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Get Your Creativity Flowing at the Office With This 3D Printer

TechRepublic par TechRepublic Academy le 10/09/2024 à 13:48:00 - Favoriser ||  Lu/Non lu

Explore the world of 3D printing with the X-Maker, a user-friendly, powerful tool designed to get your creative juices flowing. Now available at TechRepublic Academy.

Bill O'Reilly: Kamala Harris will play blame game during debate

TheHill.com Just In par Leland Vittert le 10/09/2024 à 13:48:00 - Favoriser ||  Lu/Non lu

The ABC News Presidential Debate will air live on NewsNation at 9 p.m. ET, with predebate coverage beginning at 7 p.m.

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With Just Months Left In His Term, SEC Chair Gensler Will Likely Abandon Nearly All Of His ESG Initiatives

ZeroHedge News par Tyler Durden le 10/09/2024 à 13:45:00 - Favoriser ||  Lu/Non lu

With Just Months Left In His Term, SEC Chair Gensler Will Likely Abandon Nearly All Of His ESG Initiatives

In news that should surprise no Zero Hedge readers, SEC Chair Gary Gensler is going to be forced to abandon his idiotic plans for incorporating ESG into public disclosures, according to a new report from Bloomberg Law.

As a reminder, prior to basically all of Wall Street abandoning its love affair with ESG, Gensler pushed for public companies to disclose climate risks, workforce management, and board diversity.

He also proposed rules to curb greenwashing and misleading ESG claims by investment funds.

Now, nearing the likely end of his term,  most major ESG regulations remain unfinished.

With less than five months left in Gensler's tenure, they likely won’t be completed, according to Bloomberg. A conservative backlash against ESG and federal agency power has sparked legal challenges to SEC rules on corporate emissions reporting, weakening the commission's influence.

Tyler Gellasch, who was a counsel to former Democratic SEC Commissioner Kara Stein and is president and CEO of investor advocacy group Healthy Markets Association, told Bloomberg: “It’s clear the commission leadership is exhausted and feeling buffeted by the courts, Congress and industry complaints.” 

Plans for requiring human capital and board diversity disclosures remain unresolved, and final rules on ESG-focused funds are still pending. Even if the SEC adopts them by January, a Republican-controlled Congress and White House could overturn them via the Congressional Review Act.

After a surge of significant rulemaking in 2022 and 2023, the SEC’s activity has slowed in 2024. Bloomberg Law reports that SEC Chair Gary Gensler has fallen behind his predecessors, Jay Clayton and Mary Jo White, in advancing major regulatory matters through open meetings this year.

Susan Dudley, a George Washington University professor who oversaw the White House regulatory policy office under President George W. Bush said about propsed ESG fund rules: “If it’s a Republican Congress and Trump administration, you could imagine they would be willing to disapprove those."

Gensler's policies saw massive pushback during his tenure. 

Bloomberg Law writes that in 2022, Republican attorneys general from states like West Virginia and Louisiana urged the SEC to drop proposed fund regulations after pushing it to abandon climate rules for public companies.

When the SEC adopted a diluted version of the climate rule in March, all 27 Republican-led states either sued or backed the lawsuit with a court brief.

The SEC, under Gensler, has faced significant legal defeats, including the Fifth Circuit’s June ruling striking down hedge fund fee disclosures and the Supreme Court’s decision limiting the agency’s enforcement power. The SEC decided not to challenge the Fifth Circuit ruling, ending its defense of the hedge fund rules.

Alexandra Thornton, of the Center for American Progress, says it's unclear what regulations remain viable after these losses.

We'll venture a guess...none.

Tyler Durden Tue, 09/10/2024 - 07:45

CNN Shared A Glimpse Of Just How Bad Everything Has Become For Ukraine

ZeroHedge News par Tyler Durden le 10/09/2024 à 13:35:00 - Favoriser ||  Lu/Non lu

CNN Shared A Glimpse Of Just How Bad Everything Has Become For Ukraine

Authored by Andrew Korybko via Substack,

The Ukrainian Armed Forces are in the midst of converging crises caused by the failed counteroffensive, the forcible conscription policy, and Zelensky’s Kursk blunder, which are leading to more desertions, defeats, and ultimately more desperation.

CNN carried out a rare act of journalistic service with their detailed report about how “Outgunned and outnumbered, Ukraine’s military is struggling with low morale and desertion”. It candidly describes the numerous problems afflicting the Ukrainian Armed Forces (UAF) at this pivotal moment in the conflict as they continue to occupy part of Kursk but are still losing ground in Donbass. Their story begins by introducing a battalion commander who lost most of the around 800 men under his control.

This figure couldn’t take it anymore and thus transferred to a cushy military administrative job in Kiev. He and the five others who CNN spoke to when researching their report informed them that “desertion and insubordination are becoming a widespread problem, especially among newly recruited soldiers.”

In the words of one commander, “Not all mobilized soldiers are leaving their positions, but the majority are…They either leave their positions, refuse to go into battle, or try to find a way to leave the army.”

The reader is then informed that these troops are forcibly conscripted, thus adding context to why they desert, but they also claimed that morale problems began to infect the armed forces’ ranks during the now-resolved impasse over more American aid to Ukraine. While that likely played a role, CNN conspicuously omits to mention last summer’s failed counteroffensive, which proved that Ukraine is unable to reconquer its lost lands despite all the hype and the aid that it received up until that point.  

Moving along after having clarified the real reason behind the UAF’s plunging morale over the past year, drones have made the battlefield more unbearable than before, and the amount of time between rotations has grown since some troops simply can’t leave their positions without risking their lives. CNN then added that “In just the first four months of 2024, prosecutors launched criminal proceedings against almost 19,000 soldiers who either abandoned their posts or deserted”.

They also acknowledged that “It’s a staggering and – most likely – incomplete number. Several commanders told CNN that many officers would not report desertion and unauthorized absences, hoping instead to convince troops to return voluntarily, without facing punishment. This approach became so common that Ukraine changed the law to decriminalize desertion and absence without leave, if committed for the first time.”

The impending Battle of Pokrovsk, which could be a game-changer for Russia on the Donbass front, risks turning into a total disaster for the UAF since “some commanders estimate there are 10 Russian soldiers to each Ukrainian.” Just as alarming is the claim from one officer that “There have even been cases of troops not disclosing the full battlefield picture to other units out of fear it would make them look bad.” Communication problems are also reportedly rife between Kiev’s varied units there too.

The Kursk front isn’t as bad, but it might not have served its political purpose of boosting morale among the UAF unlike what Zelensky has claimed. CNN quoted some sappers who were unsure of the strategy involved, questioning why they were redeployed from defending Pokrovsk to invade Russia when the Donbass front is experiencing such difficulties as was already reported. The piece then ends with a psychological support expert declaring that he’s no longer going to be emotionally attached to anyone.

Reflecting on CNN’s surprisingly critical report, it’s clear that the UAF is in the midst of converging crises caused by the failed counteroffensive, the forcible conscription policy, and Zelensky’s Kursk blunder, which are leading to more desertions, defeats, and ultimately more desperation. In such circumstances, Ukraine can either stay the course by remaining in Kursk at the expense of losing more ground in Donbass, withdraw from Kursk to help hold Donbass, or asymmetrically escalate.

The first two scenarios are self-explanatory while the last could concern expanding the conflict into other Russian regions, Belarus, and/or Moldova’s breakaway Transnistria region, seriously damaging Russian nuclear power plants out of desperation to provoke a nuclear response, and/or assassinating top Russians. There are only a few months left before the winter impedes combat operations on both sides, after which the status quo will persist until spring, when one or both sides might go on the offensive.

This timeline adds urgency to the impending Battle of Pokrovsk, which Russia wants to win as soon as possible in order to push through the fields beyond, capture more territory, threaten the Kramatorsk-Slavyansk agglomeration from the south, and possibly prepare to make a move on Zaporozhye city from the northeast. If Ukraine can hold out into next year, then it could have more time to build more defenses beyond Pokrovsk, thus reducing the pace of Russia’s advance if it comes out on top there.  

Even if Ukraine holds on for at least several months or perhaps as long as half a year longer there, the problems touched upon in CNN’s piece will likely only exacerbate seeing as how more forcibly conscripted troops will be thrown into what might by then become the next infamous meat grinder. Morale will probably continue plummeting while defections could spike, both of which could combine to cripple the UAF and create an opening for Russia to exploit in Pokrovsk or elsewhere along the front.

The ideal solution for Kiev would be to reach a ceasefire for facilitating its voluntary withdrawal from part of Donbass (ex: Pokrovsk’s surroundings) in parallel with pulling out of Kursk, which are terms that Russia might entertain since they’d advance some of its political and military goals. It’s better for Ukraine from the perspective of its regime’s interests to have an orderly withdrawal than a chaotic one if Russia achieves a breakthrough, but Zelensky and his ilk aren’t known for their rational decisions.

Nevertheless, those like India and Hungary who are want to help politically resolve this conflict could propose something of the sort, perhaps also suggesting the revival of last month’s reported Qatari-mediated partial ceasefire proposal for eschewing attacks against the other’s energy infrastructure. Zelensky is unlikely to agree, especially since he’s under the influence of uber-hawk Yermak, but it would still be best to informally circulate some variant of the aforementioned proposal sooner than later.

Regardless of well-intentioned third parties’ proposals, the conflict appears poised to continue raging into the next year absent a complete military and/or political breakdown in Ukraine, neither of which can be ruled out though considering how bad everything has become per CNN’s latest report. Ukraine and its Anglo-American “deep state” allies could also stage a major provocation aimed at desperately “escalating to de-escalate” on more of their terms, so observers shouldn’t rule that scenario out either.

Tyler Durden Tue, 09/10/2024 - 07:35

Republicans should use a continuing resolution to safeguard America’s voting system

TheHill.com Just In par Kevin Robert and Ryan Walker, opinion contributors le 10/09/2024 à 13:30:00 - Favoriser ||  Lu/Non lu

The way forward should be clear for conservatives: Pass a CR that extends government funding through March, or at least early 2025, and attach the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act (SAVE Act) to that bill.

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