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In a post on X at lunchtime, Khanna, of California, named the six as Salvatore Nuara, Zurab Mikeladze, Leonic Leonov, Nicola Caputo, Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem and Leslie Wexner.

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cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/34032611

The paper is here

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Planned Locations for New and Expanded ICE Offices

  • 2334 E. Highway 80, Douglas, Arizona
  • Deconcini Port of Entry, Nogales, Arizona
  • 2020 Main Street, Irvine, California
  • James C. Corman Federal Building, Los Angeles, California
  • John E. Moss Federal Building, Sacramento, California
  • Edward J. Schwartz Courthouse and Federal Building, San Diego, California
  • Santa Ana Federal Building, Santa Ana, California
  • Abraham A. Ribicoff Federal Building, Hartford, Connecticut
  • Potomac Center North, Washington, DC
  • One Enterprise Center, Jacksonville, Florida
  • One Riverview Square, Miami, Florida
  • 75 Vineyards Boulevard, Naples, Florida
  • 12249 Science Drive, Orlando, Florida
  • 1551 Sawgrass Corporate Parkway, Sunrise, Florida
  • Portico At Meridian Center, Meridian, Idaho
  • Oakbrook Gateway, Oakbrook, Illinois
  • Penn on Parkway, Carmel, Indiana
  • 1201 Third Street, Alexandria, Louisiana
  • One City Center Building, Portland, Maine
  • 201 International Circle, Cockeysville, Maryland
  • 6505 Belcrest Road, Hyattsville, Maryland
  • John F. Kennedy Federal Building, Boston, Massachusetts
  • Rosa Parks Federal Building, Detroit, Michigan
  • Waters Center, Grand Rapids, Michigan
  • One Towne Square, Southfield, Michigan
  • Norris Cotton Federal Building, Manchester, New Hampshire
  • 5 Becker Farm Road, Roseland, New Jersey
  • 843 Union Avenue, New Windsor, New York
  • 88 Froehlich Farm Boulevard, Woodbury, New York
  • 11000 Regency Lakeview, Cary, North Carolina
  • Whitehall Corporate Center, Charlotte, North Carolina
  • 774 Park Meadow Road, Westerville, Ohio
  • Corporate Tower, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
  • Edith Green-Wendell Wyatt Federal Building, Portland, Oregon
  • 1000 Westlakes Drive, Berwyn, Pennsylvania
  • 801 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • Park Place Corporate Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • 3000 Sidney Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Yorktowne Medical Center, York, Pennsylvania
  • San Patricio Office Center, Guaynabo, Puerto Rico
  • 1441 Main Street, Columbia, South Carolina
  • 5904 Ridgeway Center Parkway, Memphis, Tennessee
  • Estes Kefauver Federal Building, Nashville, Tennessee
  • Nashville House Office Building, Nashville, Tennessee
  • 3381 US Highway 277, Eagle Pass, Texas
  • Epicenter Office Community, El Paso, Texas
  • 222 E. Van Buren Avenue, Harlingen, Texas
  • 125 E. John Carpenter Freeway, Irving, Texas
  • 15727 Anthem Parkway, San Antonio, Texas
  • 1780 Hughes Landing, The Woodlands, Texas
  • Heritage Center, Annandale, Virginia
  • The Moorefield, Richmond, Virginia
  • Cabot Park, Sterling, Virginia
  • Riverfront Technical Park, Tukwila, Washington

Archived copies of the article (do not contain the location list)

If you have one coming, it's important to set up a local rapid response network. That means:

  • A hotline for locals to call (and distributing the number)
  • Town or neighborhood level signal chats to alert people about what is happening
  • Whistle distribution so that it's possible to rapidly alert immediate neighbors
  • Starting regular patrols to spot ICE before they kidnap anybody
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cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/34019909

Before the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, allegations against four others shot at by federal immigration agents failed to withstand scrutiny.

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TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is heading to Washington on Tuesday to encourage President Donald Trump to expand the scope of high-stakes nuclear talks with Iran. The negotiations resumed last week against the backdrop of an American military buildup.

Israel has long called for Iran to cease all uranium enrichment, dial back its ballistic missile program and cut ties to militant groups across the region. Iran has always rejected those demands, saying it would only accept some limits on its nuclear program in return for sanctions relief.

It’s unclear if Iran’s bloody crackdown on mass protests last month, or the movement of major U.S. military assets to the region, has made Iran’s leaders more open to compromise, or if Trump is interested in broadening the already difficult negotiations.

Netanyahu, who will be in Washington through Wednesday, has spent his decades-long political career pushing for stronger U.S. action toward Iran.

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic leaders say a proposal from the White House is “incomplete and insufficient” as they are demanding new restrictions on President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown and threatening a shutdown of the Homeland Security Department.

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer and House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries said in a statement late Monday that a White House counterproposal to the list of demands they transmitted over the weekend “included neither details nor legislative text” and does not address “the concerns Americans have about ICE’s lawless conduct.” The White House proposal was not released publicly.

The Democrats’ statement comes as time is running short, with another partial government shutdown threatening to begin Saturday. Among the Democrats’ demands are a requirement for judicial warrants, better identification of DHS officers, new use-of-force standards and a stop to racial profiling. They say such changes are necessary after two protesters were fatally shot by federal agents in Minneapolis last month.

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The initiative, which the administration wants to roll out with a splashy White House event, has yet to be formally announced – and it remains unclear which companies have agreed to the compact or been invited to participate.

The compact would mark one of the most ambitious efforts to shape the footprint of AI infrastructure without imposing direct regulation, and comes a month after the White House made an unprecedented appeal to the mid-Atlantic energy grid operator to try to lower electricity prices.

Concerns have steadily risen that data centers’ enormous appetite for energy could drive prices up even more, which could become even more of a political liability for an administration that’s been all-in on the rapid, unbridled development of data centers. The compact is one way to try to tout work to blunt their impact ahead of the midterms.

“As President Trump announced weeks ago, top tech companies are working with the President to ‘pick up the tab’ for their power consumption as they build data centers. More to come soon!” White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said in a statement.

A White House official said the draft is “is outdated and no longer accurate” without specifying which parts have changed.

__ And much more in the article. More question than answers, but something is going on.

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The Gordie Howe International Bridge, expected to open early this year, was built by Canada to ease cargo transport between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario.

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US and EU sanctions have killed 38 million since 1970
Far from a peaceful tool, these measures weaponise hunger and deprivation to enforce Western dominance.
The United States and Europe have long used unilateral sanctions as a tool of imperial power, to discipline and even destroy Global South governments that seek to shake off Western domination, chart an independent path, and establish any kind of meaningful sovereignty.
During the 1970s, there were, on average, about 15 countries under Western unilateral sanctions in any given year. In many cases, these sanctions sought to strangle access to finance and international trade, destabilise industries, and inflame crises to provoke state collapse.
For instance, when the popular socialist Salvador Allende was elected to power in Chile in 1970, the U.S. government imposed brutal sanctions on the country. At a September 1970 meeting at the White House, U.S. President Richard Nixon explained the objective was to “make [Chile’s] economy scream”. The historian Peter Kornbluh describes the sanctions as an “invisible blockade” that cut Chile off from international finance, created social unrest, and paved the way for the U.S.-backed coup that installed the brutal right-wing dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.
Since then, the U.S. and Europe have dramatically increased their use of sanctions. During the 1990s and 2000s, an average of 30 countries were under Western unilateral sanctions in any given year. And now, as of the 2020s, it is more than 60 — a strikingly high proportion of the countries of the Global South.
Sanctions often have a huge human toll. Scholars have demonstrated this in several well-known cases, such as the U.S. sanctions against Iraq in the 1990s that led to widespread malnutrition, lack of clean water, and shortages of medicine and electricity. More recently, U.S. economic warfare against Venezuela has resulted in a severe economic crisis, with one study estimating that sanctions caused 40,000 excess deaths in just one year, from 2017 to 2018.
Until now, researchers have sought to understand the human toll of sanctions on a case-by-case basis. This is difficult work and can only ever give us a partial picture. But that has changed with new research published this year in The Lancet Global Health, which gives us a global view for the first time. Led by the economist Francisco Rodriguez at the University of Denver, the study calculates the total number of excess deaths associated with international sanctions from 1970 to 2021.
The results are staggering. In their central estimate, the authors find that unilateral sanctions imposed by the U.S. and EU since 1970 are associated with 38 million deaths. In some years, during the 1990s, more than a million people were killed. In 2021, the most recent year of data, sanctions caused more than 800,000 deaths.
According to these results, several times more people are killed by sanctions each year than are killed as direct casualties of war (on average, about 100,000 people per year). More than half of the victims are children and the elderly, people who are most vulnerable to malnutrition. The study finds that, since 2012 alone, sanctions have killed more than one million children.
Hunger and deprivation are not an accidental by-product of Western sanctions; they are a key objective. This is clear from a State Department memo written in April 1960, which explains the purpose of U.S. sanctions against Cuba. The memo noted that Fidel Castro — and the revolution more broadly — enjoyed widespread popularity in Cuba. It argued that “every possible means should be undertaken promptly to weaken the economic life of Cuba,” by “denying money and supplies to Cuba, to decrease monetary and real wages, to bring about hunger, desperation and overthrow of government”.
The power of Western sanctions hinges on their control over the world’s reserve currencies (the U.S. dollar and the Euro), their control over international payment systems (SWIFT), and their monopoly over essential technologies (e.g. satellites, cloud computation, software). If countries in the Global South wish to chart a more independent path towards a multipolar world, they will need to take steps to limit their dependence in these respects and thus insulate themselves from backlash. The recent experience of Russia shows that such an approach can succeed.
Governments can achieve greater independence by building South-South trade and swap lines outside the core currencies, using regional planning to develop necessary technologies, and establishing new payment systems outside Western control. Indeed, several countries are already taking steps in this direction. Importantly, new systems that have been developed in China (e.g. CIPS for international payments, BeiDou for satellites, Huawei for telecom) now provide other global South countries alternative options that can become a pathway out of Western dependence and the sanctions net.
These steps are necessary for countries that wish to achieve sovereign development, but they are also a moral imperative. We cannot accept a world where half a million people are killed each year to prop up Western hegemony. An international order that relies on this kind of violence must be dismantled and replaced.

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As immigrants become increasingly afraid to leave their homes for fear of being detained, access to food, including free school lunches, is being cut off.

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The Department of Homeland Security is using a repurposed $55 billion Navy contract to convert warehouses into makeshift jails and plan sprawling tent cities in remote areas.

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ProPublica went inside the immigrant detention center for families in Dilley, Texas. Children held there told us about the anguish of being ripped from their lives in the United States and the fear of what comes next.

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Meta and Google, two of the most powerful companies in history, have long rejected claims their social media platforms are inherently dangerous for kids. On Monday, they are beginning a landmark trial over allegations that Meta’s Instagram and Google’s YouTube were intentionally designed to get young users hopelessly hooked despite known perils.

The so-called “bellwether” case is the first to reach trial among thousands of similar lawsuits from individual plaintiffs, school districts, and state officials. It was filed in July 2023 by a now 20-year-old California woman, identified by the initials K.G.M., who says she became desperately addicted to social media as a child, got flooded with disturbing material she did not seek, and subsequently experienced body dysmorphia, anxiety, self-harm, and suicidal thoughts.

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Trump’s gutting of the Solar for All program is deeply felt on the Northern Plains reservations.

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Rock the Country, Kid Rock’s country music festival that critics have labeled a “MAGA fest,” has been canceled in South Carolina after a string of artists dropped out.

The multi-city festival was scheduled to run for two days per venue in eight U.S. states from May 1 to September 21.

However, its stop in Anderson, South Carolina — which was scheduled for July 25 and 26 — will no longer take place, county administrator Rusty Burns told Fox Carolina.

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Having to listen to and be entertained by one of the world's most popular pop stars singing hits beloved by millions IN SPANISH could reveal that people different from me are good.

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Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-New York) faces the challenge of leading the questioning of top immigration officials at the peril of angering the White House.

The hearing is being run by a Republican because they are in the majority in the House. How willing he is to break with the rest of the Republican party is a bit dubious; the racism has become a core principle of theirs, and any challenge to it tends to result in difficulty winning a Republican primary.

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Hegseth is reportedly set to tour Bath Iron Works on Monday and give a speech on the recently announced “Trump” class battleship, according to the Bangor Daily News.

When the bosses reached out to workers for volunteers to attend the speech, however, few hands went up, according to one worker, who spoke with The Intercept on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution. The speech is slated for Monday afternoon, shortly before a shift change, which means that workers who attend would need to stay past their normal work hours — and anyone who shows up would be required to stay until the event is over.

“They issued a polling sheet this morning to see who would attend and, at least from my crew, there were no takers,” said the worker, “and not even a mention of overtime.”

After the initial lack of enthusiasm on Friday morning, a later survey went out around noon that explicitly said workers would receive overtime if they stayed past the end of their shift, according to the worker.

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