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Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters |
- Biden holds U.S. election kick-off rally as Democratic rivals sharpen attacks
- Illinois not alerted to early clues in womb-cutting case
- Katyusha rocket crashes into Baghdad Green Zone: security services
- Boeing says it has corrected simulator software of 737 MAX jets
- US 'afraid' of war with Iran, claims head of Revolutionary Guard
- Ocasio-Cortez Sides With Buffett on How Errant CEOs Should Pay
- Attorney general Barr is 'sliming his own department,' says former FBI director Comey
- Blast hits Egypt tourist bus, 17 injured: security, medical sources
- This Missile Might be the U.S. Navy's Important Weapon in Decades
- Wild video shows the moment an F-16 fighter jet crashed into a California warehouse
- Democrat 2020 hopefuls eye coveted Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez endorsement
- SAT to give students 'adversity score'
- Trump Lashes Back After GOP Lawmaker Calls Conduct ‘Impeachable’
- Al Jazeera suspends two journalists over Holocaust report
- Let Me Tell You About the Worst Submarine of All Time
- Modi’s jobs deficit: J&J’s largest India plant idle three years after completion
- Genesis Intends to Build the Essentia Concept as an EV, and It May Be Powered by Hydrogen
- Ahead of Fox News Forum, Buttigieg Critical of Hosts and Trump
- Scouted: Tevas Sandals Will Survive Anything You Put Them Through And Look Good Doing It
- What Are the Best Inexpensive Small SUVs?
- UK PM May to make 'new, bold offer' in Brexit bill, Labour skeptical
- Grumpy Cat lives forever on the internet. These were some of her best memes
- Target is selling a giant unicorn float that will hold up to 6 people
- China, Iran foreign ministers meet amid Middle East tensions
- 'The point is to overturn Roe v Wade': How a quiet Republican effort to limit abortion rights has blown up into a full scale attack on women's rights
- New Hampshire cafeteria worker fired for giving student free lunch won't return
- Michael Bennet Understands Exactly What's Gone Wrong in America
- Austrian president calls for September poll in wake of scandal
- Cold Brew’s Insidious Hegemony
- Rebels say Syrian army fails to retake Latakia mountain
- 10 surprising places to find the Statue of Liberty
- Duterte Signing Papers, Not Confined in Hospital, Spokesman Says
- AP sources: Former CIA chief Brennan to brief Dems on Iran
- You’ll wonder why you ever watched TV without this $13 gadget
- Boeing's New Version of the AH-64 Apache Attack Helicopter Might Be a 'Re-Run'
- Australian PM heads to church, football after 'miracle' election win
- Scouted: The Easy Summer Slide from J.Crew Factory is the Only Shoe I Own in Multiple Colors
Biden holds U.S. election kick-off rally as Democratic rivals sharpen attacks Posted: 18 May 2019 03:00 AM PDT Former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden on Saturday will hold a presidential-style rally intended to make his march toward becoming the Democrat to take on President Donald Trump seem inevitable, even as rivals search for ways to slow him down. Since entering the race last month, Biden, 76, has largely ignored the other 23 contenders in the Democratic field, instead training his fire on Republican Trump. Trump, in turn, has regularly knocked Biden, making the 2020 presidential contest sometimes feel like a general election more than a year before the vote takes place. |
Illinois not alerted to early clues in womb-cutting case Posted: 19 May 2019 03:29 AM PDT |
Katyusha rocket crashes into Baghdad Green Zone: security services Posted: 19 May 2019 11:30 AM PDT A Katyusha rocket crashed Sunday into Baghdad's Green Zone which houses government offices and embassies including the US mission, Iraqi security services said in a statement. The rocket -- which came after Washington ordered the evacuation of non-essential diplomatic staff from the Baghdad embassy and the Arbil consulate citing threats from Iranian-backed Iraqi armed groups -- caused no casualties, it said. "A Katyusha rocket crashed into the Green Zone without causing casualties," it said in a brief statement without giving further details. |
Boeing says it has corrected simulator software of 737 MAX jets Posted: 17 May 2019 06:39 PM PDT Boeing Co has made corrections to simulator software that mimics the flying experience of its 737 MAX jets, which were involved in two fatal crashes, and the company has provided additional information to device operators, a spokesman said on Friday. The spokesman, Gordon Johndroe, said the changes will ensure that the simulator experience is representative across different flight conditions and will improve the simulation of force loads on the manual trim wheel that helps control the airplane. The comments came after the New York Times on Friday reported https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/17/business/boeing-737-max-simulators.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage that Boeing recently discovered that the flight simulators airlines use to train pilots could not adequately replicate conditions that played a role in the 737 MAX crashes. |
US 'afraid' of war with Iran, claims head of Revolutionary Guard Posted: 19 May 2019 11:22 AM PDT The US is "afraid" of war with the US, the head of Iran's Revolutionary Guard said as tensions between Tehran and Washington intensified over the weekend. Major General Hossein Salami told the Iranian state news agency, IRNA, that the country does not want war. "The difference between us and them is that they are afraid of war and don't have the will for it," he said. His remarks came against a backdrop of increased volatility in the region, with the US sending an aircraft carrier strike group to the Persian Gulf to counter an unspecified threat from Iran. Major General Salami's comments were dismissed by the US president on Twitter. "If Iran wants to fight, that will be the official end of Iran. Never threaten the United States again!" Mr Trump tweeted. The US Federal Aviation Administration has urged commercial aircraft to exercise caution when flying over the Persian Gulf, warning they ran the risk of being "misidentified". How Iran has stoked tensions in Gulf A similar misunderstanding in 1988 led to an American warship bringing down an Iran Air flight, killing all 290 people on board. Iraq, meanwhile, has condemned as "political" a decision by US energy giant ExxonMobil to evacuate staff from a southern oil field after Washington ordered personnel to quit its Baghdad embassy. Saudi Arabia responded to the escalating crisis by calling for a Gulf summit, adding that while the country did not want war it would defend itself if hostilities erupted. John Bolton wants tough line with Iran Credit: Joshua Roberts/Reuters In Washington Donald Trump has emerged as a dove within his own administration, telling his acting defence secretary, Patrick Shanahan, that he wants to avoid an armed conflict erupting. It has put the US president at odds with John Bolton, his national security adviser and a long-standing foreign policy hawk, who has made little secret of his desire for regime change in Tehran. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, has also sought to lower the temperature by asking European allies to intervene with Iran. Washington's stance on Iran has put it at odds with European allies, notably after it withdrew from the nuclear deal negotiated by the Obama administration. Over the weekend Tulsi Gabbard, an Iraq war veteran and Democratic presidential candidate, rounded on Mr Trump and Mr Pompeo accusing them of leading the country into a war with Iran. "He says he doesn't want it, but the actions of him and his administration, people like John Bolton and Mike Pompeo, tell us a very different story," she said on ABC. "They are setting the stage for a war with Iran that would prove to be far more costly, far more devastating and dangerous than anything that we saw in the Iraq war." |
Ocasio-Cortez Sides With Buffett on How Errant CEOs Should Pay Posted: 18 May 2019 09:19 AM PDT The freshman New York Democrat retweeted a CNBC article about how the Berkshire Hathaway chairman recently told shareholders that if a bank needs a government bail-out, the responsible CEO and his or her spouse should lose their net worth. In the CNBC story she retweeted, originally published on May 4, the day of Berkshire's annual meeting in Omaha, Buffett was quoted as responding to a shareholder's question regarding the Wells Fargo scandal in 2016 involving the creation of fake accounts. The story pointed out Berkshire is one of the largest shareholders in Wells Fargo. |
Attorney general Barr is 'sliming his own department,' says former FBI director Comey Posted: 18 May 2019 01:20 AM PDT Former FBI director James Comey has accused Attorney General William Barr of "sliming his own department" by questioning the creation of the Trump-Russia investigation.Mr Comey also suggested the head of the US justice department – who has launched a review into the origins of the 2016 election meddling probe – had been acting as a "spokesperson" for Donald Trump."The AG should stop sliming his own Department," the former FBI chief tweeted. "If there are bad facts, show us, or search for them professionally and then tell us what you found. An AG must act like the leader of the Department of Justice, an organization based on truth. Donald Trump has enough spokespeople."The attorney general has asked John Durham, the US attorney in Connecticut, to examine how the probe into Russian election interference began and whether laws were broken while intelligence was collected on the Trump campaign, it was revealed earlier this week.On Friday Mr Barr said the review would focus on the actions of the US intelligence community before the FBI opened a formal inquiry in July 2016."Government power was used to spy on American citizens," the attorney general told The Wall Street Journal. "I can't imagine any world where we wouldn't take a look and make sure that was done properly."Mr Barr told a Senate subcommittee last month that he believed "spying did occur". He said: "The question is whether it was adequately predicated and I'm not suggesting it wasn't adequately predicated, but I need to explore that."The attorney general has provided no details about what "spying" may have taken place but he could be alluding to a surveillance warrant the FBI obtained on former Trump associate Carter Page and the FBI's use of an informant while investigating ex-Trump campaign foreign policy adviser George Papadopoulos.> The AG should stop sliming his own Department. If there are bad facts, show us, or search for them professionally and then tell us what you found. An AG must act like the leader of the Department of Justice, an organization based on truth. Donald Trump has enough spokespeople.> > — James Comey (@Comey) > > May 18, 2019His suggestions that members of the Trump campaign were unfairly targeted have been welcomed by the president and his associates, who have repeatedly claimed investigations into the campaign were motivated by political bias.The president said that he did not request Mr Barr launch the review, but that he thinks "it's a great thing that he did it."FBI Director Christopher Wray told Congress earlier in May that he has no evidence the FBI illegally monitored the Trump campaign and doesn't consider court-approved FBI surveillance to be "spying". Mr Comey has said "the FBI doesn't spy, the FBI investigates". He has been a consistent critic of Mr Trump since he was fired as FBI director by the president in May 2017, calling him "morally unfit to be president". |
Blast hits Egypt tourist bus, 17 injured: security, medical sources Posted: 19 May 2019 07:05 AM PDT An explosion struck a tourist bus on Sunday near Egypt's famed pyramids, injuring 17 people including foreigners, security and medical sources said. South Africans and Egyptians were among those injured when an explosive device went off, hitting the bus in Giza, according to the sources. Sunday's incident comes after three Vietnamese holidaymakers and their Egyptian guide were killed when a roadside bomb hit their bus as it travelled near the pyramids outside Cairo in December. |
This Missile Might be the U.S. Navy's Important Weapon in Decades Posted: 19 May 2019 10:00 AM PDT The Tomahawk and its controversies might make headlines, but as the U.S. Navy re-arms for high-tech warfare, the SM-6 is the missile to watch.The U.S. Navy in late January 2019 confirmed the designation of its newest cruise missile, in the process clarifying its long-term plan for arming its growing fleet of warships.The plan heavily leans on one missile, in particular. It's the SM-6, an anti-aircraft weapon that quickly is evolving to perform almost every role the Navy assigns to a missile.(This first appeared earlier in the year.)The Navy dubbed the newest version of the venerable Tomahawk cruise missile the "Block V" model, Jane's reported. There are two separate variants of the Block V missile, one with an anti-ship warhead and another with a warhead the Navy optimized for striking targets on land.Raytheon's Tomahawk has been the subject of controversy in Washington, D.C. In order to save money the Obama administration wanted to pause production of the long-range missile, which since the 1980s has been the Navy's main weapon for striking land targets from the sea.Congress overruled the Obama administration and continued buying Tomahawks for roughly $1 million apiece, adding potentially hundreds of the missiles to the thousands the fleet already possesses. |
Wild video shows the moment an F-16 fighter jet crashed into a California warehouse Posted: 18 May 2019 11:22 AM PDT In a wild story that was captured on video, an F-16 fighter jet crashed into a warehouse in Riverside, California shortly after takeoff yesterday afternoon. The pilot managed to safely eject from the plane before the crash and is said to have suffered no injuries, according to a report from the Los Angeles Times.A full-on investigation into the cause of the crash will certainly yield more details, but early reports suggest that a hydraulics failure was the reason behind the malfunction and subsequent crash.Video of the impact was captured by a nearby car's dashboard cam.> Ty Stanonis was on the freeway when the crash occurred ahead of him, he told FOX11. His vehicle's dashboard camera recorded the moment the jet crashed, showing the plane dropping into the building.> > "Everybody was slowing down, just trying to figure out what just happened," Stanonis said.> > The pilot's parachute deployed after he ejected, and he landed in a field inside the base. Stanonis said the pilot was still for a few moments but finally rose to his feet.The moment of impact can be seen in the first few seconds of the video below.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9j4dzuttA1wFootage captured from within the warehouse can be seen below. It's worth noting that the video contains explicit language.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Ho35RgfUfIMiraculously, no one in the warehouse was seriously injured as a result of the crash, though a few individuals were taken to a nearby hospital for evaluation for minor injuries.Further, the F-16 was said to be carrying live ammunition which thankfully -- and remarkably -- did not go off. All in all, what could have been an all-out disaster resulted in no deaths or serious injuries |
Democrat 2020 hopefuls eye coveted Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez endorsement Posted: 18 May 2019 06:46 AM PDT She is the great young hope of America's Left-wing, an articulate and impassioned progressive whose policies have gained traction and Twitter feed is followed by four million. Now Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the 29-year-old first-time congressman from New York, is seeing her newfound political clout manifest in a new way – a race for her endorsement. With two dozen Democrats seeking their party's presidential nomination, the support of Ms Ocasio-Cortez is being seen as a way to win over the young, energised voters who will help shape the race. Chief among the contenders are Bernie Sanders, the independent 77-year-old senator from Vermont, and Elizabeth Warren, the former academic now representing Massachusetts in the Senate. Both have made tacit acknowledgement of Ms Ocasio-Cortez's influence in public in recent weeks – whether for policy reasons, or for political gain, or both. Earlier this month, Mr Sanders appeared alongside Ms Ocasio-Cortez at an office table where they discussed the importance of reducing credit card interest rates. At the end of the 25-minute video, shared on social media and viewed by more than half a million people, the pair patted each other on the back warmly and smiled. Last month, Mr Warren wrote a 180-word ode to Ms Ocasio-Cortez for Time Magazine when the latter was named in its top 100 most influential people. "A year ago, she was taking orders across a bar. Today, millions are taking cues from her," Ms Warren wrote of the congresswoman's remarkable political rise. "And she's just getting started." Those two are not the only Democratic hopefuls vying for an endorsement, it appears. Politico reported that both senator Kirsten Gillibrand and former housing and urban development secretary Julian Castro have made "overtures". There is no reason a person should pay more than 15% interest in the United States. It's common sense - in fact, we had these Usury laws until the 70s. It's a debt trap for working people + it has to end.https://t.co/sO0p5NF7WR— Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@RepAOC) May 9, 2019 The enthusiasm is understandable. The Democratic Party's progressive base appears fired up for change and many candidates hoping to win the right to take on Donald Trump are leaning its way. Government-funded health care for all, a $15 minimum wage and bold action on climate change have been widely adopted by the field ahead of the first debate in June and the first primary vote next February. Ms Ocasio-Cortez, who last year shocked the political establishment by ousting a 10-term Democrat in her own party to take his seat, has become the progressive movement's most recognisable star. That was underscored this week as Joe Biden, the former US vice president who is polling top and running on a centrist ticket, was forced to defend his climate change stance after Ms Ocasio-Cortez dismissed it as "middle of the road". Elizabeth Warren, the Democratic senator for Massachusetts, has developed a reputation for standing up to Wall Street Credit: AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall Mr Sanders is best placed to win the endorsement race. Ms Ocasio-Cortez worked on his 2016 presidential campaign, identifies like him as a democratic socialist and shares many of the same policy beliefs. Ms Warren has also laid out a left-wing platform taking on Wall Street and redistributing wealth but makes clear she remains a believer in capitalism. Asked recently about an endorsement by a CNN reporter, Ms Ocasio-Cortez said: "What I would like to see in a presidential candidate is one that has a coherent worldview and logic from which all these policy proposals are coming forward. "I think senator Sanders has that. I also think senator Warren has that." And, the questioner followed up, would she consider endorsing Mr Biden? Ms Ocasio-Cortez turned and walked away without a definitive answer. |
SAT to give students 'adversity score' Posted: 18 May 2019 12:20 PM PDT |
Trump Lashes Back After GOP Lawmaker Calls Conduct ‘Impeachable’ Posted: 19 May 2019 08:36 AM PDT "Contrary to Barr's portrayal, Mueller's report reveals that President Trump engaged in specific actions and a pattern of behavior that meet the threshold for impeachment," said Amash, 39, who arrived in Congress as part of the Tea Party wave in 2010. Amash's manifesto-like string of more than a dozen tweets stopped short of actually calling for Trump's impeachment. |
Al Jazeera suspends two journalists over Holocaust report Posted: 19 May 2019 11:00 AM PDT Qatari state-funded broadcaster Al Jazeera suspended two journalists on Sunday over a video they produced claiming the extent of the Holocaust was being misrepresented by Jews. The clip, posted by Al Jazeera's online AJ+ Arabic service, claimed "the narrative" that the Nazis killed six million Jews was "adopted by the Zionist movement". The video said that "along with others, the Jews faced a policy of systematic persecution which culminated in the Final Solution". |
Let Me Tell You About the Worst Submarine of All Time Posted: 18 May 2019 01:20 AM PDT For the Worst Submarine of All Time, I go further and nominate an entire silent service: the undersea arm of the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN).There are many candidates for this dubious honor. After all, submarining has been around for well over a century now. Many ships render honorable but unexceptional service. Standouts emerge, generally in times of strife, as do "floating coffins" and plain old hard-luck ships.And there are some that subtract value from the nation's effort to reach its strategic and political aims. This is the unpardonable sin.The idea of ships that could submerge has been around since antiquity. Combat submersibles date to the Turtle, a hand-propelled contraption built to smite Royal Navy ships from beneath during the War of American Independence. But subs really became a going concern during the fin de siècle age, when propulsion technologies such as batteries, electric motors, and internal-combustion engines came to maturity around the same time.Combining these technologies yielded the diesel-electric propulsion plant, a hybrid affair that enabled subs to run silent, run deep on quiet electric motors when submerged and run on diesels and recharge batteries while cruising the surface. At the direction of First Sea Lord Jacky Fisher, the Royal Navy ordered five rudimentary boats designed by John Phillip Holland in 1900, and the age of modern undersea warfare was on. |
Modi’s jobs deficit: J&J’s largest India plant idle three years after completion Posted: 19 May 2019 01:20 AM PDT It was to eventually employ at least 1,500 people and help bring development to a rural area near Hyderabad in southern India. Two sources familiar with J&J's operations in India and one state government official told Reuters production at the plant, at Penjerla in Telangana state, never began because of a slowing in the growth in demand for the products. One of them said that demand didn't rise as expected because of two shock policy moves by Prime Minister Narendra Modi: a late 2016 ban on then circulating high-value currency notes, and the nationwide introduction of a goods and services tax (GST) in 2017. |
Genesis Intends to Build the Essentia Concept as an EV, and It May Be Powered by Hydrogen Posted: 19 May 2019 06:00 AM PDT |
Ahead of Fox News Forum, Buttigieg Critical of Hosts and Trump Posted: 19 May 2019 10:17 AM PDT Buttigieg, the openly gay mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who's risen in polls since a CNN town hall in March gave him national exposure, said he agreed to appear because he wants to reach voters who might not otherwise hear his message. "I'm concerned that we're retreating into media bubbles," Buttigieg told reporters after an event Saturday in Dubuque, Iowa. |
Scouted: Tevas Sandals Will Survive Anything You Put Them Through And Look Good Doing It Posted: 18 May 2019 07:00 AM PDT In two weeks, I'm traveling to Africa for the first time. When I step off that plane I'll be stepping onto my third continent in roughly a year. When I step off that plane, I'll be stepping out wearing my trusty Tevas. Africa will be their third continent in a year, too. I paired my Tevas with a silk jumpsuit while wedding dress shopping in L.A. I wore my Tevas on assignment in the Florida Everglades, crouched down in the hull of a swamp boat, hoping an alligator wouldn't chomp on my exposed toes. I protected said toes' modesty by wearing socks with my Tevas in Oman's Grand Mosque. I was wearing my Tevas a few nights ago when, slightly drunk on mezcal in Mexico, I fell into an open sewer.The fact that my Tevas seemed like the appropriate footwear for all of these scenarios is what makes them the perfect travel companion, and it's this low-key adaptability that makes me so obsessed with the brand. Now listen, I was (as perhaps you are now) skeptical at first. The last time I owned Tevas I was still wearing polar-fleece half-zip pullovers and eating raisins in the backseat of a neighbor's Volkswagen as they carpooled me to mandatory recreational sports practice. Developed in the 80s by a geophysicist/whitewater rafting guide, the brand (whose name translates to "nature" in Hebrew) has always represented a certain crunchy outdoorsiness that angsty kids who grew into East Coast city-goths like me shun out of habit. Tevas were for kids whose parents took them hiking and taught them the proper pronunciation of the word "nature" in Hebrew (it's Teh-vuh, not Tee-vuh.) But times, and I, have changed. Last year my travel schedule created the need for something I could only describe as a "performance sandal." After scoping the orthopedic curves and elastic straps of brands like Keen and Merrell, I was desperate for something that was simultaneously utilitarian and cute. In walked Teva. Women's Original Universal Sandal, $50 from TevaAs a brand, they know their reputation, but rather than ignore it by earnestly marketing to outdoor enthusiasts, they seem to be cheekily owning their identity. Like Timberlands, or other labels that have successfully made the jump from utility to streetwear, Teva isn't forsaking their core product; they are just having a little fun with it. Not only does their website have a section about how to pair their products with socks, you can even choose the height of the platform. Platforms might not be the best choice for long-endurance activities, but the brand's recent bright collab with Outdoor Voices signals that they aren't straying too far from their roots -- only updating it for a new type of colorway-conscious, Instagram-styled consumer. My Instagram DM's have been a battleground of opinions from friends and followers. . This divisiveness isn't all that surprising considering that Tevas are manufactured by the same parent company who own UGGs. Both brands flaunt a pragmatic anti-style that breeds intense loyalty. By designing shoes that apparently never even take into account sex-appeal, they're allowing women to subvert the tired old "fashion over function" trope. By insisting that function is fashion, fans can winkingly claim their comfort while feeling like provocateurs. At least, this is the narrative that runs through my head when I strap my amazingly adjustable Tevas on my much-abused feet and walk into a fancy restaurant. Their minimalist sensibility blended with unsentimental design, contribute to the effortless road-savvy, cool-girl travel aesthetic so many woman (including myself) try to project. Besides, as anyone who grew up in the 90s can attest, a strappy sandal pairs well with everything, even when drenched in Mexican sewer water. Scouted is internet shopping with a pulse. Follow us on Twitter and sign up for our newsletter for even more recommendations and exclusive content. Please note that if you buy something featured in one of our posts, The Daily Beast may collect a share of sales.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. |
What Are the Best Inexpensive Small SUVs? Posted: 19 May 2019 03:17 AM PDT |
UK PM May to make 'new, bold offer' in Brexit bill, Labour skeptical Posted: 19 May 2019 05:54 AM PDT After failing three times to get parliament's approval for her deal, the government will now put the Withdrawal Agreement Bill, legislation which will enact that deal, before parliament for a vote in early June. "Whatever the outcome of any (indicative) votes, I will not be simply asking MPs (lawmakers) to think again. The date of the vote and the substance of what lawmakers will be asked to consider - including whether they will be given chance to indicate what preferences might secure a majority before the vote is binding - have yet to be made public. |
Grumpy Cat lives forever on the internet. These were some of her best memes Posted: 19 May 2019 10:54 AM PDT |
Target is selling a giant unicorn float that will hold up to 6 people Posted: 18 May 2019 07:15 AM PDT |
China, Iran foreign ministers meet amid Middle East tensions Posted: 17 May 2019 07:56 PM PDT |
Posted: 18 May 2019 12:14 AM PDT Back in February, as the United States obsessed over whether Donald Trump would force a second government shutdown, Ohio state senator Kristina Roegner quietly introduced a bill that is now part of a flood of laws threatening the right to an abortion all across the country.The bill, known as a "heartbeat" abortion bill, received little national press. But, when it was signed into law in April, it made good on a near seven-year effort to restrict abortions in the state to six weeks, before many women even know their pregnant."The point for me, for this heartbeat bill, and all the pro-life legislation, is to save the unborn," Ms Roegner told The Independent this week of the bill, which has been introduced in every legislative session in the state since at least 2011. "It's to save innocent life."The bill is one of eight in the US to be passed this year, following over 40 years' worth of incremental work to suppress abortions. And they have spurred a national reckoning over abortion rights, and led virtually every American who has much of an opinion on the issue to wonder: is this the end of Roe v Wade, the landmark Supreme Court case that made abortion a right for women across the US?As it turns out, it takes very little prodding for that goal to be made explicit."The primary purpose is to save human life," Ms Roegner said. "But we're not going to shy away from it going to the Supreme Court with the intention of overturning Roe v Wade."For supporters of abortion bans — including the Ohio bill and one recently signed law in Alabama, which would send physicians to prison for life for terminating a pregnancy at any stage — the strategy is pretty clear, and sets these red states on a direct collision course with the Supreme Court if all things go well.With Roe as the law of the land, the plan goes, each of these bills would run foul of the limits put in place by that ruling, which limits states from banning abortions if a foetus couldn't survive outside of the womb. At six weeks, a foetus is the size of a sweet pea and is just beginning to form paddle-like hands and feet, but is nowhere near ready for the real world.So, far from banning abortion immediately, the laws that have been popping up across the country are intended to draw legal challenges, with the issue becoming more and more pressing for the nation's higher court to make a decision as more states join the battle.State representative Terri Collins, who sponsored the bill in Alabama that would make virtually all abortions illegal, even in cases of rape or incest, confirmed that the Supreme Court is the point."But what I'm trying to do here is get this case in front of the Supreme Court so Roe v Wade can be overturned," she told the Washington Post, echoing a similar statements she has made to other media outlets.Since Roe v Wade was handed down in 1973, it is estimated that more than 54 million abortions have been performed in the United States alone.While abortion ban advocates describe that number as a mass slaughter — with the Alabama bill explicitly linking abortion to the Holocaust — many in the pro choice movement say the figure is not the point.One in four women are expected to have an abortion by the time they turn 45, according to the Guttmacher Institute, and the protections provided by Roe mean that those women have no reason to seek out the procedure in an unsafe condition. Instead, doctors and physicians are in the room, helping perform a procedure that was much more dangerous when it was done secretly fifty years ago.And, having the procedure in the realm of the legal means that there is no discrepancy in enforcement. While the bills banning abortion being passed across the country don't mention the race or socioeconomic status of the women who might be targeted, it has been argued that abortions would disproportionately impact poor women and women of colour. That's at least in part because judges and prosecutors in America often have a fair amount of discretion on sentencing guidelines, and that tends to benefit rich white folks.But, while Ms Roegner and Ms Collins may hope to force a new Supreme Court ruling — and might expect a favourable ruling, since Donald Trump has pushed the court to the right with the appointment of justices Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch — it is not clear that the court would actually take up the case.Plus, a challenge to Roe v Wade could come from anywhere, according to the deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union Reproductive Freedom Project, Brigitte Amir.Ms Amir told Mother Jones that she doesn't think these laws getting loads of press will be the end of Roe, even if they have that potential."Any Supreme Court case that deals with abortion could be used to dismantle Roe v Wade," she told the magazine.Which is to say that, much like the Ohio bill passed in April, the biggest challenge may not come with a bang. It may end with a whimper. |
New Hampshire cafeteria worker fired for giving student free lunch won't return Posted: 18 May 2019 08:07 AM PDT |
Michael Bennet Understands Exactly What's Gone Wrong in America Posted: 17 May 2019 07:54 PM PDT Zach Gibson/GettyAs frightening as this historical moment is in so many ways, it's hopeful in one respect. We may finally be at a point when a majority of people are ready to ditch supply-side economics. The economy is doing very well right now, so it seems in one sense a counterintuitive argument. But Americans are increasingly recognizing that even this good economy is mostly good for the top 10 percent, especially the top 1 and .1 percent; and that if you live in one of these 50 counties or hundreds of others like them where the unemployment rates are more than twice the national average and the poverty rates are above 25 percent, the economy doesn't feel that great at all.There's a story for the Democrats to tell here. A story of a country where prosperity was once broadly shared, because politicians of both parties in those days agreed that investments in ourselves and our future were good, and that there was an inextricable link between democracy and broadly shared prosperity. I wrote about this link recently in the Times, and they tell me it did gangbusters traffic, not because it was Shakespeare but because it's a subject people care about devoutly and want to hear public figures address.Enter Colorado Senator Michael Bennet. One morning a while back I'd dropped the kid off at school and I tuned in to Morning Joe. I heard a voice saying: "Trump is not the cause of our problems. The cause of our problems is 40 years of economic immobility for 90 percent of the American people. Stagnant wages over that period of time. Periods when we had economic growth, but for most Americans, those were periods of recession. We have to fix that. It's going to take us a generation to do it."Oh my God. Naturally I thought this person was brilliant, because he was talking exactly the way I write. As the segment ended I heard them say thank you, senator, but they didn't say a name. I emailed a guy I know who works on the show and asked. Yep, he wrote, that was Michael Bennet.Shortly thereafter, Bennet, a former schools superintendent, got a prostate cancer diagnosis. Today he declares himself "miraculously cured," and makes sure to tell a visitor that the cost of his cure was $55,000, of which he had to pay only $1,800. "It made me realize just how insane it would be to get the same diagnosis without insurance," he said. "Or not to get the diagnosis at all because you didn't have a primary care doctor because you didn't have insurance."Now, Bennet—the brother as it happens of New York Times editorial page editor James Bennet, the only one-t Bennets I've ever heard of—is running for president. Is he likely to win? No. Woke lefties write him off as too moderate, because he is not for Medicare for All and because he says things about how he still thinks it's possible to find reasonable Republicans in the Senate to work with. But however you feel about his proposals, whether you're center or left, you must listen to his analysis of the problem, because he is exactly correct, and he's saying it better and more clearly than anyone else running.So I sat down with him last week in his Capitol building hideaway office (complete with foosball table!) between votes. Unlike most pols, who stay focused on the moment, his perspective is relentlessly historical. "Maybe," he mused, "we're finally at the end of the Reagan era. Maybe there are things we can do together as a country to improve the economic condition of all of us."This is why he's running, he tells me—to say these things: "I didn't think this was getting the articulation it deserves among the people who were running… I thought it was important to give voice to this and see what would happen."To that end, most of our interview was him showing me a PowerPoint presentation—"this'll be the first time I've walked anybody through his," he says—that he and his staff assembled to tell the story of the inequality and stagnation of the last 40 years for the vast majority of the population. Slide 1, Wages for most Americans have been flat for decades; Slide 2, The rich are getting richer; Slide 4, The building blocks of the middle class are out of reach; Slide 12, America is no longer leading the world in investment. He goes into much deeper detail in an upcoming book, The Land of Flickering Lights: Restoring America in an Age of Broken Politics. It's a campaign book, yes, but it's a smart and substantive one. As much as this sort of thing excites me, I'm unfortunately not confident it's going to get the hearing it deserves. He's not bombastic. He's no moralist. He did say one thing in particular during our chat that really caught my ear and may catch others': "Since 2001, we've spent $5 trillion on tax cuts, almost all of which has gone to the richest people in the country, and we've spent $5.6 trillion on wars in the Middle East. So that's $11 or $12 trillion we haven't spent addressing any of the issues we could have addressed." If his rhetoric were a pop song, that's the line that strikes me as the hook. That, plus the fact that he says he wants to take on Big Pharma, which I think is a great issue.So we'll see what happens. The one thing he said that I really disagreed with and challenged him on was that if he were president and the Democrats took control of the Senate, he would not ditch the filibuster. I said: So you'd pass nothing. He has no illusions about Mitch McConnell ("ruthless," "immune to give-and-take unless he's taking everything"), but he still thinks a few Republicans could be pressured or persuaded to vote with him. OK, good luck with that.But that's hypothetical. What's real is his analysis of the recent economic history of this country. As they said in a movie that came out back when the supply-side era started, nobody does it better.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. |
Austrian president calls for September poll in wake of scandal Posted: 19 May 2019 12:09 PM PDT Austria's president on Sunday called for fresh elections in September after a corruption scandal embroiling the far-right brought down the coalition government in spectacular fashion. Just days before key EU elections, Vice-Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache was forced to resign in disgrace Saturday following explosive revelations from a hidden camera sting. Conservative Chancellor Sebastian Kurz -- whose 18-month coalition with Strache's far-right Freedom Party (FPOe) had been held up as a model by many on the European right -- reacted by pulling the plug on their union. |
Cold Brew’s Insidious Hegemony Posted: 18 May 2019 02:00 AM PDT Soon, many parts of the United States will be unbearably hot. Texans and Arizonans will be able to bake cookies on their car dashboards; the garbage on the streets of New York will be especially pungent; Washington will not only figuratively be a swamp. And all across America, coffee consumers will turn their backs on traditional coffee in favor of a more "refreshing" vehicle for caffeine: cold brew.As conservatives, we are inherently skeptical of any change of language norms that seeks to warp the objective meaning of words, and so we defend terms such as "man and woman," "traditional marriage," and now, we must defend "coffee." "Coffee" is defined as a hot beverage made by steeping coffee in boiling water. Cold brew is made by soaking beans overnight, and the drink relies on time instead of heat to extract the flavor. The major disqualifying factor is that it's cold.Starbucks's imperial command over coffee is greatly responsible for this Orwellian redefinition. Its ubiquitous mermaid logo may read "Starbucks Coffee," but the corporate café caliphate makes most of its profit from drinks sugary enough to induce a diabetic coma in a small mammal. Even more sinister is that Starbucks expanded into Milan in 2018, irreverently flexing its muscle at coffee purists who turn up their noses while its ostentatious drinks conquer the international beverage forum, marginalizing and undermining traditional coffee.Smaller coffee shops have followed in Starbucks's footsteps. Today, "Let's go out for coffee!" seems like an innocent request from a coworker or friend, and it should suggest that the order will include a cup of boiled water that was brewed with coffee beans — whether it's a single shot of espresso or a cup of café americano, made with a French press or Moka Express. But too often, they mean something else. In the summer, they mean cold brew.One New York City coffee-store owner told the New York Times in 2017 that in the summer, 65 percent of the "coffee" he sells is iced — every other part of the year, 75 percent of the "coffee" sold is hot. Iced coffee itself is a cousin of cold brew, but with nearly all of hot coffee's features except the most significant one: heat. It's brewed the same way, and then cooled. But demand for cold brew specifically is increasing, unsurprisingly, among my generation: Millennials. A habit of subversive behavior among Millennials has driven us to attack all of our civilization's most sacred institutions, including coffee — the backbone of American productivity.As cold brew's popularity metastasizes, usurping coffee for several months of the year, will we forget our proud national heritage? Cold brew requires patience and planning: One must make a prediction of business the next day in order to estimate how much to make the night before. This is a clear break from our proud tradition of urgency. While the harvesting and roasting of good coffee beans surely requires patience, has prepared coffee ever been associated with anything other than the quick satiation of a morning addiction, or the rush to meet a deadline? Like bread, coffee is a staple for good reason: One needs only five minutes, a heat source, a filtration method, and the beans. It's dependable and democratic.Coffee has even provoked constitutional debate. Would we have considered tort reform within the framework of the Seventh Amendment had it not been for 1994's infamous hot-coffee lawsuit, Liebeck v. McDonald's?To those who will, during the summer months, abandon the beverage that gives many of us our will to live in the mornings, I ask just one concession to coffee purists: Drink your cold brew, but please, don't call it "coffee." |
Rebels say Syrian army fails to retake Latakia mountain Posted: 19 May 2019 09:16 AM PDT |
10 surprising places to find the Statue of Liberty Posted: 19 May 2019 10:06 AM PDT |
Duterte Signing Papers, Not Confined in Hospital, Spokesman Says Posted: 19 May 2019 01:23 AM PDT "I just talked to him," spokesman Salvador Panelo said in a statement Sunday. ABS-CBN News said in a report citing social media posts that Duterte was in a hospital in Metro Manila since Friday and that the medical center was under tight security. Sara Duterte, mayor of Davao City, said she hadn't received any report that her father was ill, the Philippine Daily Inquirer reported. |
AP sources: Former CIA chief Brennan to brief Dems on Iran Posted: 19 May 2019 05:13 AM PDT |
You’ll wonder why you ever watched TV without this $13 gadget Posted: 19 May 2019 07:34 AM PDT If you want to completely transform your TV watching experience without spending a fortune on a new TV, you have to check this out. Pick up a SPE LED Lighting Strip for HDTVs on Amazon, and use the self-adhesive back to stick it to the back of your television. Then plug it into the open USB port on the back of your TV, and it'll cast a gorgeous glow onto the wall behind your TV anytime your TV turns on. It really extends the viewing experience beyond the edges of your TV screen, and you can even change the color to suit your mood!Here's the key info from the product page: * ⚡ INCLUDES: 78-in, high quality LED strip light kit to provide bright accent lighting. USB bias lighting, 3M adhesive backing and USB for easy plug-in. For reference: TV in product image is 50'' * ⚡ EASY TO USE: Just clean the back of your TV, secure your LED strip light, plug the TV backlight USB plug into the USB port, and you have a great TV light or monitor backlight. Cut the LED strip every 1 inches for the perfect fit. The TV light strip powers on and off with your TV's USB port. * ⚡ CREATE A BEAUTIFUL VIEWING EXPERIENCE: With LED bias lighting, you create sharper images and color contrast while adding beautiful TV ambient lighting to your surroundings. The SPE Backlight for TV creates an environment that makes your friends and family want you to be the one to host viewing parties. * ⚡ REDUCE EYE STRAIN IN CHILDREN & ADULTS: With increasing screen time, eyestrain and headaches have become more and more common. Bias lights save your eyes and prevent unwanted headaches in both children and adults by reducing the contrast between the brightness of the TV and the surrounding room. This 78-inch TV backlight kit provides benefits with any TV size up to 60'' * ⚡ 12 Month Warranty - SPE products are all covered with an industry standard warranty on parts and replacements. Please reach out to our support email assistance. |
Boeing's New Version of the AH-64 Apache Attack Helicopter Might Be a 'Re-Run' Posted: 19 May 2019 01:00 PM PDT This seems a little strange. Boeing has released concept footage of a high-speed Apache attack helicopter during the Vertical Flight Society's 75th Annual Forum & Technology Display- and it looks awfully familiar.Known as the Advanced AH-64 Block 2 Compound, the concept will serve as an interim solution in the U.S. Army Future Vertical Lift (FVL) program.Interestingly enough, the high-tech mode doesn't seem so high-tech, when one looks back at the AH-56 Cheyenne, which first flew in 1967.Derived from the Army's Advanced Aerial Fire Support System program, which ultimately ended in only ten being built.Advanced before its time, the Cheyenne was an impressive helicopter that was limited only by the technology of the era.While the AH-64 Apache technology partially came from the Cheyenne, the development has seemingly come full-circle. In addition to powerplant and control changes, the weapons "wings" and 30mm chain gun have also undergone changes.With a rear-mounted pusher propeller, a large vertical fin and a new engine exhaust setup, the new Block 2 Compounds are rather futuristic.According to Defence Blog, Boeing is dead set on keeping the Apache fleet "capable on the highly complex multi-domain battlefield of the future through 2060."A wind tunnel test model was featured at the Vertical Flight Society's 75th Annual Forum & Technology Display. |
Australian PM heads to church, football after 'miracle' election win Posted: 19 May 2019 12:15 AM PDT Morrison's Liberal-led conservative coalition has won or is leading in 76 seats, the number needed to form a majority government, according to the Australian Electoral Commission. A jubilant Morrison hugged community members after an early Sunday service at the Horizon Church in Sydney's southern suburbs, from where he was first elected to parliament in 2007. The result drew comparisons with Republican Donald Trump's victory over Democratic rival Hillary Clinton in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. |
Scouted: The Easy Summer Slide from J.Crew Factory is the Only Shoe I Own in Multiple Colors Posted: 19 May 2019 07:00 AM PDT When my mom first lent me a pair of her Easy Summer Slide Sandals, I told her straight up that she wasn't getting them back, partially because I had stretched them because my feet are slightly bigger than hers, but mostly because I wanted them for myself. Besides, she had two other pairs herself. These sandals are the perfect balance of casual and fashionable because the thick straps keep your feet secure while still looking trendy. They also come in a ton of colors, of which I now have three (Black, True Tan, and Saddle) and much to my dismay, and my bank account's, they come in trendy patterns like gingham and leopard. The sandals have a rubber sole and a teensy tiny heel, I'm talking less than half an inch, which helps keep your foot supported even though they are mostly flat. I have worn these sandals through the streets of New York and have come out unscathed. The name isn't just a lazy way of labeling because they are truly easy: easy to wear, easy to style, easy to own multiples of without feeling too bad about having the same shoe in your closet. Also, just a quick note on sizing: If you're in between sizes, I would size up, as they run a little narrow but they stretch out.Scouted is internet shopping with a pulse. Follow us on Twitter and sign up for our newsletter for even more recommendations and exclusive content. Please note that if you buy something featured in one of our posts, The Daily Beast may collect a share of sales.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. |
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