U.S. Special Forces Have Arrested US Ambassador To Ukraine Bridger Ann Brink: U.S. Cyber Command Charges Her With HIGH TREASON, Joe Biden Also Is Involved In HIGH TREASON Acts

The Real “Existential Threat” to people and planet  

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We’re told almost daily that fossil fuels, and the climate crisis they are allegedly causing, pose an “existential threat” to our planet and the wildlife and people on it. However, as Former Member of Congress Don Ritter (R-PA) emphasizes in this article, what is truly ironic is that it’s the Biden Administration and other government policies suppressing fossil fuels that are actually The Real Existential Threat.

Precipitously “going green,” abandoning the fossil fuels that provide some 80% of the energy that powers modern civilization, and turning to expensive, intermittent, land and resource-intensive wind and solar power would have devastating consequences, Ritter notes – for our modern economies, for developing nations, and for the scenic vistas, wildlife habitats, birds and other animals we all care deeply about. His column explains why this is the case.

It is government policies that promote green energy and suppress fossil fuels

written by Don Ritter for Wyoming News

It’s ironic. The very Biden Administration and European Government policies that are supposed to address the asserted “existential threat” of climate change are themselves the true existential threat to modern civilization.

As someone trained in science and engineering, a lifelong hiker, gardener and lover of nature in the extreme, I want a healthy, sustainable planet as much as anyone promoting the climate change agenda.  It’s not that “green” energy is bad. It’s that the rate of “going green,” and the enormous investments required, are wildly disproportionate to society’s energy needs, now and for the foreseeable future.

Elon Musk gets it, but most government leadership do not – or choose to remain silent. “Realistically, civilization will crumble if we don’t continue to use oil and gas in the short run,” Musk has said.

Civilization crumbling is clearly an “existential threat.” And this guy sells electric cars! He also recommended “continued drilling and exploration for oil and gas,” because he understands that producing and fueling electric vehicles will require substantial fossil fuel electricity generation, for years to come.

“Existential” issues like war, peace, economic vitality, jobs and living standards all have the same critical driving force: energy – all forms of energy. Energy to transport people and goods, to run farms and provide food, to heat and cool homes, to power manufacturing, and to fuel ships, planes and vehicles for our military. Natural gas is essential for fertilizers to feed a hungry world. Oil and natural gas are the building blocks for plastics, pharmaceuticals, synthetic fibers, paint and thousands of other products.

Today, these vital, almost-taken-for-granted benefits come almost entirely from oil, gas and coal. Those who have it will be powerful; those who don’t will not. China and Russia know this well.

Europe made a deal with the devil by handing its energy supply to Vladimir Putin and energy-rich Russia – while crippling its own energy future with anti-fossil-fuel climate change policies. Europe closed its coal, gas and nuclear power plants, while building expensive, unreliable, weather-dependent solar and wind facilities. Putin’s war on Ukraine couldn’t have happened without his dominance over gas, oil and coal supplies to Europe.

And where is the United States government on energy reality? It’s copying Europe, with vast green energy subsidies and an unrelenting “whole of government” regulatory war on fossil fuels.

America should be telling an energy-insecure world, “We will do everything in our power to increase the supply of energy,” in an-all-of-the-above approach: not only fossil fuels and renewables, but nuclear, and hydroelectric power when feasible. Instead, we beg hostile dictatorships – that pay no attention to human rights or ecological values – to increase their production, because we refuse to increase ours.

Isn’t that just a little embarrassing? We could be the “gas station for democracy” for the Free World. But our government’s climate change policies stand in the way.

Simple arithmetic tells the story. Fossil fuels still provide some 80% of the world’s and America’s energy consumption. The rest comes from hydro, nuclear, solar, wind and biomass. In the USA, solar and wind provide less than 5% of our total energy consumption – and less than 2% for transportation, to fuel 290 million cars, trucks and buses. For airplanes, the percentage is zero.

Coal constitutes some 33% of total energy consumption in the U.S. and 37% worldwide. Yet it is being prematurely withdrawn from global energy supplies by climate change policies. This is devastating, especially for poor countries.

Developing nations need expanded coal mining to produce electricity, to create jobs and lift billions out of abject poverty. But they are denied access to capital by the climate-obsessed bureaucracies in international financial institutions and government aid agencies like the World Bank, Asian Development Bank and USAID. This is this hypocritical, especially because the West industrialized predominantly with coal.

Climate campaigners at all levels of government and in the revenue-driven private sector have created a new energy economy based on vast subsidies for solar and wind, to replace coal, oil and gas. It portends disaster, for Europe and America, because they are doing it prematurely – before the replacements are anywhere near ready for prime time. 

The Biden Administration “Inflation Reduction Act” contains some $370 billion in new green energy subsidies, purposely skewing massive private investment into solar and wind, and away from fossil fuels that are still essential – practically, economically and geopolitically.

Before governments provide such enormous subsidies, they need to analyze all the environmental impacts of producing and installing massive wind turbine, solar panel and backup battery facilities. On U.S. and global scales, those technologies would require metals and materials mining and processing – almost all with fossil fuels – on scales unprecedented in human history; indeed, at levels impossible to reach for decades to come.

Wind, solar and battery facilities also impact and destroy vast amounts of land: wildlife habitats, croplands and scenic areas. They kill birds, bats and other wildlife. Without expensive, fire-prone battery backup, they require inefficient hydrocarbon “peaker” facilities going on and off repeatedly, whenever the wind isn’t blowing and the sun isn’t shining.

Demonizing energy sources brings risks of blackouts, factory shutdowns, and freezing people in the dark during long winters. Supposedly “clean, green, renewable” energy is simply not yet able to meet America’s and the world’s growing electricity needs.

Substituting natural gas for coal in electricity generation is the reason America has been leading the Free World in reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Natural gas should be seen not as a pariah, but as the “bridge fuel” to any fossil-fuel-free future.

The Biden Administration is putting long-range, uncertain, potentially faulty, probably exaggerated predictions about climate over the lives and independence of Ukraine, the security of our European allies – and even America’s own security and well-being. India, Brazil, Indonesia and many others in the “Global South” need oil, gas and coal to exist and modernize. But the Biden Administration will not assure them that America will work to fill the gap if they try to wean themselves off Russian fossil fuels. Is it any wonder they have stayed neutral on Putin’s brutal invasion?

Sadly, the debate over expanding American energy to substitute for Russia’s – and ensure our own energy security – is virtually non-existent within the Administration, many think tanks and the media. In fact, they all cooperate to censor and silence debate.

This is not only strange, because the soaring cost of energy is the primary factor driving inflation and threatening recession, not just in America but worldwide. In fact, it is worse than strange.

Government suppression of fossil fuel production is threatening the national security and economies of countless nations. Demands that we precipitously “go green” represent the greatest “existential threat” of all – to the survival of modern industrialized nations, to developing nations, and to the survival of our planet as we know it.

Don Ritter received his Doctorate in Metals and Materials from MIT. He served 14 years on the House Energy and Commerce and Science and Technology Committees; was Ranking Member on the Congressional Helsinki Commission, and was founding Co-Chair of the Baltic States-Ukraine Caucus. Ritter led the National Environmental Policy Institute after leaving Congress. He is a Trustee of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, and Trustee and President & CEO Emeritus of the Afghan American Chamber of Commerce.

Messengers From The Russian Moral Abyss

This article was originally published on July 31, 2022 | by Prof. Joshua Berman

Cousins of mine embarking on their new life in Israel shared chilling accounts of a country that resembles prewar Germany.

It was February 25th, the day after the Russian invasion of Ukraine and Yevgeny and Anastasia Dubov, a Moscow couple in their early 20s, were in a panic. Recently married, both had just begun well-paid positions in graphic design. But they had taken leadership roles as student activists in the public demonstrations in support of Alexei Navalny, champion of the opposition in Russia and nemesis of Vladimir Putin. Acquaintances of theirs had been rounded up and jailed.

It was time – they had to flee.

The next day they were on a plane to Istanbul, hoping that the situation would quickly return to normal. After a month, and with no end in sight to the war now in its sixth month, they made the move that Yevgeny had toyed with since the eight-month Nativ program he had attended here for Russian university students in 2019 – they would move to Israel on Aliyah.

As Yevgeny and Anastasia related their journey at our Friday night Shabbat table, I was brought back in time. It was 40 years ago that we stood in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza in New York in support of Soviet Jewry, chanting the movement’s anthem, “When they come for us, we’ll be gone.” Never could I have believed that all these years later this would be the fate of distant cousins of mine, the ages of my own children.

Their Jewish journey is a fascinating one. Yevgeny had one Jewish grandfather in Russia whom he didn’t know well, and who himself was highly assimilated. Anastasia has no Jewish relatives at all; her mother goes to church. Over dinner, though, it was clear how much they relish everything Jewish.

The day of their aliyah they changed the family name, from Dubov to the surname of Yevgeny’s one assimilated Jewish grandfather. Given a choice of pumpkin soup or chicken soup – they went with chicken soup because that’s what Jews traditionally eat on Friday night.

Where does this thirst and enthusiasm for things Jewish come from?

Yevgeny remembered with fondness my wife’s vegan whole wheat challah from his previous visit with us while on his Nativ program. After dinner, they commented how much it had meant to them to join a family for a Friday night dinner, and that the idea of a weekly family reunion is something you rarely ever see in Russia. “We loved watching you give the blessings to your grown children – it’s such a connection to a deep tradition.”

I was puzzled: Where does this thirst and enthusiasm for things Jewish come from?

Yevgeny is Russian, but can no longer comfortably identify as a Russian with the decline and deprivation of political culture under Putin. “They’ve stolen the home we knew,” Anastasia says about recent events in Russia.

And so, with a deep yearning to identify with an untainted identity, they are seeking to reconnect with the vestige of another culture and another heritage that they know is buried somewhere in their past – their Jewish heritage.

But our conversation took a dark turn when I asked what their parents think of the war.

It’s a generation that just laps up what the government spews out, and it’s all that they know. For them, this is not a war against Ukraine. It’s a war against the United States.

“We try not to talk about it with them,” Yevgeny answered. “We, of course, are horrified – all our friends are. But my parents’ generation still has delusions of Soviet pride in them. They dream of a return to supposed glory and eminence in the world. It’s a generation that just laps up what the government spews out, and it’s all that they know. For them, this is not a war against Ukraine. It’s a war against the United States. And it’s a war to the finish. ‘Our very survival is on the line’ – that’s what they’re told,” he said.

“But when you send them photos of children’s corpses, schools and hospitals blown to bits – how can they possibly support that?” I asked.

“They laugh at us,” Yevgeny explained, “that we are so naïve as to fall for that fake news.”

I was speechless. How could Yevgeny’s parents, who had raised such a sensitive and intelligent young man, be so easily duped?

I had always wondered how ordinary Weimar republic Germans descended into a moral abyss. Surely it must have been the perfect storm of culture, history economics and the communication technologies of the time. A black swan, a confluence of events unlikely to ever repeat itself and entirely beyond comprehension. Who would have thought that in 2022 such a quick descent into collective moral depravity could overtake a culture with a strong economy, and where the internet guarantees that no atrocity is a secret from public view.

It was the Nazi chief propagandist Joseph Goebbels who once said, “We shall reach our goal when we have the power to laugh as we destroy, as we smash, whatever was sacred to us as tradition, as education, and as human affection.” And it was Goebbels who said, “This is the secret of propaganda: Those who are to be persuaded by it should be completely immersed in the ideas of the propaganda, without ever noticing that they are being immersed in it.”

It is an utterly unsettling thought. Goebbels’ ideas were instrumental in the deaths of 25 million Russians during World War II. And now, seemingly, good Russians like Yevgeny’s parents can dismiss the images of destruction, convinced of the purity of it all, entirely without noticing the propaganda within which they are immersed.

We remember so many tragedies during these three weeks of mourning between 17 Tammuz and 9 Av, but relate to them as events of the past. Recalling these dark episodes in history and watching what is unfolding today before our eyes is a sobering reminder that the rapid collective descent into the moral abyss is ever a threat lurking just beneath the surface.

This article originally appeared in the Times of Israel.

Isn’t It Odd That So Many Wyoming Young People Have Suddenly, Disappeared?

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Missing Person, September 27, 2022, Fremont County, Wyoming: Alexander Adrian Brown, age 17, was last seen on the Wind River Indian Reservation, Wyoming on September 23, 2022. He is a Native American male, approximately 5’9″, 150 pounds with Brown eyes and Brown shoulder length hair. He was last seen wearing Black framed glasses. Anyone with information or contact with Alexander is requested to contact the Bureau of Indian Affairs at (307) 332-3112 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, September 26, 2022, Natrona County, Wyoming: Lauralye Roxanne Shreve, age 16, was last seen in Casper, Wyoming on September 25, 2022. She is a White female, approximately 5’6″, 120 pounds with Blue eyes, Blonde hair and pierced ears. She was last seen wearing blue jeans with rips, Adidas shoes with blue strips and a gray zip up sweater. Anyone with information or contact with Lauralye is requested to contact the Casper PD at (307) 235-8278 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, September 25, 2022, Natrona County, Wyoming: Priscilla Morales, age 13, was last seen in Casper, Wyoming on September 24, 2022. She is a White female, approximately 5’2″, 99 pounds with Brown eyes and Brown hair. She was last seen wearing black shorts and a blue sweater. Anyone with information or contact with Priscilla is requested to contact the Casper PD at (307) 235-8278 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, September 25, 2022, Laramie County, Wyoming: Jonathon Robert Davisson, age 15, was last seen in Cheyenne, Wyoming on September 25, 2022. He is a White male, approximately 5’9″, 170 pounds with Brown eyes and Brown hair. He was last seen wearing black jeans and black tennis shoes. Anyone with information or contact with Jonathon is requested to contact the Cheyenne PD at (307) 637-6525 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, September 21, 2022, Laramie County, Wyoming: William Anthony Nicholson, age 18, was last seen in Cheyenne, Wyoming on September 21, 2022. He is a Black male, approximately 6’1″, 150 pounds with Brown eyes and Black hair. Anyone with information or contact with William is requested to contact the Cheyenne PD at (307) 637-6525 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, September 21, 2022, Natrona County, Wyoming: Ximena Juarez, age 18, was last seen in Casper, Wyoming on September 21, 2022. She is a White female, approximately 5’2″, 116 pounds with Brown eyes and Brown hair. She was last seen wearing Black pants and a Black crop top with flowers. Anyone with information or contact with Ximena is requested to contact the Casper PD at (307) 235-8278 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, September 21, 2022, Laramie County, Wyoming: Joshua John Waterstreet, age 15, was last seen in Cheyenne, Wyoming on September 20, 2022. He is a White male, approximately 5’11”, 140 pounds with Blue eyes and Blonde hair. Anyone with information or contact with Joshua is requested to contact the Cheyenne PD at (307) 637-6525 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, September 18, 2022, Converse County, Wyoming: Amelia Nevae Jealousofhim, age 16, was last seen in Converse County, Wyoming on September 18, 2022. She is a Native American female, approximately 5’7″, 230 pounds with Brown eyes and shoulder length curly Black hair. She has last seen wearing gray shorts, a blue t-shirt with writing on it and sandals. Anyone with information or contact with Amelia is requested to contact the Converse County Sheriff at (307) 358-4700 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, August 27, 2022, Natrona County, Wyoming: Marquis Hayman, age 13, was last seen in Casper, Wyoming on August 26, 2022. He is a White male, approximately 5’2″, 105 pounds with Brown eyes and Blonde hair. He was last seen wearing a red Nike hat, black shirt, black jeans and white shoes. Anyone with information or contact with Marquis is requested to contact the Casper PD at (307) 235-8278 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, August 27, 2022, Big Horn County, Wyoming: Ethan Michael Blair, age 17, was last seen in Big Horn County, Wyoming on August 26, 2022. He is a White male, approximately 5’10”, 153 pounds with Blue eyes and Black hair. He was last seen wearing a blue shirt and glasses. Anyone with information or contact with Ethan is requested to contact the Big Horn County SO at (307) 568-2324 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, August 26, 2022, Uinta County, Wyoming: Nathan Ray Vaughn Cortez, age 17, was last seen in Evanston, Wyoming on August 25, 2022. He is a Black male, approximately 6′, 215 pounds with Brown eyes and Black hair. He was last seen wearing all black clothing. Anyone with information or contact with Nathan is requested to contact the Evanston PD at (307) 783-1000 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, August 24, 2022, Fremont County, Wyoming: Leland Fightingbear, age 16, was last seen on the Wind River Indian Reservation, Wyoming on August 24, 2022. He is a Native American male, approximately 5’11”, 177 pounds with Brown eyes and Brown hair. He has braces and a memorial tattoo on his left leg. Anyone with information or contact with Leland is requested to contact the Bureau of Indian Affairs at (307) 332-3112 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, August 22, 2022, Fremont County, Wyoming: Rhylee Lynn Brown, age 15, was last seen in Riverton, Wyoming on August 22, 2022. She is a Native American female, approximately 5’4″, 130 pounds with Brown eyes and Brown hair. She has shoulder length straight brown hair. Anyone with information or contact with Rhylee is requested to contact the Riverton PD at (307) 856-4891 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, August 22, 2022, Fremont County, Wyoming: Shawn-Dean Shadowwolf Brown, age 17, was last seen on the Wind River Indian Reservation, Wyoming on August 2, 2022. He is a Native American male, approximately 6’4″, 190 pounds with Brown eyes and Brown hair. He was last seen wearing Nike trunks and he has one pierced ear. Anyone with information or contact with Shawn-Dean is requested to contact the Bureau of Indian Affairs at (307) 332-3112 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Missing Person, February 14, 2022, Natrona County, Wyoming: Landon Rice, age 14, was last seen on February 14, 2022 in Casper, Wyoming. He is a white male, approximately 5’4″, 135 pounds, with brown eyes and blond hair. He was last seen wearing a tie dye hoodie and black pants. Anyone with information or contact with Landon is requested to contact the Casper Police Department at (307) 235-8278 or the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation at (307) 777-7181.

Zerk Marshlin Bears Charged With Attempted Murder and Menacing Charges

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A 46-year-old Nunn man was charged with attempted murder and a felony menacing charge for an October 8, 2022, incident in Wellington. At about 3:30 p.m., a man called the Larimer County 911 dispatch center.

A 46-year-old Colorado man is facing a long list of charges, including attempted murder and felony menacing, in connection with an October 8 incident in Wellington.

At about 3:30, 46-year-old man Zerk Marshlin Bears stated that he had killed a woman and a child.

According to the Sheriff’s Department. As Multiple deputies arrived at an address on Woodlake Lane in Wellington, Deputies located a woman and a child who were outside of the home and were alive.

According to the Sheriff’s Department, the woman stated a man pointed a gun at her when he was on the phone with 911 dispatchers and pointed his gun at her three-year-old child.

The woman and child ran away at some point as the man was on the line with the 911 dispatch. As she was running, she heard a gunshot as they fled for their lives. Fortunately, neither the mother nor the child was injured.

Once deputies surrounded the home, they could deploy their tasers on Zerk Marshlin Bears, enabling the Deputies to arrest Zak without incident.

He was charged with two counts of Menacing –Aggravated Assault – Weapon (F5) and Domestic Violence Enhancement allegations. But according to the post:

Additional allegations have been added for Zerk Marshlin Bears (06/10/1976). The current allegations are:

• Menacing – Intimidation – Family – Weapon CRS 18-3-206(1)(a) (Felony 5) (two counts)

• Domestic Violence CRS 18-6-801 (Enhancement) (two counts)

• Attempted Murder in the 1st Degree – Deliberation with Intent – Gun CRS 18-3-102(1)(a) (Felony 2)

• Attempted Murder in the 1st Degree – Extreme Indifference CRS 18-3-102(1)(d) (Felony 2)

Bears is being held in the Larimer County Jail on $150,000 bond.”

Policymakers Need Steady Hand as Storm Clouds Gather Over Global Economy 

One-third of the world economy will likely contract this year or next amid shrinking real incomes and rising prices

Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas

October 11, 2022

The global economy continues to face steep challenges, shaped by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, a cost-of-living crisis caused by persistent and broadening inflation pressures, and the slowdown in China.

Our global growth forecast for this year is unchanged at 3.2 percent, while our projection for next year is lowered to 2.7 percent—0.2 percentage points lower than the July forecast. The 2023 slowdown will be broad-based, with countries accounting for about one-third of the global economy poised to contract this year or next. The three largest economies, the United States, China, and the euro area will continue to stall. Overall, this year’s shocks will re-open economic wounds that were only partially healed post-pandemic. In short, the worst is yet to come and, for many people, 2023 will feel like a recession.

In the United States, the tightening of monetary and financial conditions will slow growth to 1 percent next year. In China, we have lowered next year’s growth forecast to 4.4 percent due to a weakening property sector and continued lockdowns.

The slowdown is most pronounced in the euro area, where the energy crisis caused by the war will continue to take a heavy toll, reducing growth to 0.5 percent in 2023.

Almost everywhere, rapidly rising prices, especially of food and energy, are causing serious hardship for households, particularly for the poor.

Despite the economic slowdown, inflation pressures are proving broader and more persistent than anticipated. Global inflation is now expected to peak at 9.5 percent this year before decelerating to 4.1 percent by 2024. Inflation is also broadening well beyond food and energy. Global core inflation rose from an annualized monthly rate of 4.2 percent at end-2021 to 6.7 percent in July for the median country.

Downside risks to the outlook remain elevated, while policy trade-offs to address the cost-of-living crisis have become more challenging. Among the ones highlighted in our report:

  • The risk of monetary, fiscal, or financial policy miscalibration has risen sharply amid high uncertainty and growing fragilities.
  • Global financial conditions could deteriorate, and the dollar strengthen further, should turmoil in financial markets erupt, pushing investors towards safe assets. This would add significantly to inflation pressures and financial fragilities in the rest of the world, especially emerging markets and developing economies.
  • Inflation could, yet again, prove more persistent, especially if labor markets remain extremely tight.
  • Finally, the war in Ukraine is still raging and further escalation can exacerbate the energy crisis.

Our latest outlook also assesses the risks around our baseline projections. We estimate that there is about a one in four probability that global growth next year could fall below the historically low level of 2 percent. If many of the risks materialize, global growth would decline to 1.1 percent with quasi stagnant income-per-capita in 2023. According to our calculations, the likelihood of such an adverse outcome, or worse, is 10 percent to 15 percent.

Cost-of-living crisis

Increasing price pressures remain the most immediate threat to current and future prosperity by squeezing real incomes and undermining macroeconomic stability. Central banks are now laser-focused on restoring price stability, and the pace of tightening has accelerated sharply.

There are risks of both under- and over-tightening. Under-tightening would further entrench inflation, erode the credibility of central banks, and de-anchor inflation expectations. As history teaches us, this would only increase the eventual cost of bringing inflation under control.

Over-tightening risks pushing the global economy into an unnecessarily severe recession. Financial markets may also struggle with overly rapid tightening. Yet, the costs of these policy mistakes are not symmetric. The hard-won credibility of central banks could be undermined if they misjudge yet again the stubborn persistence of inflation. This would prove much more detrimental to future macroeconomic stability. Where necessary, financial policy should ensure that markets remain stable. However, central banks need to keep a steady hand with monetary policy firmly focused on taming inflation.

Formulating the appropriate fiscal response to the cost-of-living crisis has become a serious challenge. Let me mention a few key principles.

First, fiscal policy should not work at cross-purpose with monetary authorities’ efforts to bring down inflation. Doing so will only prolong inflation and could cause serious financial instability, as recent events illustrated.

Second, the energy crisis, especially in Europe, is not a transitory shock. The geopolitical realignment of energy supplies in the wake of the war is broad and permanent. Winter 2022 will be challenging, but winter 2023 will likely be worse. Price signals will be essential to curb energy demand and stimulate supply. Price controls, untargeted subsidies, or export bans are fiscally costly and lead to excess demand, undersupply, misallocation, and rationing. They rarely work. Fiscal policy should instead aim to protect the most vulnerable through targeted and temporary transfers.

Third, fiscal policy can help economies adapt to a more volatile environment by investing in productive capacity: human capital, digitalization, green energy, and supply chain diversification. Expanding these can make economies more resilient to future crises. Unfortunately, these important principles are not always guiding policy right now.

Effects of a strong dollar

For many emerging markets, the strength of the dollar is a major challenge. The dollar is now at its strongest since the early 2000s, although the appreciation is most pronounced against currencies of advanced economies. So far, the rise appears mostly driven by fundamental forces such as tightening US monetary policy and the energy crisis.

The appropriate response in most emerging and developing countries is to calibrate monetary policy to maintain price stability, while letting exchange rates adjust, conserving valuable foreign exchange reserves for when financial conditions really worsen.

As the global economy is headed for stormy waters, now is the time for emerging market policymakers to batten down the hatches.

Eligible countries with sound policies should urgently consider improving their liquidity buffers, including by requesting access to precautionary instruments from the Fund. Countries should also aim to minimize the impact of future financial turmoil through a combination of preemptive macroprudential and capital flow measures, where appropriate, in line with our Integrated Policy Framework .

Too many low-income countries are in or near debt distress. Progress toward orderly debt restructurings through the Group of Twenty’s Common Framework for the most affected is urgently needed to avert a wave of sovereign debt crisis. Time may soon run out.

The energy and food crises, coupled with extreme summer temperatures, are stark reminders of what an uncontrolled climate transition would look like. Progress on climate policies, as well as on debt resolution and other targeted multilateral issues, will prove that a focused multilateralism can, indeed, achieve progress for all and succeed in overcoming geoeconomic fragmentation pressures.

Los Angeles City Council Members Asked To Resign Immediately For Being Racial Towards Black Children

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October 11, 2022I stand in solidarity with all those who have called for the immediate resignation of Councilmembers Nury Martinez, Kevin De Leon, and Gil Cedillo.

Los Angeles is a city with rich history due to its vast diversity, it is unacceptable for elected officials to use oppressive language to divide our city for the soul purpose of retaining power and racially charged attitudes towards a child.

Inclusion of all, regardless of race, is what makes our city better and stronger.

We need leadership that brings all together in a fair, equitable manner in the interest of making life better in our Great City of Los Angeles.Not only do I call on all to resign immediately, I also request for a thorough investigation, and support a redistricting process that is free and independent, void of all bias and special interest influences.

26-year-old felon, Michael Langley Of Cheyenne Arrested For Firing Weapon At Vehicle

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Man Arrested Following Shots Fired Incident in Downtown Cheyenne CHEYENNE, Wy — Monday, October 10 at approximately 5:00 p.m. Cheyenne Police Officers were dispatched to a report of shots fired near the intersection of 17th Street and Stinson Avenue. It is alleged that two vehicles, a Chevy Impala and GMC Sierra, were following each other south on Stinson Avenue.

An occupant of the Impala, later identified as Michael Langley, 26, of Cheyenne, leaned out of the front passenger window with a firearm and shot multiple times in the direction of the Sierra. The Impala then fled from the scene, traveling east on West Lincolnway. One uninvolved vehicle was struck by a bullet.

No injuries were reported. It is believed that the occupants of the vehicles were involved in a prior verbal altercation. At approximately 9:00 p.m., officers were notified that the suspect vehicle was seen parked at an apartment complex near the 400 block of Miller Lane. Officers quickly arrived at the location and apprehended Langley.

Langley was taken into custody and booked into the Laramie County Jail on charges of aggravated assault without injury with a deadly weapon, felon in possession of a firearm, use of a firearm during a felony, destruction of property over $1,000, discharge of a firearm, and possession of marijuana. This case remains under investigation by the Cheyenne Police Department.