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ONU: 2.400 millones de personas no tuvieron acceso constante a comida en 2022

ARCHIVO - Trabajadores cargan grano el miércoles 26 de abril de 2023, en Izmail, Ucrania. (AP Foto/Andrew Kravchenko, archivo)

La ONU anunció el miércoles malas noticias en cuanto a la seguridad alimentaria global: 2.400 millones de personas no tuvieron acceso constante a alimentos el año pasado, y hasta 783 millones enfrentaron hambre, además de que 148 millones de niños sufrieron retraso en el crecimiento.

En el informe de 2023 sobre el Estado de la Seguridad Alimentaria y la Nutrición, cinco agencias de las Naciones Unidas señalaron que, si bien las cifras globales de hambruna permanecieron estancadas entre 2021 y 2022, muchos lugares enfrentan crisis alimentarias cada vez mayores. Hicieron notar la situación en el oeste de Asia, el Caribe y África, donde el 20% de la población del continente experimenta hambre, más del doble que el promedio global.

“La recuperación de la pandemia (de COVID-19) ha sido desigual, y la guerra en Ucrania ha afectado a los alimentos nutritivos y las dietas saludables”, dijo Qu Dongyu, director general de la Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Alimentación y la Agricultura (FAO, por sus iniciales en inglés), en un comunicado. “Esta es la ‘nueva normalidad’ en la que el cambio climático, los conflictos y la inestabilidad económica alejan cada vez más de la seguridad a quienes se encuentran marginados”.

De acuerdo con el informe, el acceso de la población a dietas saludables se ha deteriorado en todo el mundo.

Más de 3.100 millones de personas —el 42% de la población global— no pudieron costear una dieta saludable en 2021, un incremento de 134 millones de personas en comparación con 2019, según el texto.

En la conferencia de prensa en la que se dio a conocer el informe, el economista en jefe de la FAO, Máximo Torero, dijo que reducir el número de personas que consumen dietas que no son saludables “es un enorme desafío, porque esto básicamente nos dice que tenemos que cambiar significativamente la manera en que usamos nuestros recursos en el sector agrícola, en el sistema agroalimentario”.

Según la investigación más reciente, comentó, entre 691 y 783 millones de personas sufrieron malnutrición crónica en 2022, un promedio de 735 millones, lo que significa 122 millones más de personas que en 2019, antes de la llegada de la pandemia.

Torero dijo que las proyecciones de las Naciones Unidas para 2030 indican que 600 millones de personas seguirán padeciendo desnutrición crónica, muy por encima del objetivo de la ONU de alcanzar “Cero hambruna” para esas fechas.

En el prefacio del informe, los directores de la FAO, el Programa Mundial de Alimentos, el Fondo Internacional de Desarrollo Agrícola, el Fondo de las Naciones Unidas para la Infancia (UNICEF, por sus siglas en inglés) y la Organización Mundial de la Salud escribieron que alcanzar el nivel de “Cero hambruna” representa un “desafío abrumador”. Hicieron un llamado a redoblar las labores “para transformar los sistemas agroalimentarios y sacarles provecho” con el fin de alcanzar la meta.

En cuanto a los niños, el informe dice que siguen padeciendo desnutrición. No sólo 148 millones de niños menores de cinco años están atrofiados, sino que además hay 45 millones demasiado delgados para la altura que tienen, por lo que se les considera “emaciados”, mientras que 37 millones de jóvenes padecen sobrepeso.

Presentan un proyecto en el Congreso que busca la ciudadanía para veteranos extranjeros

El congresista demócrata por el Distrito 39 de California, Mark Takano, habla durante una entrevista con EFE. Imagen de archivo. EFE/ Octavio Guzmán

Un grupo de congresistas demócratas y republicanos sometieron este miércoles en el Congreso un proyecto de ley que permitiría que los veteranos extranjeros puedan solicitar la ciudadanía.

La legislación simplificará el proceso de naturalización para los veteranos extranjeros y estipulará un proceso debido para los aquellos que prestaron servicios militares y que han sido deportados erróneamente.

En el marco de la legislación «los miembros extranjeros de las Fuerzas Armadas recibirán información apropiada y la asistencia que necesitan para obtener, de forma expedita, la naturalización durante su servicio», explicó la Unión Estadounidense de Libertades Civiles (ACLU) en un comunicado.

«He luchado para impedir que los veteranos que son extranjeros se pierdan en los baches de nuestro sistema de inmigración porque es vergonzoso que sean exilados del mismo país por cuya protección y defensa han arriesgado sus vidas», señaló el congresista Mark Takano, demócrata de California.

La iniciativa, similar a otras presentadas antes, cuenta también con el respaldo de los congresistas Zoe Lofgren, Jerrold Nadler, Lou Corea, Juan Vargas, Raúl Ruiz, María Elvira Salazar y Aumua Amata Coleman Radewagen.

Nadler sostuvo que «los inmigrantes que sirven en nuestras fuerzas armadas no deberían tener que preocuparse por su estatus de inmigración».

«Cada día, estos hombres y mujeres valientes arriesgan sus vidas para apoyar a nuestro país», agregó en un comunicado. «A cambio, debemos honrar sus sacrificios apoyándoles a ellos y sus familias y dándoles todas las oportunidades de convertirse en ciudadanos de Estados Unidos».

La republicana Salazar dijo que «todos los miembros de nuestras Fuerzas Armadas merecen ser tratados con dignidad y respeto».

«Los veteranos extranjeros, al igual que sus pares estadounidenses, hacen el sacrificio último en servicio de Estados Unidos», añadió.

«Estos veteranos deberían tener la oportunidad de ser residentes permanentes y de buscar la ciudadanía», apuntó la republicana Amata.

Naureen Shah, directiva de ACLU, reiteró que las personas que han dado servicio militar a nuestro país «merecen una senda hacia la ciudadanía, y la oportunidad de volver aquí si fueron deportadas».

Telescopio Webb revela imagen del nacimiento de 50 estrellas

Esta fotografía, tomada con el Telescopio Espacial James Webb de la NASA, muestra el nacimiento de una estrella como nunca se había visto antes, lleno de detalles. Fue facilitada el miércoles 12 de julio de 2023 por la Oficina de Comunicación Pública del Instituto de Ciencias de Telescopios Espaciales, con motivo del primer aniversario del telescopio. La imagen corresponde a la nebulosa Rho Ophiuchi, la región de formación estelar más próxima a la Tierra. (NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Klaus Pon vía AP)

CABO CAÑAVERAL, Florida, EE.UU. (AP) — El Telescopio Espacial James Webb festeja un año de fotografías cósmicas con una de sus mejores imágenes hasta el momento: un impresionante primer plano de docenas de estrellas al momento de nacer.

La NASA dio a conocer la más reciente fotografía el miércoles, mostrando 50 estrellas recién nacidas en un complejo de nubes a 390 años luz de distancia. Un año luz equivale a 9,7 billones de kilómetros (casi 6 billones de millas).

La región es relativamente pequeña y tranquila aunque llena de brillantes gases, chorros de hidrógeno e incluso densas aglomeraciones de polvo con el delicado inicio de incluso más estrellas.

Todas las jóvenes estrellas parecen ser más pequeñas que nuestro Sol. Los científicos dijeron que las impactantes imágenes permiten ver esta breve fase del surgimiento de una estrella con la mayor claridad a la fecha.

“Es como dar un vistazo a nuestro propio sistema solar hace miles de millones de años, cuando estaba en formación», dijo el científico de programas de la NASA, Eric Smith, a The Associated Press.

Smith señaló que se alcanza a ver de las estrellas en la imagen partió de ese lugar hace 390 millones de años. En la Tierra, en el año 1633 el astrónomo italiano Galileo Galilei fue a juicio en Roma por decir que la Tierra giraba alrededor del Sol. El Vaticano reconoció en 1992 que se había cometido una injusticia contra Galileo.

El complejo de nubes, conocido como Rho Ophiuchi, es la región de formación estelar más próxima a la Tierra y se le ubica en el cielo cerca de los límites entre las constelaciones de Ofiuco y Escorpión, el portador de la serpiente y el escorpión.

La ausencia de estrellas en el primer plano de la foto resalta todavía más los detalles, dijo la NASA. Algunas de las estrellas presentan sombras que podrían ser indicio de la formación de planetas, según la NASA.

La imagen “presenta el nacimiento de estrellas como una obra maestra del impresionismo”, tuiteó el administrador de la NASA, Bill Nelson.

El telescopio astronómico Webb, el más grande y de mayor potencia que se haya enviado al espacio hasta el momento, ha captado hermosas imágenes cósmicas en el último año.

Las primeras imágenes del telescopio infrarrojo de 10.000 millones de dólares fueron difundidas en julio pasado, seis meses después de que se lanzó al espacio desde la Guayana Francesa.

El James Webb es considerado el sucesor del Telescopio Espacial Hubble, que ha orbitado la Tierra durante 33 años.

El Webb, un proyecto conjunto entre la NASA y la Agencia Espacial Europea, escudriña el universo desde un lugar más distante, a 1,6 millones de kilómetros (un millón de millas) de la Tierra.

El Departamento de Salud y Ciencia de The Associated Press recibe apoyo del Grupo de Medios de Ciencia y Educativos del Instituto Médico Howard Hughes. La AP es la única responsable del contenido.

Pennsylvania budget still in turmoil over school vouchers and equity funding case

The Pennsylvania House of Representatives in session at the state Capitol in Harrisburg. (Photo: AP)

HARRISBURG, Pa. — A court’s ruling earlier this year that the way Pennsylvania funds public schools is unconstitutional helped make education spending one of the thorniest issues in state budget negotiations.

Along with a partisan divide over spending taxpayer money to help students attend private and religious schools, education funding has left the state’s 2023-24 spending plan incomplete.

The state government is approaching a second week without full spending authority, with the final OK on a $45 billion spending plan stymied over a dispute about creating a $100 million program to allocate state subsidies for students in the lowest performing districts to attend private or religious schools.

Complicating matters is the judge’s ruling, which ordered the Legislature and governor to fix the system but with no guidance about how — or how quickly — it should be done.

The budget still in limbo includes about $800 million for public education, significantly less than what Democrats wanted. The state’s poorest districts will split $100 million through a program designed to help them close some of the gap between them and more affluent districts.

“Schools were unconstitutionally underfunded last year, this year, and they will be unconstitutionally underfunded next year,” said Dan Urevick-Ackelsberg, senior attorney for Public Information Law Center, which successfully pursued the school funding case.

Education advocates were hoping to see a significant down payment — about $2 billion — to start addressing the system’s shortcomings, as well as a plan to overhaul how the state funds its schools. The lawyers hoped to see it as planning begins for the next fiscal year.

“We dug a hole for a number of years. It’s going to take us a number of years to dig out,” Urevick-Ackelsberg said.

Some districts are “deeply in the hole, thousands of dollars per pupil short of where they need to be,” and the $100-million split won’t get at the real change needed, said Bruce Baker, a University of Miami education professor who researches public school financing.

In other states with similar court rulings, action has not always been swift. But some states have managed to make sustained investments, said Maura McInerney, legal director for the Education Law Center, which also was involved in the funding lawsuit.

“I think it takes a lot of political will and leadership,” she said. «There is no reason to wait here.”

Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro cautioned it would take time, and said fully funding public schools was a priority. But he also voiced his support behind the Republican-controlled Senate’s school voucher program. And even if the vouchers don’t pass this cycle, the budget still gives increases for private education through a tax credit that largely benefits private schools.

House Republicans described the vouchers as a potential solution to the court’s decision, saying that the court left reform open to a variety of paths.

The voucher would give up to $10,000 to families to use for private school. An eligible student must attend one of the state’s 15% lowest-performing schools, based on standardized test scores, and come from a family that makes under 250% of the federal poverty level, or $75,000 for a family of four.

“Its inclusion as part of this budget would lead to the most ambitious and beneficial school reform measure in decades,» Minority Leader Rep. Bryan Cutler, R-Lancaster, said in a statement. Cutler and House Republicans lost the “fair funding” lawsuit.

Increasing public education funding alone “will leave many Pennsylvania students trapped in failing schools,” Cutler said.

While Shapiro said he would use his line-item veto to kill the voucher program to keep from hitting an impasse last week, he pushed House Democratic leadership to considering alternatives, like vouchers and the tax credit program while working to reach constitutional compliance.

Even with that promise, Senate Republicans have called on Shapiro to sign the budget bill without nixing the program. They’re not without some leverage.

The chamber has adjourned until September, with key pieces of the budget unresolved. There is still legislation needed to direct how the money in the budget can be spent — including for some of Shapiro’s and House Democrats’ priorities.

Drone may have been flying near Pennsylvania jail before homicide suspect’s escape, police say

This booking photo provided by the Warren, Pa., City Police Department shows Michael Burham. Authorities searching for the inmate described by police as “very dangerous” who used bed sheets to escape from a northwestern Pennsylvania jail on Thursday, July 6, 2023, say they believe he is still in the area and have found stockpiles or campsites in the woods he may have been using. Burham was a suspect in a homicide investigation and was being held on $1 million bail on kidnapping, burglary and other charges, authorities said. (Photo: AP/Warren City Police Department)

WARREN, Pa. — Authorities are seeking information about a drone that may have been flying near a northwestern Pennsylvania jail before the escape of a homicide suspect last week, and they say they have increasing concerns that the escaped prisoner may be armed.

Michael Burham, 34, fled the Warren County Prison late Thursday by climbing on exercise equipment to gain access to the roof and then used a rope fashioned from jail bedding to get down, authorities said. Prior to his escape, Burham had been held on $1 million bail and was facing numerous charges, including kidnapping and burglary.

Lt. Col. George Bivens of the Pennsylvania State Police told reporters Wednesday afternoon that the drone was heard by a couple of people — although he didn’t know whether it was seen — “immediately adjacent to the jail” just before the escape. Surveillance video did not capture any drone, he said.

“I’m not a big believer in coincidences,» he said. «There could be a perfectly innocent and reasonable explanation. … If there’s not an innocent explanation, perhaps that assists us in finding him and also finding anyone providing aid.»

Bivens also said recent information has made him increasingly worried that Burham is armed. He did not give further details.

Prosecutors in Chautauqua County, New York say Burham is the prime suspect in the May 11 killing of Kala Hodgkin, 34, and a related arson in Jamestown, New York. He’s also accused of having abducted an elderly couple in Pennsylvania while trying to evade capture before his arrest in South Carolina, and Warren police consider him “very dangerous.”

State police say more than 200 state, federal and local law enforcement officers are involved in the manhunt and reward money in the case now totals $19,500. Police have said they believe Burham is still in the area more than five days after his escape, having found campsites and small stockpiles they believe are associated with him. Investigators have also said they believe he is getting help from someone and have vowed to prosecute anyone who aids him.

Warren County commissioners, meanwhile, vowed Wednesday to make security upgrades and reevaluate procedures.

Commissioners say the law requires inmates to be provided with time in the jail yard, a room with a cage on the top floor, and inmates are taken there in shifts. While there, they are on camera monitored by staff, but “the amount of time that he got out of that roof was quicker than anybody could respond to to get inside the room,” Commissioner Jeff Eggleston said Wednesday. Whether such monitoring was effective security was “absolutely” under review, he said.

“Everything associated with the yard, and the people inside, and how they’re observed is going to be reviewed and potentially changed,” he said. The exercise equipment is being replaced with equipment “that doesn’t provide access to higher elevations,” commissioners said in a statement, and officials were also going to review prisoner access to materials, such as the sheets used to make a rope, once the criminal investigation is completed, Eggleston said.

“Every element of their life in the jail is being evaluated and we’ll potentially change policy,” he said. Commissioners had already agreed to allocate money to increase security on the rooftop complex so that “no one’s ever going to even think to try to climb out of there ever again.”

The commission’s vice chair, Benjamin Kafferlin, said the county’s “rigorous internal investigation” would include a review of “every second” of video surveillance and interviews with people both inside or outside the jail.

“We’re not on a witch hunt, but we are going to seek justice, including if that means with our employees,” he said.

Warren County Sheriff Brian Zeybell has said the response by police and guards “couldn’t have been any quicker,” and in fact he believes “Burham saw red and blue lights within two minutes of leaving that jail.”

Police have said Burham taught himself survival skills and had military reserve training, and the large search area includes difficult terrain and cabins, oil and gas sheds, and shacks affording a fugitive a place to hide. Bivens said 500 tips have come in since the manhunt began.

In September 2014 in Pennsylvania, a manhunt of more than a month and a half ensued after a gunman killed a state trooper and permanently disabled another in an ambush outside the Blooming Grove barracks. Eric Frein, of Canadensis, also described as a self-taught survivalist, was captured after a 48-day search. He was convicted and sentenced to death, though Pennsylvania has a moratorium on executions.

After the deadly July 1996 Olympic park bombing in Atlanta, Eric Robert Rudolph hid in the mountains of western North Carolina for more than five years, apparently living off the land and using survival skills he learned as a soldier. Authorities also suspected the serial bomber had help from sympathizers or others during that time. Rudolph, who also was charged in a deadly blast at an Alabama abortion clinic, was caught in 2003 after being seen scavenging for food near a grocery store trash bin in Murphy, North Carolina. He was sentenced to life in prison.

Editorial Roundup: Pennsylvnia

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Philadelphia Daily News/Inquirer. July 9, 2023

Editorial: High marks for Gov. Shapiro’s first state budget even as GOP lawmakers fail to learn their lesson

As Republicans engaged in culture war tactics to please their base, the governor and Democrats focused on ensuring quality education, ample economic opportunity, and dependable public safety.

Gov. Josh Shapiro’s first state budget may not fulfill every Pennsylvanian’s wish list, but the $45.5 billion plan represents serious progress for the Keystone State, with significant increases in funding for public education, an extension to a home repair and weatherization program, and finally weaning the Pennsylvania State Police off of its reliance on transportation funding.

Shapiro also demonstrated a willingness to sacrifice his own priorities in the service of what’s best for the commonwealth. State Republicans could learn from his example.

Initially, the governor forged a deal with Senate Republicans. In exchange for their support for a $567 million increase in money for schools through the state basic education funding formula, Shapiro backed a new $100 million program to establish Lifeline Scholarships — essentially vouchers that would allow lower-income families in underperforming school districts to opt for private schooling. K-12 students would get $5,000, high school students would get $10,000, and special-needs students, regardless of age, would receive $15,000.

Given the one-vote Democratic majority in the state House, which includes members who have in the past strongly supported school choice, Shapiro had legitimate reason to believe that the program could pass in both chambers. House Democrats, however, balked at the potential threat to public education. In the end, Shapiro promised to line-item veto his own proposal to avert a showdown.

While this move has upset Republicans eager to achieve a long-standing priority, it was the right call for the state. Given the way voucher programs elsewhere have drained critical support away from public education while failing to produce improved test scores, launching a large voucher program as part of the budget process was never a good idea.

Even with a relatively small outlay, such a big change to the way Pennsylvania educates its children requires a more significant public debate before proceeding. House Democrats were right to use their newfound power to push back.

Rather than raging at the governor, Harrisburg Republicans need to recognize a new reality: Their party no longer dominates the General Assembly. They also should remember it was their ongoing prioritization of culture war issues over delivering for Pennsylvanians that cost them control of the House.

Yet, judging from GOP lawmakers’ approach to higher education funding and thecombative confirmation process forcabinet nominees, they remain committed to this approach.

For generations, Pennsylvania’s state-affiliated universities — Temple University, Lincoln University, the University of Pittsburgh, and Pennsylvania State University — have provided a quality college education at a reasonable price for residents. Thanks to a meltdown from Pennsylvania House Republicans, that promise was jeopardized.

Republicans wanted to end fetal research and medical support for transgender people. According to Inquirer reporting, a vendetta against Pitt Chancellor Emeritus Mark Nordenberg for helping to enact the state’s first non-gerrymandered legislative map animated some Republican votes as well.

Without state funding, the universities would need to significantly increase in-state tuition. This would force students to either defer attendance or take on more student debt, just because of political posturing in Harrisburg. Whatever the motivation, this stunt was ill-advised — Pennsylvania’s students and families deserve better.

While their House colleagues picked fights with college students, Senate Republicans embarrassed themselves with their decision to deny a successful confirmation vote to Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt, acting Health Secretary Debra Bogen, and other cabinet nominees.

Schmidt, himself a Republican, is uniquely suited to the job. For roughly a decade, he served as one of three City Commissioners, responsible for administering Philadelphia’s elections. His track record in that role was impressive. Schmidt used his position to make more election data publicly available, pursued workplace reforms, and helped launch the first departmental website. Schmidt’s office also helped clean up local elections. It was a referral from his office that led to the conviction of former U.S. Rep. Ozzie Myers for election fraud.

He also stood up against former President Donald Trump’s attempts to suppress Philadelphia’s votes and steal Pennsylvania’s electors. For that, the mild-mannered reformer became a bogeyman for the far-right. Former Trump attorneyLinda Kerns blasted Schmidt’s nomination, and State Sen. Doug Mastriano, the party’s failed nominee for governor who marched on the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, voted against him in committee.

While Schmidt was confirmed by default — after Republicans avoided a full Senate vote on the nomination, likely to prevent recrimination from Trump — Bogen, who helped lead Allegheny County through the COVID-19 pandemic, saw her nomination withdrawn after Republicans on the Health and Human Services Committee opted to deny her a favorable recommendation.

Bogen, who is eminently qualified for the position, acted prudently and recommended the same public health policies as other county, state, and federal health officials. Yet for some Harrisburg Republicans, trying to protect Pennsylvanians from the pandemic disqualified her for the job.

There’s a pattern in these Harrisburg GOP maneuvers. Each represents an attempt to placate the party base rather than an attempt to improve the lives of all.

This is the exact style of culture war politics that voters resoundingly rejected in the 2022 election. If Pennsylvanians wanted a state government that is obsessed with persecuting trans people, relitigating the 2020 election, second-guessing the commonwealth’s pandemic response, and drawing legislative districts that are favorable to incumbents, they would have voted for Mastriano. Instead, he lost by roughly 800,000 votes.

Meanwhile, despite their disagreement over Lifeline Scholarships, House Democrats and Shapiro kept their focus where it mattered most: ensuring quality education, ample economic opportunity, and dependable public safety in every corner of the commonwealth.

Imagine how the state would benefit if Harrisburg Republicans did the same.

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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. July 8, 2023

Editorial: Move transit tax options forward

Bills recently introduced in the General Assembly would potentially boost transit in the state’s most populous counties, including Allegheny and Philadelphia, by giving them local tax options to improve or expand their transit systems. Local revenue options for transit projects include taxes on income, alcohol, rental cars, and real-estate sales.

Allegheny and Philadelphia-area counties would decide which, of up to three additional, taxes to approve — or whether to use any of them at all. This flexible and sorely needed plan, now in the House Local Government Committee, should move forward immediately.

No city or state can become first-class without a first-class transit system. Systems in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia need to get better, as those regions will absorb most of the state’s additional 2.5 million people expected over the next two decades. Under the current funding system, however, significant improvements are difficult, if not impossible. Without the authority to raise more local money, large counties can’t secure federal grants that require local-funding matches.

As a result, Pennsylvania is losing millions of dollars from federal infrastructure and other grant programs. Transit systems in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh need upgrades and expansions, not only to improve service for people without vehicles or other transportation options, but also to attract more so-called choice riders, who use transit for convenience, lower stress, and other reasons.

Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald has been a long-time proponent of giving counties more ways to raise money locally. Further property tax increases would be an unfair and unsustainable way to do it.

Owing to transit’s broad social, environmental, and economic benefits, local tax option bills in the House, sponsored by Philadelphia Democrat Joe Hohenstein, should get bi-partisan support. In 2019, a House Transportation Infrastructure Task Force, headed by Republican Martina White of Philadelphia, recommended them in an overview of Pennsylvania’s transportation systems and funding.

Mr. Hohenstein has also pointed out the vital role the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority played, following the recent collapse of an overpass on Interstate 95 in Northeast Philadelphia.

Transit is essential to support the independence of seniors and people with disabilities, as well as poor and working-class people who don’t have access to reliable vehicles to get to work and elsewhere.

Pennsylvania’s future depends largely on healthy and robust transit systems. The future of those system depends on local funding options unlocked by a House plan that should move ahead immediately.

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Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. July 6, 2023

Editorial: Is leaving Pa. the way to find lower taxes and cost of living?

Commonwealth Foundation poll shows a lot of Pennsylvanians are considering relocation.

Tell us something we didn’t know.

Pennsylvania has been aware of its changing demographics for years. Decades, actually.

Pennsylvania lost one of its seats in the U.S. House of Representatives after the 2020 census, bringing the number of Keystone State lawmakers down to just 17. The state lost a seat after the 2010 count, too, just like 2000.

The good news was the bleeding slowed to just one every 10 years. The six prior censuses had taken away two or three congressional districts. You have to go back to 1920 to see a year in which Pennsylvania didn’t lose a seat — and to 1910 to see any gained.

It isn’t that Pennsylvania is losing people, per se. The population is growing — just not in that age group and not as fast as other places. Census numbers show Pennsylvania’s population rose about 300,000 people, or about 2.4%, between 2010 and 2020, topping 13 million.

But nationally, the population grew 7.4%, meaning Pennsylvania just isn’t growing at the same rate as America overall. That means other states are growing faster.

The Commonwealth Foundation poll of 800 registered voters showed that 42.25% considered moving. The reasons? Taxes and the cost of living primarily, but other issues noted show a grab bag of political motivations.

Pennsylvania has been a powerhouse state for the economy and politics. It contains the universities that drive innovation and education, the manufacturing that can push growth, a considerable amount of the financial sector and is a massive contributor to the energy industry. The state is a transportation linchpin for moving goods. Politically, you aren’t wrong to say that as Pennsylvania votes, so goes the nation.

The bottom line and the voting record require people to be here and stay here to contribute. With more people looking to leave, that’s the continuation of a troubling trend.

But is the survey telling us what we need to know? Or do we need more than a list of grievances?

People looking for greener pastures need more data about what they are hoping to find elsewhere and what the reality would look like when they get there. They also need to know that sometimes it’s better to fix up the house where you live than it is to pack up and move.

There is overlap sometimes between states that are seeing growth and those that have lower cost of living, but not always. Among those growing fastest are Florida, Idaho and Montana. Montana is 15th for low cost of living, with Idaho 17th and Florida 36th, according to U.S. News and World Report. Pennsylvania is 28th.

The states with the lowest tax burdens are Alaska, Delaware and New Hampshire — all on the high side of cost of living. Pennsylvania is 30th in tax burden, according to financial services website WalletHub, although the state does tip the scales dramatically in some areas, like gas tax.

Pennsylvania has a lot to improve. We need more jobs and better jobs with the kind of paychecks that make supporting a family and owning a home more than a pipe dream. But the numbers don’t say that’s more likely to happen elsewhere.

We just need more Pennsylvanians willing to do the work of making the state where they live into the home of their dreams.

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Scranton Times-Tribune. July 10, 2023

Editorial: Clock ticks on legal pot sales

Fully legalized marijuana sales began June 30 in Maryland. Through July 4, according to the Maryland Cannabis Administration, consumers purchased $10.4 million worth of medicinal and recreational pot — more than 2.5 times the amount of medicinal marijuana they bought over the same weekend in 2022.

In New Jersey, recreational pot sales began April 1, 2022. By Dec. 31, consumers had purchased $329 million worth of recreational pot plus $226 million worth of medicinal marijuana. New York projected total pot sales of $663 million this year, the first to include recreational pot.

In June, Forbes estimated that the national legal marijuana market was worth $45 billion.

Those numbers will make it more difficult for Pennsylvania lawmakers to hold out on fully legalizing marijuana. The situation is similar to the early 2000s, when many lawmakers opposed casino gambling but rolled over to ensure the state government’s share of the vigorish. Pennsylvania now draws more government revenue from gambling than any other state.

Two senators from opposite ends of the state and the political spectrum, Republican Dan Laughlin of Erie and Democrat Sharif Street of Philadelphia, have introduced a bill to legalize general retail marijuana sales.

Citing markets in neighboring states, Laughlin said “…we have a duty to Pennsylvania taxpayers to legalize adult-use marijuana to avoid losing out on hundreds of millions of dollars of new tax revenue and thousands of new jobs.”

Street, citing the disproportionate impact of pot law enforcement on poor and minority communities, said “legalizing the use of adult cannabis will help us fully and equitably fund education, lower property taxes and address a variety of community needs ….”

The economic and social justice benefits of legalized pot use do not mean that it is problem-free. But the bill addresses safety issues.

It would make 21 the minimum purchase age, ensure police authority to prosecute pot-impaired drivers, ban marketing toward children, address workplace drug-testing, and more.

Given the pervasive regional and national pot markets, the senators are right that Pennsylvania cannot remain an island of prohibition.

Legalization has broad public support. Lawmakers finally should pull the trigger on it while including the strongest possible safety measures.

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Wilkes-Barre Citizens’ Voice. July 8, 2023

Editorial: Mass murder template for gun reforms

Republican state lawmakers who have tried to impeach Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner as their scapegoat for gun violence, while refusing to consider gun safety laws, meet Kimbrady Carriker.

Police charged Carriker Wednesday with murdering five people in his southwest Philadelphia neighborhood and wounding four others Monday night.

Carriker is a poster child for several of the proposed gun safety laws that Republican majorities repeatedly have deposited in the state Capitol’s dumpster.

He used “ghost guns” for his alleged rampage. Such weapons are sold in pieces. Unlike fully assembled weapons, they do not include serial numbers and are not subject to background checks. Police say Carriker’s weapons were an AR-15-style semiautomatic rifle and a handgun, both assembled from kits

“If he would’ve dropped that weapon and got away, we would’ve had no way to trace that weapon back to him,” Philadelphia Deputy Police Commissioner Frank Vanore said.

Yet the Legislature will not outlaw ghost guns, require background checks to buy them, or even require registered serial numbers so that they can be traced. Philadelphia police recovered 575 ghost guns during criminal investigations in 2022.

Carriker also was deeply troubled. He had posted on social media that “evil spirits” were following him. His neighbors told police that he had been agitated in the days before the rampage, shouting biblical passages at all hours of the day and night. And a relative said he had taken to wearing body armor and other tactical equipment, which he also wore during his alleged murder spree.

Yet the Legislature will not approve a “red flag” law, under which relatives or police may remove weapons from a person whom a court, after an evaluation and hearing, deems to be danger to himself or others.

The latest tragedy probably won’t make any difference in Harrisburg — where lawmakers also won’t allow cities to adopt their own gun safety laws — because, you know, Krasner. But at least Da’Juan Brown, 15; Lashyd Merritt, 21; Ralph Moralis, 59; Dymir Stanton, 29; and Joseph Wamah Jr., 31; the murder victims, won’t have to worry about it.

END

Cerca de 22 millones de hispanos son aficionados a los videojuegos en EE. UU., dice reporte

Jóvenes juegan videojuegos próximos a estrenarse. Imagen de archivo. (Foto: EFE/David Maung)

Cerca de 22 millones de hispanos son aficionados a los videojuegos en Estados Unidos, un pasatiempo que practican frecuentemente 65 % de las personas en el país y jugadores de todos los grupos demográficos, incluidos el género, la raza, el origen étnico y la edad, encontró la encuesta anual de la Entertainment Software Association (ESA).

El reporte reveló que los videojuegos son uno de los pasatiempos más populares en EE. UU., con 212,6 millones de personas que los practican cada semana. Los hispanos representan el 10 % de estos jugadores, lo que representa el mayor porcentaje dentro de los grupos minoritarios.

Casi dos tercios de los adultos estadounidenses juegan videojuegos con regularidad. Entre los menores de 18 años el porcentaje salta al 76 %.

En todas las edades, 46 % de los jugadores son mujeres, 53 % son hombres y aproximadamente 1 % de los 4.000 encuestados se identificaron de otra manera o eligieron no identificarse.

El jugador promedio tiene 32 años y ha jugado videojuegos durante 21 años.

Una cuarta parte (26 %) de los jugadores estadounidenses tienen menos de 18 años, el 35 % tienen entre 18 y 34 años, el 14 % tienen entre 35 y 44, el 11 % tienen entre 45 y 54 y el 14 % tiene 55 años o más.

Stanley Pierre-Louis, presidente y director ejecutivo de ESA (que reúne a las principales firmas de la industria de los videojuegos), destacó en un comunicado que los videojuegos “siguen siendo un pilar en los hogares estadounidenses” y que los resultados del sondeo demuestran que este pasatiempo “no solo nos conecta, sino también mejora nuestra sensación de bienestar”.

Por ejemplo, el 80 % de los jugadores de videojuegos juegan con otros y el 71 % dicen que los juegos crean entornos acogedores e inclusivos.

La gran mayoría de los jugadores (88 %) están de acuerdo en que los videojuegos ayudan a expandir sus círculos sociales, y el 82 % dicen que pueden presentar a las personas nuevos amigos y nuevas relaciones.

El 76 % de los padres estadounidenses juegan videojuegos con sus hijos, y la mitad (50 %) de los jugadores han conocido a un buen amigo, cónyuge o pareja a través de los juegos.

El 87% de los jugadores dicen que los videojuegos crean experiencias accesibles para personas con diferentes capacidades físicas.

Elon Musk lanza xAI, una nueva empresa de inteligencia artificial

El multimillonario empresario Elon Musk. (Foto: EFE/MICHEL EULER/Archivo

El multimillonario empresario Elon Musk anunció este miércoles la puesta en marcha de xAI, una nueva compañía de inteligencia artificial cuyo propósito, asegura, será «comprender la verdadera naturaleza del universo».

Según la web de la firma, el proyecto estará liderado por el propio Musk y cuenta con un equipo de una decena de personas que han trabajado en empresas como DeepMind, OpenAI, Google Research, Microsoft Research o Tesla.

La compañía tiene previsto organizar una conferencia a través de Twitter este viernes en la que los interesados podrán conocer al equipo y hacerles preguntas y está buscando ingenieros e investigadores para unirse a su plantilla, según señala en su web.

Musk ha alertado en los últimos meses de los peligros que plantea la inteligencia artificial y el pasado marzo pidió junto a otros empresarios e investigadores la suspensión durante seis meses de los sistemas «más poderosos que GPT-4», el último modelo lanzado por OpenAI.

Sin embargo, en abril ya había adelantado que estaba preparando su propio proyecto de inteligencia artificial como una alternativa a los sistemas desarrollados por Google u OpenAI, aliada de Microsoft, a los que criticaba por estar «siendo entrenados para ser políticamente correctos».

«El peligro de entrenar a la IA para ser «woke» -en otras palabras, para mentir- es mortal», ha llegado a escribir en Twitter.

Según dijo entonces en una entrevista con Fox News, su iniciativa busca ser una «tercera opción» y confía en que, aunque «llega tarde» a la carrera, su proyecto «haga más bien que mal».

Musk es cofundador de OpenAI, fue uno de sus primeros inversores y llegó a ser copresidente. No obstante, en 2018 se convirtió en una sociedad limitada (LP, por sus siglas en inglés) y Musk dejó su directiva.

Desde que la empresa sacó al mercado su popular ChatGPT, Musk ha defendido que sin sus inversiones iniciales OpenAI no existiría, pero también ha criticado en numerosas ocasiones el trabajo hecho por la compañía.

La senda dorada

Banco Central de los Estados Unidos. (Foto: Archivo)

Las últimas cifras sobre creación de empleo en junio en Estados Unidos revelaron una desaceleración, pero todavía desafiantes de la efectividad de los diez aumentos consecutivos de la tasa de interés, aprobados hasta ahora por el banco central para controlar la inflación. La semana pasada el Departamento de Trabajo informó que en junio fueron creados 209,000 nuevos empleos, menos que la cifra revisada de 306,000 creados en mayo, a pesar del aumento de la tasa de interés a más de 5 por ciento, el nivel más alto en 15 años. La tasa de desempleo descendió desde 3.7 por ciento en mayo a 3.6 por ciento en junio. El cuidado de la salud con 41,000 nuevos empleos, el gobierno con 60,000, y la construcción con 23,000, fueron los sectores que crearon más puestos de trabajo en junio, mientras que el comercio al menudeo perdió 11,200.

También en junio, el salario promedio por hora aumentó 0.4 por ciento y 4.7 por ciento desde el año pasado, todavía debajo de la tasa de 5 por ciento del índice básico de precios al consumidor, el cual excluye alimentos y combustibles y aún está lejos del objetivo de 2 por ciento del banco central.

El índice de precios al consumidor para junio será el último disponible antes de la próxima reunión del Comité de Mercado Abierto del banco central, calendarizada para el 25 y 26 de julio. Si, como se espera, el Comité aprueba otro aumento en la tasa de interés, eso puede indicar una desviación de lo que el presidente del banco de la Reserva Federal de Chicago Austam Goolsbee llama “la senda dorada:” bajar la inflación sin causar una recesión (The New York Times 07|08|23).

The golden path

Banco Central de los Estados Unidos. (Foto: Archivo)

The latest employment creation figures for June in the United States revealed a slowdown, but still challenging the effectiveness of the ten consecutive interest rate increases approved thus far by the central bank to control inflation. The Labor Department informed last week 209,000 new jobs were created in June, less than the revised 306,000 created in May, despite interest hikes to over 5 percent, the highest level in 15 years. The unemployment rate decreased from 3.7 percent in May to 3.6 percent in June. Healthcare with 41,000 new jobs, government with 60,000, and construction with 23,000, were the sectors which created more new jobs in June, while retail lost 11,200.

Also in June, average hourly earnings increased 0.4 percent and 4.7 percent from a year earlier, still below the rate of 5 percent in the core consumer price index, which excludes food and fuels and remains far from the central bank’s 2 percent objective.

The Consumer Price Index for June will be the last available before the next meeting of the central bank Open Market Committee, scheduled for July 25-26. If, as expected, the Committee approves another interest rate increase, it may indicate deviating from what the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Austan Goolsbee calls “the golden path,” to get inflation down without causing a recession (The New York Times 07|08|23).