Categories
Home Based Business

Brett Favre testifies amid his alleged misuse of Mississippi welfare funds. [Video]

Since I retired from football, I have engaged in various business enterprises and endorsed products I believe in. And with my wonderful wife, Deanna, I helped many charities in my home state and elsewhere. Throughout my career, there were many highs and many lows. Those lows helped me find out who I really am. They taught me to persevere, overcome challenges, and succeed. But the challenges my family and I have faced over the last three years as certain government officials in Mississippi fail t

Categories
Home Based Business

FAMU postpones upcoming home game against Alabama A&M because of threat of Helene [Video]

YOUR FORECAST COMING UP. WERE HEARING FROM SOME COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES WHICH ONES WILL CLOSE AND STAY OPEN AS TROPICAL STORM HELENE HAS NOW FORMED FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITYS TALLAHASSEE CAMPUS WILL CLOSE TOMORROW, AND IT WILL STAY CLOSED THROUGH SUNDAY. AS OF NOW, THERE ARE NO OPERATIONAL CHANGES FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA CAMPUS IN GAINESVILLE. FLORIDA A&M IS CANCELING CLASSES FROM TODAY THROUGH FRIDAY. THE HOME FOOTBALL GAME FOR FAMU AND PARENTS AND FAMILY WEEKEND WILL BE RESCHEDULED AT USF CLASSES AND NORMAL BUSINESS OPERATIONS WILL CONTINUE AS SCHEDULED. BUT THAT COULD CHANGE ALSO, UCF HAS ALSO NOT ANNOUNCED ANY SCHEDULE CHANGES AS SOON AS ANY OF THESE CHANGE. WE OF COURSE, WILL UPDATE YOU AND STAY UP TO DATE ON THE TROPICS BY DOWNLOADING OUR APP. IT IS CONSTANTLY UPDATED WITH THE LATEST ADVISORIES. IT HAS EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR YOUR HURRICANE KIT AS WELL. WE WILL SEND PUSH ALERTS AND CUT INTO PROGRAMING WH

Categories
Home Based Business

Brett Favre to appear before U.S. House panel looking at welfare misspending [Video]

Retired NFL quarterback Brett Favre revealed on Tuesday that he was recently diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease.Favre made the admission while speaking before a House Ways and Means Committee hearing in Washington, D.C. The Republican-led congressional committee is examining how states are falling short on using welfare to help families in need. Favre has repaid just over $1 million in speaking fees funded by a welfare program in Mississippi. Favre said the scandal has hurt his name and hurt him financially, as well.”Sadly, I also lost investment in a company I believed was developing a breakthrough concussion drug I thought would help others, and Im sure you’ll understand why its too late for me, because Ive recently been diagnosed with Parkinsons,” Favre said. “This is also a cause dear to my heart. Recently, the doctor running the company pleaded guilty to taking TANF money for his own use.”What causes Parkinson’s disease is unknown, and it is unclear if Favre’s disease is connected to his football career or head injuries. He said in 2022 that he estimates he experienced thousands of concussions in his two decades in the NFL.House Republicans have said a Mississippi welfare misspending scandal involving Favre and others points to the need for serious reform in the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. Mississippi has ranked among the poorest states in the U.S. for decades, but only a fraction of its federal welfare money has been going to families. Instead, the Mississippi Department of Human Services allowed well-connected people to waste tens of millions of welfare dollars from 2016 to 2019, according to Mississippi Auditor Shad White and state and federal prosecutors.Favre is not facing any criminal charges, but he is among more than three dozen defendants in a civil lawsuit the state filed in 2022. The suit demands repayment of money that was misspent through TANF.White, a Republican, said in 2020 that Favre had improperly received $1.1 million in speaking fees from a nonprofit organization that spent welfare with approval from the state Department of Human Services. White said Favre did not show up for the speeches. Although Favre repaid the $1.1 million, he still owes nearly $730,000 in interest, White said.The TANF money was to go toward a volleyball arena at the University of Southern Mississippi. Favre agreed to lead fundraising efforts for the facility at his alma mater, where his daughter started playing on the volleyball team in 2017.A nonprofit group called the Mississippi Community Education Center made two payments of welfare money to Favre Enterprises, the athletes business: $500,000 in December 2017 and $600,000 in June 2018.Court records show that on Dec. 27, 2017, Favre texted the center’s director, Nancy New: Nancy Santa came today and dropped some money off (two smiling emojis) thank you my goodness thank you.Yes he did, New responded. He felt you had been pretty good this year!New pleaded guilty in April 2022 to charges of misspending welfare money, as did her son Zachary New, who helped run the nonprofit. They await sentencing and have agreed to testify against others.Favre said he didnt know the payments he received came from welfare funds and noted his charity had provided millions of dollars to poor kids in his home state of Mississippi and Wisconsin, where he played most of his career with the Green Bay Packers.

Categories
Home Based Business

This is Our Home: Shoreham, Vermont [Video]

WE’RE HEADING WE’RE HEADING TO SHOREHAM, VERMONT IN TODAY’S THIS IS OUR HOME. WHERE WE’RE TAKING YOU ON A RIDE – LITERALLY TRAVELING BETWEEN HISTORY. THE END OF SEPTEMBER MEANS ONE THING ON THIS NARROW NEAR THE SOUTH END OF LAKE CHAMPLAIN. SOON – THE FORT TICONDEROGA FERRY WILL DOCK FOR THE LAST TIME OF THE SEASON AT LARRABEE POINT IN SHOREHAM, VERMONT. FROM MAY TO OCTOBER…A CAR RIDE FROM SHOREHAM, VERMONT TO FORT TICONDEROGA, NEW YORK TURNS THE TYPICAL ONE HOUR TRIP INTO JUST 8 MINUTES VIA THE FERRY. 10;10;45;13 THE FORT TI FERRY HAS BEEN RUNNING SINCE 1759. IT TEMPORARILY SHUT DOWN A FEW YEARS BACK… UNTIL JACK DOYLE, WHO’S CALLED SHOREHAM HOME FOR OVER 20 YEARS, TOOK OVER THE COMPANY. 00;00;55;24 THE BARGE RUNS ON TWO FORMER SKI LIFT CABLES THAT KEEP THE BOAT FROM GIVING IN TO THE STRONG NORTH- SOUTH CURRENT. BRINING ABOUT 10 THOUSAND VEHICLES BACK AND FORTH BETWEEN THE TWO HISTORIC DOCKS EVERY SEASON. AND JACK SAYS IT TAKES A VILLAGE. CORA WAAG SAYS THE SAME THING ABOUT HER FAMILY’S RESTAURANT BUSINESS, THE HALFWAY HOUSE, FURTHER NORTH IN TOWN. 11;11;32;18 CORA’S OWN FAMILY HAS CALLED SHOREHAM HOME FOR FIVE GENERATIONS AND SERVES HER NEIGHBORS WHO KEEP COMING BACK TO THESE VERY BOOTHS TIME AND TIME AGAIN. 11;14;21;05 A COMMUNITY WHER

Categories
Home Based Business

Israeli strikes cause deadliest day in Lebanon in nearly 2 decades. Heres what we know [Video]

Israel launched an intense barrage of airstrikes across swathes of Lebanon on Monday in what was the deadliest day for the country since at least the 2006 war fought between Israel and the powerful Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah.Terror and despair gripped Lebanese residents as Israeli bombs killed more than 500 people, including dozens of children and wounded more than 1,800 others, authorities said, as residents fled their homes desperate to reach safety.Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country is changing the balance of power on its northern front as its military said it struck 1,600 Hezbollah assets across Lebanon on Monday and has not ruled out the possibility of a ground invasion.Several countries have warned the strikes increase the risk of a wider regional war and have called for urgent international pressure to de-escalate the situation. Despite the scale and intensity of Mondays strikes, neither side is calling the current escalation a war.Heres what we know.What happened?On Monday, Israel intensified its air campaign on Hezbollah, launching extensive strikes targeting the Iran-backed militant group in Lebanon. It marked the deadliest day of Israeli strikes in Lebanon since the 2006 war and hit multiple parts of the country, mainly in the southern and eastern parts of the country near Lebanons border with Syria and where the militant group has a strong presence.Women, children and medics were among those killed and wounded, Lebanons health ministry said Monday. It is unclear how many of the casualties were civilians or Hezbollah militants, but many of the locations described by Israel as Hezbollah targets are also residential neighborhoods and villages.Israel said that among the Hezbollah targets were cruise missiles that had a reach of hundreds of kilometers, rockets, and explosive warheads, according to military spokesperson Daniel Hagari, who claimed the munitions were stored in civilian homes.Residents began to flee their homes after their phones began pinging with text messages from Israel and calls from unknown numbers urging them to evacuate immediately. A popular Lebanese radio station said it was hacked and its broadcast interrupted by an Israeli evacuation warning. The Israeli military warned civilians to leave areas in which Hezbollah operates, such as those used to store weapons.Residents said they had little time to flee to safety before the bombing started. One resident in the southern city of Tyre on the coast of Lebanon said he heard Israeli warplanes raining bombs near his home from 5 a.m. local time on Monday.Classes in schools and universities were canceled across the country and some flights to and from Beirut were suspended. Many schools were closed to be used as shelters for those seeking refuge.On Tuesday, Hezbollah said it fired multiple rocket barrages into northern Israel, targeting the Ramat David airbase, Meggido airfield, and the Amos base, all located in the vicinity of the town of Afula in northern Israel.Later Tuesday, Hezbollah said it fired rockets at the northern city of Kiryat Shmona. The Israeli military said it intercepted most of the 50 projectiles but that some had damaged buildings in the area. Israeli police said the attack caused several fires but no injuries.Meanwhile, the Israeli cabinet declared a special situation across the country, giving it the power to impose restrictions on civilian life including limits on public gatherings, an Israeli official told CNN.Were civilians targeted?Israel said it was targeting Hezbollah infrastructure, but video shows destruction of residential areas and the large death toll reflects the scale and intensity of the strikes.The nearly 500 killed on Monday alone is roughly half the number of Lebanese killed throughout the entire 34-day war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006.Israeli warplanes were also seen flying over different parts of the country late afternoon, including over Mount Lebanon where Hezbollah does not have a notable presence.Lebanons representative to the United Nations General Assembly said there was a mass exodus of people fleeing. One Lebanese NGO said more than 100,000 people had been displaced.Residents described seeing buildings collapse and towns being emptied, while images and video show roads blocked by heavy traffic in both directions as people try to flee. Reuters video from the southern suburbs of Beirut showed debris from damaged buildings and shards of glass littering the ground.We have nowhere to go, we have nothing, Mohamed Hamayda, a Syrian man displaced from Deir al-Zahrani, told Agence France-Presse news agency.Lebanons Health Minister Dr. Firass Abiad said convoys of vehicles evacuating people from areas under fire had been targeted, as had two ambulances, a fire truck and a medical center. Two first responders were killed, he added.The Israeli military said it was trying to mitigate the harm to Lebanese civilians as much as possible, Hagari said. Netanyahu accused Hezbollah of long using civilians as human shields while aiming rockets at Israeli citizens.Why is Israel attacking Lebanon?Hezbollah and Israel have been in conflict for decades but the two have ramped up their cross-border attacks on each other since last October, when Israels war in Gaza began following the Palestinian militant group Hamas deadly Oct. 7 attack on Israel.Hezbollah is part of a Tehran-led alliance spanning Yemen, Syria, Gaza, and Iraq that has attacked Israel and its allies since the war with Hamas began. The group has said it will continue striking Israeli targets as long as the war in Gaza goes on.The increasing escalations have once again brought the region to the edge of an all-out war.Last week, Hezbollah one of the most powerful paramilitary forces in the region was left reeling after a deadly twin attack by Israel, when pagers and walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah members simultaneously exploded across the country. The attack was followed by an Israeli strike on a building in a densely populated southern Beirut, which killed at least 45 people including a top commander and other senior operatives, as well as women and children.The following days saw some of the most intense exchanges of fire between Israel and Hezbollah in almost a year of war in Gaza, as the Lebanese militant group fired projectiles deeper into Israeli territory than has previously been seen and Israel fired hundreds of projectiles into southern Lebanon.It came as Israel made a new war objective to return displaced residents to their homes near the northern border after being evacuated due to Hezbollah attacks.On Monday, Netanyahu said Israel was changing the security balance of power in the north, and separately told the security cabinet the countrys aim in Lebanon is to cut Hezbollah from the war with Hamas, an Israeli official told CNN.Though weakened militarily and its secretive lines of communication exposed, Hezbollahs second-in-command has declared a new chapter in the confrontations which he called a battle without limits.Are Lebanon and Israel at war?While the airstrikes, attacks and rhetoric from both Israel and Hezbollah suggest they are in open conflict, neither side is calling the current escalation a war.The head of Israels military Herzi Halevi said it is preparing for the next phases and Netanyahu in a televised speech told the people of Lebanon that his country is not at war with them, but with Hezbollah.Iran has warned Israel of dangerous consequences following the strikes, with Irans president telling CNN on Monday that it risks tipping the region into wider conflict.There is a renewed effort from the international community to de-escalate the situation. Qatar, one of the key mediators in talks between Israel and Hamas, said the region is on the brink of the abyss and France has requested an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council to address the strikes.Former US Defense Secretary and ex-CIA chief Leon Panetta told CNN the situation has crossed a threshold and warned that were clearly walking into a much wider war.World leaders will be gathering in New York for the UN General Assembly this week and there are feverish efforts behind the scenes to convince Israel not to escalate further and launch a ground incursion into Lebanon.Though the United States is Israels closest ally and biggest weapons supplier, a senior State Department official said the U.S. and its partners are attempting to find a diplomatic solution.The U.S. believes that neither Israel nor Hezbollah are interested in a full-scale war, but a major concern is that Iran, a key backer of Hezbollah, will get involved, U.S. officials told CNN.