Possible fates US soldier Travis King may be facing in North Korea after fleeing across border

From being used as a propaganda tool to being propped up as a potential bargaining chip, the guesses about North Korea’s next steps vary widely given there’s little precedent for King’s situation, experts and former diplomats say.

 

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Gretchen Whitmer’s ‘Governor Barbie’ social media campaign hailed by Democrats: ‘Empowering,’ ‘very sharp’

As the “Barbie” movie hits theaters this weekend, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s office seized on buzz surrounding the movie to launch their own, “Governor Barbie,” drawing praise from Democrats and grumbles from critics.

Senior aides to Whitmer reportedly came up with the idea to fashion a Barbie doll after their boss, putting out a series of photos of the hot pink-clad doll signing legislation, giving speeches, and driving around the country touting how she is “getting things done for all Michiganders.”

Whitmer told The New York Times she thought the idea was “hilarious” when staff first suggested it. “When they showed me the first iteration, I thought it was absolutely hilarious,” she said. “This Barbie is going to be signing legislation! She’s going to be leading!” 

Fellow Democrats seemed to love the social media strategy as well and heaped praise on the governor for the “sharp” and “empowering” campaign.

WHITMER AMENDS MI CIVIL RIGHTS ACT TO PROTECT ABORTION SEEKERS IN WORKPLACE

MSNBC host and former White House press secretary Jen Psaki called Whitmer’s doll a “Cool and empowering Barbie.”

The Lincoln Project’s Rick Wilson praised the “sharp” social media campaign. 

“Oh, this is a very sharp social media play right with the zeitgeist. Well done!” he tweeted.

Democratic strategist and former Hillary Clinton aide Jennifer Palmieri said the photos embodied how “role models matter.”

“Role models matter! Gov Whitmer grew up watching her lawyer-mom, Sherry, wear fuchsia blazers to court shouting “fuchsia is my power color!” Love to see all of this,” Palmieri praised.

Planned Parenthood of Michigan used the Democrat’s campaign to applaud her commitment to “reproductive rights and gender equity.”

MICHIGAN GOV. GRETCHEN WHITMER SIGNS PACKAGE OF BILLS EXPANDING VOTER RIGHTS IN THE STATE

“We love a Governor in PINK! Especially ours, because Big Gretch knows that reproductive rights and gender equity are essential components to a thriving economy filled with opportunity for everyone,” the account tweeted.

Charlotte Clymer, a transgender activist formerly with the Human Rights Campaign, praised the move, writing, “I love this so much!!! Looks like a leader.”

A Democratic pollster told the Times the move was a “slam dunk” which would make an impact with the younger generation.

“The TikTok generation are receptive to these kinds of things,” Celinda Lake told the outlet.

However, some Twitter users complained the campaign was “cringe” and a waste of taxpayer dollars.

“Next time you hit a pothole and have to buy new tires or pay your DTE bill, remember a portion of your taxes went to a staffer making Barbie videos all day,” one critic tweeted.

Whitmer defended the social media campaign to the Times.

“There will be people who don’t get it, and that’s fine. We’re going to have fun. We’re going to continue to be fierce and feminine in our fuchsia,” she said in the report.

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US Corporate Debt Defaults In 2023 Surpass Last Year’s Total: Moody’s

US Corporate Debt Defaults In 2023 Surpass Last Year’s Total: Moody’s

Authored by Bryan Jung via The Epoch Times,

The total amount of corporate debt defaults in the United States this year have already exceeded the amount seen in 2022.

Experts have been warning of a wave of defaults to hit the economy for some time due to higher borrowing rates.

At least fifty-five American-based companies defaulted on their loans in the first half of 2023, according to data from Moody’s Investors Services.

That is a 53 percent increase from the total number of defaults last year, when just 36 companies said they would fail to repay their debt obligations to lenders.

Moody’s blamed higher borrowing costs and tight lending standards for adding pressure on companies reliant on credit. In May alone, there were 16 corporate debt defaults worldwide, up from 12 in April.

Company Defaults on the Rise as Borrowers Unable to Repay Lenders

Economic uncertainty and higher interest rates have made it more difficult for borrowers to refinance existing loans or mature their debt, and has them with few options because they lack the cash to repay their creditors.

The aggressive monetary-tightening policies of the Federal Reserve have been a major factor in pushing many companies into default by making it harder to pay back their loans.

The spike in interest rates and the growing number of banks unwilling to issue new loans in the wake of the regional bank crisis this spring has exacerbated the situation.

Firms unable to repay their creditors are prevented from restructuring and forced to file for bankruptcy.

“Banks are battening down the hatches, hogging their bailout money instead of lending it out,” said Pete St. Onge, a Heritage Foundation economist, in a recent podcast.

“That credit crunch means not only do we get bankruptcies like in any recession, on top of that, we get a lending wall that cuts off even the healthy businesses. Of course, their jobs go down with them.”

Although the Fed paused rate hikes at its last policy meeting in June, policymakers are expected to raise rates again this month in their efforts to bring down inflation to the central bank’s inflation target of 2 percent.

All of these factors have tightened financial conditions across the board, raising the risk of recession, said Moody’s.

Loans Harder to Get Since Recent Bank Crisis

“Capital is much more expensive now,” Mohsin Meghji, chairman of the restructuring advisory firm M3 Partners, told CNBC on June 24.

“Look at the cost of debt. You could reasonably get debt financing for 4 percent to 6 percent at any point on average over the last 15 years. Now that cost of debt has gone up to 9 percent to 13 percent,” he said.

Mr. Meghji said that while his firm had been busy since the fourth quarter dealing with troubled companies, he expected that even financially stable firms would start having issues refinancing due to high interest rates.

Meanwhile, Bank of America warned in May that a tougher credit environment combined with a full-blown recession could result in nearly a $1 trillion in corporate debt defaults.

Total loan defaults in the United States could rise to 11.3 percent in a credit crunch, just below the all-time-high of 12 percent seen during the Great Recession, according to Deutsche Bank.

Mark Hootnick, a partner and co-head of capital transformation and debt advisory at Solomon Partners, told CNBC that it was a safe bet there would be additional defaults this year.

“We’ve been in an environment of incredibly lax credit, where, frankly, companies that shouldn’t be tapping the debt markets have been able to do so without limitations” until now, explained Mr. Hootnick.

Corporate Defaults Likely to Hit All-Time Record

Moody’s analysts noted that the five sectors with the most defaults in 2023 were business services, health care and pharmaceuticals, retail, telecommunications, and the hospitality sector.

U.S. corporate debt defaults account for the most of the total defaults worldwide this year, with 81 firms in total failing to make payments on their debts in the first half of 2023.

The annual global default rate jumped 3.8 percent in June, up from the 2.8 percent in December 2022.

Moody’s expects global corporate defaults to continue to rise, possibly hitting 4.7 percent at the end of the year.

The report’s worst-case scenario puts the global default rate at 13.7 percent, which the firm said was unlikely, but would surpass the levels of the 2008 financial crisis.

The corporate default rate is projected to climb to as high as 4.5 percent in 2023 from the previous forecast low of 2.5 percent, according to a separate Fitch Ratings report.

The report said its projections reflected “tighter lending conditions and capital access resulting from stress in the banking sector and inflation uncertainty.”

There were 340 bankruptcy filings by July of this year, not far behind the total of 374 in 2022, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

Standard & Poor’s reported more than 230 bankruptcy filings through April of this year, the highest rate for that period since 2010.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/21/2023 – 10:30

 

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YG, Tyga and Saweetie tour 2023: Dates, schedule, ticket info

YG, Tyga and Saweetie are teaming up for a tour this this fall.

 

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Former Knicks first rounder tricked into $36K tab before draft night

We’ve heard of rookie hazing before, but what Richard Jefferson and a band of NBA players did to Channing Frye the night before the Knicks drafted him eighth overall is just wrong.

 

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Ryanair passengers faint on 100-degree plane from hell stranded on tarmac: video

A TikTok video from influencer Marco Ferrero shows the chaos on board as sweat-soaked passengers scrambled for relief on the AC-less jet.

 

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NJ bus monitor was on cellphone as 6-year-old special needs student was strangled by own seatbelt: authorities

A New Jersey school bus monitor has been charged with manslaughter in the death of a 6-year-old special-needs student who was strangled to death by her wheelchair harness – as the woman was allegedly on her cellphone.

 

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California Science Center begins complex process to vertically display NASA’s Space Shuttle Endeavour

A highly technical process began Thursday in Los Angeles to put NASA’s retired Space Shuttle Endeavour on permanent display in the vertical launch position complete with external tank and two solid rocket boosters.

Workers used a crane to hoist the bottom segments of the boosters into the California Science Center’s future Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center, which is currently under construction in Exposition Park.

The segments, called aft skirts, had to be precisely positioned so that the entire assembly can be stacked properly. Officials say it will be the first time the procedure has been done outside of a NASA facility.

MEET THE AMERICAN WHO WROTE THE MOON-LANDING SOFTWARE: MARGARET HAMILTON, COMPUTER WHIZ AND MOM

The 20-story-tall display will stand atop an 1,800-ton concrete slab supported by six so-called base isolators to protect Endeavour from earthquakes.

Endeavour was built as a replacement for the destroyed Space Shuttle Challenger and flew 25 missions between 1992 and 2011.

When NASA’s shuttles were retired, Endeavour was flown to California atop NASA’s special Boeing 747 shuttle carrier in 2012, drawing crowds as it flew over locations in the state associated with the space program.

After landing at Los Angeles International Airport, the shuttle was placed on a special trailer and then created a sensation as it was inched through tight city streets to the California Science Center over several days.

JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE DETECTS MOST DISTANT ACTIVE SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLE EVER SEEN

A groundbreaking ceremony for the Air and Space Center was held last year on the 11th anniversary of Endeavour’s final return from space.

Dec. 31 will be the last chance to see Endeavour as it has been displayed — horizontally in the landing position — for years since arrival at the California Science Center.

The shuttle will be moved across Exposition Park and lifted by a crane to be intricately mated to the external tank. Construction of the Air and Space Center will be completed around the full shuttle stack.

The center’s foundation has raised nearly $350 million of the $400 million goal for the project.

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Rutgers continues streak of USWNT World Cup representation

A familiar face popped up on screen as USWNT goalkeeper Casey Murphy waited to begin a Zoom interview with NJ Advance Media from her hotel room in New Zealand on Friday afternoon.

 

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Mega MAGA Squeeze: Trump-Linked SPAC Soars After SEC Settlement

Mega MAGA Squeeze: Trump-Linked SPAC Soars After SEC Settlement

Digital World Acquisition Corp (DWAC) – the SPAC working to bring Donald Trump’s ‘Truth Social’ media venture public, has exploded over 70% higher this morning in its biggest rally since November after the SEC said it settled fraud charges against the SPAC.

The SEC said late Thursday that DWAC will pay an $18 million fine if it completes the deal with Trump Media & Technology Group.

As The Wall Street Journal reports, the SEC alleged that DWAC misled investors who participated in its $287 million initial public offering in 2021.

DWAC told IPO investors that it didn’t have discussions with a merger target prior to raising money.

But DWAC officers had extensive merger discussions with Trump’s company, Trump Media & Technology Group, the SEC said.

DWAC first disclosed the likely settlement in early July, when the SEC hadn’t yet approved the deal.

When the headlines dropped last night, we had a feeling…

DWAC: latest mega squeeze

— zerohedge (@zerohedge) July 20, 2023

With the short-interest ratio notably high…

And sure enough, DWAC is up over 70%…

The resolution clears one obstacle to DWAC’s merger with Trump Media & Technology, which would become a public company if the deal is completed.

DWAC and Trump Media have until September to finish their deal, or the SPAC will have to return the millions it raised to investors.

credittrader
Fri, 07/21/2023 – 10:16

 

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