegeye, from Yokne’am Illit.

The three soldiers killed in action in the southern Gaza Strip are:

Maj. David Nati Alfasi, from Beersheva; Maj. Ilay Levy, from Tel Aviv; and Capt. Eyal Mevorach Twito, from Beit Gamliel.

A total of 221 soldiers have been killed since the start of Gaza ground operations on Oct. 27, and 556 have been killed on all fronts since the start of the war on Oct. 7.

Israeli forces encircle Khan Yunis

Dozens of Hamas terrorists were killed in the past 24 hours as Israeli ground forces encircled Khan Yunis, the IDF said on Tuesday.

Khan Yunis is Gaza’s second largest city and is regarded as a personal stronghold of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, whose family lives there.

Over the past day, IDF ground troops engaged in close-quarters combat, directed air strikes, and used intelligence to coordinate fire, resulting in the deaths of dozens of terrorists.

The IDF targeted terrorist cells carrying RPGs near the troops, those launching anti-tank missiles, and terror operatives who had rigged compounds with explosives. Ready-to-launch rockets, military compounds, shafts and numerous weapons were located during the activity.

The activities are part of a major offensive in Khan Yunis that was preceded by airstrikes on Sunday night and was expected to last several days. It includes parts of the IDF’s Givati Infantry Brigade, 7th Armored Brigade, paratroopers and commando forces.

Israeli forces killed more than 50 terrorists, including a Hamas company commander, at the start of the military assault, the IDF said on Monday evening. JNS

Source: Matzav

GOP Lawmakers Want Trump to Focus on Economy, Immigration

0

(CQ-Roll Call/TNS) — Republican lawmakers, many of whom speak to Donald Trump regularly, want the 2024 GOP presidential front-runner to hammer a campaign message focused on immigration and the economy, saying that is where President Joe Biden is most vulnerable.

Trump weaved those two issues into the backbone of a conservative populist message during his successful 2016 White House bid. After the COVID-19 pandemic shook up every aspect of life and hamstrung the economy, then-President Trump’s 2020 reelection campaign message, by necessity, was more disjointed, and Biden prevailed.

GOP lawmakers, even if they have endorsed other candidates in their party’s ongoing presidential primary, said Biden has made a mess of the U.S.-Mexico border and is not enforcing immigration laws. The same Republican members said their constituents complain daily about still-high prices, even as inflation rates have eased, and believe Biden has bungled a fundamentally strong economy that Trump left him.

They see Trump as uniquely suited to pounce. But they say he must stay on message and not allow his legal troubles to water down what, so far, has been a campaign focused on promises to drastically reduce immigration and shape an economy in which houses, cars, fuel and everyday items will somehow be more affordable.

“I think, right now, on the current course and speed, he wins a general election,” Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., said of Trump. “I think a lot of it depends on tone and priorities. … The American people want somebody to give them optimism, and give them a sense that the next four years are going to be … a lot better than the last four.”

Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., said he would advise the former president to focus on three issues: “The border. The border. And the economy.” He suggested Trump could turn the situation at the southern border into two issues; saying “the border” would fire up his GOP base and “immigration” would appeal to the independent voters in the key swing states analysts and strategists have said likely will decide the election.

“I just think the reason Donald Trump is doing so well is because of the issue that’s so easy to compare the two candidates. … It really is the southern border,” Cramer said, then turning to the economy: “The economy is recovering a little bit, but things are still not catching up. Obviously, people’s wages aren’t catching up to the inflation.”

But the situation at the southern border, which even some Democratic lawmakers now call a “crisis,” is mentioned more and more by voters, Cramer added, saying: “I hear it most often. … And I think it’s the independent voters that it resonates the most with, absolutely.”

GOP lawmakers interviewed late last week said Trump should emphasize talking about issues most on GOP and independent voters’ minds. But that does not mean they would prefer he talk less about his various court cases or drop his sharp-tongued style.

“Oh, yeah. They definitely do,” Cramer replied when asked if his constituents say they worry that Trump’s campaign rally lines about federal and state prosecutors targeting them could come true. “Independents, they’re just looking at the result. And I think that they’re becoming more and more concerned about the outcomes than they are about the personalities.”

Biden, so far, has struggled to find a reelection message about the economy that resonates with most voters. Trump has at times boiled his pitch down to a straightforward line — while the sitting president often sounds like an economics professor, with his talk of an economy that grows from the “middle out and bottom up” rather than the “top down.”

Here was Trump on Dec. 5 during a prime-time Fox News interview: “Who doesn’t want strong borders and a strong military and low taxes and low interest rates, and go out and buy a house?” Appearing on Fox News on Monday morning, Trump was in step with lawmakers’ advice, saying at one point: “We had the best border in the history of our country. We’re going to have that within 30 days. … I have all the people ready to go. … We’re going to get rid of inflation very quickly.” In both instances, he offered no policy proposals that might turn those promises into realities.

Polls have shown for months that most voters believe Trump and Republicans are better equipped at handling immigration and the economy. Biden campaign officials contend they are not worried about those numbers right now, making a big bet that once voters get serious about the general election later this year, they will see it as a choice between Biden and Trump.

“Talking about bringing back American jobs to this country, talking about taking on these big multinational companies that have been selling out our workers, closing down our border, getting wages growing again. I mean, I just think that’s what he ran on in 2016,” said Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo.

“That’s why he became the Republican nominee against all odds. That’s why he won that [2016] general election against all odds, against all predictions,” he added. “So, I just think that’s the right message. It’s not one that’s welcomed by the Republican establishment at this time at all. They hate all of that stuff. … But if we’re not in a working-class party, we’re not going to be a majority party, ever.”

When Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis dropped out of the GOP primary on Sunday, he posted a video on social media in which he described Trump as the Republican voters’ preference. Trump’s lone remaining primary foe, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, told CNN on Monday the former president is too focused on “investigations” and “the past” and “vengeance.” Within Haley’s critique was a call for Republican 2024 candidates to emphasize “solutions of the future.”

South Carolina GOP Rep. Ralph Norman, who endorsed Haley, a former two-term Palmetto State governor, said late last week he did not believe Trump needs to alter his campaign trail message one bit.

In fact, Norman said the only reason he endorsed Haley was age.

“You don’t play a football game to win the first half,” he said. “You’ve got to have eight years [as president]. You’re not going to do that when you’re almost 80.”

In a telling anecdote that provides merely the latest data point about the grip the 77-year-old Trump maintains on the party, Norman said he called Trump to give him a heads-up before announcing his endorsement of Haley. How did Trump respond, according to Norman? “He was very benevolent about it.”

Trump is going to be Trump, the GOP lawmakers all noted. And that means he might listen to his party mates, and the members said they speak with him on the phone regularly. But they all said the candidate himself will set the tone and priorities of what could be his final White House bid.

“It kind of sounds like I’m giving him advice,” Hawley said with a smile. “He doesn’t need advice from me.”

Source: Hamodia

Elise Stefanik Generates VP Speculation As She Campaigns With Trump

0

MANCHESTER, N.H. – Standing in a packed room at the Trump campaign office here, Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) delivered a quintessential Trumpian speech. She drew cheers from the crowd as she declared that “we need to build the wall.” She ripped “Bidenomics.” And she reiterated Donald Trump’s claims of a weaponized judicial system.

“They’re trying to remove President Trump from the ballot in multiple states; you see them, witch hunt after witch hunt,” she told supporters. “They’re doing it because they know that Donald J. Trump, President Trump, is going to win and beat Joe Biden.”

One person cheered “VP” as she finished her remarks. When she approached reporters, Stefanik echoed Trump again, asking attendees, “Trump supporters, are we ready to take questions from the fake media?” It was Stefanik’s second public appearance in the Granite State in less than 24 hours for Trump, as he and his allies are hoping for a decisive win Tuesday that will bring an early end to the Republican nomination process.

Stefanik, the No. 4 House Republican, symbolizes the shift of GOP officials in the Trump era. Once a Trump critic – a view for which she was celebrated among Republicans who had opposed his 2016 presidential bid – Stefanik has risen within the party over the years and fully embraced Trump. But her drop-in trip to New Hampshire, as well as visits from Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), has prompted speculation beyond the state’s primary: Who would Trump pick as his vice president if he becomes the nominee?

During Trump’s 2016 campaign, Stefanik said that his behavior toward women was “offensive” and “just wrong,” and that she would “absolutely oppose” some of his foreign policy. She defied Trump on several policies, including her party’s tax cut bill, and disagreed with his pledge to withdraw from the Paris climate accord.

But her view and approach toward Trump changed. Her evolution from moderate to MAGA began after Democrats sought to impeach him over his effort to pressure Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate his rival, Biden. Stefanik thought the impeachment was a sham and was furious about how Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), chair of the Intelligence Committee, led the effort, a sentiment widely shared by Republicans, according to numerous GOP aides and lawmakers who have spoken to her. It led her to become a fierce Trump defender in Congress and on conservative television. Trump embraced her as a “Republican star.”

When asked about being a potential choice for vice president in a phone interview, Stefanik responded: “I’d be honored to serve in the Trump administration in any capacity,” saying she’s “focused on being a surrogate.” Stefanik added that she is friends with other surrogates whose names come up as potential veep picks, adding that “we are showing a full-court press.”

Even as Trump seemed to suggest at a Fox News town hall in Iowa that he knew whom he’d pick, his campaign has tamped down speculation about whom they are eying for the vice presidency should Trump win the nomination.

“President Trump is focused on winning New Hampshire and securing the Republican nomination for president,” senior adviser Jason Miller said. “There will be a time and place for VP discussions, but that isn’t now. Anyone claiming to have some ‘inside scoop’ is in fact fake news.”

In the same interview with The Washington Post, Stefanik said her support for Trump “goes back a long way,” adding that she was proud “to be the leading voice” during the former president’s first impeachment. She and her aides noted ads from her Democratic opponent Mike Derrick in 2016 hitting her as the “only Republican woman from the northeast to still support Trump” while quoting other Republicans who said they could not support him. At the time, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and then-Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.), the other two GOP women elected from the northeast, said they did not back Trump.

After GOP Conference Chair Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) was removed from her leadership position in 2021 because of her constant criticism of Trump and the Republicans who defended him, Stefanik, who had become one of Trump’s most ardent allies even after his attempt to overturn the 2020 election and following the Jan. 6, 2021, attack by his supporters on the Capitol, was elected by House Republicans to the position tasked with GOP messaging.

While Cheney had a more conservative voting record than Stefanik’s, she was ousted from her leadership position because she did not support Trump’s baseless claim that the 2020 election was stolen.

But Stefanik has since passed over opportunities to run for higher leadership positions. In part, she realized it would be a tough fight against other candidates for whip but also made the calculation, according to people close to her, that a senior leadership position was going to be politically risky in a slim majority.

Stefanik’s rise followed her turnabout in her view on Trump’s claims about stolen elections. In 2016, after Trump said he was concerned about “rigged” polls showing him trailing Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, she said she disagreed with Trump, who beat Clinton. But when Trump falsely said the 2020 election was stolen, she supported some of his claims.

She falsely said that in Georgia, “more than 140,000 votes came from underage, deceased and otherwise unauthorized voters in Fulton County alone,” a claim refuted by Georgia election officials and given four Pinocchios by The Post’s Fact Checker. She signed on to a failed lawsuit filed by Texas’s attorney general that sought the rejection of the presidential vote in Wisconsin, Michigan, Georgia and Pennsylvania, all of which were won by Biden. She voted against certifying Biden’s win in Pennsylvania.

Speaking recently on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” she stood by her vote against certifying the Pennsylvania results, accusing the state of “unconstitutional overreach.” After the interviewer noted that Stefanik had said that the Jan. 6 rioters “must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” she was asked whether she agreed with Trump’s statement that Jan. 6 was a “beautiful day” and that some of those who went to jail are “hostages.”

She responded by accusing NBC of being biased and said she believed that “Joe Biden will be found to be the most corrupt president in our nation’s history.” Pressed to answer the question, she responded: “I have concerns about the treatment of January 6th hostages.” The Trump team loved the interview, according to two people familiar with their sentiments.

As for the 2024 election, Stefanik has said she would not commit to certifying the results. “We will see if this is a legal and valid election,” she said.

In the interview with The Post, Stefanik said she speaks to Trump “frequently” and described her district in New York as “the story of the evolution of the Republican Party: and the growing support for President Trump that we are seeing from hard-working families.”

Many of Stefanik’s colleagues on Capitol Hill see her as angling to become vice president. One vulnerable New York Republican, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the matter candidly, said: “She’s auditioning.”

Another vulnerable House member suggested Stefanik has a balance to strike between being in leadership and pursuing higher ambitions.

“I think when you’re in leadership, it can look like it’s annoying for rank and file,” that member said. “But if you’re in leadership and you’re thinking of higher office, you’re going to have to throw out there what gets people’s attention.”

For the past several cycles, Stefanik has focused on electing more Republican women. She is also now working to ensure Republicans from her home state win reelection. And she has been encouraging House Republicans to endorse Trump, telling them it will help motivate the GOP base.

Stefanik recently received praise from conservatives for her role in a congressional hearing with the presidents of Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for their handling of antisemitism on campus. Stefanik later took credit for the resignations of Harvard President Claudine Gay and Penn President Liz Magill.

At a campaign event in Concord, N.H., last week where Stefanik also spoke, Trump praised the New York Republican for her committee performance, even as he mispronounced her last name in the speech: “That was such a beautiful delivery, did she destroy those three people.”

Voters attending Stefanik’s campaign event on Shabbos said that she was among the candidates they’d like to see join Trump on the ticket, along with tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and other members of Congress.

Marie Tontodonato, 68, of Hampton, N.H., described Stefanik as a “front-runner.”

“She supports Trump, and she’s been pushing for him in Congress and her home state; she’s just like one of us,” Tontodonato said. As for vice president, she said she’d like to see “either her or Kristi Noem. I’d like to see a woman. And Ben Carson. Those are my three picks.”

Source: Matzav/(c) 2024 , The Washington Post · Marianne LeVine, Michael Kranish, Leigh Ann Caldwell 

Elon Musk Visits Auschwitz-Birkenau in Response to Antisemitism Backlash

0

KRAKOW, Poland (AP) — Elon Musk visited the site of the Auschwitz-Birkenau World War II Nazi German death camp on Monday, after the billionaire faced criticism for subscribing to an antisemitic conspiracy theory and allowing hate messages on his social media platform, X, formerly known as Twitter.

The private visit was apparently in response to calls from some Jewish religious leaders for Musk to see with his own eyes the most symbolic site of the horrors of the Holocaust.

Musk was photographed visiting the Birkenau site. Birkenau is an area near Oswiecim, in southern Poland, fenced off with barbed wire, where wooden barracks that were simple shelters for the inmates and the ruins of a gas chamber can be found and where a monument to the victims stands.

Musk had been expected to make the visit on Tuesday, together with political figures attending a conference of the European Jewish Association on the rise of antisemitism.

Later Monday, Musk was to discuss antisemitism online as part of a conference by the European Jewish Association held in Krakow ahead of the Jan. 27 International Holocaust Remembrance Day, which takes place on the anniversary of the camp’s 1945 liberation.

Musk sparked outcry in November with his own posts responding to a user who accused Jews of hating white people and professing indifference to antisemitism. “You have said the actual truth,” Musk tweeted in a reply.

After advertisers starting pulling out of X, Musk said the post was the “dumbest” he had ever written.

 

Source: Poland

Israeli Military Confirms Expanding Khan Yunis Offensive

0
By Pesach Benson • 22 January, 2024

Jerusalem, 22 January, 2024 (TPS) — The Israel Defense Forces confirmed on Monday evening it expanding its offensive in the southern Gaza city of Khan Yunis.

The IDF said it launched a combined attack of four brigades on the west of Khan Yunis, encircling and maneuvering within the Khan Yunis refugee camp. The goal is to dismantle Hamas’s military capabilities in the area.

The military said 50 terrorists were eliminated in air strikes since this morning including a Hamas company commander planning attacks on Israeli forces, the IDF said.

“West Khan Yunis is a sensitive area, which has many humanitarian shelters, hospitals and other sensitive sites. The IDF is preparing for ‘legitimacy traps’ that Hamas will try to carry out,” the announcement added.

Khan Yunis is Gaza’s second largest city and is regarded as a personal stronghold of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, whose family lives there. On Thursday, Israeli forces raided a compound belonging to the Southern Battalion of Hamas’ Khan Yunis Brigade in the IDF’s southernmost activity so far.

At least 1,200 people were killed in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on Oct. 7. The number of men, women, children, soldiers and foreigners held captive in Gaza by Hamas is now believed to be 136. Other people remain unaccounted for as Israeli authorities continue to identify bodies and search for human remains.

Dr. Mindy Boxer – Healing Trauma with Acupuncture

Trauma can be emotional or physical and carries a weight with it for those who suffer from a traumatic event and the longer post-traumatic stress that can come from it. Fortunately, we live in a time where help is available. Since acupuncture subscribes to the whole mind/body/spirit healing approach to balancing energy and achieving complete wellness, it makes sense that acupuncture could be a helpful tool to treating various forms of trauma and its impact on both the mind and body.

A paper from Boston University by Danielle Rousseau explained it well: “The way acupuncture can aid in trauma recovery is by alleviating the symptoms either directly or residually caused by the event. For example, after a car accident, an individual might suffer pain in their neck and experience anxiety whenever they are in a car again. Acupuncture can help to relieve the neck pain that both hinders quality of life and acts as a constant reminder of the accident. Chronic pain is also a common side effect of adverse childhood experiences. When an adult comes in for therapy with a long history of repeat traumas, alleviating physical pain is a great starting point to begin recovery. This allows for a greater sense of control in one’s own body and opens doors for further therapeutic practices like yoga and exercise that would not have been possible with chronic pain. Acupuncture may not be the cure-all that therapists and researchers are looking for to help their patients overcome past traumas but its longstanding history and overwhelming success rate for non-trauma related pain demands more research be conducted on the practice’s effects on trauma.”

With its whole-body approach, acupuncture is a holistic option to treat both the physical symptoms that can come from experiencing trauma as well as the processing of emotions that follows. And the research is backing this up. A 2007 randomized controlled pilot trial found that, “acupuncture may be an efficacious and acceptable non exposure treatment option for PTSD.”

2019 study from Italy found that acupuncture improved both the mental and physical symptoms associated with PTSD. Researchers looked at the effects of acupuncture on survivors of a major earthquake in Italy that caused 300 deaths and left 30,000 people homeless. Researchers found that prior to treatment, approximately 70% of the study subjects reported symptoms associated with PTSD. They also found that after the third acupuncture treatment both the physical symptoms like musculoskeletal pain and mental symptoms like anxiety and depression from the trauma significantly improved with 60% of the patients in the study.

If you suffer from the effects of trauma, please contact me.  I will complete a comprehensive health history to not only address your symptoms but help you address the underlying mental and emotional impacts as well. Acupuncture’s goal is always to restore balance to the whole body. Make an appointment today and begin your mind/body healing journey.

Dr. Mindy Boxer is a holistic practitioner who has grown into her specialties in an organic way. Understanding a range of disciplines allows her to integrate the wisdom of Ancient healing in combination with the most recent innovations in Scientific research. This dynamic blend has enabled Dr. Boxer to help patients in the prevention and treatment of disease for over 25 years.
At age 15, Dr. Boxer began her lifelong practice of Yoga & Meditation, read many Nutrition books, began Juicing her Vegetables, and explored and all Raw Diet.  Recognizing the importance of Nutrition in overall health, she earned her Ph.D. in 1986 in Nutrition and Human Behavior, providing her with a solid foundation to counsel and educate patients on how to attain health and vitality.
Her informative Lectures and appetizing Cooking Classes were the perfect forum to educate the community about the effects of food on Mood and Behavior, as well as in innovative ways to balance Body Chemistry in order to achieve overall well being.
Sensing a need to expand her training and understanding of the human body as a whole system, Dr. Boxer continued her studies in Acupuncture & Chinese Herbal Medicine,  and in 1993 earned a Masters Degree in Traditional Oriental Medicine. She is licensed by the Medical Board of the State of California in Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine and is also licensed by the National Certification Commission for Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine.
These diverse disciplines give Dr. Boxer a unique view of the human body and how to keep it functioning in an optimal manner. Her practice of Acupuncture, Chinese Herbs and Functional Nutrition have a profound effect on Hormonal balance, Rejuvenation, and Immune system enhancement.

Dr. Boxer has a particularly keen understanding of Women’s Health issues including Gynecological irregularity, PMS, Fertility, IUI & UVF support, Healthy Pregnancy & Delivery, and Menopausal issues. Her interest in the human body as a dynamic system has given her the understanding to deal with such problems as improper Digestion and elimination, Cancer Support, Allergies, back pain, tight neck and shoulders, carpal tunnel syndrome, respiratory distress, chronic fatigue, Insomnia, Stress, Anxiety and Depression.
She has also studied the art and science of Homeopathy, earning her Diplomate in Homeopathy from the Hahnemann College of Homeopathy in 1995. This allows her to treat the whole person — physically, mentally, emotionally.

Phyllis Shallman – Revolutionize Your Financial Journey

0
Embarking on a financial empowerment journey involves more than just understanding money…

it’s about reshaping your entire approach to financial decisions. This guide isn’t just a set of instructions; it’s a comprehensive map to redefine monetary interactions and establish wise financial habits. No matter your background in finance, you possess the innate ability to master your financial destiny.

This guide delves into more than basic budgeting or saving. It’s a deep dive into the psychology of spending and a commitment to continuous financial education. It involves weekly finance sessions and challenging deep-rooted economic beliefs, drastically altering your financial perspective.

Be prepared to question your assumptions, face your financial fears, and embrace accountability. This isn’t just a pathway to financial health; it’s a journey towards true empowerment.
?

Weekly Financial Habits: The Path to Empowerment

Dedicate a weekly session to your finances. Starting with just 20 minutes and gradually increasing to an hour, these sessions allow a deep exploration of your financial landscape. Cover topics like budgeting, investing, and debt management. Use this time to set goals, track progress, and expand your knowledge through resources like books and podcasts. This ongoing commitment will cultivate a prosperous financial future, enhancing your understanding and decision-making abilities in finance.
?

Gaining Control: Starting with Small Steps

Initially, focus on organizing your finances, reviewing transactions, and understanding your spending patterns. As you grow more comfortable, tackle more considerable challenges like reducing expenses and seeking professional advice. This approach transforms daunting tasks into manageable activities, laying a solid foundation for your financial future.
?

Embracing Responsibility: The Key to Financial Literacy

You’re not alone if you lack a formal financial education. The key is acknowledging your current financial standing and taking proactive steps towards literacy. This journey allows you to make informed choices, set realistic goals, and devise a sustainable financial plan.
?

Aligning Spending with Reality: A Pragmatic Approach

Align your spending with your actual financial situation to avoid debt traps. Assess your income and expenses, and identify essential costs. Modern budgeting tools and apps like Copilot can help you manage your finances effectively. This approach controls spending, avoids debt, and helps achieve financial goals.
?

Establishing an Emergency Fund: Your Safety Net

Create an emergency fund to protect against unexpected financial strains. Store it in a high-yield savings account to ensure accessibility and minimize impulsive use. This fund provides security and peace of mind.
?

Prioritizing Expenses: Essential vs. Non-Essential

Effectively manage your finances by distinguishing between essential and discretionary spending. Allocate income wisely, ensuring stability and security. Consider separate accounts for better tracking and discipline.
?

Building Financial Resilience

Strive for financial stability by saving and investing wisely. Start small and increase contributions as feasible. A robust financial future offers wealth, peace of mind, and growth opportunities.
?

Understanding Financial Psychology

Explore the underlying causes of your spending habits. Reflect on your upbringing, emotional triggers, and beliefs about money. This introspection helps identify patterns hindering your progress, paving the way for positive change.
?

Continuous Learning for Financial Growth

Strengthen your financial basics for transformative life changes. Resources like “HowMoneyWorks: Stop Being a Sucker” offer practical steps to improve economic behavior. Embrace this opportunity for personal growth and financial empowerment.
?

Embracing the Financial Journey

Financial empowerment is more than money management; it’s about aligning your lifestyle with your goals and values. It involves gaining knowledge and skills for informed decisions and building a foundation for long-term well-being. Take the first step into financial education and let it catalyze positive change. The path may be challenging, but the rewards are substantial. Embrace the journey, the growth, and the transformation that awaits.

Biden Finally Admits Border Isn’t Secure, Believes ‘Massive Changes’ Needed: ‘I’m Ready To Act’

0

President Biden acknowledged on Friday that the US-Mexico border is not secure, contradicting Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. Biden made this admission after expressing support for “massive changes” in immigration policy during a speech to a bipartisan group of mayors in the White House East Room. He emphasized the need for significant policy changes, particularly in the asylum system, to gain better control over border security. Biden urged action from House Republicans, challenging them to decide whether they are willing to address the issue or continue politicizing it.

“No, it’s not,” Biden said when asked whether the frontier was secure.

“I believe we need significant policy changes at the border, including changes in our asylum system to ensure that we have the authorities we need to control the border. I’m ready to act,” the president said. “Now the question is for the [House] Speaker [Mike Johnson] and the House Republicans: Are they ready to act as well?” Biden added. “They have to choose whether they want to solve a problem or keep weaponizing the issue to score political points against the president. I’m ready to solve the problem. I really am,” he added. “Massive changes, and I mean it sincerely.”

In his speech, President Biden voiced his hope for Senate negotiators to announce a compromise on border policy in the coming week. This compromise is expected to be part of a broader $106 billion supplemental spending request, covering military aid for Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan. Biden expressed readiness to act on the necessary changes at the border and called on House Republicans to join in solving the problem. He emphasized his commitment to substantial and sincere reforms.

The specifics of asylum policy changes that could garner support from the White House, Senate Democrats, and House Republicans remain uncertain. The current administration’s policy allows almost all migrants illegally crossing the border to enter the US and await asylum proceedings, granting them work permits after an initial waiting period. President Biden ended the “Remain in Mexico” policy implemented by former President Trump, which required asylum seekers to stay south of the border while awaiting case rulings.

Despite contradicting Mayorkas’ claims that the border is secure, Biden defended his Homeland Security chief when questioned about House Republican efforts to impeach and remove him. The president expressed confusion about the move and reiterated his commitment to addressing the ongoing migrant crisis, which has led to record-breaking numbers of illegal crossings.

Biden faced criticism for his handling of the border situation, particularly after December witnessed an all-time high in illegal crossings. Responding to critiques, the president sarcastically remarked about misleading portrayals of his stance on open borders.

“I love how I turned on [TV] and, ‘Biden is for a free and open border, just tear down everything — everybody come, no restrictions,’” the president sarcastically remarked during his speech.

He defended his record by referencing reform legislation sent to Congress in 2021, aiming to legalize most migrants currently in the US illegally. Additionally, he noted a request for more border security funds made in October, following a fiscal year that saw an all-time record for unlawful crossings.

Source: {Matzav.com}

Brutally Cold Weather Reaches Deep Into Lower United States, Causing Dozens of Deaths

0

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Much of the U.S. remained gripped by deadly Arctic weather Sunday — with subfreezing conditions reaching as far south as Texas and Florida. But the numbing cold is expected to ease up in the coming days.

Freezing rain, sleet and high wind gusts later Sunday would make traveling in parts of Kansas and Oklahoma particularly treacherous, the National Weather Service said. Wind chills in Iowa made it feel like minus 20 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 7 degrees Celsius) in some parts.

But the end of subzero temperatures — which blasted into the U.S. on Friday — was in sight for parts of the country. The daily high temperatures in Iowa’s capital of Des Moines, for example, were expected to stay above freezing starting Monday.

‘With no additional replenishment of arctic air from Canada, a steady warm-up is in store for the mid-section of the country,” the weather service said.

Still, the cold was felt especially by people unaccustomed to such bitter cold in places like Memphis, Tennessee, where residents were urged to boil water and some had no water at all after freezing temperatures broke water mains across the city. Temperatures weren’t expected to rise until after the weekend.

Winter storms this month claimed at least 67 lives around the U.S., many involving hypothermia or road accidents.

At the Four Way Grill in Memphis, owner Patrice Bates Thompson said the water problems have closed their soul food kitchen for days.

“This is our staple, and this is what basically drives the force of my family financially,” Thompson told Fox-13 Memphis. “We depend on business, and we have been at home.”

So many pipes broke in Memphis that water pressure fell throughout the city. Concerned about possible contamination, Memphis Light, Gas & Water urged its more than 400,000 customers to boil water for drinking or teeth-brushing or use bottled supplies on Saturday while crews worked around the clock to make repairs.

“Our production and treatment of water is working well,” the utility said in an email. “We cannot give restoration estimates until all leaks are identified.”

The utility said more than 100 employees volunteered Saturday to identify breaks, and residents were urged to report leaks in the street, at homes and in unoccupied buildings.

Without water since Thursday morning, Pamela Wells was visited Saturday by a worker who asked whether they had a leak.

“My husband said, ‘How can we have a leak, if we don’t have any water?’” she said.

They had filled a bathtub with water to flush toilets with when they noticed the pressure dropping, Wells said. For everything else they were using a dwindling supply of bottled water until their street became passable on Saturday and friends brought in fresh supplies.

Meanwhile, the Memphis City Council opened seven bottled water distribution stations on Saturday, one in each council district. Two others were operating at fire stations. One had 300 cars lined up when it opened on Saturday, Shelby County Emergency Management Director Brenda Jones said in a telephone interview.

“You have people with absolutely no water, people with low water pressure, and you have the boil water advisory,” she said.

Tennessee alone recorded 26 deaths, including a 25-year-old man found dead on the floor of a mobile home in Lewisburg after a space heater overturned and turned off, said Bob Johnson, chief deputy for the Marshall County Sheriff’s Office.

“There was ice on the walls in there,” Johnson said.

On the West Coast, more freezing rain was forecast in the Columbia River Gorge and the area was expected to remain near or below freezing through at least Sunday night. Trees and power lines already coated with ice could topple if they get more, the National Weather Service warned.

“Stay safe out there over the next several days as our region tries to thaw out,” the weather service said. “Chunks of falling ice will remain a hazard as well.”

The weather service forecast above-average temperatures across most of the country next week. Meanwhile, not everyone hated the white stuff.

“It’s fun right now,” Michigan City resident Andrew Smith told WBBM-TV. “We haven’t had this much snow in a minute, and Christmas wasn’t snowy, so it’s fun to do this. I can play with the kids, make snowballs, make a snowman.”

Source: VosIzNeias

Ron DeSantis Drops Out of Presidential Race, Endorses Trump

0

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis announced Sunday that he was ending his bid for the Republican nomination in the 2024 presidential election and endorsed former President Donald Trump.

DeSantis said, in a video posted to social media, that he did not see a path forward.

In endorsing Trump, DeSantis said and that while he had had disagreements with him over Covid and other issues, the former president is a superior alternative to both President Joe Biden, and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, the latter of whom he blasted, referring to her to as representing the “old republican guard,” and a “repackaged form of warmed over corporatism.”

“If there was anything I could do to produce a favorable outcome, more campaign stops, more interviews, I would do it,” DeSantis said in his video message. “But I can’t ask our supporters to volunteer their time and donate their resources if we don’t have a clear path to victory. Accordingly, I am today suspending my campaign.”

The governor, who won not only a resounding victory in the typically vacillating state of Florida, succeeded in forming a GOP-dominated legislature and congressional makeup in his second term.

DeSantis, announcing his long-anticipated candidacy in May, was once favored by many elites in the conservative movement as a rising, younger star and the top alternative to former President Donald Trump.

Trump, in his usual style, hammered DeSantis on the campaign trail, giving him one of his signature “nicknames” used to mock his opponents and critics – Ron “DeSanctimonious.”

But Trump quickly changed gears after DeSantis endorsed him.

“With only a few days left until President Donald J. Trump’s victory in New Hampshire, we are honored by the endorsement from Governor Ron DeSantis and so many other former presidential candidates,” Trump said in a statement. “It is now time for all Republicans to rally behind President Trump,” Trump added.

DeSantis only briefly came within striking distance of the former president, managing to lead him in a December 2022 USAToday/Suffolk University poll, prior to DeSantis declaring his candidacy. Subsequent polls had him trailing Trump consistently. He had also fallen far behind Haley in recent polls taken in New Hampshire, the next stop on the road to the nomination.

According to a poll released recently by CNN and the University of New Hampshire, DeSantis only has 6% support in the state. Trump received 50%, and U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, who placed third in Iowa, had 39%.

DeSantis had finished second in last week’s Iowa caucus, earning 21% of the vote and picking up nine delegates.

Trump, whose base supporters are similar ideologically to DeSantis’, will likely pick up more support.

Prior to running for president, DeSantis had worked with Trump.

Earlier Sunday, before DeSantis’ announcement, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) said he would welcome the governor back into the Trump camp.

“I remember the good old days when I was Ron DeSantis’s transition chairman and he and President Trump worked so well together,” Gaetz, a top Trump supporter, told a crowd.

“I hate when mom and dad fight,” he said, and was met with laughs from the audience. “It turns out we might get Ron DeSantis back on side pretty soon and I would welcome that.”

Haley, in a statement given after DeSantis’ announcement, praised him as a “good governor,” and wished him well.

“So far, only one state has voted,” the statement continued.

“Half of its votes went to Donald Trump and half did not. We’re not a country of coronations. Voters deserve a say in whether we go down the road of Trump and Biden again or we go down a new conservative road.

“New Hampshire voters will have their say on Tuesday. When I’m president, I will do everything in my power to show them they made the right decision.”

However, Haley, who has steered clear of personal attacks on Trump, has taken aim at her former boss in recent days, questioning his mental capabilities and citing his age.

“He’s just not at the same level he was in 2016,” the former South Carolina governor said of Trump Sunday, in an interview with CBS.” “I think we’re seeing some of that decline.”

“He claimed that Joe Biden was going to get us into World War II. I’m assuming he meant World War III,” she said. “He said that he ran against President Obama. He never ran against President Obama. He says that I’m the one that kept security from the Capitol on January 6th. I was nowhere near the Capitol on January 6th.

“Don’t be surprised if you have someone that’s 80 in office, their mental stability is going to continue to decline,” Haley added.

Unlike the last competitive GOP primary in 2016, which started off with over a dozen candidates and still had five going into delegate-rich Super Tuesday, the race is now down to only two who have significant support; Haley and Trump.

Following the Iowa caucus, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, who came in fourth place and picked up three delegates, suspended his campaign. Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, who received a fraction of 1%, also bowed out. In November, Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) quit the race.

Source: Hamodia

WP Twitter Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com