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- O'Rourke drops out of 2020 presidential race
- Missing New Hampshire couple found buried on Texas beach, sheriff's office says
- The Latest: Hong Kong protesters vandalize Xinhua office
- Warren Reveals $52 Trillion Medicare for All Plan, Claims No Middle-Class Tax Increase Necessary
- California wildfires: Climate change driving ‘horror and the terror’ of devastating blazes, say scientists
- Teachers strike taught Chicago's new mayor tough lessons -analysts
- For Vietnam's 'Box People,' a Treacherous Journey
- Greta Thunberg says meeting with Trump 'would be a waste of time'
- Andrew Yang's campaign has gone 'mainstream'
- Bad news for Boeing: Company says more 737 NGs found to have wing cracks
- My Hospital Was Bombed by Putin and Assad. Why Won’t America Hear Our Cries?
- Texas woman says mother's gynecologist used his sperm to conceive her after submitting DNA to Ancestry.com
- Georgia ex-policeman sentenced to 12 years in prison in shooting of unarmed black man
- The Republican Party must choose between Donald Trump and the party's fundamental values
- China Thinks a Nuclear Submarine Can Sink Half of An Aircraft Carrier Battle Group
- Ken Cuccinelli Calls Debbie Wasserman Schultz a Witch: She ‘Got on Her Broom and Left’
- Who Wore It Better? 10 Names Shared by Automakers
- New execution date set for Georgia inmate
- Nicaragua court convicts ex-student in New York killing
- Hollow building becomes center of Iraq's uprising
- A New ISIS Recording Names al-Baghdadi's Successor. Here's What to Know About the New Leader
- This time, Southern California was prepared for wildfires. Here's how countless homes were saved
- Iran says cooperation plan sent to Gulf neighbours
- Low-Yield Nuclear Weapons Won’t End the World
- Bill O’Reilly: 'If Joe Biden is elected president ... he has to be impeached'
- Hezbollah TV channel says Twitter accounts suspended
- Distressing photos show glaciers that are disappearing or on the brink of collapse around the world
- American convicted of child sex abuse in Cambodia
- Trump Says He’s Swapping New York for Florida as Main Residence
- PG&E and Southern California Edison have turned off power to minimize fires. It hasn't worked. What will?
- ‘Shut Up About Politics’ Singer John Rich Shows Up on Fox News to Talk About Politics
- For the Best Three-Row Mid-Size Crossovers and SUVs, See These Full Rankings!
- Iran, Please Don't Develop a Stealth Fighter
- At least 42 killed in Haiti protest violence: UN
- Turkey threatens to send British Islamic State members back to UK
- Police officer retires after far-right group ties revealed
- Judge blocks Trump rule requiring prospective immigrants have health insurance
- 23 ISIS wives start repatriation case in Netherlands
- Democrats plan to release transcripts of Trump impeachment probe. But Rep. Liz Cheney wants them 'immediately'
- Why the Fed Has No Choice but to Keep Cutting Interest Rates
O'Rourke drops out of 2020 presidential race Posted: 01 Nov 2019 02:50 PM PDT |
Missing New Hampshire couple found buried on Texas beach, sheriff's office says Posted: 02 Nov 2019 02:24 PM PDT |
The Latest: Hong Kong protesters vandalize Xinhua office Posted: 02 Nov 2019 03:58 AM PDT Protesters have vandalized the Hong Kong office of China's official Xinhua News Agency for the first time during the months-long anti-government demonstrations, smashing windows and doors. Local media showed scenes of the aftermath that included a fire in the lobby of the Xinhua office in Hong Kong's Wan Chai district, with shattered windows and graffiti sprawled over the wall. Protesters have been targeting Chinese banks and businesses perceived to be linked to mainland China as anger builds up against Beijing, which the protesters accuse of infringing on the freedoms guaranteed when Britain returned Hong Kong to China in 1997. |
Warren Reveals $52 Trillion Medicare for All Plan, Claims No Middle-Class Tax Increase Necessary Posted: 01 Nov 2019 05:10 AM PDT Senator Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.) unveiled a Medicare for all plan Friday that will cost nearly $52 trillion over the next ten years and, she claims, will not require any middle-class tax increases.The proposal would be funded by roughly $20 trillion in taxes on employers, financial transactions, and super-wealthy corporations over the next decade. Existing federal and state spending would account for the remaining $30 trillion in costs."We don't need to raise taxes on the middle class by one penny to finance Medicare for All," Warren writes as part of the plan."When fully implemented, my approach to Medicare for All would mark one of the greatest federal expansions of middle class wealth in our history," she continues. "And if Medicare for All can be financed without any new taxes on the middle class, and instead by asking giant corporations, the wealthy, and the well-connected to pay their fair share, that's exactly what we should do."Warren would impose $9 trillion in new Medicare taxes on employers over the next decade, which she claims will replace what employers currently pay for employee health insurance.The plan includes a "Supplemental Employer Medicare Contribution" — another tax — on large corporations if the Medicare plan risks running out of funds.Warren also proposes more taxes on the super-rich in addition to her trademark wealth tax, which would raise another $1 trillion. Additional taxes on foreign earnings and financial transactions would also be implemented under the plan.Warren admitted on Tuesday that a universal medicare plan would eliminate about two million jobs, mostly among health-care-industry professionals, necessitating a plan to help those professionals adjust."I think this is part of the cost issue and should be part of a cost plan," Warren commented.Rival candidate Bernie Sanders has proposed his own universal medicare plan, which he projected would cost around $32 trillion over ten years. Sanders would fund the plan with taxes on wealthy Americans, although his wealth tax would only raise a comparative $4.35 trillion over ten years, along with other taxes on the middle class.Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg criticized medicare for all and Warren during last month's Democratic primary debate."No plan has been laid out to explain how a multi-trillion-dollar hole in this Medicare-for-all plan that Senator Warren is putting forward is supposed to get filled in," Buttigieg said at the time. |
Posted: 02 Nov 2019 09:52 AM PDT |
Teachers strike taught Chicago's new mayor tough lessons -analysts Posted: 01 Nov 2019 12:27 PM PDT Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot made strategic errors in the first major fight of her tenure, an 11-day teachers' strike, but may have learned lessons that will prove useful as she confronts immense city budget challenges, political observers said. Lightfoot, 57, was elected in convincing fashion to become Chicago's first black woman mayor in April, when she vaulted to victory on promises to dismantle the city's corrupt political machine and reform the city's school district. |
For Vietnam's 'Box People,' a Treacherous Journey Posted: 01 Nov 2019 12:20 PM PDT LONDON -- Vietnamese smugglers call it the "CO2" route: a poorly ventilated, oxygen-deficient trip across the English Channel in shipping containers or trailers piled high with pallets of merchandise, the last leg of a perilous, 6,000-mile trek across Asia and into Western Europe.Compared to the other path -- the "VIP route," with its brief hotel stay and seat in a truck driver's cab -- the trip in a stuffy container can be brutal for what some Vietnamese refer to as "box people," successors to the "boat people" who left after the Vietnam War ended in 1975.Vietnamese migrants often wait for months in roadside camps in northern France before being sneaked into a truck trailer. Snakeheads, as the smugglers are known, beat men and sexually assault women, aid groups, lawyers and the migrants themselves say. People cocoon themselves in aluminum bags and endure hours in refrigerated units to reduce the risk of detection.That journey proved fatal last week for 39 people, many of them believed to be Vietnamese, who were found dead in a refrigerated truck container in southeastern England.As dangerous as the last leg of the migrant journey to Britain often is, those petrifying hours in a trailer are sometimes only a sliver of months if not years of harsh treatment -- first at the hands of organized trafficking gangs, and then under imperious bosses at nail salons and cannabis factories in Britain.But still they come, an estimated 18,000 Vietnamese paying smugglers for the journey to Europe every year at prices between 8,000 and 40,000 pounds, around $10,000 to $50,000.In Britain, where Brexit has discouraged the flow of labor from Eastern Europe, migrants see a country thirsty for low-wage workers, paying easily five times what they could earn at home and free of the onerous identity checks that make other European countries inhospitable.Vietnamese smugglers, for the most part, get their clients across to France and the Netherlands, where other gangs, often Kurdish and Albanian, or, as in the recent case, apparently Irish or Northern Irish, finish the job.Many come from Ha Tinh and Nghe An, two impoverished provinces in north-central Vietnam, and leave for Britain with their eyes wide open to the risks, analysts say. Having watched their neighbors suddenly refurbish their homes with pricier materials, or buy better cars, they crave the same sense of security for their family, whatever it might cost them.But when Britain fails to deliver on that promise, migrants can end up in a dreadful limbo, kept from seeking help by the country's harsh immigration system and living in the grip of a shadowy system of traffickers and the employers who rely on them."I always encourage them, 'Stay at home,'" the Rev. Simon Thang Duc Nguyen, the parish priest at a Catholic church in East London attended by many migrant parishioners, said this week. "Even though you are poor, you have your life. Here, you have money, but you lose your life."Not all the 20,000 to 35,000 undocumented Vietnamese migrants estimated to be living in Britain have horror stories to tell. Many migrants, some experts say, put up with the travails of working in Britain for the real chance of a payday."My research has shown stories of migrants are not all about exploitation and not all about being trafficked," said Tamsin Barber, a lecturer at Oxford Brookes University. "People are usually coming here agreeing to take high risks to work illegally and potentially earn large amounts of money in the cannabis trade."But more vulnerable Vietnamese are also being trafficked to Britain, with the authorities receiving five times as many referrals last year as in 2012.Once family and friends have scraped together enough money, the odyssey may begin with a trip to China to pick up forged travel documents. That is how many of the dozens of people who died in the truck began their journey, said Anthony Dang Huu Nam, a Catholic priest serving a church in the town of Yen Thanh, where he said dozens of the victims were from.On the way from China to Russia to Western Europe, one of the most punishing stretches is the walk through Belarusian forests to the Polish border. In a 2017 French survey of Vietnamese migrants, a man identified as Anh, 24, told researchers that he and five other men, led by a smuggler, were repeatedly arrested in Belarus, only to be released at the Russian border to try again. When they finally succeeded, they were met by a truck waiting on the Polish side."We were cold," the survey quoted him as saying. "We didn't eat anything for two days. We drank water from melted snow."Other routes, choreographed down to the minute, land migrants in European airports with recycled visas and travel documents, according to "Precarious Journeys," a recent report from ECPAT, an anti-child-trafficking organization, and other groups. As a precaution, smugglers in Vietnam often tell people to arrive at airport check-in desks 10 minutes before they close, for instance, so agents do not have enough time to inspect paperwork.The trip can take months, even years. Nguyen Dinh Luong, 20, one of the migrants believed to have died last week, wanted to go to France to find work and support his siblings, seven of them in all, his father, Nguyen Dinh Gia, said. But in Russia, he overstayed his tourist visa and was confined to his house for six months. Then he moved to Ukraine and France, where he found a job as a waiter, before deciding to go to Britain for work in a nail salon.Trips are frequently interrupted when migrants are detained or run out of money. Some migrants are forced to work along the way, in garment factories in Russia or in restaurants across Europe. Some women sell sex, researchers say.Smugglers often keep people in the dark about where they are as a way of exerting total control. In a 2017 case, 16 Vietnamese people picked up by the Ukrainian authorities in Odessa thought they were in France.When migrants disobey their smugglers, the blowback can be fierce."They cannot be discovered by the police, so they have to keep the discipline," said Nguyen, the priest in London. "If you do not behave, you can be punished by beatings, or for women be abused sexually."And once they arrive in Britain, they are often in for a rude awakening. Sulaiha Ali, a human rights lawyer, said migrants were sometimes promised legitimate work in a restaurant or on a construction site, only to be forced to work as "gardeners" in a house converted into illegal cannabis growing operations. Locked inside the house for days at a time and often living 15 to a room, workers face the risk of fire from tampered electrical wiring and health problems from noxious chemicals.In the nail salons where many Vietnamese find work, salon bosses can control every aspect of workers' lives, a power that can breed exploitation, though researchers said some bosses also become migrants' surrogate parents, cooking for them and providing a place to stay.When the police raid places housing migrants, they can often ignore signs of forced work or human trafficking and send migrants into deportation proceedings instead, migrant advocates say. "The emphasis, as soon as it's established someone doesn't have any identification documents, is not trying to establish whether they've been exploited," Ali said. "It's on, 'Can we justify detention? Can we get them removed back to their countries?'"That threat of deportation, whatever someone's circumstances, is a cudgel for trafficking gangs to keep migrants under their sway."There's a serious distrust of authorities, a lot of the time because traffickers have embedded that in victims' minds: 'You don't have official documents,' or, 'You're going to be deported or imprisoned,'" said Firoza Saiyed, a human rights lawyer. "It's another thing that makes disclosure really difficult."Older Vietnamese migrants in Britain, many of whom arrived after the Vietnam War, are separated by a wide cultural gulf from the newer arrivals, but they have still proved to be a crucial support, ever more so in the last week.Nguyen, who left Vietnam in 1984, said he had been fielding calls from families in Vietnam, wanting to know if he could tell them whether their children were in the trailer."The mother, the father, all called me in tears," he said. "I couldn't bear hearing the words. You have to borrow a lot of money for this journey, and now you had hoped your daughter, your son can be successful, and that you can have some money to pay the debt. Now, it's hopeless -- nothing."He went on, "Nothing is OK, as long as they are arrested or in prison. It's OK, they survived. But now they lost two things. They lost hope and they lost their lives. Nothing."This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2019 The New York Times Company |
Greta Thunberg says meeting with Trump 'would be a waste of time' Posted: 01 Nov 2019 07:58 AM PDT |
Andrew Yang's campaign has gone 'mainstream' Posted: 02 Nov 2019 10:09 AM PDT While some Democratic presidential candidates are cutting back on their campaigns, entrepreneur Andrew Yang is going all in, Politico reports.Yang, who as recently as April, had fewer than 20 staff members on his campaign's payroll, now has 73 people running the show. "It's been like a startup but this startup has gone mainstream, about to go public, if you want to keep using the analogy," said Zach Graumann, Yang's campaign manager. "And frankly and I tell the team, 'we're just getting started.'" There's some big names now involved with the campaign, as well, lending more credence to Graumann's words. Devine, Mulvey, and Longabaugh -- a media consulting firm which worked for the 2016 campaign for Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) but opted to not to join forces again for 2020 over "differences in a creative vision" -- has shifted its services to the Yang campaign because he's "offering the most progressive ideas" among the Democratic candidates. They also don't think he's a flash in the pan. "We wouldn't have signed on with somebody we didn't think was a serious candidate," Mark Longabaugh said. "Yang has a good deal of momentum and there's a great deal of grassroots enthusiasm for his candidacy and that's what's driven it this far." Yang still faces numerous hurdles to really get back in the running, but the campaign surely think it's possible. Read more at Politico. |
Bad news for Boeing: Company says more 737 NGs found to have wing cracks Posted: 01 Nov 2019 04:36 PM PDT |
My Hospital Was Bombed by Putin and Assad. Why Won’t America Hear Our Cries? Posted: 01 Nov 2019 02:10 AM PDT National GeographicOn Oct. 13, The New York Times published a story that proved that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's Russian allies deliberately bombed four hospitals in opposition-held Idlib province in May. Indiscriminate or intentional targeting of hospitals and medical facilities is a war crime, and both culprits have always denied the charges. In reality, Assad has targeted hospitals and other civilian structures from the start of the war, and Russia has done the same since it entered the war in 2015. The Times investigation is important because it is apparently the first to present substantive proof of this specific war crime. The newspaper's conclusions are based on comprehensive evidence from many sources, including thousands of Russian Air Force radio recordings of pilots and ground control officers. There are videos documenting the bombing of three of the four hospitals, and recordings of the Russian pilots confirming their strikes. There are testimonies of witnesses and survivors, and flight logs from the spotters who keep watch on the sky in order to warn civilians of impending attacks.I know what it's like to experience such an attack, having lived through many of them during the six years I worked as a pediatrician at the Cave, an underground hospital in East Al Ghouta. On September 28, 2015, Russian warplanes bombed the Cave, killing three male nurses and injuring two female nurses, including my friend Samaher. Samaher suffered terrible memory loss for about a year, but she continued working at the hospital despite the trauma she carried with her. When I became manager of the Cave in 2016, I did everything I could to shore up the infrastructure above and below ground so it could withstand bombings. I worked on evacuation plans to ensure the safety of patients and staff. We all knew another attack could come at any time. And the attacks multiplied in frequency and brutality as Assad and Russia closed in on Al Ghouta. During our final month in the Cave, we were hit five or six times by barrel bombs. It can't be said often enough: Assad and Russia are malign actors that cannot be trusted. When they agreed to help the Kurdish-led SDF in northeastern Syria, it wasn't about protecting a vulnerable ethnic group. It was about positioning themselves in a regional conflict that has international ramifications that go beyond the Kurdish issue. The Syrian and Russian governments didn't protect the Kurds in the past, and they won't protect them once the current fight is over. Assad has never been a friend to Syria's Kurds, who are the country's largest ethnic minority. All Syrians—Arabs, Christians, Kurds—have suffered under Assad's regime. I have many Kurdish friends who took part in the 2011 demonstrations in Al Ghouta, one of the first and most important areas to speak out for freedom and democracy. We were all trapped there when the government laid siege to the area in 2013. When Russian troops marched into Al Ghouta in 2018, we were displaced. The list of Assad's war crimes is long. With the help of his allies Russia and Iran, he has committed these atrocities out in the open while the world looked on. Half of Syria's population has been displaced. In the five-year siege of Al Ghouta, civilians were deliberately starved, deprived of medicine, and repeatedly bombed. Then there are the multiple chemical attacks on opposition territories. I was in East Al Ghouta in August 2013 when rockets loaded with sarin gas were dropped while people slept. I never imagined that one day the government would use chemical weapons to kill civilians. When that happened, I realized they wanted to kill everybody in Al Ghouta—and anyone in Syria who wanted freedom. All told, close to one million people have been killed and about half a million are detained in prisons where they are tortured and murdered. Two-thirds of the country is destroyed. Dr. Amani Ballour amongst the rubble in SyriaNational GeographicWhat concerns me now is the safety of the Syrian Arab and Kurdish citizens in the north, especially the women and children who always pay the highest price in wars. So far, some 160,000 people have been displaced, many of whom were already refugees from other parts of Syria. With winter coming, the situation is even more urgent. Every winter, refugee camps in the north are flooded with water and mud, and tents become uninhabitable. The camps in the northwest were already overcrowded and miserable and are hardly equipped to take in more homeless, traumatized civilians.It is not too late for the free world to act, for Western nations to show that they believe what they say about human rights. An entire generation of Syrian children—2.6 million—have had no education whatsoever because of the war. They deserve schools in safe places, where they can learn without fear. Women in refugee camps often have no idea about their rights and they are frequently exploited to work for barely any pay. They deserve better. Right now, the international community could direct resources to help the hundreds of thousands of displaced Syrians who will soon be freezing. There is plenty of empty land in the northwest of Syria, where nongovernment organizations could build houses for people needing shelter. But in no way should those houses be considered anything but temporary. Because it is long past time for Syrians to be able to return to their own homes. For nearly nine years, the international community has let down the Syrian people. It has focused on solving the consequences of the crimes, instead of dealing with the culprits, Assad and his allies. It is not impossible to get Assad out of Syria, to hold him to account for his crimes against humanity. If we can get rid of Assad and free Syria of all foreign interference, then Syrians can begin new lives. We who are exiles and refugees can come home and join our fellow citizens in building a free, united, democratic Syria that includes all the Syrian people without discrimination.Dr. Amani Ballour is a Syrian pediatrician, activist and founder of the nonprofit foundation Al Amal. She worked for six years at the Cave, a secret underground hospital in East Al Ghouta that is the subject of the new documentary The Cave.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. |
Posted: 01 Nov 2019 01:23 PM PDT |
Georgia ex-policeman sentenced to 12 years in prison in shooting of unarmed black man Posted: 01 Nov 2019 01:44 PM PDT A former Georgia police officer was sentenced on Friday to 12 years in prison after his conviction in the fatal shooting of an unarmed black man outside an Atlanta apartment in March 2015. Robert "Chip" Olsen, a 57-year-old white man, was convicted last month of aggravated assault and violating his oath of office but found not guilty of murder in the killing of 26-year-old Anthony Hill. Before the sentencing, members of Hill's family urged Dekalb County Superior Court Judge LaTisha Dear Jackson to sentence Olsen to the maximum penalty of 30 years behind bars. |
The Republican Party must choose between Donald Trump and the party's fundamental values Posted: 01 Nov 2019 01:00 PM PDT |
China Thinks a Nuclear Submarine Can Sink Half of An Aircraft Carrier Battle Group Posted: 01 Nov 2019 04:00 PM PDT |
Ken Cuccinelli Calls Debbie Wasserman Schultz a Witch: She ‘Got on Her Broom and Left’ Posted: 01 Nov 2019 08:37 AM PDT A day after a contentious congressional hearing in which he was accused by Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) of pushing a "heinous white supremacist ideology," acting U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director Ken Cuccinelli essentially called the congresswoman a witch.Appearing on Fox & Friends on Friday morning, Cuccinelli brushed off questions about whether he's still being considered to head up the Department of Homeland Security by saying he will keep doing his current job "in the face of some people who would rather we are not as successful.""Are you referring to Debbie Wasserman Schultz by chance," co-host Ainsley Earhardt asked, prompting Cuccinelli to say she was "among them."The hosts went on to play a video clip from Thursday's contentious hearing in which the Florida lawmaker claimed the Cuccinelli and President Donald Trump were pursuing a white supremacist policy by denying public benefits to legal immigrants, including children."That's one of those things that politicians can say things because they are protected," co-host Steve Doocy remarked. "However, you are—as somebody who is serving in the public interests—you have to give facts."Cuccinelli insisted that while he was under oath, Wasserman Schultz was "literally protected to lie," citing the speech and debate clause in the Constitution. He then asserted that she only came into the hearing to make a speech before making his witch allusion."She wasn't at much of the committee hearing," he said. "She came in, laid on her smears on both me and the president, all completely false. And then wasn't there much longer, got on her broom and left. It was a fly-by for her and to get a little sound bite."The hosts, meanwhile, rather than push back on Cuccinelli's not-so-veiled sexist insult of a female lawmaker, instead expressed sympathy for the Trump immigration chief."She didn't want you to interrupt her," Earhardt declared. "And I guess the rules prevent you from doing but she is smearing your reputation and character and saying something you don't feel like it is true. You have to defend yourself."Following Cuccinelli's Fox & Friends remarks, Wasserman Schultz took to Twitter to respond, calling out the Trump official for trying to "silence outspoken women who speak truth to power."Read 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. |
Who Wore It Better? 10 Names Shared by Automakers Posted: 02 Nov 2019 05:20 AM PDT |
New execution date set for Georgia inmate Posted: 01 Nov 2019 03:04 PM PDT Georgia officials set a new execution date Friday for a death row inmate two days after he was granted a temporary reprieve because of a legal technicality. Ray Jefferson Cromartie, 52, is scheduled to die by lethal injection Nov. 13 at the state prison in Jackson. Georgia Corrections Commissioner Timothy Ward set the execution for the first date of a seven-day window ordered Friday by a Superior Court judge in Thomas County. |
Nicaragua court convicts ex-student in New York killing Posted: 01 Nov 2019 09:29 PM PDT A Nicaraguan court on Friday convicted a dual U.S.-Nicaraguan citizen of killing a nursing student in New York state after an unusual trial that saw many witnesses testifying by long-distance video conference. Broome County District Attorney Steve Cornwell confirmed Orlando Tercero's conviction in a tweet. The 23-year-old former Binghamton University student was found guilty of the March 2018 killing 22-year-old Haley Anderson. |
Hollow building becomes center of Iraq's uprising Posted: 02 Nov 2019 12:41 PM PDT The skeleton of a high-rise building overlooking Baghdad's central Tahrir Square known as the Turkish Restaurant has become a temporary home and a bustling center for protesters staging demonstrations against Iraq's ruling elites. Dressed in combat trousers and wearing an Iraqi flag as a cape, the 35-year-old is the leader of the group, made up of 20-odd young men who occupy a corner of the building's base. Groups of young men have occupied all 18 floors of the building, with its cramped unlit narrow staircases. |
A New ISIS Recording Names al-Baghdadi's Successor. Here's What to Know About the New Leader Posted: 01 Nov 2019 07:43 AM PDT |
This time, Southern California was prepared for wildfires. Here's how countless homes were saved Posted: 02 Nov 2019 09:47 AM PDT |
Iran says cooperation plan sent to Gulf neighbours Posted: 02 Nov 2019 10:08 AM PDT Iran said Saturday it has sent Iraq and Arab states of the Gulf the text of its security and cooperation project first unveiled by President Hassan Rouhani at the UN in September. Rouhani "sent the full text (of the initiative) to the heads" of the Gulf Cooperation Council and Iraq and "asked for their cooperation in processing and implementing it", the foreign ministry said. The GCC is a six-nation bloc that groups Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Oman. |
Low-Yield Nuclear Weapons Won’t End the World Posted: 01 Nov 2019 05:00 PM PDT A recent video by Princeton University's Program on Science and Global Security, Plan A, suggests that the use of one low-yield non-strategic nuclear weapon, in a NATO-Russia conflict, would lead to the large scale use of strategic nuclear weapons and the death of more than 90 million people. While the video's makers deserve credit for its production quality and very ominous background music, the scenario they offer, while always possible, is highly unlikely. |
Bill O’Reilly: 'If Joe Biden is elected president ... he has to be impeached' Posted: 01 Nov 2019 08:19 AM PDT |
Hezbollah TV channel says Twitter accounts suspended Posted: 02 Nov 2019 12:59 PM PDT The television station of Lebanon's powerful Shiite movement Hezbollah protested Saturday that most of its Twitter accounts had been suspended. Al-Manar accused the US-based social media platform of giving in to "political pressures". "There is no place on Twitter for illegal terrorist organisations and violent extremist groups," a Twitter spokesperson told AFP. |
Distressing photos show glaciers that are disappearing or on the brink of collapse around the world Posted: 01 Nov 2019 01:27 PM PDT |
American convicted of child sex abuse in Cambodia Posted: 01 Nov 2019 04:26 AM PDT A Cambodian court has sentenced an American man to 2 ½ years in prison on charges of sexually abusing three underage girls, a court official and social activist said Friday. Ying Srang, spokesman for the provincial court in Siem Reap, site of the famed Angkor Wat temples, said Rugh James Cline was convicted Thursday of indecent acts against minors under 15 years of age for paying three girls for sex during visits in February and May this year. An NGO that investigates suspected foreign pedophiles in Cambodia, Action Pour Les Enfants, said the victims told police that he paid them a total of $120. |
Trump Says He’s Swapping New York for Florida as Main Residence Posted: 01 Nov 2019 03:27 PM PDT (Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump, a lifelong New Yorker, has changed his primary residence to Florida, a move that could benefit his re-election campaign -- and his tax bill.The president said in a declaration of domicile filed in Palm Beach County, Florida, that he has become a "bona fide resident of the State of Florida residing at" his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach.He confirmed that filing in a series of tweets on Thursday night, adding, "I cherish New York, and the people of New York, and always will, but unfortunately, despite the fact that I pay millions of dollars in city, state and local taxes each year, I have been treated very badly by the political leaders of both the city and state."In the document, dated Sept. 27, Trump said that "I formerly resided at 721 Fifth Avenue" in New York, the address of Trump Tower.He lists "other places of abode as" 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW in Washington -- the White House -- and his golf resort in Bedminster, New Jersey.First Lady Melania Trump also changed her state residence to Florida, in a document dated Oct. 3.Trump's move was reported earlier Thursday night by the New York Times. If motivated by tax considerations, it would bolster a point that his political foes have been making for months: His tax overhaul is hurting Democratic-led, high-tax states by prompting the wealthiest residents to move elsewhere. Governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, has called the change "economic civil war.""Good riddance. It's not like Mr. Trump paid taxes here anyway," Cuomo said in a statement on Thursday night. "He's all yours, Florida."The president, who grew up in Queens and rose to fame as a real estate developer in Manhattan, remains deeply unpopular with voters in his hometown. He lost the heavily Democratic state in 2016, but narrowly won Florida, which remains under Republican control.Florida will be contested in next year's election, and becoming a resident of the state could help Trump's campaign there.Cuomo and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, although rivals, are both longtime Trump critics. And State Attorney General Letitia James has been pursuing a legal case that would allow the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee to see the president's state tax returns. The state passed a law in July that would allow the panel to ask for the returns.Taking to Twitter again on Friday, Trump said "New York can never be great again under the leadership of Governor Andrew Cuomo" or New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio."The president is scheduled to travel to New York on Saturday to attend a mixed martial arts event at Madison Square Garden.In any event, Trump could see large tax savings from a residency switch to Florida. New York State and city impose a combined individual income tax rate of nearly 12.7% for top earners. Florida officials have long enticed wealthy people from the Northeast with promises of warm sunshine -- and zero state income taxes.The financial hit of state income taxes increased following Trump's 2017 tax overhaul, which limited the federal deduction for state and local taxes to $10,000. The deduction was previously unlimited, allowing some top earners to take deductions that can be worth millions of dollars.Another New Yorker, billionaire Carl Icahn is planning to move his home and business to Florida to avoid the Empire State's higher taxes next year.New York doesn't make it easy to leave, however. The state Department of Taxation and Finance will go to great lengths to keep wealthy residents on their tax lists. New York considers people residents if they maintain a residence there for at least 11 months of the year and spend at least 184 days in the state.The states' methods can be aggressive: Issuing subpoenas to pore through credit card statements, bank transactions or phone records to track a taxpayer's location, and sending auditors to interview doormen or confirm doctors' appointments.The law in the District of Columbia says that elected officials who work in Washington should claim their home state for tax purposes.Trump concluded his Thursday night Twitter posts with a farewell to his now-former city and state: "I will always be there to help New York and the great people of New York. It will always have a special place in my heart!"(Updates with more Trump tweets, beginning in 12th paragraph. An earlier version corrected the spelling of Bill de Blasio's last name.)\--With assistance from Peter Blumberg.To contact the reporters on this story: John Harney in Washington at jharney2@bloomberg.net;Laura Davison in Washington at ldavison4@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Michael Shepard at mshepard7@bloomberg.net, John HarneyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Posted: 01 Nov 2019 10:59 AM PDT |
‘Shut Up About Politics’ Singer John Rich Shows Up on Fox News to Talk About Politics Posted: 02 Nov 2019 02:31 AM PDT Months after teaming up with the hosts of Fox News midday gabfest The Five to record an extremely lame hit song titled "Shut Up About Politics," country artist John Rich appeared on Fox News to—without a shred of irony—talk about politics.Sitting down Friday with The Daily Briefing host Dana Perino—a Five host featured on the song—Rich was immediately asked to weigh in on former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton's recent appearance on The Daily Show. Noting that Clinton took part in a skit in which she told a scary ghost story about losing the 2016 election despite having three million more votes than Donald Trump, Perino added that Clinton and the show "thought that was funny" but not for the same reason Rich might think it's funny.The singer, however, focused instead on how scary he found Clinton's physical appearance."That actually freaked me out a little bit," he declared. "I'm kind of envious of her because if you think about all the money she saves every Halloween, she doesn't have to get a costume."While an on-air graphic blared "Country Star John Rich Talks Politics W/Dana," again without a glint of self-awareness, Rich continued to express how physically frightened he was of the former secretary of state."Well her policies were scary and then when you put her out in the dark with a flashlight and the whole thing you go—that's how I kind of envision how that would have worked out," he added.They would go on to talk about politics and Clinton for a bit longer before moving on to how much fans love their collaborative song.That song, co-written by Fox News political pundit Greg Gutfeld, features the following lyrical refrain:Shut up about politicsAin't nothin' but a big pile of dirty tricksI'm tired of all the fighting and the pitchin' fitsSo shut up about politics.Read 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. |
For the Best Three-Row Mid-Size Crossovers and SUVs, See These Full Rankings! Posted: 01 Nov 2019 03:21 PM PDT |
Iran, Please Don't Develop a Stealth Fighter Posted: 02 Nov 2019 02:01 AM PDT |
At least 42 killed in Haiti protest violence: UN Posted: 01 Nov 2019 01:31 PM PDT Port-au-Prince (AFP) - At least 42 people have been killed and dozens injured during anti-government protests in Haiti since mid-September, the UN's human rights body said Friday, adding it was "deeply concerned" by the crisis. The poorest country in the Americas has been roiled for two months by protests, which were triggered by fuel shortages but have turned violent and morphed into a broader campaign against President Jovenel Moise. "We are deeply concerned about the protracted crisis in Haiti, and its impact on the ability of Haitians to access their basic rights to healthcare, food, education and other needs," the UN's Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) said in a statement. |
Turkey threatens to send British Islamic State members back to UK Posted: 02 Nov 2019 09:44 AM PDT Turkey has warned that it will send British Islamic State members back to the UK if they come into the custody of Turkish forces in Syria. Suleyman Soylu, the Turkish interior minister, told Britain and other European governments that Turkey was "not a hotel" for foreign jihadists and vowed to send them home. "When there is a Daesh member, they cancel his or her citizenship, making the person stateless. Then, they take no responsibility," Mr Soylu said. "That is not acceptable to us. It's also irresponsible." Tooba Gondal, 25, is the only British Isil member so far known to have ended up in Turkish custody. She and her children escaped from a Kurdish-run facility in northern Syria last month and ended up in the hands of Turkish-backed Syrian rebels. Ms Gondal was known as "the Isil matchmaker" because she used her social media accounts to try to convince other young British women to follow in her footsteps and become wives to jihadists. Britain has for years resisted pressure from the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) to take back Isil members from the UK. Tooba Gondal photographed after fleeing the Ain Issa camp in Syria. But it may be more difficult to stave off pressure from Turkey, which in theory could put Ms Gondal on a plane to London or try to hand her over to the British embassy in Ankara. There are believed to be eight British men in Kurdish prisons in northeast Syria, while another 25 women and around 60 children are in Kurdish-run camps. Some of them may end up in Turkey's custody as the Turkish military continues to attack Kurdish targets. Ms Gondal was born in France but moved to London as a child and had British residency. However, the UK government is reluctant to bring her back to the UK. Ms Gondal, who married and was widowed three times while living in Isil's "caliphate", was banned from re-entering the UK last November by a Home Office exclusion order, but her son Ibrahim, three, is entitled to citizenship because of his British father. However, her 18-month-old daughter Asiya's late father was Russian. Ms Gondal is today thought to be in one of the new camps for Isil wives set up by Turkey in an area of northern Syria it seized during an offensive in 2017. |
Police officer retires after far-right group ties revealed Posted: 01 Nov 2019 07:48 AM PDT A Connecticut police officer has retired after a civil rights organization raised concerns about his membership in a far-right group known for engaging in violent clashes at political rallies, a town official said Friday. Officer Kevin P. Wilcox retired from the East Hampton Police Department on Oct. 22, according to Town Manager David Cox. Wilcox had been an East Hampton police officer since 1999. |
Judge blocks Trump rule requiring prospective immigrants have health insurance Posted: 02 Nov 2019 03:48 PM PDT Judge Michael Simon in U.S. District Court in Portland, Oregon, granted a 28-day temporary restraining order that prevents the rule from taking effect on Nov. 3. Seven U.S. citizens and an advocacy organization filed a lawsuit to block the rule, arguing it "rewrites our immigration and healthcare laws by Presidential fiat" and could bar hundreds of thousands of prospective immigrants. The proclamation is blocked while the legal challenge against it continues. |
23 ISIS wives start repatriation case in Netherlands Posted: 01 Nov 2019 11:13 AM PDT Lawyers for 23 women who joined the Islamic State group from the Netherlands asked a judge on Friday to order the Netherlands to repatriate them and their 56 young children from camps in Syria. The women and children were living in "deplorable conditions" in the al-Hol camp in northern Syria, lawyer Andre Seebregts said in court. |
Posted: 02 Nov 2019 08:19 AM PDT |
Why the Fed Has No Choice but to Keep Cutting Interest Rates Posted: 01 Nov 2019 08:30 PM PDT |
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