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Dr. Fauci will walk away with the largest federal retirement package ever, $350K per year

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If Dr. Anthony Fauci ever decides to call it quits, the White House chief medical adviser will walk away with a golden parachute worth up to $350,000 per year — the largest federal retirement package ever, according to a report by Forbes.

The eye-popping amount reportedly does not include annual cost-of-living increases to Fauci’s pension and benefits.

Fauci, who turned 81 on Christmas Eve, has worked for the government for 55 years and was paid $434,312 in 2020, making him the highest-compensated federal employee.

That amount represented a 4 percent bump on Fauci’s 2019 salary of $417,608, according to federalpay.org.

Fauci, who has headed up the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 1984, got a huge salary boost — deemed a “permanent pay adjustment” — during the George W. Bush administration for his biodefense work. 

He went from making a $200,000 salary in 2004 to $335,000 in 2007, a 68 percent increase.

Federal employees who worked as long as Fauci can earn “80 percent of [their] high-3 average salary, plus credit for [their] sick leave” when they retire, Forbes said, citing the U.S. Office of Personnel Management.

Fauci’s 2021 salary has yet to be published, and Forbes said it had filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit in November for the pay information.

Forbes used the last three available years of Fauci’s salary — he also made $399,625 in 2018 — to calculate his potential retirement benefits. 

“If he’d left federal service at the end of FY2020, figuring 80 [percent] of his highest three-year average, would mean a federal pension of $333,745 a year, plus cost-of-living increases (($1,251,545/3) x 80% = $333,745),” Forbes estimated.

Fauci also is likely eligible to receive an annuity payment that applies to federal employees who serve more than 10 years. That would amount to an additional $8,344 per year.

The Forbes report noted that Fauci’s 2021 and 2022 salaries will likely be the same as or even higher than his 2020 salary, potentially boosting his base retirement pay to around $347,500 a year.

Fauci told ABC News’ Jonathan Karl on “This Week” Dec. 19 that he has no plans to retire anytime soon.

“There’s no way I’m going to walk away from this until we get this under control. I mean, that’s the purpose of what we do. That’s — that’s our mission in life. In the middle of it, I’m not going to walk away​,” he said.

“You know, we’re in a war, Jon. It’s kind of like we’re halfway through World War II, and you decide, ‘Well, I think I’ve had enough of this. I’m walking away​,’” Fauci continued. ​”You can’t do that. You’ve got to finish it, and we’re going to finish this and get back to normal.”

Myanmar military is reverting to strategy of massacres as a weapon war

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When the young farmhand returned to his village in Myanmar, he found the still smoldering corpses in a circle in a burned-out hut, some with their limbs tied.

The Myanmar military had stormed Done Taw at 11 a.m. on Dec. 7, he told the AP, with about 50 soldiers hunting people on foot. The farmhand and other villagers fled to the forest and fields, but 10 were captured and killed, including five teenagers, with one only 14, he said. A photo taken by his friend shows the charred remains of a victim lying face down, holding his head up, suggesting he was burned alive.

“I am very upset, it is unacceptable,” said the 19-year-old, who like others interviewed by the AP asked to remain anonymous for fear of reprisal.

The carnage at Done Taw is just one of the most recent signs that the Myanmar military is reverting to a strategy of massacres as a weapon of war, according to an AP investigation based on interviews with 40 witnesses, social media, satellite imagery and data on deaths.

The massacres and scorched-earth tactics — such as the razing of entire villages — represent the latest escalation in the military’s violence against both civilians and the growing opposition. Since the military seized power in February, it has cracked down ever more brutallyabducting young men and boyskilling health care workers and torturing prisoners.

The massacres and burnings also signal a return to practices that the military has long used against ethnic minorities such as the Muslim Rohingya, thousands of whom were killed in 2017. The military is now accused of killing at least 35 civilians on Christmas Eve in Mo So village in an eastern region home to the Karenni minority. A witness told the AP that many of the bodies of the men, women and children were burned beyond recognition.

But this time, the military is also using the same methods against people and villages of its own Buddhist Bamar ethnic majority. The focus of most of the latest killings has been in the northwest, including in a Bamar heartland where support for the opposition is strong.

More than 80 people have died in killings of three or more in the Sagaing region alone since August, according to data from the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, or AAPP, a group that monitors verified arrests and deaths in Myanmar. These include the deaths of those in Done Taw, five people in Gaung Kwal village on Dec. 12 and nine in Kalay township on Dec. 23, part of a trend that has made Sagaing the deadliest region in Myanmar.

The military is also reprising a hallmark tactic of destroying entire villages where there may be support for the opposition. Satellite imagery the AP obtained from Maxar Technologies shows that more than 580 buildings have been burned in the northwestern town of Thantlang alone since September.

The violence appears to be a response to the local resistance forces springing up across the country, but the military is wiping out civilians in the process. In Done Taw, for example, the military moved in after a convoy hit a roadside bomb nearby, but the people killed were not part of any resistance, another villager told the AP.

“They were just normal workers on the betel-leaf plantation,” the 48-year-old welder said. “They hid because they were afraid.”

As fresh soldiers have flowed into Chin state, residents have reported troops putting down protests with live rounds and brutal beatings. A teacher in the town of Mindat said many fled early on, but she was determined not to be forced out.

Then the military fired artillery into the town so the “houses would shake like an earthquake,” she said. Her cousin, a member of the PDF, was killed by a sniper and his body boobytrapped, the teacher said.

That evening, villagers tried to move the body from a distance with a stick. The body blew up.

“We didn’t get back a body,” she said. “Instead we had to collect pieces.”

She fled to neighboring India in October.

A half-day’s drive west from Mindat lies Matupi, a town with two military camps that is now bereft of its young people, according to a college student who fled with her two teenage brothers in October. She said the military had locked people into houses and set them alight, hid bombs in churches and schools, killed three protest leaders she knew and left bodies in the middle of roads to terrorize people.

Yet the resistance has spread, she said.

“People are scared of the military, but they want democracy and they are fighting for democracy,” she said from India, where she now lives. “They are screaming for democracy.”

Hong Kong police charged two men from pro-democracy news outlet with sedition

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According to AP, Hong Kong police on Thursday formally charged two people from an online pro-democracy news outlet with sedition, a day after the outlet said it would cease operations following a police raid on its office and seven arrests.

National security police said they charged two men, aged 34 and 52, with one count each of conspiracy to publish a seditious publication but did not identify them.

According to local media reports, the two are Chung Pui-kuen and Patrick Lam, who were editors at Stand News, an online pro-democracy news outlet.

Police also said they would prosecute the company for sedition.

Chung and Lam were being taken to West Kowloon court on Thursday, police said in a statement.

The other arrestees have been detained for further questioning. Apart from Chung and Lam, four other former Stand News board members, including singer Denise Ho and former lawmaker Margaret Ng, were arrested on Wednesday. Ho was released from police custody on Thursday afternoon.

Chan Pui-man, a former editor at the pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper and Chung’s wife, was also arrested.

The seven were arrested under a crime ordinance that dates from Hong Kong’s days as a British colony before 1997, when it was returned to China. Those convicted could face up to two years in prison and a fine of up to 5,000 Hong Kong dollars ($640).

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said at a news conference Thursday that the arrests were not targeted at the media.

“Journalism is not sedition, but seditious acts and activities and inciting other people through other acts and activities could not be condoned under the guise of news reporting,” she said.

“It should be very clear what is reporting of news, and what is seditious acts or activities to undermine national security.”

Her comments came after U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken called on Hong Kong authorities to release the detainees.

“Freedom of expression, including media freedom, and access to information provided by an independent media are critical to prosperous and secure societies. These freedoms enabled Hong Kong to flourish as a global center for finance, trade, education, and culture,” Blinken said in a statement.

“By silencing independent media, (Chinese) and local authorities undermine Hong Kong’s credibility and viability. A confident government that is unafraid of the truth embraces a free press.”

The United States has also sanctioned five Hong Kong-based Chinese officials following legislative council elections in the city earlier this month for reducing Hong Kong’s autonomy and freedoms.

Michigan paid an estimated $8.5 billion in fraudulent jobless claims from 2020

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The state of Michigan paid up to $8.5 billion in fraudulent unemployment assistance claims during the pandemic, a new audit has found.

The report prepared by Deloitte & Touche LLP uncovered that Michigan’s Unemployment Insurance Agency paid an estimated $8.4 billion to $8.51 billion in potentially fraudulent claims from March 1, 2020, to Sept. 30, 2021.

But the report also found the losses could have been much worse, as the state avoided paying an estimated $43.7 billion in fraudulent claims in that same time period.

“It’s extremely disheartening that bad actors have defrauded the much-needed benefits intended for hard-working Michiganders and the scale of their actions is stunning,” Julia Dale, Michigan’s UIA director, said in a statement, according to The Detroit News. “We have been successful over the past year in limiting the percentage of cases that are fraudulent to less than 1 percent, but we will never stop fighting for our workers.”

State-level unemployment offices dealt with unprecedented levels of new claims during the COVID-19 pandemic. This new pressure left many agencies exposed to fraudsters, according to state and federal officials.

The omicron variant makes the New Year’s holiday hard for millions of Americans

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Cases of omicron are surging. The seven-day average is 240,408, a 60% increase over last week. Although the percentage of cases that require hospitalization or cause death remain relatively low, the sheer infectiousness of the disease means many people will suffer.

“This virus has proven its ability to adapt quickly and we must adapt with it,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said at a White House briefing on Wednesday.

Even in Florida, a state that has tried to go full steam ahead through much of the pandemic, the Miami Hurricanes had to pull out of a football game and a production of the Nutcracker was canceled.

For the second year in a row, Susan Patterson was forced to shut down the “First Night” festival in Saranac Lake, N.Y., that she helps organize.

“We had a couple hundred people who would usually go,” she said, noting that winters in her region of that state’s north are long and social gatherings are important.

Patterson, who lives alone, said organizing the festival is also an important part of her winter — a way of connecting and celebrating.

Asked what she’ll do now on New Year’s Eve, she shook her head and laughed ruefully. “I don’t know. Nothing.”

Meanwhile, for people who choose to gather and celebrate despite the rise in omicron cases, public health officials are urging caution.

People who are vaccinated and have had their booster shots are most safe. Wearing high-quality masks and maintaining social distance whenever possible can also help lower risk. At a briefing this week, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul also urged people to gather outside if weather allows.

China’s Xi’an lockdown hits world’s biggest chipmakers

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Two of the world’s biggest chipmakers are warning that Covid-19 outbreaks and stringent lockdowns in a major Chinese industrial hub are hampering their operations.

According to CNN, Samsung and Micron said this week that they’ve had to adjust operations in the northwestern city of Xi’an, which is experiencing one of China’s worst community outbreaks of the coronavirus pandemic. Authorities have responded by enacting sweeping measures with an intensity and on a scale rarely seen since Wuhan, the pandemic’s original epicenter.

Any slowdown in output from the city risks worsening the global chip shortage, an ongoing crisis that has limited the supply of everything from iPhones to new cars.

Samsung said Wednesday that it had to “temporarily adjust operations” in Xi’an. The South Korean giant added that protecting its workers in the city remains its “top priority,” and that it plans to take “all necessary measures, including leveraging our global manufacturing network, to ensure that our customers are not affected.”

Samsung has invested more than $10 billion in Xi’an, and employs more than 3,300 people there. According to the Korea Economic Daily, output in the city accounts for over 40% of Samsung’s total global production of NAND memory chips, a product found in smartphones, tablets and hard drives.

Samsung declined to comment when asked by CNN Business for more information about how production in the city was being affected.

American chipmaker Micron also said Wednesday that Xi’an’s lockdown could impact the production of its DRAM memory chips, which are used in computers, as the company has had to reduce its workforce at the site.Micron added that it is tapping its “global supply chain, including our subcontractor partners,” to meet customer demand, but warned that “there may be some near-term delays as we activate our network.”

Big Hit Music denies Jungkook’s dating rumors

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After actress Lee Yoo Bi’s label responded to their dating rumors, on December 27th, Big Hit Music has also denied Jungkook’s dating rumors. The dating rumors, in fact, were initially from a YouTube video by the very YouTuber V has personally addressed suing about a week ago. 

On December 23rd, this YouTuber posted a video on his channel alleging Jungkook and Lee Yoo Bi are dating with “receipts” that he gathered online. 

Big Hit Music has said it is taking action over posts “that exceed the reasonable and accepted boundaries of expression and personal commentary”, saying the company routinely monitors social media and message boards for posts about its artists that contained “ill-intentioned criticism, the spreading of groundless information and personal attacks”.

[Video] Cops kick out mom and child from NYC restaurant

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A video posted on social media shows a mother and her child being kicked out of a Queens Applebee’s by a contingent of NYPD cops.

The officers from the NYPD’s Strategic Response Group can be seen surrounding the table during a protest at the Queens Centre Mall on Dec 15.

“Unless you have vaccination cards, you have to exit the restaurant,” an officer could be heard saying in the video.

The child appears upset and covers his face as the officers attempt to defuse the situation.

Others in the restaurant heckle the NYPD officers as they ask the group to leave.

“Scaring a child. Traumatizing a child. Hope you feel good about yourself, NYPD,” one protester yells.

“If you leave voluntarily, you will not have charges pressed against you. Otherwise, you will be arrested for trespass. This will be your only warning,” he says in the video.

A mother and her child were forced to leave a restaurant, as officers from the NYPD's Strategic Response Group can be seen surrounding the table during a protest at the Queens Centre Mall.
A mother and her child were forced to leave a restaurant, as officers from the NYPD’s Strategic Response Group can be seen surrounding the table during a protest at the Queens Centre Mall.

Atlanta Hawks on pace to finish with one of the best attendance totals in 53-year

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The Atlanta Hawks are on pace to finish the season with one of the best overall attendance totals in the 53-year history of the franchise.

Also, at the current pace of 16,000-plus fans per game, the franchise is on pace to set an attendance mark at State Farm Arena.

The 17,049 fans in attendance for Monday’s game against Chicago was the seventh sellout in 17 home games this year, essentially in the middle of the league average. As of Christmas day, seven NBA teams have sold out every home game this season, including Chicago. The NBA consecutive sellout record currently belongs to the Dallas Mavericks, owned by billionaire businessman Mark Cuban. The Portland Traiblazers set the standard with a streak that lasted from 1977 to 1995.

State Farm Arena is operating at 95% capacity for Hawks games, and this season the franchise has set a record with 10,000 season-ticket holders, said Hawks CEO Steve Koonin.

The team record for overall attendance is 690,150, set during the 2015-16 season at the old Philips Arena, according to Statista.com. The Hawks attendance record at State Farm Arena is 628,440, set in the 2018-19 season. It was the first year the team played at State Farm after a roughly $200 million makeover to the venue. The Hawks drew 628,440 fans that year.

The Hawks are experiencing a nearly 2% uptick in attendance over last season. Overall NBA attendance is down from last year, according to Sports Business Journal. At 16,102 per game, the Hawks are 18th in average attendance among the 30 teams in the league, according to ESPN.com. Chicago is first at 20,874 per game.

Indonesia has lifted a ban on the Boeing’s 737 after deadly crash

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According to Reuters, Indonesia has lifted a ban on the Boeing (BA.N) 737 MAX, its transport ministry said on Tuesday, three years after the crash of one of the aircraft operated by domestic carrier Lion Air with the loss of all 189 people on board.

Aviation authorities around the world grounded the aircraft months later after a similarly deadly accident in March 2019 involving one of the aircraft operated by Ethiopian Airlines.

The approval for the aircraft’s return in Indonesia comes months after it returned to service in the United States and Europe, and follows more recent lifting of grounding orders in countries including Australia, Japan, India, Malaysia, Singapore and Ethiopia.

The lifting of the ban was effective immediately and it follows the evaluation of changes to the aircraft’s system by regulators, the ministry said in a statement.

Airlines must follow airworthiness directives and inspect their planes before they can fly the 737 MAX again, it said, adding that the government would also inspect the planes.

Privately owned Lion Air, which operated 10 of the 737 MAX planes before the ban, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.