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Mike Pence rebukes Trump, says he had no right to overturn election – MSNBC

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Former Vice President Mike Pence last week rejected former President Donald Trump's claim that he could have 'overturned' the results of the 2020 election. The Morning Joe panel discusses.Feb. 7, 2022

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Rep. Cheney in op-ed says January 6 committee 'won't be intimidated'06:23

Trump phone call logs missing from documents examined by Jan. 6 committee09:45

Steve Rattner charts the 'red-hot' housing market05:42

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House member prioritizes lowering prescription drug prices10:16

NFL star Anthony Harris takes fan to dance after her father dies01:44

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Mike Pence rebukes Trump, says he had no right to overturn election - MSNBC

Nikki Haley: Pence ‘did what he thought was right’ on Jan. 6 | TheHill – The Hill

Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki HaleyNikki HaleyWhy Mike Pence should run for president Trump endorses Rep. Nancy Mace's primary challenger GOP challenger says Mace 'sold out President Trump' MORE said on Monday that she thinks former Vice President Mike PenceMichael (Mike) Richard PencePence to give commencement address at South Carolina university Why Mike Pence should run for president Fight over Trump records puts focus on low-profile National Archives MORE "did what he thought was right" on Jan. 6 when he certified the results of the 2020 election.

"Mike Pence is a good man. He's an honest man. I think he did what he thought was right on that day," Haley told Fox News's Bret Baier on Monday.

"I will always say Im not a fan of Republicans going after Republicans because the only ones that win when that happens are the Democrats and the media, and we have to keep our eyes on 2022," she added.

Haley's remarks came after Pence said last week that the idea of overturning the election results was "un-American."

"President TrumpDonald TrumpGiuliani in discussions with Jan. 6 committee about testifying: report Rapper Kodak Black, three others wounded in shooting outside California bar Sunday shows preview: White House says Russia could invade 'any day'; RNC censure resolution receives backlash MORE is wrong. I had no right to overturn the election," Pence said at a Federalist Society event in Florida. "The presidency belongs to the American people and the American people alone. Frankly, there is almost no idea more un-American than the notion that any one person could choose the American president."

Former President Trump has explicitly said Pence should have unilaterally overturned the results, something he did not have the power to do.

If the Vice President (Mike Pence) had 'absolutely no right' to change the Presidential Election results in the Senate, despite fraud and many other irregularities, how come the Democrats and RINO Republicans, like Wacky Susan CollinsSusan Margaret CollinsOn The Money Inflation hitshighest rate since February 1982 Three indicted following investigation into illegal donation scheme to Collins campaign, PAC Senators introduce a resolution honoring Tom Brady's career MORE, are desperately trying to pass legislation that will not allow the Vice President to change the results of the election? Trump said in a statement.

Trump has repeatedly blamed widespread voter fraud for his loss, but actions at the state level in several states backed by Democrats and Republicans have not found evidence to support his claims.

Haley is also seen as a potential 2024 presidential candidate, though she has said she will not run should Trumpdecide to launch his own bid.

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Nikki Haley: Pence 'did what he thought was right' on Jan. 6 | TheHill - The Hill

Mike Pence tells world peace rally that U.S. must show strength in face of North Korean provocations – Washington Times

Former Vice President Mike Pence told a gathering of world leaders and international dignitaries on Friday that there is still hope for a peaceful resolution to the North Korean nuclear crisis, but stressed that America must show strength in the face of rising missile tests and other provocations from Pyongyang.

Weakness arouses evil, and a resurgence of missile tests and provocations from Pyongyang, [including] this weeks promises to shake the world, are a testament to this truth, Mr. Pence said, referencing North Koreas claim in recent days to be confronting the U.S. by shaking the world with missile tests.

While he did not mention the Biden administration by name, Mr. Pence suggested Washington is not responding aggressively enough to a growing wave of missile tests by Pyongyang, asserting that former President Donald Trumps diplomatic breakthrough with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un proved that peace follows strength.

The former vice president made the remarks at a summit to promote world peace and mobilize hope behind efforts to end the North Korean nuclear crisis and the decades-old conflict between North and South Korea.

The World Summit 2022 event was organized by the Universal Peace Federation and is bringing participants from every continent together, both virtually and at an in-person program in Seoul, where Mr. Pence was a featured speaker at an opening ceremony Friday.

Other top officials of the former Trump administration, including former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Secretary of Defense Mark T. Esper, were slated to address the gathering in Seoul over the weekend.

During Fridays opening ceremony, Mr. Pence said the former administration showed that the dream of peace on the Korean peninsula is possible.

Under our administration we proved to the astonishment of the world that peace is possible when America is strong, the former vice president said. He referenced direct summits that Mr. Trump held with Mr. Kim after exerting economic and other pressure on Pyongyang in response to a surge in North Korean missile tests and nuclear provocations in 2017.

Few people imagined that they would see the leaders of the United States and North Korea sitting down to discuss peace, but thats exactly what happened at that historic summit in Singapore in 2018 and the summit and meetings that followed, said Mr. Pence. President Donald Trump showed it was possible, the nuclear testing stopped, the missile testing stopped and we began a productive dialogue for peace between our nations.

The historic diplomacy ultimately failed to achieve a breakthrough denuclearization deal. Mr. Trump walked away from a second summit with Mr. Kim in 2019, saying the North Korean side had demanded sweeping relief from sanctions in exchange for only a limited commitment to destroy part of the nuclear arsenal it has been building for decades in violation of repeated U.N. Security Council resolutions.

Attempts at diplomacy with the North Koreans have gone nowhere during the years since, while the Kim regime engages in increasingly brazen new missile tests.

Mr. Pences sobering remarks on the situation came amid speeches by a range of other prominent international figures at Fridays opening ceremony for the World Summit, an event being hosted by Hak Ja Han Moon, the co-founder of UPF, and co-hosted by Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and former U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

Mrs. Moon, the widow of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon, is the leader of the Unification movement that grew from the Unification Church that the Rev. Moon founded in 1954 a year after war between North and South Korea was frozen by a U.S.-backed armistice. She and her late husband devoted their lives to the reunification of the Korean Peninsula and to the promotion of world peace. They founded The Washington Times in 1982.

A range of prominent political figures and current world leaders are participating in this weekends summit, including Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, Albanian President Ilir Meta, Senegal President Macky Sall and former European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso.

Mr. Pence and other speakers praised the work of Mrs. Moon on Friday. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who also addressed the gathering in Seoul, praised participants for coming together in the name of peace for the world and for the Korean peninsula.

The human race will move forward to safety, to prosperity and to freedom only if good people take the time, show the courage, and get involved, Mr. Gingrich said.

The human race is at one of those amazing turning points, when the technology that brings us together can also be the technology that destroys us, and I think these efforts, this commitment to talk together, to bring together the kind of really remarkable groups that come from all over the world to this kind of conference, to make friendships, to go back home realizing that you have things in common that allow you to build a better future, I think all this is very, very vital, he said. So I want to commend everyone both people who are here, people who are with us virtually, and people who will, in the future, see all of this on social media.

Mr. Pence spoke of humankinds inexhaustible thirst for freedom, asserting that the U.S. plays a special role in promoting freedom around the world.

In the face of such renewed belligerence from North Korea, of Russian tanks on the border of Ukraine, of Chinas warplanes flying into Taiwans defense zone in record numbers, you can be sure of this: The American people will always stand for freedom and we will always stand with the people of the Republic of Korea, the former vice president said.

America will always be freedoms greatest champion, libertys greatest protector and the armed forces of the United States will remain the greatest force for good the world has ever known, he said.

As our administration proved. Much can be accomplished through a combination of strength and engagement, he said. Based on the progress that I saw under the Trump-Pence administration, I remain supremely confident that a brighter future is on the horizon, for the United States, for the people of the Korean peninsula, the Asia-Pacific and the world.

No oppressive regime can last forever, Mr. Pence said. For inside every human heart is an unquenchable fire that burns to be free. Inside every human soul is an insatiable desire for freedom.

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Mike Pence tells world peace rally that U.S. must show strength in face of North Korean provocations - Washington Times

This 33-year-old left the U.S. for Bali and lives a life of luxury on $2,233 a monthhow he spends his money – CNBC

Olumide Gbenro has never called one place "home" for long.

The 33-year-old entrepreneur grew up in Nigeria until he turned six, when his minister parents decided to move to London. Then, seven years later, the Gbenros were granted visas to immigrate to the United States through the country's green card lottery so Olumide, his parents and two siblings relocated to Columbus, Ohio.

"Being a person of color, I felt that there were certain times in my life where I just didn't feel valued as a human being," Gbenro tells CNBC Make It of growing up Black in the Midwest. "I always felt left out."

Gbenro wanted a creative life: one that was filled with travel, art and opportunities to meet people from all corners of the world. But his parents wanted him to become a doctor, lawyer or engineer.

In 2016, he finished his double master's degree in epidemiology and behavioral science at San Diego State University. He found himself caught between two paths: go to medical school and become a doctor or travel the world.

"All of my life, I just followed the rules, whether it was from my parents, religion or society," he says. "But deep down I knew that if I took the position in the PhD program, I could never go back, I could never travel abroad I'd be stuck to a lab, so I decided to say 'no.'"

Gbenro packed up all of his belongings and left the United States to see the world but it would take him years to land in Bali, his forever home.

Gbenro's first stop was Berlin, where he had friends from graduate school. He spent three months there on a tourist visa bouncing between friends' couches and hostels.

When Gbenro left the United States, he had "almost zero savings and no plan." He quickly grew his Instagram following posting travel tips, dance videos and other content. Gbenro decided to monetize his hobby: He would message other creators and businesses on Instagram and offered to help them improve their social media strategy for a fee (often $250).

Starting a remote business was "really tough in the beginning," Gbenro recalls, but soon he had a full roster of clients and enough income to make social media his full-time job. He took an online course in social media marketing that helped him structure his business, and an old friend in San Diego referred him to his first two clients.

Once his visa expired, he traveled to Mexico for four months, then went back to San Diego. "But I realized I wasn't happy living in America still," he says. "There was something about living in America that made me feel like I wasn't growing."

He continues: "As a Black man, there was a psychological trauma and pressure I felt living there, especially as an immigrant too, feeling like I didn't fit in."

Gbenro officially launched his social media marketing business, Olumide Gbenro PR & Brand Monetization, in 2018 while he was still in San Diego,collaborating with celebrity chefs, real estate agents, business coaches and more. Though he was thriving at work, Gbenro still craved a change.

One afternoon he was scrolling through Instagram and stopped on a photo of one of his friends who was traveling in Bali. She was relaxing on a beach, surrounded by lush palm trees, with a coconut in her hand.

'It looked like the perfect place to live," Gbenro says. "The difference between Bali and every other city I researched is that it seemed very peaceful all the locals, in photos online, looked genuinely happy and like they spend a lot of time in nature."

In 2019, he found an apartment in Bali through an acquaintance on Instagram, booked a one-way plane ticket and never looked back.

Since moving to Bali, Gbenro has been able to spend more on travel, dining and other hobbies as well as boost his savings. "I'm never worried about money anymore because Bali has a much lower cost of living than the U.S.," he says.

For his first nine months in Bali, Gbenro used a tourist visa. Indonesia offers tourists a single entry visa that is valid for 60 days and allows for four 30-day extensions, adding up to a six month stay.Gbenro would fly to Singapore or Malaysia for brief trips once his visa expired, then renew it upon his return.

Soon after he switched to an investor visa, which requires proof that you are contributing to the local economy. Gbenro expanded his marketing business to help people advertise their properties in Indonesia to qualify for the visa, which he renews with the localgovernment every two years.

As an entrepreneur, Gbenro earns about $140,000 per year. In addition to his consulting business, Gbenro hosts several conferences for digital nomads, including the Digital Nomads Summit, which attracts thousands of people and will be hosted in Bali this September.

His biggest expenses are his rent and utilities, which together are about $1,010 each month. Gbenro lives in a one-bedroom apartment in a building with a private gym, pool and restaurant downstairs.

He spends about $600 each month on takeout and eating out, often ordering food from local restaurants on a popular app called Gojek. Gbenro's other larger expenses include health insurance, transportation (he rents a motorbike) and travel.

Gbenro likes to travel at least once each month and often ventures to Uluwatu, a small region on Bali's southwestern tip famous for its surfing.

"I'm probably spending about the same amount of money I would each month if I was living in San Diego, but my quality of living is much higher," he says. "I'm living a life of luxury."

Here's a monthly breakdown of Gbenro's spending (as of January 2022):

Olumide Gbenro's average monthly spending

Gene Woo Kim | CNBC Make It

Rent and utilities: $1,010

Food: $600

Transportation: $98

Phone: $28

Health insurance: $137

Travel: $300

Laundry: $60

Total: $2,233

Gbenro says the most challenging part of building his new life in Bali was battling loneliness. "I was going to the beach every day, drinking coconuts and seeing beautiful sunsets, but I lived by myself and didn't have friends here," he explains.

Once he started visiting co-working spaces in Bali and attending in-person networking events, Gbenro says it became much easier to build close friendships with other expats and locals. He knows conversational Indonesian, but says a lot of people living in Bali also speak English.

"I've really been loved and welcomed by the Balinese," he says. "Everyone's always smiling there's a really genuine, heart-centered tone here that you can't get anywhere else."

Olumide and a friend out to lunch in Bali

Ruda Putra for CNBC Make It

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This 33-year-old left the U.S. for Bali and lives a life of luxury on $2,233 a monthhow he spends his money - CNBC

Secrets of successful inventories revealed in new course – Letting Agent Today

Inventory Base Academy has launched its new course - how to start your own inventory operation.

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It outlines the legal requirements of running a successful business, it teaches providers how to create the right impression when developing leads, how to get the most out of their social media presence and build the framework that will start their service business off on the front foot.

Sin Hemming-Metcalfe, Head of Training and Development at Inventory Base Academy, says:The property market is changing and at an extremely rapid pace. Whether you agree or not, the government is intent on implementing what it sees as improvements to ensure tenant safety and hold the PRS even more to account.

The launch of the levelling up plan, removal of Section 21 and a national landlord register are yet more examples of the type of legislation the rental sector is now expected to implement and manage.

We want to help providers grasp the opportunity to build and support their client base by supporting them to respond to these challenges.

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Secrets of successful inventories revealed in new course - Letting Agent Today