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Facebook and Twitter Remove Accounts Connected to China

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Twitter and Facebook said they have removed thousands of accounts connected to Chinese information campaigns, in the latest sign of Beijing’s ambitions to shape the global narrative around the country.

In a notice posted early Thursday, Twitter said that it took action against two networks comprising more than 2,000 accounts that worked to undermine accusations of human rights abuses in the western Chinese region of Xinjiang, where Chinese officials have interned Muslim minorities and subjected them to harsh surveillance.

Both networks promoted videos shot within Xinjiang that sought to portray the region as one of prosperity and freedom. One of the networks, which Twitter attributed to the Chinese Communist Party, also coordinated verbal attacks against activists and articles critical of China, while bolstering Chinese state media with positive comments and likes, according to a report on the takedown released by the Stanford Internet Observatory, a research group focused on the misuse of technology and social media.

The New York Times and ProPublica first identified a large number of accounts in the network in a June report about the campaign to project normalcy in Xinjiang.

Although many of the more than 30,000 tweets attributed to the network received little engagement, the use of harassment and hashtags indicated “an effort to reframe global debate or to crowd out critical/adversarial narratives,” the Stanford report said.

In a separate statement released late Wednesday, Facebook said it had taken down more than 500 accounts after they had helped to amplify posts from a fake Swiss biologist named “Wilson Edwards” who alleged the United States was interfering in World Health Organization efforts to track the origins of Covid-19. The fake scientist’s accusations were quoted by Chinese state media.

When the Swiss embassy in Beijing said “Wilson Edwards” did not exist, Facebook found that his account on the platform had been created less than 12 hours before it began posting.

The takedowns are the latest in a series of efforts by American social media companies to push back against Chinese information campaigns. Although blocked within China, Twitter and Facebook have become important avenues for shaping global opinions about China. In recent years, Chinese diplomats and state media have focused new efforts on building followings on the platforms.

U.S. official: 1st case of omicron variant identified in U.S.

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WASHINGTON (AP) – A person in California became the first in the U.S. to have an identified case of the omicron variant of COVID-19, a U.S. official told The Associated Press on Wednesday. It comes as scientists continue to study the risks posed by the new strain of the virus.

The Biden administration moved late last month to restrict travel from Southern Africa where the variant was first identified and had been widespread. Clusters of cases have also been identified in about two dozen other nations. The official could not discuss the matter publicly and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is taking steps to tighten U.S. testing rules for travelers from overseas, including requiring a test for all travelers within a day of boarding a flight to the U.S. regardless of vaccination status. It was also considering mandating post-arrival testing.

Officials said those measures would only “buy time” for the country to learn more about the new variant and to take appropriate precautions, but that given its transmissibility its arrival in the U.S. was inevitable.

Much remains unknown about the new variant, including whether it is more contagious than previous strains, whether it makes people more seriously ill, and whether it can thwart the vaccine. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. infectious disease expert, said more would be known about the omicron strain in two to four weeks as scientists grow and test lab samples of the virus.

The announcement of the first U.S. case comes before President Joe Biden plans to outline his strategy on Thursday to combat the virus over the winter. Biden has tried to quell alarm over the omicron variant, saying it was a cause for concern but “not a cause for panic.”

Biden and public health officials have grown more urgent in their pleas for more Americans to get vaccinated – and for those who have been vaccinated to get booster shots to maximize their protection against the virus.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

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Business execs who pursue woke agenda clash with consumers’ views: poll

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A broad, bipartisan majority of voters says corporate executives should spend less time virtue signaling on social issues and more on developing and selling their products, according to new research from a leading strategic data analysis firm.

The study by Brunswick Insights, which involved voters and chief executives of companies with more than $50 million in annual earnings, shows that most Democrats and Republicans are put off by “woke” messaging from C-suite offices.

Conversely, business executives themselves believe that their social messaging is important and that it has been successful, indicating a sharp divide between business elites and their consumers, the study found.

“We’ve always said that political speech and actions by senior executives is not part of a business strategy and detracts from shareholder value,” said Bill Flaig, a founder of the American Conservative Values Fund ETF, an exchange-traded fund that refuses to invest in companies publicly pushing a woke agenda.

Concerns about corporations embracing liberal causes appear to be growing: On Tuesday, the Republican chief financial officers of 15 states, led by West Virginia, sent a letter to financial institution executives threatening to pull some $600 billion in assets from those that are blocking financing for oil and gas projects in the name of global warming.

The Brunswick study, titled “The Intersection of Business and Politics,” labeled the rush by executives to signal their alignment with a liberal position on political and social issues “the talking trap.”

“In a highly complex civic, socio-economic and communications environment, there is enormous pressure on organizations to respond to everything that is happening,” the study states. “The efforts are all-too-often disbelieved as authentic — by people across every part of the political and socio-economic spectrum.”

By a margin of 2-1, the study showed “corporate executives are ‘out of step’ with broader public sentiment related to engagement on social issues.”

Of those surveyed, 63% of corporate executives agreed unequivocally that they should speak out on social issues, a view held by only 36% of the voters.

The divide is equally pronounced when it comes to the perceived effectiveness of woke corporate campaigns, according to the study. On that point, three-quarters of executives said the campaigns are effective, compared to 39% of voters.

“Corporate executives have vastly overestimated how much people want to hear companies discuss social issues,” the study states. “More often than not (and more often than ever), companies are talking, but who is really listening, and do they even agree with what they say?”

That gap existed among those who supported President Biden or former President Donald Trump in the 2020 election, according to the study. Among those who voted for Mr. Biden, “there is a 24-point gap between Biden voters and corporate executives on the effectiveness of corporate communication, and only 17% think corporate communication has been “very” effective,” the study states.

When the American Conservative Values Fund (ACVF) launched just over a year ago, Mr. Flaig said he and the fund’s directors did not think they would have to recalibrate its holdings very often. But business executives have repeatedly proved them wrong, he said.

He pointed to decisions by Delta Air Lines and Coca-Cola to side with opponents of election laws passed by Georgia lawmakers and their support of Major League Baseball moving its All-Star Game from Atlanta to Denver last summer.

“They economically hurt Atlanta, their home base,” Mr. Flaig said. “I’m always surprised at how often these executives speak out in favor of left-wing positions; it’s pretty frequent.”

Pegged to the S&P 500, the ACVF now has $33 million under management, and the fund is boycotting about 27% of the companies that comprise the S&P 500.

The fund’s biggest single holding is Microsoft, which Mr. Flaig leads to considerable “head scratching.”

“The problem is technology companies in general are just so liberal, but you can’t really have a fund with no tech stocks,” he said.

Twitter’s turnover at the top this week is a case in point, Mr. Flaig said. While departing chief executive Jack Dorsey has steered the company toward squashing conservative speech, investors are likely to take a new look at Twitter under its new leader Parag Agrawal.

The Brunswick Group conducted an online survey of 301 executives at companies with at least $50 million in annual revenue and 800 voters who reflected the 2020 voting divide between Sept. 29 and Oct. 7. The margin of error for the voters poll was plus or minus 3.39 percentage points and 5.61 percentage points for the executives poll.

The distrust among many Democrats is rooted in a belief the companies are insincere in their campaigns, while many Republicans simply do not want to hear executives’ views on social issues or disagree with the executives’ views, the study states.

The one issue on which a majority of all voters did see sincerity reflected in corporate campaigns was in their charitable work following natural disasters.

“Going work for the sake of appeasing the progressive Twitter mob might satisfy one sect of the population, but as a CEO you’ll only alienate customers and employees,” Mr. Flaig said. “This report demonstrates in no uncertain terms that any CEO who continues to force their company into politics is placing their own political agenda ahead of maximizing shareholder value.”

Champ Carlsen suffers, but holds draw to keep chess title fight tied

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There were some uncomfortable moments for Norwegian world chess champion Magnus Carlsen, but he was able to secure a draw with the Black pieces in Wednesday’s Game 5 of his scheduled 14-game title match with Russian challenger Ian Nepomniachtchi.

The result is the fifth straight draw to open the match and a clear defeat for Carlsen’s proclaimed pre-match strategy that he hoped to score an early win against his lower-rated and less experienced opponent.

Despite some intriguing positional battles, neither player has come close to obtaining a decisive advantage in any of the games played so far.

Asked after Wednesday’s game to assess the match so far, a visibly fatigued Carlsen said it was “very clear that it is going to be hard for either of us to break through. It’s not easy.”

But he noted that Thursday is a rest day and he will have the advantage of the White pieces and the first move in two of the next three contests.

The first player to 7 1/2 points wins the match, with a one-day rapid playoff is the score is tied at 7-7.

In the third Ruy Lopez defense the two players have played so far, Carlsen and internet analysts said White missed some chances to push back the Black forces, particularly in declining to advance his c-pawn on Move 20. White continued to press his middle-game advantage after a trade of queens, and it took a number of precise moves by Black to re-order his forces and neutralize White’s pressure.

Carlsen said he felt relief after trading off one of Nepomniachtchi’s active knights on Move 35, and the symmetrical pawn structure and the completely even material balance led the players to agree to a draw just after the first time control was passed at Move 40.

Game 6 of the match will be played Friday.

The moves of Game 5:

Nepomniachtchi-Carlsen, World Chess Championship, Game 5, Dubai, December 2021

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Be7 6. Re1 b5 7. Bb3 O-O 8. a4 Rb8 9. axb5 axb5 10. h3 d6 11. c3 b4 12. d3 bxc3 13. bxc3 d5 14. Nbd2 dxe4 15. dxe4 Bd6 16. Qc2 h6 17. Nf1 Ne7 18. Ng3 Ng6 19. Be3 Qe8 20. Red1 Be6 21. Ba4 Bd7 22. Nd2 Bxa4 23. Qxa4 Qxa4 24. Rxa4 Ra8 25. Rda1 Rxa4 26. Rxa4 Rb8 27. Ra6 Ne8 28. Kf1 Nf8 29. Nf5 Ne6 30. Nc4 Rd8 31. f3 f6 32. g4 Kf7 33. h4 Bf8 34. Ke2 Nd6 35. Ncxd6+ Bxd6 36. h5 Bf8 37. Ra5 Ke8 38. Rd5 Ra8 39. Rd1 Ra2+ 40. Rd2 Ra1 41. Rd1 Ra2+ 42. Rd2 Ra1 43. Rd1 Draw agreed

GOP lawmakers push government shutdown over Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate

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A cadre of GOP House and Senate lawmakers say they are planning to force a government shutdown later this week over President Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine mandates.

Republicans Rep. Chip Roy of Texas and Sen. Mike Lee of Utah are pitching lawmakers within their respective chambers to block the short-term funding measure needed to keep the government afloat past Friday.

The lawmakers plan to object to any legislation averting a government shutdown unless Democrats agree to defund enforcement efforts for the White House’s vaccine mandate for workers at large and mid-sized U.S. businesses.

Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is expected to bring up the stop-gap funding measure as early as Wednesday. Despite the efforts of Mr. Roy and other Republicans, the legislation appears headed to passage given that Democrats narrowly control the chamber.

Within the 50-50 Senate, the situation is more tenuous. To avert a government shutdown at least 10 Republican senators will have to back the measure to overcome a likely filibuster.

Mr. Lee, who is up for reelection next year, has not announced whether he will lead a filibuster against the bill or only offer an amendment to block funding from going to enforce the vaccine mandate. Requests to his office were not immediately returned.

“The Senate GOP has a choice,” said Mr. Roy, a member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus. “Fund a government that mandates Americans get injected against their will — or don’t. We choose not to fund that government.”

If Republicans were to succeed and strip funding to enforce the administration’s vaccine mandate, Mr. Biden would be likely to veto the bill.

The White House did not return requests for comment on this story.

Earlier this year, Mr. Biden announced plans to issue new regulations requiring private companies with more than 100 employees to mandate vaccinations against COVID-19. Administration officials argue the mandate will ensure that more than 100 million Americans across federal agencies, large businesses and the health care sector get vaccinated.

Republicans have called the move an “overreach” and are waging legal challenges to prevent its implementation. Most GOP lawmakers warn that the mandate will result in mass firings because the penalties for companies in contravention are significant, running upwards of $13,600-per-violation.

Hopes that the courts will strike down the mandate were buoyed on Tuesday when two separate federal judges blocked its implementation for federal contractors and health care workers at hospitals funded by taxpayers.

Some Republicans say that waiting for the courts to strike down the mandate will take too long, especially since the economic livelihoods of Americans are at stake. Instead, they say Congress should defund enforcement efforts starting with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), which is writing the regulations to implement the mandate.

“The most important thing Republicans can do is to stop the funding of vaccine mandates,” said GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green of Georgia. “Republicans voting for funding of OSHA will be voting to fund communist tactics used against the American people.”

Despite the push, any effort to shut down the government faces long odds in the Senate, where past shutdowns have proven politically unpopular.

“There’s no appetite. Nor should there be on either side of the aisle,” said Sen. John Kennedy, Louisiana Republican. “I predict that the government will not shut down.”  

For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.

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Outside Supreme Court, crowd amplifies abortion arguments

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WASHINGTON (AP) – Hundreds of abortion debate partisans crowded the plaza in front of the Supreme Court on Wednesday, intermingling and trading chants as justices heard the highly anticipated arguments inside.

“Who’s choice?” “My choice,” was a frequent call-and-response on the abortion rights side, countered by “Hey hey, ho ho, Roe v. Wade has got to go.”

Jo Luttazi, wearing gloves emblazoned with “Bans Off Our Bodies” on the palms, said everyone should have access to abortion as a form of health care.

“As somebody who is assigned female at birth, and having female anatomy, I have had a terrible time trying to just be able to be in control of my body,” the 22-year-old said. “So issues around bodily autonomy have always been very close to my heart. I knew I had to be here.”

A woman who wanted to be identified only as Nancy held a sign with an American flag on it that said “Pray.”

“We need to come together to stop the murder of millions of children,” she said. “I don’t understand why that’s so controversial. I’m out here to exercise my First Amendment right and I wish that would be respected.”

The crowd rallying with the Center for Reproductive Rights swelled to about 400 as the sun rose over the majestic building, outnumbering the anti-abortion demonstrators holding up images of fetuses.

“You need to repent,” one man yelled into a bullhorn, trying to drown out an abortion rights speaker. “You want women to murder babies. You love the murder of children.”

The center’s president and CEO, Nancy Northup, drew cheers when she said her organization’s lawyers have defended abortion rights before the nation’s highest court four times in the last six years.

“Four trips to the Supreme Court in six years is four trips too many,” Northrup said. “We are here to win.”

Democrats Diana DeGette and Barbara Lee, co-chairs of the Congressional Pro-Choice Caucus, were among the representatives who appeared. Lee told the crowd of her experience getting an abortion.

“I remember what it was like before Roe v. Wade. I survived. Many women, especially Black women, did not survive. We will not go back to those ways,” Lee said.

“This issue is about racial equality and justice. This decision is about the right to make decisions about your own body. The right to abortion isn’t real unless everyone can access it.”

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

‘Ah-mic-ron?’ ‘Oh-mic-ron? New variant becomes a tongue-twister

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There are many unknowns about the omicron variant of the coronavirus, including whether it spreads faster than other strains or is more deadly. But here’s another puzzler: How to pronounce it.

World Health Organization officials give Greek names to new variants of concern, like alpha and delta. Those were pretty straightforward, but omicron appears to be tripping people up.

President Biden repeatedly referred to it as “omni-cron” during remarks Tuesday, a flub that Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health appeared to repeat from the podium.

On Wednesday, Dr. Fauci pronounced it as “ah-mi-cron,” with a short O sound at the start, during a White House COVID-19 briefing.

White House COVID-19 coordinator Jeff Zients used the same version, though Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, went with the “oh-mi-cron,” with the long O sound at the beginning.

That version, perhaps fittingly, sounds a bit “oh my God,” and it’s the one preferred by Maria van Kerkove, a key WHO official in the COVID-19 response.

Not to be outdone, the British found another way of saying it, with a middle syllable that sounds like “mike.” The Oxford Learner’s Dictionaries offered that version or the “ah-mic-ron” version preferred by Dr. Fauci.

Some people are conflicted.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, addressing the nation on the new variant, used the “oh” version before stopping himself short: “Ah-mic-ron, I should say.”

A Game Designer in Beijing Bought Toy Guns. China Imprisoned Him.

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China’s strong gun controls mean that fatal shootings are rare, and many citizens support the laws to keep it that way. But there has been a growing debate over the legal definition of a firearm. Experts say that China’s regulations — which ban buying, selling or owning weapons above a very low threshold of force — are vague and hard for laypeople, even judges, to understand. The result, critics say, is that unsuspecting buyers of compressed-air and spring-powered toys are turned into criminals.

China’s gun control law of 1996 states that to be legally classified as a gun, a weapon has to be capable of killing someone or knocking them unconscious. But in 2010, the Chinese Ministry of Public Security imposed far stricter rules that in effect defined many toys as illegal guns. Under the rules, a toy gun that fires a projectile with enough force to tear a sheet of newspaper — far short of lethal or dangerous force — can be considered a gun, according to lawyers.

In a study published in 2019, investigators from China’s Public Security University found that nearly all of a random sample of 229 replica guns bought online would be classified as illegal under the 2010 rules.

“These toy guns are openly sold in Hong Kong, but in the mainland they’re treated as weapons and ammunition,” said Wang Jinzhong, whose son was sentenced to life imprisonment in Hebei Province, northern China, in 2016, for owning 16 replicas that the police deemed illegal.

“Frankly, there are many things more dangerous than these toys,” said Mr. Wang, who has petitioned judges and officials for his son, Wang Yinpeng, 37, to be released. “This really is a human rights disaster for China.”

Chinese regulators have demanded over the years that Alibaba be more proactive about stopping various kinds of illegal goods from being sold on its digital bazaars. In 2015, the country’s market watchdog accused the company of turning a blind eye to sales of fake alcohol and cigarettes, knockoff designer bags and “items that endanger public safety,” such as certain knives. Alibaba called the regulator’s findings “flawed” and filed a complaint.

Officials: Sides reach tentative pact in Reno bus strike

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RENO, Nev. (AP) – A union for drivers and the operator of metro Reno’s transit bus system say they’ve reached a tentative agreement to settle a contract dispute that dramatically reduced service during the past three weeks.

Officials of Teamsters Local 533 and Keolis International said Tuesday that normal service would resume immediately if the agreement is approved by a vote of represented employees later this week.

Terms of the proposed settlement were not immediately available.

Only a handful of routes ran during the strike, leaving thousands of riders without public transportation.

Teamsters 533 President Gary Watson said some issues between the union and Keolis remained unresolved but that union officials were hopeful that those can be resolved in coming months.

Keolis Vice President Mike Ake said the tentative agreement resulted from productive negotiation sessions held over the weekend.

The strike began Nov. 9 after the union rejected the “best and last offer” proposed by Keolis, which operates the system for the Regional Transportation Commission of Washoe County.

Two previous strikes halted bus service in early August and in late September and into mid-October.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

Letitia James, N.Y. attorney general, says state should become abortion sanctuary

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New York’s attorney general said Wednesday that the state should create a fund to help out-of-state women come to seek abortions if the Supreme Court overturns the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision and allows other states to ban the procedure.

Letitia James, a Democrat who is also running for governor next year, said overturning Roe would leave women in about half the states without local access to abortions, and she said New York should step in and help them.

Her proposal came just minutes before the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral argument on a case involving Mississippi’s ban on most abortions after 15 weeks into a pregnancy. Mississippi has asked the justices to overturn Roe.

“While we remain committed to fighting Mississippi’s unconstitutional abortion ban, we must be ready to support women in Mississippi and a host of other states if this dangerous law is upheld,” Ms. James said. “We, here in New York, must set up a fund to ensure that any woman, anywhere in the country, can look to New York as a safe haven that will allow them to make the reproductive health care decisions that are best for them.”

Before Roe, states set abortion policy, with some states allowing more access than others. Should Roe be overturned, the Guttmacher Institute, which advocates for abortion rights, calculates that 26 states already have laws on the books that would tighten access to the procedure, in some cases resulting in a total ban.

Nine of those states still have bans on the books from before 1973. Other states have enacted “trigger” bans, which will snap into place should the court rule in Mississippi’s favor.

Ms. James said New York should set aside “meaningful funding” to cover costs of transportation, housing and the abortion procedure itself. The money would be available to women who live in a state where abortion was no longer available.

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