Catching-Up on Current Events

Russia's Gazprom halts gas supplies to Italy in latest energy battle

With Nord Stream out of commission, there is now just one major pipeline bringing natural gas straight to Europe. And that route, which passes through Ukraine, is looking increasingly vulnerable. That pipeline has already had part of its supply knocked out by the war, and could turn out to be the next to close as the conflict drags on.

Gazprom Saturday also reduced the daily gas flow levels to Moldova through the Ukraine and blamed the reduction on Ukraine.

Russia’s state-controlled Gazprom PJSC suspended natural gas deliveries to Italy in an apparent scuffle over regulation in Austria, escalating the energy crisis in Europe.

The cutoff appeared to target just Italy, which gets Gazprom’s supplies from a pipeline that passes through Austria. Higher volumes of Russian gas were allocated to Vienna-based OMV AG than recently, said Andreas Rinofner, a spokesman for OMV, which imports Russian gas to Austria.

Although Italy has been weaning itself off Russian gas, Saturday’s development highlights how vulnerable European countries are to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s repeated moves to choke off energy to the continent. The standoff intensified this week after massive leaks erupted in a key pipeline to Europe that some nations blamed on sabotage.

Gazprom released a statement saying it had suspended the supplies to Italy because the Austrian operator had refused to confirm “transport nominations” after regulatory changes implemented in Austria in late September.

Austria’s Energy Ministry said Gazprom had failed to sign off on contractual changes that reflect technical rule adjustments typically made at the start of each gas year. Gazprom, like other market participants, had known of the changes for months, Austrian regulator E-Control said in a tweet.

Disputes over contractual clauses and regulation have accompanied the meltdown in economic ties between Russia and countries to its west, as Putin continues his war against Ukraine. Earlier this year, Russia’s demand for gas deliveries to be paid in ruble contributed to soaring prices.

Gazprom said it is working to resolve the issue with Italian buyers. Eni SpA confirmed the cutoff and said it was reaching out to Gazprom. Austria’s government also said it was working on the matter at a technical level.

A spokeswoman for pipeline operator Trans Austria Gasleitung GmbH didn’t respond to an email and calls seeking comment.

Alternative supplies

Italy once relied on Russia for about 40% of its gas imports, but has been aggressively cutting that dependence since the invasion in February. Italy has now sourced sufficient alternative supplies of gas from North Africa to make up for any shortfalls this winter if Russia were to cut off supplies, people familiar with the matter have told Bloomberg. A boost of expected deliveries from Algeria and Egypt will be able to cover the remaining supplies that Italy was still getting from Russia, they said.

The cutoff of Italian gas comes days after underwater eruptions crippled the key Nord Stream gas pipelines connecting Russia with Europe. U.S. President Joe Biden yesterday echoed the assessment of Western European leaders that the pipelines were sabotaged and added that Russian statements about the incident shouldn’t be trusted.

In response, Norway’s armed forces stepped up patrols of the country’s energy facilities and Germany, France and the U.K. offered to help protect oil and gas installations in the North Sea. NATO is also using its naval and air capabilities to monitor the Baltic and North Seas.

With Nord Stream out of commission, there is now just one major pipeline bringing natural gas straight to Europe. And that route, which passes through Ukraine, is looking increasingly vulnerable. That pipeline has already had part of its supply knocked out by the war, and could turn out to be the next to close as the conflict drags on.

Gazprom Saturday also reduced the daily gas flow levels to Moldova through the Ukraine and blamed the reduction on Ukraine.

Berlin: Capital gets first gay and lesbian day care center

https://de.newstdy.net/berlin-capital-gets-first-gay-and-lesbian-day-care-center-regional-2/

Berlin – It is the first project of this kind in Germany: a gay and lesbian day-care center is to open in Berlin-Schoeneberg in the spring.

The facility will be part of what is known as the “diversity of life at Südkreuz” (Ella-Barowsky-Str. 27/28, Schöneberg). In the building, gay counseling Berlin is planning a multi-generation house for homosexual, bisexual, transsexual and intersexual people, a counseling center and nursing homes.

And also the day-care center, which consists of the “Pink Tiger” and “Yellow-Green Panther” facilities. All under the motto LSBTI*, i.e. lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex people.

Baerbock justifies arms deal with Saudi Arabia

Federal Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock (Greens) justified the controversial export license for equipment and ammunition for Saudi Arabia.

Federal Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock (Greens) justified the controversial export license for equipment and ammunition for Saudi Arabia. "There are no direct arms deliveries from Germany to Saudi Arabia - especially in view of the devastating human rights situation on site and in the region," said Baerbock in an interview with the "Neue OsnabrĂźcker Zeitung" (NOZ).

However, Germany is part of long-term joint defense projects with its closest European partners. "We can't block these projects right now," said Baerbock, adding: "Some decisions are hair-raisingly difficult."

Despite an extensive export ban, the traffic light government recently gave the green light for the delivery of equipment and ammunition for fighter jets to Saudi Arabia worth 36 million euros. The basis is an exception. Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) visited the Gulf state last Saturday. The former federal government had largely stopped arms exports to Saudi Arabia, partly because of the kingdom's involvement in the Yemen war and the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

After years of war, Saudi Arabia is now working for a ceasefire in Yemen, Baerbock told the NOZ. “Nevertheless, this terrible conflict is not over. At the same time, according to Baerbock, value-based foreign policy means "facing the dramatic world situation and not getting in the bush in the face of difficult debates".

In "the worst security crisis in Europe for decades", "reliability towards our allies in the EU and NATO has become even more important," said Baerbock, explaining the green light for the joint project. In any case, a decision will be made very critically and conscientiously about rejection or approval. Only the approved deliveries would be reported to the Bundestag, and the few cases made it clear that the human rights situation and the fact that deliveries cannot be used for internal repression "play the central role in our foreign and also in our economic policy". .

Baerbock added that an intensive social debate has been going on since February about how to deal with these dilemmas after the turn of the century. "And we will pour these principles into clear, strict criteria in an arms export control law," said the Foreign Minister.

Next on Europe's doomsday list: Collapse of cell phone networks

Energy rationing, power cuts expected to knock out parts of mobile systems

It's not just heating that could be missing across Europe this winter: cell phones may be the next to go. That's because if power cuts or energy rationing knocks out parts of the mobile networks across the region, mobile phones could go dark around Europe this winter according to the latest doomsday reporting from Reuters.

While everyone knows by now that Europe's chances of rationing and power shortages have exploded ever since Moscow suspended gas supplies, in France, the situation is even worse as several nuclear power plants are shutting down for maintenance. And the cherry on top: telecom industry officials told Reuters they fear a severe winter will put Europe's telecoms infrastructure to the test, forcing companies and governments to try to mitigate the impact (i.e., more bailout demands).

The problem, as four telecoms executives put it, is that currently there are not enough back-up systems in many European countries to handle widespread power cuts, raising the prospect of mobile phone outages. Realizing that in just weeks Europe could be cell phone free, countries including France, Sweden and Germany, are scarmbling to ensure communications can continue even if power cuts end up exhausting back-up batteries installed on the thousands of cellular antennas spread across their territory.

Alas, like with everything else in Europe, it's too little, too late and Europe is facing a truly historic cell phone black out because while Europe has nearly half a million telecom towers, most of them have battery backups that last around 30 minutes to run the mobile antennas. After that they go dark.

One of the alternatives being discussed is pushing Europe back to communist era blackout regimes: In France, a plan put forward by electricity distributor Enedis, includes potential power cuts of up to two hours in a worst case scenario, two sources familiar with the matter said.

The general black-outs would affect only parts of the country on a rotating basis. Essential services such as hospitals, police and government will not be impacted, the sources said. And now, it appears that cell phones are considered essential too: the French Federation of Telecoms (FFT), a lobby group representing Orange, Bouygues Telecomand Altice's SFR, put the spotlight on Enedis for being unable to exempt antennas from the power cuts.

Enedis said it was able to isolate sections of the network to supply priority customers, such as hospitals, key industrial installations and the military and that it was up to local authorities to add telecoms operators infrastructure to the list of priority customers.

"Maybe we'll improve our knowledge on the matter by this winter, but it's not easy to isolate a mobile antenna (from the rest of the network)," said a French finance ministry official with knowledge of the talks.

Telcos in Sweden and Germany have also raised concerns over potential electricity shortages with their governments, several sources familiar with the matter said. Swedish telecom regulator PTS is working with telecom operators and other government agencies to find solutions, it said. That includes talks about what will happen if electricity is rationed. PTS is financing the purchase of transportable fuel stations and mobile base stations that connect to mobile phones to handle longer power outages, a PTS spokesperson said.

The Italian telecoms lobby was even more forceful, and told Reuters it wants the mobile network to be excluded from any power cut or energy saving stoppage and will raise this with Italy's new government. The power outages increase the probability of electronic components failing if subjected to abrupt interruptions, telecoms lobby chief Massimo Sarmi said in an interview.

Until a solution is reached, to save power, telecom companies are using software to optimise traffic flow, make towers "sleep" when not in use and switch off different spectrum bands, Reuters sources said. The telecom operators are also working with national governments to check if plans are in place to maintain critical services. In Germany, Deutsche Telekom has 33,000 mobile radio towers and its mobile emergency power systems can only support a small number of them at the same time, a company spokesperson said. Zerohedge

Instability increases in the Middle East.

The conflict in Yemen between the Iran-backed Huthi rebels and pro-government troops escalated in March 2015 when a Saudi-led military coalition intervened in support of the loyalists.

The civil war has killed hundreds of thousands of people, directly and indirectly, according to the United Nations.

A truce in place since April ended on Sunday with no agreement to renew.

The UN's special envoy, Hans Grundberg, attempts to extend the truce to six months and expand its terms to include paying civil servants' salaries and opening routes into Taez.

However, the Huthis reject the proposal and the October 2 deadline passes without agreement.

https://twitter.com/TheCradleMedia/status/1576691433456533504

After the ceasefire between Yemen and Saudi Arabia expired, a video was released by Ansarallah: the group's leader, Abdel Malik al-Houthi, clarified that if the coalition does not heed the warning and lift the blockade immediately, they will regret it.

Gibraltar PANORAMA TODAY'S FRONT PAGE

@GibPanorama

#Gibraltar #News http://panorama.gi


Image

https://twitter.com/GibPanorama/status/1577218408772694016?s=20&t=mkWt9xFC-8cMvxFN_W-3Zg

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'Enduringly British': Picardo calls for Gibraltar self-determination and new UK-EU treaty

The Rock's Chief Minister expressed his hope that Brexit will bring "benefits".

Fabian Picardo has called for Gibraltar’s self-determination and for a new treaty between the UK and the EU. He told the Conservative Party conference that the Rock’s “commitment to Britain is unshakable”.

The British Overseas Territory did not form a part of the 2020 EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement.

Round nine of talks on the future status of the Rock was pushed back last month following the death of Queen Elizabeth II.

Ahead of the rescheduled negotiations, Mr Picardo expressed his desire for Gibraltar to be self-determining.

He told the Gibraltar Reception at the Tory party conference that he felt among friends – and that he was sure the Government would help to ensure the future status of the Rock is a positive one.

The Chief Minister said: “And I know that we are two thousand five hundred kilometres away from Gibraltar. But I also know that I could very easily tonight have started my address by calling you all 'my fellow Gibraltarians’.

“For each of you cares deeply about Gibraltar and our prospects for the future.

“I know you care as deeply as we do to ensure that every thing we do is designed to keep us entirely, exclusively and enduringly British. I know that you will work with us to ensure that Brexit delivers dividends for us in a new UK-EU Treaty on our future relationship with the EU.

“And I know that, like every Gibraltarian, you will want to ensure that any such treaty is safe and secure for Gibraltar.”

He added that “I also know that we all agree that the future of Gibraltar can only be decided by the Gibraltarians and that your commitment to our self-determination is unquestionable”.

Mr Picardo paid special thanks to Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, who he described as a “great friend of Gibraltar”.

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Foreign Secretary James Cleverly says Britain and France will have blazing rows but also work together

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly has predicted that Britain and France will both have “blazing rows” and “work very collaboratively” as he vowed the Government will approach the European Political Community with an open mind.

Liz Truss is set to attend a meeting of the group – French President Emmanuel Macron’s scheme to bring together EU nations and countries outside the bloc.

The British prime minister caused controversy during her Tory leadership campaign by failing to say whether the ally was “friend or foe”.

Mr Cleverly declined to call Mr Macron a “friend” when asked to choose but said he had a “lovely chat” with the French President on the eve of the Queen’s funeral.

The Foreign Secretary told a Tory conference fringe event hosted by the UK in a Changing Europe think tank: “We had a very friendly chat, I said to him that the comments that he made about Her late Majesty were pitch perfect.”

Elaborating on the cross-Channel relationship, he said there is a “degree of sibling rivalry”.

“I think our proximity sometimes generates friction but ultimately what we’ve seen on plenty of occasions, not just because of Ukraine, that despite perhaps our unique ability to rub each other up the wrong way at times, that actually we do have a real ability to pull together and work very collaboratively when needs be.

“I have no doubt that we will find ways of working brilliantly closely with France, and I have no doubt we’ll find ways of having blazing rows with France, because that’s what the Brits and the French do, it’s our thing.”

Asked about Mr Macron’s European club, Mr Cleverly said he agreed with “recognising there is more to Europe than the EU”.

“I think having European countries finding ways to work together, whether on mutual security, economic security etc, etc, that’s certainly something we’ll go into with open eyes.

“We want to find ways of working well with our neighbours and partners and friends in Europe, and we’re willing to explore what this can do and how it can add value to our relationships.”

Ms Truss’s move to attend the meeting in Prague, which comes after days of weighing up whether to go, will raise eyebrows given her explicit scepticism about the project only a few months ago as Mr Cleverly’s predecessor at the Foreign Office.

Mr Cleverly said it had struck him how much the international community has pulled together since Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, saying the Russian president has failed in his aim to fracture the allies’ relations.

He said Russia’s veto on the United Nations Security Council is “problematic”, but that it still serves an “important function” as it “allows the world to see that they are isolated”.

Asked about negotiations with the EU over the Northern Ireland Protocol, Mr Cleverly said: “We’ve been very clear about the things we think are key to the integrity of the UK: Northern Ireland must always be treated as an integral part of our country.”

He praised government colleague Steve Baker for apologising to the EU and Ireland for his former “ferocious” stance on Brexit negotiations.

“I think it was very honourable to try and take some of the heat out of the conversation,” he said.

“What Steve is implicitly saying is ‘let’s look forward and not backwards’, and I think that is a very, very sensible thing to say.”

The Twitter deal is back.

Twitter’s stock spikes after Elon Musk offers to buy firm for original $44B price

Twitter’s stock skyrocketed on Tuesday afternoon after word surfaced that billionaire Elon Musk has proposed moving forward with his original $44 billion deal to buy the social media firm.

Shares of Twitter spiked as much as 15% before trading was halted on the news of the report. As of 1:15 a.m. ET, the stock was up 12.67% to $47.93 – a figure that trailed Musk’s offer of $54.20 per share.

Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives said Musk’s decision to reverse course and proceed with the deal “is a clear sign” that the billionaire recognized he was “highly unlikely” to win his legal battle with Twitter’s board.

“We see minimal regulatory risk in this deal although now Musk owning the Twitter platform will cause a firestorm of worries and questions looking ahead among users and the Beltway,” Ives said in a note. “This is a smart move for Musk to go ahead with the deal given the legal hurdles that were ahead into Delaware.”

Ives set a 12-month price target of $50 for Twitter shares.

Musk’s reversal came just days before he was slated to face Twitter in Delaware Chancery Court. Twitter was seeking to force Musk to buy the company at the originally-agreed $44 billion price after the billionaire tried to back out of the agreement due to concerns about spam bots.

Musk’s proposal weighed on Tesla shares, which were trading higher for much of the morning, but sank as reports of a deal surfaced – a potential sign that investors are fretting he will have to sell more stock to fund the transaction.

Tesla’s stock, which had opened higher in early morning trades, was flat at $244.03 in early afternoon trading.

As The Post reported, Musk’s proposal to honor the original terms was a bid to avoid the trial, which was slated to begin on Oct. 17. The Tesla CEO was slated to be deposed by Twitter’s attorneys on Thursday and Friday ahead of the trial.

Musk offers to end legal fight, pay $44B to buy Twitter

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/report-musk-proposes-to-proceed-with-twitter-takeover/2022/10/04/d7f2a6aa-4401-11ed-be17-89cbe6b8c0a5_story.html

Many of Musk’s tweets in the past 24 hours have been about a divisive proposal to end Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, drawing the ire of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Musk argued in a tweet Monday that to reach peace Russia should be allowed to keep the Crimea Peninsula that it seized in 2014. He also said Ukraine should adopt a neutral status, dropping a bid to join NATO following Russia’s partial mobilization of reservists.

Elon Musk is abandoning his legal battle to back out of buying Twitter by offering to go through with his original $44 billion bid for the social media platform.

The mercurial Tesla CEO made the offer in a letter to Twitter, Musk disclosed in a filing Tuesday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The offer comes just two weeks before Twitter’s lawsuit seeking to force Musk to go through with the deal goes to trial in Delaware Chancery Court.

The filing says he’ll complete deal as long as he gets debt financing and provided that the court gets rid of the lawsuit.

By going through with the deal, Musk essentially gave Twitter what it was seeking from the court — “specific performance” of the contract with Musk, meaning he would have to go through with the purchase at the original price. The contract Musk signed also has a $1 billion breakup fee.

Eric Talley, a law professor at Columbia University, said he’s not surprised by Musk’s turnaround, especially ahead of a scheduled deposition of Musk by Twitter attorneys starting Thursday that was “not going to be pleasant.”

“On the legal merits, his case didn’t look that strong,” Talley said. “It kind of seemed like a pretty simple buyer’s remorse case.”

If Musk were to lose the trial, the judge could not only force him to close the deal but also impose interest payments that would have increased its cost, Talley said.

What did surprise Talley is that Musk doesn’t appear to be trying to renegotiate the deal. Even a modest price reduction might have given Musk a “moral victory” and the ability to say he got something out of the protracted dispute, Talley said.

News of the renewed offer caused trading of Twitter stock to be halted much of Tuesday afternoon on the New York Stock Exchange for “news pending” after it jumped nearly 13% to $47.93. That’s still well below the price of $54.20 in Musk’s original offer. Trading halts are how stock exchanges give investors a forced timeout when trading for a stock gets too chaotic, or when a company is about to offer market-moving news.

Neither Twitter nor attorneys for Musk responded to requests for comment Tuesday afternoon.

Musk has been trying to back out of the deal for several months after signing on to buy the San Francisco company in April. Shareholders have already approved the sale, and legal experts say Musk faced a huge challenge to defend against Twitter’s lawsuit, which was filed in July.

Musk claimed that Twitter under-counted the number of fake accounts on its platform, and Twitter sued when Musk announced the deal was off.

Musk’s argument largely rested on the allegation that Twitter misrepresented how it measures the magnitude of “spam bot” accounts that are useless to advertisers. Most legal experts believe he faced an uphill battle to convince Chancellor Kathaleen St. Jude McCormick, the court’s head judge, that something changed since the April merger agreement that justifies terminating the deal.

Legal experts said Musk may have anticipated that he would lose. Things haven’t been going well for him in court recently, with the judge ruling more frequently in Twitter’s favor on evidentiary matters, said Ann Lipton, an associate law professor at Tulane University. The judge’s denied several of Musk’s discovery requests, Lipton said.

It’s also possible that Musk’s co-investors in the deal were starting to get nervous about how the case was proceeding, she said.

Musk’s main argument for terminating the deal – that Twitter was misrepresenting how it measured its “spam bot” problem – also didn’t appear to be going well as Twitter had been working to pick apart Musk’s attempts to get third-party data scientists to bolster his concerns.

Twitter now has options in the case and doesn’t necessarily have to accept a new offer from Musk, said Robert Anderson, a law professor at Pepperdine University.

“Twitter could still be concerned that the same thing might happen again without some additional security,” Anderson said. “They’re going to want some assurance that the deal is going to happen right away.”

Columbia’s Talley said he would insist on Musk putting money into an escrow account until the deal is completed. Such an account could hold cash and/or Twitter shares, as a good-faith demonstration by Musk, Talley suggested.

Mysteriously, neither Musk nor Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal have written anything about the deal on Twitter, where many developments in the dispute have been aired. Many of Musk’s tweets in the past 24 hours have been about a divisive proposal to end Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, drawing the ire of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Musk argued in a tweet Monday that to reach peace Russia should be allowed to keep the Crimea Peninsula that it seized in 2014. He also said Ukraine should adopt a neutral status, dropping a bid to join NATO following Russia’s partial mobilization of reservists.

If the deal does go through, Musk may be stuck with a company he damaged with repeated statements denoucing fake accounts, Susannah Streeter, senior markets analyst for Hargreaves Lansdown in the United Kingdom, wrote in an investor note. “This is an important metric considered to be key for future revenue streams via paid advertising or for subscriptions on the site, and his relentless scrutiny of Twitter’s figures over the last few months is likely to prompt questions from potential advertising partners,” she wrote.

Reports of the settlement surfaced just hours after attorneys for Musk filed a motion late Monday night seeking sanctions against Twitter for allegedly instructing whistleblower Peiter “Mudge” Zatko in June to destroy evidence. In a proposed order, Musk attorneys, said “an adverse inference is drawn against plaintiff, that all destroyed evidence corroborates Mr. Zatko’s testimony.”

If Musk were to lose, among the remedies that would favor Twitter is a court order to go through with the deal. The Chancery Court last year forced private equity firm Kohlberg & Co. to go through with its $550 million buyout of DecoPac, a company based in Minnesota that calls itself the world’s largest supplier of cake decorating supplies to professional decorators and bakeries. The case was emblematic of the court’s common — though not uniform — resolution of enforcing contractual obligations on buyers.

Other options include Musk being forced to pay the breakup fee each side agreed to if deemed responsible for the deal falling through. Or he might have to pay off a larger amount without actually buying the company for $44 billion.

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He, Picardo, also pledged his allegience to the not so royal crown:

Our Royal Gibraltar Regiment proudly guarded the Sovereign and the Royal Palaces in March this year.

What better demonstration than that of our indisputably British Sovereignty.

Our people,

Our Regiment,

Guarding Our Sovereign.

We were therefore heart broken when the death of Her Late Majesty was announced. Because as you may already have heard me say, but I will never tire of repeating, We were her Rock – and she was ours.

And both those analogies extend far beyond the geological.

So today, as I see you for the first time since the pandemic and as we gather for the first time since we mourn Her, I want to end my address to you tonight reaffirming the entire, enduring and exclusive loyalty and commitment of the People and Government of Gibraltar to the British Crown.

We all wish and pray that our beloved Queen Elizabeth shall rest in Eternal Peace.

And I urge you all to raise your glasses and toast, my dear friends, the King of Gibraltar, Charles the III.

Long Live The king.

He was also thankful for:

The supply of vacancies, which made us the first territory with full population vaccination. And the assistance with a Sovereign Guarantee for our long term pandemic debt.

And:

"To be truly in Team GIBRALTAR you have to wear the colours though."

"So I have had specifically brought over the colours for James and Leo to wear as we get into the final stages of this negotiation."

What colours is he talking about?
Could it be the blood soaked red on the Gibraltar flag which represents satan and his political lakeys, instead of Gods colour blue?

gibred

https://jahtruth.net/gibfg.htm

Or could his colours more closely represent what he paraded around in not to long ago?

download (2)

images (5)

Which more closely aligns with the drool fest he exhibits for the pedophiles of the fake royal house of wind soar?

Gibraltars future is already established, with the Righteous Royal King, whose Crown it is.

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly has predicted that Britain and France will both have “blazing rows” and “work very collaboratively” as he vowed the Government will approach the European Political Community with an open mind.

[Je ne sais pas] - Those french cows drink red wine...

French Cows Drink Red Wine - Vinbovin Meat Uses Wine in Cattle Feed

:cow2: :cow2:

Probably safe to say that both Kobe and Vinbovin beef is only for the "select elect" few to eat.

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Agreed

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Kuwaiti government steps down

The government of the Gulf state has had its letter of resignation accepted amid a standoff with the country's democratically elected parliament.

Kuwait's government on Sunday submitted its resignation to Crown Prince Sheikh Meshal Al Ahmad Al Jaber Al Sabah, who accepted it, state news agency KUNA reported.

The crown prince had received a letter of resignation from Prime Minister Sheikh Ahmad Nawaf al-Sabah and accepted the offer, asking the government to stay on in a caretaker capacity, the news agency said.

The crown prince had appointed Sheikh Ahmad prime minister in July.

Why would Kuwait's government resign?

The move comes after parliamentary elections on Thursday that saw opposition candidates, including Islamists, make considerable gains.

The results have made it unlikely that the government can ease recent tensions between it and the 50-member assembly and push forward with economic reforms.

The Kuwaiti government is appointed by the royal family, while the parliament is democratically elected and enjoys more independence than other legislatures of its kind in the region.

The previous parliament was dissolved by the crown prince, who has taken on most of the ruling emir's duties since late last year, in a bid to end the political standoff.

Among other things, the deadlock between the government and parliament has delayed the approval of a state budget for the fiscal year 2022/2023.

All lives matter. With that being said, the backlash against white-skinned people is wrong.

Kanye West, Candace Owens Spark Backlash After Wearing ‘White Lives Matter’ Sweatshirts

Rapper Kanye West attended his Yeezy Season 9 collection presentation in Paris, France, on Monday wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the words “White Lives Matter.”

Germany announces an end to lockdowns, but something new is coming

In Germany, the municipality has put a warning in every mailbox saying that there will be no more Lockdown.

The new one coming for this winter is called Blackdown.

Brochures explain how a citizen of Germany must prepare for this Blackdown in order to survive.

To have food for 14 days, water, batteries, medicines, cash.
The warning is very serious and for the first time it is made individually to every citizen of Germany.
Blackdown may not only involve Germany, but much of Europe.