In conclusion, the recent wave of Israeli airstrikes on Syria underscores the complex and volatile dynamics at play in the region and the challenges of addressing security threats in a rapidly changing environment. The international community must work together to de-escalate tensions and find diplomatic solutions to prevent further violence and instability in the Middle East.
WASHINGTON — Rep. Ann McLane Kuster wasn’t going to become one of those lawmakers accused of lingering too long in the halls of Congress. “I think people get into a comfortable pattern,” Kuster said this month, as she wrapped up 12 years representing New Hampshire’s 2nd District. She led the New Democrat Coalition, a powerful center-left caucus that managed to grow its ranks this election cycle. And she made many friends, like Democratic Whip Katherine M. Clark of Massachusetts, her longtime roommate while in Washington. But her belief that the party needs new blood, as well as partisan fatigue and memories of Jan. 6, 2021, guided her decision not to run again. “I had so many different factors going into it, but one of them is I’m trying to set a better example,” Kuster said. This interview has been edited and condensed. Question: Why did you decide to walk away now? Answer: I’ve always said I wasn’t going to stay forever. Congress, by being so focused on seniority, tends to cater to a much older population. I think the Democratic caucus can learn from the experience of the Republican caucus that if you have higher turnover, you bring in more people, you’ll be more effective. And then there is a part of it related to Donald Trump coming back. I was one of the last members of Congress in the gallery on Jan. 6, and as it turns out, we have the security footage that shows it was only 30 seconds from when I was able to evacuate that the insurrectionists were in that hallway hunting for us with zip ties and bear mace and who knows what else. I just felt like, he tried to kill me once. I’m not available for it again. I’m not prepared to be the gladiator, if you will, again for him, with his attack on women and undermining the social fabric. I’ve worked very hard on mental health and addiction treatment and on the environment. I’ve done a lot of work on tackling sexual assault and the whole “Me Too” era of protecting women in the military and in the workplace, and it appears his approach is to tear that all down. Q: What’s next? A: Elections are about change, and the majority of voters wanted change from the Biden administration. They wanted lower costs. They wanted to tackle immigration and the border and crime and safety. And there’s a lot of reasons that people had for their vote, but I don’t believe the approach of the Trump administration is going to fix those issues for them. I mean, just take tariffs. If he puts those on, the price of food is going to go way up. I think the consequences of his policies are going to result in a swing back in 2026 and in 2028. So I’m going to stay involved, but not on the ballot. I’m going to stay involved in the work I’ve done this cycle with the New Democrat Coalition Action Fund and raising resources, along with a group we call Elect Democratic Women — that’s a PAC that I was one of the founders of — and win back the majority. Q: Why do other members stay in Congress as long as they do? A: It tends to be people who don’t have difficult elections. I had really difficult elections. I’m in a swing district. It’s a red district that I turned purple, but it’s certainly not blue, and it was challenging every single time. And part of it is, I’m just literally exhausted from that, but the people who are in deep-blue districts don’t have to do the fundraising, they don’t have to do the campaigning, and it becomes much more comfortable for them. Q: What are some highlights of your time here? A: The biggest thing for me probably has been the increasing number of women in Congress and being involved in creating Elect Democratic Women, and also chairing the New Dem Coalition and helping bring new members to Congress. It’s made a tremendous difference. When I first came, women [made up] about 20 percent of the House. Now our Democratic caucus is probably 45 percent women. It’s amazing. Q: What are you going to miss? A: I’ll definitely miss my friends. Katherine Clark, our minority whip, is my roommate and has been for 10 years, and so that’s one of the reasons I want to stay involved, is to have an excuse to come back down and see them. We have this amazing group of friends that we call the “Pink Ladies,” with Lois Frankel, Katherine, Julia Brownley, Grace Meng and myself. And I’m sure there’s a part of it I will miss on the policy front, but right now that has gotten much more difficult in terms of the hyperpartisanship. These task forces I had, on addiction and mental health, on ending sexual violence, and even the ski and snowboard caucus, they were all bipartisan. Everything I did, I always told my team, don’t bring a bill to me without a Republican co-lead. But it has become so much more difficult to work in that bipartisan way. I’m ready to let somebody else take a shot at it. Q: From your perspective, what went wrong for Democrats in the 2024 elections? A: I think our party needs to reflect on how it felt to an entire generation of younger people that for a pretty long time, the face of our party has been octogenarians. I mean, Nancy Pelosi was an extraordinary speaker. I’m not in any way critical of her, but the transition that we made in the House was really important to Hakeem Jeffries and Katherine Clark and Pete Aguilar, and I think we need to continue that process, because we somehow have missed the opportunity to connect with a whole generation of young people that we assumed, just by the laws of nature, would be more progressive and more close to our perspective. Now, what’s interesting, our New Dem candidates were successful, and we have 25 new New Dems coming to Congress, and we flipped several seats. So I think we needed that approach at the national level. Q: A lot of the postmortems have fixated on the divide between the progressive and more moderate wings of the party. A: To me, it’s not knee-jerk left or right, progressive or moderate. It’s listening to people and meeting voters where they are. It started with Tom Suozzi in his special election, but we hired Tom Suozzi’s campaign manager, a guy named Jon Gonin, to be the political director for New Dems, and we carried that message through. Our members and candidates that were endorsed by New Dems talked about immigration reform, securing the border, making people feel safer in their community and lowering costs. This is a message that works in my district and in purple districts all across the country, and we won them. We beat Republicans with that message. And I think maybe the [Democratic National Committee] and the party has gotten away from meeting people where they are. Q: Are you optimistic for the next cycle? A: I’m an optimist, and I think this was a swing election. I was very involved in Barack Obama’s first election, starting with the New Hampshire primary, and that was a change election — hope and change from George W. Bush. You look at 2016, and Trump was backlash from Obama, and then Biden was change from Trump. I just think these swings, and maybe this is social media, are coming much faster. People just wanted change, and they vote with their middle finger. This is the only lever they have, and all they can say is, “Hell, no.” It’s very hard to say, “Well, this isn’t perfect, but I think we’re headed in the right direction.” And people don’t follow it that closely, they just really don’t. And it’s too bad, because for Democrats in particular, we tend to be involved with policies that take a long time, to restore the economy after COVID, or to pass the biggest infrastructure bill. I just saw from DOT and [Transportation Secretary] Pete Buttigieg a map of all these projects all across the country. And it’s like, where was that map during the election? People are going to be driving over brand-new bridges and new highways and cutting 45 minutes off their commute and getting home for dinner on time, and nobody’s going to say, “Oh, thank you, Joe Biden.” They’re probably going to say, “Thank you, Donald Trump,” because they don’t realize that it just takes so long.
NoneThe Inaugural AIGC Director Co-creation Program University Roadshow in China is Launched, "RealAI" Drives a New Trend in Film and Television Creation
I love how the Aspen Skiing Co. sometimes opens the mountains earlier than the published date. The move strikes me as a benevolent gesture — a vital bone thrown to the locals — one with meat and marrow we can all chew on until the real soap opera of ski season begins. Aspen’s ski season is indeed a real-life docudrama; the greatest show on snow. It’s the relentless grind of winter, filled with thrills and spills of victory, hoots and hollers, camaraderie and the agony of “da feet” (and knees). As of 9 a.m. today, Aspen is officially, once again, a classic American ski town. Let the games begin! The recent snow has assuaged the very real fear of a no-snow year — a nightmarish scenario that I internally fret about every fall. This is the second year of Aspen Mountain’s top-to-bottom snowmaking capabilities. That’s significant. The affectionately nicknamed “manmade ribbon of death” begs speed, and is grossly emblematic of early season skiing to me. In the shadow of the World Cup’s impending absence, is now the time to reboot the heralded “24 Hours of Aspen” ski race? While driving into town one eerie October evening I couldn’t help but notice the lights of the snowmaking system on Golden Horn and Thunderbowl making an illuminated, fluorescent signature in a dogleg left arc. The spectacle reminded me of the Starlink satellite network streaking across the sky; a token of man’s technological mark shining over the land. Over the years, I’ve witnessed an ideological, technical and money-driven change in the ski industry. From the conglomerate resort entities, to their season passes, to day-ticket technology, to the equipment, to the clothing, to on-mountain dining, to the teaching techniques, to the chairlifts, to snow-management procedures, to the way the mountains are being skied, to lodging and transportation, to the workforce — every sector and component of the snow business has metamorphosed. Yet for me, the liberating feeling of skiing itself has stayed much the same as when I was a kid. I always marvel at that familiarity and simplicity of the very first run of the year: skiing effortlessly off of the lift and settling into those first few turns. Just like riding a bike. In an odd little way, ski season completes me. Maybe that has something to do with being fortunate enough to have hustled in the ski industry for the past 30-plus years. I feel blessed to work in the snow business, surrounded by outgoing, adventurous people — the majority of whom I can identify with — who eat, sleep and breathe skiing. As a testament, I still like skiing. The business part hasn’t forever ruined the fun for me. Yet. And, I really dig turning people onto the sport, and seeing their faces and hearing the unadulterated excitement and sense of accomplishment in their voices after conquering Homestead Road on Buttermilk for the first time. A couple of weeks ago on a sleepy Monday I was startled by the image of a guy walking through town carrying a pair of skis. My head was somewhere far, far away. Last Sunday while watching the Broncos, I performed a “dress rehearsal” for ski season, a little trick my old ski pal Larry Mayer hipped me to while we were riding the gondola one time. You suit-up for skiing, put your boots on, lay your skis out on the carpet, click-in, get down into a tuck and hold it for as long as you can. Recover and repeat. The exercise worked like a charm. Something inside of me shifted — mentally and physically — to get psyched to ski again. I’m definitely not in the ski shape I used to be. I was nearly hyperventilating just from buttoning my pants, then bending over and buckling my boots. Afterwards I performed a rudimentary early season ski tune, courtesy of my handy Swix tuning kit by deburring and sharpening the edges to a 90-degree bevel. I’m always experimenting with obscure waxing techniques. I’ve tried everything from Armor All to olive oil to Lemon Pledge furniture wipes. This time I applied some spray-on carnauba Turtle Wax to the thirsty bases of my fat sticks. My skis feel smooth; they smell nice, too. Either tune your skis yourself, or support your local ski shop and have them tuned professionally. You’ll be happy with the big difference that little bit of effort makes. Last year, I learned the hard way that at this stage in my ski career, when you live in a ski town the likes of Aspen, it’s best to let the skiing come to you as opposed to chasing early turns at other resorts. I like the concept, but the execution was a different beast entirely. Driving three-plus hours to ski, and three hours or more back, is for people in their 20s with Ikon Passes and Subarus. I’d like to take this opportunity to profusely thank everyone in mountain operations for getting the slopes ready for us. I’m acutely aware of all the hard work that goes into mountain preparation: mowing and clearing the runs during summer, ceremoniously igniting burn piles with napalm (smells like ... ski season), snowmaking and grooming, getting the chairlifts and gondola ready. Thanks also to the patrolmen and patrolwomen who make the terrain safe and inevitably the injured bodies off of the hill. The more people that get out and ski, the overall healthier and happier our community is. Here’s to a fun, successful and rewarding ski season, everyone. See you up there!In a groundbreaking development, Huawei has recently unveiled the successful completion of the first-ever nationwide commercial deployment of 5G EasyMacro high-precision positioning in subway tunnels, in collaboration with China Mobile. This significant milestone signals a new era in the advancement of 5G technology, bringing enhanced connectivity and precise location services to underground transportation systems.The construction of a new expressway in Jiangxi has recently made significant progress, marking a milestone in the development of transportation infrastructure in the region. The project, which aims to enhance connectivity and improve travel efficiency, is set to bring about numerous benefits to the local economy and residents.
When Kevin Campbell took a 1991 Chevy truck in trade at his dealership on Moncton's Salisbury Road in early November, he didn't have it for long. But not because it sold right away. The 1991 Chevrolet C1500 SS 454, listed for more than $28,000, was stolen off his lot on Nov. 14, around 1:30 a.m., he said. "This truck is very distinct. There wouldn't be another one, I bet you, in all of New Brunswick. If there was, there would be one or two, so very recognizable, very distinguishable truck, very desirable truck." Campbell's property is equipped with an AI-based security system.The cameras track movement and the system also flashes red and blue lights, sounds an alarm and allows a security guard to talk to trespassers. He said he's spent more than $10,000 on it. It didn't stop the theft. The stolen truck was a 1991 Chevrolet C1500 SS 454, listed for more than $28,000. (Campbell's Auto Sales) Both Campbell and the RCMP say they arrived at the scene within minutes, but the thieves had already left. "They knew they could steal this truck and get out of here, and it took them two minutes and 11 seconds," he said. "I'm mad, I'm upset, I'm — I'm frustrated, I'm every emotion you can imagine. This is a blow." WATCH | See a pickup truck get stolen in minutes: A 1991 truck was stolen in Moncton in under 3 minutes 13 hours ago Duration 2:35 A Moncton car dealer was surprised to see how quickly thieves made off with a pickup truck from his parking lot, after the theft was caught on security cameras. An expert provides tips on how to keep vehicles from being stolen. Codiac RCMP say they are investigating the theft. According to the latest statistics, there have been 386 motor vehicle thefts in Moncton, 84 in Dieppe and 56 in Riverview, so far in 2024. This data was last updated on Nov. 22. Bryan Gast is the vice-president for investigative services at Équité Association, an organization that works to stop crime on behalf of the Canadian property and casualty insurance industry. Gast, who is also a former police officer, was not surprised by how quickly the theft occurred. Brian Gast says there are things that may help to deter theft, including parking in a garage or a well-lit area, and installing devices such as a wheel lock, an aftermarket immobilizer or tracking device, or a pedal lock. (David Common/CBC) He said a vehicle that old could easily be stolen in a few minutes using simple tools but those with modern technology may get stolen even faster. "They've figured out how to do it the old-fashioned way as well as with new technology. So they can do it from both sides," Gast said. And the thieves don't always work under the cover of darkness. "What used to happen pretty much exclusively between 1:00 and 5:00 in the morning is now happening in broad daylight in busy areas ... they are so efficient and effective at the ability to steal vehicles that it doesn't take them long and it almost doesn't even look out of place." Most cars stolen in N.B. are used to commit other crimes, not for export Gast said vehicles manufactured after 2007 are often stolen by capturing the radio frequency of the key fob to start them, by reprogramming the key fob, or by gaining access to the vehicle's electronics and computer. The stolen vehicles are either used to commit another crime, take a joyride, sold part by part, exported to another country or by changing its vehicle identification number and selling it, he said. "I think this is just ... a really good example of the older models are still definitely targets." "This shows the importance of a standard to have all vehicles protected, have effective anti-theft measures right from the manufacture," he said. He said in 2007, a standard was introduced making it mandatory for manufacturers to have an immobilizer installed in vehicles, however thieves were able to adapt to that. Gast said that standard has not been modernized since then. Gast said although the authorities are doing their best, people should apply a layered approach to make the vehicles harder to steal. This Moncton man's prized car was stolen. Hundreds of Maritimers helped find it Vehicle thefts in N.B. jumped 18% last year, according to latest StatsCan data Park in a garage or a well-lit area, install devices such as a wheel or pedal lock, an aftermarket immobilizer or tracking device, he said. "You don't have to do them all, but if you could do two or three of them ... those are all good options to make it harder for them to steal," he said. As a business owner, Campbell says the whole situation is upsetting. "It just all frustrates me to think that you work so hard to earn what you have and people just think they can come and take it from you, like, that is so discouraging and so [brazen]."
Argentina’s Racing wins its first Copa Sudamericana championship by beating Brazil’s Cruzeiro 3-1
"I play this game for one reason: to win a championship," Gobert affirms. "Every day, I step onto the court with that goal in mind, and I know that my teammates share the same drive and determination. Together, we will continue to push each other to new heights and leave everything we have on the court. Our journey is far from over, and I am excited to see what the future holds for this team."The partnership between Sharp and KDDI also highlights the importance of data privacy and security in the era of AI. As businesses increasingly rely on data to drive strategic decisions, safeguarding sensitive information and ensuring compliance with data protection regulations are paramount. The AI data center will prioritize data security measures, encryption protocols, and regular audits to ensure the integrity and confidentiality of the data processed within the facility.Josh Norris scores late power-play goal in the Senators' 3-1 victory over the Wild
NoneDespite Flight Butler's explanation, many consumers and industry experts remain unconvinced. Critics argue that such a substantial price difference cannot be justified by the services offered, especially when the same flight can be booked directly from the airline at a much lower price. The lack of transparency in Flight Butler's pricing strategy has also raised concerns about the trustworthiness of online flight booking services in general.
The implications of these airstrikes on the broader Middle East region are also significant. Given the complex web of alliances and rivalries that define the political landscape in the Middle East, any escalation in one conflict zone is likely to have ripple effects across the entire region.Former President Jimmy Carter has died at the age of 100. The 39th president of the United States was a Georgia peanut farmer who sought to restore trust in government when he assumed the presidency in 1977 and then built a reputation for tireless work as a humanitarian. He earned a Nobel Peace Prize in 2002. Carter died Sunday, coming up on two years after entering hospice care, at his home in Plains, Georgia. At age 52, Carter was sworn in as president on Jan. 20, 1977, after defeating President Gerald R. Ford in the 1976 general election. Carter left office on Jan. 20, 1981, following his 1980 general election loss to Ronald Reagan. Here's the latest: United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres on Sunday praised Carter for his significant contributions to international peace through the Camp David Accords, the SALT II Treaty and the Panama Canal treaties. “President Carter’s commitment to international peace and human rights also found full expression after he left the presidency,” Guterres said in a statement. "He played a key role in conflict mediation, election monitoring, the promotion of democracy, and disease prevention and eradication. These and other efforts earned him the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002 and helped advance the work of the United Nations. “President Carter will be remembered for his solidarity with the vulnerable, his abiding grace, and his unrelenting faith in the common good and our common humanity,” Guterres said. King Charles III joined leaders from around the world in issuing their condolences and sharing their reflections on the former president. “It was with great sadness that I learned of the death of former President Carter," the king said in a public statement. “He was a committed public servant, and devoted his life to promoting peace and human rights. His dedication and humility served as an inspiration to many, and I remember with great fondness his visit to the United Kingdom in 1977." President Joe Biden broke from his family vacation in the U.S. Virgin Islands to remember Carter, recalling his predecessor as a role model and friend. America and the world lost a “remarkable leader” with Carter’s death, Biden said, adding that he had spoken to several of the former president's children and was working with them to formalize memorial arrangements in Washington. Speaking for roughly 10 minutes, Biden remembered Carter as a humanitarian and statesman, someone he couldn't imagine walking past a person in need without trying to help them. He represented “the most fundamental human values we can never let slip away,” Biden said. The president repeatedly praised Carter's “simple decency” and his values, saying some will see him as a man of honesty and humility from a bygone era. “I don’t believe it’s a bygone era. I see a man not only of our time, but for all times,” Biden said. “To know his core, you need to know he never stopped being a Sunday school teacher at that Baptist church in Plains, Georgia.” Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi said on X that Carter's significant role in achieving the peace agreement between Egypt and Israel "will remain etched in the annals of history.” He went on to say Carter's “humanitarian work exemplifies a lofty standard of love, peace, and brotherhood.” Carter will be remembered as “one of the world’s most prominent leaders in service to humanity,” el-Sissi said. President Joe Biden will speak about Carter Sunday evening. The president will make his address from a hotel in St. Croix, from the U.S. Virgin Islands, where he is on a holiday vacation with his family. Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter had one of the great love stories and political partnerships in U.S. presidential history. The former president sometimes called his wife, who died Nov. 19. 2023, “Rosie,” which is a good way to remember how her name actually is pronounced. It is “ROSE-uh-lyn,” not, repeat NOT, “RAHZ-uh-lyn.” They were married more than 77 years but their relationship went back even further. Jimmy’s mother, “Miss Lillian,” delivered Eleanor Rosalynn Smith at the Smith home in Plains on Aug. 18, 1927. The nurse brought her eldest child back a few days later to visit, meaning the longest-married presidential couple met as preschooler and newborn. She became his trusted campaign aide and White House adviser, surprising Washington by sitting in on Cabinet meetings. Then they traveled the world together as co-founders of The Carter Center. Most of the nation saw the former president for the last time at Rosalynn Carter’s funeral. Jason Carter is now the chairman of The Carter Center’s board of governors. He said his grandparents “never changed who they were” even after reaching the White House and becoming global humanitarians. He says their four years in Washington were just one period of putting their values into action and that the center his grandparents founded in Atlanta is a lasting “extension of their belief in human rights as a fundamental global force.” Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter traveled the world advocating for democracy and fighting disease, but Jason Carter said they weren’t motivated by pity, or arrogance that a former American president had all the answers — they ventured to remote places because they could “recognize these people.” They too were from “a 600-person village” and understood that even the poorest people “have the power ... the ability ... the knowledge and the expertise to change their own community.” As reaction poured in from around the world, President Joe Biden mourned Carter’s death, saying the world lost an “extraordinary leader, statesman and humanitarian” and he lost a dear friend. Biden cited Carter’s compassion and moral clarity, his work to eradicate disease, forge peace, advance civil and human rights, promote free and fair elections, house the homeless and advocacy for the disadvantaged as an example for others. Biden said he is ordering a state funeral for Carter in Washington. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is remembering Carter as a man steeped “in devotion to public service and peace.” The California Democrat said in a statement Sunday that Carter was committed to “honoring the spark of divinity within every person,” something she said manifested in “teaching Sunday school in his beloved Marantha Baptist Church, brokering the landmark Camp David Accords to pave the way to peace or building homes with Habitat for Humanity.” Pelosi also said Carter led “perhaps the most impactful post-presidency in history.” British Prime Minister Keir Starmer noted in a post on X the special contribution Carter made by brokering the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt and through his work with the Carter Center. “Motivated by his strong faith and values, President Carter redefined the post-presidency with a remarkable commitment to social justice and human rights at home and abroad,” Starmer said. To commemorate Carter’s death, officials with the Empire State Building said in a post on social media that the iconic New York City landmark would be lit in red, white and blue on Sunday night, “to honor the life and legacy” of the late former president. In a statement issued Sunday, former President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama said Carter’s beloved Maranatha Baptist Church “will be a little quieter on Sunday,s” but added that the late former president “will never be far away -- buried alongside Rosalynn next to a willow tree down the road, his memory calling all of us to heed our better angels.” Noting the “hundreds of tourists from around the world crammed into the pews” to see the former president teach Sunday school, as he did “for most of his adult life,” the Obamas listed Carter’s accomplishments as president. But they made special note of the Sunday school lessons, saying they were catalysts for people making a pilgrimage to the church. “Many people in that church on Sunday morning were there, at least in part, because of something more fundamental: President Carter’s decency.” The longest-lived American president died Sunday, more than a year after entering hospice care , at his home in the small town of Plains, Georgia, where he and his wife, Rosalynn, who died at 96 in November 2023 , spent most of their lives. “Our founder, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, passed away this afternoon in Plains, Georgia,” The Carter Center said in posting about his death on the social media platform X. It added in a statement that he died peacefully, surrounded by his family. In his 1975 book “Why Not The Best,” Carter said of himself: “I am a Southerner and an American, I am a farmer, an engineer, a father and husband, a Christian, a politician and former governor, a planner, a businessman, a nuclear physicist, a naval officer, a canoeist, and among other things a lover of Bob Dylan’s songs and Dylan Thomas’s poetry.” A moderate Democrat, Carter entered the 1976 presidential race as a little-known Georgia governor with a broad smile, outspoken Baptist mores and technocratic plans reflecting his education as an engineer. After he left office and returned home to his tiny hometown of Plains in southwest Georgia, Carter regularly taught Sunday School lessons at Maranatha Baptist Church until his mobility declined. Those sessions drew visitors from around the world. Former Vice President Al Gore praised Jimmy Carter for living “a life full of purpose, commitment and kindness” and for being a “lifelong role model for the entire environmental movement.” Carter, who left the White House in 1981 after a landslide defeat to Ronald Reagan. concentrated on conflict resolution, defending democracy and fighting disease in the developing world. Gore, who lost the 2000 presidential election to George W. Bush, remains a leading advocate for action to fight climate change. Both won Nobel Peace Prizes. Gore said that “it is a testament to his unyielding determination to help build a more just and peaceful world” that Carter is often “remembered equally for the work he did as President as he is for his leadership over the 42 years after he left office.” During Gore’s time in the White House, President Bill Clinton had an uneasy relationship with Carter. But Gore said he is “grateful” for “many years of friendship and collaboration” with Carter. Former President Bill Clinton and his wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, remember Carter as a man who lived to serve others. “Hillary and I mourn the passing of President Jimmy Carter and give thanks for his long, good life. Guided by his faith, President Carter lived to serve others — until the very end." The statement recalled Carter's many achievements and priorities, including efforts “to protect our natural resources in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, make energy conservation a national priority, return the Panama Canal to Panama, and secure peace between Egypt and Israel at Camp David." After he left office, the Clinton statement said, Carter continued efforts in "supporting honest elections, advancing peace, combating disease, and promoting democracy; to his and Rosalynn’s devotion and hard work at Habitat for Humanity — he worked tirelessly for a better, fairer world,” the statement said.One of the key highlights of the report is the significant increase in the number of private equity funds exceeding the billion-dollar mark in asset under management. This growth in scale not only reflects the increasing investor confidence in private equity as an asset class but also underscores the effectiveness of fund managers in deploying capital efficiently and maximizing returns.
The Latest: Former President Jimmy Carter is dead at age 100Victor Wembanyama went to a park in New York City and played 1-on-1 with fans on Saturday. He even lost a couple of games. Not in basketball, though. Wemby was playing chess. And this wasn't on a whim: He knows how to play and even brought his own chess set. Before the San Antonio Spurs left New York for a flight to Minnesota, Wembanyama put out the call on social media: “Who wants to meet me at the SW corner of Washington Square park to play chess? Im there,” Wembanyama wrote. It was 9:36 a.m. People began showing up almost immediately. Washington Square Park is a known spot for chess in New York — Bobby Fischer among others have famously played there, and it's been used for multiple movie scenes featuring the game. Wembanyama was there for an hour in the rain, from about 10-11 a.m. He played four games, winning two and losing two — he told Bleacher Report afterward that both of the losses were to professional chess players — before departing to catch the Spurs' flight. Wembanyama had been trying to get somewhere to play chess for the bulk of the team's time in New York — the Spurs played the Knicks on Christmas and won at Brooklyn on Friday night. The schedule never aligned, until Saturday morning. And even with bad weather, he bundled up to make it happen. He posed for photos with a couple of dozen people who showed up, braving a morning of cold rain to play chess with one of the NBA's biggest stars. “We need an NBA players only Chess tournament, proceeds go to the charity of choice of the winner,” he wrote on social media after his chess trip was over. Wembanyama is averaging 25.2 points and 10.1 rebounds this season, his second in the NBA after winning rookie of the year last season. The Spurs play at Minnesota on Sunday.In conclusion, while Country Garden has faced its share of criticism and controversy in recent times, the company's response reflects a willingness to listen, learn, and adapt. By acknowledging its shortcomings and outlining a path forward, Country Garden demonstrates its commitment to being a responsible and sustainable business. As the company continues to navigate the challenges of a rapidly evolving industry, its response serves as a reminder of the importance of transparency, accountability, and engagement with stakeholders. Through proactive efforts to address criticism and implement positive change, Country Garden sets a positive example for the real estate sector and beyond.
Moreover, the changing landscape of work and employment further complicates the issue. With the rise of remote work, gig economy platforms, and automation, traditional sources of income are becoming increasingly unstable and unreliable. This shift not only challenges the sustainability of passive income strategies but also highlights the need for individuals to adapt and diversify their income streams to ensure their financial well-being.
However, it is important to note that the adoption of large-scale models comes with its own set of challenges. Businesses must invest in the necessary technology, talent, and infrastructure to effectively implement and leverage these models. Additionally, there are concerns surrounding data privacy and security that must be addressed to ensure consumer trust and compliance with regulations.
In the end, Tang Shangjun's story teaches us that the greatest gift we can give to our parents is not material wealth or grand gestures, but the gift of our time, attention, and unconditional love. Let us all take a cue from Tang Shangjun's example and cherish every moment we have with our loved ones, for in the end, it is the memories we create and the love we share that truly matter.On the other hand, Apple, one of the tech giants known for its groundbreaking products and services, made a notable statement regarding its stance on Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). Despite the growing interest and investment in AGI research and development by other tech companies, Apple has expressed that it is not currently pursuing AGI and instead remains focused on leveraging AI for specific applications within its ecosystem. This strategic decision underscores Apple's commitment to delivering user-centric experiences while highlighting the diverse approaches taken by companies in navigating the complex landscape of AI technologies.
As the dust settles on this controversial update, one thing is certain: the future of "Fantasy Beast Palu" hangs in the balance. Will the removal of the throwing Poke Balls summoning mechanism prove to be a step in the right direction, or will it ultimately lead to the game losing its unique charm and appeal? Only time will tell.