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Reposted by Tracyhotd
The return of these special-education staffers is overdue — but partial fixes aren’t enough. We need fully restored federal capacity to protect #disabled students’ rights & ensure #IDEA is upheld nationwide.

#DisabilityRights @disabilityscoop.bsky.social

www.disabilityscoop.com/2025/11/14/a...
As Government Reopens, Ed Department Brings Back Fired Special Education Staffers
A deal to end the nation's longest-ever government shutdown is reversing plans to gut the federal special education office and providing funds for other disability programs — at least temporarily.
www.disabilityscoop.com
November 14, 2025 at 2:33 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
Special needs services in England face ‘total collapse’ from increasing demand

Councils say 59 authorities could go bankrupt by March 2028 without urgent structural reform
www.theguardian.com/education/20...
Special needs services in England face ‘total collapse’ from increasing demand
Councils say 59 authorities could go bankrupt by March 2028 without urgent structural reform
www.theguardian.com
November 14, 2025 at 3:06 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
British journalist detained by ICE says ‘there is a war on US freedom of speech’

US immigration agents are ‘merciless’, Sami Hamdi told The Independent upon his release
www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home...
British journalist detained by ICE says ‘there is a war on US freedom of speech’
US immigration agents are ‘merciless’, Sami Hamdi told The Independent upon his release
www.independent.co.uk
November 14, 2025 at 4:56 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
Russia says North Korean troops play key role in de-mining its Kursk region | Reuters www.reuters.com/business/aer...
www.reuters.com
November 14, 2025 at 1:56 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
Reposted by Tracyhotd
US, Korea ‘joint fact sheet’ on tariff and nuclear sub deal: What Seoul said - Korea Pro koreapro.org/2025/11/us-k...
US, Korea ‘joint fact sheet’ on tariff and nuclear sub deal: What Seoul said - Korea Pro
The U.S. White House and the South Korean Presidential Office on Friday Seoul time published a long-awaited Joint Fact Sheet outlining agreements reached during the late-October summit between Preside...
koreapro.org
November 14, 2025 at 10:17 AM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
Future USS Idaho (SSN 799) Virginia-class Block IV nuclear-powered attack submarine coming in from sea trials to Groton, Connecticut - November 11, 2025 SRC: FB- Victoria.Guillerault
November 14, 2025 at 2:24 PM
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#Idaho and let’s not forget they gave 50 million to private schools and the governor signed it after receiving overwhelming feedback not to
November 14, 2025 at 2:31 PM
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“'We are going to do everything we can to fight this,' Newport Mayor Jan Kaplan said Wednesday night. 'That’s where we stand'.”
opb.org OPB @opb.org · 2d
At a packed community meeting in Newport, along Oregon’s central coast, residents gathered to express a mix of confusion, frustration and anxiety about the relocation of a U.S. Coast Guard rescue helicopter – and the federal immigration enforcement outpost that could take its place.
Newport residents, leaders denounce possible ICE detention facility
At a packed community meeting in Newport, along Oregon’s central coast, residents gathered to express a mix of confusion, frustration and anxiety about the relocation of a U.S. Coast Guard rescue helicopter – and the federal immigration enforcement outpost that could take its place.
www.opb.org
November 13, 2025 at 7:58 AM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
Shutdown ends. Newport expresses unease over possible ICE facility. Vancouver picks a new flag. Seattle picks a new mayor. Blazers win. OPB premieres a new doc on descending the undammed Klamath River. Here's what we're following on @opb.org today: www.opb.org/article/2025...
OPB’s First Look: Government shutdown ends
The longest federal government shutdown in U.S. history is over. Here's your First Look at Thursday's news.
www.opb.org
November 13, 2025 at 3:48 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
But since the 2024 EU election they have professionalized, and that dynamic is changing.

“The far right is getting politically smarter and now knows how to play with the rules of procedure to their advantage,” said an EU official working on relations between the EP and COM.
November 14, 2025 at 2:16 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
🚨🚨"Welcome to the new European Parliament". In the year and a half since the far right surged at the EU election, Brussels’ mainstream forces have been anxiously wondering if the center can hold. Yesterday, they discovered it couldn’t. 🧵
www.politico.eu/article/euro...
In Brussels, the far right can no longer be ignored
EU conservatives working with the far right have signed the death warrant of the cordon sanitaire.
www.politico.eu
November 14, 2025 at 2:07 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
Update from @apnews.com: #Iran seized a Marshall Islands-flagged oil tanker as it traveled through the narrow Strait of Hormuz on Friday, a U.S. official said, turning the ship into Iranian territorial waters in the first-such interdiction in months in the strategic waterway.
November 14, 2025 at 10:49 AM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
APNewsAlert: DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — British military warns of possible 'state activity' affecting a ship that turned course into Iranian waters.
November 14, 2025 at 9:04 AM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
❗️Agents of the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of 🇺🇦Ukraine blew up the railway track of the 🇷🇺Trans-Siberian Railway near the settlement of Sosnovka, Khabarovsk Krai.

This railway is used by Russia to supply weapons and ammunition, including from the DPRK.
November 14, 2025 at 1:30 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
China’s new aircraft supercarrier challenges U.S. dominance in Pacific

China’s efforts to blunt American maritime power in the Pacific, a region the United States has long considered its domain, received a major boost this month with the official launch of its third — and most advanced by far — a
China’s new aircraft supercarrier challenges U.S. dominance in Pacific
China’s efforts to blunt American maritime power in the Pacific, a region the United States has long considered its domain, received a major boost this month with the official launch of its third — and most advanced by far — aircraft carrier, the Fujian.Get concise answers to your questions. Try Ask The Post AI. The 80,000-ton supercarrier, which can accommodate about 60 aircraft and will be accompanied by as many as 10 warships, will dramatically narrow the naval capability gap between the U.S. and China, according to American, Japanese, Taiwanese and Chinese analysts. It will also enable Beijing to further intimidate rivals in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait. “We’re really entering a new era here,” said Lyle Goldstein, an associate professor at the Naval War College. The impact of China's new Fujian aircraft carrier The Fujian will help China’s goal of expanding from a coastal navy to a Pacific power. The impact of China's new Fujian aircraft carrier The Fujian will help China’s goal of expanding from a coastal navy to a Pacific power. China was already a significant adversary: It has the world’s largest navy by number of ships, biggest arsenal of ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles, and largest active military service, with a standing army of 2 million soldiers. But China has lagged the United States in aircraft carrier technology. Now, the launch of the Fujian will bring Beijing closer to its goal of eroding U.S. maritime primacy in its backyard, not least because the warship uses electromagnetic catapults to launch planes, making China the only the country, after United States, to have developed and built this technology. “It’s not a small jump,” Goldstein said of the Fujian’s catapults. “It’s literally doubling or tripling — maybe even quadrupling — the combat lethality.” Underscoring how central the Fujian is to this goal, state broadcaster CCTV last week reported that Xi “personally” made the decision to adopt electromagnetic catapult technology. During the launch ceremony on the southern military stronghold of Hainan, Xi — dressed in a green military shirt — pressed the catapult button and sent the launch shuttle forward “like an arrow leaving the string of a bow,” CCTV said. The carrier fulfills multiple goals for Chinese military strategy: Its strike group — comprising fighter jets, stealth fighters, surveillance planes and cruisers laden with anti-ship missiles — will bolster Beijing’s intimidation of rival claimants in the disputed waterways of the South China Sea. But the U.S. projects its power around the world, while Beijing can concentrate on Asia. That makes the military balance in the region look far more precarious than before, said Toshi Yoshihara, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a Washington-based think tank. The speed of Chinese progress has been dramatic. When China commissioned its first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, in 2012, it was widely dismissed as an outdated Soviet design retrofitted from a secondhand hull. Its next attempt, the Shandong, in 2019, was built in China but based on the Liaoning. Now, Beijing has unveiled a domestically designed supercarrier with electromagnetic catapults. This launch system uses rapidly moving magnetic fields to accelerate aircraft along a track and fling them into the sky, enabling the Chinese military to launch heavier planes and at a far faster rate than before. Only one U.S. carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, which was commissioned in 2017, uses this technology. But concerns about the reliability of its systems have led President Donald Trump to suggest that future carriers should return to steam-powered catapults. China, however, claims to have mastered the electromagnetic catapult. State media in September broadcast footage of fighter jets and surveillance planes being launched from and landing back on the Fujian’s flight deck during sea trials. Chinese military experts claim that the three catapults of the Fujian can launch as many as 300 aircraft a day, on par with the most advanced U.S. carrier — although that may be an exaggeration. The layout of the Fujian’s flight deck makes it difficult to launch and land aircraft simultaneously, military analysts say. Still, its launch rate will be far higher than China’s two older carriers. Even allowing for the hyperbole of Chinese propaganda, the Fujian is shaping up to be a “completely different beast” from its predecessors, said Joaquin Camarena, a former U.S. Marine Corps intelligence officer who tracks China’s military modernization. China’s carrier program is focused on mastering revolutionary technologies that can modernize the country’s entire navy, said Tian Shichen, a retired People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy captain. “It’s like the Apollo program,” said Tian, who is now president of the Global Governance Institution, a Beijing-based think tank. “Its value wasn’t the footprint on the moon but the overall technological leap required to make it possible.” The Fujian has a significantly enhanced ability to detect enemy targets and act as a floating command center and air base. This will help deny adversaries access to the seas and skies in a potential conflict in the South China Sea or over Taiwan. The carrier’s catapults make it the only ship in the Chinese navy capable of launching the KJ-600 early-warning aircraft, dubbed the PLA Navy’s “brain in the sky” by local media. This plane, China’s answer to the U.S. E-2 Hawkeye, made its debut during a grand military parade in Beijing in September. Its extended radar range — at least double that of the helicopters used on China’s older carriers — enables the KJ-600 to look over the horizon, gather real-time information and relay commands, boosting the carrier’s ability to conduct complex defensive operations and offensive strikes far out at sea. “They have bridged that gap with the U.S., at least in theory,” said Collin Koh, an expert on the Chinese military at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore. “That certainly expands the PLA Navy’s far-seas combat capability.” The Fujian will be a force amplifier that brings together several advances in Chinese air and maritime combat power. Its strike group is expected to include Type 055 stealth guided-missile cruisers armed with an array of ballistic missiles designed to overpower the air defenses of U.S. naval vessels. It is nicknamed the “carrier killer” in Chinese state media and is thought to carry the latest YJ-21 hypersonic anti-ship missiles. One of the most formidable warships afloat, it was “built for the purpose of protecting carriers,” said Goldstein. The air wing will include upgraded J-15 fighter jets with inbuilt, electronic-warfare capabilities and next-generation J-35 stealth fighters. A single aircraft carrier cannot upend the regional security balance, said Li Da-jung, an expert on the Chinese military at Tamkang University in Taiwan, but the Fujian is a milestone that cannot be ignored. “If I were the U.S.,” he said, “I would treat this with great seriousness.” Countering American carrier dominance in the Asia-Pacific region has been an obsession for Beijing ever since the 1990s, when a crisis over Taiwan led the U.S. to send multiple aircraft carriers through the Taiwan Strait — infuriating Beijing over what it deemed an “internal” affair. That display became a “major catalyst for China’s naval modernization,” said Edward Sing Yue Chan, a postdoctoral fellow at Australian National University. It led Beijing to see carrier capabilities as “essential for any country aspiring to great-power status,” he said. Decades later, Beijing has hailed the arrival of the Fujian as evidence it can effectively challenge U.S. naval dominance across critical maritime domains in the Pacific. The U.S. had relied on geographical lines to contain China during the Cold War — mainly the first and second island chains, which run south from Japan, forming maritime chokepoints to access the Pacific Ocean. “China wants to push U.S. forces out from inside the first island chain and then be able to operate freely within the second island chain,” said Moriki Aita, a research fellow at National Institute for Defense Studies, a Tokyo-based think tank under Japan’s Defense Ministry. In May and June, China’s two older carriers held simultaneous drills in the Western Pacific near Japan’s outlying islands, with their associated aircraft conducting over 1,100 sorties, in a display of Beijing’s growing confidence. Chinese state media has hailed the Fujian’s even greater ability to operate near the second island chain as a way to deter Taiwan from moving toward formal independence. Beijing has long used its military to intimidate Taiwan but has contained its activity to the island’s east coast, just 100 miles from China. In recent years, it has increasingly been encircling Taiwan in an effort to test the island’s defenses. Taiwanese defense experts fear that campaign will only intensify with the Fujian. “We once assumed the east coast was relatively safe,” Ding Shuh-fan, an expert on the Chinese military at National Chengchi University in Taipei. “Now,” Ding said, “every corner of Taiwan is threatened.” Xi has made China’s “unification” with Taiwan a top priority — even though the Chinese Communist Party has never ruled the island. Some U.S. officials — including former CIA director William J. Burns and the former Indo-Pacific commander, retired Navy admiral Philip Davidson — have said Xi wants the Chinese military to be prepared to invade by 2027, if he deems force necessary. Any Chinese invasion is unlikely to be led by an aircraft carrier strike group, analysts say — it would probably rely on rocket bombardment, and amphibious and airborne assaults. But carrier strike groups could be an important component of China’s other critical objective: Keeping the U.S. and its allies from coming to Taiwan’s aid. In an escalating conflict, China would probably send carriers and destroyers out past the first island chain in a bid to “delay, disrupt and degrade U.S. capabilities,” said J. Michael Dahm, a retired U.S. Navy intelligence officer now at George Washington University. The Fujian has only just been commissioned, but China might be working on its next aircraft carrier. Construction is underway at a dry dock in China’s northeast on a huge ship that some analysts believe will become a fourth carrier. Whether or not the vessel becomes a next-generation supercarrier, there is little doubt that Beijing wants its next iteration to be even bigger than the Fujian — and to rely on nuclear propulsion, like American carriers. U.S. warships use pressurized water reactors to travel long distances and operate power-hungry catapults and radars for decades without needing to refuel. Developing these reactors has eluded Beijing. But in late 2024, analysts at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies in California concluded, based on satellite images, that China had built a prototype of the kind of reactor needed to power large warships in the southwestern province of Sichuan. The PLA Navy wants to match the U.S. Navy’s carrier capabilities within a decade. Already, Dahm said, they’re “ahead of where they need to be.” Data from U.S. and Taiwanese military analysts, Chinese state media reports, the Japan Joint Staff Office and the U.S. Defense Department. Rudy Lu in Taipei, Taiwan, and Chie Tanaka in Tokyo contributed to this report. Editing by Anna Fifield, Adrián Blanco Ramos, Joseph Moore, Natalia Jiménez and Luis Velarde. Copy editing by Melissa Ngo.
www.washingtonpost.com
November 14, 2025 at 1:47 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
Only two of South Carolina's 46 state senators are women.

Hear from South Carolina Democratic Party Chair Christale Spain on who should receive this week's "Sit Your Ass Down Award." #SYAD #AtOurTable
https://youtube.com/shorts/LIDXr7lZFSs?si=ZkDlY34TnTKr73Nw
"Just two of South Carolina's 46 state senators are women."
South Carolina Democratic Party Chair Christale Spain presents Senator Richard Cash of Charleston, SC, with our weekly "Sit Your Ass Down Award." #syad #atourtable
youtube.com
November 14, 2025 at 12:37 PM
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November 12, 2025 at 9:56 PM
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'He just lied': Johnson skewered by colleagues as House closes — again

www.alternet.org/us-house-vac...
Liars and truly corrupt politicians need to be removed immediately from our government ASAP
'He just lied': Colleagues skewer Johnson as House closes — again
WASHINGTON — The federal government may be open, but the House of Representatives is closed for business. Again.The record-shattering 43-day-long shutdown coincided with an impromptu 53-day vacation f...
www.alternet.org
November 14, 2025 at 1:44 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
Diabetes is not a lifestyle issue, it is a justice issue, and slow death is still a death. As insulin prices soar and test strips vanish from public clinics, South Africans are dying of inequality. A generation ago, South Africans refused to die waiting for HIV treatment, forced Big Pharma to ...
Why diabetes care must be SA’s next health justice uprising
www.dailymaverick.co.za
November 14, 2025 at 12:57 PM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
The U.S. government shutdown lasted 43 days – longer than any previous shutdown in history. An economist breaks down the economic toll: $7 billion to $14 billion in lost GDP, plummeting consumer confidence and eroded international trust in American economic leadership. buff.ly/coc2dec
The shutdown has ended – but this economist isn’t rejoicing quite yet
Billions of dollars have likely been wiped off the US gross domestic product.
theconversation.com
November 14, 2025 at 3:30 AM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
A largely united U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops condemns the Trump administration’s aggressive deportation campaign.
Bishops rebuke U.S. ‘mass deportation’ of immigrants without mentioning Trump by name
A largely united U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops condemns the Trump administration’s aggressive deportation campaign.
www.sltrib.com
November 14, 2025 at 5:11 AM
Reposted by Tracyhotd
Estonia has canceled a planned Limp Bizkit concert in Tallinn because frontman Fred Durst publicly backed Putin and Russia after the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

The Foreign Ministry said there is “no place in Estonia or its cultural space for supporters of an aggressor state,”👇
November 13, 2025 at 8:14 PM