Editorial: Even Dems souring on Biden immigration policies

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:14:35 GMT

Editorial: Even Dems souring on Biden immigration policies Democrats have ridden an abortion rights platform to outperform expectations in recent elections. Do Republicans have a similar opportunity when it comes to illegal immigration?President Joe Biden’s handling of the southern border has been a fiasco. According to Syracuse University’s TRAC website, which compiles immigration information, some 3.8 million people have entered the United States illegally since the president took office, about half of whom were never apprehended.The influx has created discontent even in Democratic strongholds, particularly after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott sent immigrants to so-called “sanctuary cities.” Last month, the Democratic mayors of New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Denver and Houston asked the White House for help in managing the surge in illegal migrants that is stressing their social service capabilities. Sanctuary indeed.And now, concern over administration immigration policy has pushed even many left-leaning voters to ...

Pawelski: Yesteryear’s immigrants wouldn’t make it today

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:14:35 GMT

Pawelski: Yesteryear’s immigrants wouldn’t make it today A common immigration phrase we hear today is “My family immigrated the right way.” But what is considered “legal” or “right” depends on when your family arrived.My great grandmother immigrated from Italy in 1903. The sole immigration document is the ship’s Manifest of Alien Passengers for the Commission of Immigration. Prior to 1924, a rudimentary immigration system existed. The arriving immigrant needed to show no discernable health issues and have good moral character (not a criminal, polygamist, anarchist, beggar, or importer of prostitutes). While the 1882 discriminatory Chinese Exclusion Act was still in force, for many western Europeans the door to America was open.Congress passed the Immigration Act of 1924, which limited how many people could enter the United States, created an admissions quota, and banned Asian countries. My grandfather, Samuel, was born two years after enactment. While he was an American citizen and World War II veteran, prejudices persisted for both first...

Looking right at home, Foxboro tops Hanover for the Div. 5 state title

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:14:35 GMT

Looking right at home, Foxboro tops Hanover for the Div. 5 state title FOXBORO – As mother nature opened the skies, nothing was going to rain on the Foxboro parade.In essentially a home game for the Warriors, three turnovers in the first half buoyed No. 2 Foxboro to a 48-21 victory over top-seeded Hanover in the Division 5 Super Bowl at Gillette Stadium in the final of eight Super Bowl games played at the home of the New England Patriots this week.It’s the fifth championship victory in nine tries for the Warriors all under the tutelage of head coach Jack Martinelli, who is in his 42nd year running the ship at Foxboro. Martinelli’s squad finished 12-1 on the season and like fine wine, the wins only get better for Martinelli.“I always thought the kids took the stadium and the Patriots for granted because they were in their backyard. But being here and finishing this way makes it even more special, said Martinelli. “Right now (this win) is on the top of the heap, couldn’t replace it with anything else. But now I’ll get phone calls from the other kid...

The Tubes bring theatrical rock to City Winery

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:14:35 GMT

The Tubes bring theatrical rock to City Winery A concert by theatrical rockers the Tubes may be a bit less elaborate than it was in the ‘70s. But rest assured that the production numbers are still in place and the band’s best-known character, the decadent rocker Quay Lewd, will still make an appearance to sing the anthemic “White Punks on Dope.”“We were going to have him come out with a walker. But then I realized we didn’t want to parody people who actually have to use one,” confesses frontman Fee Waybill. “So he’s still the same, just a little drunker and a little more unstable on the big shoes. But I’m still wearing the outfit and the wig, the whole thing. We’re not carrying 35 people and three dancing girls with us anymore, but I’m still doing six or eight costume changes per show.”And now it can be told after all these years: The inspiration for Quay Lewd was the New York Dolls, with whom the Tubes shared a bill in the ‘70s. “We played a show with them at this little club in San Francisco. And they showed up in full glam &#...

Dear Abby: Wedding disinvite roils family

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:14:35 GMT

Dear Abby: Wedding disinvite roils family Dear Abby: My young daughter is the half-sister of a famous athlete’s wife. They were married last year and invited my daughter. A week later they DISinvited her! There is a 20-year gap in their ages, but my daughter looks up to her half-sister. My daughter’s feelings were really hurt. My feelings may have been even more hurt. All of her other siblings were there, as well as several other family members.We were never told why my daughter was disinvited. Her father did not stand up to his older daughter for breaking his younger daughter’s heart. My daughter is getting older, and she knows who her brother-in-law is when she sees him on TV. How can I stop being angry at these people for hurting my baby? — Furious Mama in MichiganDear Mama: You stated there is a 20-year age gap between your daughter and the bride. Is it possible that the bride and her famous fiance had concerns about someone so young (7, 8, 9?) at their high-profile wedding? Before your resentmen...

Trump and DeSantis will hold dueling campaign events in Iowa with the caucuses just six weeks away

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:14:35 GMT

Trump and DeSantis will hold dueling campaign events in Iowa with the caucuses just six weeks away DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Ron DeSantis plans on Saturday to complete his campaign promise to visit each of Iowa’s 99 counties, a timeworn tactic for presidential candidates hoping to make their mark in the leadoff state over months mingling with voters at the state’s diners, cookouts and Pizza Ranches.But the Florida governor’s moment, like much of his campaign, will take place under the towering shadow of former President Donald Trump.Around the same time DeSantis is set to take the stage Saturday afternoon in Newton, Iowa, Trump will be addressing cheering supporters about 100 miles away in Cedar Rapids. Just six weeks are left before the Jan. 15 Iowa caucuses, which DeSantis has said he “absolutely” expects to win. He’s bet his campaign on the state, winning key endorsements from Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds and high-profile evangelical leader Bob Vander Plaats.“He’s showing up,” Reynolds said in an interview. “He’s not just landing, doing an event and heading out...

With ‘shuttle diplomacy,’ step by step, Kissinger chased the possible in the Mideast

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:14:35 GMT

With ‘shuttle diplomacy,’ step by step, Kissinger chased the possible in the Mideast LONDON (AP) — When it came to the Middle East, Henry Kissinger wasn’t pushing for peace — only for what was possible.By the time Kissinger died Wednesday at 100, the agreements he negotiated as United States secretary of state between Israel, Egypt and Syria stabilized borders for nearly half a century after the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. His work and the pacts it produced sidelined the Soviet Union and set the U.S. as the region’s chief negotiators. But Kissinger did not resolve the fate of the Palestinians — indeed, no one has — and his legacy in the Mideast remains debated. He saw decades of Israeli occupation and growing rage among Palestinians and lived long enough to see Hamas fighters storm out of the Gaza Strip Oct. 7 and kill about 1,200 people in Israel on the bloodiest day for Jews since the Holocaust. Kissinger, a Jew who fled Nazi Germany with his family when he was 15, posed a query two weeks before his death about whether Israel can now deal with not just thre...

A 5.5 magnitude earthquake jolts Bangladesh

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:14:35 GMT

A 5.5 magnitude earthquake jolts Bangladesh DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — An earthquake jolted Bangladesh on Saturday morning, sending tremors that were felt across the country. No damage or injuries were immediately reported. The 5.5 magnitude earthquake struck the South Asian nation at 9:35 a.m., the United States Geological Survey said. The tremor had a depth of 10 kilometers (6 miles) with the epicenter about 8 kilometers (5 miles) east of Ramganj in the southeastern Bangladeshi district Lakshmipur, according to the USGS.Many Bangladeshis wrote on Facebook that they were scared after the quake shook buildings in the capital, Dhaka, and elsewhere. Bangladesh has experienced several earthquakes this year, including one that struck along the border of northeast India in August.The Associated Press

Justice Sandra Day O’Connor paved a path for women on the Supreme Court

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:14:35 GMT

Justice Sandra Day O’Connor paved a path for women on the Supreme Court WASHINGTON (AP) — One fall day in 2010, retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor slipped into the courtroom where she worked for nearly 25 years to take in an “amazing” sight.The first — and for 12 years, the only — woman on the high court saw three women in black robes among the nine justices.Recalling that day, O’Connor said she “saw a woman on the far right end of the bench, one on the far left end and one near the middle. That was pretty amazing.”O’Connor lived to see four women serve at the same time on the Supreme Court. What was once a novelty when she was the first woman to sit on the high court has become almost commonplace. In a sense, O’Connor was witnessing the culmination of her own journey, in which she struggled to get any legal job after graduating from law school in the 1950s, then ended more than 190 years of male exclusivity on the Supreme Court when President Ronald Reagan nominated her in 1981.O’Connor, who left the court in 2006, died Friday in Phoenix...

With the expulsion of Santos and ouster of McCarthy, the House is making unexpected history

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:14:35 GMT

With the expulsion of Santos and ouster of McCarthy, the House is making unexpected history WASHINGTON (AP) — The House is making history this year in ways that Republicans could hardly have envisioned when the party took control.First, the Republicans voted to oust their speaker, Kevin McCarthy, and on Friday they voted to get rid of one of their own, indicted GOP Rep. George Santos of New York.Never before had a House majority voted to evict its speaker, and not since the Civil War had the chamber voted to expel a member who was charged but not yet convicted of a crime.The result has been a dizzying 11 months in a House majority riven by infighting, chiseling away at the powers of Congress and taking its toll on the actual business of governing. As the year comes to a close, the arc of power for House Republicans is at an inflection point, a new era of performance politics and chaotic governing that shows no signs of easing.“Is it messy? Yeah, sure,” said Republican Rep. Mike Lawler, among the New Yorkers who led the ouster of Santos. “But when you’re actuall...