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Northeast and Midwest set to bake under intense heat this weekend | CNN

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Northeast and Midwest set to bake under intense heat this weekend | CNN



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Scorching temperatures will continue to smother millions from the Midwest to the Northeast on Friday and into the weekend, triggering emergency mode for cities and testing nation’s largest power grid.

Forecasters are cautioning about 150 million people of extreme heat Friday as severely high temperatures persist for much of the US – from California, Arizona and Texas to Missouri, Illinois and New York.

“Within these areas, daytime temperatures are forecast to approach and exceed 95-100F heading into this weekend, but oppressive humidity will make these temperatures feel much hotter,” the National Weather Service warned.

“In addition to the hot daytime highs, nighttime lows are also expected to be 10 to 15 degrees above average, with the potential for several warm nighttime low records to be broken,” weather service forecasters added.

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Heat indexes – a measure of what the temperature feels like on the skin when accounting for relative humidity – are expected to be between 105 and 110 degrees on Friday, particularly over the Mid-Atlantic and Central Plains, the weather service said.

The agonizing, unrelenting heat has taken a hefty toll on many communities, as well as wildlife.

The number of people dying from heat-related complications is rising in the US. In Arizona, the Maricopa County Medical Examiner’s Office in Phoenix brought in 10 refrigerated containers to handle a possible overflow of heat-related deaths.

“While we typically see a surge in heat-related deaths in July, we won’t know how many … we have this year until forensic pathologists complete their investigations,” said Maricopa County spokesperson Jessie Caraveoa. The county has reported 25 heat-associated deaths so far this year as of Monday.

Arizona officials are also reporting emergency room visits for extreme heat burns after people fall to the ground – and even cacti are dying from the persistent triple-digit temperatures.

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The intense heat is spreading as a newly published report indicates July is likely the planet’s hottest month on record.

The report, published Thursday by the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service and the World Meteorological Organization, notes July’s heat has been so intense that it is “virtually certain” this month will break records “by a significant margin.”

In the US on Thursday, record-high temperatures were reported in Arizona, California, Texas, Louisiana and Washington, DC, according to preliminary data.

As the heat continues Friday before slowly waning in some areas during the weekend, here’s how some communities have taken precautions.

  • Heat health emergencies: The cities of Boston and Philadelphia each declared the emergency to provide resources to residents including opening cooling sites. Philadelphia is also ramping up homelessness outreach.
  • “Let’s be clear: heat can kill”: In New York City, about nine million residents may endure heat indexes exceeding 100 degrees Friday, as an excessive heat warning remains in effect. Mayor Eric Adams warned in a tweet that such temperatures can be fatal. “This is dangerous. Take precautions,” he said.
  • Expanded access to public pools: Pools and water park facilities in Providence, Rhode Island, plan to offer extended hours over the next several days due to the extreme heat, Mayor Brett Smiley said Thursday. Officials in Lexington, Kentucky, are also offering discounted rates at its six public pools. Many areas experiencing extreme heat have also opened cooling centers.
Vendors sell cold drinks near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC, on Thursday.

The heat is also taxing power infrastructure in many parts of the country.

Energy provider Con Edison has asked New York residents to reduce their consumption. “Intense heat and increased demand for air conditioning can cause strain on the electric system and may lead to localized outages,” the utility said in a news release.

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And PJM Interconnection – the nation’s largest power grid system – on Thursday declared an emergency alert, which instructs all systems to be online, including those with planned outages. The utility coordinates electricity for more than 65 million people in all or parts of Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia and Washington, DC, according to its website.

The heat index in Washington, DC, is expected to exceed 100 degrees Friday and Saturday. Low temperatures won’t dip below 74 on both days, providing little relief for the nation’s capital.

Meanwhile in Chicago, residents could see a heat index of 101 degrees Friday, but temperatures are expected to cool Saturday when a high of 78 is forecast.

In New York, temperatures may begin to improve Sunday, when the high is forecast at 82 degrees.

Elsewhere, Phoenix saw a much-needed improvement Wednesday night when the temperature at Phoenix Sky Harbor airport fell below 90 degrees for the first time since the morning of July 9, according to the city’s National Weather Service office. Nearby thunderstorms cooled the area after it reached a record high of 118 degrees Wednesday afternoon.

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TikTok owner asks Chinese staff in Singapore to pay taxes to Beijing

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TikTok owner asks Chinese staff in Singapore to pay taxes to Beijing

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TikTok parent ByteDance is asking Chinese staff at its Singapore headquarters to pay tax to their home country or risk losing their ability to cash out on stock options, as Beijing steps up enforcement of its global tax scheme.

Employees at ByteDance who relocated from China to Singapore received an internal memo on Tuesday requiring them to report their income to Chinese tax authorities and pay relevant taxes to cash out on stock options that make up a significant portion of their pay, according to three people with knowledge of the matter.

Those hired locally with Chinese citizenship were encouraged to report their income but not required to do so, according to the people. More than 1,000 employees could be affected, and the tax difference could be as high as 21 percentage points depending on individual salaries, as both countries have a tiered tax structure.

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Singapore has emerged as a regional hub for many Chinese companies looking to expand into south-east Asia and globally. Tech giants Alibaba, Tencent and PDD, as well as start-ups such as Shein, have set up offices in the city-state, where lower tax rates have convinced many Chinese workers to relocate.

China in recent years has increased efforts to collect tax revenue to fill government coffers, including demanding wealthy individuals and companies double-check for unpaid liabilities, amid a broad economic slowdown.

In 2019, Beijing revised its income tax rules to allow authorities to collect revenue from Chinese expats, similar to US rules on Americans living abroad, but it has not enforced them rigorously. Most Chinese citizens working abroad only need to report their taxable income on a voluntary basis, and Beijing has not outlined consequences for those who do not.

For higher-paid workers at ByteDance, the potential difference could be massive. The highest marginal tax rate in mainland China is 45 per cent, while the top rate in Singapore and Hong Kong, cities with significant Chinese expat populations, is 24 per cent and 15 per cent, respectively.

Many ByteDance employees receive part of their remuneration in restricted stock units that are typically vested over a number of years and then purchased by the company. A recent share buyback in November valued ByteDance at $300bn.

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A person familiar with the matter said employees required to pay tax would need to show proof of payment to fully participate in the buyback, while any amount of tax owed would be held by the company in equivalent restricted stock units.

The person added that ByteDance would provide subsidies to affected employees for up to two years but did not specify if they would be enough to bridge the gap.

ByteDance did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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2SLGBTQ+ community in Windsor, Ont., worries about rise in hatred in wake of Trump order | CBC News

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2SLGBTQ+ community in Windsor, Ont., worries about rise in hatred in wake of Trump order | CBC News

Anold Mulaisho was born intersex and wonders where they fit in, in the wake of U.S. President Donald Trump’s executive order for the United States to recognize only two sexes, male and female.

Trump, on his first day in office, ordered an end to a range of policies aimed at promoting racial equity and protecting rights for 2SLGBTQ+ people.

During his speech, Trump also said it is now “the official policy of the United States government that there are only two genders: male and female.”

The executive order requires the government to use the term “sex” rather than “gender,” while mandating that identification documents issued by the government, including passports and visas, be based on what it described as “an individual’s immutable biological classification as either male or female.”

“This is quite ridiculous,” said Mulaisho, the founder and managing director of Queer and Trans Migrant Advocacy Alliance of Windsor-Essex. 

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“What do you call me now? How do you perceive me to be? It’s a human rights violation.”

‘What affects the U.S. eventually also affects us here in Canada:’ Intersex advocate

Mulaisho said this will elicit and legitimize hatred against the larger 2SLGBTQ+ community.

“What affects the U.S. eventually also affects us here in Canada,” they said.

“There are so many problems going on right now in the world, let them focus on those that are actual problems instead of making sexuality, which is not a problem, a huge thing.”

They said they are also receiving “quite a lot of calls from the U.S.” where people are concerned for their safety. 

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In Windsor-Essex, Mulaisho said they are hearing growing concerns about potential increase of hatred and violence.

Trans woman says order will cause more bigotry, hate 

Akshat Virmani moved from India to Windsor to feel comfortable in her skin as a trans woman.

“In my high school, I was bullied a lot,” Virmani said with tears in her eyes. “But there is hate and bigotry which is still prevailing in this society too.

“It is quite disgusting…The order will be causing even more division and more bigotry and hate.”

Akshat Virmani is a trans woman who says she moved from India to Canada and says she is feeling anxious in the wake of President Trump’s comments. (Pratyush Dayal/CBC)

Virmani said she is feeling “anxious” in the wake of the order. 

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“I’m definitely worried about my own safety… Our existence will be questioned, but it will not be eradicated,” she said.

“Transgender people’s lives are already at a risk because they are not accepted everywhere. That’s our reality, sadly.”

“It’s just bad. It sucks,” said Windsor author and trans woman Casey Plett, who now lives in Athens, Ohio. 

“It’s awful and also there is no point or rationale. You’ll notice that there’s no reason for this. No one has ever been hurt by being allowed to change gender markers on their identity documents.”

Plett said trans people in the U.S. and Canada are at risk of facing transphobia and hatred and says she worries that hatred will worsen now. 

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2SLGBTQ+ organizations urge hope, not despair

Derrick Carl Biso, the team lead for administration and education at Trans Wellness Ontario, says Trump’s statements are false and warrant more education and awareness. 

“If we look at history, we have always existed,” said Biso, who identifies as a non-binary gender fluid person who uses he/they/she pronouns. “No one can dictate that away or speak it away or executive order that away.”

A person in front of a Trans Wellness Ontario banner
Derrick Carl Biso is the team lead for administration and education with Trans Wellness Ontario and uses he/they/she pronouns. They say they worry about the impact of Trump’s comments in Canada. (Pratyush Dayal/CBC)

Like others, Biso anticipates more threats and violence and hardship in Canada in the wake of Trump’s order. 

“I feel very threatened in a way I haven’t maybe in the last five to 10 years,” Biso said, referencing comments made by Conservative Party of Canada leader Pierre Poilievre and policies in Alberta, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick.

Being a small part of the population, Biso said trans and gender diverse people are “not the problem.” 

“I encourage each other not to lose hope, not to despair or get depressed even though it’s pretty cold out there.”

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Canada shouldn’t follow lead: National 2SLBTQ+ charity

Omid Razavi is the executive director at It Gets Better Canada, a national charity that focuses on uplifting and empowering 2SLGBTQ+ youth.

He said Trump’s order will pave the way for more discrimination in “one of the most polarizing moments in recent history.”

“We have been seeing an increase in policies and legislation that really are working against the 2SLGBTQ+. We have absolutely seen it in provinces across Canada. That’s the ripple effect,” he said.

He urges Canadian politicians not to follow pursuit as the transphobia and homophobia in Canada is “incredibly troubling.”

“The ignorance and discomfort of a few should not deny the existence or validation of many. The hope is that as we invite new leadership in Canada, that they will continue to honour what has made us proud as Canadians.”

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Bishop Asks Trump to ‘Have Mercy’ on Immigrants and Gay Children

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Bishop Asks Trump to ‘Have Mercy’ on Immigrants and Gay Children

Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde was nearing the end of her sermon for the inaugural prayer service on Tuesday when she took a breath and looked directly at President Donald J. Trump.

“I ask you to have mercy upon the people in our country who are scared now,” said Bishop Budde, the leader of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington. “There are gay, lesbian and transgender children in Democratic, Republican and independent families, some who fear for their lives.”

The direct appeal to Mr. Trump, at the start of the first full day of his presidency, was a remarkable moment. Twenty-four hours after he had reclaimed the highest office in the land, summoning tech billionaires as witnesses and pulling off a sweeping display of power by signing of a flurry of executive orders, he was suddenly confronted by an extraordinary act of public resistance from an unlikely source: a soft-spoken bishop.

“The vast majority of immigrants are not criminals,” Bishop Budde said. “I ask you to have mercy, Mr. President, on those in our communities whose children fear that their parents will be taken away, and that you help those who are fleeing war zones and persecution in their own lands to find compassion and welcome here.”

Mr. Trump, seated in the first row of pews in the towering Washington National Cathedral, looked down and then away. Vice President JD Vance raised his eyebrows and looked several times at his wife, Usha Vance, who kept her gaze trained ahead on the bishop. When Bishop Budde finished, Mr. Trump said something to Mr. Vance, who shook his head in apparent irritation. Members of the Trump family seated directly behind them appeared to look at one another, noticeably perturbed. Eric Trump, Mr. Trump’s middle son, shook his head.

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It was not how Mr. Trump has generally been spoken to as he returns to the White House. Since winning the election, he has been courted by powerful business leaders and politicians alike, including many who kept their distance during his first term. Just the day before, he celebrated his return to office with an inauguration in the Capitol Rotunda, a rally surrounded by supporters and a succession of inaugural balls. Even former President Joseph R. Biden Jr. greeted Mr. Trump at the White House by saying, “Welcome home.”

Bishop Budde’s comments came a day after Mr. Trump issued a flurry of executive orders focused on transgender rights and immigration.

The appeal by the pastor clearly grabbed Mr. Trump’s attention. Asked by a reporter what he thought of the service, the president said: “Did you like it? Did you find it exciting? Not too exciting, was it?

“I didn’t think it was a good service, no,” Mr. Trump continued. “They could do much better.”

In an interview, Bishop Budde said she had decided to speak to the president directly because “of the fear that I have seen and experienced among our people — people that I know and love, both within the immigrant community and within the L.G.B.T.Q. community, and how terrified so many are.”

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She said she was concerned about “the level of license to be really quite cruel” that some people feel now.

“I wasn’t necessarily calling the president out. I was trying to say, ‘The country has been entrusted to you,’” Bishop Budde said. “And one of the qualities of a leader is mercy, right? Mercy. And to be mindful of the people who are scared.”

Bishop Budde is not the only prominent clergy member to call attention to the fear caused by Mr. Trump’s agenda. Pope Francis on Sunday called Mr. Trump’s plans for mass deportations “a disgrace.”

Mr. Trump began his presidency on Monday with executive actions that aimed to turn his campaign rhetoric into tangible policies, including one that rescinded a Biden administration order that sought to prevent discrimination on the basis of gender identity or sexual orientation.

Mr. Trump’s new order, the administration said, seeks to defend women against “gender ideology extremism” that allows biological males to undermine their rights and privacy. And the definitions it sets forth go further to more explicitly define “sex.”

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Under the order signed by Mr. Trump on Monday, males and females would be defined at “conception,” the text states. Someone who eventually produces “the large reproductive cell” would be deemed female, the order says. A male would be defined as the person who eventually “produces the small reproductive cell.”

The order also says that the federal government would no longer recognize “gender identity,” and only “sex” as defined by “an individual’s immutable biological classification as either male or female.”

The order also prohibits the use of federal funds for any promotion of “gender ideology” through grants or other government programming, as well as the use of public funding for transition-related medical procedures in prisons.

The order effectively defines transgender Americans out of existence.

“At its core, this executive order is an appallingly cruel effort to make transgender people strangers to the law and push them back into the closet,” said Sarah Warbelow, legal director at the Human Rights Campaign.

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Mr. Trump also issued multiple immigration-related executive orders on Monday that suspended refugee admissions, severely restricted asylum for migrants and made clear that he intended to deploy the military to the southern border. The border, however, remains relatively calm after a record number of illegal crossings earlier in the Biden administration.

The Trump administration also rescinded a Biden policy that directed Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to not make arrests at schools, places of worship and other places described as “sensitive locations.”

Throughout his campaign, and during his first term, Mr. Trump often portrayed all migrants crossing the border illegally as criminals. While sporadic crimes by migrants have gained national attention in recent years, homeland security officials themselves acknowledge that most people crossing the border are fleeing poverty or violence and seeking a better life.

“There are times when he talks of immigrants in broad strokes that feel as if the image portrayed is that all immigrants who are coming into the country are dangerous,” Bishop Budde said. “And I know that’s not true. It’s not true.”

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