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UNBOARABLE – Israeli Hogs Gone Wild: Haifa has a Serious Problem and its Mayor is AWOL

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With a shooting ban in place, the invasion of wild pigs started in earnest during the pandemic-induced lockdowns, and residents are furious.

The Haifa municipality is meeting Tuesday in a special session dedicated to – wild pigs, Walla News reported Monday.

Residents of Israel’s third-largest city are furious at Mayor Dr. Einat Kalisch-Rotem for not dealing with an invasion of wild boars that began to make the news during the Covid-19 lockdowns, when streets emptied for months at a time, giving the animals free rein.

“I just drove over now to come pick up the boy, nearly 13, from a class nearby because he’s afraid to walk alone because of the pigs,” one Haifa grandmother in a car with her grandson told the news site.

The boars constantly roam the streets, ripping up public and private gardens along with their piglets and destroying garbage bins in search of food.

They have taken over playgrounds and even waded in swimming pools, said the report. But when they walk in the streets, the nuisance can become a serious hazard. According to one resident, they have caused a number of car accidents on the main roads of the city.

Although boars don’t often grow to their maximum of two meters long, even the smaller animals are strong and can be dangerous. In the last few months, there have been reports of a girl being bitten and an elderly man being attacked and needing treatment in a hospital. A year ago, a man was right next to his home when a boar rammed into him, breaking his leg in five places, leaving him bedbound and then in physical therapy for months.

At least one resident has sued the municipality for unnamed damages and won compensation. Lawyer Aviad Vissuli has threatened court action as well, warning in a letter to the mayor already six months ago that one day a boar vs. human confrontation could have fatal consequences.

“Haifa has become a warning to the whole country due to the municipality’s failure to get rid of the wild boars from the streets of the city,” he said, “which is deterring residents and visitors from coming.”

Incursions of boars have been a periodic problem in Haifa; they did not just appear out of the blue last year with the shutdowns. The city began having them shot in a controlled culling program in 2012 in order to keep the numbers down. However, when Kalisch-Rotem was elected mayor at the end of 2018, she ordered a ban on thinning out the animal population, in line with the wishes of animal rights activists.

As of now, Vissuli maintains that the city doesn’t even acknowledge the size of the problem, let alone doing anything about it, which is “more negligence on the municipality’s part.”

Conservative estimates put the number at around 2,000 pigs, given their average rate of reproduction and the fact that they have no natural enemies. One city council member, Yitzhak Balas, who spoke about the crisis already last June, thinks it’s more like 7,000, said the Walla report.

The municipality responded in a statement that it is “using all proven methods to distance the boars from residential neighborhoods…focusing on preventing food and water sources that are the main factors attracting the boars.” They have also recently received permission from the Nature and Parks Authority to trap the animals “in places where human-boar encounters have been reported.”

(World Israel News).

 

The list is growing: Major European nations suspend use of AstraZeneca shot. WHO says it’s safe

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Germany, Austria, France, Spain and Italy become latest EU nations to announce temporary ban; European Medicines Agency tries to allay concerns, claiming there are no known health risks.

Austria, Germany, France, Spain and Italy on Monday became the latest countries to suspend the use of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine over reports of dangerous blood clots in some recipients, though the company, European regulators and the World Health Organization have said there is no evidence that the shot is to blame.

Germany’s health minister said the decision was taken on the advice of the country’s vaccine regulator, the Paul Ehrlich Institute, which called for further investigation into seven reported cases of clots in the brains of people who had been vaccinated.

“Today’s decision is a purely precautionary measure,” Jens Spahn said.

French President Emmanuel Macron said his country would likewise suspend shots at least until Tuesday afternoon, when the European Union’s drug regulatory agency will weigh in on the vaccine. He said France hopes to resume using the formula soon.

Italy’s medicines regulator and Spain’s health minister also announced a precautionary, temporary ban.

AstraZeneca said on its website that there have been 37 reports of blood clots out of more than 17 million people vaccinated in the 27-country European Union and Britain. The drug maker said there is no evidence that the vaccine carries an increased risk of clots.

In fact, it said the incidence of clots is much lower than would be expected to occur naturally in a general population of this size and is similar to that of other licensed COVID-19 vaccines.

The European Medicines Agency and the World Health Organization (WHO) have also said that the data does not suggest the vaccine caused the clots and that people should continue to be immunized.

Dr. Soumya Swaminathan of the WHO said Monday that officials at the UN health agency “don’t want people to panic” even as close monitoring of the vaccine’s use continues. She said a review is underway that could produce updated recommendations as early as Tuesday.

Swaminathan noted that some 300 million doses of a variety of coronavirus vaccines have been given to people around the world, and “there is no documented death that has been linked to a COVID vaccine.”

She said the rates at which blood clots have occurred in people who received the AstraZeneca vaccine “are in fact less than what you would expect in the general population.”

The AstraZeneca shot has become a key tool in European countries’ efforts to vaccinate their citizens against COVID-19. But Pfizer’s and Moderna’s vaccines are also used on the continent, and Johnson & Johnson’s one-shot vaccine has been authorized, though not yet delivered.

In the US, which relies on the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, AstraZeneca is expected to apply any day now for authorization.

Blood clots can travel through the body and cause heart attacks, strokes, and deadly blockages in the lungs. AstraZeneca reported 15 cases of deep vein thrombosis, or a type of clot that often develops in the legs, and 22 instances of pulmonary embolisms, or clots in the lungs.

Denmark last week became the first country to temporarily halt the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine in recent days to investigate. It said one person developed clots and died 10 days after receiving at least one dose. The other countries include Ireland, Indonesia, Thailand, the Netherlands, Norway, Iceland, Congo, and Bulgaria.

Last week, Germany and France were among the nations that stuck by the shot, while Italy suspended only a specific batch of the vaccine. Britain is standing by AstraZeneca’s vaccine for now.

Spahn, the German health minister, said of the decision to suspend the AstraZeneca shot: “The most important thing for confidence is transparency.” He said both first and second doses of the vaccine would be affected by the suspension.

German authorities have encouraged anyone who feels increasingly ill more than four days after receiving the shot — for example, with persistent headaches or dot-shaped bruises — to seek medical attention.

Germany has received slightly over 3 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine. Spahn said about 1.6 million doses of the shot have so far been administered in the country.

(Times of Israel).

Israel Wages ‘Psychological Warfare’ on Hezbollah Terror Boss

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Israeli report shows that Hezbollah terror leader Hassan Nasrallah is “paranoid”, and “obsessed” with Israeli media reports about him.

The IDF is prepared for a military confrontation with the Iran-backed Hezbollah terror group in Lebanon, but without firing a single bullet the Israeli military got under Hezbollah’s skin last week with some old-fashioned psychological warfare against its leader.

On Friday, Israel’s Yediot Aharonoth newspaper published excerpts from an IDF study on Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, the smartly attired leader of Hezbollah whose beard is always perfectly coiffed and whose turban is never at the wrong angle.

The special investigative team of the National Security Agency, which monitors Hezbollah’s movements 24/7, revealed the “Hassan Nasrallah file” for the first time and there was little in it that was complimentary to the long-time terrorist leader.

The profile revealed a “super-intelligent…family man”, but that’s as far as the niceties went.

“Paranoid. Obsessed with the media in the country and reads every word written about him [in the Israeli media],” Yediot reported. “Narcissist. Suffers from vitamin D deficiency due to life in the bunker.”

Despite repeatedly claiming his small force would destroy Israel, Nasrallah has been unable to wage war because he knows that it would bring destruction on Lebanon.

Nasrallah is also under fire in Lebanon for illegally storing the explosives that last year blew up and killed hundreds of Lebanese civilians and destroyed much of the capital city of Beirut. His organization is widely despised by the Lebanese people for its corruption and attempt to take over the country.

The IDF profile revealed that Nasrallah is also having an “an identity crisis.” The in-depth report published photos from Nasrallah’s childhood, showing how deep the Israeli assessment of the enemy went.

The revealing comments about Nasrallah seemed to have worked, as Hezbollah allies slammed the Yediot article

Nasrallah’s friend, the Lebanese Al-Akhbar newspaper editor Ibrahim al-Amin, wrote in an op-ed calling the Yediot article a “professional insult,” “Israeli propaganda” and “bad collusion between the press and the staff of the military and security establishment.”

Al-Amin rejected longstanding Israeli allegations that Nasrallah lives in a bunker to avoid Israeli attacks and is rarely seen in public.

“Nasrallah does not live underground, he travels outside Lebanon, and he moves between cities and villages and in the streets and neighborhoods,” Al-Amin wrote.

However, despite Al-Amin’s claim, the truth is that Nasrallah does not give public speeches and instead delivers addresses on a screen while he sits in a studio at an undisclosed location. That’s been Nasrallah’s standard operating procedure for years out of fear of assassination.

“Publication of the article in the mass-circulated Yediot newspaper is widely seen as part of the ongoing psychological warfare Israel wages with Hezbollah, which has included revelations where the Iranian proxy stores its advanced weapons and tries to manufacture precision guided munitions,” The Jerusalem Post noted.

“Without a doubt, psychological warfare has proven its right to a place of dignity in our military arsenal,” said Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces in Europe against the Nazis who went on to become the 34th President of United States.

(United with Israel).

Washington Post admits ‘misquoting’ Trump in report on phone call with chief Georgia investigator

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The Post had ‘misquoted’ Trump’s comments on the call, based on information ‘provided by a source,’ newspaper admits.

The Washington Post ran a correction on Monday on its bombshell report on former President Donald Trump’s phone call with chief investigator at Georgia State Secretary Office Frances Watson.

The original report had suggested that Trump on December 23, Trump explicitly instructed Watson “to find the fraud,” adding that this would make her “a national hero.”

“The Post misquoted Trump’s comments on the call, based on information provided by a source,” the newspaper acknowledged, adding that the episode did not take place as described above.

On Thursday, the Wall Street Journal released a recording of the phone conversation in question, contesting the WaPo’s account.

In the recording, Trump repeatedly says that he won Georgia and urges Watson to probe the situation in Fulton County.

“When the right answer comes out, you’ll be praised,” he can be heard saying.

“I can assure you that our team and the [Georgia Bureau of Investigation], that we are only interested in the truth and finding the information that is based on the facts,” she replies, as cited by the WSJ.

Trump’s phone conversations with Georgia officials in the wake of the November 3 vote are now being investigated in a criminal probe.

(i24 News).

 

IDF commander: ‘There may be 2,000 missiles a day’

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Head of IDF’s Home Front Command warns that in the next war, Israel’s civilians may field 2,000 rockets each day. ‘Israeli home front will stand strong and steadfast.’

Major General Uri Gordin, Commander of the Home Front Command, on Monday morning spoke about the threat Israel’s next war is expected to present for Israeli civilians.

Speaking at the Besheva conference, Gordin said that according to the relative threat, during the next war the State of Israel can expect 2,000 missiles to be fired at it daily.

“This will challenge both the military and civilian systems,” he warned.

However, he added that “our enemies on the various fronts need to know that if necessary, we will use a forceful military, as we have never done in the past. At the same time, they should know that the Israeli home front, which has proven itself more than once in the past, is strong and will stand steadfast against any challenge it is confronted with.”

“They know that they will not win us in battle, so they are trying to move the battle to the second front, which is our home – by physically harming cities, towns, and villages, and by hurting our spirit via a psychological war. They should know that even on the home front, they will meet an iron, determined, and interconnected fist – and there as well they will suffer total defeat.”

Regarding the Home Front Command’s role in the war against coronavirus, Gordin said: “During the coronavirus crisis, the Home Front Command fulfilled its purpose of strengthening the nation’s resilience and saving lives, perhaps in the most significant way ever. We have a lot of work ahead of us to ensure the pandemic is defeated, while healing the economic and social damage suffered by Israel’s citizens.”

“The Command worked on its widest scale since its founding. Those in the Command worked in local authorities, helped the Health Ministry in hospitals, health clinics, vaccination centers, [coronavirus] testing centers, quarantine and recovery hotels, and, obviously, in the Alon Headquarters, which led the central efforts in the battle against the pandemic’s spread. We need to preserve and leverage the good things that were created as a result of the battle against it – the bridges and cooperation are some of the most important [of these].”

“The faith in us and the correct action of the citizens are a condition for victory in every war or crisis that we will need to deal with in the future,” he concluded.

(Arutz 7).

 

Congressional Republicans attempt to apply brake to Biden admin’s Iran deal re-entry

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GOP lawmakers have introduced a barrage of legislation to prevent giving up sanctions for very little return.

As it becomes increasingly likely – despite US President Joe Biden’s administration’s assurances to the contrary – that America will rejoin the Iran Nuclear Deal, possibly offering Iran major concessions, Republican lawmakers have introduced a raft of legislation to act as a brake to re-entry.

“The eight pieces of legislation address issues including tightening sanctions enforcement, expressing disapproval of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), opposing easing sanctions on Iran and seeking to block the U.S. from reentering the JCPOA entirely,” according to the Jewish Insider (JI).

While some proposals have hardly gained any traction at all, others have received a more favorable response.

One Senate bill that seeks congressional oversight over sanctions reductions has gained 27 cosponsors. Another, which Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR.) introduced, opposes any form of sanctions relief that did not address both Iran’s nuclear program – which it insists is for peaceful, domestic purposes – and the recent attacks on a US base inside Iraq, by an Iranian-backed Shi’ite proxies. This bill has garnered 31 cosponsors.

In the House, these two bills have 24 and 30 cosponsors respectively.

“The concern I’ve got is that the Biden administration wants to roll back our sanctions, just in exchange for reentering the deal. It took us a long time to get the sanctions in place. We’ve got pressure on Iran now that is like never before. And this is not the time to be backing off,” said Rep. Michael McCaul in an interview with JI.

Meanwhile, Rep. Andy Barr (R-KY) was concerned that if “the Biden administration was to jeopardize the national security of Israel, one of our greatest allies, they should go through Congress to do so.”

More broadly, the Republican lawmakers are concerned that the Biden administration was too easily giving up a considerable amount of leverage that has been built up over the last few years, particularly since former President Donald Trump withdrew from the nuclear agreement in 2018 and initiated biting sanctions in a maximum pressure campaign.

(i24 News).

 

North Korean dictator’s sister to Biden: Don’t cause a stink

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Kim Yo Jong, sister of Kim Jong Un, criticizes ongoing military drills in South Korea, warns new US administration against “causing a stink” if it wants peace.

Kim Yo Jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, on Monday criticized ongoing military drills in South Korea and warned the new US administration against “causing a stink” if it wants peace, Reuters reports.

The statement comes a day before America’s top diplomat and defense chief are due to arrive in Seoul for their first talks with South Korean counterparts.

“We take this opportunity to warn the new U.S. administration trying hard to give off powder smell in our land,” Kim said in a statement carried by state news agency KCNA. “If it wants to sleep in peace for coming four years, it had better refrain from causing a stink at its first step.”

South Korean and American troops began a joint springtime military drill, which was limited to computer simulations because of the coronavirus risk as well as the ongoing efforts to engage with the North.

“War drills and hostility can never go with dialogue and cooperation,” said Kim Yo Jong, who mocked South Korea for “resorting to shrunken war games, now that they find themselves in the quagmire of political, economic and epidemic crisis.”

Her warning follows reports on Saturday that North Korea has not responded to behind-the-scenes diplomatic outreach since mid-February by President Joe Biden’s new administration.

Former US President Donald Trump tried to reached an agreement with North Korea while in office. Kim and Trump met in Hanoi in 2019 for a summit that left nuclear talks at a standstill.

The pair had met three times since June 2018 but made little progress towards denuclearization.

Since those talks broke down, North Korea has conducted several tests of ballistic missiles.

Shortly before Biden took office, the North Korea’s ruling Workers’ Party held its first congress in five years. During the congress, Kim was named the “general secretary” of the party.

In remarks he made at the start of the gathering, Kim threatened to expand his nuclear arsenal and stated that the fate of relations with the United States depends on whether it abandons its “hostile policy”.

Later, North Korea displayed what appeared to be a new submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) at a parade.

(Arutz 7).

 

Phyllis Shallman -Step by Step Guide to Creating Your Budget

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Creating a budget doesn’t have to be confusing!

In fact, it can be a straightforward—and profoundly enlightening—exercise that reveals your available cash flow and where you can reduce spending.

Here’s your step by step guide to creating a simple budget!

Get a pen and paper (or laptop). You’ll need a place to write and crunch a few simple numbers. If you’re “old school”, a pen, piece of paper, and a calculator will work perfectly. But you can also use a text document or spreadsheet if you’d rather!

Also, consider using a budgeting app. They’re simple tools right on your phone that you can use to track your income and outgo.

Make a list of all your monthly expenses, including housing, utilities, groceries, and transportation. Then, log in to your online banking account. You should be able to determine your average monthly spending in all of your expense categories. Write down those numbers in your budget.

Add up how much you spend in each category. That’s your total average monthly spending!

Then, subtract that number from your income to calculate your average available cash flow. That’s how much money you have leftover each month to tackle debt, save for emergencies, or use to start building wealth.

If it’s a smaller number than you expected, it’s ok. You’ve taken a very important step to face reality and move forward financially! You now know what you’re spending each month, and on what. Look at categories like entertainment and dining out. Can you reduce your monthly spending in these areas?

If your budget is tight and cash still isn’t flowing as freely as you’d like, you may need to consider starting a side hustle or part-time business to help make up the difference.

Ask me if you need help constructing your budget. It’s a simple process that can seriously improve your financial wellness.

Prager U – Did Capitalism Save Communist China?

 

How did one of the world’s poorest countries—China—become, in thirty years, one of the world’s richest? The answer is surprisingly simple and surprisingly powerful. China scholar Helen Raleigh breaks it down.

 

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Ireland, Too, Suspends AstraZeneca Vaccine Amid Blood Clot Reports

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Irish health officials on Sunday recommended the temporary suspension of the AstraZeneca vaccine after reports of serious
blood clotting after inoculations in Norway.

This follows Thailand, which on Friday became the first Asian country to halt the use of the jab over safety concerns.

Shortly before Thailand, Denmark announced a two-week pause to its nationwide rollout after reports of blood clots and one death.

Dr. Ronan Glynn, Ireland’s deputy chief medical officer, said the recommendation was made after Norway’s medicines agency reported four cases of blood clotting in adults after receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine.

He said that while there was no conclusive link between the vaccine and the cases, Irish health officials are recommending the suspension of the vaccine’s rollout as a precaution. Danish, Norwegian and Icelandic authorities have taken similar precautionary steps.

AstraZeneca said in a statement Sunday that it “would like to offer its reassurance on the safety of its COVID-19 vaccine based on clear scientific evidence.”

“The safety of the public will always come first,” the British-Swedish biopharmaceutical company said, adding that it’s “keeping this issue under close review but available evidence does not confirm that the vaccine is the cause.”

The company said that a review of safety data of more than 17 million people who have received the AstraZeneca vaccine in the European Union and the U.K. “has shown no evidence of an increased risk of pulmonary embolism, deep vein thrombosis (DVT) or thrombocytopenia, in any defined age group, gender, batch or in any particular country.”

The World Health Organization and the European Union’s medicines regulator have previously said that there was no link between the jab and an increased risk of developing a clot.

(Vosizneias / AP).

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