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- ‘World’s most dangerous bird’ kills owner after attacking him when he fell over at Florida home
- UN says 120 killed since fighting broke out in Libya
- Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas are Southern states most at risk of tornadoes Saturday
- Many Democrats and liberals are cheering Assange's arrest. That's foolish
- This Country Has a Choice to Make: F-35s, F/A-18 Super Hornets or a European Fighter
- North Korea's Kim Jong Un gives U.S. to year-end to become more flexible
- An F-35 Will Never be Alone: Russia Seems to Warn America's Stealth Fighter
- Stratolaunch takes off: World's largest plane - with 117-metre wingspan - completes first flight
- Red Cross appeals for three staff missing in Syria since 2013
- 'Justice for Palestine' protesters interrupt Cory Booker's campaign kickoff speech
- American extends Max 8 flight cancellations into August, joining Southwest
- MPs urge UK to cooperate with Sweden in Assange case
- The Latest: Martin Truex Jr. wins at Richmond Raceway
- Ilhan Omar: White House escalates Trump attack over 9/11 comment
- Nancy Pelosi Says Shipping Immigrants Off to Sanctuary Cities is 'Disrespectful' to Challenges
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- Nigeria President Says Election Rival Was Not a Citizen
- Daimler faces probe over 'new cheating software'
- 'Radicalized' couple behind viral AOC ad launches pro-socialism, Netflix-like service
- China's JD.com boss criticises 'slackers' as company makes cuts
- UPDATE 1-Multiple people shot outside nightclub in Australia
- New ruling Sudan military council promises civilian Cabinet
- The breakout star of Pete Buttigieg’s 2020 campaign? His husband Chasten
- Consumer Reports' Guide to Spring Cleaning
- Game of Thrones Meets International Relations: A Match Made In Heaven?
- Appeals for restraint as Ukraine's presidential race turns nasty
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‘World’s most dangerous bird’ kills owner after attacking him when he fell over at Florida home Posted: 14 Apr 2019 01:38 AM PDT A 75-year-old man has been killed by the large flightless bird he owned after he fell on his property in Florida.Police found the man badly wounded by a cassowary when they were called to his property, where the victim kept exotic animals, on Friday.Cassowaries are known as the "world's most dangerous bird", according to San Diego Zoo.Alachua County Sheriff Department said the man was probably injured by the bird's 4-inch, dagger-like claws.Police are investigating the incident but say initial information suggests it was a "tragic accident".The victim, named as Marvin Hajos, was taken to hospital by paramedics, where he later died from his injuries.He was reportedly breeding the birds, which are native to Australia and New Guinea."It looks like it was accidental," deputy chief Jeff Taylor told the Gainesville Sun newspaper."My understanding is that the gentleman was in the vicinity of the bird and at some point fell. When he fell, he was attacked."Police added that the cassowary involved in the attack "remains secured on private property at this time."A woman who identified herself as the victim's partner told the Gainesville Sun that he had died "doing what he loved" but chose not to make any further statement.Cassowaries are similar to emus and are among the largest bird species in the world, weighing up to 60kg and reaching up to 6ft in height.San Diego Zoo said cassowaries "can slice open any predator or potential threat with a single swift kick", due to their long claws.The birds are not traditionally raised in the US but are sought after by collectors.The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission lists the cassowary as Class II wildlife which can "pose a danger to people" and require a permit for ownership.Agencies contributed to this report |
UN says 120 killed since fighting broke out in Libya Posted: 14 Apr 2019 06:41 AM PDT |
Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas are Southern states most at risk of tornadoes Saturday Posted: 13 Apr 2019 09:50 AM PDT |
Many Democrats and liberals are cheering Assange's arrest. That's foolish Posted: 14 Apr 2019 10:47 AM PDT Some have argued that Assange isn't under attack for 'journalism,' but for 'activism.' That's a troubling logic to fall for 'This prosecution is about silencing dissent rather than enforcing the law.' Photograph: Victoria Jones/PAThe attempted extradition and prosecution of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange by the United States should be an obvious outrage. It's a very clear effort by the US government to punish those who expose embarrassing secrets about its actions, and it could set a precedent that would threaten journalists everywhere. And yet many of those who should be championing Assange's cause and condemning the prosecution are doing exactly the opposite. Plenty of liberals and mainstream journalists are inexplicably cheering for Assange to be punished.There has been plenty of over-the-top gloating about Assange's arrest. In the Atlantic, Michael Weiss said Assange "got what he deserved". Some Democratic politicians have been salivating at the possibility of prosecuting him. Hillary Clinton said that Assange needs to "answer for what he has done". Charles Schumer said he hoped Assange "will soon be held to account for his meddling in our elections on behalf of Putin and the Russian government". Dianne Feinstein has been calling for Assange to be brought here and prosecuted since 2010. West Virginia Democratic senator Joe Manchin went even further, with the truly disturbing comment that "now [Assange is] our property and we can get the facts and truth from him". Nor did Bernie Sanders speak up to defend Assange, opting for the same shameful silence he has taken on the imprisonment of whistleblower Chelsea Manning. The other 2020 candidates, with the exception of Mike Gravel and Tulsi Gabbard, have also stayed quiet.There's a lot to be disturbed by here. First, it's not clear that people like Schumer even care about the question of whether Assange broke any laws. Assange has been charged over allegedly helping Chelsea Manning to crack a Department of Defense password in 2010. The indictment has nothing to do with Putin or the 2016 election. Yet Democrats are thrilled enough to have a longtime villain in the clasps of the United States government that the actual charges, and their implications for free speech, are irrelevant.Those free speech questions are serious, and nobody inclined to celebrate Assange's arrest should wave them away. The documents WikiLeaks published, obtained by Chelsea Manning, revealed evidence of serious criminal wrongdoing by the United States armed forces. They shined a crucial light on some of our government's ugliest actions abroad. Because the US government does not like to have its secrets exposed, and needs to send a message to anyone who undermines its authority, it needs to prove that its security state has global reach and that even people outside the US will be seized.This prosecution is about silencing dissent rather than enforcing the law. The accusation against Assange is that nearly 10 years ago he tried unsuccessfully to assist in breaking a government password. How often does doing this result in a years-long federal investigation and an extradition request? Or US senators declaring a foreign national the "property" of this country? The Obama administration fished for years to find a charge that would stick to Assange, but ultimately couldn't find a way of going after him that wouldn't also criminalize ordinary acts of journalism. Donald Trump's government is less scrupulous.Some have argued that Assange isn't under attack for "journalism", but for "activism". Frida Ghitis of CNN wrote that Assange "is not a journalist and therefore not entitled to the protections that the law – and democracy – demand for legitimate journalists". This is a dangerous position. Generally, the law doesn't actually distinguish between "journalists" and "non-journalists", giving everyone the same protections. This is for good reason: if such a distinction becomes legally relevant, it means the government is empowered to decide who the True Journalists are.Those of us who work for independent media outlets – I edit a small-circulation political magazine – will always operate under the threat of being deemed "illegitimate" and having our rights taken away. Even if you think Assange is "not a journalist", the precedent his case sets has ramifications for journalists everywhere. And I do mean everywhere: remember, Assange is Australian, so don't be surprised when the US tries to seize any journalist around the world who can be alleged to have violated one of its laws.In defending Assange on this issue, some may be tempted to say "Of course I don't like the guy, but…" I'm not going to say that, because it should be obvious that one's opinion of Assange is completely irrelevant to the issue. Michael Weiss said nobody should fall for Assange's "phony pleas for sympathy, his megalomania, and his promiscuity with the facts". The Washington Post's editorial board said he is "he is long overdue for personal accountability". True or not, these are not the issue.You don't need to know what Weiss, the Post, or I think of Assange's morals. What you need to know is that anyone who doesn't stick up for him against this prosecution is both unprincipled and foolish. Unprincipled, because they don't care about protecting the liberties that are essential to exposing government crimes, and foolish because authoritarianism doesn't come all at once. It creeps slowly, normalizing itself bit by bit, until you don't realize that it's too late. First they came for Assange, and if you say nothing, they're coming for you next. * Nathan Robinson is the editor of Current Affairs |
This Country Has a Choice to Make: F-35s, F/A-18 Super Hornets or a European Fighter Posted: 14 Apr 2019 10:57 AM PDT The Swiss air force is beginning to test foreign warplane designs as part of a lengthy and much-delayed, $8-billion effort finally to replace the air arm's old Northrop Grumman F-5E/F Tiger fighters.On April 12, 2019, two Eurofighter Typhoons -- an FGR4 single-seat, multi-role variant and a T3 two-seat trainer, both operated by British Aerospace -- reportedly flew missions from Payerne."A Swiss evaluator was noted flying in the two-seater," Scramble magazine reported.Switzerland is testing five different aircraft. Beside the Typhoon, the candidates including Boeing's F/A-18E/F Super Hornet, Dassault's Rafale, Lockheed Martin's F-35A Lightning II and Saab's JAS-39E/F Gripen."Between April and July 2019, the five candidates will be in Switzerland for aerial and ground tests for a period of two weeks each, with public viewing opportunities," according to Scramble.> These tests will complete the same program with the objective to check the capacities of the aircraft and the data of the offers submitted by the different manufacturers. Each candidate will perform eight missions with specific tasks. |
North Korea's Kim Jong Un gives U.S. to year-end to become more flexible Posted: 13 Apr 2019 06:06 AM PDT Kim said he will wait "till the end of this year" for the United States to decide to be more flexible, according to KCNA. "It is essential for the U.S. to quit its current calculation method and approach us with a new one," Kim said in a speech to the Supreme People's Assembly on Friday, KCNA said. Trump and Kim have met twice, in Hanoi in February and Singapore in June, building goodwill but failing to agree on a deal to lift sanctions in exchange for North Korea abandoning its nuclear and missile programs. |
An F-35 Will Never be Alone: Russia Seems to Warn America's Stealth Fighter Posted: 14 Apr 2019 08:00 AM PDT This is perhaps the most aggressive illustration of a new Russian rhetorical approach. In a move that would raise eyebrows even by Cold War standards of political saber-rattling, the Russian Embassy in Washington seemed to threaten America's F-35 fighter with Vietnam-era propaganda footage.(This first appeared earlier in the year.)Last month, the official handle of the Russian Embassy in the US tweeted the following update:> 'If a Russia... ever was to see an F-35 inside its airspace', we would love to send Chief of Staff of the @usairforce Gen. David L. Goldfein 'message with two words' — 'remember Vietnam' > 'An F-35 will never be alone'As observed by Foxtrot Alpha, the tweet is a direct reference to a recent Brookings Institution lecture given by Air Force chief of staff Gen. David Goldfein. During his talk, General Goldfein gave this assessment of the F-35's capabilities:"If a China or a Russia or another adversary on the globe ever were to see an F-35 inside their airspace," Goldfein said. "I would love to send them all messages with two words — 'we're here. "It's not 'I'm here,'" he said. "An F-35 will never be alone." |
Stratolaunch takes off: World's largest plane - with 117-metre wingspan - completes first flight Posted: 13 Apr 2019 07:29 PM PDT The world's largest airplane - a behemoth boasting six engines, two fuselages and a wingspan broader than a football pitch - made its first test flight on Saturday in California. Taking to the skies over the Mojave Desert in California on Saturday, it was the first flight for the carbon-composite plane built by Stratolaunch Systems, started by late Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, as the company enters the lucrative private space market. Designed to send humans into space at a fraction of the cost of rockets, the white airplane called Roc took off shortly before 7 a.m. Pacific time (3pm UK time) and stayed in the air for more than two hours before landing safely back at the Mojave Air and Space Port, where a crowd of hundreds of people cheered. "What a fantastic first flight," Stratolaunch Chief Executive Officer Jean Floyd said. "Today's flight furthers our mission to provide a flexible alternative to ground launched systems, Mr Floyd said. Thrilled to share that today the Stratolaunch aircraft flew for the first time! ✈ Check out the video here ⬇ StratoFirstFlighthttps://t.co/rluHdNRtJ4— Stratolaunch (@Stratolaunch) April 14, 2019 "We are incredibly proud of the Stratolaunch team, today's flight crew, our partners at Northrup Grumman's Scaled Composites and the Mojave Air and Space Port." The plane is designed to drop rockets and other space vehicles weighing up to 500,000 pounds at an altitude of 35,000 feet and has been billed by the company as making satellite deployment as "easy as booking an airline flight." Saturday's flight, which saw the plane reach a maximum speed of 189 miles per hour and altitudes of 17,000 feet, was meant to test its performance and handling qualities, according to Stratolaunch. Allen, who co-founded Microsoft with Bill Gates in 1975, announced in 2011 that he had formed the privately funded Stratolaunch. The Stratolaunch aircraft has two fuselages and is powered by six Boeing 747 engines Credit: AFP The company seeks to cash in on higher demand in coming years for vessels that can put satellites in orbit, competing in the United States with other space entrepreneurs such as Elon Musk's SpaceX and United Launch Alliance - a partnership between Boeing and Lockheed Martin. Stratolaunch has said that it intends to launch its first rockets from the Roc in 2020 at the earliest. Allen died in October 2018 while suffering from non-Hodgkins' lymphoma, just months after the plane's development was unveiled. "We all know Paul would have been proud to witness today's historic achievement," said Jody Allen, Chair of Vulcan Inc and Trustee of the Paul G. Allen Trust. "The aircraft is a remarkable engineering achievement and we congratulate everyone involved." |
Red Cross appeals for three staff missing in Syria since 2013 Posted: 14 Apr 2019 02:30 PM PDT The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) appealed on Sunday for information on the whereabouts of three employees abducted in Syria more than five years ago and last known to have been held by Islamic State. Breaking its silence on the case, the independent aid agency identified the three as Louisa Akavi, a nurse from New Zealand, and Syrian drivers Alaa Rajab and Nabil Bakdounes. U.S.-backed forces proclaimed the capture of Islamic State's last territory in Syria last month, eliminating its rule over a caliphate which it had proclaimed in Iraq and Syria in 2014. |
'Justice for Palestine' protesters interrupt Cory Booker's campaign kickoff speech Posted: 13 Apr 2019 01:02 PM PDT |
American extends Max 8 flight cancellations into August, joining Southwest Posted: 14 Apr 2019 07:00 AM PDT |
MPs urge UK to cooperate with Sweden in Assange case Posted: 13 Apr 2019 03:14 AM PDT More than 70 British lawmakers have urged their government to prioritise any extradition bid Sweden might make for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who is also wanted in the United States. Assange was arrested on Thursday at Ecuador's London embassy on allegations of skipping bail, and on a US extradition warrant related to a huge leak of official documents. In the letter, the MPs and peers urge British Home Secretary Sajid Javid to "give every assistance to Sweden should they want to revive and pursue the investigation". |
The Latest: Martin Truex Jr. wins at Richmond Raceway Posted: 13 Apr 2019 07:55 PM PDT |
Ilhan Omar: White House escalates Trump attack over 9/11 comment Posted: 14 Apr 2019 10:09 AM PDT * Sarah Sanders: 'It's a good thing president is calling her out' * Congresswoman heralds 'unwavering love for America' * Opinion: Omar is the target of a dangerous hate campaignIlhan Omar participates in a news conference outside the Capitol in Washington, earlier this week. Photograph: Jim Bourg/ReutersThe White House escalated its assault on the Muslim American congresswoman Ilhan Omar on Sunday, after Donald Trump repeatedly tweeted video footage of September 11 and accused Omar of downplaying the terror attacks.Supported by a wave of Democrats saying Trump was wilfully misrepresenting comments by Omar in what amounted to dangerous racist bullying, the congresswoman on Saturday said she would not be silenced by "an administration that ran on banning Muslims from this country"."No one person – no matter how corrupt, inept, or vicious – can threaten my unwavering love for America," Omar tweeted.But on Sunday White House press secretary Sarah Sanders insisted that Omar, 37, a Somali American who as one of the first Muslim women in Congress is the first to wear a hijab in the House chamber, was in the wrong.> I think that it's a good thing that the president is calling her out> > Sarah Sanders"I find her comments to be absolutely disgraceful and unbefitting of a member of Congress," Sanders said, "and I think that it's a good thing the president is calling her out."Sanders dismissed concern among Democrats that Trump was inciting violence against Omar, who has received death threats, and other Muslim Americans."The president is wishing no ill will and certainly not violence toward anyone," said Sanders. "But the president is absolutely and should be calling out the congresswoman."Omar has come in for a drubbing from the right over a snippet from a speech last month to the Council on American-Islamic Relations (Cair), in which she discussed the problem of Islamophobia and described "the discomfort of being a second-class citizen"."Cair was founded after 9/11," Omar said, "because they recognized that some people did something and that all of us were starting to lose access to our civil liberties".In response, Trump tweeted, retweeted then pinned atop his Twitter account a video splicing footage of Omar's remark with video of the 9/11 attacks, including planes striking the World Trade Center and the Twin Towers falling.Trump's attack amplified a cover run by the tabloid New York Post, owned by Rupert Murdoch, which splashed a quote from Omar over a picture of the World Trade Center in flames. In response, a group of New York City corner-store owners announced a boycott of the newspaper.The Yemeni American Merchants Association, which represents Yemeni Americans who own and run an estimated 4,000 to 5,000 of the city's thousands of delis and corner stores, known as "bodegas", wrote that the front page "provoked hatred" and "aims to harm Omar and her family and other people of the Islamic faith"."This rhetoric threatens the safety and wellbeing of Omar, Muslim leaders, and the larger Muslim American community at a time when Islamophobia is at an all-time high," it added.> This is about the fact that she looks a certain way, she is a woman of color, she happens to be of the Muslim faith> > Andrew GillumAndrew Gillum, a former mayor of Tallahassee who made a strong run in 2018 for the Florida governorship, said on CNN's State of the Union Trump was making a racist attack on Omar as part of his strategy to win re-election."Obviously Ilhan has become a little bit of an easy target for this White House, for this administration," Gillum said. "But I think his attack is beyond congresswoman Omar. This is about the fact that she looks a certain way, she is a woman of color, she happens to be of the Muslim faith. The president is setting, in my opinion, the groundwork for the kind of campaign he wants to run, which is to pit Americans against Americans, to turn brown and black people against his base."Omar, who represents a district including Minneapolis, has been in Congress just over three months but she has been targeted by Trump more than once. In February, after Omar suggested support for Israel was fueled by donations from a lobby group, she was accused of antisemitism.Omar apologized "unequivocally". But she has declined to do so over her 9/11 comment."I did not run for Congress to be silent," she tweeted on Saturday. "I stand undeterred to continue fighting for equal opportunity in our pursuit of happiness for all Americans."Many Democrats, including more than a dozen presidential candidates, issued statements of support for Omar, though activists were careful to note that some of the statements, which mentioned Omar by name, were stronger than others.Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, the other Muslim American woman in Congress, was the first on Friday to call for Democrats to support Omar."Enough is enough," she wrote. "No more silence, with NY Post and now Trump taking Ilhan's words out of context to incite violence toward her, it's time for more Dem[ocrats] to speak up. Clearly the GOP is fine with this shameful stunt, but we cannot stand by."Senator Bernie Sanders called attacks on Omar "disgusting and dangerous" and said Omar would not "back down to Trump's racism and hate, and neither will we".Senator Elizabeth Warren said: "The president is inciting violence against a sitting congresswoman – and an entire group of Americans based on their religion. It's disgusting. It's shameful. And any elected leader who refuses to condemn it shares responsibility for it."Former representative Beto O'Rourke and New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said Trump's attacks amounted to an "incitement to violence".Trump's own controversial remarks and false claims about September 11 have come under renewed scrutiny. Speaking on CNN's State of the Union on Sunday, the New York congressman Jerrold Nadler, whose district covers lower Manhattan, said he was not offended by Omar's remarks because she referred only in passing to September 11.But Trump was speaking out of turn, Nadler said, because after 9/11 he had taken money from a federal grant fund for small businesses that were damaged in the terrorist attacks."He stole $150,000 from some small business person who could have used it to help rehabilitate himself," Nadler said."He has no moral authority to be talking about 9/11 at all." |
Posted: 14 Apr 2019 03:30 PM PDT |
View Photos of the I.D. Roomzz Electric SUV Concept Posted: 14 Apr 2019 04:15 AM PDT |
Nigeria President Says Election Rival Was Not a Citizen Posted: 14 Apr 2019 01:50 AM PDT The allegation against Atiku Abubakar, the opposition candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, was made in a petition filed by Buhari's All Progressives Congress to the panel in Abuja, according to a spokesman of that party. Abubakar's party filed a petition at the Presidential Elections Tribunal last month to nullify Buhari's victory on allegations that voting was rigged in favor of the incumbent. Buhari, 76, was declared the winner for his second term, with 56 percent of the vote, while Abubakar garnered 41 percent. |
Daimler faces probe over 'new cheating software' Posted: 14 Apr 2019 09:10 AM PDT Daimler confirmed Sunday it was facing a regulatory probe after a report said German authorities have uncovered a previously unknown type of pollution trickery software allegedly installed by the car giant in some of its vehicles. The Federal Motor Transport Authority (KBA) has initiated a formal hearing procedure, Bild am Sonntag newspaper reported. "We fully cooperate with the Federal Motor Transport Authority and are reviewing the facts," said Daimler in a statement. |
'Radicalized' couple behind viral AOC ad launches pro-socialism, Netflix-like service Posted: 14 Apr 2019 12:44 PM PDT |
China's JD.com boss criticises 'slackers' as company makes cuts Posted: 13 Apr 2019 01:47 AM PDT Liu, who started the company that would become JD.com in 1998, in the note spoke about how in the firm's earliest days he would set his alarm clock to wake him up every two hours to ensure he could offer his customers 24-hour service - a step he said was crucial to JD's success. "JD in the last four, five years has not made any eliminations, so the number of staff has expanded rapidly, the number of people giving orders has grown and grown, while the those who are working have fallen," Liu wrote. The term he used, which is commonly translated in China as "slackers" can be directly translated as people who drift along aimlessly or waste time. |
UPDATE 1-Multiple people shot outside nightclub in Australia Posted: 13 Apr 2019 04:48 PM PDT Multiple people have been shot outside a nightclub in the Australian city of Melbourne, police said on Sunday. Two men were in hospital in critical condition, police said, while two other men had non-life-threatening injuries. A police spokeswoman said by telephone that there was no suggestion the attack was terror-related at this stage. |
New ruling Sudan military council promises civilian Cabinet Posted: 14 Apr 2019 02:14 PM PDT Sudan's new ruling military council announced Sunday that it will name a civilian prime minister and Cabinet but not a president to help govern the country following the coup that removed longtime leader Omar al-Bashir. An army spokesman, Lt. Gen. Shamseldin Kibashi, also said in televised remarks that the military had begun to overhaul security organizations and would not break up demonstrations that have continued outside the military headquarters since Thursday's coup. The announcement was unlikely to satisfy protesters, who have demanded full civilian rule. |
The breakout star of Pete Buttigieg’s 2020 campaign? His husband Chasten Posted: 12 Apr 2019 10:00 PM PDT Chasten Buttigieg has gained a sizable following – and boosted his husband's campaign – with his candid social media posts about life on the trailPete Buttigieg watches as his husband, Chasten, plays with their dog Buddy at their home in South Bend, Indiana. Photograph: Joshua Lott/The Washington Post/Getty ImagesAlthough he is yet to formally enter the 2020 presidential race, Pete Buttigieg has wowed crowds at town halls, raised more money than better-known rivals and placed near the top of Iowa polls.It has been a remarkable three months for the 37-year-old mayor of South Bend, Indiana, a rise that might only be matched by that of his husband, Chasten Buttigieg.The pair have crossed the country together and Chasten's documentation of life on the campaign trail has made him a breakout star in his own right – and a boost to his husband's campaign.The 29-year-old's funny and candid posts on Twitter and Instagram have won him more than 240,000 followers as he offers up a more carefree side to his husband's earnest persona. Having taken a sabbatical from teaching to focus on the campaign, he has been a hit offline too, winning rave reviews earlier this month for a speech at a Human Rights Campaign gala.Pete seems well aware of his husband's popularity. At a recent rally in New Hampshire, one of the loudest cheers came when he mentioned Chasten. But Chasten's role is not just that of a supportive husband, blithely tweeting policy proposals and fundraising links. He is popular because he posts the sort of things anyone might post.Photos of the couple's dogs, for example, go down particularly well. They have two: Truman, a labrador-beagle mix, and Buddy, a puggle who only has one eye.Chasten's excitement at his husband's success has also found an audience. He eagerly tweets out positive articles and praise but his position outside the campaign also means he can address things his husband, who would be the first openly gay president, might ignore.> Reporter: will your husband play a role in your campaign? > Peter: yeah, I think he's behind you pic.twitter.com/D5BBoR13gX> > — Chasten Buttigieg (@Chas10Buttigieg) March 29, 2019After a handful of articles appeared online asking if Pete Buttigieg was good or bad for the gay community – the Outline ran the headline "Why Pete Buttigieg is bad for gays" – Chasten was happy to wade in."I definitely thought the 'he's not skinny enough' comments would come first," he wrote in a post which drew a supportive response from Adam Rippon, the first openly gay American to win a medal at the Winter Olympics.Pete's rapid rise from small-city mayor to a serious contender to be the next president probably seems a rapid change for the couple, who had their first date – an evening of drinking beer and eating scotch eggs – in September 2015."Once I saw he was down for the Scotch egg, I knew it had a shot," Pete recalled to the New York Times in a splashy feature about their wedding in June 2018. The ceremony included a reading from the supreme court ruling that legalised same-sex marriage, according to the Times, before the pair were driven away in a "cherry red 1961 Studebaker Lark VIII".Chasten's parents were there but he has talked about the difficulty of coming out to them as an 18-year-old – he ended up moving out of the family home and sleeping in his car and on friends' couches. He regularly posts motivational messages for people who might find themselves in a similar situation."For many of us, coming out was, and is, an extremely painful process," he wrote earlier this month. "Perhaps, like me, you medicated, prayed and begged. Sharing our stories matter. Let's bust the stigma together."> Your time in the closet and your journey to coming out belong to you. You are not required to open healed wounds or write lengthy threads in order to explain your worth to others who aren't willing to see it themselves. You matter first.> > — Chasten Buttigieg (@Chas10Buttigieg) April 2, 2019Chasten reflected on his newfound fame in his speech to the Human Rights Campaign, telling the crowd: "I now live in a world where people take photos of me in the deodorant aisle at the grocery store."He had a serious message too, mentioning how "the grace of one supreme court vote" enabled him and Pete to marry. He closed his speech by stressing the need for an Equality Act, then added in a plug for his husband."We need someone in the White House who will sign the Equality Act into law," he said. "And luckily, I know a guy." |
Consumer Reports' Guide to Spring Cleaning Posted: 13 Apr 2019 03:00 AM PDT |
Game of Thrones Meets International Relations: A Match Made In Heaven? Posted: 13 Apr 2019 12:57 PM PDT George R. R. Martin, author of the acclaimed A Song of Ice and Fire book series which has been brilliantly adapted for television as HBO's Game of Thrones, is fond of invoking a quote by William Faulkner that, "The only thing worth writing about is the human heart in conflict with itself." While both Thrones and its literary inspiration have done a masterful job portraying such conflict, fans of the series have been equally if not more transfixed by the external conflicts erupting around Martin's characters. Game of Thrones' depiction of a sprawling and intricate multiparty struggle for political and military control of the continent of Westeros has produced a depiction of war, diplomacy, and political intrigue that is as compelling as it is brutal.While Thrones' violence, sex, witty banter, and ice zombies have proven more than sufficient to capture the imagination of the casual television viewer, it is the show's rich portrayal of complex political questions that has helped attract many students and practitioners of foreign policy to the series. Despite its fictional medieval setting, Game of Thrones has provided an excellent lens through which to examine theoretical debates and global problems facing contemporary international relations scholars. With Thrones about to begin its eighth and final season this Sunday, it seems fitting to look back and appreciate the series' deft handling of the very debates that regularly play out in the pages of publications like the National Interest. |
Appeals for restraint as Ukraine's presidential race turns nasty Posted: 13 Apr 2019 07:11 AM PDT Ukraine's interior ministry on Saturday called on a comedian tipped to become the country's next president and his incumbent rival not to exacerbate tensions ahead of a run-off in a high-stakes election. Nerves are starting to fray as polls show the comic and actor Volodymyr Zelensky easily defeating President Petro Poroshenko for the leadership of a country seen as the biggest frontier between Europe and Russia. "We are approaching the final phase of the election campaign and the atmosphere in society is tense," Ukraine's deputy interior minister Sergiy Yarovyi said in a statement. |
Roger Stone Attacks Mueller Indictment, Seeks to See Report Posted: 13 Apr 2019 10:48 AM PDT A longtime Republican political operative and dirty trickster, Stone was indicted in late January on charges he lied to Congress about communications with WikiLeaks, obstructed lawmakers' investigation and tampered with witnesses. In a suite of six sometimes overlapping filings, Stone's lawyers asked U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson in Washington to throw out the case against him, arguing that Mueller's investigation was improperly funded, that the special counsel himself was improperly appointed and that the lawmakers to whom Stone allegedly lied never asked Mueller to investigate that possibility. |
Where and how to mail your federal tax return Posted: 13 Apr 2019 04:02 AM PDT |
La. church fires: Documents claim suspect bought gas can before crimes Posted: 14 Apr 2019 10:50 AM PDT |
Syria says Israeli airstrike on military position wounds 6 Posted: 13 Apr 2019 01:23 AM PDT |
Five years after Boko Haram kidnap, 112 Chibok girls still missing Posted: 13 Apr 2019 06:50 PM PDT Aisha Musa Maina digs through an old bag looking for memories of her daughter Hauwa, one of the Chibok schoolgirls kidnapped five years ago by Boko Haram jihadists in northeastern Nigeria. The kidnap had caused the family such suffering and sadness it feels as if they were all abducted, Hauwa's mother told AFP. On April 14, 2014, gunmen stormed the Chibok girls' boarding school, kidnapping 276 pupils aged 12-17, 57 of whom managed to escape by jumping from the trucks. |
Severe damage in the aftermath of a possible tornado Posted: 13 Apr 2019 01:27 PM PDT |
What 100 Calories of Easter Candy Looks Like Posted: 13 Apr 2019 03:00 AM PDT |
Senator Kamala Harris releases 15 years of tax returns Posted: 14 Apr 2019 05:55 AM PDT |
Self-Driving Light Trucks Will Be Allowed on California Roads Posted: 13 Apr 2019 08:00 AM PDT |
Brazil’s Economy Minister Says He Can ‘Fix’ Petrobras Situation Posted: 13 Apr 2019 03:00 PM PDT When asked about Bolsonaro's meddling in state-controlled Petrobras' pricing policy this week, Guedes said he'd get more information when he returns home from Washington, where he's been attending the spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund. Petrobras shares plunged more than 8 percent on Friday after Bolsonaro called the energy producer's Chief Executive Officer Roberto Castello Branco and ordered him to cancel a planned increase in diesel prices. |
Police: Mother tries karate, son strips and dog steals cornbread at Walmart Posted: 13 Apr 2019 01:30 PM PDT |
AP FACT CHECK: Trump knew WikiLeaks until he didn't Posted: 13 Apr 2019 05:48 AM PDT |
Assange's father calls on Australia to bring him home Posted: 13 Apr 2019 10:15 PM PDT WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's father on Sunday called on Australia to bring his son home, saying he was shocked to see his son's condition after his arrest in London last week. John Shipton -- who was secretary of the Wikileaks Party when his son tried to run for a senate seat in 2013 national elections -- reportedly visited Assange every Christmas at the Ecuadore embassy in London after he sought refuge there in 2012. "DFAT (Department of Foreign Affairs) and the prime minister should in a nuanced way do something," Shipton told Melbourne's Sunday Herald Sun. |
Posted: 14 Apr 2019 05:03 AM PDT Welcome to another special weekend edition of our daily deals roundups, where we dig through hundreds and hundreds of sales to find you the best of the bunch. Highlights from today's list include a killer sale that gets you Sylvania soft white LED light bulbs for just $1 each when you buy a 24 pack, a fast wireless charging pad in four different colors for just $9.99, the best-selling Bluetooth earbuds on Amazon for $16.99, $10 off the Fire TV Stick 4K and the Fire TV Stick, brand new current-generation Apple iPad tablets starting at just $250 instead of $330, a Bose TV sound bar for only $199, and more. Check out all of Sunday's top deals below. |
Google takes on 'Africa's challenges' with first AI centre in Ghana Posted: 12 Apr 2019 08:21 PM PDT An artificial intelligence research laboratory opened by Google in Ghana, the first of its kind in Africa, will take on challenges across the continent, researchers say. The US technology giant said the lab in the capital Accra would address economic, political and environmental issues. "Africa has many challenges where the use of AI could be beneficial, sometimes even more than in other places," Google's head of AI Accra, Moustapha Cisse, told AFP at the centre's official opening this week. |
RPT-NEWSMAKER-Chevron CEO proves dealmaker with $33 bln offer for Anadarko Posted: 13 Apr 2019 06:07 AM PDT Chevron Corp's proposed $33-billion deal for Anadarko Petroleum Corp vaults the company into top ranks of the world's biggest oil companies and cements its chief executive, Mike Wirth, as a dealmaker. The merger, the sixth largest energy acquisition by value, propels Chevron two spots to the second-largest major by oil output, behind Exxon Mobil Corp, according to research firms Drillinginfo and Wood Mackenzie. The deal announced on Friday comes less than three months after Wirth bought Pasadena Refining System Inc, the (PRSI) operator of a Texas oil refinery. |
Highlights: UK's Hammond talks about Brexit, the BoE and PM May's successor Posted: 12 Apr 2019 11:40 PM PDT British finance minister Philip Hammond said on Friday it was very likely that the idea of a second Brexit referendum would be put to parliament at some point, but time was tight before October when Britain is due to leave the European Union. Hammond also said the process for choosing a new governor of the Bank of England was beginning ahead of the scheduled departure of current governor Mark Carney in January 2020. ON A NO-DEAL BREXIT "No-deal as an immediate threat is off the table. |
Military's Grip on Power Challenged by Sudan Democracy Protests Posted: 14 Apr 2019 12:57 AM PDT The moves on Saturday followed the decision of Defense Minister Ahmed Awad Ibn Auf to stand down as the head of the council less then two days after the military's overthrow of Omar al-Bashir's 30-year rule and just hours after veteran intelligence chief Salah Gosh resigned. "The coup-makers are in disarray," said Alex de Waal, executive director of the World Peace Foundation at Tufts University in Massachusetts, and a Sudan expert. |
Posted: 13 Apr 2019 11:00 PM PDT The Battle of Iwo Jima, which began Feb. 19, 1945, was one of the bloodiest battles in Marine Corps history, as former Cpl. Don Graves knows firsthand and will never forget.He'll also never forget the time a Japanese soldier smelled hot chocolate being brewed near him and called out for him to bring him some. The moment, as he recounted in a video posted to the Marine Corps Facebook page Tuesday, was almost like the Christmas truce that wasn't.Sitting in a fox hole with two other Marines on the fifth week of the battle, he said, Graves decided to make himself some hot chocolate. "So my other two buddies, they said, 'make enough for three of us.'"So there he was, slicing up his chocolate ration with a Ka-Bar and chopping it into a powder. Then he cut off a piece of his Composition C2 demolition charge and used it to light a flame."Just a nice little fire going, and we sat there and we watched it," he said. "And then all of sudden I could smell hot chocolate."Of course, so could everyone else, including enemy soldiers.A few minutes later, he heard a Japanese voice calling out to him, "hey Marine, very good chocoletto. You bring chocoletto here.""If you want chocoletto, you come here and get it," he said back. "He says, 'oh no, you bring here,'" Graves said, laughing."There's humor in combat. Every man that's been in combat knows that sometimes funny things happen." |
Israeli spacecraft crashes into pieces attempting moon landing, dashing hopes of making history Posted: 14 Apr 2019 09:59 AM PDT |
Mall of America incident: Man charged after child possibly pushed from 3rd floor Posted: 13 Apr 2019 07:49 AM PDT |
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