Santa Barbara County News and Events

Vatican will not participate in Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’

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Pope Leo XIV waves to the crowd during the weekly general audience at St Peter's Square in The Vatican on February 18

By Christopher Lamb, CNN

(CNN) — Pope Leo XIV will not be joining US President Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace,” the Vatican’s top diplomat said Tuesday, adding that the United Nations should be left to handle crisis situations.

The board, which will be chaired indefinitely by Trump, was originally designed to oversee reconstruction of Gaza. However, its objective has since expanded to make the board a global peacekeeping body.

Pope Leo was invited to join the board last month.

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Holy See Secretary of State, told reporters they will not take up the invitation saying they were left “perplexed” by some points of the plan and that “critical issues” needed to be resolved.

The cardinal said that one of the Vatican’s concerns “is that at the international level it should above all be the UN that manages these crisis situations. This is one of the points on which we have insisted.”

Parolin’s comments came after attending an event with the Italian government to mark the anniversary of the Lateran Pacts, which created the Vatican City as a sovereign state nearly a century ago.

While Italy and the European Union have said they plan to attend the board as observers, the cardinal said the Vatican would not “participate in the Board of Peace because of its particular nature, which is evidently not that of other States.”

The Vatican is not the only state to have declined invitations. Britain, France and Norway are not signing up. Diplomats, officials and world leaders have expressed concerns over the expanded remit of the board, Trump’s indefinite chairmanship and the potential damage it could cause to the UN’s work.

Pope Leo XIV, the first US-born pontiff, has made peacemaking a central part of his papacy, warning last month that “war is back in vogue” in a major diplomatic address. Leo stressed the UN “should play a key role” in addressing conflicts while insisting on the importance of humanitarian law.

The pope has made repeated appeals for Gaza since his election, called for a two-state solution, and for the right of Palestinians to live peacefully “in their own land.” During the Israel-Hamas war he pressed for the release of the October 7 hostages, maintained dialogue with Israel’s leaders and has lamented the rise of antisemitism.

Leo has criticized Trump’s policies on immigration while the pontiff’s insistence on international, humanitarian law contrasts with a president who told The New York Times in January that he feels constrained only by his “own morality” while dismissing international law and the post-World War II order.

The board is due to hold its first meeting in Washington on Thursday.

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The hole-in-the-wall chicken shop Chinese tourists are traveling thousands of miles to visit

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António Silva has been selling grilled chicken from a tiny Lisbon shop for four decades.

By Tiago Palma, CNN

Lisbon (CNN) — In a city of beautiful streets, Lisbon’s Travessa da Tapada is easy to miss. Lined by parked cars, it’s a short run of apartment buildings linking busier thoroughfares, soundtracked by the rumble of traffic from the nearby elevated A2 highway.

And yet, each day, a steady parade of tourists — many of whom have traveled thousands of miles from China — makes its way to one unmarked address: number 5A.

Behind a green door with no sign above it, António Silva, 66, works alone in a tiny Portuguese churrasqueira — a no-frills charcoal-grill shop best known for one thing: roast chicken. Inside, he tends a bed of glowing embers, turning spatchcocked birds over the heat while the phone rings for orders. The smoke drifts towards the glass and stays there, lingering in the storefront window like a memory.

On a recent winter day, visitors lined up outside the blank storefront, dressed in quilted coats with furry hoods, cellphones ready to capture photos and videos for social media. They were there to film the scene through the fogged window — Silva’s hands, the grill, the chickens — and then to taste what comes out in a white paper bag printed with cartoon roosters, still steaming in the cold.

The chicken tastes smoky first — charcoal on the skin — then salty and gently sweet from the seasoning, with meat that stays remarkably juicy under the crackle. Piri-piri seasoning cuts through with a bright, lingering heat, the kind that builds rather than burns.

Travessa da Tapada hasn’t always been a tourist stop. Silva has been roasting meat in this backstreet shop for decades, and until recently it was a secret known mainly to locals in Lisbon’s Alcântara district. There’s no sign on the street — just the door number, 5A — and the daily rhythm hasn’t changed much since he began.

Then, somehow, the address found its way onto Chinese-language “you have to go” lists — and the line began.

Word of mouth

It started, Silva says, about two years ago. He couldn’t recall the exact date, only a before” and an “after.” First came one Chinese customer. The next day, another. Then another, and another, until he realized the shop’s clientele had almost completely shifted.

“I only noticed it like that,” he says. The line grew slowly and, at some point, stopped being a line and became a wave. “Sometimes I have 40 Chinese people at the door. I saw 40, believe it if you want.”

One day, he says, a man arrived with a video camera and spent hours filming the shop inside and out, from every available angle. “He was there a long time,” Silva says, glancing around his shop as he recalled the visit. “Maybe a Chinese influencer. I don’t know.” Not long after, this small backstreet became a dot on an international map.

“Word of mouth for millions and millions of people,” he says.

These days, visitors often arrive with suitcases in tow, straight from the airport. Others come from their hotels, concierges dialed in on their phones to help guide them. Once inside, many use translator apps — often to tell Silva something he already knows. “You’re very famous in China.”

If he’s impressed by the reputation, Silva doesn’t show it. He isn’t on social media himself. “Not Facebook, not Instagram. I’ve got nothing,” he says. There are no delivery-platform orders here, either. Requests come by phone, often through the shop’s ancie

Tras su breve suspensión del aire en 2025, Jimmy Kimmel sigue tomando riesgos en su programa de TV

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Por Dan Heching, CNN

En septiembre del año pasado, el presentador de televisión nocturna Jimmy Kimmel se encontró de repente en el centro de atención, uno que iba mucho más allá del escenario de su estudio.

El mundo de la televisión nocturna ya estaba en crisis después de que CBS cancelara abruptamente el programa de Stephen Colbert ese verano de 2025, una decisión que sacudió a la industria y alimentó la especulación sobre el futuro del formato de comedia de larga data.

Así que cuando los comentarios de Kimmel relacionados con el presunto homicida del activista conservador Charlie Kirk se volvieron virales por todas las razones equivocadas, los riesgos eran aún mayores de lo habitual.

Mientras la indignación de la derecha llegaba hasta la Casa Blanca, el presentador y su equipo recibieron una avalancha de amenazas y su información personal fue expuesta. Un funcionario de la administración amenazó con revocar las licencias de las filiales de ABC. Solo unas horas después, ABC suspendió el programa de Kimmel “indefinidamente”.

Fue un momento que incluso el propio Kimmel admitiría después que su programa podría no haber sobrevivido. “Pensé: nunca volveré al aire”, dijo más tarde. Pero se equivocó: sí regresó.

En los días posteriores al homicidio de Kirk, Kimmel —acostumbrado a agitar las aguas con humor político incisivo— se centró en las percepciones sobre el presunto homicida, diciendo que “la pandilla MAGA (estaba) desesperada por caracterizar a este chico” como “cualquier cosa menos uno de ellos”.

Kimmel también se burló del presidente Donald Trump por hablar sobre la renovación del ala este de la Casa Blanca cuando un miembro de la prensa le preguntó cómo estaba afrontando personalmente la muerte de Kirk.

El comediante volvió a hablar sobre la politización de la muerte de Kirk en el programa de la noche siguiente, diciendo que “muchos en MAGA-land están trabajando muy duro para capitalizar la muerte de Charlie Kirk”.

A medida que crecía el coro de comentaristas de medios de derecha que criticaban a Kimmel, el podcaster conservador Benny Johnson invitó a Brendan Carr, jefe de la Comisión Federal de Comunicaciones, a su programa para abordar la situación.

Carr, cuya agencia otorga licencias a las estaciones de televisión locales en todo el país, dijo que el asunto podría resolverse “por las buenas o por las malas” para ABC y su empresa matriz, Disney.

Solo unas horas después, los propietarios de grupos de estaciones Nexstar y Sinclair anunciaron que dejarían de transmitir el programa de Kimmel en sus respectivos mercados. Poco después, ABC anunció que retiraba el programa del aire por completo, diciendo: “’Jimmy Kimmel Live!’ será suspendido indefinidamente”.

La decisión de sacar a Kimmel del aire desató una tormenta, con críticos acusando a la FCC de extralimitación e intromisión en la libertad de expresión, especialmente porque Nexstar estaba en proceso de buscar la aprobación de la FCC para una fusión propuesta con otro propietario de grupo de estaciones, Tegna.

La suspensión incluso provocó un boicot de consumidores a Disney+ y Hulu, plataformas de streaming que forman parte del portafolio de Disney.

En una entrevista con Erin Burnett de CNN después de que el programa d

Drying Wednesday, storm number 3 begins Thursday

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Rainfall totals over the last 48 hours have been quite impressive! Over an inch and a half is reported in Santa Barbara, close to 3 inches in San Luis Obispo, 2 inches near Santa Maria and Ventura. We dry out Wednesday, a few small showers may pop up inland this afternoon but minimal impact is expected. All Flood and Wind Advisories expired at 6am, now were left with High Surf Advisories for the beaches and a Winter Storm Watch for inland mountains through Thursday. The sun will peak out by Wednesday afternoon and bring a small warming trend. Highs rise into the 50s and 60s. Overnight more rain begins.

Storm number 3 of the week arrives Thursday morning. This is our next cold front, but this time, impacts and rain look to be moderate. Compared to the last two storms this system will rank third. We start the morning with widespread moderate rain during breakfast. The moderate rain will transition to light and most storms move out of the area by midday. A rather quick set of spring showers ahead. Use caution when traveling some roadways are at risk for minor flooding and mudslides. Winds will crank up around advisory levels and may still down trees and power lines. Snow levels continue to lower and we may see a dusting in some unusual areas. High Surf will slam the coastline, avoid standing near or on jetties and rocks. The sun will dry the area out after lunch, highs rise into the 50s and 60s.

We begin another drying trend on Friday and dry weather holds into Saturday. The next set of showers begin Sunday afternoon and yet another storm Monday into Tuesday. Both of these systems look to be small, however more data will need to be collected.

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Microsoft pledges $50 billion to tackle growing AI inequality

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By Hanna Ziady, CNN

London (CNN) — Microsoft says it is on track to invest $50 billion by the end of the decade to help bring artificial intelligence to lower-income countries, as concerns mount over the technology’s potential to deepen inequality.

The announcement was made Wednesday at the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, where leading tech executives, government officials and AI researchers are debating how to use AI to solve real-world problems.

Policymakers globally are increasingly worried that the unequal adoption of AI risks widening income and development gaps between rich and poor countries. In December, the United Nations Development Project called for global cooperation on standards and safety to ensure the technology “functions as a shared public good rather than a concentrated advantage.”

At the summit, Microsoft likewise expressed the need for cross-border partnerships to prevent poorer countries from being left behind.

“We need to act with urgency to address the growing AI divide,” Microsoft president Brad Smith and chief responsible AI officer Natasha Crampton said in a joint statement. “Artificial intelligence is diffusing at an impressive speed, but its adoption around the world remains profoundly uneven.”

A recent Microsoft report found that AI usage in the global north, a catch-all term for developed and high-income countries, is roughly twice that of the global south — and growing.

“This disparity impacts not only national and regional economic growth, but whether AI can deliver on its broader promise of expanding opportunity and prosperity around the world,” Smith and Crampton said.

They warned that, just as unequal access to electricity has exacerbated a growing economic gap between the global north and south, without urgent action, the AI divide could perpetuate that disparity in the century ahead.

On the other hand, the technology could be used positively to help poor countries leapfrog older development pathways. “If AI is deployed broadly and used well by a young and growing population, it offers a real prospect for catch-up economic growth for the Global South,” said Smith and Crampton.

“It might even provide the biggest such opportunity of the 21st century,” the pair said.

Microsoft’s $50 billion investment will, among other things, help to build the data centers crucial to providing the computing power needed to run AI models. Extending internet access is another focus.

Only about 36% of Africa’s population had broadband internet access in 2022, according to the World Bank. That compares with some 90% of US households, official figures show.

The AI Impact Summit, hosted by India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, highlights the country’s ambition to position itself as an AI leader in the global south.

High-profile attendees include Sam Altman of OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei and Google CEO Sundar Pichai who is due to deliver a keynote address on Friday.

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