Santa Barbara County News and Events

Guns on the television and in Iran’s streets as Trump renews war threats

Kraig Pakulski 0 30 Article rating: No rating

By Chief Global Affairs Correspondent, Matthew Chance

Tehran (CNN) — As night falls over Iran’s sprawling capital, and the snowy peaks of the Alborz mountains fade into the darkness, thousands of Iranians have been routinely taking to the streets for state-sponsored rallies aimed at mobilizing supporters against the United States.

Near Tajrish Square, an upscale neighborhood of Tehran, the inevitable chanting of “Death to America” blares out over a sea of Iranian flags, while street vendors hawk tea and souvenirs, like patriotic baseball caps and patches, to the enthusiastic crowd.

“I am so ready to sacrifice my life for my country and for my people,” one young woman named Tiana, wearing glasses in the colors of the Iranian flag, told me above the deafening chants.

“All the people, the whole army, all commanders that we have, they’re ready to sacrifice their lives too, and ready to fight with their whole heart and soul,” she added, dismissing US President Donald Trump’s latest social media threat to resume military action.

“For Iran, the clock is ticking, and they better get moving, fast, or there won’t be anything left of them,” Trump posted on his Truth Social platform on Sunday, further ratcheting up tensions as stalled peace talks undermine a fragile ceasefire.

One elderly man carrying a makeshift placard offered to translate his sign, hand-written in Farsi. “Nuclear and missile technology is as important as our borders, so we will protect them,” it read.

“We need nuclear power, clean energy, not a bomb,” he told me, a reference to Iran’s refusal to end its controversial nuclear program, which Trump has made a condition for ending the war.

“Trump knows we don’t have a bomb, but he is attacking us anyway,” he added.

As swirling rumors and escalating fears mount of imminent US-Israeli strikes, there is a growing sense of inevitability among many Iranians about the resumption of hostilities.

“We know this war isn’t over. We know Trump is not really going to negotiate,” said Fatima, who said she grew up in London and Dubai.

“He’s just going to be, like, ‘You do what I tell you or I’m going to kill you.’ And then he’s going to attack us even if we do as he says,” she added.

The rallies, or “night-gatherings” have been taking place across the country every evening for nearly three months, essentially since the start of the war.

But recent days have seen the ominous appearance of public gun kiosks, where civilians are being offered basic lessons in using weapons – a sign of how the hardening Iranian authorities are readying people for further conflict.

At one kiosk in Vanak Square, we saw a woman dressed in a black chador being learning how to handle an AK-47 assault rifle, with a masked man in military fatigues showing her how to strip and assemble the weapon.

A few feet away, a small girl played with an unloaded Kalashnikov, aiming the weapon into the air before pulling the trigger and handing the gun back to her smiling instructor.

The general call to arms is also being reiterated on state television, with several channels broadcasting their hosts brandishing assault rifles.

One male anchor, Hossein Hosseini, on the state-run Ofogh channel, fired his rifle – on live television – into the studio ceiling after receiving a lesson from a masked member of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC.

Separately, a female Channel-3 presenter, Mobina Nasiri, addressed viewers while grasping an assault rifle with both hands.

“They sent me a weapon from Vanak Square so that I too, like all of you people, can learn how to use it,” she announced.

But not all Iranians are gunning for a fight.

Summer Solstice Workshops get underway

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) Volunteers have a month to prepare for the 52nd Summer Solstice Celebration.

They held their first of many workshops on Sunday.

Volunteers are building floats and preparing to make costumes.

They are re-purposing things that have made a splash in the past.

Artist Carlos Cuellar is helping another artist with a surfing design.

"Wave is the theme for solstice, we are going to paint the waves green and blue and come out the pipe, the tube from the surfer," said Cuellar.

Volunteers usually work on the floats and the costumes from 3-8 p.m.

If someone wants to get involved, they can stop by the Solstice Workshop on the 600 block of Garden St.

The 3-day Summer Solstice Celebration begins on Friday, June 19, with a kick off event in Alameda Park.

The parade starts at noon on Saturday, June 20, on the corner of Santa Barbara and Ortega Streets.

For more information visit https://solsticeparade.com

The post Summer Solstice Workshops get underway appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

California Strawberry Festival raises money for nonprofits and scholarships

Kraig Pakulski 0 47 Article rating: No rating

VENTURA, Calif. (KEYT) The California Strawberry Festival celebrated its 40th anniversary over the weekend.

On Sunday, the Oxnard High School Marching Band welcomed people at the entrance.

Once inside, people quenched their thirst on all kinds of strawberry drinks.

They also had plenty of Strawberry treats to choose from.

They enjoyed strawberries dipped in chocolate on the premises and strawberry popcorn.

And with the help of student volunteers they made Strawberry Shortcakes large enough to share.

Naval Base Ventura County Seabee Matthew Suarez and his family enjoyed it all.

"We already have chocolate strawberries, shortcake, we got our margaritas, everything is good," said Brissa of Suarez.

California Strawberry Festival Chairman Greg Berini said attendance impacts scholarships given each year the children of field workers and the nonprofits that ran some of the stands.

"When all the money is counted then we look at how much our nonprofits benefited, from that we see how we do our scholarship funds for the children of field workers and that really dictates how much we can give back," is how many people come to the festival," Berini.

Hundreds of people came by train or free shuttle buses.

People had a chance to  take photos to remember the experience/

And at the end of their day they usually bought a tray of strawberries to take home.

One Oxnard Grower ran out on Saturday, but restocked their stand on the final day of the festival.

Organizers hope people who had a good time will want to come back year after year.

The post California Strawberry Festival raises money for nonprofits and scholarships appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Aaron Rai has always been the nice guy in two gloves. Now he’s the nice guy in two gloves with a PGA Championship win

Kraig Pakulski 0 16 Article rating: No rating

By Dana O’Neil, CNN

Newtown Square, Pennsylvania (CNN) — After he signed his card, the one that made official his in-the-clubhouse best 9-under for the PGA Championship, Aaron Rai grabbed the hand of his wife, Gaurika Bishnoi.

The two ambled around the metal gates that keep out the people who don’t belong in the official areas, circled around the paved walkway and made their way toward the Aronimink clubhouse.

As they walked, his right hand in her left, their arms swung back and forth casually as if they were out for an ordinary Sunday evening stroll – happily oblivious to the two cameramen walking backward in front of them, the phalanx of photographers trailing them, the guy dangling a boom mic and the Goodyear blimp hovering nearby.

As if any of this was normal. In the course of one afternoon, Rai eagled nine, sunk an absurd 50-odd foot putt at 17, mastered a course that seemed unconquerable, kept at bay a pack of baying wolves that included Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas, Cameron Smith, Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele, and won the PGA Championship, his first major and only second PGA Tour win of his career.

All that while putting to bed an Englishman’s hex on this particular tournament. The list of past English champions begins with Jim Barnes, winner in 1916 and 1919. It’s now bookended with Rai.

And yet – as his putting, driving and shot making is assessed in the search for the secret sauce of Aaron Rai – it is that very walk with his wife that makes clear why he, ranked 44th in the world coming into suburban Philadelphia, leaves as the champion.

“It’s such an amazing journey to get to this point,’’ Rai said. “There’s so much that goes into it. It’s still hard for me to get my head around it because I also think what’s required to perform in a tournament like this, it is very different. … Having a larger view of things, a larger perspective on the journey to this point, you have to stay extremely present, extremely focused on what’s in front of you. But to try and reflect on it, it’s absolutely incredible.”

Mr. Nice Guy becomes a major champion

Aronimink put the world’s best golfers in a vice this week and squeezed the whines right out of them. Difficult pin placements. Impossible greens. Too little strategy off the tee. Protected scoring. Too much bunching on the leaderboard. Mrs. Lincoln had better reviews about the play than the golfers had about the course here.

Rai just put his head down and played golf. It is what he does. It is how he was raised. It is how he exists. Simple, true, straight as an arrow, impossibly hard to rattle, equally hard to impress, Rai is universally referred to as Mr. Nice Guy on the Tour.

That can sound damning with faint praise, with his lack of wins, but people actually mean it. He is nice.

He is a man with no social media footprint, who tries hard not to fist pump after a good shot, lest his peers think he’s trying to show them up. He does not drink, does not smoke, does not party. He met his wife when her brother served as his volunteer at an event and his mom lined up a meet-cute.

In his 14 years on the Tour, he has afforded himself one splurge – a right-hand driving Honda Integra sports car straight out of “Fast and Furious” and imported from England to his Jacksonville, Florida, home.

It all adds up to the one thing Aronimink demanded that no one else seemed to master here: Calm. While Rahm inadvertently tossed rough at a volunteer and McIlroy doubled over his club after errant shots, Rai put his head down and took the tournament one hole at a time – even as his round gained momentum, the crowds around him swelled, the Goodyear blimp parked itself overhead and drones started z

Por qué no está convocado Ángel Di María con Argentina para el Mundial 2026

Kraig Pakulski 0 12 Article rating: No rating

Por Federico Leiva, CNN en Español

Cuando la selección de Argentina aterrice en Estados Unidos para defender el título conseguido en Qatar 2022, habrá un nombre ausente que llamará mucho la atención: Ángel Di María. El “Fideo”, como se lo conoce en su país, es uno de los seis vigentes campeones del mundo que no estará en la cita de este año, ya que no integra la prelista de 55 futbolistas que entregó el entrenador Lionel Scaloni.

El rosarino, de destacados pasos por el Real Madrid, Paris Saint-Germain, Manchester United y Benfica, no estará en el Mundial 2026 porque así lo decidió él. Consciente de lo mucho que le costó ser reconocido por la afición albiceleste, y después de un período marcado por la obtención de cuatro títulos oficiales consecutivos, Di María le puso punto final a su participación en el combinado nacional tras ganar la Copa América 2024.

La fecha ya estaba estipulada desde 2023. Así lo hizo saber durante una entrevista. No había enojos u otros motivos ocultos, sino que simplemente deseaba retirarse de la selección en lo más alto, a su manera y a su tiempo. Soñaba con hacerlo con otro título bajo el brazo y lo logró en aquella sufrida victoria sobre Colombia.

Fue el final soñado para un jugador que sufrió como pocos las críticas en Argentina por la falta de títulos, y uno a los que más se señaló por lo bien que rendía en sus equipos y lo mucho que le costaba en la selección. Algunos incluso pidieron que dejara de ser convocado.

Pero la historia cambió cuando Scaloni tomó las riendas del combinado argentino, que llevaba casi tres décadas sin títulos oficiales (excluyendo los Juegos Olímpicos).

Di María no solo siguió siendo convocado por Scaloni, sino que fue determinante en cada uno de los logros de la selección. Cómo olvidar esa definición de emboquillada sobre Ederson para darle la Copa América 2021 ante Brasil en el mismísimo Maracaná, o cuando repitió esa misma fórmula contra Donnarumma en la goleada a Italia para levantar la Finalissima en 2022.

Lo mejor llegó a finales de ese mismo año, en Qatar. Di María comenzó siendo un titular importante en la Copa del Mundo, pero a partir de los mano a mano fue al banco casi todos los partidos, y apenas jugó ocho minutos entre octavos, cuartos y semifinal. Sin embargo, Scaloni confió en él para el encuentro más importante de todos, y “Fideo” no defraudó: le hicieron el penal que significó el 1-0, marcó él mismo el 2-0.

Fue tan buena su labor (especialmente desde lo táctico, ayudando a anular el costado derecho de Francia) que su sustitución coincidió con el mejor momento del seleccionado francés en el partido. Finalmente, la historia tuvo un final feliz para él.

Y mucho más feliz fue con el título en la Copa América 2024, donde fue titular en cuatro de los partidos que jugó la selección argentina en su camino al bicampeonato consecutivo.
Incluso en la final contra Colombia jugó 117 minutos. Ese fue el broche de oro. El epílogo de una historia cargada de frustraciones, que el “Fideo” cerró con las manos llenas de trofeos.

The-CNN-Wire
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