Delaware's assisted suicide bill signed into law, making it the 11th state with such a statuteNew Foto - Delaware's assisted suicide bill signed into law, making it the 11th state with such a statute

Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer, a Democrat,signed a billTuesday legalizing physician-assisted suicide for certain terminally ill patients, arguing that the measure is about "compassion, dignity, and respect for personal choice." The End-of-Life Options Act, which takes effect next year, allows mentally capable adults who have been diagnosed with aterminal illnessand given six months or less to live to request a prescription to self-administer and end their lives. "We're acknowledging today that even in the last moments of life, compassion matters," Meyer said at the bill signing. "Every Delawarean should have the right to face their final chapter with peace, dignity and control." New York Assembly Passes Bill To Legalize Assisted Suicide For The Terminally Ill "This signing today is about relieving suffering and giving families the comfort of knowing that their loved one was able to pass on their own terms, without unnecessary pain, and surrounded by the people they love most," he continued. Delaware is now the 11th state to allow medical aid in dying, joining California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Vermont and Washington. Washington, D.C., also permits physician-assisted suicide. Read On The Fox News App "Today, Delaware joins a growing number of states in recognizing that end-of-life decisions belong to patients—not politicians," Meyer said. "This law is about compassion, dignity, and respect. It gives people facing unimaginable suffering the ability to choose peace and comfort, surrounded by those they love. After years of debate, I am proud to sign HB 140 into law." Several other countries, including Canada, Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands, have also legalized so-called death with dignity. TheDelaware Legislaturenarrowly rejected the measure last year, but Meyer pushed for it this session and it passed last month. The governor's signature now ends nearly a decade of debate on the issue. Under the new law, sponsored by Democrat state Rep. Eric Morrison, patients considering assisted suicide in the state must be presented with other options for end-of-life care, including comfort care, palliative care, hospice and pain control. The bill requires two waiting periods and a second medical opinion on a patient's prognoses before they can obtain a prescription for lethal medication. Minnesota Lawmakers Propose Controversial Medically-assisted Suicide Bill State Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend, a Democrat, said the law "is about honoring the autonomy and humanity of those facing unimaginable suffering from terminal illness." "This legislation exists due to the courage of patients, family members, and advocates who have shared deeply personal stories of love, loss and suffering," he said in a statement. Original article source:Delaware's assisted suicide bill signed into law, making it the 11th state with such a statute

Delaware's assisted suicide bill signed into law, making it the 11th state with such a statute

Delaware's assisted suicide bill signed into law, making it the 11th state with such a statute Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer, a Democrat,sign...
Exclusive-Ukraine pitches tougher Russia sanctions plan to EU as US waversNew Foto - Exclusive-Ukraine pitches tougher Russia sanctions plan to EU as US wavers

By Tom Balmforth KYIV (Reuters) - Ukraine will ask the EU next week to consider big new steps to isolate Moscow, including seizing Russian assets and bringing in sanctions for some buyers of Russian oil, as U.S. President Donald Trump has backed off from tightening sanctions. A previously unreported Ukrainian white paper to be presented to the EU calls for the 27-member bloc to take a more aggressive and independent position on sanctions as uncertainty hangs over Washington's future role. Among 40 pages of recommendations were calls to adopt legislation that would speed up the EU's seizure of assets from sanctioned individuals, and send them to Ukraine. Those under sanctions could then seek compensation from Russia. The EU should consider a range of steps to make its sanctions apply more forcefully beyond its own territory, including targeting foreign companies that use its technology to help Russia, and "the introduction of secondary sanctions on purchasers of Russian oil". Such secondary sanctions, which could hit big buyers such as India and China, would be a major step that Europe has so far been reluctant to take. Trump had publicly discussed this before taking the decision not to act for now. The white paper also calls for the EU to consider using more majority-rules decision making over sanctions, to prevent individual member states from blocking measures that otherwise require unanimity. After speaking to Putin on Monday, Trump opted not to impose fresh sanctions on Russia, dashing hopes of European leaders and Kyiv who had been lobbying him for weeks to ratchet up pressure on Moscow. Trump spoke to Ukrainian and European leaders after his call with Putin and told them he didn't want to impose sanctions now and to give time for talks to take place, a person familiar with conversation told Reuters. The EU and Britain imposed additional sanctions against Russia on Tuesday anyway, saying they still hope Washington will join them. But Europeans are openly discussing ways they can maintain pressure on Moscow if Washington is no longer prepared to participate. 'CATALYSE THE EU' Publicly, Ukraine has tried to avoid any hint of criticism of Washington since President Volodymyr Zelenskiy received a dressing down from Trump in the White House in February. The sanctions white paper emphasises the "unprecedented" sanctions imposed by the EU so far and talks up their potential to do more. It also includes a stark assessment of the Trump administration's commitment to coordination efforts so far. "Today, in practice, Washington has ceased participation in nearly all intergovernmental platforms focused on sanctions and export control," it said. Washington had slowed work in the monitoring group for enforcing price caps on Russian oil, dissolved a federal taskforce focused on prosecuting sanctions violations and reassigned a significant number of sanctions experts to other sectors, it added. It noted that two potentially major U.S. sanctions packages had been drawn up - one by the government and another by pro-Trump senator Lindsey Graham - but that it was "uncertain" whether Trump would sign off on either of them. Uncertainty over the U.S. stance had slowed the pace of economic countermeasures and multilateral coordination, but "should not prompt the European Union to ease sanctions pressure", it said. "On the contrary, it should catalyse the EU to assume a leading role in this domain." 'HUGE STRIKE' Ukraine is worried that Washington peeling away from the Western consensus on sanctions could also cause vacillation in the EU, which traditionally requires consensus for major decisions. "American withdrawal from the sanctions regime (would) be a huge strike on the unity of the EU. Huge," a senior Ukrainian government official told Reuters. The EU cannot fully replace the heft of the United States in applying economic pressure on Russia. Much of the impact of U.S. sanctions comes from the dominance of the dollar in global trade, which the euro cannot match. Still, U.S. sanctions relief for Russia would not spur a significant return of foreign investors and investment if Europe held firm, said Craig Kennedy, a Russian energy expert at the Davis Center, Harvard. "Europe holds a lot more cards than you'd think," he said. (Reporting by Tom Balmforth; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Peter Graff)

Exclusive-Ukraine pitches tougher Russia sanctions plan to EU as US wavers

Exclusive-Ukraine pitches tougher Russia sanctions plan to EU as US wavers By Tom Balmforth KYIV (Reuters) - Ukraine will ask the EU next w...
US negotiating Israel-Gaza ceasefire with Hamas through American in Doha, source saysNew Foto - US negotiating Israel-Gaza ceasefire with Hamas through American in Doha, source says

The US has been talking with Hamas through an American intermediary in Doha this week in hopes of brokering an Israel-Gaza ceasefire agreement, according to a source familiar with the matter, as US officials say President Donald Trump is growing increasingly frustrated with Israel's handling of the conflict. The talks have been led on the US side by Bishara Bahbah, the American-Palestinian who led the group "Arab Americans for Trump" during the 2024 presidential campaign and who has been working on behalf of the administration, the source said. Bahbah remotely exchanged messages with Hamas earlier this year in what became a critical backchannel to secureIsraeli-American hostage Edan Alexander, the source said. Israel also began indirect talks with Hamas in the Qatari capital on Saturday, and working level dialogue continues. But bolstering the line between the Trump administration and Hamas could give US officials a clearer sense of Hamas's position, particularly as Trump's frustrations have mounted. In the past, the US has gone through Qatar and Egypt to correspond with Hamas. "It tells me that they think they have a real negotiation happening. They want their own Hamas channel, not through Qatar or Egypt. That is an indicator that they think they can cut through the issues more effectively and also that they think they can influence Hamas," said Dennis Ross, a former US envoy to the Middle East who is now at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. But some other regional experts are skeptical that this channel could lead to a breakthrough, given that Bahbah has limited experience and the Hamas decision makers are based in Gaza. But they argue it underscores that Trump is willing to work around Israel. "I am not sure if this is a sign of desperation or confusion," said Aaron David Miller, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "Maybe they see him as a window into Hamas thinking, it is certainly plausible." The growing frustrations among Trump and his top aides with Israel boil down to a key issue: the president wants the war to end – and soon. Trump, multiple sources familiar with the matter said, has been "annoyed" on several occasions with the pace of talks. And Netanyahu, they fear, is not ready to deal. "The president obviously wants a deal," a person close to Trump told CNN. "It's becoming more clear as talks continue that Bibi isn't quite there." With Israellaunching renewed strikes in Gaza, Vice President JD Vance opted not to visit the country over the weekend following his trip to Italy – a decision sources said was driven in part by logistics, and in part because his presence could have been viewed as a dramatic endorsement of the attacks. "It would be hard to view the US as truly independent if he had gone," the official added, calling it "an overly generous signal of support for what Israel is doing." Axiosfirst reported on Trump's frustrationsand thereasoning behind Vance's decision to skip a stop in Israel. The sources cautioned that Trump's frustrations do not amount to a change in posture in the United States' support of Israel, a country which the president continues to view as one of America's strongest allies. Nor is Trump privately pressuring Israel to halt its renewed military operation in the Gaza strip, said a source familiar with the matter. National Security Council Spokesman Max Bluestein argued in a statement to CNN that it "is absolutely false" that the administration is frustrated with Israel. "Israel has had no better friend than President Trump. We continue to work closely with our ally Israel to ensure that remaining hostages in Gaza are freed, that Iran never acquires a nuclear weapon, and that every opportunity for regional economic prosperity – especially the expansion of the Abraham Accords – is exploited. As Secretary [Marco] Rubio explained over the weekend, 'What the President is saying is he doesn't want to end the war until Hamas is defeated,'" Bluestein said. Trump has shown a willingness to approach US foreign policy moves without direct adherence to Israel in recent months, including the announcement of a ceasefire with the Houthis – that did not include strikes on Israel and continued Iran deal talks while Israel has pushed for strikes on Iran's nuclear program. "There is a litany of actions lately reflecting that Trump will do what he thinks is in the US interest and Israeli considerations aren't foremost in his mind. It's not reflecting a break necessarily with Israel but it's an effort to put energy into US interests," Ross said. Keeping US interests front and center – especially efforts that Trump wants to pursue in the region more broadly – the administration remains focused on trying to secure a Gaza ceasefire. Bahbah has been coordinating his efforts with Steve Witkoff, the president's Middle East envoy who has also been directly in touch with Netanyahu and his aides. Witkoff recently put forward a new proposal to both Israel and Hamas that could serve as the foundation to getting both sides to agree to another ceasefire, Trump administration officials said. One of the officials said that the US wants humanitarian aid to continue flowing into Gaza, something the Israelis acquiesced to on Sunday after blocking aid into the strip for nearly 11 weeks. Israel "can achieve their objective of defeating Hamas while still allowing aid to enter in sufficient quantities," Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Tuesday. "You have this acute, immediate challenge of food and aid not reaching people, and you have existing distribution systems that could get them there," Rubio told the Senate Appropriations Committee. Asked if it is an emergency humanitarian situation, Rubio conceded it is. "Ultimately, I think we all see the same images," he said. The Trump administration was also pleased with how the talks with Hamas to release Alexander, the last known living American hostage in Gaza, unfolded in recent weeks. Instead of shutting down the channel between Hamas and Bahbah, they elevated it, signing off on in-person talks in Doha. "His release was widely viewed internally as a goodwill gesture," a White House official told CNN, adding that they saw the move as a key opportunity to draw Israel and Hamas back to the negotiating table. But just days later, Israeli military forces moved into northern and southern Gaza as part of the "Gideon's Chariots" operation, which Israel warned would take place if Hamas did not agree to a deal to release hostages. The fresh attacks did little to reassure US officials that a potential ceasefire deal was on the horizon. But Trump's frustrations with Netanyahu began even before the war took another deadly turn this week, the sources familiar with the matter said. One such instance was when the Israeli Prime Minister met privately with the president's then-National Security Adviser, Michael Waltz, at the White House to discuss military options against Iran prior to a scheduled meeting in the Oval Office with Trump. The meeting,first reported by the Washington Post, has been cited as a key point of Trump's frustration with Waltz, who waslater ousted from his position. But a source familiar with the matter said Trump also took issue with Netanyahu potentially trying to influence Waltz on a sensitive topic before raising it with Trump directly. CNN's Jennifer Hansler contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

US negotiating Israel-Gaza ceasefire with Hamas through American in Doha, source says

US negotiating Israel-Gaza ceasefire with Hamas through American in Doha, source says The US has been talking with Hamas through an American...
Iran executes man responsible for Azerbaijan embassy attackNew Foto - Iran executes man responsible for Azerbaijan embassy attack

DUBAI (Reuters) -A man charged over a fatal shooting at Azerbaijan's embassy in the Iranian capital, Tehran, was executed on Wednesday, Iran's judiciary news outlet Mizan said. The shooting, which took place in January 2023 and led to the killing of the Azeri embassy security chief, brought relations between Tehran and Baku to a new low, with the latter branding the shooting as an "act of terrorism". Judicial authorities ruled the attack was for "personal reasons," Mizan reported. "I thought my wife was at Azerbaijan's embassy in Tehran and was not willing to meet with me. I decided to go there with a Kalashnikov rifle," the defendant said during his trial, according to Mizan. The two neighbouring countries have had tense relations, with Baku accusing Tehran of discriminating against its large ethnic Azeri minority and Iran voicing concerns regarding Azerbaijan's ties with its arch-rival Israel, as well as potential border changes following a military conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian travelled to Baku last month, where he said Tehran hoped to resolve all issues jointly and to strengthen bilateral relations. (Reporting by Dubai Newsroom; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

Iran executes man responsible for Azerbaijan embassy attack

Iran executes man responsible for Azerbaijan embassy attack DUBAI (Reuters) -A man charged over a fatal shooting at Azerbaijan's embassy...
Low-Energy LeninismNew Foto - Low-Energy Leninism

Given that Donald Trump is a borderline illiterate, he has chosen a strange strategy as president: being a writer. He is a writer of "executive orders," many of them press releases disguised as diktats. He is a writer of memos and tweets and presidential statements. I mean that he is a writer of these in the same way he is the writer who wroteThe Art of the Deal—which is to say, he didn't write the thing, but it is, in a broader sense, his work. And the thing about work is, Trump does not like it. Post-election politics and substantive policymaking—distinct but related activities—require a lot of boring, labor-intensive, grindingwork. The really hard part of politics startsafterElection Day, and there have always been grinders to be found among the great American politicians qua politicians: James Madison, Lyndon Johnson, Sam Rayburn, Arthur Vandenberg. Sen. Vandenberg may be best remembered for a speech—"The Speech Heard 'Round the World"—but his achievement was in putting that speech into effect by remaking the domestic political landscape of American foreign policy, dragging the GOP out of its isolationist bunker in the face of World War II. President Trump doesn't really do politics—because he is, in fact, utterly incompetent at negotiation, which is why he spends so much time insisting that he is a master of the art. Trump mainly does politics only in those areas where he can operate without much, or any, negotiation: in making appointments, of course, and in doing all that writing that has not and will not amount to much of anything. Why write? There's a view of criminal justice reform that holds that the best way to dissuade criminals is by increasing thelikelihood, rather than theseverity, of punishment. For example, some jurisdictions have increased the criminal penalties for low-level firearms trafficking by "straw buyers," but this is likely to have little effect, since we rarely prosecute such cases at all—a 10-year sentence that a criminal is almost certain to avoid is no more of a deterrent than a five-year sentence that a criminal is almost certain to avoid. On the other hand, a one-year sentence that a criminal is likely to serve probably would be much more effective as a deterrent than a 10-year sentence the offender would escape 99.9 times out of 100. Signaling matters—but only when it is backed by something stronger than the signal itself. The most charitable view one could take of the Trump administration's crypto-Leninist central planning—his low-energy autocracy consisting of lots of easy-to-publish executive orders amounting in the long run to approximately squat, little in the way of more durable reform fortified by actual legislation—is that it is a signaling strategy. That works both ways: Tell the markets you intend to follow a daffy economic policy of chaotic quasi-autarky and they just may take you seriously enough to crash; tell the markets that you're having second thoughts about economically hitting yourself with a ballpeen hammer in the body parts that are right there in the name of the instrument, and they may bounce back. Signaling can be especially useful in deterring crime: Before he was the gin-ruined and servile grotesque he is today, Rudy Giuliani was the famously competent mayor of New York City, whose administration coincided with a dramatic reduction in crime—not because the authorities successfully locked up all of the urban malefactors, but because the administration signaled that it was willing to go to greater lengths to lock them up than its predecessors had been. Donald Trump's hawkish rhetoric about border control and illegal immigration probably is the reason (or at least a considerable part of it) for the recent decline in attempted illegal border crossings. Entering the United States illegally is a lot more tempting if you believe that you are unlikely to pay any price for it, and heavy penalties provide little deterrence if they are seldom imposed. But there is only so much you can do with signaling. Trump's battyinternationalprice-fixing scheme for pharmaceuticals(remember when the dirty socialists wanted to regulate drug prices only in onlyonecountry? Nikolai Bukharin lacked vision!) is, shorn of its pretense, basically a pleading missive to the drug companies expressing Trump's preference for lower prices vis-à-vis Bulgaria or Serbia or wherever it is that Trump's going to go to recruit his next wife. There's no mechanism for making anything happen. And so nothing is going to happen. Sure, signals matter—but money talks, too, and what Donald Trump is hearing from the coffers of the world's pharmaceutical companies is … not printable in this space. Trump may bluster and pound the table, but he isn't the only signal-sender. Bond markets and credit-rating agencies do not respond that much to the present fiscal situation of the United States as much as to their expectations about where federal spending and debt are going—to the signal, in this case, a particularly loud one. One big credit-rating agency just downgraded Washington's debt a step down from AAA, and that is a signal, too, one that Donald Trump is going to ignore: He long had one of the worst credit profiles of any supposed billionaire walking the Earth, andapparently found it difficult to get credit from the big New York banks, which are not, in spite of what sometimes seems to be the case, run by orangutans. Credit ratings—for people and states—are important signals. I recommend that people listen to Donald Trump when he speaks. What you will hear is a brief for central planning, for a program of economic regimentation and political domination that would be denounced associalismby every Republican within 20 miles of a Fox News microphone were it coming from a Democrat. But Trump rarely gets as far as Lenin in asking, in practical terms:What Is to Be Done?Lenin was a monster, but he also was a world-shaper. Trump is a monster and a social-media troll. He is different from crackpot authors of Facebook manifestos in that Americans will from time to time be obliged to visit a federal court to vacate his nonsense, but his approach remains fundamentally passive: He is not a driver of world events but acommentatoron them. A commentator can shake the fundament from time to time—Martin Luther did. But Trump is notThe Man in the Arena, however much he may protest and as strange as it is to write of a man who not only serves as president of these United States but who also is the central political figure in the world today. He would like you to believe he is in the thick of it, which is why, for example, hefalsely claimed to have had a hand in the India-Pakistan ceasefire, which was news in Delhi and Islamabad. That's the first rule ofrainmaking: When it rains, start dancing. Remember Trump's first reaction to COVID—trying to talk up the markets and insisting, as though his insistence were supernaturally efficacious, that the whole thing would blow over in a week or two. Think of how differently that episode might have gone with an actual executive in charge rather than a half-literate would-be pundit. But, again, that would bework. And Trump is lazy, preferring the illusion of action to action itself. Trump prefers to simply list his preferences, as though he were choosing from the dollar menu at McDonald's or shooting the breeze in front of a Fox News broadcast in some bingo hall in Smackover, Arkansas. He dreams of managing the country as though it wereone big department store, but Trump has never run a department store and couldn't on his best day make a competent manager of a Neiman Marcus or a suburban outlet mall, both of those being genuinely complex businesses. Trump doesn't run the country. He runs his mouth. Read more at The Dispatch The Dispatch is a new digital media company providing engaged citizens with fact-based reporting and commentary, informed by conservative principles. Sign up for free.

Low-Energy Leninism

Low-Energy Leninism Given that Donald Trump is a borderline illiterate, he has chosen a strange strategy as president: being a writer. He is...

 

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