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Peter-Legal-Problems-Navarro Suggests Bragg Should Really Be Charged

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Trump’s former trade adviser Peter Navarro has decided to weigh his former boss’s criminal charges, even though he himself has pending court cases related to Jan. 6.

During a segment of Newsmax’s “Tonight Rob Schmitt,” the host gave a platform to right-wing conspiracy theories by speculating about the “outright hyperpartisans” involved in the case who “hate Donald Trump.” This led Navarro to argue that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg himself should be listed to indict the former president.

“Rob, the broad charge here against President Trump is falsifying information to change the election results,” Navarro said. said guest. “You know, under this definition, Alvin Bragg should be immediately charged with rigging a complaint to change the results of the 2024 election. And if Donald Trump is elected president, it would indeed be sweet justice if Bragg were charged with exactly the crime he should be.”

Navarro can speak: he himself is currently the defendant in two federal cases. One of them focuses on hundreds of encrypted emails he kept after his time in the White House. The Justice Department has been trying to get their hands on them for months on the grounds that they are federal records owned by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA).

Last week, a federal judge demanded that he turn over the emails, but it’s unclear if he complied.

Last summer, he was also charged with contempt of Congress after he refused to obey the committee’s Jan. 6 subpoena. He also tried to dodge it, but the federal judge refused to close the casepaving the way for future litigation.

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4/6: CBS primetime news

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4/6: CBS News Prime Time—CBS News

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John Dickerson reports on a vote to expel Tennessee state lawmakers over gun protests, proposed limits on artificial intelligence, and how the Supreme Court ruled on a transgender athlete ban in West Virginia.

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School Restoration: What can educators learn from high school students?

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It’s no secret that the pandemic has hit many students hard — emotionally, academically, or both. Test score data shows a sharp drop in reading and math skills. Thousands of students “disappeared” among the public school population. And in February, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a report detailing the rise in mental health problems among young people, especially teenage girls and LGBTQ+ teens.

And especially for juniors and seniors whose school experience has been defined by the pandemic, the return to academic demands and routine hasn’t erased the past few years. As these high schoolers end their K-12 careers, one question comes to the fore: Can school districts learn lessons that can help the younger generation that comes after them?

Why did we write this

While everyone hoped that returning the students to the classroom would help, there was no automatic return to normal. What can school systems learn from students graduating from high school due to the pandemic?

Bella Alvarado, a high school student at Hilltop High School in Chula Vista, California, spent the pandemic caring for injured and sick relatives and teaching her younger brother and cousins. Back in class, she notices that students want to work at their own pace and be more selective about what they are learning.

Bella notices that teachers, students and the system have changed.

“There is no such thing as a return to pre-COVID education,” she says. “I firmly believe that nothing will ever be the same.”

Like many generations of students before her, Bella Alvarado, a student at Hilltop High School in Chula Vista, California, is approaching the end of her senior year with mixed feelings.

Proud of your achievements and looking forward to new adventures? yes Ready to say goodbye to childhood and part with friends? Not really.

For Bella, who was looking forward to “being a kid again,” face-to-face learning was mixed: some normal moments and some big differences. It took time to make new friends, adjust a new schedule, and deal with academic expectations despite feeling retarded at first.

Why did we write this

While everyone hoped that returning the students to the classroom would help, there was no automatic return to normal. What can school systems learn from students graduating from high school due to the pandemic?

“Everyone learns at a different pace,” she says. “Everyone perceives things in their own way.”

In general, American education has returned to normal three years after schools switched to distance learning. But especially for juniors and seniors whose school experience has been defined by the pandemic, the return to academic demands and routine has not erased the reality of the past few years.

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Canada repatriates women and children from Syrian camps

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Last October, the RCMP, Canada’s federal police, arrested a 27-year-old Canadian returning from Syria and charged her with terrorism-related offences. Another woman who returned to Canada after marrying an Islamic State militant has also been arrested and released on bail as officials seek peace in her case.

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