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- Trump confirms death of Al-Qaeda heir Hamza bin Laden
- Virginia Attorney General Concludes Race Information Is Not Necessary for Marriage Licenses
- Expert: Iran Can't Sink a U.S. Navy Aircraft Carrier in a War (For Now)
- Scores of tigers rescued from infamous Thai temple have died: media
- A look at the corruption scandals facing Israel's Netanyahu
- Video shows a Model 3 automatically apply the brakes to avoid hitting a cop who ran a red light
- 'You want to wrestle?': Biden offers to prove his health after questions from reporters
- Steven Mnuchin’s Mysterious Link to Creepy Epstein Model Scout
- Moscow holds Taliban talks
- Violence Flares as Protesters Defy a Police Ban to March Through Hong Kong's Streets
- The Future of Design: Transportation
- Courts free more suspects in case of disappeared students
- Saddam Hussein Thought He Knew How to Sink U.S. Battleships
- Rep. Meadows says Democrats' impeachment investigation already has 'made up conclusions'
- Texas congressman switches endorsement from Castro to Biden
- Jeered over attacks, S.Africa's president apologises at Mugabe funeral
- Trump lashes out at MSNBC's Joy-Ann Reid, tweets that he 'never met' the TV host but that she has 'NO talent' and a 'bad reputation'
- Climate Activists Don’t Know How to Talk to Christians
- Police: No sign that Duluth synagogue fire was hate crime
- Iran's Submarines: Could They Sink the U.S. Navy in a War?
- Felicity Huffman's two-week jail sentence triggers claims of 'white privilege'
- Muslim American New Jersey Mayor Says CBP Wrongfully Detained Him for Almost 3 Hours
- Biden Draws Domestic Terror Line From Birmingham to El Paso
- French group to open two hotels in Damascus as airstrikes kill civilians
- Rep. Kevin McCarthy predicts Sen. Elizabeth Warren will be the 2020 Democratic nominee
- DOJ releases part of Mueller’s conflict of interest waiver
- Over 2,000 fetal remains found at ex-abortion doctor's home
- Man who dragged shark to death from speedboat and poured alcohol down throats of fish is jailed
- Attacks wiped out half of Saudi Arabia's oil production — and it could lead to higher gas prices (WTI)
- Storm reprieve: Tropical Storm Humberto steers clear of beleaguered Bahamas
- Hong Kong activist seeks U.S. support for pro-democracy protests
- Iran inks deal to develop gas field in tense Gulf
- Surveillance video allegedly shows 2 people moving carpet with body in Harlem; victim identified
- Trump Must Not Give Israel a Blank Check in the Middle East
- Golden Toilet Stolen From the U.K.'s Blenheim Palace, Birthplace of Winston Churchill
- Decks collapse during firefighter event; at least 22 injured
- View Photos of Volkswagen Microbus with Civil Rights History
- Venezuela's Guaidó pictured with members of Colombian gang
- 'Call of Duty' gamer Casey Viner solicited a fatal 'swatting' call. He was sentenced to 15 months in prison
- Top Democrats tell Trump gun bill must include universal background checks
- African leaders laud Mugabe at state funeral in divided Zimbabwe
- County lines epidemic blamed as number of children missing or linked to drugs gangs doubles
- Taiwan Needs New Submarines To Stop a Possible Future Invasion by China
Trump confirms death of Al-Qaeda heir Hamza bin Laden Posted: 14 Sep 2019 01:04 PM PDT US President Donald Trump on Saturday confirmed that Hamza bin Laden, the son and designated heir of Al-Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden, was killed in a counter-terrorism operation in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. US media reported more than a month ago, citing intelligence officials, that the younger Bin Laden had been killed sometime in the last two years in an operation that involved the United States. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said last month that it was "his understanding" that Bin Laden, who was thought to be about 30, was dead. |
Virginia Attorney General Concludes Race Information Is Not Necessary for Marriage Licenses Posted: 15 Sep 2019 01:55 PM PDT |
Expert: Iran Can't Sink a U.S. Navy Aircraft Carrier in a War (For Now) Posted: 15 Sep 2019 12:48 AM PDT |
Scores of tigers rescued from infamous Thai temple have died: media Posted: 15 Sep 2019 01:47 AM PDT More than half of the tigers that Thai authorities confiscated in 2016 from an infamous Tiger Temple tourist attraction have died from a viral disease because their immune systems were weakened by inbreeding, media reported. The Buddhist temple west of Bangkok was a tourist destination where visitors took selfies with tigers and bottle-fed cubs until authorities removed its nearly 150 tigers in 2016 in response to global pressure over wildlife trafficking. |
A look at the corruption scandals facing Israel's Netanyahu Posted: 15 Sep 2019 09:38 AM PDT Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is seeking to hold on to power in Tuesday's historic repeat election as the shadow of various corruption charges loom over his future. Israel's attorney general has recommended pressing criminal charges against him in three separate corruption cases, pending a long delayed pre-trial hearing scheduled for early October — just three weeks after the election. |
Video shows a Model 3 automatically apply the brakes to avoid hitting a cop who ran a red light Posted: 13 Sep 2019 08:07 PM PDT Tesla's automated emergency braking (AEB) system, which was first introduced in 2017, has improved markedly in a relatively short amount of time. Just a few weeks ago, for example, Tesla demonstrated its next-gen AEB system which can more ably apply the brakes when a pedestrian or cyclist is detected. With that said, we recently stumbled across a new video which shows a Tesla Model 3 abruptly hit the brakes when a police officer on a motorcycle runs a red light and turns left into oncoming traffic. The officer was presumably chasing someone but his sirens were off at the time. As you can see in the video below, the Model 3 owner begins to accelerate at a green light and doesn't see the police officer swooping in from the right-hand side. Luckily, the Model 3 detected the officer and swiftly applied the brakes. https://youtu.be/SZdRTVfRi48 Describing the incident, the Model 3 owner posted the following on his YouTube channel. > Happened this morning; I was rolling about my way when the light turns green, and out of nowhere a cop without their audio on for their sirens runs a red light. If not for Tesla's emergency stop safety features this would not have been a good day. Thank you Tesla and ElonMusk for making the Model3 the safest car ever or I might've scarred myself for life with a horrible accident.Another angle of the incident can be seen below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3D3pzSWVjc&t=46s Of course, this is hardly the first time we've seen a Tesla take evasive action and avoid a potentially serious collision. In the video below, a Tesla that was rear ended quickly swerves to the left to avoid the car directly ahead. https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=21&v=QVdTAwU07Jc |
'You want to wrestle?': Biden offers to prove his health after questions from reporters Posted: 14 Sep 2019 03:31 AM PDT Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has attempted to brush off concerns about his age and health by asking a reporter who had questioned if he would release his medical records: "you want to wrestle?"The 76-year-old former US vice-president pledged to provide evidence of his fitness for leadership. |
Steven Mnuchin’s Mysterious Link to Creepy Epstein Model Scout Posted: 15 Sep 2019 05:00 PM PDT Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast/Photos Getty/HandoutIn the late 1980s—before he was a member of Donald Trump's Cabinet, or even a high-rolling hedge fund manager—Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin served in an official capacity for a business run by one of Jeffrey Epstein's most infamous associates. In official records, Mnuchin is listed as the official state point of contact for Next Management Corporation, a company formed in 1988 by modeling-industry insiders Jean-Luc Brunel and Armand Brunel. At the time, Brunel had just been the subject of a 60 Minutes documentary accusing him of drugging and raping at least three models. Later, he would be accused by two women of supplying girls to Epstein to be sexually abused. (Brunel has denied the allegations.)Records accessed by The Daily Beast list Mnuchin as the New York Department of State process for Next Management Corporation. According to department officials, the DOS process is the person who files a company's registration papers and receives lawsuits and other official documents on their behalf—usually a lawyer or some other legal representative.A Treasury Department official said Mnuchin did not know he was listed as the DOS Process for Next Management Corp. before The Daily Beast's inquiry. He said it was "not clear" how Mnuchin wound up serving in that role, and added that the Secretary not recall ever meeting either Brunel brother and has never done business with either of them. Mnuchin's office did confirm that he was longtime friends with Faith Kates, the owner of Next modeling agency. The Brunel brothers co-founded the Next agency with Kates in 1989, and their company, Next Management Corp. owned a 25 percent stake in the agency for several years. The address listed under Mnuchin's name in State Department records is the first address for Kates' company, Next Management Company.Models Say Jeffrey Epstein's Closest Pal Drugged, Raped ThemJeffrey Epstein's Modeling Ties Go Much Deeper Than Victoria's SecretReached by The Daily Beast, Kates denied any involvement with setting up Next Management Corporation, and said she had nothing to do with Mnuchin serving as the DOS process. "Ms. Kates was never involved with Next Management Corp. in any way," a spokesperson said. "Given that, she never designated anyone, including Sec. Mnuchin, to be a DOS process or any officer or director of Next Management Corp."The spokesperson added that Kates' agency sued Next Management Corp. 25 years ago, over allegations that the Brunel brothers had "raided" the agency, and said Kates has not had any contact with them since then. She said Kates had "no knowledge" of why her company's address was listed in official records for Next Management Corp.Kates has her own connections to Epstein, as The Daily Beast previously reported. Former employees say the financier regularly dropped in on the agency's New York offices, and tax filings show he donated tens of thousands of dollars to charities connected to Kates and her family. At least two former Next models have been romantically linked to Epstein, and a third appears in his infamous address book. A spokesperson for Kates said neither she nor the Next agency had any business or financial ties to Epstein, and that Kates never introduced the financier to any models.Mnuchin has been friends with Kates for approximately 30 years, according to the Treasury Department official, and once helped Kates set up a business "as a friend." A spokesperson for Kates confirmed the two had been friendly for decades. She said Munchin had offered Kates business advice when she started Next Management Company, and served as her real estate broker.Mnuchin's spokesperson said the Secretary had no ownership in any of Kates' businesses or served them in any business capacity.The Daily Beast was unable to reach Jean-Luc or Arnaud Brunel for comment. The ties between Jean-Luc Brunel and Epstein, however, have been widely reported. Flight records show Brunel flew on the financier's private plane more than 20 times between 1999 and 2005, and house staff said in depositions that the modeling agent was a regular presence at Epstein's Palm Beach estate. When Epstein was arrested in 2008, Brunel visited him nearly 70 times in jail.One of Epstein's first public accusers, Virginia Roberts (now Giuffre), claimed Epstein forced her to sleep with Brunel and many other powerful men in the years he kept her as his "sex slave." She also accused Brunel of using his modeling industry connections to supply Epstein and other wealthy men with foregin girls to abuse.A former bookkeeper for one of Brunel's agencies told the FBI in 2010 that Brunel used the company to bring in teenage models from around the world, and housed them in Epstein's Upper East Side apartments. The bookkeeper claimed the girls were loaned out to wealthy clients for up to $100,000 a night, and were not paid if they refused to be "molested." French authorities are currently seeking Brunel as part of their probe into Epstein, and recently interviewed two women who say they were victims of the modeling agent in the late 1970s and early '80s, according to French newspaper Le Parisien.Brunel has denied all claims of sexual misconduct, as well as any knowledge of Epstein's wrongdoings. In legal filings, he said the former bookkeeper had been fired from his agency for embezzling company funds."I strongly deny having participated, neither directly nor indirectly, in the actions Mr. Jeffrey Epstein is being accused of," Brunel said in a 2015 statement. "I strongly deny having committed any illicit act or any wrongdoing in the course of my work as a scouter or model agencies manager."Jeffrey Epstein Accuser Names Powerful Men in Alleged Sex RingMy Night With Epstein Pal Jean-Luc Brunel and His Terrified ModelsRead more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Posted: 14 Sep 2019 04:52 PM PDT A Taliban delegation held talks with Russian officials in Moscow after US negotiations with the Afghan insurgents collapsed, the Russian foreign ministry said Saturday. "The Russian president's special representative for Afghanistan... Zamir Kabulov, hosted a Taliban delegation in Moscow," a ministry spokesman said, quoted by RIA Novosti state-funded news agency. No date for the talks was given. |
Violence Flares as Protesters Defy a Police Ban to March Through Hong Kong's Streets Posted: 15 Sep 2019 12:44 AM PDT |
The Future of Design: Transportation Posted: 15 Sep 2019 01:26 PM PDT |
Courts free more suspects in case of disappeared students Posted: 15 Sep 2019 01:55 PM PDT Courts have freed another 24 people implicated in one of the country's most notorious crimes, the disappearance of 43 students, a federal official said Sunday. Deputy Interior Secretary Alejandro Encinas told a news conference that the detainees were freed the previous evening after courts found various violations of due process in their cases, including torture and arbitrary detention. Authorities say leftist students from the Ayotzinapa teacher's school were abducted by police in the Guerrero state town of Iguala in September 2014 and handed over to the drug gang Guerreros Unidos headed by Gildardo López Astudillo, who was freed earlier this month. |
Saddam Hussein Thought He Knew How to Sink U.S. Battleships Posted: 14 Sep 2019 09:00 PM PDT |
Rep. Meadows says Democrats' impeachment investigation already has 'made up conclusions' Posted: 15 Sep 2019 06:05 AM PDT |
Texas congressman switches endorsement from Castro to Biden Posted: 15 Sep 2019 06:26 AM PDT |
Jeered over attacks, S.Africa's president apologises at Mugabe funeral Posted: 14 Sep 2019 07:45 AM PDT South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa was jeered and whistled at on Saturday during his speech at Zimbabwe ex-leader Robert Mugabe's funeral before he apologised for recent xenophobic attacks. At least 12 people have been killed this month in a surge in violence and mob attacks against foreign-owned businesses in and around Johannesburg, South Africa's largest city. A wave of jeers, boos and whistles interrupted Ramaphosa at the Harare national stadium as he started his eulogy at the state funeral for Mugabe, who died age 95 last week. |
Posted: 14 Sep 2019 01:28 PM PDT |
Climate Activists Don’t Know How to Talk to Christians Posted: 15 Sep 2019 01:56 AM PDT Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast / Photo GettyThis story is part of Covering Climate Now, a global collaboration of more than 220 news outlets to strengthen coverage of the climate story. Religious Christians are the key to America taking action on global warming. And yet, the way climate activists frame the issue often alienates the very people they most need to persuade. First, the math. Seventy percent of Americans say they want the government to take action to combat global warming. But the Republican Party has, in the last two decades, gone from accommodating a wide range of perspectives on climate change to marching lock-step to the energy industry's climate denial tune.Most Republicans, however, don't work for the energy industry. Over half of Republican voters identify as conservative Christians—either evangelicals, Catholics, or others. These voters may be right-wing on social issues, right-wing on immigration, and right-wing on 'big government.' But they're not necessarily right-wing on allowing the Earth's climate to be radically disrupted—and if they move, the Republican Party will have to move too.But according to two new studies conducted by the Yale Program for Climate Communication and published in the journal Science Communication, most religious Christians understand global warming in very different terms from others.The first study "found that 'protect God's creation' is one of the most important motivations that Christians report for wanting to mitigate global warming." Resonant messages included "God made humans responsible for taking care of His creation"; "We can use nature for our benefit, but it is not OK to destroy God's garden that He entrusted to us"; and the language of "stewardship" over the Earth.And the second study found that framing the issue of global warming in moral and religious terms was crucial for Christians to care about it, because it suggested that "people like themselves" care about the issue."People derive values, a sense of self, and social norms from the groups to which they belong," said Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Program and a co-author of the two studies. "Messages that resonate with group identities may be especially effective in influencing people's attitudes."In other words, we think the way our group thinks. If we believe that no one in our group cares about a certain issue, we're less likely to care about it. If we believe that our core values have nothing to do with a certain issue, we're less likely to care about it.Unfortunately, when one turns to how the issue is framed in public, these messaging frames are conspicuously absent.For example, the introduction to next week's U.N. Climate Action Summit reads, in part:> Global emissions are reaching record levels and show no sign of peaking. The last four years were the four hottest on record, and winter temperatures in the Arctic have risen by 3°C since 1990. Sea levels are rising, coral reefs are dying, and we are starting to see the life-threatening impact of climate change on health, through air pollution, heatwaves and risks to food security.> > The impacts of climate change are being felt everywhere and are having very real consequences on people's lives. Climate change is disrupting national economies, costing us dearly today and even more tomorrow. But there is a growing recognition that affordable, scalable solutions are available now that will enable us all to leapfrog to cleaner, more resilient economies.If you're like me—highly educated, privileged, urban-dwelling, and liberal—that language is probably pretty effective. But according to the new Yale studies, it will probably ring hollow for the constituency that's most central to changing the United States' current intransigence on climate science and climate action.Indeed, the U.N. language doesn't even include the "most important reason to reduce global warming" chosen by both Christians and non-Christians in the Yale studies, namely: "Provide a better life for our children and grandchildren." Instead, it provides a bunch of ecological verbiage about coral reefs and food security.Nor, of course, is the problem confined to the United Nations.The Environmental Defense Fund—one of the more centrist and mainstream of American environmental organizations—likewise only mentions the environmental impacts of global warming on its page "why fighting change is so urgent": "extreme weather events… chunks of ice in the Antarctic have broken apart… wildfire seasons are months longer… coral reefs have been bleached of their colors… mosquitoes are expanding their territory, able to spread disease." And yet it doesn't provide the primary reasons given by people in general (leaving a better world for our children) or Christians in particular (protecting God's creation). Of course, these omissions make sense in some ways. First, obviously, plenty of atheists, Jews, Muslims, and people of other religious backgrounds care about climate change. Especially anyone with kids or grandkids.But it's also unlikely that the people writing copy for climate change websites are religious Christians themselves, and are using language that "preaches to the choir," which in this case means other secular environmentalists. But if no one speaks in terms that Christians, especially conservative Christians, care about, then climate activists are only going to be talking to themselves.Which is exactly what's happened. Levels of understanding and concern about climate change have more or less plateaued in the last few years. On the political level, nothing is happening. Thirty-four percent of Americans still do not "believe" that global warming is being caused by humans, and only 44 percent of Americans say they "worry a great deal" about it. Another recent Yale study found that voters rank it just 17th among issues of concern.Given the extreme likelihood of an unprecedented refugee crisis brought on by rising seas and changing crop patterns, mass extinctions, and global food shortages, all of those numbers are shocking. According to the World Health Organization, 250,000 people will die each year from 2030-2050 because of increased rates of malnutrition, malaria, diarrhea, and heat stress. Climate denial, meanwhile, is now a billion-dollar industry, with energy-funded think tanks, pseudoscience, lobbying, and media campaigns. The energy industry is using the most persuasive, most effective methods to persuade people about global warming. Why isn't the environmental movement?Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Police: No sign that Duluth synagogue fire was hate crime Posted: 15 Sep 2019 03:01 PM PDT A fire that destroyed a historic synagogue in northeastern Minnesota doesn't appear to have been a hate crime, authorities said Sunday in discussing the arrest of a suspect. Matthew James Amiot, 36, of Duluth, was arrested Friday in the fire last week at the Adas Israel Congregation in downtown Duluth, the city's police chief, Mike Tusken, said at a news conference. Tusken said he has no reason to believe the fire was a hate crime, although the investigation is ongoing. |
Iran's Submarines: Could They Sink the U.S. Navy in a War? Posted: 15 Sep 2019 03:30 AM PDT |
Felicity Huffman's two-week jail sentence triggers claims of 'white privilege' Posted: 14 Sep 2019 09:16 AM PDT Actress Felicity Huffman has been accused of benefiting from "white privilege" after getting just a two-week jail sentence over paying to inflate her daughter's exam results. US congressman Hakeem Jeffries, chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, and Martina Navratilova, the tennis player, were among those who took to Twitter to suggest Ms Huffman had got off lightly given her background. There was also criticism of the minimum-security prison she will be incarcerated in, which reportedly has the nickname "Club Fed" because of its cushy conditions. Ms Huffman, best known for her starring role in the TV series Desperate Housewives, was one of the most famous names caught up in the college admissions scandal. Prosecutors alleged that parents, often rich and white, broke the law by paying someone to ensure their child got into top colleges, sometimes by phony sports scholarships. Many of the cases are still going through the courts. Ms Huffman pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit fraud. She expressed regret at paying $15,000 to inflate her daughter's SAT test score, saying it was to her "eternal shame" that she did not pull out of the scheme. She was sentenced to 14 days in prison, as well as a fine $30,000 fine, supervised release for a year and 250 hours of community service. Like many, Mr Jeffries and Navratilova questioned the sentence by comparing it to Crystal Mason, an African-American woman given a five-year sentence for voting while on supervised release from prison. Navratilova tweeted: She tweeted: "Is there anyone that can still argue there is no such thing as WHITE PRIVILEGE?!?" Ms Mason, who is fighting her conviction, also commented, saying in a statement: "I don't wish this for anyone, but a sentence to 14 days for actual serious fraud just shows how unfair my sentence is." Ms Huffman will spend her two weeks in jail at Federal Correctional Institution Dublin in California, one of four low-security prisons with an all-female population. Inmates are reportedly allowed up to $320 a month to spend at the prison commissary, which offers ice cream, instant coffee and cookies. |
Muslim American New Jersey Mayor Says CBP Wrongfully Detained Him for Almost 3 Hours Posted: 15 Sep 2019 02:29 PM PDT |
Biden Draws Domestic Terror Line From Birmingham to El Paso Posted: 15 Sep 2019 11:34 AM PDT (Bloomberg) -- Joe Biden drew a direct line between the violence of groups such as the Ku Klux Klan and recent mass shootings in a speech on race and domestic terrorism in Birmingham, Alabama, on Sunday, seeking to unify the congregation – and the country – in a fight against hatred and injustice."The domestic terrorism of white supremacy has been the antagonist of our highest ideals from before our founding," Biden said at the 56th anniversary of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing, where four black girls were killed and more than a dozen others were injured after Klansmen bombed the church in 1963.He added: "The same poisonous ideology that lit the fuse at 16th Street pulled the trigger in Mother Emanuel, unleashed the anti-Semitic massacre in Pittsburgh and Poway, and saw a white supremacist gun down innocent Latino immigrants in an El Paso parking lot with military-grade weapons declaring it would stop a 'Hispanic invasion of Texas.'"Mother Emanuel refers to the African Methodist Episcopal church in Charleston, South Carolina, where a white supremacist killed nine people in 2015. The pastor of that church, Rev. Eric Manning, attended Biden's address.In his 20-minute speech, Biden recounted the impact the bombing had on the Civil Rights movement, most notably the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. But Biden also emphasized the importance of remembering the bombing's personal cost. With a handful of relatives of the four slain girls in attendance, Biden, who lost his wife and one-year-old daughter in 1972, shared the pain of families that lose children at a young age."When you lose a child so young the loss is always punctuated by questions," he said. "What would she have looked like? What might she have done? What memories will never be?"But, Biden, quoting Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., said their deaths implore others to work to combat racism and injustice. Biden then recounted the now-familiar refrain about the "defining moments" in his life, including the death of his first wife and daughter and later his son, Beau, that led him to a life of public service.And as he often does, Biden recalled the march of white supremacists in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 as a moment that he believed showed the country was "in a battle for the soul of this nation." As congregants chanted "Amen" and "all right," Biden passionately described the need to fight hate in all forms.Revulsion to Hate"Hate only hides, it doesn't go away," he said. "If you give it oxygen it comes out from under the rocks. It can be defeated or drowned out — but never vanquished. But we also should realize that revulsion to hate at its ugliest can summon the very best in us."Biden, the front-runner for the Democratic nomination for president, is highly popular among black voters, a crucial constituency in the party, and his speech on Sunday showed his appeal."It was right on the mark," said Bobbie Adams, 82, a black woman who was born in Birmingham and remembers the bombing. "It was just beautiful. He told us what we needed to know. He's going to bring civility back to our country."She added: "He's a Christian man. We need a Christian man to lead us."As Biden continues his third run for the presidency, he will need to hold onto to black-voter support -- particularly in South Carolina, the fourth state in the 2020 primary calendar, where more than 60% of the Democratic primary voters are black. He plans to campaign there alongside some of his rivals on Monday.Record on RaceBut, Biden has also faced criticism for his record on race. He was the architect of the 1994 crime bill that critics say resulted in the mass incarceration of people of color. One of his rivals, California Senator Kamala Harris, also attacked him in the first Democratic debate for his past positions on school busing and integration.Biden also came under fire after the third Democratic debate on Thursday for his answer on the legacy of slavery."We bring social workers into homes of parents to help them deal with how to raise their children," he said. "It's not that they don't want to help, they don't want -- they don't know quite what to do."Some critics suggested Biden had inferred that black parents were unable to raise their own children. His campaign rejected that characterization, saying the former vice president was talking about his proposal to invest resources to under-served schools.Shirley Gavin Floyd said she was frustrated by Biden's comments at the debate, but she said Sunday's speech helped her move on.'Right Speech'"Today in my mind, he cleared that all up," said Floyd, 66, who is also black and a Birmingham resident. "I think he delivered the right speech."But, Floyd isn't committed to supporting Biden in the Alabama primary on Super Tuesday on March 3. She also likes Harris and Senator Elizabeth Warren.Richard Dickerson, who served in the Clinton administration but then moved to Birmingham years ago, said he supports Biden and appreciated his speech and visit to the church. But Dickerson, 64, said he was looking for more from white politicians."Whenever there's confusion, racial chaos and destruction, white people run to black churches," he said. "I think they also need to go to white churches. Black people didn't create racism. We weren't the bombers."Biden has also rebutted critics of his record on race by pointing to his service as vice president to the nation's first black president. He's closely hewed to former President Barack Obama's legacy throughout the campaign, and he invoked Obama multiple times on Sunday -- including the former president's speech after the shooting in Charleston when he sang "Amazing Grace."As he concluded his speech, Biden received a standing ovation and later joined the congregation in singing "We Shall Overcome." Biden, standing in the front row and locking hands with the people next to him, belted out the lyrics as he swayed with the congregation.(Updates throughout with new material from speech and church.)To contact the reporter on this story: Tyler Pager in Birmingham, Alabama at tpager1@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Wendy Benjaminson at wbenjaminson@bloomberg.net, Mark NiquetteFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
French group to open two hotels in Damascus as airstrikes kill civilians Posted: 14 Sep 2019 11:17 AM PDT Louvre Hotels Group, owned by China's Jin Jiang, has signed an agreement to open two hotels under its own name in Damascus, it said on Saturday, a day after the UN announced an internal investigation into the bombing of hospitals in Syria. The confirmation of the two hotels opening, after recent media reports, also came as at least six civilians were killed by the Syrian regime and Russian fire in northwestern Idlib province in the past days, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The Hayat Tahrir al-Sham alliance led by Al-Qaeda's former Syria affiliate controls most of Idlib as well as parts of neighbouring Aleppo and Latakia provinces. |
Rep. Kevin McCarthy predicts Sen. Elizabeth Warren will be the 2020 Democratic nominee Posted: 15 Sep 2019 07:41 AM PDT |
DOJ releases part of Mueller’s conflict of interest waiver Posted: 14 Sep 2019 08:13 AM PDT |
Over 2,000 fetal remains found at ex-abortion doctor's home Posted: 14 Sep 2019 03:43 PM PDT More than 2,000 medically preserved fetal remains have been found at the Illinois home of a former Indiana abortion clinic doctor who died last week, authorities said. The Will County Sheriff's Office said in a news release late Friday that an attorney for Dr. Ulrich Klopfer's family contacted the coroner's office Thursday about possible fetal remains being found at the home in an unincorporated part of Will County in northeastern Illinois. The sheriff's office said authorities found 2,246 preserved fetal remains but there's no evidence medical procedures were performed at the home. |
Man who dragged shark to death from speedboat and poured alcohol down throats of fish is jailed Posted: 15 Sep 2019 08:56 AM PDT |
Posted: 15 Sep 2019 09:41 AM PDT |
Storm reprieve: Tropical Storm Humberto steers clear of beleaguered Bahamas Posted: 15 Sep 2019 09:41 AM PDT |
Hong Kong activist seeks U.S. support for pro-democracy protests Posted: 14 Sep 2019 12:40 PM PDT Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong said on Saturday he was seeking the support of U.S. lawmakers for the demands of his fellow protesters who have led months of streets demonstrations, including a call for free elections. Wong, who spoke to Reuters in New York ahead of a planned visit to Washington, led Hong Kong's pro-democracy "Umbrella Movement" in 2014. The latest protests, which began over a now-withdrawn extradition bill but grew into demands for greater democracy and independence from mainland China, are mostly leaderless. |
Iran inks deal to develop gas field in tense Gulf Posted: 14 Sep 2019 03:47 AM PDT Two Iranian companies signed a $440 million agreement Saturday to develop a gas field in the sensitive Gulf, with the oil ministry saying it showed arch-foe the United States could not stop the country with sanctions. Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said the deal reached between two government-owned firms, Pars Oil and Gas Company and PetroPars, to develop the Balal field would be the first of many. Tensions have soared in the Gulf since last year when the US began reimposing sanctions on Iran after unilaterally withdrawing from a 2015 deal that put curbs on its nuclear programme. |
Surveillance video allegedly shows 2 people moving carpet with body in Harlem; victim identified Posted: 13 Sep 2019 05:59 PM PDT |
Trump Must Not Give Israel a Blank Check in the Middle East Posted: 15 Sep 2019 12:07 PM PDT |
Golden Toilet Stolen From the U.K.'s Blenheim Palace, Birthplace of Winston Churchill Posted: 14 Sep 2019 10:34 AM PDT |
Decks collapse during firefighter event; at least 22 injured Posted: 14 Sep 2019 07:16 PM PDT A home's multilevel deck collapsed Saturday evening at the Jersey Shore during an event weekend, trapping people and injuring at least 22, including some children, officials said. It was unclear how many people were on or under the decks at the time, or how many were firefighters, but authorities said those who were trapped were quickly removed. The annual convention attracts thousands of current and former firefighters to the resort town. |
View Photos of Volkswagen Microbus with Civil Rights History Posted: 15 Sep 2019 08:01 AM PDT |
Venezuela's Guaidó pictured with members of Colombian gang Posted: 13 Sep 2019 05:56 PM PDT Opposition leader plays down images but analysts say they could prove highly damagingJuan Guaidó takes a selfie at the concert in Cúcuta, Colombia, in February. Photograph: Luis Robayo/AFP/Getty ImagesJuan Guaidó, the Venezuelan politician fighting to topple Nicolás Maduro, is facing awkward questions about his relationship with organised crime after the publication of compromising photographs showing him with two Colombian paramilitaries.In an interview on Friday, Guaidó played down the significance of the pictures, in which he posed alongside two members of the Colombian criminal gang the Rastrojos identified as El Brother and El Menor.The photos appear to have been taken on 22 February as Guaidó used an illegal border crossing to sneak across Venezuela's western border into Colombia to attend a Live Aid-style concert in the town of Cúcuta."I took hundreds of photos that day," Guaidó told the Colombian broadcaster Blu Radio. "It was hard to know who was asking for a photo. Misconstruing these photos means playing the Maduro regime's game."> Lo dijimos desde el primer día: la entrada a Colombia el 23 de febrero del sr @jguaido fue coordinada con los Rastrojos. Aquí están alias el brother armado, y el segundo al mando de este grupo paramilitar, alias el menor. pic.twitter.com/qflAYBgWQf> > — WILFREDO CAÑIZARES (@wilcan91) September 12, 2019On Friday Venezuela's state prosecutor's office said it would open an investigation into the photos. Analysts said the images had the potential to cause severe harm to Guaidó's credibility and his nine-month quest to force Maduro from power.The Rastrojos are a drug-trafficking group with paramilitary origins who operate on both sides of the Colombia-Venezuela border. As well as the cocaine trade, they are engaged in illegal mining, kidnapping for ransom and extortion.Phil Gunson, a Caracas-based expert for Crisis Group, said: "I think it is extremely damaging. Regardless of whether this was as innocent as they claim – which is rather hard to believe – or whether there was something more to it, it looks so bad."Gunson said the photos handed "a huge propaganda victory" to Maduro's government, which is fending off accusations of ties to leftist guerrillas and drug traffickers.Maduro sought to exploit the scandal on Thursday, claiming the images were definitive evidence of Guaidó's ties to "paracos, murderers and narco-traffickers".In a televised speech, Maduro declared: "The connection between Colombian narco-trafficking and the Venezuelan right is right there in the photo. No one can deny it."Another senior Chavista, Freddy Bernal, claimed the photos were proof of "the criminal alliance between [Venezuela's] fascist right" and paramilitary and terrorist groups. Maduro's main propaganda channels also gave the scandal top billing.Carlos Vecchio, Guaidó's ambassador to the United States, rejected those claims. "There is no connection between Juan Guaidó's interim government [and] any paramilitary or guerrilla group. Zero, zero," he told the Colombian newspaper El Espectador.Gunson said that whatever the truth, the photos showed "unbelievable naivety" and were an embarrassment to the international coalition backing Guaidó, which includes the US, Colombia, Brazil and the UK."It could almost not have come at a worse time for Guaidó," Gunson said, pointing to the Colombian government's plans to denounce Maduro's ties to leftist guerrillas at the UN general assembly later this month.Gunson said Guaidó's claim not to have realised who he was posing with was "frankly not credible … [One of them] looks like a paramilitary out of central casting."The photos were published on Thursday by Wilfredo Cañizales, the director of a human rights group in Cúcuta, where February's highly politicised concert was held.Speaking to the Guardian, Cañizales claimed the Rastrojos had imposed a curfew along the border before Guaidó's crossing into Colombia "to make sure no locals would take photos of him crossing illegally through the hidden paths".Cañizales declined to say how he had obtained the photos or why he had decided to publish them but said: "The Rastrojos are paramilitaries. They are the ones in this region who decide who lives and who dies."Gunson said the photos also posed uncomfortable questions for Guaidó's backers in the Colombian government and their possible links with paramilitary groups. "There's a lot of questions that haven't been answered," he said. |
Posted: 15 Sep 2019 03:03 PM PDT |
Top Democrats tell Trump gun bill must include universal background checks Posted: 15 Sep 2019 01:07 PM PDT Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi said they spoke to Trump by phone on Sunday morning, which marked 200 days since the Democratic House passed legislation to expand background checks to all gun purchases. In the aftermath of a series of mass shootings in August that killed more than 30 people, Trump has been discussing potential legislation with lawmakers in both parties. |
African leaders laud Mugabe at state funeral in divided Zimbabwe Posted: 14 Sep 2019 08:22 AM PDT Zimbabwe gave former president Robert Mugabe a state funeral on Saturday with African leaders paying tribute to a man lauded as a liberation hero but whose 37-year rule was defined by repression and economic turmoil. Mugabe, who died in Singapore last week aged 95, left Zimbabwe deeply torn over his legacy as the country still struggles with high inflation and shortages of goods after decades of crisis. Mugabe's casket, draped in the green, black, gold and red Zimbabwe flag, was marched slowly into Harare's national stadium as a military band played and crowds chanted and drummed, though less than half of the 60,000 seats appeared taken. |
County lines epidemic blamed as number of children missing or linked to drugs gangs doubles Posted: 15 Sep 2019 02:19 PM PDT County lines drug networks have been blamed for a huge spike in the number of children identified as having links to gangs, after the figure more than doubled in three years. Social services in England carried out 8,650 assessments of young people whom they labelled as vulnerable with gangs highlighted as an issue in 2017-18. It marked a significant jump on 2014-15, when 3,680 such cases were recorded. A similar trend was found in the number of children who went missing during the same period - from 8,850 to 16,070 - which is considered a trait of county lines networks. Drugs gangs increasingly recruit vulnerable children to ferry narcotics from cities to smaller towns, with around 2,000 operations believed to be operating across the UK. County lines feature The smuggling networks are known as "county lines". Academics and MPs described the figures, analysed by The Guardian, as "shocking". "There will be elements of that about increased reporting and awareness but that is not going to account for such a big rise - there is something happening," Simon Harding, an associate professor of criminology at the University of West London, told the newspaper. "Working in county lines has a great allure for young people. It gives them a tax-free income, gives them a regular income and high income". The Department for Education data showed a steady rise in the number of vulnerable children who go missing or become involved with gangs over the past few years. Factors for a child disappearing are complex but can also include the absence of social services in the area, along with the work of drugs gangs. Josie Allan, of Missing People UK, said: "I did research recently with a small group of young people involved in county lines, and everyone who took part said that going missing was a key feature, especially in the early stages of criminal exploitation." Another factor thought to be driving the trend of children being reported missing is a drop in the number of parents or teachers reporting them as "absent" instead. FAQ | County lines Ann Coffey, the MP for Stockport and chair of the all-party Parliamentary committee on runaway and missing children and adults, told the newspaper: "What concerns me is that we are not really making inroads on arresting and taking those senior gang leaders out of county lines. As long as they continue to operate, the number of children exploited will continue to grow." A Government spokesman said: "Any child that goes missing from home, school or care could be in danger of exploitation from gangs or violent criminals – that's why we are equipping the professionals who protect vulnerable children to help them identify those who are most at risk and keep them safe. "Our national 'tackling child exploitation' support programme is helping specialists in education, social care, health, the police and the voluntary sector to improve how they respond to these kinds of threats in their communities, including gangs, county lines drug activity and trafficking, and our serious violence strategy includes a range of actions to combat county lines." |
Taiwan Needs New Submarines To Stop a Possible Future Invasion by China Posted: 14 Sep 2019 02:35 AM PDT |
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