Jumat, 30 September 2022

Maggie Haberman: I’m ‘stuck’ with Trump ‘until he stops being a story’ - The Hill

New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman is opening up about the last several years of her career ahead of the release of her book about former President Trump’s life and legacy.

Haberman has been closely tied to Trump and has published a series of scoops during his presidency and after he left office.

“If I went and covered something else, do you think I really get away from this?” Haberman told Politico Magazine this week. “Even if I did move on … I don’t get to move on, because at this point I am so publicly associated with this story — so, until he stops being a story, I think I’m stuck.”

Haberman’s new book, “Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America,” is slated to be released on Tuesday and contains never-before-revealed anecdotes and reporting from Trump’s inner circle during his time in the White House and business career.

Since leaving the White House, Trump has continued to dominate the political news cycle, garnering headlines with posts on his social media start-up, comments on current events at rallies and various media appearances.

Haberman herself became a star journalist during Trump’s rise to prominence, gaining notoriety for her oftentimes unmatched access to Trump and his closest associates.

Haberman reports in her book that Trump, during one meeting after he left office, turned to an aide and said of Haberman, “I love being with her, she’s like my psychiatrist.”

Among the most shocking revelations made in Haberman’s book were photographs to corroborate reporting that White House staffers regularly found ripped-up printed paper clogging a toilet in the presidential residence during Trump’s administration.

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Miami Dolphins' Tua Tagovailoa released from hospital after suffering head and neck injuries - ESPN

CINCINNATI -- Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was taken to a local hospital and later released after suffering head and neck injuries on a second-quarter sack in Thursday night's game against the Cincinnati Bengals.

The Dolphins said shortly before halftime that he was conscious and had movement in all his extremities at the hospital, the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.

A source confirmed to ESPN that Tagovailoa was later released from the hospital and flew back with the team to South Florida.

Tagovailoa was in "good spirits" upon returning to his home in South Florida on Friday, a source told ESPN. Initial tests showed no structural damage, another source confirmed to ESPN, and Tagovailoa, who wore a neck brace as a precaution, will have an MRI.

Tagovailoa hit the back of his head on the ground when he was sacked by Bengals nose tackle Josh Tupou, and his arms appeared to seize up almost immediately. He remained on the field for roughly 10 minutes before he was loaded onto a stretcher and taken away.

Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel said Tagovailoa called for him when he went down.

"I could tell it wasn't the same guy that I was used to seeing," McDaniel said. "It was a scary moment. He was evaluated for a concussion. He's in the concussion protocol, but he's being discharged.

"It's an emotional moment. It's not a part of the deal you sign up for. His teammates and myself were very concerned, but he got checked out and it's nothing more serious than a concussion."

The entire Dolphins team gathered at midfield as Tagovailoa was taken off, and the crowd chanted, "Tua! Tua!"

In Sunday's win over the Buffalo Bills, Tagovailoa underwent concussion evaluations at halftime after he hit his head on the ground and then stumbled while trying to return to the huddle. The team initially listed him as questionable to return because of a head injury but later said it was a back injury that caused him to stumble. Tagovailoa said later in the week that he passed every evaluation he took before ultimately returning to the game.

The NFL Players Association requested a review of the NFL's concussion protocols following Tagovailoa's quick return to the game.

"Player health and safety is at the core of the union's mission. Our concern tonight is for Tua and we hope for a full and speedy recovery. Our investigation into the potential protocol violation is ongoing," the NFLPA said in a statement after Tagovailoa was hurt Thursday night.

McDaniel, asked whether he knew with 100% certainty that Tagovailoa was not concussed after Sunday's game, said yes, and noted that Tagovailoa was cleared by an independent neurologist.

"People don't stray. We don't mess with that. As long as I'm the head coach, that will never be an issue," McDaniel said.

Asked whether there was anything he could have done differently following the Bills game, McDaniel said: "Absolutely zero patience for or will ever put a player in position for them to be in harm's way. That's not what I'm about at all. No outcome of a game would influence me to be irresponsible as a head coach of a football team."

Tagovailoa, 24, was listed as questionable because of a back injury for most of the week ahead of Thursday night's game.

Before leaving the game, Tagovailoa was 8-for-14 for 110 yards and an interception.

Dolphins receiver Tyreek Hill said players were asking for updates on the quarterback throughout the second half.

"You wanna win the game but obviously you wanna make sure that your brother is all right," Hill said. "Football is just our part-time job, but that brotherhood is something that'll last forever."

Teddy Bridgewater entered in Tagovailoa's place and finished 14-for-23 for 193 yards, a touchdown and an interception in the 27-15 loss. The Dolphins had rookie quarterback Skylar Thompson active for the first time in his career, as well.

Linebacker Jaelan Phillips said it was difficult to compartmentalize after seeing Tagovailoa stretchered off.

"That's kind of what football is all about. We practice compartmentalizing every day. It's not easy -- we all love Tua," he said. "It's definitely tough to try to refocus, but we tried."

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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Kamis, 29 September 2022

6 GOP-led states sue Biden over student loan forgiveness plan - CNN

Washington CNN  — 

Six Republican-led states sued President Joe Biden on Thursday in an effort to block his student loan forgiveness plan from taking effect.

The lawsuit was filed in a federal court in Missouri by state attorneys general from Missouri, Arkansas, Kansas, Nebraska and South Carolina, as well as legal representatives from Iowa.

“In addition to being economically unwise and inherently unfair, the Biden Administration’s Mass Debt Cancellation is another example in a long line of unlawful regulatory actions. No statute permits President Biden to unilaterally relieve millions of individuals from their obligation to pay loans they voluntarily assumed,” Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson’s office said in a news release.

Earlier this week, a public interest lawyer who is also a student loan borrower, sued the Biden administration over the student loan forgiveness plan, arguing that the policy is an abuse of executive power and that it would stick him with a bigger state tax bill.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

How Biden’s plan will work

Under Biden’s plan, individual borrowers who earned less than $125,000 in either 2020 or 2021 and married couples or heads of households who made less than $250,000 annually in those years will see up to $10,000 of their federal student loan debt forgiven.

If a qualifying borrower also received a federal Pell grant while enrolled in college, the individual is eligible for up to $20,000 of debt forgiveness. Pell grants are awarded to millions of low-income students each year, based on factors that include their family’s size and income and the cost charged by their college. These borrowers are also more likely to struggle to repay their student debt and end up in default.

The administration is expected to roll out the first wave of student loan forgiveness in October.

The Congressional Budget Office estimated this week that Biden’s plan could cost the government $400 billion but warned that the estimate relies on several assumptions and is “highly uncertain.”

Estimating the cost of student debt forgiveness is complicated because loans are generally paid back over several years. The White House argues that the CBO’s estimate should be looked at over a 30-year time frame.

Untested legal waters

Biden announced the forgiveness plan in August, after facing mounting pressure from Democrats to forgive some student loan debt. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren repeatedly called on the President to cancel up to $50,000 in student loan debt per borrower.

But canceling federal student loan debt so broadly is unprecedented and, until now, has yet to be tested in court. Biden initially urged Congress to take action to cancel some student debt, rather than wade into a murky legal area himself, but Democrats don’t have the votes to pass such legislation.

In a Department of Education memo released in August, the Biden administration argued that the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students Act of 2003 – or Heroes Act – grants the Education Secretary the power to cancel student debt to help address the financial harm suffered due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Heroes Act, which was enacted in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks, “provides the Secretary broad authority to grant relief from student loan requirements during specific periods,” including a war, other military operation or national emergency, according to the memo.

The lawsuit filed Thursday argues that the Heroes Act does not grant the President such broad authority.

What happens next

Additional lawsuits challenging Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan could be forthcoming. Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich, a Republican, has said he is working on developing the best legal theory to sue the administration over the action.

A conservative advocacy group called the Job Creators Network is also weighing its legal options, planning to file a lawsuit once the Department of Education formalizes the student loan forgiveness plan next month.

But some legal experts are skeptical that a legal challenge to Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan could be successful.

Abby Shafroth, staff attorney at the nonprofit National Consumer Law Center, previously told CNN that she believes the merits of the Biden administration’s legal statutory authority are strong and that it’s unclear who would have legal standing to bring a case and want to do so. Standing to bring a case is a procedural threshold requiring that an injury be inflicted on a plaintiff to justify a lawsuit.

If the standing hurdle is cleared, a case would be heard by a district court first – which may or may not issue a preliminary injunction to prevent the cancellation from occurring before a final ruling is issued on the merits of the hypothetical case.

Several recent US Supreme Court decisions have touched on executive power, limiting the federal government’s authority to implement new rules. While the Supreme Court takes up a small number of cases each year, lower courts may look at what the justices have said in those cases when assessing the Department of Education’s authority.

This story has been updated with additional information.

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Ginni Thomas to speak with Jan. 6 committee this week - The Hill

Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) announced on Wednesday that Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, is scheduled to meet with the Jan. 6 select committee this week.

“Our expectation at this point is that we will talk to Ms. Thomas, and we have no indication to the contrary,” Thompson, the chairman of the Jan. 6 panel, told reporters.

Pressed on if the interview will take place on Thursday or Friday, Thompson said “it’s sometime this week.”

“Again, to my knowledge, it’s set, and we look forward to whenever that occurs,” he added.

The interview with Thomas will cap a months-long effort by the select committee to speak with the conservative activist who reportedly exchanged emails with John Eastman, the lawyer who drafted memos for the Trump campaign outlining how Vice President Mike Pence could keep then-President Trump in power.

Thomas also reportedly texted then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and Arizona lawmakers regarding efforts to reverse the results of the 2020 presidential election.

Thompson told reporters in June that the committee asked Thomas for an interview, and the conservative activist at the time said she was looking forward to speaking with the panel.

Later that month, Thomas’s attorney, Mark Paoletta, wrote a letter to the committee saying he did “not understand the need to speak with Ms. Thomas,” and requested a “a better justification” for why the her testimony was relevant to the committee.

But nearly three months later, on Sept. 21, Paoletta confirmed that his client would meet with the Jan. 6 committee.

“As she has said from the outset, Mrs. Thomas is eager to answer the Committee’s questions to clear up any misconceptions about her work relating to the 2020 election,” Paoletta said in a statement. “She looks forward to that opportunity.”

Thomas’s conversation with the committee comes as the panel is racing the clock to finish its work before the year’s end, when the group will likely be dissolved if Republicans take control of the House this November.

The panel was scheduled to hold a hearing — potentially the last one before its final report is released — on Wednesday, but the presentation got postponed because of Hurricane Ian, which made landfall in Florida that day.

Committee members have not yet announced a new date for the hearing.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), a member of the select committee, told CNN in an interview on Sunday that the panel is interviewing Thomas “because of her own activities.”

“It’s not because of whose wife she is. And I’m hopeful that we will learn important elements from her testimony to us,” she added.

Pressed on what the committee is hoping to hear from Thomas, Lofgren pointed to her communications with Eastman.

“I don’t know what her answers will be, but clearly there were e-mails between her and Dr. Eastman that we’d like to explore with her. And she said publicly that she’ll come in and everything will be clear, so we hope that’s the case,” she said.

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Rabu, 28 September 2022

How to Shop Prevention Recipe Ingredients on Instacart - Prevention Magazine

We’re so eager for you to try the delicious, healthy recipes from the Prevention test kitchen (like Roasted Chicken and Potatoes With Kale) that we want it to be super easy for you to get cooking. So, we’re excited to announce that we’ve partnered with our favorite shopping app Instacart, in conjunction with their new initiative Instacart Health—it means you can seamlessly get all the ingredients from our recipes delivered to your doorstep.

instacart health logo
Instacart

With Instacart Health, the company is focused on getting healthy, affordable, and delicious foods to people everywhere. One great benefit is that you can now shop for ingredients to make your favorite, good-for-you Prevention recipes directly on our recipe page, and many recipes will even be available on the Instacart app. For example, if you’re really craving Pan-Friend Chicken With Lemony Roasted Broccoli for dinner tonight, head to the recipe page and you can shop all the ingredients directly on Instacart. Instacart has over 900 retail partners, works with 75,000 stores, and is available in 5,500 cities in North America.

In addition to partnering with health brands (like us!) to make online recipes shoppable, Instacart has also added tools on their website that include health tags (like low-sodium and gluten-free) on ingredients to make shopping easier. They also have technology that simplifies ordering groceries for loved ones, and makes it easy for dietitians to send shopping lists to clients.

using instacart app
Instacart

A crucial element of Instacart Health is to increase equitable access to healthy food across the country. Food insecurity is on the rise, but Instacart believes that grocery delivery can help close that gap: 6 out of 7 people experiencing nutrition insecurity have access to delivery via Instacart. Plus, affordability is important: Many retailer partners of Instacart can now accept EBT/SNAP benefits as payment, and the company’s new Fresh Funds program allows organizations, employers, and others to provide funds for people to purchase fresh food via the platform. “For far too long, too many people have lacked access to nutritious food because it’s either too far away, too expensive, or both,” says Nancy E. Roman, President and CEO of Partnership for a Healthier America. “With help from Instacart and their Fresh Funds initiative, we can break down these barriers.”

We’re happy that Prevention’s healthy recipes are a part of the new Instacart Health program, and if you’re excited about getting your nutritious ingredients more easily, you can also check out the recipes from brands like Good Housekeeping, Country Living, Delish, and The Pioneer Woman; you can easily purchase their ingredients too. Now, let’s get shopping!

How to get your favorite Prevention recipe ingredients on Instacart

Step 1

Find a Prevention recipe that you’re excited about (we’re big fans of these Healthy Spinach & Goat Cheese Egg Muffins), and select get ingredients with Instacart below the ingredient list.

Step 2

Once you’re logged into your Instacart account and find a store that works for you, you can begin to customize your cart. The ingredients the recipe calls for will be added to your cart, but you scrap the ones you already have on hand, and add any additional items you may need (are you running low on toilet paper?).

Step 3

Does everything look good? When the cart is ready and it’s time to check out, tap on the shopping cart. This is your opportunity to add any additional instructions for your shopper and use the swap button to switch out ingredients.

Step 4

Here you can add in your address, payment, and delivery time. This can be as little as one hour, or you can schedule as long as five days in advance, so it’s equally great for last-minute planners and Sunday meal-preppers.

Step 5

At this point, you can also choose a replacement ingredient for items that may be out of stock. Click let shopper suggest for a substitute suggestion or refund item if you’d rather not have the item at all. You’re then able to make changes up to an hour before shopping begins and you can even chat with your shopper in real-time.

Step 6

Thank your shopper as they drop off all your groceries needed to make your Prevention recipe right at home! Now, get cooking!

Need some recipe inspiration?

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Kim Ragosta writes the recipes that keep local R.I. farms cooking - The Boston Globe

Scrolling through Kim Ragosta’s mouth-watering Instagram feed, you might assume she works at a trendy city restaurant.

But Ragosta, a homeschooling mother of five, lives on a homestead in Richmond, R.I., where she creates recipes for local farms. It’s a way to encourage people to shop locally, and by bartering recipes for food from local farms, she’s feeding her family and keeping her grocery bills down.

“It’s amazing,” she said. This summer, “I bought things like butter, flour. But I haven’t bought meat since May 2021. For a family of seven, that’s been great.”

“My son and my husband are hunters, so we get venison, turkey, duck,” she said. “It’s neat knowing you can self-sustain if needed. That’s a big part of our homeschooling, too.”

On their homestead, the Ragostas raise heritage breed chickens and Nigerian dwarf goats and keep a vegetable garden. Homeschooling her kids, ages 5 to 13, also includes field trips to learn “where the animal you’re eating comes from. My kids are able to see, from start to finish, how this product ended up on our table,” she said. “It’s been a beautiful process.”

An East Greenwich native, Ragosta, 39, will release her debut cookbook in 2023. She talked to Globe Rhode Island about bartering, local farms, fall recipes, and how to stretch a grocery budget.

Q: I’m so intrigued by this concept of bartering recipes for food. How did this start?

Ragosta: Growing up, my father was an entrepreneur, you could say. He was great at bartering. He was a pilot and photographer, and would take aerial photography of businesses, restaurants, and [trade] a beautiful picture, matted and framed, for a $300 gift certificate for the restaurant. He was always doing things like that. I was exposed to that.

I thought: Farms could give me meat or vegetables, and I could write recipes. Farms could use them on their website, or social media. Because so many times, with farms or CSAs, people think: “What do I do with frozen chuck roast? Or daikon?”

I reached out first to Wild Harmony Farm, and bartered $30 of meat for a recipe. I reached out to probably 40 farms and artisans in Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut. Every single one said yes.

It took off fast. I love it. And I’ve gotten to know the food community. It’s been fun being able to showcase like their products in a delicious and beautiful way that, at the same time, helps customers with inspiration and ideas. Now I’m writing a cookbook with all of these recipes, plus the ones I’ve created over the past 15 years.

BBQ ribs created for Wild Harmony Farms in Exeter, R.I. Courtesy of Kim Ragosta

How many Rhode Island farms do you work with?

I’ve worked with about 25 Rhode Island farms since May 2021, not [all] currently, though. Every farm utilizes me differently. For Rocky Point Blueberry Farm, I did recipes in exchange for letting the kids and I pick. Wild Harmony, she’s super good about having everything up on the website. Windmist prints them out and posts them on freezers. Chris and Kristina’s Market Garden prints them to display. There are tons of ways farms utilize this. It’s a good thing for them, their customers, and it’s been a huge blessing in my life.

What are a few others you’ve worked with?

Wicked Roots Micro Farm in South Kingstown. Micro Farms are popping up more and more. Another one: Farming Turtles. Little River Farm, Luckyfoot Ranch, Brandon Family Farm, Emma Acres, Cedar Valley Farm. The Local Catch for seafood. Pat’s Pastured — I actually used to work there as an egg-washer.

What’s a good recipe to stretch a food budget?

Honestly, a whole chicken. I can take a 4-pound chicken, for $20, $25, and feed my family of seven. You can do so much with it. I do dutch oven or Crockpot slow-cooking for soup, tacos, quesadillas. Afterwards, I strip that carcass completely and put it back into the pot with water, veggies, herbs to make bone-broth. That’s one of my favorite ways to stretch a meal.

I love pestos. I hate to waste anything, so I’ll take carrot and beet tops that most people throw away and turn those into pesto with some herbs, a little bit of cheese, sunflower seeds — which are much cheaper than pine nuts and taste just as good — and a good olive oil.

What are some kid-favorite dishes?

They love tacos. For a quick meal, sheet-pan nachos. I’ll put a pork-butt roast in the crock pot, make my own barbecue sauce. It’s so easy — nachos and veggies, pulled pork on top with local cheese. The kids go crazy for that.

Crispy bacon and veggie hash with eggs for Cedar Valley Farm in Exeter, R.I. Courtesy of Kim Ragosta

And what are some of your personal favorite meals?

I go right to a bolognese. There’s so many ways you can do that: pork, veal, ground beef, fresh tomatoes. I love pasta. I remember when I was 19, being in the kitchen with my husband’s grandmother, she was teaching me how to make homemade potato gnocchi. And the love — I could just feel it. So any kind of Italian cuisine, I relate to the most.

Homemade pizza, eggplant parmesan, bruschetta. I love braised meats with polenta or risotto. Italian cuisine is my favorite. I love the simplicity and the passion.

So if somebody wants to trade with you, do they let you pick the food? Or do they give you something as an assignment?

I’m usually a take-charge person, but this has been me saying: “Whatever you’re able to bless our family with, I’ll be creative with.” I usually do two recipes per month for each farm. So if they give me pork chops, or ground beef, I’ll start thinking about that.

A lot of vegetable farms, I’m able to pick what I want. I love that because I can [browse and get] inspired — like that potato and leek soup. I’ve only had one farm tell me: “this is what I want for a recipe.” But I definitely need to feel that inspiration in order to make something good.

What are a few recipes for fall?

When I think of fall, I think stews, soups, breads with kalamata olives, pasta. It depends what product I’m working with. I love cooking seasonally and locally— food is more delicious when you’re in tune with the seasons.

Looks like you’re doing a lot with squash right now.

Squashes are huge. There’s so much you can do with them. For mac & cheese, I’ve made a butternut squash sauce the kids thought was cheese. And it’s so easy: Just roast the butternut squash, mash it up. Puree it, add a little milk, salt, pepper, nutmeg, and becomes like this beautiful, velvety creamy sauce. I’ve done it in lasagna. You could put that on pizza.

A butternut squash lasagna developed for Wicked Roots Micro Farm in Charlestown, R.I. Courtesy of Kim Ragosta

Another interesting squash is delicata squash — a beautiful long squash with green stripes. Roast them until they’re golden brown. The skin is delicious and packed with nutrients. Mix that with a little ghee or a little olive oil. I just had the best squash I’ve ever had in my life, a butterkin — a combination between a butternut and a pumpkin. The sweetness was just delicious.

And when you put flowers on your dishes, are they edible?

Yes. This year was the first year growing nasturtium. You can eat those flowers right up. And it makes it look extra pretty.

This interview has been edited and condensed.


Lauren Daley can be reached at ldaley33@gmail.com. Follow her on Twiiter @laurendaley1.

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5 apple recipes to try this fall | Food | lancasteronline.com - LNP | LancasterOnline

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5 apple recipes to try this fall | Food | lancasteronline.com  LNP | LancasterOnline

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Recipe management software: 3 ways to store your recipes in the cloud - Komando

If you value family traditions, you should store recipes in the cloud. Replacing tattered cookbooks makes life easier and your kitchen cleaner. It’s easy with recipe management software.

A cloud-based library allows you to access your recipes while away from home. This means you can pull up a recipe on your phone to get all the ingredients at the grocery store. While you’re there, use these seven strategies to save money on groceries.

Storing recipes online is much more convenient than relying on stained and torn hard copies. Digitize your family cookbooks with one of these tools. We’ll explain how they work and why they’ll help you upgrade your dinner plans.

1. CreateMyCookbook is one of the most popular options out there

CreateMyCookbook is especially useful because it has pages already formatted to look like professional cookbooks. Plus, you can add recipes as you discover new ones (or uncover old notes that you lost).

You can even order physical cookbooks from the site. If you want hardcover or full-color photos, you can adjust your preferences. Overall, this tool is easy to use and navigate. Even if you aren’t a professional editor, you’ll find that it’s a breeze to update and tweak your digital cookbook.

Plus, you can save yourself from transcribing handwritten recipes and order its WeTypeIt service. The first two credits for this service are free. You will need to pay for more credits. Up to $59.95 for 100 credits. No matter what you need, this site has a solution. The free CreateMyCookbook app is available for iOS and Android.

2. Check out Mixbook during your search for recipe management software

This is one of the most popular tools for home chefs. With Mixbook, it’s easy to treasure your family’s heritage. You can create beautiful recipe books with this tool.

As you can tell from the picture above, you can use many designs. You just have to pick a template with a layout you like. From there, you can customize it to your heart’s desire.

Don’t be nervous if you’ve never made a digital cookbook before. Mixbook has an easy step-by-step guide to follow. Some templates cost as little as $10, but some nicer designs may cost more. It all depends on your preference.

Of course, if you want to save money, you can always search for cookbook templates on Etsy. You could even commission a template from an artist on Fiverr. The options are endless, but for a quick and easy solution, we recommend Mixbook. The free Mixbook app is available for iOS and Android.

RELATED: Free printable templates: Planning sheets, sheet music, stickers, calendars and more

3. Novice cooks and pro chefs alike swear by MasterCook

MasterCook is versatile and stuffed with helpful features. This recipe software app is one of the most comprehensive tools. Once you enter your recipes, you can sort them by ingredients, preparation times or dietary restrictions.

You can make various cookbooks in it to separate different food types. You can even share cookbooks with other people to collaborate. It also comes with a mobile app. Plus, you can store up to 100,000 recipes when you subscribe. The free MasterCook app is available on iOS and Android.

Bottom line: Recipe management software is a must for cooks

If you’re sick of squinting at tiny handwritten text, it’s time to digitize your recipes. You don’t even have to type them yourself.

Depending on your scanner type, you could scan recipes and immediately copy and paste words from an image. Tap or click here to digitize your handwritten notes or copy text from a photo. That tip is for iPhone users.

If you have an Android, use Google Keep. Add new notes by taking photos of your recipes through the app. Then, open the picture, tap the three-dot menu and tap Grab image text. You can later edit text on your PC or desktop computer.

We also have a guide Mac users can benefit from

The macOS Monterey update comes with Live text, a feature you can use to share text from photos. Tap or click here to extract text from an image with Mac’s new Live text feature.

You could take a photo of family recipes, transfer them to Mac and then copy and paste the text into your recipe management software of choice. Just like that, you brought your old family recipes into the modern, digital world. Bon appétit!

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Selasa, 27 September 2022

Hurricane meal prep with these three healthy recipes - Axios

a dish of farro salad
Photo: Daniele Orsi/Reda & Co./Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Last time the power went out at my place, I was hungry and had no idea what to do, so I just ordered delivery.

  • This is my first big hurricane, but I'm guessing Uber Eats won't be running in gale force winds. I've been trying to think about how I will feed myself without resorting to eating SpaghettiOs out of the can.

Thought bubble: If you've got time to do some food prep and have room for a cooler, you can have some nutritious meals ready to go.

  • Just make sure you're using ingredients that are the least likely to go bad. For instance, instead of a pasta salad with mayo, a lighter version with olive oil will still be more satisfying than just a granola bar.

Some recipes to try:

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Historic trial for Oath Keepers leader and his top lieutenants over January 6 set to begin - CNN

CNN  — 

The Justice Department this week will argue at trial for the first time in over a decade that a group of Americans plotted to violently oppose the US government.

The historic trial of Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes and four of his top lieutenants will provide a deep dive into a far right-wing militia and extremist movement as they allegedly planned to stop Joe Biden from becoming president in January 2021 by any means necessary.

Federal prosecutors intend to prove that the plan included a reconnaissance trip to Washington, DC, staging an armed “quick reaction force” at a hotel across the Potomac River, using a military formation to breach the US Capitol, and, for some defendants, searching for lawmakers inside.

The landmark indictment is the most aggressive and politically fraught case that prosecutors have brought against a group of alleged rioters to date and marked a dramatic change in the department’s approach to prosecuting January 6 defendants.

This is the first of three sedition trials scheduled to take place this year.

The case also comes with hefty political ramifications. When it was unsealed in January 2022, the indictment sparked an outcry from some Trump supporters and figureheads on the right who claimed that the charges were trumped up or politically motivated, and the Justice Department as a whole has come under increased fire from some on the political right for its investigations into those aligned with the former president.

The trial against the Oath Keepers will begin on Tuesday with jury selection in DC federal court.

All five defendants have pleaded not guilty to the indictment and face a maximum sentence of 20 years in a federal prison.

The defendants

Stewart Rhodes, 57, is a former Army paratrooper and graduate of Yale Law School. Rhodes, who is from Texas, founded the Oath Keepers in 2009 and has led the militia ever since.

Kelly Meggs, 53, is the leader of the Florida chapter of the Oath Keepers. Meggs went by the moniker “Gator 1.”

Jessica Watkins, 40, is an Army veteran and bar owner from Ohio. Watkins, who served in Afghanistan, was a “commander” of her own Ohio based militia using the moniker “Cap.”

Kenneth Harrelson, 41, is a former Army sergeant and Oath Keepers leader from Florida. Harrelson used the moniker “Gator 6.”

Thomas Caldwell, 68, of Virginia, is a former lieutenant commander in the Navy and FBI employee. Caldwell went by the monikers “CAG” and “Spy.” He has denied he is a member of the Oath Keepers.

The case

To make their case, prosecutors will lay out an extensive retelling of January 6 and the months leading up to the riot. The story will rely on more than 40 witnesses, prosecutors said in court, including FBI agents, Capitol Police officers, journalists and confidential human sources.

They also plan to use recordings from the group of planning meetings leading up to January 6 and walkie-talkie communications during the siege.

Taken together, prosecutors believe the evidence will lay out a sophisticated plan by the Oath Keepers that began to take shape just days after the 2020 election.

In a November 5, 2020, Signal message, Rhodes allegedly warned the Oath Keepers that “we aren’t going through this without civil war. Too late for that. Prepare your mind, body and spirit.” Less than one week later, according to court documents, Caldwell traveled to Washington for a reconnaissance trip and reported his findings back to Rhodes.

Rhodes, Meggs, Watkins, Harrelson and Caldwell coordinated for several weeks, prosecutors say, including attending paramilitary training camps and renting rooms at a Virginia hotel to stash guns and other weapons in case they were needed in Washington.

On January 6, the Oath Keepers donned combat and tactical gear, and allegedly stationed themselves around the nation’s capital – some at the Capitol, others providing security and a third group waiting with a cache of weapons in Virginia.

That afternoon, prosecutors allege that the group converged on the Capitol at Rhodes’ direction. Meggs, Harrelson and Watkins, who were in a military “stack” formation with other Oath Keepers, pushed past police officers and into the building, court documents say. As Watkins tried to push past officers guarding the hallway to the Senate Chamber, prosecutors say Meggs, Harrelson, and other Oath Keepers broke off in an unsuccessful search for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Rhodes directed the group from outside, prosecutors say. Caldwell is also not alleged to have entered the building.

After the riot, Rhodes and others went to Olive Garden to celebrate the attack and “discuss next steps,” according to court documents. By Inauguration Day, January 20, 2021, Rhodes allegedly told associates to organize local militias to oppose the Biden administration.

For their part, lawyers for the five defendants have argued that the Oath Keepers came to Washington to act as “peacekeepers” if riots broke out between Trump supporters and Antifa. Some members went inside the Capitol to assist police officers, lawyers for the defendants have contended.

Extremism in America

Though it is not clear how the trial will affect the future of the Oath Keepers, experts say the prosecution alone has severely affected the organization.

“The media, the public, and then the legal accountability that’s been brought down at Oath Keepers has had incredibly detrimental effects that organization and quite frankly, has nearly decimated it,” Rachel Carroll Rivas, a senior research analyst at the Southern Poverty Law Center who studies extremism, told CNN.

Because the organization lacked a robust leadership structure, Rivas said, the fate of the group rose and fell with Rhodes. Rhodes has been in federal custody since his arrest in January, and Rivas said that “removing him from the ability to be a leader in that organization, it has had a huge impact.”

Regardless of the outcome of the case the threat of domestic extremism remains large in the US, Jon Lewis, a research fellow at the program on extremism at George Washington University, told CNN.

“The threat today has metastasized far beyond individual groups,” Lewis said. “The life or death of the Oath Keepers … doesn’t change the contours of the threat today.”

“I think what’s more was far more concerning from our perspective, is that the rhetoric that inspired them, the narratives that they push forward haven’t gone away. Hate has only gotten stronger,” Lewis said.

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Senin, 26 September 2022

Hurricane Ian's latest path: Hurricane warning issued for Tampa Bay area - ABC News

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has declared a public health emergency for the state of Florida.

HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra made the declaration Monday to address the possible health impacts for Florida residents once Hurricane Ian nears the state.

"We will do all we can to assist Florida officials with responding to the health impacts of Hurricane Ian," Becerra said in a statement. "We are working closely with state, local, and tribal health authorities, as well as our federal partners, and stand ready to provide additional public health and medical support."

HHS has pre-positioned two 15-person health and medical task force teams from its National Disaster Medical System, as well as a 13-person incident management team and two pharmacists to assist with the response in Florida.

"These teams are highly trained and ready to respond if, when, and where they may be needed following the storm," HHS Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response Dawn O’Connell said.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency on Saturday. That declaration was approved by President Joe Biden on Sunday.

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Putin grants Russian citizenship to U.S. whistleblower Snowden - Reuters

Sept 26 (Reuters) - President Vladimir Putin on Monday granted Russian citizenship to former U.S. intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, nine years after he exposed the scale of secret surveillance operations by the National Security Agency (NSA).

Snowden, 39, fled the United States and was given asylum in Russia after leaking secret files in 2013 that revealed vast domestic and international surveillance operations carried out by the NSA, where he worked.

U.S. authorities have for years wanted him returned to the United States to face a criminal trial on espionage charges.

There was no immediate reaction from Snowden, whose name appeared without Kremlin comment in a Putin decree conferring citizenship on a list of 72 foreign-born people.

The news prompted some Russians to jokingly ask whether Snowden would be called up for military service, five days after Putin announced Russia's first public mobilization since World War Two to shore up its faltering invasion of Ukraine.

"Will Snowden be drafted?" Margarita Simonyan, editor-in-chief of the state media outlet RT and a vocal Putin supporter, wrote with dark humour on her Telegram channel.

Snowden's lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, told RIA news agency that his client could not be called up because he had not previously served in the Russian army.

He said that Snowden's wife Lindsay Mills, who gave birth to a son in 2020, would also apply for citizenship.

U.S. State Department spokesperson Ned Price said he was unaware of any change to Snowden's status as a U.S. citizen.

"I am familiar with the fact that he has in some ways denounced his American citizenship. I don't know that he's renounced it," Price said in a press briefing.

Russia granted Snowden permanent residency rights in 2020, paving the way for him to obtain Russian citizenship.

That year a U.S. appeals court found the program Snowden had exposed was unlawful and that the U.S. intelligence leaders who publicly defended it were not telling the truth.

Putin, a former Russian spy chief, said in 2017 that Snowden, who keeps a low profile while living in Russia, was wrong to leak U.S. secrets but was not a traitor.

Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Mark Trevelyan and Grant McCool

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Kentucky Parole Board votes to have Paducah school shooter serve out life sentence - CNN

(CNN)[Breaking news update at 9:33 a.m. ET]

The Kentucky Parole Board on Monday denied parole to Michael Carneal, a man serving a life sentence for killing three students in a school shooting in 1997, when he was 14 years old.
The ruling by the full parole board to have Carneal serve out his sentence comes after a two-person panel failed to reach a unanimous decision about Carneal's release last week.
Carneal has served nearly 25 years in prison for opening fire at Heath High School in Paducah on December 1, 1997, killing the three students and wounding five others just after the students' prayer circle in the lobby said "Amen."
[Previous story, published at 2:10 a.m. ET]
A man serving a life sentence for killing three students in a Kentucky school shooting when he was 14 years old will face a full parole board Monday after a two-person panel couldn't reach a unanimous decision on his release last week.
Michael Carneal has served nearly 25 years in prison for opening fire at Heath High School in Paducah on December 1, 1997, killing the three students and wounding five others just after the students' prayer circle in the lobby said "Amen."
Carneal pleaded guilty to three counts of murder, five counts of attempted murder, and a count of first-degree burglary. While he was sentenced to life in prison, Kentucky law requires that minors be considered for parole after 25 years.
Now 39, Carneal pleaded his case to members of the parole board in a hearing last week, saying if he's released, he plans to live with his parents, continue undergoing mental health treatment and eventually get a job.
His public defender, Alana Meyer, asked the board to remember Carneal was a teenager when he opened fire, was suffering from undiagnosed paranoid schizophrenia and was struggling with bullying and the transition from middle to high school.
In the quarter century since, Carneal "has committed himself to his mental health treatment, to participating in available educational and vocational programs, and to being a helpful and positive person within the prison," Meyer wrote.
Michael Carneal is escorted out of the McCracken County Courthouse after his arraignment in Paducah on January 15, 1998.

School shooter says he still hears voices

The attorney said Carneal "has shown deep, genuine remorse and taken responsibility for the shooting" and is dedicated to bettering himself.
Carneal told the panel last week he has received multiple mental health diagnoses and has long heard voices in his head -- including on the day of the shooting.
This screen shot from a Zoom video hearing shows Michael Carneal on Tuesday at Kentucky State Reformatory in La Grange.
He said that before opening fire he heard a voice telling him to "pick up the gun out of the backpack and hold it in front of me and shoot."
"There's no justification or excuse for what I did," Carneal said. "I'm offering an explanation. I realize there's no excuse for what I did."
Carneal said he still hears voices in his head, but now knows when to ignore them.
During the initial hearing, parole board members Larry Brock and Ladeidra Jones questioned Carneal about the shooting.
"I was 14 at the time and I had not experienced anything in life really. I didn't know exactly the effect of what I would do eventually. I didn't know what that would actually mean. I did not know the hurt and the pain it would cause people," Carneal told them.
"Did you know that if you walked in a school and fired a handgun at multiple people and kill them that that was wrong?" Jones asked. "Yes," Carneal responded.

Survivors and families push back against Carneal's requested release

Missy Jenkins Smith was 15 and on her way to class when she saw 14-year-old Nicole Hadley get shot in the head and fall to the ground.
Too young to recognize the sound of gunshots and thinking that it must be a joke, Jenkins Smith stood in front of the girl, waiting for her to get up, when a bullet pierced her chest and she too fell to the ground.
There, she began noticing she lost feeling in her stomach, and then her legs, as chaos unfolded around her.
Jenkins Smith survived the shooting but was left paralyzed from the chest down.
From her wheelchair, Jenkins Smith addressed the parole board last week, sharing how she struggles without the use of her legs and voicing her opposition to Carneal's release from custody.
"He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 25 years. Also on December 1, 1997, Michael sentenced me to life in a wheelchair without the possibility of parole ever," Missy Jenkins Smith said.
Nicole Hadley's parents and siblings also spoke of their loss, and the fear it would cause them if Carneal is granted parole.
"If the shooter is released, what happens when he doesn't take his meds? Who's he going to hurt or kill next? The community and the families don't deserve to be sentenced to even harsher -- to living in fear," Gwen Hadley said tearfully.
Nicole's sister, Christina Hadley Ellegood, was at school on the day of the shooting and found her sister lying on the ground with a gunshot wound to her head.
"Nicole was given a life sentence. Michael (pleaded) to a life sentence," she told the board. "I believe that he should have to spend the rest of his life incarcerated. Nicole does not get a second chance. Why should he?"
Missy Jenkins looks at a get-well card with her twin sister Mandy Jenkins at Lourdes Hospital in Paducah on December 10, 1997.
The shooting stunned a nation unfamiliar with such violence and left a long-lasting mark on Paducah. All but one person who spoke at the virtual victim's hearing last week asked that Carneal's parole be denied.
Hollan Holm, whom Carneal shot in the head, told the board he understood why people want to keep him in prison but he would vote to give Carneal another chance.
Holm recalled lying on the floor of Heath High, bleeding from the head, praying and readying himself to die at the age of 14. He had been shot by the boy he rode the bus and ate lunch with growing up.
Though Holm still lives with mental and emotional scars from that day, he said that when he thinks of Carneal, he thinks of his 10-year-old daughter and he can't imagine holding her to the same standard to which he'd hold an adult.
Missy Jenkins Smith, right, talks to reporters at her home in Kirksey, Kentucky, Tuesday while waiting for a decision from a parole board panel.
"If the mental health experts think he can be successful on the outside, he should get that chance," Holm said, adding that he understands the anger people feel. "I feel that anger, too, but when I feel that anger, I think about the 14-year-old boy who acted that day and I think of my own children, and I think the man that boy became should get the chance to try to do and be better."
Meanwhile, Jenkins Smith, now 40 and a mother herself, told CNN she thinks a teenager should have known the consequences of pulling a trigger.
"I have a 12-year-old and a 15-year-old and both of them know that if they point a gun at somebody and pull the trigger, that could be a life-or-death situation and that there's consequences for that," she said. "So I don't want that to send the wrong messages to other people who might possibly do this and think they can get out at 39."
Jenkins Smith said the harm done from the shooting stretched beyond what happened to her and the others who were shot, and beyond the custodians who had to clean the students' blood off the floor, or the doctors and nurses who had to try to save the dying children.
"There was a lot of people that felt like their innocence was taken away. There was a lot of concern of 'will this happen at my school?' There was a lot of people affected," Jenkins Smith said.

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Teen Who Ate Spicy 'One Chip Challenge' Product Died of Cardiopulmonary Arrest - The New York Times

A 14-year-old whose family said he had eaten a chip made with two of the hottest peppers in the world died of cardiopulmonary arrest, accor...