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Minnesota's 'nice' culture shattered by political violence

Minnesota's 'nice' culture shattered by political violence

BBC News6 hours ago

Jessie Ebertz held back tears as she stood in front of a makeshift memorial honouring the slain Democratic politician Melissa Hortman and her husband."Minnesota has felt a little bit like a safe haven," said Ms Ebertz, a government employee who lives in the state capital, "because we have been able to keep our atmosphere of respecting one another here.""This has blown that out of the water."The death of Hortman and her husband has sent a shockwave through the state. They were killed early Saturday morning by an assailant disguised as a police officer, who also injured Democratic state lawmaker, John Hoffman, and his wife. Both are expected to survive. But the attacks, which appear politically motivated, have badly shaken confidence in the state's reputation for politeness, courtesy and respect, an attitude that has its own nickname and Wikipedia page: "Minnesota nice". Prosecutors say the suspect Vance Boelter also visited two other homes early Saturday searching for politicians.The state's largest-ever manhunt ended late Sunday when Boelter was captured near his home in a rural area dotted with farms, gravel roads and small villages about an hour away from the twin cities of Minneapolis and St Paul.
Many pointed out that Mrs Hortman was known for her ability to work with Republican colleagues, including recently to pass a state budget vote. On Monday local talk radio station WCCO replayed one of her last interviews, jointly done with Republican colleagues, where among other things they discussed what they might do if they spent some off time together.The idea that this friendly state in the Upper Midwest could avoid the political rancour which is more frequently tipping over into violence elsewhere is an illusion, says Jenna Stocker, editor of Thinking Minnesota, a publication put out by the conservative think tank Center of the American Experiment.The centre's office was firebombed last year in what think tank officials called a politically motivated attack. Nobody has been charged with the crime."Some people even here in Minnesota have really let politics guide their thinking and how they feel about their neighbours, their friends and their relatives," Ms Stocker says.In extreme cases, that has led to extreme actions. Several recent studies indicate that political violence is growing across the US, reaching a level not seen since the 1970s.Reuters has tallied more than 300 cases of politically motivated violence since the January 2021 Capitol riot. A 2023 study from the Brennan Center for Justice, a left-leaning institute, found that 40 percent of state legislators had experienced threats or attacks in the three years prior.Despite widespread fears, fuelled in part by two assassination attempts against Donald Trump and the 2021 US Capitol riot, there was no large-scale violence around the time of the November 2024 presidential election.But any supposed détente has been broken - several times over - since that vote.In April the residence of Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, was set on fire. Politics appear to have motivated the alleged killers of a health-care executive in New York and two Israeli embassy employees in Washington.In Washington, members of the US Congress were set to get emergency briefings about security this week.Here in Minnesota, meanwhile, many people were lamenting what the attacks on the state's politicians mean in a place that prides itself on its openness and ability to avoid the viciousness of national politics.Despite the rawness of the recent attacks, inside the Capitol building there was little visible sign of heavy security – and no metal detectors – on Monday afternoon. Among the mourners, several of Hortman's relatives laid flowers in front of the state House chamber, where a table was laden with bouquets and signs reading "Demand Change" and "Rest in Power".In between the news cameras and flowers, a group wandered around the building on a guided tour and legislative officials went about their work in an eerie hush.But as people here mourned, nationally the partisan arguments continued.President Trump on Tuesday said he wouldn't be calling the state's governor, Tim Walz – the Democratic vice-presidential nominee in last year's election – calling him "a mess"."The guy doesn't have a clue," he told reporters.In the wake of the attacks, several of Trump's top supporters and allies - including Utah Senator Mike Lee, Elon Musk, conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer and activist Charlie Kirk - attempted without evidence to link Walz and Democratic lawmakers to the killings.Lee wrote: "This is what happens When Marxists don't get their way" while Musk reposted a message including a line about the attacks with the comment "The far left is murderously violent".Both men, who did not respond to requests for comment, appear to have been sucked in by conspiracy theories floating around online.Many pointed to the fact that Walz and a previous Democratic governor had appointed the suspect to a position on a state economic board.However, the suspect Mr Boelter was a supporter of President Trump who held conservative views, according to interviews with friends and neighbours. And according to evidence revealed by authorities, his long target list included Democratic and progressive lawmakers, and he had flyers with information about anti-Trump "No Kings" rallies which happened in St Paul and other cities around the country on Saturday.Although the exact motive is still under investigation, evidence has indicated that the suspect was targeting the president's opponents and left-wing and Democratic Party politicians.
"It's terrifying," said Kameko White, a neighbour who lived near one of the suspect's homes, in north Minneapolis, which was raided by police on Saturday."I saw that man every day in his yard," Ms White said. "The other day I saw him outside smoking and writing something down in a notebook."While the capture of Mr Boelter gave some measure of relief here, discussions on the airwaves in Minnesota have turned towards what can be done to cool the political temperature and prevent future attacks.Ms Stocker, the editor of Thinking Minnesota, said "there's good people here" and noted that the vast majority of Minnesotans reject violence.However an increase in "othering" and heated rhetoric makes her pessimistic about the chances of peace any time soon."It's going to take a whole generation of people to say we're not going to take this any more and it just needs to stop," she said."I think we need young people to rise up and say we're just not going to stand for it."

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US energy investors juggle exposure as tax bill debate rolls on
US energy investors juggle exposure as tax bill debate rolls on

Reuters

time29 minutes ago

  • Reuters

US energy investors juggle exposure as tax bill debate rolls on

LITTLETON, Colorado, June 18 (Reuters) - Energy equity investors are adjusting positions across the U.S. power sector in an attempt to pick winners and cut losers ahead of the final passing of President Donald Trump's tax-and-spending bill. The "One Big, Beautiful Bill Act" contains aggressive cuts to several tax credits and incentives tied to clean power generation from renewable energy sources, and has sparked an aggressive selloff in stocks tied to the sector. The bill would also accelerate the phase-out of federal support for electric vehicles, clean energy component manufacturing and wind farm development. However, the latest U.S. Senate proposals - which tweaked the version previously passed by the U.S. House - preserve support for nuclear, geothermal and battery storage projects, and sparked gains in stocks tied to nuclear power. Additional adjustments to the bill proposals are likely before it can be passed into law by Congress, sparking more position jostling by energy investors in the weeks ahead. Below is a breakdown of the key energy sector exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and equities that have and will be most impacted by the proposed budget. Stocks tied to companies engaged in the production of solar panels and inverters and in the installation of solar systems stand to be among the biggest losers once the proposed bill is passed, regardless of its final make-up. The Trump administration and many Republican lawmakers are against federal subsidies for solar power for several reasons, including concerns about its intermittency and its heavy reliance on components made in China and elsewhere. The Senate's recent budget bill proposal phases out several key solar tax credits and subsidies from 2026, and would eliminate them entirely from 2028. As the solar sector has already been hit by rising interest rates - which lifted the cost of system installations - the speedy gutting of federal support has greatly dimmed the prospects for several companies in the space. Stocks in solar inverter manufacturer Enphase (ENPH.O), opens new tab and panel makers First Solar (FSLR.O), opens new tab, Sunrun (RUN.O), opens new tab and SolarEdge (SEDG.O), opens new tab have all dropped by 20% or more within the past month as ramifications of the bill proposals were digested. Shares in the Invesco Solar ETF plumbed five-year lows in April, and are down more than 50% over the past two years as investors jettisoned positions and the sector's outlook darkened under the anti-renewables Trump administration. Several energy investors looking to get out of the solar space have pivoted their funds into the nuclear power sector, which has gained support under the current Trump administration. The Global X Uranium ETF (URA.P), opens new tab has gained more than 35% in value over the past month, and recently scaled its highest levels in more than a decade. Investors have been drawn to the fund by the likelihood of a tightening in the supply of uranium - the main fuel used by nuclear power plants - should more reactors get commissioned once the tax bill becomes law. Stocks in companies tied to geothermal energy production have also rallied recently as provisions tied to supporting the sector were preserved in the latest round of bill wrangling. Shares in Nevada-based Ormat Technologies (ORA.N), opens new tab, which makes power converters for geothermal plants, are up more than 30% since early May. Energy investors have also recently increased positions in funds and companies within the traditional oil and gas sector, as the gutting of clean energy subsidies will likely increase demand for fossil fuels. 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Check out Reuters Open Interest (ROI), your essential new source for global financial commentary. ROI delivers thought-provoking, data-driven analysis of everything from swap rates to soybeans. Markets are moving faster than ever. ROI can help you keep up. Follow ROI on LinkedIn, opens new tab and X, opens new tab.

Great Black Hope by Rob Franklin review – privilege and race intersect in a fine debut
Great Black Hope by Rob Franklin review – privilege and race intersect in a fine debut

The Guardian

time40 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Great Black Hope by Rob Franklin review – privilege and race intersect in a fine debut

Lives can turn on one mistake. Smith's comes when he is caught in the corner of a restaurant in the Hamptons on the last night of summer, snorting cocaine from a key. He walks calmly out with the two khaki-clad police officers, poses for a mugshot and posts his $500 bail. Smith is Black, which won't help, but he comes from wealth, which will. So he calls his sister, who calls his father in Atlanta, who tells his mother, who collapses on the floor in shock then starts calling lawyers. Smith prepares for his court date with a series of AA meetings and counselling sessions that will make it clear that this promising young man is on the road to redemption. The contrite lines Smith rehearses have some truth, and his legal troubles are not the only thing on his mind. He was a model student as a boy, living up to the pedigree of his family of Atlanta landlords, lawyers and professors. At university, new social worlds opened thanks to new friends Elle, the effervescent Black daughter of a successful soul singer, and Carolyn, an impulsive white art-world scion. After graduating, Smith shares a New York apartment with Elle, mixing brunches, hook-ups and club nights with fairly half-hearted work. A content strategist at an arty startup, he is in an investor meeting when his phone buzzes with the news that Elle has been found dead of an overdose. Revelations and rumours spread and Smith spirals, partying harder until his arrest a few weeks later. Before long, a Vanity Fair journalist is pestering him with questions, and Carolyn won't answer his calls. Brooklyn-based writer and academic Rob Franklin, like Smith, moved from Atlanta to New York. He shared an apartment with a young woman, Lyric McHenry, who died from a widely reported overdose. His watchful and poetic debut does not dwell on the obvious drama of arrests or police investigations. It is about a gay twentysomething trying to figure out his place in the world, and plenty more besides: this is a book about New York that's part love letter, part reckoning; a tale of glamorous club kids and their sometimes bleak inner lives; and an account of the way privilege and race intersect. Sign up to Inside Saturday The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend. after newsletter promotion Franklin evokes a world of slick surfaces. Carolyn's set seem to live 'entirely by what looked best in retrospect', moving from impossible-to-get dinner reservations and bleary afterparties to stage-managed meet-ups in which a picnic is 'incomplete without a tuft of bundled peonies, a sketchbook casually strewn'. One apartment has 'an emerald slab topped with a polar bear hide' instead of a couch; Smith's workplace is built of 'polycarbonate and Lucite' and peopled by 'ex‑bankers in boot-cut denim and software engineers in Yeezys'. There are moments when Smith relishes this life and finds joy in his friendships and the release of the dancefloor. But shadows are ever present. Smith claims he isn't addicted to a substance as much as a desire to 'negate or obliterate' time. As his court date beckons, he looks back on the detritus of Elle's life: the piled gift bags and cosmetics that were her payment for interning, the inverted drugs baggies that filled the bin. Smith's status and connections grant him access to exclusive circles, but his entry is conditional: he is a 'brown, queer interloper' who offers Carolyn's group a multicultural veneer. Elle's death is made to fit a tragic story: 'Black pain', Smith reflects, 'was always spectacle, was always entertainment.' The Instagram comments quickly descend: 'junkie', 'whore', 'u got wut u deserved'. If Smith's race lends a fragility to his privilege, others are broken already. He passes 'scattered, limp bodies splayed out on benches' in a park and joins a new crowd who hand out emergency supplies and drug test kits. Franklin charts Smith's slow, uncertain journey towards stability with sometimes overheated prose: rather than addiction, he speaks of 'a desire inescapable, and often ruinous to those who possess it, to scrape with fanged nails against the marbled flesh of being'. Yet for the most part he grounds his lyrical writing with granular details, from sidestreets and brand names to vivid late-night conversations, in a book that really convinces. This fine debut probes grief, friendship, hedonism and the hard edges of the city as it walks a young man towards a second chance he knows others may not get. Great Black Hope by Rob Franklin is published by Summit (£16.99). To support the Guardian, order your copy at Delivery charges may apply.

What to do if your mobile phone account is hacked or number stolen
What to do if your mobile phone account is hacked or number stolen

The Guardian

time40 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

What to do if your mobile phone account is hacked or number stolen

Your mobile phone line is the artery through which data, calls and texts flow. It is also used to prove you are who you say you are for a plethora of accounts, from banks to messaging services. But if it gets hacked or stolen, in what is known as a 'sim swap' or 'simjacking', the consequences can be far worse than just being cut off from mobile data or calls. Unfortunately it is the kind of hack you don't see coming. It happens in the background, with hackers using your personal data such as date of birth and address to con your network provider into swapping your phone number to a new sim in their possession. If that happens it is important to act as swiftly as possible. Here's what to do. Keep an eye on notifications from your mobile network, which are usually delivered by SMS. These include information about activity elsewhere and alerts of change requests, such as your phone number being activated on another device. Be aware of scams. Fraudsters may and try to trick you out of information using fake notifications. If you receive a message asking you to get in touch, double-check that any number you are given is legitimate before calling, or use a number from the provider's website or a bill. Any loss of service that prevents calling, texting or accessing mobile data and is not explained by outages or missed payments may be a sim-swap attack. Loss of access to various accounts such as your bank or social media linked to your phone number could indicate hackers are in the process of trying to break in or have already changed your password and stolen the account. Frequently review statements and account for unexpected charges, which may be a sign that you've been hacked. Call your provider on the customer service number listed on its site using another phone. Have your phone number and details ready, including any account passwords you may have set. Explain what has happened and make sure your provider begins the recovery process and investigates how this has happened. Ask your provider to block any 'charge to bill' activity. Contact your bank, crypto and other financial services immediately to ensure the hackers cannot get into your other accounts, which are typically their primary targets. Contact your immediate family and anyone who could fall victim to a scammer pretending to be you and texting from your number. Check any account you use your phone number for two-step verification. Change the two-step method if you can and set a new strong password. Check your WhatsApp and other messaging services that use your phone number as the user ID. Activate any and all security measures on your provider's account. This includes using a strong password and two-step verification, and setting a sim pin on your phone, as well as adding a telephone customer service password and a sim transfer pin, if available. Find out from your provider how the hack happened, and if possible, what personal data was used to break into your account. Consider using fake security question answers that cannot be guessed rather than real ones, just make sure you store them safely such as in a password manager. Set a spend cap on your phone account. As soon as you are sure you have full control again, reactivate two-step verification on your accounts and transition any that you can to authenticator app-based two-step verification, which is more secure. Set pins on messaging services such as WhatsApp or Signal to make it much harder for someone else to register new devices or take over your account. Contact your financial services providers to reactivate your accounts but keep watching out for fraud and query any unexpected transactions. Look at your social media and other public-facing accounts for any information that could enable criminals to steal your identity to perform hacks such as this.

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