Dimming the Sun Is a Terrifying New Industry

Solar geoengineering, a bunch of techniques that aim to mask some effects of climate change by blocking sunlight, isn’t on the agenda for this month’s COP30. It ought to be. A record-breaking funding round for companies doing this stuff shows people are getting serious about trying to artificially cool the planet. That’s terrifying, especially when these businesses are largely unregulated.
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2025-11-20/climate-geoengineering-dimming-the-sun-is-a-terrifying-new-industry-cop30

Travelers without REAL IDs could face more problems at airports as TSA proposes new compliance

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) — Without a REAL ID, air travelers could soon have a real problem. Since May, airports in California have been asking passengers for the federally approved identification at security checkpoints. “Travelers 18 years and older now need to have a Real ID or other acceptable form of identification to go through security screening,” said Vickie Calderon, a media and public relations officer at the Fresno-Yosemite International Airport. On Wednesday, the TSA proposed another option: if you don’t have an ID that they accept, you can pay $18 as a workaround. The TSA has proposed a biometric kiosk system as an option to verify identity if a traveler does not have a Real ID but pays the fee. The payment would be valid for 10 days for domestic travel. The TSA says it’s the next step in REAL ID compliance, first signed into law 20 years ago to heighten safety in airports. “I do think it makes sense. Only because it’s so easy to get a driver’s license. And they last for a really long time,” said Roger Schreiner, who was travelling through Fresno’s airport on Wednesday. Other travelers Action News spoke to on Wednesday were concerned that the new system may cause problems. “It definitely would cause holdups,” said Kelli Davenport, who is visiting family in Fresno. “I already have my REAL ID, so I don’t think it would impact me. But for others. I think that could hinder them. Especially with the fee. Additionally, the agency said biometric screening is not a guarantee that all identities will be verified. Travelers could face additional security measures and encounter delays. After announcing the proposal on Wednesday, the TSA reminded Americans that this newest compliance with REAL ID has been in the works for decades. “This notice serves as a next step in the process in REAL ID compliance, which was signed into law more than 20 years ago and finally implemented by Secretary Noem as of May 2025. TSA is working with stakeholders and partners to ensure both security and efficiency at our checkpoints. Additional guidance will be announced in the coming days,” said the agency.
https://abc30.com/post/travelers-real-ids-could-face-more-problems-airports-tsa-proposes-new-compliance/18178537/

LeBron James Comes Back In Victory Over Utah Jazz

LOS ANGELES-LeBron James had 11 points and 12 assists in the first game of his unprecedented 23rd NBA season, and Luka Doncic had 37 points and 10 assists in the Los Angeles Lakers’ 140-126 victory over the Utah Jazz on Tuesday, November 18 at Crypto. com Arena. 40-year-old James made his season debut in the Lakers’ starting lineup and played 30 minutes after missing training camp and their first 14 games due to sciatica. James didn’t take long to find the flow: He put on a playmaking clinic in the second half, and Doncic scored 17 points in the third quarter while the Lakers pulled away from Utah. Austin Reaves added 26 points as the Lakers improved to 11-4 with their third straight victory. One of the leagues best NBA teams so far. James made a driving layup in the third quarter to extend his streak of double-digit scoring performances to a record 1, 293 games every game in which he has played since Jan. 6, 2007. The four-time NBA champion didn’t score again, but the Lakers moved comfortably ahead. Bronny James played the final 3: 33 and hit a 3-pointer. The Jazz and Lakers will play on Sunday in Utah.
https://www.canyon-news.com/lebron-james-comes-back-in-victory-over-utah-jazz/

Homes at or under $1 million in Ocean County, Nov. 10 to 16

Prospective homebuyers considering the real estate market had a range of options in various neighborhoods throughout the region between Nov. 10 and Nov. 16. In this article, we outline recent property sales in Ocean County, all of which featured homes under $1,000,000. Below, we provide an overview of the top 10 properties in each area, chosen for their proximity to the desired price range and the largest living spaces. Please note that the properties in the list below are for real estate sales where the title was recorded during the week of Nov. 10, even if the property may have been sold earlier. 1. $999K, 4 bedrooms / 3 bathrooms Priced at $999, 000 (equivalent to $399 per square foot), this single-family residence, constructed in 1989 and situated at 9 Tracy Place, was sold in October. The home spans 2, 506 square feet of living area, with four bedrooms and three bathrooms. The property comprises a 13. 8-acre lot. The deal was finalized on Oct. 27. 2. $995K, 5 bedrooms / 3 baths In October, a single-family home, with five bedrooms and three baths, at 5000 Ocean Blvd., changed ownership. The property, covering 1, 469 square feet, was built in 1950 and was sold for $995, 000, which calculates to $677 per square foot. The lot size encompasses 3, 750 square feet. The deal was finalized on Oct. 28. 3. $920K, 3 bedrooms / 2 baths This single-family house, featuring three bedrooms and two bathrooms, underwent a change of ownership in October. At 94 Enclave Blvd., the home spans 2, 381 square feet and was sold for $920, 000, or $386 per square foot. The property sits on a lot measuring 6, 930 square feet, and it was built in 2004. The deal was finalized on Oct. 28. 4. $910K, 3 bedrooms / 2 bathrooms Situated at 3 Linda Drive, this detached house, consisting of three bedrooms and two bathrooms, was sold in October for a price of $910, 000, translating to $502 per square foot. The property, constructed in 1988, offers a living area of 1, 811 square feet and sits on a 1. 1-acre lot. The deal was finalized on Oct. 27. 5. $860K, 7 bedrooms / 4 bathrooms At $860, 000 ($315 per square foot), the single-family house at 7 Granite Drive offered another opportunity below the targeted price range when it changed hands in October. This property, built in 2018, provides 2, 734 square feet of living space, featuring seven bedrooms and four baths, and sits on a 2, 614-square-foot lot. The deal was finalized on Oct. 27. 6. $789K, 2 bedrooms / 2 baths For a price tag of $789, 000 ($336 per square foot), the single-family home, built in 2000 and at 52 Rosewood Drive changed hands in October. The home spans 2, 350 square feet of living area, with two bedrooms and two bathrooms. The property comprises a 4, 221-square-foot lot. The deal was finalized on Oct. 28. 7. $775K, 3 bedrooms / 2 baths At $775, 000 ($567 per square foot), the single-family residence at 79 Top Sail Court offered another opportunity below the targeted price range when it changed hands in October. This property, built in 1985, provides 1, 366 square feet of living space, featuring three bedrooms and two bathrooms, and sits on a 6, 000-square-foot lot. The deal was finalized on Oct. 27. 8. $758K, 4 bedrooms / 2 bathrooms Situated at 207 Stafford Ave., this detached house, consisting of four bedrooms and two baths, was sold in October for a price of $758, 200, translating to $260 per square foot. The property, constructed in 2004, offers a living area of 2, 919 square feet and sits on a 1. 7-acre lot. The deal was finalized on Oct. 28. 9. $751K, 3 bedrooms / 2 baths For a price tag of $751, 000 ($389 per square foot), the single-family house, built in 1990 and at 1025 Bayview Ave. changed hands in October. The home spans 1, 931 square feet of living area, with three bedrooms and two baths. The deal was finalized on Oct. 28. 10. $750K, 1 bedroom / 3 bathrooms In October, a single-family residence, with one bedroom and three bathrooms, at 279 Old Squan Road, changed ownership. The property, covering 2, 402 square feet, was built in 2001 and was sold for $750, 000, which calculates to $312 per square foot. The lot size encompasses 9, 496 square feet. The deal was finalized on Oct. 28.
https://www.nj.com/realestate-news/2025/11/homes-at-or-under-1-million-in-ocean-county-nov-10-to-16.html

“Did she earn her astrophysics degree from E or Hulu?”: Netizens react after Khloe Kardashian says Kim doubts moon landing because of her

Khloe Kardashian has revealed that she doesn’t believe in the 1969 moon landing. She added that she is the reason why her sister, Kim Kardashian, also called the moon landing ‘fake’ in a recent interview. Ad In an episode of The Kardashians, released on October 30, Kim said that she doesn’t believe in the moon landing. In an interview with PEOPLE, published on November 18, Khloe Kardashian opened up about her beliefs on the topic as well. She said: “I don’t believe in the moon landing. That’s very controversial. And I feel bad because I think I riled Kim up about it, and I’ve gotten her into a lot of trouble! I don’t think it happened. I think me and my brother, we’ve fed her a lot of information. I don’t know, I feel bad about that, but I’m going to die on this hill!” Ad Khloe added that there are more conspiracy theories she can talk about, but added that she doesn’t expect the government to admit them. She said: “I don’t expect the government to admit the moon landing was faked, because then if they admit that didn’t happen. I mean, there’s a long list of things you can look into, and some are too scary to talk about publicly because you don’t want anyone getting mad at you.” Ad Fans online have reacted to this statement from Khloe Kardashian, as one X (formerly Twitter) user wrote: “Did she earn her astrophysics degree from E or Hulu.” Langab Nation @LangabNation1st @PopCrave Did she earn her astrophysics degree from E or Hulu. Ad Another wrote, Maxwell O @Areyoucapable @PopCrave It mostly shows how conspiratorial thinking has become part of pop culture and how celebrities can unintentionally fuel misinformation simply by saying they don’t believe something historically verified. Ad Another commented, 𝐢𝐦𝐚𝐧𝐢 | 💕 @fantasizemafia @PopCrave the whole family has collective IQ of 70 Ad Users continued to take digs at Khloe and Kim, as one user tweeted, Maxwell O @Areyoucapable @PopCrave Khloé’s opinion is her own, but it doesn’t change the fact that there’s overwhelming scientific, photographic, and physical evidence the moon landing happened. A celebrity doubting it doesn’t equal proof. Ad Another wrote, Joelyn Jane @Joelyn45205201 @PopCrave Why Kardashian sisters are obsessed with moon landing? First Kim K now Khole K !! Ad Another commented, MM @cornu123copia @PopCrave God spare us the Kardashians pontificating on matters of science and technology, none of whom have been to university. Ad Also Read: “Now our sons get to grow up together”: Khloe Kardashian opens up about how Kylie Jenner supported her after Tristan Thompson breakup Kim Kardashian labeled moon landing ‘fake’ days before Khloe Kardashian backed her on the conspiracy theory On the October 30 episode of The Kardashians, Kim Kardashian was speaking to her All Fair’s co-star Sarah Paulson about the moon landing. She told Paulson: Ad “I’m sending you, so far, a million articles with both Buzz Aldrin and . the other one [Neil Armstrong]. This girl says, ‘What was the scariest moment?’ And [Aldrin] goes, ‘There was no scary moment, cause it didn’t happen. It could’ve been scary, but it wasn’t, cause it didn’t happen.’ Kim claimed that Aldrin sometimes slips up in interviews, leading her to believe that the moon landing didn’t happen. She added: Ad “I don’t think we did. I think it was fake. I’ve seen a few videos [of] Buzz Aldrin talking about how it didn’t happen. He says it all the time now, in interviews.” Explaining her theory further, Kim said: “Why does Buzz Aldrin say it didn’t happen? There’s no gravity on the moon why is the flag blowing? The shoes that they have in the museum that they wore on the moon [have] a different [foot]print than the photos. Why are there no stars?” Ad Meanwhile, many experts have spoken up to debunk Kim and Khloe Kardashian’s theories since then. Buzz Aldrin, who stepped on the moon with Neil Armstrong on July 20, 1969, has also shared his memories in multiple interviews in recent months. Also Read: Kris Jenner opens up about being “control freak,” claims Dr. Amen’s Rule of 12 helps her calm down × Feedback Why did you not like this content? Clickbait / Misleading Factually Incorrect Hateful or Abusive Baseless Opinion Too Many Ads Other Was this article helpful? Thank You for feedback Edited by Aditya Singh.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/pop-culture/news-did-earn-astrophysics-degree-e-hulu-netizens-react-khloe-kardashian-says-kim-doubts-moon-landing

Memorial plaque presented to Olyphant Vietnam veteran’s wife

Army veteran Vincent Narcoonis of Olyphant, who died on May 10 at the age of 76, was a recipient of two Purple Hearts and other service medals while serving in the Vietnam War. Commander Peter Puhalla Sr. of the Shopa Davey VFW Post 6082, Peckville, presented a memorial plaque of all of Vincent Narcoonis’ medals to his wife, Joan Narcoonis, this month.
https://www.thetimes-tribune.com/2025/11/20/memorial-plaque-presented-to-olyphant-vietnam-veterans-wife/

The Outlaw of Appalachia

How do we contend with being shaped by where we’re from, especially when we’re too ashamed to accept it? I’ve always lived close to my family, two hours from Campbell County, a county home to the small town at the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains where my mom grew up. It was where her parents grew up too, and their parents before them. My great-great-grandparents, the Pools, moved from Brookneil, Va. to Concord Va. after the Great Depression and made their money growing tobacco and raising cattle. They bought a couple dozen acres after sharecropping for a couple years in town, and built a little farmhouse on their newly acquired land. Now, it’s inhabited by Scott, my grandmother’s cousin. They don’t talk-my grandmother voted for Donald Trump: a hard line, full stop. A dealbreaker for Scott. For me though, it’s more complex. My grandparents were always around in my childhood. They’d come stay with my mom while my dad was at work to help with my newborn sister and keep a 4-year-old me entertained. I have fond memories of tussling with my grandfather, who had to be told to play more gently with me. He often forgot I was a little girl and not an older boy, even though that’s how I’ve always acted. When my sister was older, we’d have sleepovers at my grandparents’ quaint one-story house. I remember going down to the basement to rummage through old baseball cards and antique dolls. It’s just a bit bigger than a double wide, the house where my mother grew up. A couple hundred yards from the house where her grandmother lived and died. I’ve always been political, whereas they’ve always been religious. Those two identities didn’t clash until the rise of Trump’s MAGA, and then I realized there was a part of myself I’d always have to hide if I wanted to keep them in my life. Now, I feel as though no matter how often we talk, they’ll never fully know me since I decided to stifle this definitive piece of my identity that I feel explains so much of who I am. With Scott, it’s something I don’t have to hide. We both agree that we’re cut from the same cloth. My mom doesn’t understand how Scott became the person she is. After all, she grew up in the same place as the rest of our family that we feel are so wildly different from us. But Scott’s the type of person to focus on what unites us rather than what divides us. I didn’t know much about her growing up. I knew she was somewhat estranged from the family after trotting off to New York City in the ‘90s, but I didn’t realize how close we really were until I posted a picture from Kasteel Well on Facebook and got this comment from ‘AS’: “Where are you?? Is that Kasteel Well? Is this the Emerson school?” I responded, “yes it is!” Best to keep it short and sweet, I thought, since I had no clue why this random third cousin would be able to identify my campus from just one picture of naked trees and a moat. But then she responded: “I was a professor at Emerson in the late ‘80s early ‘90s and taught at the Castle in 1993-4. How crazy is that?” That’s when it started. A year and a half later, I thought about the prompt for this semester’s magazine issue-what connects us? I thought about me and this random distant relative who were tied together by a medieval castle owned by Emerson in the Dutch countryside. But it turned out to be so much more. It’s a now-defunct alternative press publication in Boston that Scott was the editor of while getting her master’s in writing, literature, and publishing at Emerson. It’s the first gay-friendly bar in the town that she and my mom grew up in. She said she opened it because there were no other cool places to go, so why not make the cool place? It’s the bar she tended in Boston, where she served the likes of Winona Ryder and Johnny Depp, next to the Four Seasons on Tremont, back when it was the Ritz Carlton. It’s the view of the stars from her farmhouse, which my Aunt Sue says is “the best view of the stars you’ll ever see.” No trees, no lights, no people. Just wide open space and the brilliant night sky. Over a long weekend, in the middle of the fall semester, I asked my mom to take me to see Scott. She wanted to meet at a little coffee shop in Appomattox, about halfway between Richmond (where I’m from) and where my mom grew up. I knocked out during the car ride there and woke up to a sign welcoming travellers to the town “where the nation reunited”-where the Civil War ended. The Blue Ridge Mountains looked true to their name-they gleamed cerulean in the distance. We walked into the coffee shop (she wanted to meet here because it’s owned by “big ol’ libs”). Then I saw her, dressed in all black, wearing dirt caked Hunter boots, with a long black bonnet concealing her dark, curly hair. Just like my mom’s. The first thing I noticed was that she didn’t have the drawling Southern accent that my grandparents, aunts, and uncles all share. The second thing I noticed was that it actually wasn’t gone, just hiding. Waiting ‘til she gets real fired up about something, impassioned, hands flying in the air, inhibitions released. Then, the ends of words start “droppin’.” Just like me. She told me about writing plays at Emerson in Boston and teaching about great female writers at the Castle. She told me about her uncle, the school superintendent of Campbell County who made the decision to integrate the school system during the Civil Rights Movement, only to wake up to a burning cross in his yard. She told me about her mother, the voter registrar who traveled across Appalachian Virginia to attend African American church services and register Black voters. She told me about her family getting death threats from the Ku Klux Klan because of it. For hours, I sat, enamored and fascinated by her very existence. Like me, she worked at a bar through college while simultaneously editing-her at the Boston Phoenix and me at The Beacon. She came back to the place she grew up in to visit her parents, who were both much sicker and older than she expected to find them. She remembers riding in her daddy’s truck to bring the cattle to the market and telling him it’s not just a visit. She was tired of the fast-paced city life and was ready to return to the country for good. “He looked over with tears in his eyes and said, ‘Well that’d be mighty fine,’” she told me, her own eyes glistening too. After our first meeting, we planned a phone call. It was that call where she told me about hammock camping across Central America in the middle of getting her master’s. She spoke of the transcendence she experienced sitting atop Mayan ruins at night, with monkeys and toucans as her roommates. The phosphorescent waters in Mexico, where all the waves break at the same time because of a continental shift causing a mile-deep drop on the ocean floor. She also told me about her home, where she once had to chase out a cooper hawk, where she would drive up the road to get heirloom fruits from trees that were hundreds of years old to make treats and desserts for her friends, the way my great-grandmother Betty did. She also remembers Betty, her aunt, fondly, how she’d come over and bake big cakes, make sweet tea, and stay up all night playing the card game Rook. She remembers how Betty used to pinch her fingers, squint her eyes, and say, “I love you thiiiiis much,” a testament to her humor. I think about how my mom has that phrase tattooed on her arm now. We talked about our family history, the 16 siblings my great grandfather Norris had. How his parents wouldn’t go to his sister’s-Scott’s mother Annie’s-wedding because she was marrying a Methodist man and they were raised Baptist. I think about how upset my grandparents were when my mother told them she’d be marrying an atheist. Not just an atheist, but a Northern one too. Bless her heart. I think about how despondent they’d be if I were to marry a woman. I’m certain they’d never speak to me again. They certainly wouldn’t attend the wedding, and my grandfather would die before officiating it-which I grew up my whole life hearing he wanted to do. I think about how he became the bitter man he is, damned to spend the rest of his life in a wheelchair due to exposure from Agent Orange, a highly toxic herbicide, in Vietnam. I remember how Scott told me my great-grandfather Norris died from asbestos exposure in the Navy. How my dad was exposed to that, too. How those three men have all reconciled differently with the cards they’d been dealt. And my mom, who returned to Lynchburg, Va. for the first time in probably over a decade to see her father in the hospital. He sneered when he heard we visited Scott. How could someone who had traveled the whole world and lived in some of the biggest cities on the East Coast decide to come back to a small mountain town in Virginia despite it all? For the same reason she opened that little gay bar, where she told me Venezuelan baseball players came to dance with lesbians. Where the drummer of The Psychedelic Furs came to perform-a scene straight out of her groovy stomping grounds in Brooklyn and Back Bay. Because people like us still exist in places like that little mountain town in Virginia, even if you don’t see us. Upon moving back to Virginia in the late ‘90s, Scott decided to open up her bar because her and her friends didn’t have anywhere cool to go for drinks and dancing. Lo and behold, there was a whole sleeper cell population of “freaks,” as Scott affectionately calls them, waiting for a safe space to come show themselves. In a town like Lynchburg, home to Jerry Falwell and Liberty University, that act is more than brave; it’s revolutionary. And it’s necessary, because queer people are everywhere. Even in the mountains of Virginia. This existence is more of an act of courage than being who you are in any of those other places that welcome you with open arms. That’s what Scott embodies-embracing who you are loudly and proudly for the chance of finding others like you, despite the guarantee of hatred, discrimination, anger, and even danger. Accepting that those things shape you just as much as the good stuff. It’s a lesson I learned on my own, as Scott did too. And her mother before her. And her mother before her.
https://berkeleybeacon.com/the-outlaw-of-appalachia/

Marvel’s Deadpool VR review: The merc with an HMD

For a second consecutive year, Oculus Studios has delivered a superhero game as its flagship VR experience for the fall. Last year it was Batman: Arkham Shadow and this year it’s Marvel’s Deadpool VR. The popular Marvel character feels right at home in VR, even if experience is bogged down by the woes of the hardware. Maximum effort Marvel’s Deadpool VR finds the titular antihero on a mission for S. H. I. E. L. D. when he’s forcefully brought in by the villain Mojo to capture other villains for his upcoming reality TV show. It’s the sort of wacky plot synopsis that only Deadpool could get away with. As Deadpool jumps into different areas of the universe, he does battle with villains like Lady Deathstrike and Mephisto. There’s a sense of life to the world of Deadpool VR. Developer Twisted Pixel brings in a lot of lesser-known characters to fill out the roster, which I always appreciate in a game like this. That combined with the various locations really makes it feel like you’re exploring an untouched corner of the Marvel universe. Of course, this is a Deadpool game, and it does not skimp out on the humor and fourth wall breaking. Deadpool is constantly acknowledging the fact that he’s in a video game, that it’s VR, and that he’s being controlled by a human player. He references characters not just from the Marvel pantheon, but pop culture as a whole. I was usually on board with Deadpool’s humor, but it’s a reality of comedy that when you’re constantly firing off jokes, you’re going to have some misses. It also didn’t help that Neil Patrick Harris, who plays Wade Wilson, feels like he’s doing a Ryan Reynolds impersonation most of the time. Your mileage will vary greatly based on how much you love to hear Deadpool crack jokes about anything and everything happening around him. I wore my red pants today VR is a platform where gameplay has to come first, and Deadpool VR provides an excellent playground for chaos. Wade Wilson is equipped with pistols, swords, bombs, and a grappler that he can use in tandem to kill enemies in a plethora of ways. My personal favorite was throwing his swords like daggers, which would then pin enemies to a nearby wall if they were close enough. You can also grab automatic weapons and rifles from defeated enemies or various weapon caches around the world. I’m lucky enough that I don’t struggle with VR sickness, but if you do, Deadpool VR has three settings for you to customize your experience. These settings will tweak locomotion and on-screen movement so that you’re not getting queasy as Wade Wilson falls from great heights or propels himself up using the grapple gun. After playing enough Deadpool VR, you’ll notice that the majority of encounters boil down to you being stuck in a room as waves of enemies enter until you can defeat them all and move on. Combat is fun, but this setup can feel repetitive after a while. There were a few instances where I caught myself hoping that I had just finished the last wave of enemies before I could progress, which isn’t how I should feel in an action game. Still, if you just want to slice some heads, this game should be on your radar. The devs don’t hold back on the blood and gore; you can decapitate and dismember enemies as you fight through hordes of them. Enemies can also destroy your limbs, and you’ll have to wait as Wade’s regenerative powers form baby limbs that grow into adult size. Superhero landing Marvel’s Deadpool VR doesn’t hit the immersive highs as Batman: Arkham Shadows did last year, but it’s still a fun superhero romp from Oculus Studios. The developers at Twisted Pixel make great use of the Deadpool IP, and there’s no shortage of havoc to wreak if you’re just looking for an action-heavy VR experience. This review is based on a code provided by the publisher, played on Meta Quest 3. Marvel’s Deadpool VR is available now for $49. 99 on Meta Quest 3 and Meta Quest 3S.
https://www.shacknews.com/article/146899/marvels-deadpool-vr-review-score

Astronaut prepares for a year in orbit

This week NASA will launch one of its most ambitious missions yet, sending 51-year-old astronaut Scott Kelly to the International Space Station for 12 months. That’s twice as long as his last trip to space in 2010, and a new record for an American in orbit. David Pogue of Yahoo Tech reports.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/astronaut-prepares-for-a-year-in-orbit/

Gastos de Petro revelan pagos en tiendas de lujo y un burdel en Portugal

19 de noviembre de 2025 Bogotá EFE. El presidente de Colombia, Gustavo Petro, hizo públicos sus gastos personales con la finalidad de demostrar la normalidad de sus ingresos y desvincularse de cualquier relación con el narcotráfico. No obstante, esta divulgación sacó a la luz una serie de pagos realizados en tiendas de alta gama en Estados Unidos y Europa, e incluso un desembolso en un establecimiento de entretenimiento para adultos ubicado en Portugal. La decisión de revelar sus cuentas parece estar motivada por la reciente inclusión, por parte del Departamento del Tesoro de EE. UU., del mandatario, junto a su esposa, Verónica Alcocer, su hijo mayor, Nicolás Petro Burgos, y su ministro del Interior, Armando Benedetti, en la ‘Lista Clinton’ de la Oficina de Control de Activos Extranjeros (OFAC), bajo la acusación de ser un “líder del narcotráfico”. El martes, Petro afirmó en su cuenta de X: “He publicado mis cuentas desde el 2022 hasta la fecha, y quisiera que fuera desde más atrás, para que no quede duda de mis ingresos. Pueden investigar lo que quieran sobre ellas y comparar con mi declaración de renta que he hecho públicas también”. Posterior a esta declaración, diversos medios de comunicación locales divulgaron un informe de la Unidad de Información y Análisis Financiero (UIAF), la entidad encargada de la lucha contra el Lavado de Activos y la Financiación del Terrorismo. Este documento, anterior a la fecha en que Estados Unidos anunció la sanción en octubre pasado, detalla los movimientos financieros del presidente, indicando que el deber de la UIAF es “velar por la seguridad financiera del presidente” ante alertas de “presuntas afectaciones” a sus cuentas. El informe, que en un principio fue catalogado como “secreto”, compila las “entradas, salidas y saldos” de dinero, así como las “operaciones en efectivo” que el sector financiero le reportó a la UIAF a nombre de Gustavo Petro entre 2023 y mediados de 2025. Dentro de estos registros se encuentran transacciones comunes como pagos en hoteles, restaurantes, farmacias y heladerías, además de abonos hipotecarios y compras en grandes almacenes y tiendas internacionales en el exterior, incluyendo El Corte Inglés, Zara, Saks Fifth Avenue y Nordstrom, así como algunas de lujo como Gucci, Prada o La Rinascente. Sin embargo, el gasto que capturó mayor atención mediática, más por el tipo de local que por su monto (209. 969 pesos colombianos, equivalentes a unos 56 dólares), fue un registro de mayo de 2023 en el Ménage Strip Club, un club para adultos en Lisboa. El presidente se encontraba en Portugal en una visita oficial de trabajo entre el 6 y el 7 de mayo de 2023, la cual siguió a una estancia de tres días en España como parte de su agenda. Luego de la difusión de sus gastos, Petro se dirigió a Noticias RCN, uno de los medios que cubrió el informe financiero, cuestionando en X: “¿Algo que rechazar señores de RCN? ¿Encontraron que mis gastos son superiores a mis ingresos salariales y de regalías de mi libro?”. El mandatario no realizó comentarios adicionales sobre los detalles específicos del informe.
https://latino-news.com/gastos-de-petro-revelan-pagos-en-tiendas-de-lujo-y-un-burdel-en-portugal/