It’s enough to drive someone bananas.
A monkey broke into a home in South Africa and stole a TV remote, causing a home panic alarm to sound the day after Christmas and prompting several security units to respond and hunt down the plucky primate, according to security company Mi7 National Group.
“Under the impression that the client must have been under distress, several units were immediately dispatched to the home,” the Pietermaritzburg, South Africa-based security firm wrote in a Thursday Facebook post.
But instead of human home burglars, the homeowner informed dispatched units that a monkey had broken into the Northdale abode, nabbed the homeowner’s panic button remote and repeatedly triggered an emergency response.
“It then bolted from the premises, pressing the panic button several times as it hurried away, remote in hand,” the firm recounted. “The panic signals only stopped once the monkey was out of range of the receiver.”
In an unusual turn of events, the homeowner declined to have security units chase down the thief and allowed the monkey get away with his loot, Mi7 said.
“A great laugh was had, and a new panic button is currently on the way,” the firm added.
Jour : 29 décembre 2024
Help Grand County Animal Shelter as growth pushes them out of their building – Denver 7 Colorado News
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GRANBY, Colo. — Up in Grand County, it’s a different kind of cold, which is why it’s so important to bring pets indoors at night.
“Being outside, it is much tougher during the wintertime,” said Grand County Animal Shelter volunteer Diana Farabaugh. “It’s cold out. And we have rescues from all over.”
Having shelter can be the difference between life or death.
“Even when it’s hot out, the animals need a safe place to be,” said Mary Ann Kerstiens, treasurer of Grand County Pet Pals and an animal control corporal with Grand County.
“The Grand County Animal Shelter has been here for about 25 years,” Farabaugh said. “And we take in all kinds of animals. Animals that are abandoned, animals that have been dropped off, that we’ve picked up, animals that people can no longer care for.”
“For the past 25 years, it’s given us what we’ve needed,” Kerstiens said.
But now, because of the county’s growth, they’re being pushed out.
“Unfortunately, with the growth in the county, we’ve had to look for a new space,” Farabaugh said. “The sanitation department is expanding.”
The sanitation department owns the building the animal shelter occupies and finally needs the space after 25 years of lending it out.
“It’s just what happens when a county grows,” Kerstiens said. “We’ve taken on the task to try to raise funds to build a new building.”
Through thoughtful planning and preparation, an architect and contractor have helped develop designs for a new building. Through donations, Grand County Pet Pals was able to raise enough money to purchase the land for a new shelter.
“We have about three-quarters of an acre of property here, a little bit short,” Farabaugh said. “It cost about $145,000. So, we’ll have the front of the building facing the ballfields, and then our parking lot will be right here.”
Farabaugh showed Denver7 the property, which is right next to Kaibab Park and also at the gateway of Granby on the southeast side of town as you come in from Winter Park, just a few blocks from downtown.
“People coming to the ballfields, people coming to the park will be able to see the shelter,” Farabaugh said. “And hopefully, that will help us get our animals adopted faster. When you lose your ball, you have to take a dog home with you.”
The shelter will also have easy access to city water here, with another sanitation building just across the street from the new location.
“That’s the reason why that piece of property was so favorable to us,” Kerstiens said.
Although they’ve raised roughly $800,000 for the project, they still need about $1 million to complete it.
“It’s about a $2 million building,” Farabaugh said.
So, for now, the fundraising continues.
“We have a mission that we feel that we need to find homes for animals,” Kerstiens said.
Kerstiens said the partnership between Pet Pals Treasure and Grand County Animal Control will continue regardless of where they end up.
“And everyone’s behind us,” she said. “It’s just that – we’re needing the funds to make the dream of the whole county come to light. We are a smaller community, but as Deana said, we are growing.”
If they secure enough funding, they will break ground in May.
Denver7 is helping Grand County Animal Control raise money for a new building through Denver7 Gives. If you’d like to help, click here and select ” Build A New Grand Co. Animal Shelter” in the drop-down menu.
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Ukraine Breaking News Today Live on 12-29-2024 – Kyiv Post
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US nerve center to combat China and Russia global propaganda shut down by GOP opposition – USA TODAY
WASHINGTON − The State Department’s Global Engagement Center, the highly touted nerve center for coordinating U.S. efforts to counter foreign disinformation – especially by Russia and China – shut down this week after becoming a lightning rod for conservative criticism.
The mission of the GEC, as it is commonly known, was to “direct, lead, synchronize, integrate, and coordinate” the U.S. campaign against propaganda and disinformation efforts aimed at undermining or influencing the policies, security and stability of the U.S. and its allies.
But the GEC, with a relatively tiny $60 million budget and staff of 120, was first criticized in 2023 by Elon Musk, the multibillionaire advisor to President-elect Donald Trump, as the “worst offender in U.S. government censorship & media manipulation.”
More:‘President-elect Musk’: Elon’s influence on display in government spending fight
The GEC was initially included in a stopgap bill to fund the government past a Dec. 20 deadline, but GOP lawmakers deleted it from a last-minute bill ultimately passed by Congress.
A State Department spokesperson said the GEC “will terminate by operation of law [by the end of the day] on December 23, 2024. The Department of State has consulted with Congress regarding next steps,” the AFP news agency reported.
The GEC evolved from the Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications, established by the Obama administration in 2011 to counter online extremist recruitment and propaganda. An Obama 2016 executive order created the GEC to broaden its mission to include fighting disinformation by state and non-state actors.
The GEC soon began to focus primarily on using high-tech tools such as social media analytics to identify and counter disinformation campaigns by Moscow and Beijing that were increasingly targeting Washington and its allies. It sought to broaden its impact by working with other U.S. agencies, foreign allies and the private sector.
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A Sept. 28, 2023 report by the GEC called out China for spending billions of dollars annually on foreign manipulation efforts. It detailed how Beijing employed “a variety of deceptive and coercive methods as it attempts to influence the international information environment.”
The report said China extensively pushed propaganda, including through fake media and research papers “falsely blaming the United States for creating COVID-19.”
Those efforts falsely promoted China and the Chinese Communist Party’s “desired narratives on issues such as Taiwan, its human rights practices, the South China Sea, its domestic economy, and international economic engagement.”
More broadly, the GEC report said, China sought to leverage propaganda, censorship and “digital authoritarianism” to encourage foreign governments, journalists and civil society at large to accept its preferred narratives and avoid criticizing its conduct as it sought more influence on the global stage.
The GEC also has published numerous hard-hitting criticisms of Russia.
In 2020, the GEC has detailed how Russia spread conspiracy theories during the COVID-19 pandemic. It has called out the Kremlin for trying to sow chaos in U.S. And it has exposed Russian attempts to destabilize U.S. influence in Africa by spreading false claims about U.S. health programs.
In September, it called out Moscow and its state-run media organization RT for using propaganda, disinformation – and sophisticated “cyber capabilities” – to sway the global community on issues like its war against Ukraine.
More:Lara Trump, Kari Lake, other notable Republicans appeared on podcasts accused of Russia tie
That effort by RT involved not only information operations but also covert influence and even military procurement efforts in targeting countries around the world, including in Europe, Africa, and North and South America, the GEC said in a Sept. 13 report.
“When state or non-state actors spread disinformation, material deliberately meant to deceive or divide our public, they attack the very foundations of our free and open society,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in releasing the report. He laid out specific steps the Biden administration was taking “to hold accountable those who weaponize disinformation to undermine our democracy,” including coordinated crackdowns by the State, Justice and Treasury departments.
In January, the GEC spearheaded an agreement to counter state-run disinformation campaigns that’s now backed by at least 21 countries including Spain, Poland, Finland and the West African nation of Côte d’Ivoire – and that could enable them to also create their own versions at home.
Funding for the GEC ran into congressional opposition in 2024 by Republican lawmakers who claimed it was overstepping its authority by trying to silence conservative voices in the U.S. including pro-Trump influencers.
Three ranking House Republicans wrote Blinken in July to accuse the GEC of straying from its statutory duty to counter propaganda and disinformation abroad.
“Your Department refuses to acknowledge that … any value the GEC provides is tempered by genuine concerns that the GEC is at best indifferent to, and at worst complicit in, an orchestrated and systematic effort to stretch the term ‘disinformation’ to encompass viewpoints that, among American progressives, are deemed to be politically disfavored or inconvenient…” the lawmakers wrote.
Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., who co-authored the 2016 legislation that established the center, said such criticisms were unwarranted and politically motivated. He led the effort to save it from GOP shutdown, along with Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn. Former Ohio Republican Sen. Rob Portman is also a staunch supporter.
“[The GEC] has played an indispensable role in combating Russian and Chinese disinformation,” Murphy said in October. “It would unnecessarily undermine U.S. national security if we eliminated this tool.”
When Trump won a second term on Nov. 5, Republicans also retained control of the House and retook the Senate.
The GEC tweeted its last on Dec. 18, praising the European Union for its “first-time use of designations under its Russia hybrid sanctions framework.”
On Tuesday, the day before Christmas, the site went offline with this message: “This account is no longer in use as of 12/23/2024. For updates on the U.S. Department of State, please follow @StateDept.”