Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Tropical system expected to bring heavy rainfall, flooding to northern Gulf Coast

Tropical system expected to bring heavy rainfall, flooding to northern Gulf Coast

TROPICAL STORM WARNING IN EFFECT AS STORM BARRELS TOWARD GULF COAST

A tropical storm warning was in effect for parts of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida — extending from Intracoastal City, La., to the Okaloosa-Walton County line in the Florida Panhandle, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

The poorly organized disturbance was located Friday morning about 255 miles (410 kilometers) south of Morgan City, La., with maximum sustained winds of 35 mph (55 kph). It was moving north at 14 mph (22 kph).

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards late Thursday issued a state of emergency due to the potential weather threats. The move is an administrative step that authorizes the use of state resources to aid in storm response efforts, the governor’s office said.

The system is expected to produce up to 8 inches (20 centimeters) of rain across the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico and up to 12 inches (30 centimeters) through the weekend along the central U.S. Gulf Coast.

The combination of storm surge and the tide will cause normally dry areas near the coast to be flooded by rising waters moving inland from the shoreline, the hurricane center said. The water could reach the heights of about 1-3 feet (30-91 centimeters).

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP 

There have already been two named storms during the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season. Meteorologists expect the season to be busy, but not as crazy as the record-breaking 2020 season.


>>>>

Archaeologists in Norway find rare Viking ship burial using only radar

Archaeologists in Norway find rare Viking ship burial using only radar

London Norwegian archaeologists have identified a previously undiscovered “high-status” Viking burial site, featuring a feast hall, cult house, and the remnants of a ship burial.

Researchers were able to discover the findings without having to dig into any land, instead using ground-penetrating radar (GPR) to see below the surface.
Key amongst the findings from the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research — published Tuesday in the Antiquity journal — is a Viking ship burial site located on the Jell mound in Gjellestad, southeastern Norway. Boats symbolized safe passage into the afterlife and were usually accorded to the elite of Viking society.
The GPR data showed that the Iron Age vessel measures around 19 meters (62 feet) long, with the ship buried between 0.3 meters to 1.4 meters (0.9 to 4.6 feet) beneath the ground’s surface.
    “When we’re doing these kinds of surveys, it’s normally just gray and black and white blobs — but this data set is so visually striking,” said lead author of the study Lars Gustavsen, a researcher at the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research.
    “We knew that there was something special there, but we had no idea that there was going to be a ship burial, that’s pretty unique,” he told CNN.
    The data shows the various mounds picked up by the radar, including a big oval shaped one that researchers identified as a Viking Age ship.

    After initial tests were conducted, efforts to fully excavate the ship are now underway.
    Gustavsen said that the mound was previously dug up in the 19th Century, when a lot of the wooden remains of the ship were burned because people were unaware of what they were, meaning there is not a lot left for researchers to analyze today.
    “It’s a unique opportunity, it’s just a shame that there is so little left of it,” he said. “What we have to do is use modern technology and use it very carefully. By doing that, we’re hoping that we can capture something from that ship, and be able to say something about what type of ship it was.”
    Researchers found several burial mounds beneath the ground; including the ship, they discovered 13 mounds in total — with some measuring more than 30 meters (98 feet) wide.
    Several buildings were discovered using the radar data, providing an insight into the lives of those who came before. Researchers identified what they believe to be a farmhouse, a cult house and a feasting hall.
    According to Gustavsen, the land, which dates back to the 5th Century AD, was transformed into an elite “high-status cemetery and settlement” during the Viking Age.
    Gustavsen hopes to secure more funding to find out more about the surrounding areas. “By doing a larger survey, we can get a more complete picture of Gjellestad, we could describe or explain why it came about and why it eventually failed or went out of use.”
    The Late Nordic Iron Age, which lasted from 550 to 1050, saw many key historical events, including the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the rise of the Viking Age. Researchers hope the site may uncover new truths about such a turbulent period.
      The discoveries came after surveys were carried out in 2017 to determine if proposed construction plans would damage any archaeological artifacts beneath the ground.
      The Jell Mound, the site of the findings, is located at Gjellestad, in the southeastern Norwegian region of Østfold. The mound is widely known as one of the largest Iron Age funerary mounds in Scandinavia.

      >>>>

      2 Confederate statues were removed in Georgia within 3 days

      2 Confederate statues were removed in Georgia within 3 days

      Two Confederate statues were removed from public locations in the state of Georgia this week.

      This comes as cities across the nation have grappled with how to handle statues of historical figures with troubling pasts, including Confederate generals, slave owners and colonizers.
      As calls for social justice rang out throughout the country following the death of George Floyd at the hands of former Minneapolis Police officers, many monuments were vandalized, spray painted or even torn down by the public.

      Monument put in storage

        One such vandalism was the catalyst for the removal of the Confederate monument that stood outside the Gwinnett County Courthouse in Lawrenceville.
        The stone monument, inscribed with “1861-1865 Lest We Forget” and installed in 1993, was removed and put into storage Thursday, according to CNN affiliate WXIA.
        Lawrenceville, about 30 miles northeast of Atlanta, is the county seat of Gwinnett County.
        The Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners voted in January to have the monument moved into storage until court proceedings were finished determining its fate, a press release from the board said last month.
        According to the release, the 28-year-old monument was vandalized during protests in June 2020, prompting a lawsuit filed by Gwinnett County Solicitor-General Brian Whiteside that sought to have the monument declared a public nuisance and have it removed.
        It was vandalized again on Thanksgiving, which led to the board making the decision to put it in “an appropriate storage facility for protection and preservation until the court provides further direction or the lawsuit is resolved,” the release said.
        “A monument celebrating the Confederacy on county property is inconsistent with the message of welcome and inclusion that the County is sending to the world. We should place it in storage to avoid further provocation and to help the cause of tranquility for the benefit of all,” Chairwoman Nicole Hendrickson said in the press release.
        Commissioner Kirkland Carden said in the release that it was “time to remove this monument of hate that has been a stain on Gwinnett County since it was erected in 1993,” adding that “removing this monument is a step in the right direction.”

        Statue moved to historic house

        A statue of Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston was relocated from downtown Dalton to the historic Huff House Saturday by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, who own the statue, city of Dalton spokesman Bruce Frazier told CNN.
        Dalton sits just 16 miles south of the Tennessee border in the northwest corner of Georgia.
        “The statue of General Johnston is the property of the United Daughters of the Confederacy which commissioned it and placed it downtown in 1912,” Dalton told CNN.
        The historic Huff House was the headquarters of General Johnston “during the Confederate Army of Tennessee’s winter encampment in Dalton for about six months from December 1863 to May 1864,” Robert D. Jenkins, Sr., attorney for the United Daughters of the Confederacy, said in a statement to CNN.
        “It is a logical place for the statue where the history of the man, the statue and the house may all be interpreted and visited,” Jenkins explained.
        Jenkins said that the removal process didn’t require any votes or come after any attempts to destroy the statue.
        “No one involved in this process has intimated or attempted to tear down or destroy the statue or the history of it,” he said, adding that the United Daughters of the Confederacy “simply wanted it moved from a public property and were willing to pay for its relocation.”
        “In many communities across our country, unfortunately, similar circumstances have led to violence,” said Jenkins. “In Dalton, however, the various parties have worked together to find and to carry out a good solution. We hope that the new location of the statue will lead to greater interest to and support of the Huff House,” Jenkins said.
        Frazier confirmed to CNN that the measure was never voted on by a mayor or council and “the issue never appeared on any city agenda.”

        Confederate monument to be replaced with John Lewis statue

        These are not the first Confederate monuments in the state of Georgia to be removed.
        In June last year, the city of Decatur, east of Atlanta, removed a 30-foot Confederate obelisk from the Decatur Square after a DeKalb County judge ordered it to be relocated.
          The city had argued the statue had become a threat to public safety during recent protests and wanted it to be put in storage until they could find another place to put it.
          Officials now plan to erect a monument that honors the late John Lewis, the Georgia Congressman who spent his entire life fighting for civil rights.

          >>>>

          An announcer hurled racial insults at a high school basketball team for kneeling during the National Anthem

          An announcer hurled racial insults at a high school basketball team for kneeling during the National Anthem

          The Norman, Oklahoma, Public Schools District is condemning an announcer who “made racist and hateful comments targeted at our Norman High student athletes” on a livestream of a state basketball tournament, a statement from the district superintendent said.

          On Thursday, the Norman High School girls’ basketball team was set to play Midwest City in the Oklahoma 6A state basketball tournament. The game was being livestreamed by the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Network.
          A video of the livestream shows that when the Norman players kneeled during the National Anthem, one of the announcers began to hurl insults at them.
              “They’re kneeling? F**king n***ers,” the person is heard saying.
                “I hope Norman gets their ass kicked,” the speaker, who has not been officially named, says.
                  After a short pause, with the National Anthem still playing, the insults continued.
                  “F**k them. I hope they lose.”
                  “C’mon Midwest City — they’re gonna kneel like that? Hell no,” the announcer says.
                  The person uses the same slurs one more time before the audio on the recording cuts out entirely.
                  The school district says in its statement that the announcers were contracted by the Oklahoma Secondary Schools Activities Association (OSSAA) for the state tournament.
                  In a statement, OSSAA acknowledged that it is “aware that some very offensive, inappropriate comments were made during the NFHS livestream broadcast” and they are investigating the incident.
                  “While we are currently investigating the incident, this crew will not be doing any more games for the remainder of our championships,” the statement said.
                  OSSAA added that “this kind of behavior will never be tolerated by anyone representing the NFHS or OSSAA.”
                  NFHS said that it was “sickened by the comments made last night” in a statement released Friday.
                  “The thoughts expressed in no way represent the NFHS Network and we are outraged that they found their way into our production,” the organization said in its statement. “We are aggressively investigating the incident and have immediately cut ties with the third-party production crew that was involved.”
                    In a series of tweets on Friday, Norman Mayor Breea Clark said she is “livid and absolutely disgusted about the racist and hateful comments directed towards the young women on the Norman High School basketball team.”
                    The Norman team won the game 53-40. Going into the game, the team was ranked No. 1 in their bracket with a 17-0 record, according to T.D. O’Hara, the district’s athletic director.

                    >>>>

                    A Trump policy institute? Heaven help us

                    A Trump policy institute? Heaven help us

                    Michael D’Antonio is the author of the book “Never Enough: Donald Trump and the Pursuit of Success” and co-author, with Peter Eisner, of the book “High Crimes: The Corruption, Impunity, and Impeachment of Donald Trump.” The opinions expressed in this commentary are his own. View more opinion on CNN.

                    As a brand extension, the recently announced launch of the America First Policy Institute couldn’t be better. The name leans on Donald Trump’s campaign catchphrase and, true to form, promises something grand. And though it’s built on a shaky foundation — how many real policies did the former president actually have? — its $ 20 million starting budget offers insiders a chance to get paid for continuing to spread Trump’s populist message.

                    Michael D'Antonio

                    Trump alumni without independent means are going to need paychecks — especially after some members of the former administration were reported to be having trouble finding jobs following the deadly Capitol riot by Trump supporters on January 6. Randall Lane, the editor of Forbes magazine, bluntly warned employers that if they hired any of Trump’s “fellow fabulists” the publication “will assume that everything your company or firm talks about is a lie.” Politico also reported that former Trumpers faced “bleak” job prospects due to the taint of their association with him.
                      A handful of Trump loyalists still draw federal salaries because the government provides small staffs for former presidents. And some, like former press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and former White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow, have been given work by Fox News.
                        (Kudlow is also listed as vice chair of the America First Institute’s board.) However, few other major hirings have been announced and GOP/Trump insider Armstrong Williams told the Washington Post that “many, many people” saw job offers rescinded after Trump incited the attack on the Capitol.
                          Given the former president’s entrepreneurial past, it’s no surprise that acolytes who faced dim job prospects decided to create work for themselves. According to the institute’s website, 35 of them have been named to the “team.” (Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner will reportedly be part-time advisers.) With those millions in start-up money, salaries shouldn’t be a problem. And in true Trump fashion, more than half the folks named to the institute will get fancy titles such as “chair” of this or “director” of that.
                          But what exactly will they be doing? According to the institute’s site, it will house 15 or more “centers” that will conduct research and “develop policies that put the American people first.” It’s worth noting that Team Trump promised the same thing during his administration, but didn’t get very far. Perhaps as they set to work, the institute’s chairs and directors could come up with the health care plan promised by Trump and never delivered. Or a real infrastructure program to replace the one Trump apparently forgot.
                            Come to think of it, the institute could fill its entire agenda with ideas that the former president either failed to develop or implement despite big promises. To begin there’s that “big, beautiful” southern border wall that Mexico was supposed to pay to construct. Trump didn’t get it half-way finished and Mexico hasn’t paid a penny. Then there are all those jobs Trump promised to create in manufacturing plants and coal mines. And how about the 4% annual growth in Gross Domestic Product he promised? Maybe the institute could devise policies to make that happen.
                            The problem for all the thinkers who will populate the America First Institute is that greater Washington, not to mention the country overall, is already very well-served by policy experts. The Heritage Foundation, Brookings, the Kaiser Family Foundation, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Rand Corporation, Center for American Progress, and National Bureau of Economic Research, to name a few, spend hundreds of millions annually on policy research and development. They also count Nobel laureates and other global leaders in their ranks.
                            At the American First institute one of the best-known names comes with additional controversy attached. John Ratcliffe, who served as Trump’s director of national intelligence for seven months, faced questions about whether he misrepresented his credentials prior to taking the job and while in office declassified unverified Russian intelligence in an apparent attempt to help Trump politically.
                            A few of the institute’s people, like Lt. General Keith Kellogg, former national security adviser to Vice President Mike Pence, will bring a touch of gravitas to the operation but generally speaking the folks at Rand or Brookings likely have little to fear in terms of academic competition. Besides, some of the topic areas assigned to this team suggests a less-than-serious cast of mind. Among the institute’s “centers” will be one devoted to “media accountability” that will be directed by a former Trump campaign marketing officer with no apparent experience in the media. Likewise, a Center for Election Integrity will be run by a former state trial court judge who lists no election-related expertise in her biographical sketch. Election integrity and media accountability are obsessions for Trump, who is infamous for unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud and countless reckless attacks on the press.
                            Taken together, the people and the agenda of the new institute suggest that it will serve mainly as a make-work project for needy administration alumni keeping up the pretense that Trump was a successful leader. Much will have to be overlooked, including the former president’s miserable response to the Covid-19 pandemic, his record of lies, and his decisive defeat in his reelection bid.
                            Get our free weekly newsletter

                            Sign up for CNN Opinion’s new newsletter.

                            Join us on Twitter and Facebook

                              The team’s commitment to maintaining the mirage of Trump’s “success” — even without mentioning him by name on the site — was apparent as the institute’s president Brooke Rollins announced it was launching to “continue the transformative changes” of the last four years. “We keep the mission going,” she declared in her pop-up video message on the site’s home page.
                              Heaven help us.

                              >>>>

                              Robert Durst’s family helped cover up disappearance, murder of wife: lawyers

                              Robert Durst’s family helped cover up disappearance, murder of wife: lawyers

                              “Attorneys representing Kathleen Durst’s family say #RobertDurst brother Douglas & father Seymore aided in the cover-up of Kathleen’s disappearance and murder,” Law & Crime executive producer Cathy Russon tweeted.

                              The renewed accusations by the law firm Abrams and Fensterman comes as Robert Durst’s Los Angeles trial in the murder of his longtime confidant, Susan Berman, is set to resume after a 14-month delay.

                              A 2019 lawsuit filed by Kathie’s sister, Carol Bamonte, accused the wealthy Durst family of conspiring “to protect [Robert] Durst and The Durst Organization from any connection to Kathie’s disappearance and murder.”

                              WHO IS ROBERT DURST?

                              The suit claimed Kathie was set to expose illegal business dealings within the family’s real estate company, the Durst Organization, prompting Seymour Durst to direct his son Robert Durst to “take care of this problem.”

                              On Monday, Robert Abrams, who represents Kathie Durst’s family, claimed he had new information to bolster the allegations — but refused to share it after the Westchester District Attorney announced it was reopening the cold case into her death.

                              In a statement, the Durst family said they were “appalled” by the claims.

                              “Mr. Abrams is a member of the cottage industry that seeks to personally profit off of Robert’s victims, even if it involves disrupting the prosecution of the murder of Susan Berman,” Jason Barowitz, a spokesman for the family, told The Post.

                              “The truth is that the Durst family is appalled by Robert’s actions and has cooperated with authorities to help ensure justice is served,” Barowitz said. “These allegations are false and have been repeatedly debunked.” 

                              In court Monday, Judge Mark Windham denied a motion by Durst’s lawyers to delay the trial in Berman’s death — although he said he would schedule a hearing in future to consider evidence regarding his health.

                              Durst attorney Dick DeGuerin claimed his elderly client, who was not in court, needs “urgent hospitalization” and better care than can be provided by “medical students” in jail.

                              DeGuerin said Durst suffers from a multitude of ailments, including pancreatic cancer and heart, liver and lung disease.

                              “This is something that’s very serious,” he told the judge. “The doctor simply says, ‘The question is not just whether he can endure the rigors of a trial. The question is whether he can survive at all.'”

                              But lead prosecutor John Lewin debunked the claims, saying Durst is receiving proper medical care behind bars — with no guarantee, his health would improve if the trial were delayed for several months.

                              Durst, 78, has been jailed since 2015 on charges he shot and killed his friend Susan Berman in her Los Angeles home in 2000.

                              Prosecutors contend that the kooky real estate heir shot Berman in the back of the head because she was about to give information to authorities on Durst’s missing wife, Kathie.

                              Kathie Durst vanished from the couple’s New York home in 1982, and authorities believe Durst killed her — although he has never been charged with her death. Her body was never found.

                              Durst was also accused of killing his neighbor, Morris Black, in Texas while he was in hiding — but was acquitted after claiming self-defense.

                              His trial in Berman’s death began last year, with opening arguments and two days of testimony in a Los Angeles courtroom.

                              However, the case was halted due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

                              The proposed resumption of the trial would be unprecedented, with jurors already seated and having heard testimony before being called back into court.

                              The panel of 23 jurors, including 11 alternates, was whittled down from a pool of 400, and lawyers for Durst argue that the long layover makes it impossible for the jury to be impartial given the high-profile nature of the case.

                              The defense team also asked for a delay in the trial due to Durst’s health issues, including a battle with cancer.

                              However, the judge has vowed to try to push ahead and is due to question the jurors on Monday before resuming the proceedings on Tuesday.

                              To read more from the New York Post, click here.


                              >>>>

                              19 families buy nearly 97 acres of land in Georgia to create a city safe for Black people

                              19 families buy nearly 97 acres of land in Georgia to create a city safe for Black people

                              “Welcome to Freedom!” exclaims real estate agent Ashley Scott as she surveys the nearly 97 acres of land that she and a group of 19 Black families purchased in August.

                              “I’m hoping that it will be a thriving safe haven for people of color, for Black families in particular,” Scott says.
                              The land sits just East of Macon in rural Wilkinson County, Georgia. Scott and her friend, investor and entrepreneur Renee Walters, didn’t initially plan on buying a large plot of land, but they had a vision that was clear — to create a safe space for their Black families.
                              “Being able to create a community that is thriving, that is safe, that has agriculture and commercial businesses that are supporting one another and that dollars circulating in our community, that is our vision.”

                                A safe space

                                The unrest that took hold of the country earlier this year after the killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor at the hands of police, and closer to home, the shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery while jogging outside Brunswick, Georgia, prompted the women to search for a new community, one they could start themselves.
                                Land purchased by the Freedom Georgia Initiative in Wilkinson County, Georgia.

                                “Watching our people protesting in the streets, while it is important, and I want people to stay out in the streets, bringing attention to the injustices of Black people. We needed to create a space and a place where we could be a village, again, a tribe, again,” Scott said.
                                “We wanted to create this safe space where we can address our own issues and concerns.”
                                The two wanted to launch an initiative that would create a new city founded by Black families.
                                “We both have Black husbands. We both have Black sons. And I was starting to get overwhelmed and have a sense of anxiety when my husband will leave the house to go to work,” said Walters. “So, it was like, OK, what can we do? And once I saw the post of Toomsboro going viral, about a town being on sale, I was like, ‘Oh, this is perfect.'”
                                Scott and Walters reached out to family and friends to see who might be interested in joining their effort. Together, they created the Freedom Georgia Initiative to spearhead the purchase. They hope to incorporate the land they bought into a new Black city, called Freedom, Georgia.

                                Town for sale?

                                The ad Renee Walters saw had been circulating online, publicizing the sale of the Town of Toomsboro. The ad eventually went viral.
                                Scott said she got a call when her friend caught wind of the sale. “She said Ashley, did you see the article about Toomsboro for sale? For the price of a small condo, we could buy a whole town for $ 1.7 million,” Scott said.
                                CNN affiliate WGXA reported the website called Toomsboroforsale.com was run by Tim Bumgardner, a developer who owned more than 30 properties around town.

                                “It is one of the few places where you can buy a whole town with every kind of building including a historic inn, a syrup mill, an opera house, a school house, a railroad depot, a cotton warehouse, a restaurant, a barbershop, a water wheel, a grist mill, a work shop, a filling station, and several houses,” the ad read.
                                Turns out, the town itself wasn’t actually for sale. Joyce Denson, the Mayor of Toomsboro, made that clear.
                                “I have gotten calls from New York. I’ve gotten calls from North Carolina. I’ve gotten tells calls from California,” Denson says. “We welcome business. We want new people to come in. The thing that we want to make sure is that you promote and help keep the flavor of the community.”
                                After Scott and Walters discovered the town itself wasn’t up for sale, Scott put on her real estate hat and looked for land in the area. They found acreage for sale just outside Toomsboro, in unincorporated Wilkinson County.
                                “It was just such a beautiful piece of land. It was affordable, and it just made sense that we could create something that would be amazing for our families,” said Scott.

                                History of Black cooperatives

                                The combining of resources to create a collective or cooperative economics is not new — especially when it comes to Blacks in the United States.
                                “We have a very long history of doing cooperative economics, economic cooperation, creating our own communal towns,” says Jessica Gordon Nembhard, author of Collective Courage: A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice and professor of community justice at John Jay College. “More recently, we’ve been establishing community land trust, which actually give official land ownership to the community.”
                                Hobson City, Alabama, was the state’s first all-Black city, founded in 1899 after Blacks were kicked out of neighboring towns. CNN affiliate WBRC reported in June that “Hobson City residents celebrated Juneteenth with one simple message: Black Towns Matter” to celebrate the city’s heritage.
                                One of the earliest all-Black municipalities was Mound Bayou in the Mississippi Delta. It was established by former slaves after the Civil War.
                                “Almost every society that had enslavement also had marooned societies,” says Gordon Nembhard. “They set up their own communities … and start to farm it together, create a town, run the town, work collectively as much as possible and basically have a secluded space that was totally community controlled, and a way to be away from slavery.”
                                “There’s so many former Black cities,” said Scott. “We hope that we can be one of those as well.”
                                Scott and Walters say they’ve gotten questions about why they want to create an all-Black city. Their response? It’s something that’s been done for generations.
                                “It’s impossible to have anything exclusively Black because our families are integrated,” says Scott. “We are an integrated, tolerant and diverse community even as Black people, so we don’t intend for it to be exclusively Black, but we do intend for it to be pro Black in every way.”

                                ‘We’re creating a legacy’

                                Scott and Walters plan to develop the land in phases. The first phase involves clearing the land, farming, and creating a man-made lake for sustainable fishing.
                                At a ribbon-cutting ceremony, Scott said while they didn’t know the exact history of their plot of land, the symbolism of reclaiming this land gives them an opportunity to write their own story.
                                  They hope to grow within a few years. By the end of their development plan, they hope to have a fully operational, self-sufficient city — putting Freedom, Georgia, on the map.
                                  “To be able to pass this land down to my children and to the children that are represented by each of our 19 families. As a piece of legacy. We’re hoping to create legacy.”

                                  >>>>

                                  The UN removes cannabis from a list of the most dangerous substances

                                  The UN removes cannabis from a list of the most dangerous substances

                                  A United Nations commission has voted to remove cannabis from a list that categorized it as one of the most dangerous drugs — a move that recognizes the plant as having medicinal value.

                                  The UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs approved a recommendation from the World Health Organization on Wednesday to remove cannabis and cannabis resin from its Schedule IV classification under the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs. That designation put cannabis and one of its derivatives in a category alongside heroin and other opioids.
                                  Substances classified as Schedule IV are a subset of Schedule I drugs. That means not only are they considered to be “highly addictive and highly liable for abuse,” they’re also labeled as “particularly harmful and of extremely limited medical or therapeutic value.”
                                  “This is welcome news for the millions of people who use cannabis for therapeutic purposes and reflects the reality of the growing market for cannabis-based medicinal products,” a group of drug policy advocacy organizations said in a news release.
                                    Wednesday’s vote means that cannabis and cannabis resin are no longer classified as among the most harmful substances and are acknowledged as having medical benefits. But they’ll still be subject to restrictions under the Schedule I category.
                                    “We welcome the long overdue recognition that cannabis is a medicine,” Ann Fordham, executive director of the International Drug Policy Consortium, said in a statement. “However, this reform alone is far from adequate given that cannabis remains incorrectly scheduled at the international level.”
                                    The move is largely symbolic, and may not have an immediate impact on how governments control scheduled substances. But it could give a boost to medical cannabis legalization efforts in countries that look to the United Nations for guidance.
                                    The commission voted 27-25 to reschedule cannabis and cannabis resin. The United States, the United Kingdom, Germany and South Africa were among those who voted in favor, while countries including Brazil, China, Russia and Pakistan voted against.
                                    Members also rejected other four other recommendations from WHO about cannabis and its derivatives, which included removing extracts and tinctures of cannabis from Schedule I status and classifying a psychoactive component of cannabis, tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC.
                                      Alfredo Pascual, an analyst for the trade publication Marijuana Business Daily, said in a news release that “the message that the removal from Schedule IV sends cannot be overstated.”
                                      He added, “It’s an implicit acknowledgement of its therapeutical utility and that marijuana is not as dangerous as believed about 60 years ago.”

                                      >>>>

                                      Dan Bongino: Mainstream media are ‘useful idiots,’ promote ‘Chinese propaganda’

                                      Dan Bongino: Mainstream media are 'useful idiots,' promote 'Chinese propaganda'

                                      “Folks, new questions are emerging about the coronavirus and the lab leak theory,” Bongino said. “They are serious questions that serious people in our media should have been asking, and didn’t, because they practiced a bunch of Chinese propaganda and pumped it down your gullets.”

                                      Bongino asserted that evidence suggests COVID may have leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, a theory that was initially called a conspiracy theory by many media outlets.  

                                      “Did they create a super virus, the Chinese Communist Party?” he asked. “Did they use the media to cover it up?  Folks, the evidence is out there. You can see it yourself.”

                                      “Did they use the media to cover it up?  Folks, the evidence is out there. You can see it yourself.”

                                      — Dan Bongino

                                      Bongino noted that although he is not a virologist, he can see and read evidence that suggests COVID may have come from a Chinese lab.

                                      FAUCI NOT HONEST ABOUT COVID ORIGIN, SAYS ADM. BRETT GIROIR

                                      He referenced an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal titled, “The Science Suggests a Wuhan Lab Leak,” which states “The COVID-19 pathogen has a genetic footprint that has never been observed in a natural coronavirus.” 

                                      “Kind of an important fact, no?” Bongino asked. 

                                      The Fox News host also referenced comments made by Adm. Brett Giroir, who told Fox News’ “America Reports” it was likely that China had an “extensive biological weapons program” integrated between the government, academia, and the private sector. 

                                      Giroir added that it was “not crazy” to think that COVID could have been part of a bioweapons program. 

                                      “Again, liberal media types, that’s called a clue,” said Bongino. 

                                      “When a guy on the inside like Admiral Giroir, who understands what happened, he was on the coronavirus task force, a serious person, says ‘China has dual-use bioweapons programs, civilian research, maybe we should check it out’ – maybe we should check it out.” 

                                      Bongino also questioned what NIAID Director Dr. Anthony Fauci knew about COVID origins, and what role the United States may have had in financing Chinese research.  

                                      “Did we finance, I can’t ask this enough, did we finance dual-research programs to finance Chinese bioweapons, and if so, did government insiders and Dr. Fauci know?” 


                                      >>>>