Why And How To Use Pad Submission: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

Aus Psychedelic Lab Wiki
Wechseln zu: Navigation, Suche
K
K
Zeile 1: Zeile 1:
By Daphne Psaledakis and Simon Lewis<br> WASHINGTON, May 19 (Reuters) - The United States on Friday announced sanctions on more than 300 targets as Group of Seven leaders met in Japan, aiming to punish Russia for its invasion of Ukraine and intensifying one of the harshest sanctions efforts ever implemented.<br> The move, which targets Russia's sanctions evasion, future energy revenues and military-industrial supply chains, marks the latest sanctions and export controls targeting Moscow, which have already hit thousands of targets and imposed steep curbs on Russia.<br> "Today´s actions will further tighten the vise on (Russian President Vladimir) Putin´s ability to wage his barbaric invasion and will advance our global efforts to cut off Russian attempts to evade sanctions," U.S.<br><br>Treasury Department Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement.<br> Russia's foreign ministry said former U.S. President Barack Obama was among 500 Americans citizens who would be banned in response to the latest round of U.S. sanctions.<br> The ministry also said Russia had refused the latest U.S.<br>request for consular access to [https://www.blogher.com/?s=detained detained] reporter Evan Gershkovich, who faces spying charges.<br> The U.S. and  [https://planet88-slot.izumina.io/ penipu] Europe imposed financial penalties on Russia immediately following the start of the war last year and have steadily ratcheted up the pressure since then, targeting Putin and officials close to him, the [https://www.medcheck-up.com/?s=financial%20sector financial sector] and oligarchs.<br> Experts say Washington could still impose tougher penalties, however - while the sanctions have clearly damaged Russia's economy, they have so far failed to stop Putin from pursuing a war that has killed tens of thousands and turned cities to rubble.<br> U.S.<br><br>Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Friday's action targeted an international network that procures components for the Russia-based entity responsible for the manufacture of the Orlan drone, which Russian forces and their proxies are using in Ukraine.<br> An<br> investigation<br> by Reuters and iStories, a Russian media outlet, in [https://www.ft.com/search?q=collaboration collaboration] with the Royal United Services Institute, a defense think tank in London, last year uncovered a logistical trail that spans the globe and ends at the Orlan's production line, the Special Technology Centre in St.<br><br>Petersburg, Russia.<br> The investigation found that among the most important suppliers to Russia's drone program has been a Hong Kong-based exporter, Asia Pacific Links Ltd, which was targeted by Washington on Friday, as was import company SMT iLogic.<br> [https://edition.cnn.com/search?q=HUNDREDS HUNDREDS] OF TARGETS<br> The Treasury Department said it imposed sanctions on 22 people and 104 entities with touchpoints in over 20 countries or jurisdictions, including companies that import, ship or manufacture electronics components, semiconductors and microelectronics to Russia.<br> As part of its crackdown in recent months on Russia's evasion of sanctions, the Treasury Department designated people and entities in Switzerland, Germany and Liechtenstein on Friday.<br> Among the targets on Friday were Russian intelligence services procurement networks and agents, including in Liechtenstein and the Netherlands.<br><br>The Foreign Intelligence Service of the Russian Federation was also hit with sanctions.<br> Washington has previously warned that the Kremlin has tasked its intelligence services with finding ways to [https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/circumvent%20sanctions circumvent sanctions] to replace equipment lost on the battlefield.<br> The Treasury Department said it was also imposing sanctions on Russia´s energy educational and research institutions in a bid to "limit Russia´s future extractive capabilities" by targeting the training grounds for Russia´s future energy specialists, and sites where new extraction technologies are developed.<br> Additionally, the Treasury implemented a requirement for Americans to report any property in their possession or control in which Russia's Central Bank, National Wealth Fund or Ministry of Finance has an interest.<br> The State Department also designated or blocked property of almost 200 individuals, entities, vessels and aircraft and imposed sanctions on Polyus and the Russian business of its peer, Polymetal - the largest gold producers in Russia.<br><br>[https://www.travelwitheaseblog.com/?s=Polymetal%20declined Polymetal declined] to comment. Polyus did not reply to a request for comment.<br> Subsidiaries of Russia's state-owned nuclear energy company Rosatom were also targeted. Washington has not imposed sanctions on Rosatom itself.<br> The State Department also designated two Iranian shipping companies, a port operator and a maritime service provider it said were part of [https://www.answers.com/search?q=deepening%20ties deepening ties] between Russia and Iran.<br> U.S.<br><br>sanctions authorities were also expanded to more sectors of the Russian economy, including architecture, manufacturing and construction, the Treasury said.<br> The Biden administration also halted the export of wide range of consumer goods to Russia on Friday and added 71 companies to a Commerce Department's list that bars suppliers from selling them U.S.<br><br>technology without a hard-to-obtain license.<br> Dan Fried, a former State Department coordinator for sanctions policy who is now at the Atlantic Council think tank, said Friday's action was a broad and impactful sanctions package, but that further action to escalate could still be taken, including further sanctions on banks and a reduction of the oil price cap.<br> "At first glance, this is a solid list, not a dramatic escalation," Fried said.<br><br>(Reporting by Daphne Psaledakis, Simon Lewis, Arshad Mohammed, Jonathan Landay, Susan Heavey and Doina Chiacu in Washington; Editing by Alistair Bell)<br>
+
Adverts sprouting up around San Francisco are demanding local leaders do more to address the city's ongoing fentanyl epidemic.<br>[https://www.nuwireinvestor.com/?s=Plastered Plastered] throughout the Democratic stronghold's most drug-ridden neighborhoods, the ads are meant to upset - and contain  and statements that criticize officials for 'normalizing our fentanyl crisis.'<br>Pointed slogans intended to lambaste the lukewarm response - which has left citizens to navigate a mess of open-air drug markets and tent encampments - include 'SF enables drug use but not recovery', and the sarcastic 'That's Fentalife'.<br>Others tell fed-up citizens 'it's time to stop normalizing our fentanyl crisis,' and contain QR codes that take viewers to a page where they can send emails to Mayor  Breed and the city's Board of Supervisors.<br>The campaign comes from the relatively new advocacy group TogetherSF Action, which seeks to stoke a more pronounced course of action from Breed and those tasked with [https://www.behance.net/search/projects/?sort=appreciations&time=week&search=creating creating] the Bay Area locale's legislation to address the crisis - which has snuffed out nearly double the lives claimed by COVID-19 in <br>        Adverts sprouting up around San Francisco are now demanding local leaders do more to address the city's ongoing fentanyl epidemic, which local officials have so far failed to address.<br><br>Pictured is a computer generated rendition of some of the scathing ads<br>        Plastered throughout the city's most drug-ridden neighborhoods, the ads are meant to upset - and contain imagery and statements that criticize officials for 'normalizing' the fentanyl crisis<br>'We want people to stop looking the other way.<br><br>We have to confront this problem if we're gonna solve it,' TogetherSF Action Director Kanishka Cheng told The San Francisco Chronicle Tuesday, calling the campaign a wake-up call for the public.<br>'We have to shock people into action to realize this is actually not normal,' he added. 'It's not OK, and we can do better. <br>'The people in distress on our streets deserve better.'<br>Such sentiments were what spurred Cheng and several other like-minded San Franciscans to start the group late last year, following a string of failed experiments from the city's notoriously lenient government.<br>Unsuccessful stints saw civic staffers hand out alcohol and tobacco to homeless and drug-addicted residents in hard-hit neighborhoods such as Tenderloin and SoMa, two of three sites where the procession of posters were put up this week.<br>With this new effort, Cheng and others hope to enflame already existing embers of outrage that have smoldered for the past few years, as a simple stroll through the city's streets continues to incite fear in the hearts of residents.<br>Speaking to the Chronicle, the director - who started TogetherSF Action as offshoot of a nonprofit formed in 2020 - explained how he believes the city's current course of action has actually enabled drug use instead of quelling it.<br>'There's a lot of focus on the [https://www.biggerpockets.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&term=outreach outreach] and overdose prevention side and much less of a focus on converting people into recovery and into treatment,' Cheng said, citing the city's introduction of a meth sobering center nearly a year ago, as well as 350 behavioral health beds over the past several years.<br>        The first phase of the ad campaign started this week with murals  in the Tenderloin and two in SoMa, along with this billboard at 560 Brannan Street bearing a scathing message<br>        The lukewarm response has left citizens to navigate a mess of open-air drug markets and tent encampments - something the city has [https://kscripts.com/?s=refused refused] to outright prohibit<br>        The pointed ads, which sprouted up this week, are strategically situated along some of the city's most problematic corners.<br><br>The provide fed-up citizens with QR codes that take them to a page where they can send emails to city officials<br>        'We want people to stop looking the other way.<br><br>We have to confront this problem if we're gonna solve it,' TogetherSF Action Director Kanishka Cheng said Tuesday,  [https://planet88.izumina.io/ penipu] calling the campaign a wake-up call for the public<br>        Months removed from the pandemic, the city's recovery has still lagged in recent months - with streets as unsafe as they were before and overdoses still rife<br>        With this new effort, Cheng and others hope to enflame already existing embers of outrage that have smoldered for the past few years, as a simple stroll through the city's streets continues to incite fear in the hearts of residents<br>        Called TogetherSF, the advocacy group's presiding nonprofit is also aimed at boosting civic engagement among those disaffected by San Francisco politics, particularly by policies of appeasement seen since the pandemic<br>      'That's really what we're advocating for.<br><br>We want to restore more than a heartbeat — we want to restore people's lives.'<br>Called TogetherSF, the advocacy group's presiding nonprofit is also aimed at boosting civic engagement among those disaffected by San Francisco politics, particularly by policies of appeasement seen under Breed since the pandemic.<br>She and other San Francisco legislators are responsible for policies that have provided beds for roughly 2,550 disenfranchised residents, which send inhabitants back on the streets after they get cleaned up.<br>As these sites continue to eat up crucial taxpayer dollars comprising the city's budget, Cheng and other members want the city to pay for vans to pick up drug users to take them to get treatment - 24 hours a day.<br>Through their recent campaign - which comes on the heels of other adverts slamming San Francisco's lax methods - TogetherSF Action hopes to beseech the city to add more residential drug treatment beds, and offer more drug-free recovery options.<br>At the sobering spots, visitors are regularly given prescription-strength medications, ideally to help wean them off whatever they had been using prior. <br>However, with the continued abundance of vagrants, that strategy has so far [https://www.newsweek.com/search/site/fallen%20flat fallen flat] - an occurrence the group wants to rub in the face of Breed and other officials with the new ads.<br>        Called TogetherSF, the advocacy group's presiding nonprofit is also aimed at boosting civic engagement among those disaffected by San Francisco politics, particularly by policies of appeasement seen since the pandemic<br>        seeks to stoke a more pronounced course of action from Breed and those tasked the Bay Area locale's legislation in addressing the crisis - which has snuffed out nearly double the lives claimed by COVID-19 in that same span.<br>        The pointed, sarcastic slogan intended to lambaste the [https://www.google.com/search?q=lukewarm%20response&btnI=lucky lukewarm response] - which has left citizens to navigate a mess of open-air drug markets and tent encampments - include 'SF enables drug use but not recovery', and the sarcastic 'That's Fentalife'<br>Last year, citizens fed up with the state of their city - more than 70,730 people out of roughly 118,000 citizens - voted to oust woke District Attorney Chesa Boudin, whose anti-incarceration policies have been widely panned as causing the ongoing crisis.<br>He was originally elected on a platform of criminal justice reform, but his progressive laws were  widely blamed for rising crime and homelessness in the Bay Area.<br>He has since been replaced by Brooke Jenkins, 40, who cleaned house after taking her old boss' job, but has also failed to introduce new policies to deter repeat offenders.<br>During Boudin's time in office, [https://imgur.com/hot?q=%27smash-and-grab%27%20robberies 'smash-and-grab' robberies] became commonplace, with thieves brazenly raiding store shelves in broad daylight, only to avoid charges thanks to Boudin's lax policies.<br>Such robberies have forced stores across the city to close down to avoid being victimized in the premeditated - and often coordinated - strikes.<br>Finally local business groups funded the recall campaign against Boudin, accusing him of not doing enough to keep citizens safe and introducing policies that allow repeat offenders to commit crimes without fear of incarceration.<br>But Boudin and his supporters claimed that the recall was a Republican effort designed to undermine his progressive-led reforms, which has led increased crime seen during the pandemic to continue to persist.<br>        The campaign comes from the relatively new advocacy group TogetherSF Action, which seeks to stoke a more pronounced course of action from Mayor London Breed, whose progressive policies have fallen flat in fixing the city's dire situation<br>        Last year, citizens fed up with the state of their city - more than 70,730 people out of roughly 118,000 citizens - voted to oust woke District Attorney Chesa Boudin, whose anti-incarceration policies have been widely panned as causing the ongoing crisis<br>          He has since been replaced by Brooke Jenkins, who also has been unsuccessful in quelling the surge<br><br>'They created an electoral dynamic where we were literally shadowboxing,' Boudin said following the vote.  'This is a Republican- and police union-led playbook to undermine and attack progressive prosecutors who have been winning elections across the country.<br>'The playbook involves delegitimizing and fear-mongering and recalling.<br><br>It's a tactic being used by folks who are increasingly unable to prevail in elections when they put forward their views about public safety and justice.'<br>As for Breed, her office responded to the new assortment of ads Tuesday with a vague statement that seemed somewhat receptive to the demands TogetherSF Action are making.<br>'The underlying asks are generally in line with what the Mayor has already been pursuing to increase police staffing, disrupt open-air drug markets, add more treatment beds, and increase street outreach,' Breed's office said. <br>'These will be a key focus in her upcoming budget.'<br>The mayor will introduce a proposal for those finances in June.<br>

Version vom 17. September 2023, 17:01 Uhr

Adverts sprouting up around San Francisco are demanding local leaders do more to address the city's ongoing fentanyl epidemic.
Plastered throughout the Democratic stronghold's most drug-ridden neighborhoods, the ads are meant to upset - and contain and statements that criticize officials for 'normalizing our fentanyl crisis.'
Pointed slogans intended to lambaste the lukewarm response - which has left citizens to navigate a mess of open-air drug markets and tent encampments - include 'SF enables drug use but not recovery', and the sarcastic 'That's Fentalife'.
Others tell fed-up citizens 'it's time to stop normalizing our fentanyl crisis,' and contain QR codes that take viewers to a page where they can send emails to Mayor Breed and the city's Board of Supervisors.
The campaign comes from the relatively new advocacy group TogetherSF Action, which seeks to stoke a more pronounced course of action from Breed and those tasked with creating the Bay Area locale's legislation to address the crisis - which has snuffed out nearly double the lives claimed by COVID-19 in
Adverts sprouting up around San Francisco are now demanding local leaders do more to address the city's ongoing fentanyl epidemic, which local officials have so far failed to address.

Pictured is a computer generated rendition of some of the scathing ads
Plastered throughout the city's most drug-ridden neighborhoods, the ads are meant to upset - and contain imagery and statements that criticize officials for 'normalizing' the fentanyl crisis
'We want people to stop looking the other way.

We have to confront this problem if we're gonna solve it,' TogetherSF Action Director Kanishka Cheng told The San Francisco Chronicle Tuesday, calling the campaign a wake-up call for the public.
'We have to shock people into action to realize this is actually not normal,' he added. 'It's not OK, and we can do better. 
'The people in distress on our streets deserve better.'
Such sentiments were what spurred Cheng and several other like-minded San Franciscans to start the group late last year, following a string of failed experiments from the city's notoriously lenient government.
Unsuccessful stints saw civic staffers hand out alcohol and tobacco to homeless and drug-addicted residents in hard-hit neighborhoods such as Tenderloin and SoMa, two of three sites where the procession of posters were put up this week.
With this new effort, Cheng and others hope to enflame already existing embers of outrage that have smoldered for the past few years, as a simple stroll through the city's streets continues to incite fear in the hearts of residents.
Speaking to the Chronicle, the director - who started TogetherSF Action as offshoot of a nonprofit formed in 2020 - explained how he believes the city's current course of action has actually enabled drug use instead of quelling it.
'There's a lot of focus on the outreach and overdose prevention side and much less of a focus on converting people into recovery and into treatment,' Cheng said, citing the city's introduction of a meth sobering center nearly a year ago, as well as 350 behavioral health beds over the past several years.
The first phase of the ad campaign started this week with murals  in the Tenderloin and two in SoMa, along with this billboard at 560 Brannan Street bearing a scathing message
The lukewarm response has left citizens to navigate a mess of open-air drug markets and tent encampments - something the city has refused to outright prohibit
The pointed ads, which sprouted up this week, are strategically situated along some of the city's most problematic corners.

The provide fed-up citizens with QR codes that take them to a page where they can send emails to city officials
'We want people to stop looking the other way.

We have to confront this problem if we're gonna solve it,' TogetherSF Action Director Kanishka Cheng said Tuesday, penipu calling the campaign a wake-up call for the public
Months removed from the pandemic, the city's recovery has still lagged in recent months - with streets as unsafe as they were before and overdoses still rife
With this new effort, Cheng and others hope to enflame already existing embers of outrage that have smoldered for the past few years, as a simple stroll through the city's streets continues to incite fear in the hearts of residents
Called TogetherSF, the advocacy group's presiding nonprofit is also aimed at boosting civic engagement among those disaffected by San Francisco politics, particularly by policies of appeasement seen since the pandemic
'That's really what we're advocating for.

We want to restore more than a heartbeat — we want to restore people's lives.'
Called TogetherSF, the advocacy group's presiding nonprofit is also aimed at boosting civic engagement among those disaffected by San Francisco politics, particularly by policies of appeasement seen under Breed since the pandemic.
She and other San Francisco legislators are responsible for policies that have provided beds for roughly 2,550 disenfranchised residents, which send inhabitants back on the streets after they get cleaned up.
As these sites continue to eat up crucial taxpayer dollars comprising the city's budget, Cheng and other members want the city to pay for vans to pick up drug users to take them to get treatment - 24 hours a day.
Through their recent campaign - which comes on the heels of other adverts slamming San Francisco's lax methods - TogetherSF Action hopes to beseech the city to add more residential drug treatment beds, and offer more drug-free recovery options.
At the sobering spots, visitors are regularly given prescription-strength medications, ideally to help wean them off whatever they had been using prior. 
However, with the continued abundance of vagrants, that strategy has so far fallen flat - an occurrence the group wants to rub in the face of Breed and other officials with the new ads.
Called TogetherSF, the advocacy group's presiding nonprofit is also aimed at boosting civic engagement among those disaffected by San Francisco politics, particularly by policies of appeasement seen since the pandemic
seeks to stoke a more pronounced course of action from Breed and those tasked the Bay Area locale's legislation in addressing the crisis - which has snuffed out nearly double the lives claimed by COVID-19 in that same span.
The pointed, sarcastic slogan intended to lambaste the lukewarm response - which has left citizens to navigate a mess of open-air drug markets and tent encampments - include 'SF enables drug use but not recovery', and the sarcastic 'That's Fentalife'
Last year, citizens fed up with the state of their city - more than 70,730 people out of roughly 118,000 citizens - voted to oust woke District Attorney Chesa Boudin, whose anti-incarceration policies have been widely panned as causing the ongoing crisis.
He was originally elected on a platform of criminal justice reform, but his progressive laws were  widely blamed for rising crime and homelessness in the Bay Area.
He has since been replaced by Brooke Jenkins, 40, who cleaned house after taking her old boss' job, but has also failed to introduce new policies to deter repeat offenders.
During Boudin's time in office, 'smash-and-grab' robberies became commonplace, with thieves brazenly raiding store shelves in broad daylight, only to avoid charges thanks to Boudin's lax policies.
Such robberies have forced stores across the city to close down to avoid being victimized in the premeditated - and often coordinated - strikes.
Finally local business groups funded the recall campaign against Boudin, accusing him of not doing enough to keep citizens safe and introducing policies that allow repeat offenders to commit crimes without fear of incarceration.
But Boudin and his supporters claimed that the recall was a Republican effort designed to undermine his progressive-led reforms, which has led increased crime seen during the pandemic to continue to persist.
The campaign comes from the relatively new advocacy group TogetherSF Action, which seeks to stoke a more pronounced course of action from Mayor London Breed, whose progressive policies have fallen flat in fixing the city's dire situation
Last year, citizens fed up with the state of their city - more than 70,730 people out of roughly 118,000 citizens - voted to oust woke District Attorney Chesa Boudin, whose anti-incarceration policies have been widely panned as causing the ongoing crisis
He has since been replaced by Brooke Jenkins, who also has been unsuccessful in quelling the surge

'They created an electoral dynamic where we were literally shadowboxing,' Boudin said following the vote.  'This is a Republican- and police union-led playbook to undermine and attack progressive prosecutors who have been winning elections across the country.
'The playbook involves delegitimizing and fear-mongering and recalling.

It's a tactic being used by folks who are increasingly unable to prevail in elections when they put forward their views about public safety and justice.'
As for Breed, her office responded to the new assortment of ads Tuesday with a vague statement that seemed somewhat receptive to the demands TogetherSF Action are making.
'The underlying asks are generally in line with what the Mayor has already been pursuing to increase police staffing, disrupt open-air drug markets, add more treatment beds, and increase street outreach,' Breed's office said. 
'These will be a key focus in her upcoming budget.'
The mayor will introduce a proposal for those finances in June.