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    The New Players in Brazilian Politics? Elon Musk and Republicans.

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    Just a few months ago, the political movement behind Brazil’s far-right former president, Jair Bolsonaro, was sputtering. Mr. Bolsonaro had been voted out of office, ruled ineligible to run in the next election and was in the cross hairs of deepening criminal investigations.

    But now Mr. Bolsonaro and his followers have had a sudden surge of energy and momentum — with the help of Elon Musk and the Republican Party.

    Over the past month, Mr. Musk and House Republicans have harshly criticized Alexandre de Moraes, a Brazilian Supreme Court justice who is leading investigations into Mr. Bolsonaro, over the judge’s moves to block more than 100 social media accounts in Brazil. Many of them belong to prominent right-wing pundits, podcasters and federal lawmakers who, in some cases, have questioned Mr. Bolsonaro’s election loss.

    Mr. Moraes has said he is acting to protect Brazil’s democracy against attacks from the former president and his allies, who have been accused of planning a coup in 2022.

    Mr. Musk has repeatedly called Mr. Moraes a “dictator” and posted dozens of times about the judge on his social network, X, accusing him of silencing conservative voices.

    The House Judiciary Committee, led by Representative Jim Jordan, Republican of Ohio, published sealed court orders from Mr. Moraes last month in a report about “Brazil’s censorship campaign.” And on Tuesday, House Republicans held a hearing that cast the situation in Brazil as “a crisis of democracy, freedom and rule of law.”

    While the efforts of Mr. Musk and the Republican politicians have received little attention in the United States, they are making major political waves in Brazil.

    Before Mr. Musk began posting about Brazil on April 6, much of the nation’s news cycle revolved around criminal investigations into Mr. Bolsonaro. That included revelations by The New York Times that Mr. Bolsonaro made an apparent bid for political asylum at the Hungarian embassy just days after authorities confiscated his passport.

    But over the past month, attention has shifted to a new question: Is the Brazilian Supreme Court stifling free speech? Brazilian media covered the debate widely, including on the cover of the nation’s top weekly magazine, Veja. One of Brazil’s leading newspapers, Folha de São Paulo, called on Mr. Moraes to stop censoring.

    Amid the renewed debate, Brazil’s Congress effectively killed a long anticipated bill on combating online misinformation, and the Supreme Court said it would rule on a lawsuit that challenges Brazil’s main internet law.

    That a series of online posts from Mr. Musk had such a swift impact in a foreign nation’s internal politics shows his growing influence as the owner of and perhaps the loudest voice on one of the world’s largest digital town squares.

    Mr. Bolsonaro is now capitalizing on the renewed attention from powerful supporters abroad. The former president has held campaign-style rallies to attack what he says is political persecution — and to thank his foreign allies.

    Mr. Musk “really stands up for freedom for us all,” Mr. Bolsonaro told thousands of people on Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro last month. “He’s a man who’s had the courage to show — already with some evidence, and more will surely come — where our democracy is heading and how much freedom we’ve lost.”

    Mr. Bolsonaro then called for a round of applause for Mr. Musk, earning one of the biggest roars of the day. Some Bolsonaro supporters wore Elon Musk masks, while others carried signs praising the billionaire.

    “With a few tweets, Elon Musk was capable of changing the political environment in Brazil,” said Ronaldo Lemos, a Brazilian lawyer who studies the nation’s internet laws. The Brazilian right was struggling, Mr. Lemos added. “He brought the energy back.”

    To Brazil’s left, however, Mr. Musk and Republicans are twisting facts to attack Brazil’s institutions.

    President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a leftist, took on Mr. Musk in a speech last month, calling him “an American businessman who has never produced a foot of grass in this country, daring to speak ill of the Brazilian court, Brazilian ministers and the Brazilian people.”

    In recent years, Brazil’s Supreme Court has taken an aggressive stance against certain online content, including election misinformation and attacks on democratic institutions. Brazilian courts have ordered X to take down at least 140 accounts since 2022, according to documents published by the House Judiciary committee.

    Mr. Moraes, who declined to comment for this article, has called such measures necessary in the face of threats to Brazil’s democracy posed by Mr. Bolsonaro and some of his supporters, who ransacked Brazil’s halls of power last year. “Freedom of speech is not freedom of aggression,” Mr. Moraes said last month. “Freedom of speech is not freedom to defend tyranny.”

    But his moves have also generated intense debate over whether they are posing their own threat to Brazil’s democracy.

    Mr. Moraes has ordered X to suspend the accounts of some of Brazil’s most popular right-wing pundits, as well as those of at least 10 federal lawmakers, though most of the lawmakers have since returned to the platform.

    In some cases, the accounts cast doubt on election results or encouraged protesters calling for a military coup. But Mr. Moraes typically seals such orders, so people who have their accounts suspended usually receive little information why.

    Social networks do frequently block content that violate their policies. After the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, for instance, Twitter removed 150,000 accounts linked to the conspiracy movement known as QAnon, which had inspired many rioters.

    But Mr. Moraes has often ordered the removal of content that social media companies would otherwise leave up under their rules.

    In 2022, Mr. Moraes authorized Brazilian federal agents to raid the homes of eight major businessmen and ordered social networks to suspend some of their accounts. He was acting in response to leaked screenshots that showed two of the businessmen saying in a private WhatsApp group that they would prefer a military coup to Mr. Lula’s victory in that year’s presidential race.

    Mr. Moraes shelved the investigation against most of the men last year, but has maintained the suspension of the accounts belonging to two of the businessmen, including Luciano Hang, a department store magnate. Mr. Hang, one of Mr. Bolsonaro’s most prominent backers, has been unable to use his social media accounts in Brazil, which collectively had more than six million followers, for nearly two years.

    Such stories have attracted the attention of some Republicans in Congress. In the hearing on Tuesday, Representative Chris Smith, a New Jersey Republican, said that “Brazilians have been subject to grave human rights violations committed by Brazilian officials on a vast scale.”

    But Representative Susan Wild, a Pennsylvania Democrat, said that the Brazilian courts had the mandate to prevent the sort of military dictatorship that ruled the country from 1964 to 1985. Any debate about the role of the courts in Brazil “should be decided by the Brazilian people,” she said. “The United States Congress is not the forum.”

    Few U.S. lawmakers attended the hearing, but some of the biggest names on Brazil’s right did, including Mr. Bolsonaro’s son, Eduardo. The proceedings were frequently interrupted by cheering or booing from the right-wing Brazilians in attendance.

    One witness, Fabio de Sa e Silva, a Brazilian lawyer and professor at the University of Oklahoma, said that he believed Brazilian law supported Mr. Moraes’s right to block accounts. He argued that any crisis in Brazil’s democracy was not because of judges but rather because of “mobs unwilling to play by the rules.”

    But some analysts argue that Mr. Moraes appears to be violating Brazilians’ rights. Mr. Lemos, the Brazilian internet law expert, said that he no longer saw such an extreme threat to Brazil’s democracy that would justify Mr. Moraes’s aggressive approach.

    “We’re no longer living through an emergency,” he said.

    In Labor’s Mission to Organize the South, Another Domino Could Soon Fall

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    Late last month, workers at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee voted overwhelmingly to join the United Auto Workers (UAW). This was the first time workers at a foreign car maker’s plant have unionized in the U.S. South, the least unionized region in the country. The UAW’s win could have major implications for workers across the South, who are governed by labor laws that weaken unions and result in lower wages. Next up, workers at a Mercedes-Benz facility in Vance, Alabama will vote on whether to join the UAW starting May 13, and the outcome could help determine whether the union’s success in Tennessee will have a domino effect on other workplaces in the region.

    Union density in Tennessee hovers around 6% and other states have even lower union density: Virginia’s is slightly over 4%, North Carolina’s is under 3% and South Carolina has the lowest union density in the country, counting just over 2% of workers. All of these states are right-to-work,” which union members and organizers say is a misnomer. In reality, right-to-work laws — which ban union security agreements (meaning that unionized workplaces are prohibited from requiring all workers to pay union dues) — make unions weaker and smaller. 

    This new wave of organizing won’t be the first time unions have seriously attempted to organize workers in states unfriendly to labor. In the mid-1940s, the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) launched Operation Dixie” in hopes of unionizing Southern workers, particularly those in the textile industry. Their goal was not just to improve Southern workers’ lives or grow their ranks, but also to maintain union strength in the North, as industries began relocating to the South due to lack of union density. But Operation Dixie failed in large part due to racist Jim Crow laws and other racial conflicts in the region, the legacies of which workers still deal with today.

    Leonard Riley, a 48-year member of International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) Local 1422 in Charleston, South Carolina, tells In These Times, our governor Henry McMaster says, come to South Carolina, we work for less.’ That’s how you market your state?” Riley is referring in part to a joint statement released by the governors of Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Texas, Mississippi, and South Carolina prior to the union election at the Volkswagen plant, which said that Unionization would certainly put our states’ jobs in jeopardy.”

    The lack of union density has created a feedback loop: working people may not know what unions are or may not know any union members, and lack experience with what union organizers call the union difference,” i.e. the ways unions materially improve people’s lives. (On average, union members make 14% more than nonunion workers. They’re also more likely to have benefits like employer-provided healthcare and a pension.) Riley says, when you live a certain way for all of your life, you become accustomed to not having things you should have. When you get a victory like the UAW’s in Chattanooga, a win that survived intimidation by the bosses and public pressure, it allows all laboring people to see what they deserve.”

    This is not the first time the UAW has tried to organize at Volkswagen. The union ran campaigns in 2014 and 2019, and fell short both times, although both previous elections were close—in 2014, the vote count was 712626, and in 2019, it was 833776. But the political terrain has shifted significantly over the last decade, with workers taking action against powerful employers like Starbucks and Amazon; participating in high-profile strikes, like the 75,000 employees at Kaiser Permanente last year; and the fact that unions have their highest approval rating since 1965.

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    Auto workers specifically have seen new and transformative leadership at the UAW since reformer Shawn Fain took office as president early last year, along with historic victories at the Big Three after the union’s Stand Up” strike last fall. UAW members at Daimler Truck North America — which manufactures, sells and services several commercial vehicles in North Carolina, Georgia and Tennessee — narrowly averted a strike and won a tentative agreement ahead of the contract’s expiration at midnight on Friday, April 26. The agreement includes an end to wage tiers, profit sharing, inflation protection, and record wage increases, and on May 4 workers ratified the agreement. This victory, another in the South, could also help inspire other workers in the region to organize.

    Union organizing in the South has increased despite the immense barriers, including anti-labor legal regimes, right-to-work laws, widespread union busting tactics, and deeply anti-union politicians, and each win has improved organizing conditions for workers across the region. Kelly Coward, a Registered Nurse at Mission Hospital in Asheville, North Carolina, helped organize her union after HCA Healthcare bought the hospital in 2019. A born-and-raised North Carolinian, Coward didn’t have any personal experience with unions, although she knew nurses in other states were unionized. She had worked for Mission for more than 20 years and was content before its sale to a for-profit company, which is when things began changing. 

    That’s when we saw a huge difference. Positions were being cut, we didn’t have the equipment that we needed,” Coward tells In These Times. We knew we needed to do something.” Her co-workers contacted National Nurses United, and went on to win their union election at Mission by 70% in September 2020, becoming the first private sector hospital to unionize in the state. 

    The victory in Asheville was a boon for NNU, which went on to organize nurses in Austin, Texas in 2022 and New Orleans, Louisiana in 2023. North Carolina has also seen other union victories in recent years including Duke faculty in 2016, Duke graduate workers in 2023 (both campaigns on which I worked), and Durham REI workers in 2023, along with more heightened union action by public sector workers in the state, like sanitation workers with United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers of America (UE) Local 150 who went out on an illegal strike in 2023 in protest of low pay.

    Ben Carroll, the Organizing Coordinator of the Southern Workers Assembly (SWA), says, the victory by Volkswagen workers in Chattanooga is nothing short of electrifying. It gives confidence and momentum to many workers across the South who themselves are organizing and building power in their own workplaces, and sends a strong message to the rest of the labor movement that the South can and will be organized.” 

    SWA was founded 12 years ago and works to coordinate worker organizing across the region, helping them engage in collective action. Their goal is to exchange lessons between workers in the region, develop an infrastructure of rank-and-file workers, and support those who are organizing both through the NLRB and outside of it. Carroll tells In These Times, we hope that the rest of the labor movement will follow the UAW’s inspiring lead and mobilize the resources needed to take advantage of this opening and organize in the South.”

    The UAW is continuing to build on the momentum from their victory at the Big Three. In addition to workers at Volkswagen and Mercedes, workers at Hyundai in Alabama have also launched a union organizing campaign, with more than 30% of workers having signed union authorization cards. The UAW has made it clear that it plans to organize all non-union auto plants in the region.

    Mercedes worker and member of the volunteer organizing committee, Jeremy Kimbrell, has worked at the Alabama plant for nearly 25 years, and has also been involved in past organizing drives there. Kimbrell tells In These Times that despite living in an anti-union state his entire life, my [parents] instilled in me you don’t let people treat you just any kind of way. My daddy was in the coal miners’ union, and his granddaddy, back in the 30s or 40s, shot at a coal truck that was crossing the picket line, so I never doubted the power of a union.” 

    But as the union election at Mercedes approaches, and after the UAW’s blow-out win at Volkswagen, the bosses and politicians in Alabama are turning their union-busting up a notch. Alabama Governor Kay Ivey posted on X (formerly Twitter), The UAW is NOT the good guy here,” calling the union corrupt, shifty and a dangerous leech.” Ivey also wrote an op-ed which reads, in part, the Alabama model for economic success is under attack. A national labor union, the United Automotive Workers (UAW), is ramping up efforts to target non-union automakers throughout the United States, including ours here in Alabama.” Former Mercedes CEO Michael Göbel, who resigned from his position late last month, also came out against the union, as did special-interest business groups, who have paid for anti-union billboards near the plant and set up anti-union websites. 

    “Politicians say they represent the people, but then say the workers don’t deserve their fair share of the labor. That doesn’t work.” —UAW President Shawn Fain

    Workers at Mercedes aren’t just fighting the boss or contending with the unfriendly political landscape — they’re up against both, and one can’t change without the other. Carroll says that it’s not difficult to trace the reactionary politics that dominate the region to the lack of working class organization and power.” And it’s difficult to win that kind of power when the political conditions are so fraught. But workers are continuing to fight on, and hope to shut out the noise of right-wing politicians and the Business Council of Alabama, the state’s chamber of commerce, which has penned op-eds against the union and even created a website, Alabama Strong,” which states that Alabama’s auto industry’s future is threatened by a UAW attack seeking to impose the union’s way of business on your life.”

    UAW President Fain doesn’t mince words when referring to Alabama’s governor and the state’s Business Council: These people are nothing but puppets for corporate America and for the billionaire class, and they’re the reason why workers aren’t getting their fair share. Politicians say they represent the people, but then say the workers don’t deserve their fair share of the labor. That doesn’t work.”

    Isaac Meadows, who has worked at the Chattanooga Volkswagen plant for almost two years and is a member of the organizing committee, says of the union effort in Tennessee, It was a lot of hard work, but it was worth it. Mercedes is in a tougher fight than we had. Oftentimes you feel like you’re by yourself, out fighting alone, but you’re not. There’s a lot of support, inside and outside, so keep up the fight, keep up the good work, it’s worth it in the end.” 

    Ahead of the vote, which could end up being another domino in labor’s plan to organize the South, Meadows tells In These Times that he wants Mercedes’ workers to know, this is not [the politicians’] decision. It’s our decision. They don’t work in these plants. I’ve put the invitation out to any of these governors, come work next to me for a day, see what I do. So far none of them have taken me up on it.”

    Israeli forces take control of Gaza side of Rafah border as cease-fire hangs in balance

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    CAIRO (AP) — Israeli troops seized control of Gaza’s vital Rafah border crossing on Tuesday in what the White House described as a limited operation, as fears mount of a full-scale invasion of the southern city as talks with Hamas over a cease-fire and hostage release remain on a knife’s edge.

    The U.N. warned of a potential collapse of the flow of aid to Palestinians from the closure of Rafah and the other main crossing into Gaza, Kerem Shalom, at a time when officials say northern Gaza is experiencing “full-blown famine.”

    The Israeli foray overnight came after hours of whiplash in the now 7-month-old Israel-Hamas war, with the militant group saying Monday it accepted a cease-fire proposal that Israel insisted fell short of its own core demands.

    The high-stakes diplomatic moves and military brinkmanship left a glimmer of hope alive — if only barely — for a deal to bring at least a pause in the war, which has killed more than 34,700 Palestinians, according to local health officials, and has devastated the Gaza Strip.

    WHAT TO KNOW TUESDAY

    IN GAZA: An Israeli tank brigade has seized control of the Gaza Strip side of the Rafah border crossing with Egypt, authorities say, as Israel threatens to launch a wider offensive in the southern city. Follow live updates.

    CEASE-FIRE PROPOSAL: Hamas said Monday it accepted an Egyptian-Qatari cease-fire proposal, but Israel said the deal did not meet its core demands and it was pushing ahead with plans to invade the southern Gaza city of Rafah. Still, Israel said it would continue negotiations. Here is what’s on the table on the cease-fire talks.

    ON CAMPUSES: German police on Tuesday broke up a protest by several hundred pro-Palestinian activists who had occupied a courtyard at Berlin’s Free University earlier in the day. And in the U.S., police cleared a pro-Palestinian tent encampment at the University of Chicago.

    By capturing the Rafah crossing, Israel gained full control over the entry and exit of people and goods for the first time since it withdrew soldiers and settlers from Gaza in 2005, though it has long maintained a blockade of the coastal enclave in cooperation with Egypt.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the capture of the crossing an “important step” toward dismantling Hamas’ military and governing capabilities, and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said Israel would “deepen” the Rafah operation if the talks on the hostage deal failed.

    Osama Hamdan, a Hamas official based in Beirut, said the militant group would not respond to military pressure or threats and would not accept any “occupying force” at the Rafah crossing.

    White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said the operation along the Gaza-Egypt border in eastern Rafah was not a full-on invasion of the city that President Joe Biden has repeatedly warned against on humanitarian grounds. He said Israel had described it as “an operation of limited scale and duration” aimed at cutting off Hamas arms smuggling.

    Kirby also expressed optimism about the negotiations, saying Israel and Hamas “should be able to close the remaining gaps” to complete an agreement, without offering a timetable. He said CIA chief William Burns will attend further talks in Cairo with representatives from Israel, Egypt and Qatar. Hamas also sent a delegation to Cairo, which will meet separately with the Arab mediators.

    “Everybody is coming to the table,” Kirby said.

    Fighting forced the evacuation of the Abu Youssef al-Najjar Hospital, one of the main medical centers receiving people wounded in airstrikes on Rafah in recent weeks. It was not immediately clear how many patients had been moved to other facilities.

    The looming operation threatens to widen a rift between Israel and its main backer, the United States, which says it is concerned over the fate of around 1.3 million Palestinians crammed into Rafah, most of whom fled fighting elsewhere.

    Biden warned Netanyahu again Monday against launching an invasion of the city after Israel ordered 100,000 Palestinians to evacuate from parts of Rafah. But Netanyahu’s far-right coalition partners have threatened to bring down his government if he calls off the offensive or makes too many concessions in cease-fire talks.

    Palestinians’ cheers of joy over Hamas’ acceptance of the cease-fire deal turned to fear Tuesday. Families fled Rafah’s eastern neighborhoods on foot or in vehicles and donkey carts piled with mattresses and supplies. Children watched as parents disassembled tents in the sprawling camps that have filled Rafah for months to move to their next destination — which for many remained uncertain.

    “Netanyahu only cares about coming out on top. He doesn’t care about children. I don’t think he’ll agree” to a deal, said Najwa al-Saksuk as her family packed up while Israeli strikes rang out amid plumes of black smoke.

    Families of the hostages also saw their hope turn to despair. Rotem Cooper, whose 85-year-old father, Amiram, was among scores abducted during Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, slammed what he said was the government’s inaction on a deal.

    “We see all sorts of explanations — this isn’t the deal that we gave them, Hamas changed it without saying something,” Cooper said at a parliamentary hearing Tuesday. He questioned whether military pressure was an effective bargaining tactic.

    Israel’s 401st Brigade took “operational control” of the Gaza side of the Rafah crossing early Tuesday, the military said. Military footage showed Israeli flags flying from tanks in the area. It also said troops and airstrikes targeted suspected Hamas positions in Rafah.

    The military claimed it had intelligence the crossing was “being used for terrorist purposes,” though it did not immediately provide evidence. It said Hamas fighters near the crossing launched a mortar attack that killed four Israeli troops near Kerem Shalom on Sunday and that more mortars and rockets were fired from the area Tuesday.

    The Rafah crossing with Egypt and the Kerem Shalom crossing with Israel are critical entry points for food, medicine and other supplies for Gaza’s 2.3 million people. They have been closed for at least the past two days, though the smaller Erez crossing between Israel and northern Gaza continues to operate.

    Israeli authorities denied the U.N. humanitarian affairs office access to the Rafah crossing Tuesday, said its spokesman, Jens Laerke, warning the disruption could break the fragile aid operation. All fuel for aid trucks and generators comes through Rafah, and Laerke said there was a “very, very short buffer of about one day of fuel.”

    Israeli strikes and bombardment across Rafah overnight killed at least 23 Palestinians, including at least six women and five children, according to hospital records.

    Mohamed Abu Amra said his wife, two brothers, sister and niece were killed when a strike flattened their home as they slept. “We did nothing. … We don’t have Hamas,” he said.

    Egypt’s Foreign Ministry condemned the seizure of the crossing, calling it “a dangerous escalation.”

    It has previously warned that any seizure of Rafah — which is supposed to be part of a demilitarized border zone — or an attack that forces Palestinians to flee into Egypt would threaten the 1979 peace treaty with Israel that’s been a linchpin for regional security.

    Netanyahu has said an offensive to take Rafah — which Israel says is Hamas’ last major stronghold in Gaza — is crucial to destroying Hamas after its Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel that triggered the war. Hamas and other militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took around 250 hostages.

    The United States, Egypt and Qatar have spent months trying to broker an agreement on a cease-fire and the release of the estimated 100 hostages and remains of 30 others still held by Hamas, which insists it will not release them unless Israel ends the war and withdraws from Gaza.

    Netanyahu and other top officials have publicly rejected those demands, saying they plan to resume the offensive after any hostage release and continue it until Hamas is destroyed. For now, the hostages serve as Hamas’ strongest bargaining chip and potential human shields for its leaders.

    An Egyptian official and a Western diplomat said the draft Hamas accepted had only minor changes in wording from a version the U.S. had earlier pushed for with Israeli approval. The changes were made in consultation with the CIA chief, who embraced the draft before sending it to Hamas, they said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the deliberations.

    According to a copy released by Hamas, the proposal outlines a phased release of the hostages alongside gradual withdrawal of Israeli troops from the entire enclave and ending with a “sustainable calm,” defined as a “permanent cessation of military and hostile operations.”

    ___

    Lidman reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press journalists Aamer Madhani in Washington, Ashraf Sweilam in el-Arish, Egypt, and Abby Sewell in Beirut contributed to this report.

    Helldivers 2 Community Rallies To Rescue Game’s Steam Reviews

    Co-op shooter Helldivers 2 was enjoying tons of success in the months since its February launch. Then, a few days ago, Sony announced that PC players had to link (or create) a PlayStation Network account to continue playing the game. This enraged fans who have been playing for months, resulting in a massive review-bombing scheme that cratered Helldivers 2’s Steam score. On May 6, Sony reversed this mandate, and now Helldivers fans are corralling to lift Arrowhead Game Studios’ live-service multiplayer shooter review back up on Steam, giving thousands of positive reviews in two days in what the community has dubbed “Major Order: Operation Clean Up.”

    Helldivers 2 launched to an “overwhelmingly positive” rating on Steam on February 8. It was—and still is—one of 2024’s hottest games, garnering hundreds of thousands of players with its fun, chaotic gameplay and clever storytelling. On May 3, Sony told players that a PlayStation Network account was required to play the PC version of Helldivers 2. This mandate obviously riled up the community, with many going to (digital) war over it, review-bombing the game on Steam and sharing angry posts on social media with such intensity that Arrowhead CEO Johan Pilestedt apologized for the issue. Three days after the announcement, Sony announced it would remove the PlayStation Network account linking requirement.

    Now Helldivers 2 fans have rallied to pay it forward. In the game’s subreddit, a moderator dropped a new Major Order, which are main objectives in the live-service shooter usually passed down by Arrowhead, calling for fans to reverse their negative reviews.

    “Sony has reversed their decision to move forward with the account linking update,” the post, created by OmegaXesis on May 6, reads. “Helldivers; should you choose to accept this major order. Please consider reversing your steam review. Arrowhead has worked very hard to make this game special, and you the player have shown both Sony and Arrowhead that your voice matters too. Let us restore Helldivers 2 on steam back to its former glory. And let us restore this community back to normal. Please reverse any negative reviews you left for any other games that Arrowhead or Sony has worked on. Let’s do better as a community and not do that again. Thank you, Helldivers mod team.”

    At the time of writing, over 75,000 positive reviews have been submitted since the Major Order was delivered, raising Helldivers 2‘s Steam rating from “mostly negative” to “mixed.” With over 600,000 reviews right now, the game has a “mostly positive” rating overall, but if this Major Order continues as planned, I’ve no doubt that Helldivers 2 will, as OmegaXesis said in the subreddit, return to its former glory of “overwhelmingly positive” reviews on Steam. For his part, Pilestedt said he’s impressed with the community’s “willpower” to collaborate together and effect change.

    I guess good things happen when you use your voice.

    In other Helldivers 2 news, the game received a patch on May 7 that addressed some lingering issues. This includes things such as misaligned scopes, damage over time problems, crashes and other bugs, and much more.

     

    Security Guard Injured in Shooting Outside Drake’s Home in Toronto

    A man identified as a security guard for Drake was wounded in a shooting outside of the rapper’s Toronto mansion around 2 a.m. on Tuesday, the police said.

    The man was taken to a hospital with a gunshot wound, Inspector Paul Krawczyk, a member of the gun and gang task force, said at a news conference at the scene on Tuesday morning. The suspects fled in a vehicle and remain at large; the police did not offer a description but said the shooting had been captured on video.

    The shooting occurred outside the gates in front of Drake’s 50,000-square-foot mansion on Park Lane Circle in the North York neighborhood known as Bridle Path in Toronto, but did not involve the rapper, the authorities said. Drake was previously permitted to build fences twice as high as allowed by city law, citing a need for increased security.

    The shooting followed a weekend of increasingly personal diss tracks traded between Drake and the Compton, Calif., rapper Kendrick Lamar, whose long-simmering musical rivalry resulted in the release of six songs in 72 hours, including detailed attacks involving family members and claims of abuse against women on both sides.

    “I cannot speak to a motive at this time, because it’s so early, but as we get information we will share it with you,” Inspector Krawczyk said at the news conference. He said that he could not confirm whether Drake was home at the time of the shooting, but that authorities had been in contact with the rapper’s team, which was cooperating.

    The police said the victim, who was not identified, remained at the hospital in serious condition.

    A representative for Drake declined to comment.

    Lamar’s “Not Like Us,” which was released on Saturday and taunts Drake and his associates as “certified pedophiles,” features an aerial shot of Drake’s home on a map as its cover art. The track is currently topping the charts globally and in the United States on streaming services including Spotify and Apple Music. The cover is edited to portray the home as dotted with markers meant to represent the presence of registered sex offenders.

    Kendrick Lamar’s single “Not Like Us,” which was released on Saturday and taunts Drake, features an aerial shot of Drake’s home on a map as its cover art.

    Drake has previously referred to the location of his home, which he calls the Embassy, on tracks like “7AM on Bridle Path.”

    Representatives for Lamar did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Olivia Chow, the mayor of Toronto, said she had been briefed by the police but declined to offer any details.

    “Any shooting is not welcome in this city and I hope the police will find the people that are violating the law and catch them,” she told reporters.

    Ian Austen contributed reporting from Ottawa.

    Vancouver brand inspired by founder’s Desi upbringing, the West Coast

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    Canadian brand aselectfew is ‘dedicated to celebrating and preserving culture through fashion.’

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    When a brand can count music superstar Diljit Dosanjh among its fans, you know it’s well on its way. 

    Inspired by founder and creative Moneey Singh’s upbringing, Canadian clothing line aselectfew aims “to be the global leader in the diaspora within luxury fashion” by offering a curated selection of locally made, sustainably minded styles.

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    We caught up with Singh to learn more:

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    Q: For those who aren’t familiar, what is aselectfew?

    A: Established in 2018, aselectfew is a Vancouver-based fashion label that draws inspiration from my Desi upbringing and West Coast lifestyle. I began my career as an engineer and later applied my expertise to promote sustainability in fashion through circular design principles, exploring innovation in technical apparel, and refine my knowledge of local manufacturing processes.

    We are dedicated to celebrating and preserving culture through fashion. We blend traditional designs and fabrics with contemporary trends and technology, creating unique and classic clothing. We care a lot about the environment, so we prioritize the use of eco-friendly materials and production methods to minimize our environmental impact.

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    Q: What makes it unique?

    A: Aselectfew emphasizes building for the underrepresented majority in fashion, exploring Indo-futurism and long-lasting functional products. Our designs unify timeless esthetics, technical applications, eco-conscious decision-making and cross-cultural elements.

    Q: Who is the target customer?

    A: They are the trendsetting individual living within the diaspora, navigating life with an eye for contemporary fusion.

    Fashion isn’t just about dressing up; it’s a statement of self-expression and an extension of their identity. Every outfit tells a story, combining timeless style with a nod to eco-conscious living.

    Q: Where are the pieces designed/made?

    A: Our clothing is designed, made and produced entirely in Vancouver. Despite occasional challenges, our aim is to support the local economy, ensuring the Vancouver fashion industry doesn’t fade away, and upholding fair labour conditions and wages.

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    Q: Is there a ‘hero’ design in the collection?

    A: Our KMBL Pullover stands out as our hero product. Crafted from up-cycled kambal blankets, it honours our South Asian roots while evoking a sense of nostalgia. This pullover design is an expression of art and ultimately to give power back to the South Asian community that so often doesn’t have a voice in mainstream fashion.

    Q: What is the price range for your pieces?

    A: Our socks start at $30, while our Technical ANRK is $850. The essential pieces in our collection are our Graphic T-Shirts at $150 and our Waterproof Hoodies at $250.

    Q: And where can people check them out?

    A: Online on our website, aselectfew.co, and our Instagram page, @aselectfew_official.

    Aharris@postmedia.com

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    St. John’s lands Seton Hall’s Kadary Richmond in seismic transfer

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    It took some time, roughly seven weeks after the transfer portal opened March 18. But St. John’s has broken through.

    One day after landing do-it-all Utah guard Deivon Smith, Rick Pitino and co. picked up a verbal commitment from Seton Hall’s Kadary Richmond, one of the premier players to enter the portal.

    The 6-foot-6 Brooklyn native, an All-Big East first team selection, immediately raises the team’s ceiling for next year, joining Smith and rising sophomore Simeon Wilcher to comprise one of the premier backcourts on paper in the country.

    St. John’s has landed Seton Hall’s Kadary Richmond in the transfer portal. Charles Wenzelberg/NY Post

    “It can be very dynamic,” Richmond told The Post. “We all do things differently, we all have different styles I would say. As long as we can get it to mesh early, it can be something big for us.”

    Richmond visited St. John’s twice, right after entering the portal on April 26, and again Monday and Tuesday of this week. He tripped to Oklahoma over the weekend. Illinois, Syracuse and West Virginia were among his other suitors. He considered taking other visits, but after his trip to Queens on Monday, Richmond was set on his new home.

    “Just the fact that they were keeping it real from day one,” Richmond said. “With the track record of coach Pitino, what he’s done with guards in the past. I liked the vision they put together along with the guards they have already and the players they have coming in. That also was a big deal for me.”

    This is a seismic addition.

    The website EvanMiya.com rates the uber-talented Richmond as the top player to switch schools this offseason, based on a formula that incorporates box stats and advanced metrics to quantify a player’s overall impact.

    It also shows the ever-changing landscape of the sport, that Richmond would leave Seton Hall for inter-conference rival St. John’s.

    The Pirates, it should be noted, did bring in St. John’s transfer Dylan Addae-Wusu last spring, although Addae-Wusu was part of an exodus of players following a coaching change.

    Seton Hall’s Kadary Richmond drives against Indiana State in the NIT Championship. AP

    “Everyone might not be happy with it, but I just hope they understand sometimes you have to make the best decision to go places you want to go in life,” Richmond said. “If they were in my shoes, they would probably have a better understanding of that. I’m pretty sure everyone is going to be in an uproar and there’s going to be a lot of backlash from many different places.”

    It will be fascinating to see how Richmond and Smith, who is ranked 15th by EvanMiya.com, co-exist.

    The two lead guards are used to playing with the ball in their hands and it will take adjustments from each player.

    Pitino has often had two ball-dominant guards throughout his career, most notably at Louisville when Russ Smith and Peyton Siva starred together.

    Kadary Richmond drives against St. John’s on Feb. 18, 2024. Noah K. Murray for the NY Post

    Richmond and Smith talked on Monday after the Utah transfer’s announcement, and both expressed an interest in teaming up.

    “Just being able to play off each other, he’s a good player as well,” Richmond said. “He makes the right plays about winning, and mainly that’s what it’s all about in these next coming months.”

    Richmond comes to St. John’s after a brilliant season for its rival a year ago, averaging career-bests of 15.7 points, 7.0 rebounds, 5.1 assists, 2.2 steals and 44.1 percent shooting from the field.

    He led the Pirates to a fourth-place finish in the Big East after they were predicted by the league’s coaches to come in ninth. Following an NCAA Tournament snub, they won the NIT crown.

    The one hole in Richmond’s game is the 3-point shot. He’s never averaged more than 1.8 attempts and shot only 27 percent this past season. He’s at his best penetrating, either off the dribble or in post-up opportunities.

    Best known throughout his career for his player development, Pitino will work with Richmond on that weakness in his game.

    “He told me to do some research on the players he had that struggled shooting and take a look at jumps they made after being with him,” Richmond said. “They showed improvements in all areas. That really stood out to me as well.”

    Near collapse of Earth’s magnetic field 591 million years ago may have allowed complex life to thrive

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    Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more.



    CNN
     — 

    Earth’s magnetic field plays a key role in making our planet habitable. The protective bubble over the atmosphere shields the planet from solar radiation, winds, cosmic rays and wild swings in temperature.

    However, Earth’s magnetic field almost collapsed 591 million years ago, and this change, paradoxically, may have played a pivotal role in the blossoming of complex life, new research has found.

    “In general, the field is protective. If we had not had a field early in Earth history water would have been stripped from the planet by the solar wind (a stream of energized particles flowing from the sun toward Earth),” said John Tarduno, a professor of geophysics at the University of Rochester in New York and senior author of the new study.

    “But in the Ediacaran, we had a fascinating period in the development of the deep Earth when processes creating the magnetic field … had become so inefficient after billions of years, that the field almost completely collapsed.”

    The study, published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment on May 2, found that Earth’s magnetic field, which is created by the motion of molten iron in Earth’s outer core, was significantly weaker than its current strength for a period of at least 26 million years. The discovery of the sustained weakening of Earth’s magnetic field also helped resolve an enduring geological mystery about when Earth’s solid inner core formed.

    This time frame lines up with a period known as the Ediacaran, when the very first complex animals emerged on the seafloor as the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere and the ocean increased.

    These weird animals barely resembled life today — squashy fans, tubes and doughnuts, and discs such as Dickinsonia, which grew up to 4.6 feet (1.4 meters) in size, and the sluglike Kimberella.

    Prior to this time, life had been largely single-celled and microscopic. The researchers believe that a weak magnetic field may have led to an increase in oxygen in the atmosphere, allowing early complex life to evolve.

    Shuhai Xiao/Virginia Tech

    A photograph shows a cast of a 560 million-year-old Dickinsonia costata fossil found in South Australia. At more than a meter in length, the creature is the largest known animal from that period.

    The intensity of Earth’s magnetic field is known to fluctuate over time, and crystals preserved in rock contain tiny magnetic particles that lock in a record of the intensity of Earth’s magnetic field.

    The first evidence that Earth’s magnetic field weakened significantly during this period came in 2019 from a study of 565 million-year-old rocks in Quebec that suggested the field was 10 times weaker than today at that point.

    The latest study collated more geological evidence that indicated the magnetic field weakened dramatically, with information contained in 591 million-year-old rock from a site in southern Brazil suggesting the field was 30 times weaker than today.

    The weak magnetic field hadn’t always been that way: The team examined similar rocks from South Africa that dated back more than 2 billion years and found, at that point in time, the Earth’s magnetic field was as strong as it is today.

    Unlike now, Tarduno explained, back then the innermost part of Earth was liquid, not solid, influencing the way the magnetic field was generated.

    “Over billions of years that process is becoming less and less efficient,” he said.

    “And by the time we get to the Ediacaran, the field is on its last legs. It’s almost collapsing. But then fortunately for us it got cool enough that the inner core started to generate (strengthening the magnetic field).”

    The emergence of the earliest complex life that would have wafted along the seafloor at this time is associated with a rise in oxygen levels. Some animals can survive at low levels of oxygen, such as sponges and microscopic animals, but larger animals with more complex bodies that move need more oxygen, Tarduno said.

    Traditionally, the rise in oxygen during this time has been attributed to photosynthetic organisms such as cyanobacteria, which produced oxygen, allowing it to build up in the water steadily over time, explained study coauthor Shuhai Xiao, a professor of geobiology at Virginia Tech.

    However, the new research suggested an alternative, or complementary, hypothesis involving an increased loss of hydrogen to space when the geomagnetic field was weak.

    “The magnetosphere shields the Earth from solar wind, thus holding the atmosphere to the Earth. Thus, a weaker magnetosphere means that lighter gases such as hydrogen would be lost from the Earth’s atmosphere,” Xiao added via email.

    Tarduno said multiple processes could have been taking place at once.

    “We do not challenge that one or more of these processes was happening concurrently. But the weak field may have allowed oxygenation to cross a threshold, aiding animal radiation (evolution),” Tarduno said.

    Peter Driscoll, staff scientist at the Earth and Planets Laboratory at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, DC, said he agreed with the study’s findings on the weakness of Earth’s magnetic field, but the claim that the weak magnetic field could have affected atmospheric oxygen and biological evolution was difficult to assess. He wasn’t involved with the study.

    “It is hard for me to evaluate the veracity of this claim because the influence that planetary magnetic fields might have on climate is not very well understood,” he said via email.

    Tarduno said that their hypothesis was “solid,” but proving a causative link could take decades of challenging work given how little is known about the animals that lived at this time.

    Shuhai Xiao/Virginia Tech

    A 565 million-year-old fossil of an Ediacaran animal, called Fractofusus misrai, was found at the Mistaken Point Formation in Newfoundland, Canada.

    The geological analysis also revealed telling details about the innermost part of Earth’s center.

    Estimates on when the planet’s inner core may have solidified — when iron first crystallized at the center of the planet — once ranged from 500 million to 2.5 billion years ago.

    The research on the intensity of Earth’s magnetic field suggests that the age of Earth’s inner core is on the younger end of that timescale, solidifying after 565 million years ago and allowing Earth’s magnetic shield to bounce back.

    “The observations appear to support the claim that the inner core first nucleated soon after this time, pushing the geodynamo (the mechanism that creates the magnetic field) from a weak, unstable state into a strong, stable dipolar field,” Driscoll said.

    Tarduno said the recovery of the field strength after the Ediacaran, with the growth of the inner core, was probably important in preventing a drying of water-rich Earth.

    As for the bizarre animals of the Ediacaran, they had all disappeared by the following Cambrian Period, when the diversity of life exploded and the branches of the tree of life familiar today formed in a relatively short time.

    South Dakota has a syphilis problem

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    Tyler Broghammer leaves his office nearly every day armed with a small blue cooler.

    Inside is a weapon against South Dakota’s syphilis epidemic: syringes of penicillin. The sexually transmitted infection case manager at Oyate Health Center in Rapid City also carries rapid STI tests and condoms on his near daily drive around town, meeting with people he’s learned may have the disease.

    Broghammer is one of two STI case managers at Oyate Health finding and treating people who have syphilis. The organization is one of several working to address the epidemic in South Dakota through collaborative partnerships.

    COVID-19 ‘completely overwhelmed’ screening

    Syphilis is a bacterial infection most often spread through sex that can be cured, but can cause serious health problems without treatment and can be spread from mothers to unborn babies.

    South Dakota experienced a 2,493% increase in adult syphilis cases from the five-year median in 2022, according to the state Department of Health, with 1,504 cases reported — the highest rate of syphilis cases in the country at the time. That was a 90% increase from 2021.

    The number of syphilis cases in the state dropped in 2023 to 1,374 cases, according to the state’s infectious disease dashboard.

    Syphilis cases are down by 335 cases in the first quarter of this year compared to 2023, according to a state Department of Health spokesperson.

    The state had the second highest rate of congenital syphilis in the country in 2022 with 40 cases, which is 351.8 cases per 100,000 births, and was a 150% year-over-year increase. The state saw a 1,233% increase in congenital syphilis among infants from the five-year median in 2022.

    The state reported 54 congenital syphilis cases in 2023 and 18 through April of that year. So far this year, there have been nine reported cases.

    A cooler is filled with doses of penicillin on April 24, 2024, at the Oyate Health Center in Rapid City. (Seth Tupper/South Dakota Searchlight)

    Syphilis was close to being eradicated in the United States in the 1990s, but cases in South Dakota were increasing in the years prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Syphilis infections nationwide have climbed rapidly in recent years, reaching a 70-year high in 2022, according to the most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That rise comes amid a shortage of penicillin, the most effective treatment, due to the nationwide increase in syphilis cases. The shortage is predicted to last until the end of this year.

    Hospitals were overwhelmed with treating the coronavirus in 2020 and 2021 and patients were hesitant to get screened or treated for STIs, said Meghan Curry O’Connell, a member of the Cherokee Nation and chief public health officer at the Great Plains Tribal Leaders’ Health Board in Rapid City.

    “The whole system we have to make sure people are screened and treated for STIs was completely overwhelmed by COVID, like everything else,” said Curry O’Connell, who is a family physician by training. “Particularly in South Dakota, added challenges included difficulty in accessing care in very rural areas, which compounded the impacts of the pandemic.”

    Native American communities hit hardest

    Native American communities have been hit the hardest by the epidemic in South Dakota and nationally. About 90% of congenital syphilis cases in South Dakota are among Indigenous babies, according to the state Health Department.

    Syphilis causes a range of symptoms, including rashes, sores and hair loss. But if the disease isn’t treated, symptoms may go away even though the infection remains, making it a prolific spreader unless sexually active people are educated on the disease, practice safe sex and are regularly tested, Curry O’Connell said.

    The disease can potentially persist for decades if untreated, which can lead to death. If pregnant people are infected, it poses a dangerous risk to their baby; congenital syphilis can cause bone deformities, severe anemia, jaundice, meningitis and even death. In 2022, the CDC recorded 231 stillbirths and 51 infant deaths caused by syphilis nationally, out of 3,761 congenital syphilis cases reported that year.

    The Great Plains Tribal Leaders’ Health Board and tribal leaders from North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska and Iowa have asked the federal Department of Health and Human Services to declare a public health emergency in their states. A declaration would expand staffing, funding, and access to contact tracing data across their region.

    “It’s important to get treated, because we want to prevent any of those outcomes, and it’s just so easy for people to do,” Curry O’Connell said. “Most people just need one shot of penicillin if newly infected.”

    The rate of congenital syphilis infections among Native Americans ( 644.7 cases per 100,000 people in 2022) is comparable to what the rate for the entire U.S. population was in 1941 (651.1) before doctors began using penicillin to cure syphilis, according to KFF Health News.

    The risk is especially high for people with limited access to health care.

    “If you’re putting off care or don’t have a regular relationship with a doctor, those people are more likely to go untreated,” Curry O’Connell said. “For whatever reason or barrier — if a person can’t get time off of work, they have a distance to travel, they don’t have immediate transportation or anything — it could end up that the symptom goes away.”

    How SD entities are addressing the epidemic

    Broghammer’s position is funded by a grant from the Indian Health Service. His “boots on the ground” method is the most effective way to treat patients, though it’s also a “grind,” Broghammer said.

    Whether due to homelessness, financial or privacy concerns, many patients struggle to find their way to Oyate Health on the west side of Rapid City, Broghammer said. He’ll meet patients anywhere: their home, hotels or even in parking lots.

    “Some days I’ll get five to six phone calls reaching out to us, which is great. Other days we’re picking up the phone and trying to locate people but might not find anybody,” Broghammer said. “It’s not just as simple as a phone call and meeting with them. We have a decent sized population of houseless relatives where it’s difficult to find them — no phone or address. Sometimes we literally have nothing to go off of.”

    Some other health care systems will test for syphilis but won’t go to the patient’s location.

    “Underlying all of this is it’s very resource intensive, especially in rural areas,” Curry O’Connell said. “However, there’s not anything we know of yet that can replace it. Boots on the ground, going out to talk to people, giving testing and doing what needs to be done is just basic public health work, and there’s nothing else that really works better.”

    Some tribes and Indian Health Service locations are also sending nurses across South Dakota reservations to find and treat people. The state Department of Health plans to launch its Wellness on Wheels program in May, with five vans traveling across the state to provide basic health care to rural communities — including STI testing, treatment, education, counseling and referrals to community resources.

    The vans will also provide pregnancy care services, safe sleep guidance and developmental screening for children, WIC services, maternal depression screening, immunizations and oral health.

    “We hope to use these vans several times a week to reach clients who might not have access to one of our physical locations,” said Tia Kafke, media spokesperson for the department, in an emailed statement. “The vans will operate in the winter as much as possible, weather permitting.”

    The state, tribes and tribal health board have monthly meetings about syphilis, Curry O’Connell said. IHS recommends every patient age 16 and older be screened for syphilis at least once a year. Pregnant patients should be screened three times during their pregnancy.

    Broghammer often receives calls from the state Department of Health with leads on people who tested positive for syphilis.

    “They save me time and energy, so I know they’re working their tails off,” Broghammer said.

    The state department started piloting a rapid testing partnership with a health care provider in Mission, on the Rosebud Reservation, in December. Fifty patients were tested in the first three months with eight testing positive and being treated for the disease.

    The move to rapid testing is an important development, professionals agree, because patients are able to be treated immediately rather than days or weeks later when results come in from laboratories. The department has seven normal testing centers across the state.

    The number of syphilis cases in South Dakota has decreased since it peaked in 2022, though it’s still at epidemic levels. Congenital syphilis is only prevented by treating pregnant females. The number of congenital syphilis cases in South Dakota increased from 2022 to 2023.

    Prenatal care, intervention key to addressing congenital syphilis

    Though Broghammer sees the collaborations’ effect, he said there could be more entities working together in the state to put more boots on the ground.

    Curry O’Connell said more effort is needed to test pregnant patients who aren’t receiving prenatal care. Nearly one-third of congenital syphilis cases in the first half of 2023 did not receive prenatal care, according to the state.

    Most women still will interact with the health care system at some point during their pregnancy, even if they don’t receive prenatal care. They should be screened with a rapid test at that point, Curry O’Connell said.

    “If someone goes into urgent care or goes in for something that’s not even pregnancy related, that would be a place to start, because a lot of women will receive some sort of care during pregnancy,” Curry O’Connell said. “It’s trying to maximize the screening potential of those visits that’s important.”

    Education, Broghammer said, is an important tool.

    “I think the biggest thing is to just get checked,” Broghammer said. “If you’re sexually active, be safe: get screened and get checked. Be mindful of your partners and safe sex practices.”

    South Dakota Searchlight is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. South Dakota Searchlight maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Seth Tupper for questions: info@southdakotasearchlight.com. Follow South Dakota Searchlight on Facebook and Twitter.

    Rishi Sunak accused of ‘gaslighting’ UK on economy as MoD ‘hacked’ by China – UK politics live

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    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has vowed to ‘fight’ on (Henry Nicholls/PA) (PA Wire)

    Labour’s Rachel Reeves has accused the government of gaslighting the public about the economy, as she warns that the Tories’ disastrous local election results show the country has voted for change.

    Accusing ministers of making deluded, over-optimistic statements which are out of touch with Britons struggling with the cost of living, the shadow chancellor warned that voters at the general election have a choice between five more years of chaos with the Tories or stability with Sir Keir Starmer’s party.

    It came as reports revealed that the Ministry of Defence was targeted in a cyberattack on a third party payroll system including the details of tens of thousands of British armed forces and veterans.

    The MoD has been working over the last three days to understand the scale of the recently-discovered hack, and MPs will be informed officially in parliament on Tuesday afternoon, Sky News reported.

    Senior Tory Tobias Ellwood alleged that the targeting of a payroll system “points to China” and could be part of “strategy to see who might be coerced”. China’s foreign ministry said it “firmly opposes and fights all forms of cyberattacks”.

    1715083055

    Government reviewing third-party contractor’s operations after cyberattack

    The government is reviewing the operations of a third-party contractor whose systems were hacked in a cyber attack on the Ministry of Defence, Downing Street has said.

    Rishi Sunak’s official spokesman said: “In relation to the specific contractor involved in this incident, a security review of that contractor’s operations is under way and appropriate steps will be taken after that.”

    Andy Gregory7 May 2024 12:57

    1715082081

    No 10 declines to attribute cyberattack to specific state

    Downing Street has declined to attribute the reported cyberattack on the Ministry of Defence to a specific state or actor.

    Asked whether China was responsible for the attack, Rishi Sunak’s official spokesman said: “The defence secretary is going to give an update to parliament on this this afternoon.

    “You will appreciate I’m obviously limited in what I can say until then, other than the Ministry of Defence has already taken immediate action, isolating the network and supporting personnel affected.

    “I can’t get into any further speculation around the origination of the attack.”

    Andy Gregory7 May 2024 12:41

    1715081598

    Muslim group issues 18 demands for Keir Starmer to win back voters lost over Gaza

    A Muslim campaign group has issued Sir Keir Starmer with 18 demands in order to win back support lost due to his stance on Israel’s war in Gaza.

    The Muslim Vote, which aims to organise voters against MPs who did not back a ceasefire in the conflict, has called for the Labour leader to apologise for his early stance on Israel’s campaign against Hamas.

    And it has urged Sir Keir to promise to cut military ties with Israel and let Muslims pray in schools and for Labour figures to return “zionist money”.

    Our political correspondent Archie Mitchell reports:

    Andy Gregory7 May 2024 12:33

    1715080874

    Record proportion of voters expect Labour to win next election, polling suggests

    Just one in five voters expect the Conservative Party to win at the next general election, new polling by Redfield & Wilton suggests.

    That compares with 63 per cent who believe Labour will win – the highest proportion ever recorded by the pollster.

    The situation marks an utter reversal in summer 2021, prior to the Partygate scandal, when 55 per cent of voters believed the Tories would win the next election and less than 25 per cent thought Labour would.

    The two parties were tied on around 40 per cent in the early days of Liz Truss’s premiership, until Tory fortunes plummeted significantly and Labour’s rose correspondingly in the wake of her disastrous mini-Budget.

    Andy Gregory7 May 2024 12:21

    1715080379

    Humza Yousaf signs official resignation letter to King

    Scotland’s outgoing first minister Humza Yousaf has signed his official resignation letter to King Charles.

    Mr Yousaf signed the letter at the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh.

    He is expected to make a speech at Holyrood later ahead of a vote on new SNP leader John Swinney becoming Scotland’s new first minister.

    Andy Gregory7 May 2024 12:12

    1715079613

    Tories must unite to bring back voters who stayed away in local elections, minister says

    Rishi Sunak must win back “disgruntled” Conservative voters to give the party a hope of general election victory, work and pensions Secretary Mel Stride has said.

    Mr Stride insisted the Tories still have “all to play for” in the general election despite the drubbing inflicted in local and regional contests. But in a message to the prime minister’s Tory critics, Mr Stride said the party had to be “united” to win back voters.

    Mr Stride, a close ally of Mr Sunak’s, said a lot of Conservative voters “stayed away” from the ballot boxes because they were “disgruntled” – but insised the upcoming general election will be an “entirely difference contest”.

    Acknowledging that the results from the local elections had been “very painful”, he told Times Radio: “This is a volatile electorate, there are undoubtedly people that we need to win back to the Conservative cause.

    “I suspect a large number of those people stayed away on election day last Thursday, and it’s down to us now to do absolutely everything we can in a united way as the party to bring back those people to the Conservative fold.”

    Andy Gregory7 May 2024 12:00

    1715079118

    Sian Berry steps down days after re-election

    Former Green Party co-leader Sian Berry has stepped down from the London Assembly just days after being re-elected, to make way at City Hall for the party’s mayoral candidate Zoe Garbett.

    Andy Gregory7 May 2024 11:51

    1715078230

    Watch: Infected blood scandal is greatest injustice country has seen, claims Andy Burnham

    Infected blood scandal greatest injustice country has seen, claims Andy Burnham

    Andy Gregory7 May 2024 11:37

    1715077342

    Rachel Reeves says government ‘gaslighting’ public about economy

    Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves has accused the government of “gaslighting” the public about the economy, saying ministers’ over-optimistic statements are “out of touch” with Britons still struggling with the cost of living, reports Sophie Wingate.

    Seeking to get ahead of the Tories’ response to a raft of economic data this week, the Labour frontbencher argued that Jeremy Hunt and Rishi Sunak’s likely message of an improving economy is “deluded”.

    In a speech in the City of London on Tuesday, she warned that voters at the general election have a choice between “five more years of chaos” with the Tories or “stability” with Sir Keir Starmer’s party.

    As Labour celebrates a string of victories in regional mayoral contests, local elections and a by-election in Blackpool South, Ms Reeves said the results showed that people “voted for change”.

    Her intervention comes ahead of the Bank of England’s latest interest rates decision on Thursday and figures covering the economy’s performance over the first three months of this year on Friday.

    Andy Gregory7 May 2024 11:22

    1715074277

    Security services ‘investigating whether China trying to build profiles of British military personnel’

    The UK’s security services are investigating whether China is attempting to build profiles of members of the armed forces and people in other sensitive roles through a series of hacks of different databases holding personal information, British officials familiar with the matter have told Bloomberg.

    Tory MP Tobias Ellwood earlier told the BBC that the targeting of a payroll system “points to China” and could be part of “strategy to see who might be coerced”.

    Andy Gregory7 May 2024 10:31