Instant Alert: David Petraeus would have to inform his probation officer if Trump hires him as secretary of state

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David Petraeus would have to inform his probation officer if Trump hires him as secretary of state

by Chris Sanchez on Dec 1, 2016, 12:21 AM

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Former CIA Director David Petraeus would need to notify his probation officer if he is chosen as President-elect Donald Trump's secretary of state, according to court documents cited by CNN and USA Today on Wednesday.

The documents stipulate that Petraeus, who is serving two years' probation after pleading guilty to charges of mishandling classified information, would have three days to inform his probation officer about his new job.

If hired by Trump and confirmed by Congress, Petraeus would also have to get approval from a court or his probation officer before he can travel out of North Carolina for work, and submit to periodic, warrantless searches of his property and electronic devices, according to the court documents.

Petraeus is reportedly one of four candidates in the running for the secretary of state position, along with former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair Bob Corker, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, and retired Marine Corps Gen. John Kelly.

SEE ALSO: Obama says the US is divided because 'people are no longer talking to each other'

DON'T MISS: Trump's secretary of state drama is down to the final 4 candidates


 
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Instant Alert: Obama says the US is divided because 'people are no longer talking to each other'

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Obama says the US is divided because 'people are no longer talking to each other'

by Chris Sanchez on Nov 30, 2016, 11:29 PM

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US President Barack Obama said he is concerned that the way people consume news may be contributing to the growing divisiveness in the country.

“The biggest challenge that I think we have right now in terms of this divide is that the country receives information from completely different sources,” Obama said in an interview with Rolling Stone published this week.

Obama suggested the root of the problem is that some people only look to news sources that confirm their existing political views.

“People are no longer talking to each other; they're just occupying their different spheres," Obama said.

He also commented on the proliferation of fake news — a problem that put Facebook in the hot seat during the election.

"In an internet era where we still value a free press and we don’t want censorship of the internet, that's a hard problem to solve,” he said.

At first, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg dismissed accusations that phony news stories on the social network influenced the outcome the election. But the company later announced plans to cut off websites that produce fake stories from its advertising network in order to prevent them from making a profit.

The president earlier this month said fake news created " dust cloud of nonsense."

Earlier this month a BuzzFeed study showed that several fake news stories on Facebook significantly outperformed stories from legitimate news sources in the days leading up to the election.

Obama suggested one solution could be to create new business models that appeal to a wider audience and creates an inclusive dialogue about issues, rather than pursuing bombastic headlines.

“It's making people exaggerate or say what's most controversial or peddling in the most vicious of insults or lies, because that attracts eyeballs,” Obama said.


 
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Instant Alert: Colombia's congress ratifies peace accord with rebels

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Colombia's congress ratifies peace accord with rebels

by Joshua Goodman on Nov 30, 2016, 10:26 PM

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BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — After five decades of war, more than four years of negotiations and two signing ceremonies, Colombia's congress late Wednesday formally ratified a peace agreement allowing leftist rebels to enter politics.

The 310-page revised accord was approved unanimously by the lower house, which voted a day after the Senate approved the same text 75-0 following a protest walkout by the opposition led by former President Alvaro Uribe.

The accord introduces some 50 changes intended to assuage critics who led a campaign that saw Colombians narrowly reject the original accord in a referendum last month. President Juan Manuel Santos has said there won't be a second referendum.

Revisions range from a prohibition on foreign magistrates judging alleged crimes by government troops or by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia to a commitment from the rebels to forfeit assets, some amassed through drug trafficking, to help compensate their victims.

But the FARC wouldn't go along with the opposition's strongest demands — jail sentences for rebel leaders behind atrocities and stricter limits on their future participation in politics.

"There needs to be a balance between peace and justice, but in this agreement there's complete impunity," Uribe, now a senator, said during Tuesday's heated debate. Other senators accused him of standing in the way of a peace deal that he pursued with the FARC as president in 2002-10.

Santos says ratification will set in motion the start of a six-month process in which the FARC's 8,000-plus guerrillas will concentrate in some 20 rural areas and turn over their weapons to United Nations monitors.

"Tomorrow a new era begins," Santos said Tuesday, celebrating the Senate's endorsement and the expected approval by the lower house.

But the rebels insist that their troops won't start demobilizing until lawmakers pass an amnesty law freeing some 2,000 rebels in jail.

"D-Day starts after the first actions are implemented," the rebel leader "Pastor Alape," a member of the FARC's 10-member secretariat, told foreign journalists last week after the new accord was signed. "The president unfortunately has been demonstrating an attitude that creates confusion in the country."

Colombia

The debate over amnesty highlights one of the peace deal's early challenges: the need for congress to pass legislation implementing the accord and setting up special peace tribunals.

Santos was initially counting on swift approval of the needed changes that in some cases require constitutional amendments. But the referendum loss has left the status of his fast-track authority in doubt, awaiting a ruling by the constitutional court. Experts say a solid pro-peace coalition could crumble if implementation drags on and butts against the political maneuvering for the 2018 presidential election.

Beyond the legal hurdles, there is also concern FARC fighters will wind up joining criminal gangs rampant throughout the country or the much-smaller rebel National Liberation Army, which for months has been playing cat and mouse with the government over opening a peace process of its own. On Wednesday, both sides said they would delay until January any decision about when to start talks.

Combating security threats will test the state's ability to make its presence felt in traditionally neglected rural areas at a time of financial stress triggered by low oil prices.

There is also a risk that peace could trigger more bloodshed, as it did following a previous peace process with the FARC in the 1980s. At that time, thousands of former guerrillas, labor activists and communist militants were killed by right-wing militias, sometimes in collaboration with state agents.

Worries about new bloodshed, although less prevalent than in the darker days of Colombia's half-century conflict, has become more urgent with more than a dozen human rights defenders and land activists in areas dominated by the FARC being killed by unknown assailants since the initial signing ceremony in September. So far this year, 70 have been killed, according to Bogota-based We Are Defenders, more than in all of 2015 and 2014.


 
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Instant Alert: China's manufacturing sector hasn't looked this good in over 2 years

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China's manufacturing sector hasn't looked this good in over 2 years

by David Scutt on Nov 30, 2016, 8:48 PM

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China’s manufacturing sector is humming right now.

The government’s latest purchasing managers index (PMI) jumped to a more than two-year high of 51.7 in November.

The figure was higher than the 51.2 level of October and expectations for a decline to 51.0.

It was the equal-highest level since April 2012, matching the figure reported in July 2014.

The PMI measure changes in activity levels across China’s manufacturing sector from one month to the next. A reading above 50 indicates that activity levels are expanding while a sub-50 figure suggests they are contracting.

50 is deemed neutral, with the distance from this level indicative of the strength of the expansion or decline.

Though not high by historical standards for China, as shown in the chart below, activity levels are definitely on the improve.

China manufacturing PMI Nov 2016

According to the China’s National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), the improvement was yet again driven by larger manufacturing firms whose PMI jumped 0.9 points to 53.4.

Activity levels for medium-sized manufacturers also returned to growth, rising 0.2 points to 50.1. Smaller manufacturers, in comparison, saw activity levels weaken with the subsector PMI slipping 0.9 points to 47.4.

Reflective of the strength in the headline PMI, the NBS reported that production, new orders and purchase quantities all improved at a faster pace than October, a good sign for activity levels in the months ahead.

Imports and new export orders also expanded having contracted in the previous month.

Despite the clear improvement in activity levels, firms continued to shed staff, albeit at the slowest pace seen in over a year, while the cost of raw materials continued to soar, hitting another multi-year high of 68.3.

Good news for the global economy, especially given that it’s not just the manufacturing sector that is looking healthy.

Others, including services, are too.

The government’s non-manufacturing PMI — released alongside the manufacturing report — rose to 54.7 in November, some 0.7 points higher than the level reported for October.

It now sits at the highest level seen since June 2014, indicating that activity levels across other sectors in the economy are now expanding strongly.

China non manufacturing PMI

Taken together, the reports indicate that China’s economy is ending 2016 on a strong footing, something few believed was possible when tepid economic data earlier this year was roiling financial markets.

The recovery this year, in part, has been driven by a surge in public infrastructure spending and residential construction, helping to not only underpin economic growth but also commodity prices.

With the economy now clearly strengthening, the question now is whether the government will persist with fiscal stimulus heading into 2017.

There’s already signs that it is with China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) approving infrastructure projects worth 338 billion yuan so far in November, adding to the 299 billion yuan approved in October.


 
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Instant Alert: Newt Gingrich goes in on Romney, accuses him of 'sucking up' to Trump for secretary of state job

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Newt Gingrich goes in on Romney, accuses him of 'sucking up' to Trump for secretary of state job

by Bryan Logan on Nov 30, 2016, 7:00 PM

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Newt Gingrich sounded off Wednesday on Mitt Romney's latest meeting with President-elect Donald Trump about the secretary of state post.

Gingrich appeared on conservative radio host Laura Ingraham's show Wednesday and implied that Romney is "sucking up" to Trump to get the job.

"You have never, ever, in your career seen a wealthy adult who is independent, has been a presidential candidate, suck up at the rate that Mitt Romney is sucking up," Gingrich said.

The former House speaker is a vocal supporter of Trump and was at one point a contender to be Trump's running mate. But he has been one of the members of Trump's inner circle to push back on the idea of Romney as secretary of state. 

Gingrich continued:

"I am confident that he thinks now that he and Donald Trump are the best of friends, they have so many things in common. That they're both such wise, brilliant people. And I'm sure last night at an elegant three-star restaurant, he was happy to share his version of populism, which involve a little fois gras, a certain amount of superb cooking, but put that in a populist happy manner."

Romney, the former Massachusetts governor and 2012 GOP presidential nominee, is apparently still among the top four people under consideration for the secretary of state role. His candidacy has rubbed a few early Trump loyalists the wrong way.

On Tuesday, Bloomberg reported that the search was down to five candidates: 2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair Bob Corker, former CIA Director David Petraeus, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, and retired Marine Corps Gen. John Kelly. Trump was meeting with Kelly on Wednesday.

Listen to Gingrich's interview below:

SEE ALSO: Trump's secretary of state drama is down to the final 4 candidates

DON'T MISS: A pattern is emerging with Trump's deals to save US manufacturing jobs


 
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Instant Alert: Cruz blasts 'young socialists' Trudeau and Obama for 'praising' Castro: 'We're not mourning the death of some revolutionary romantic'

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Cruz blasts 'young socialists' Trudeau and Obama for 'praising' Castro: 'We're not mourning the death of some revolutionary romantic'

by Allan Smith on Nov 30, 2016, 6:02 PM

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Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas eviscerated President Barack Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday for their statements following the death of former Cuban leader Fidel Castro.

Speaking from the Senate floor, Cruz said "we are thankful" for "this brutal dictator's" death. He said Trudeau and Obama "should know better" than to offer up the statements they did.

"Let me be absolutely clear: We're not mourning the death of some revolutionary romantic or a distinguished statesman," said Cruz, who is of Cuban descent. "We're not grieving for the protector of peace or a judicious steward of his people. Today we are thankful, we are thankful that a man who has imprisoned and tortured and degraded the lives of so many is no longer with us."

The Texas Republican said he wanted to pay tribute to the "millions" who "suffered at the hands of the Castro regime."

"We remember them and we honor the brave souls who fought the lonely fight against the totalitarian communist dictatorship imposed on Cuba," he said. "And yet at the same time, it seems that the race is on to see which world leader can most fulsomely praise Fidel Castro's legacy while delicately averting his eyes from his less than savory characteristics."

"Two duly elected leaders of democracies who should know better: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and American President Barack Obama have been leading the way."

Cruz roiled Trudeau for having "praised" Castro as a "larger than life leader who served his people for almost half a century" and "a legendary revolutionary orator who made significant improvements in the education and healthcare on his island nation." Trudeau was roundly criticized for his laudatory statement Saturday.

"Tell that to the people in the prisons," Cruz said. "Tell that to the people who have been tortured and murdered by Fidel Castro."

The one-time 2016 Republican presidential candidate also criticized Obama for offering "condolences to the Cuban people" and suggesting that "history will record and judge the enormous impact of this singular figure."

"What is it about young leftists, what is it about young socialists, that they idolize communist dictators who torture and murder people?" he said. "Fidel Castro and Che Guevara and all of their goons are not these sexy unshaven revolutionaries in college dorm rooms on posters that make leftists get all tingly inside. They were brutal monsters."

He reiterated that he called for no US government officials to attend Castro's funeral until his brother, Raul, released political prisoners. Cruz then condemned Obama's deputy national security adviser, Ben Rhodes, and US diplomat Jeffrey DeLaurentis, who will attend the Cuban leader's memorial service.

Watch Cruz's speech below:

SEE ALSO: Office of Government Ethics gushes over Trump move in bizarre tweetstorm


 
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