2019年9月28日星期六

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Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters


Hillary Clinton: Trump 'has turned American diplomacy into a cheap extortion racket'

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 10:27 AM PDT

Hillary Clinton: Trump 'has turned American diplomacy into a cheap extortion racket'Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton accused President Trump on Friday of having "turned American diplomacy into a cheap extortion racket."


Iran releases photo of Khamenei with Hezbollah chief

Posted: 28 Sep 2019 11:59 AM PDT

Iran releases photo of Khamenei with Hezbollah chiefIran has released a "never before seen" photo of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei alongside Hassan Nasrallah, leader of the Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah. The three men are shown in front of what appears to be a door covered by a curtain and surrounded by shelves stacked with books -- decor associated with Khamenei's Tehran office.


Purple Heart recipient dies saving 3-year-old granddaughter

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 02:45 PM PDT

Purple Heart recipient dies saving 3-year-old granddaughterA Purple Heart recipient has died saving his 3-year-old granddaughter from a house explosion in Oklahoma.


Canadian police release findings of report into murders of three tourists

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 04:06 PM PDT

Canadian police release findings of report into murders of three touristsTwo dead Canadian teens who were the subject of an intense manhunt this summer confessed to the murders of three tourists in northern Canada in a series of videos, but did not reveal a motive behind their actions or indicate remorse, Canadian police said on Friday. The bodies of Bryer Schmegelsky, 18, and Kam McLeod, 19, were found on Aug. 7 after a two week-long search that began in northern British Columbia and ended in the remote and hostile terrain of northern Manitoba, three provinces and several thousand kilometers (miles) away. The pair were first reported as missing after leaving their hometown of Port Alberni, British Columbia, in search of work.


Julian Assange ‘subjected to every kind of torment’ in Belmarsh prison as he awaits extradition

Posted: 28 Sep 2019 09:11 AM PDT

Julian Assange 'subjected to every kind of torment' in Belmarsh prison as he awaits extraditionThe father of Julian Assange has said the WikiLeaks founder is "being subjected to every sort of torment" at Belmarsh prison as he awaits the hearing that could see him extradited to the US.The whistleblower who is being held alongside some of the UK's most infamous criminals ahead of his extradition hearing in February, could face a maximum prison sentence of 175 years under charges laid down by Washington.


Democratic candidate Tom Steyer backs rival Joe Biden around impeachment inquiry, says he 'should be left out of this'

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 07:14 AM PDT

Democratic candidate Tom Steyer backs rival Joe Biden around impeachment inquiry, says he 'should be left out of this'Long-shot presidential candidate Tom Steyer, a billionaire hedge fund manager and leading Democratic donor, ruled out attacks on former Vice President Biden at the next Democratic primary debate over the allegations that are central to the impeachment inquiry.


Trump calls out CNN for missing punctuation mark as impeachment looms

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 01:12 PM PDT

Trump calls out CNN for missing punctuation mark as impeachment loomsAn impeachment inquiry is looming, and the revelations in the whistleblower scandal pop up hour by hour, but President Trump took CNN to task on Friday over the use of the word "liddle."


'Frankenstein's monster': Dog breeder who created the labradoodle says they're his 'life's regret'

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 06:20 AM PDT

'Frankenstein's monster': Dog breeder who created the labradoodle says they're his 'life's regret'The man who invented the labradoodle says creating the breed is his "life's regret" and that he has no clue why anyone would want one. 


Russians Used Greed to ‘Capture’ NRA, Senator Alleges in New Report

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 10:30 AM PDT

Russians Used Greed to 'Capture' NRA, Senator Alleges in New ReportPavel Ptitsin/APTies between the National Rifle Association and influential Russians were substantial and potentially lucrative enough to render the politically potent gun lobby an "asset" of Russia, according to a Senate Democrat's year-plus investigation. More than 4,000 pages of NRA records provided to Sen. Ron Wyden, the top Democrat on the finance committee, documented deep connections between the beleaguered gun group and Maria Butina, who in December pleaded guilty to conspiring to act as a Russian agent without registering with the Justice Department. Wyden's report, released Friday and undertaken without the cooperation of committee Republicans, indicates that greed motivated some NRA officials to engage in the outreach.Butina also made clear to NRA officials long before their controversial Butina-facilitated December 2015 trip to Moscow that Alexander Torshin, her patron and an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, was a man with mysterious pull in the Kremlin. She emailed former NRA president David Keene in January 2015 that Torshin's appointment to the Russian central bank was "the result of a 'big game' in which he has a very important role. All the details we can discuss with you only in person."Maria Butina's Boss Alexander Torshin: The Kremlin's No-Longer-Secret Weapon"During the 2016 election, Russian nationals effectively used the promise of lucrative personal business opportunities to capture the NRA and gain access to the American political system," Wyden said. Representatives for the NRA did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In addition to scrutinizing the December 2015 NRA trip, Wyden found that the NRA hosted former Russian ambassador Sergei Kislyak for a three-hour tour of its headquarters in August 2015. Kislyak was a key figure in Russia's 2016 election interference before former national security adviser Mike Flynn pleaded guilty to misrepresenting his conversations with him to the FBI. An NRA calendar entry provided to Wyden suggests that NRA leaders took Kislyak hunting at the Grand National Waterfowl Hunt weeks before the Moscow trip. Wyden's report shows the NRA officials, donors, and supporters meeting with Russian officials under U.S. sanctions during the Moscow trip, something previously reported. But it also shows that Butina ensured the NRA would send sufficiently senior leaders, something necessary to enhance Torshin's prestige, by dangling opportunities for NRA luminaries to enrich themselves. While U.S. sanctions do not make meeting with foreigners under sanction illegal, U.S. nationals can't conduct business with them.Returning from Moscow further inclined the NRA to aid its Russian friend Butina, who presented herself as the head of a rare Russian gun-rights foundation. Soon after, the NRA bought Butina and Torshin memberships in a hunters' advocacy group known as Safari Club International. Later, one of the key NRA figures on the Moscow trip, Pete Brownell, confirmed to Wyden that he personally introduced Butina to Donald Trump Jr. at the NRA's 2016 annual meeting, though Brownell's counsel dismissed it as a "chance encounter." Butina would also write to NRA heavies for formal invitations to their events, something she said would help her get visas to enter the country.The NRA has attempted to distance itself from the Moscow trip after it became politically controversial. It told Wyden's office in May that any relationship "certain individuals, including NRA supporters and volunteers" had with Butina and Torshin was entirely distinct from NRA business.Yet Wyden's report shows then-NRA president Allan Cors, who backed out of the trip, contemporaneously referring to it in an email to Torshin as a chance to "represent the NRA" to influential Russians. Among those Russians were Butina's reputed moneyman, Igor Pisarsky, whom Butina presented as Putin's "campaign manager"; the sanctioned Russian deputy prime minister for the defense industry, Dmitry Rogozin; and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. Documentation the NRA provided, the report notes, did not show "action to discourage or prevent its officers from using organization resources to explore business opportunities or to meet with sanctioned individuals and entities" during the trip. Cors' absence from the trip was a problem for Butina. Without a senior NRA leader to show off to the influential Russians who had agreed to meetings, Torshin could lose face. "Many powerful figures in the Kremlin are counting on Torshin to prove his American connections—a last minute important member cancellation could affect his political future," she emailed. In November, Butina turned to Brownell, the NRA's then-vice president and Cors' future successor, with an urgent plea for his attendance. Outside the NRA, Brownell runs a business that sells guns, ammunition, and firearms accessories. A Brownell spokesperson told The Daily Beast in February that Brownell took the trip "understanding that it was an NRA-related event organized with the support of the organization." His corporate compliance officer later said Brownell could meet with sanctioned Russians insofar as his trip was not business but an NRA "cultural exchange."But materials Wyden acquired cast doubt on that. Butina, in emails, told Brownell that while it was an NRA trip, "especially for you and your company I have something more." She told him that Russian gun manufacturers "are ready to meet you and talk about export and import deals." Another email, this one from Brownell, records the NRA vice president musing that he was "not interested in attending if [it is] just an NRA trip." In another email, Brownell called the "strictly diplomatic" trip a chance to "introduce our company to the governing individuals throughout Russia." Among the people the NRA met with in Russia were representatives of the Kalashnikov Concern, a weapons manufacturer under U.S. sanctions. The report states that later Brownell explored a deal with someone he met on the trip but ultimately canceled because the Russian was unable to follow proper import-export rules. Brownell recently resigned from the NRA's board, a move seen as part of the organization's recent turmoil. In April, its president Oliver North resigned after losing a power struggle to longtime NRA magnate Wayne LaPierre. The group is locked in bitter litigation with its former ad firm, which might be the least of its legal woes, considering investigations into its tax status by attorneys general in New York and the District of Columbia.A representative for Brownell did not immediately respond to a request for comment.Brownell was not the only one to whom Butina appealed with an offer unrelated to NRA business. Wyden's report corroborated a Daily Beast report that Butina told trip attendee Keene, who was also the Washington Times' opinion editor, that one of the meetings was with a Russian media oligarch who would be able to secure Keene an interview with Putin for the paper.Butina also dangled to the NRA a meeting with Putin himself, though no such meeting appears to have manifested. An email ahead of the trip from Butina's since-indicted boyfriend, the GOP consultant Paul Erickson, to Brownell promised "private meetings with the top ministers in Putin's government and private lunches in oligarch's dachas." Butina fronted money for the attendance of another trip attendee, NRA donor Jim Liberatore, for which the NRA reimbursed her with $6,000 from its president's budget. The NRA was an open door for Butina and Torshin, whose goal was to use the organization as a lever to move U.S. politics in a direction more agreeable to Russian interests. In addition to welcoming the two to the NRA's own events, the NRA aided them in attending other conservative-friendly gatherings, including the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, a staple event for politicians of both parties. Butina asked then-presidential candidate Donald Trump a question about U.S.-Russian relations at a campaign stop in Las Vegas, boasted of being a conduit for his campaign's communications to Russia, and was photographed with prominent GOP politicians like Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker.  Wyden stopped a step short of recommending the NRA lose its tax-exempt status, citing insufficient cooperation from the group. "A broader review of NRA's activities in recent years" from the IRS was needed to determine if the NRA's Russian connections fit within a "persistent pattern of impermissible conduct," the report concluded. "The totality of evidence uncovered during my investigation, as well as the mounting evidence of rampant self-dealing, indicate the NRA may have violated tax laws. This report lays out in significant detail that the NRA lied about the 2015 delegation trip to Moscow," Wyden said. "This was an official trip undertaken so NRA insiders could get rich—a clear violation of the principle that tax-exempt resources should not be used for personal benefit."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.


View 2020 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat / Scat Pack Widebody Photos

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 06:00 AM PDT

View 2020 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat / Scat Pack Widebody Photos


Democrats have a long list of possible witnesses in Trump impeachment inquiry

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 02:22 PM PDT

Democrats have a long list of possible witnesses in Trump impeachment inquiryThe list of people Democrats may seek information from regarding President Trump's attempt to obtain dirt on Joe Biden seems to grow by the minute.


Back in 2010, the U.S. Navy Surfaced 3 Elite Submarines to Warn China

Posted: 28 Sep 2019 01:45 AM PDT

Back in 2010, the U.S. Navy Surfaced 3 Elite Submarines to Warn ChinaIn 2010, China was given a glimpse of what could happen in a war.


Ivory Coast Leader Wants to Hand Over Power to New Generation

Posted: 28 Sep 2019 09:34 AM PDT

Ivory Coast Leader Wants to Hand Over Power to New Generation(Bloomberg) -- Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara is in favor of "handing over to the new generation" in next year's presidential polls, but did not rule out running in the election.The 78-year-old, who has just over a year left of his second term in office, was addressing reporters in his hometown of Dimbroko after a four-day visit to the surrounding region.Ouattara addressed plans to amend the constitution to include an age limit for presidential hopefuls, saying "it's part of the evolution of our country," Seventy-five percent of the population is aged under 30 and "we can't remain indifferent." But he also said "don't interpret this as me not being a candidate."His fiercest political rivals include Henri Konan Bedie , 85, who broke away from the ruling coalition last year after Ouattara claimed a new constitution adopted in 2016 allows him to seek a third mandate if he wishes.Another, Laurent Gbagbo, 74, was acquitted by the International Criminal Court on charges of crimes against humanity committed after a disputed vote in 2010, but prosecutors are appealing the ruling.To contact the reporter on this story: Leanne de Bassompierre in Abidjan at ldebassompie@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Andre Janse van Vuuren at ajansevanvuu@bloomberg.net, Jacqueline Mackenzie, Keith CampbellFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P.


Zimbabwe's Mugabe buried in home village, ending an era

Posted: 28 Sep 2019 09:00 AM PDT

Zimbabwe's Mugabe buried in home village, ending an eraZimbabwe's founding leader Robert Mugabe was buried on Saturday in his home village of Kutama, ending a dispute between his family and the government of his successor President Emmerson Mnangagwa over his final resting place. Mugabe ruled Zimbabwe for 37 years from independence in 1980 but was a polarizing figure idolized by some for his role in the country's liberation struggle and hated by others for ruining a promising nation through disastrous economic policies and repression against opponents. After Mass by a Roman Catholic priest and speeches by family members, Mugabe was buried in the courtyard of his rural homestead without the pomp and fun fare usually reserved for national heroes.


Ocasio-Cortez calls for government bailout to help struggling NYC cab drivers

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 09:40 PM PDT

Ocasio-Cortez calls for government bailout to help struggling NYC cab driversRepresentative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is now backing up a financial rescue for those who were lured into predatory loans.


Once Again, Progressive Anti-Christian Bigotry Carries a Steep Legal Cost

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 11:20 AM PDT

Once Again, Progressive Anti-Christian Bigotry Carries a Steep Legal CostLast summer, in the days after the Supreme Court decided Masterpiece Cakeshop on the narrow grounds that Colorado had violated Jack Phillips's religious-liberty rights by specifically disparaging his religious beliefs, a bit of a skirmish broke out among conservative lawyers. How important was the ruling? Did it have any lasting precedential effect?For those who don't recall, the Supreme Court ruled for Phillips in large part because a commissioner of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission called Phillips's claim that he enjoyed a religious-freedom right not to be forced to design a custom cake for a gay wedding a "despicable piece of rhetoric." The commissioner also denigrated religious-liberty arguments as being used to justify slavery and the Holocaust.While all agreed that it would have been preferable had the court simply ruled that creative professionals could not be required to produce art that conflicted with their sincerely held beliefs, the question was whether Justice Anthony Kennedy's strong condemnation of anti-religious bigotry would resonate beyond the specific facts of the case. For example, what would happen if, in a different case, state officials called faithful Christians who seek to protect the religious freedom of Catholic adoption agencies "hate-mongers"?In the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan, it turns out that such rhetoric has cost the state a crucial court ruling, granted a Catholic adoption agency a vital victory, and demonstrated — once again — that anti-religious bigotry can (and should) carry substantial legal costs.The case is called Buck v. Gordon. My friends at Becket represent St. Vincent Catholic Charities, a former foster child, and the adoptive parents of five special-needs kids. The facts are relatively complicated, but here's the short version: St. Vincent upholds Catholic teaching by referring same-sex and unmarried families who seek foster and adoption recommendations and endorsements to agencies that have no objection to providing those services. There is no evidence that St. Vincent has prevented any legally qualified family from adopting or fostering a child. In fact, same-sex couples "certified through different agencies" have been able to adopt children in St. Vincent's care.In 2015 the state of Michigan passed a statute specifically designed to protect the religious liberty of private, religious adoption agencies. In 2018, however, Dana Nessel, a Democratic attorney general, took office. During her campaign, she declared that she would not defend the 2015 law in court, stating that its "only purpose" was "discriminatory animus." She also described proponents of the law as "hate-mongers," and the court noted that she believed proponents of the law "disliked gay people more than they cared about the constitution."Then, in 2019, the attorney general reached a legal settlement in pending litigation with the ACLU that essentially gutted the Michigan law, implementing a definitive requirement that religious agencies provide recommendations and endorsement to same-sex couples and banning referrals. The plaintiffs sued, seeking to enjoin the relevant terms of the settlement, and yesterday Judge Robert Jonker (a Bush appointee) granted their motion for a preliminary injunction.His reasoning was simple. There was ample evidence from the record that the state of Michigan reversed its policy protecting religious freedom because it was motivated by hostility to the plaintiffs' faith. Because Michigan's targeted St. Vincent's faith, its 2019 settlement agreement couldn't be truly considered a "neutral" law of "general applicability" that would grant the state a high degree of deference in enforcement.Instead, the state's targeting led to strict scrutiny. Here's Judge Jonker:> Defendant Nessel made St. Vincent's belief and practice a campaign issue by calling it hate. She made the 2015 statute a campaign issue by contending that the only purpose of the statute is discriminatory animus. After Defendant Nessel took office, the State pivoted 180 degrees. . . . The State also threatened to terminate its contracts with St. Vincent. The Summary Statement's conclusion – that if an agency accepts even one MDHHS child referral for case management or adoption services, the agency forfeits completely the right to refer new parental applicants to other agencies based on its sincerely held religious beliefs – is at odds with the language of the contracts, with the 2015 law, and with established State practice. Moreover, it actually undermines the State's stated goals of preventing discriminatory conduct and maximizing available placements for children.The last point is key. As stated above, there was no evidence that St. Vincent prevented any qualified couple from adopting. In fact, if the state forced St. Vincent's to choose between upholding the teachings of its faith or maintaining its contractual relationship with the state, then it risked shrinking the available foster or adoption options in the state of Michigan. The state demonstrated that it was more interested in taking punitive action against people of faith than it was in maintaining broader access to foster and adoption services for its most vulnerable citizens.The judge rightly called the state's actions a "targeted attack on a sincerely held religious belief." Once again, Masterpiece Cakeshop pays religious-liberty dividends. Once again, a court declares — in no uncertain terms — that in the conflict between private faith and public bigotry, religious liberty will prevail.


Trump's Ukraine call sparks new questions over intelligence chief's firing

Posted: 28 Sep 2019 08:13 AM PDT

Trump's Ukraine call sparks new questions over intelligence chief's firingThe president removed Dan Coats days after his conversation with Zelenskiy and insisted that Coats's deputy not get the jobDan Coats, seen in 2018, reportedly interrupted a meeting to convince his deputy to resign. Photograph: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty ImagesThree days after his now infamous phone conversation with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy, Donald Trump abruptly fired his director of national intelligence in favour of an inexperienced political loyalist.According to a New York Times report, the White House learned within days that the unorthodox call on 25 July with Zelenskiy had raised red flags among intelligence professionals and was likely to trigger an official complaint.That timeline has raised new questions over the timing of the Trump's dismissal by tweet of the director of national intelligence (DNI), Dan Coats, on 28 July and his insistence that the deputy DNI, Sue Gordon, a career intelligence professional, did not step into the role, even in an acting capacity.Instead, Trump tried to install a Republican congressman, John Ratcliffe, who had minimal national security credentials but had been a fierce defender of the president in Congress. Trump had to drop the nomination after it emerged that Ratcliffe had exaggerated his national security credentials in his biography, wrongly claiming he had conducted prosecutions in terrorist financing cases.Despite the collapse of the Ratcliffe nomination, Gordon was forced out. She was reported to have been holding a meeting on election security on 8 August when Coats interrupted to convince her that she would have to resign.In a terse handwritten note to the president, Gordon said: "I offer this letter as an act of respect and patriotism, not preference. You should have your team."The Office of the DNI (ODNI) and its inspector general has the authority to receive whistleblower complaints from across all US intelligence agencies and determine whether they should be referred to Congress."We all knew Coats' departure was coming because he had clashed with the president on several issues. What was weird was the president's forcefulness in not wanting Sue Gordon to take over as acting director," said Katrina Mulligan, a former official who worked in the ODNI, the national security council, and the justice department."I was hearing at the time that Sue was getting actively excluded from things by the president that she would ordinarily have taken part in, and she was being made to feel uncomfortable," said Mulligan, now managing director for national security and international policy at the Center for American Progress."And then the president tried to install someone who was clearly unqualified," she added. "Now the timeline of the whistleblower in the White House raises a lot of questions about the Sue Gordon piece of this."John McLaughlin, the former acting CIA director, said the fact that Ratcliffe's nomination was dropped and the job of acting DNI ultimately went to an intelligence professional, Joseph Maguire, was a sign that the intelligence community was so far resisting political pressure from the White House.Maguire faced tough questioning in Congress this week about his initial refusal, on justice department guidance, to refer the whistleblower complaint to Congress."On politicisation, my sense is that the community is holding the line against it although undoubtedly dealing with more or less constant pressure," McLaughlin said. "I felt kind of bad for the acting DNI, an honourable man with impeccable service to the nation. I believe he made some honest errors in judgment rather than yielding to political pressure. Throwing him into this job in these circumstances on such short notice is a little like assigning me on a navy Seal mission."


Sixth-Grade Boys Allegedly Attack, Cut Girl’s ‘Ugly’ Dreadlocks at Private Christian School

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 09:33 AM PDT

Sixth-Grade Boys Allegedly Attack, Cut Girl's 'Ugly' Dreadlocks at Private Christian SchoolPhoto Illustration by The Daily Beast/Courtesy Cynthia AllenAmari Allen was about to use the slide at the Immanuel Christian School playground on Monday when three white classmates appeared. Within "seconds," the 12-year-old said, she was pushed down, her hands held behind her back as the boys called her names and cut off patches of her "ugly, nappy" dreadlocks. "One of the boys put his hand over my mouth so I wouldn't scream while they used scissors on my hair," she recalled to The Daily Beast on Thursday. "They were all laughing, calling me ugly, and saying I should have never been born."The alleged assault only lasted "a minute or two" before the bell rang to signal the end of recess, the sixth grader said. The three boys took off running to go into their math class while Amari stayed on the slide, trying to collect herself before following behind. "They ran off laughing, and I was just sitting there," the soft-spoken teenager said. "I'm hurt that it happened. All I want to ask them is, Why?"The Monday afternoon racist attack at the private Immanuel Christian School—an already controversial school where Karen Pence, the second lady of the United States, teaches art class part-time—has "destroyed" the Allen family, and they are now seeking legal and administrative retributions. Courtesy of Cynthia AllenAmari's mother, Cynthia Allen, told The Daily Beast that the family met with school officials on Thursday morning to demand the three boys be removed and updated policies be put into place to ensure "this doesn't happen again." Allen also said Amari filed a police report. "We take seriously the emotional and physical well-being of all our students, and have a zero-tolerance policy for any kind of bullying or abuse. We are deeply disturbed by the allegations being made, and are in communication with the family of the alleged victim to gather information and provide whatever support we can," the school said in a statement to The Daily Beast. "We have also reached out to law enforcement to ask them to conduct a thorough investigation, and further inquiries should be directed to the Fairfax County Police Department.""All I am asking for is this to be resolved, if they can't leave school, then I will," Amari said. Her mother agreed, adding, "She's in real pain but she wants justice."The 53-year-old mom said it took two days for Amari to finally admit the attack even happened. At first, the 12-year-old told her mother that the missing parts of her hair were the result of playing "beauty salon" with another friend. "We continued to press her on it because it just didn't sound like something she would do," Cynthia Allen said. "Then she started breaking down crying, trembling, and shaking before telling us what happened."Amari said she "instantly felt better" when she told her family about how the three sixth-grade boys pinned her down on the playground. She said while one boy covered her mouth, a second boy put her hands behind her back, and a third boy cut her dreadlocks while calling her names."They called her 'ugly,' told her she was an 'attention seeker,' called her hair 'nappy,' all of these horrible things," her mother said. "And when they ran away laughing, she just had to sit there and get herself together." Amari admitted she initially denied that anyone cut her hair out of fear of retaliation. The three boys—including one that used to be her friend—are in six of her classes and she said she was afraid they "would come after me.""They had scissors, so they could have done anything to me," the sixth grader said. "I was afraid if I told the teacher they wouldn't care."Amari's mom explained that this was not the first time her daughter had been subjected to bullying by these three classmates. Throughout the school year, the boys have allegedly been "taking her lunch every single day and calling her names.""My concern is, how did they not see what was taking place, on the playground and all year," Allen said. "Karen Pence, the vice president's wife, works at the school. There is security and secret service everywhere. How did they not know!"The Immanuel Christian School, which enrolls kindergartners through eighth graders at its campus in Springfield, Virginia, has been previously embroiled in controversy after its school banned LGBT students and demanded all employees affirm the belief that marriage should only be between a man and a woman.According to The New York Times, the school's employment application requires prospective teachers to describe their faith and sign their initials next to a list of beliefs, including Immanuel Christian's definition of marriage and stances on sexual identity."I understand that the term 'marriage' has only one meaning; the uniting of one man and one woman," the application reads, detailing that certain "moral misconduct" considered disqualifying includes "heterosexual activity outside of marriage (e.g., premarital sex, cohabitation, extramarital sex), homosexual or lesbian sexual activity, polygamy, transgender identity, any other violation of the unique roles of male and female."Pence, 62, has had a long history with the school, having taught from 2001 to 2013 while her husband served in Congress. And in December, the second lady decided to return twice a week to the private school as an art teacher. Cynthia Allen said despite the school's recent controversies, she is more concerned with its future and said she is planning to speak to administrators further about preventing another racist attack. But for now, she said, Amari will not return to school. "Amari is surviving, but this can't happen again," she said. "She is terrified, she has not been able to sleep. And she is strong, I can't imagine if this happened to somebody else."Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.


Israeli minister urges unity government to stave off 'blow-up' in Iran tensions

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 02:28 AM PDT

Israeli minister urges unity government to stave off 'blow-up' in Iran tensionsIsrael's energy minister on Friday warned tensions between Iran and the United States were reaching a breaking point and an Israeli unity government deal was needed to stave off the threat of conflict following an inconclusive election last week. Washington has blamed Iran for a Sept. 14 attack on Saudi Arabia's oil facilities, and on Thursday announced it would send radar systems and Patriot missiles to the kingdom to bolster its defenses. Iran denies carrying out the attack.


Greta Thunberg marches in Montreal for global climate protests

Posted: 28 Sep 2019 04:59 PM PDT

Greta Thunberg marches in Montreal for global climate protestsThe 16-year-old Swede met privately with Trudeau but later told a news conference with local indigenous leaders that he was "not doing enough" to curb greenhouse gases responsible for global warming. Thunberg generated headlines around the world earlier this week with her viral so-called "How Dare You?" speech at the UN climate summit, accusing world leaders of betraying her generation.


Aubrey O'Day claims flight attendant forced her to 'undress in front of the entire plane'

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 07:47 AM PDT

Aubrey O'Day claims flight attendant forced her to 'undress in front of the entire plane''I literally had to have my breasts in a bra out in front of everyone around me in order to not get kicked off.'


Saudi Arabia: As kingdom opens up to tourists, will people visit?

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 01:59 PM PDT

Saudi Arabia: As kingdom opens up to tourists, will people visit?Those who study international tourism say a combination of geography, history and culture could make the kingdom an attractive tourist destination.


North Carolina Detective Fired After Allegedly Sending Inappropriate Messages to Women Whose Rape Cases He Handled

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 02:32 PM PDT

North Carolina Detective Fired After Allegedly Sending Inappropriate Messages to Women Whose Rape Cases He HandledPaul G. Matrafailo III was fired in May from the Fayetteville Police Department for allegedly writing inappropriate messages to rape victims.


Senate Republicans are never going to turn on Trump

Posted: 28 Sep 2019 03:30 AM PDT

Senate Republicans are never going to turn on TrumpJeff Flake said on Thursday that if a private vote were held on the matter, at least 35 Republican senators would choose to remove Donald Trump from office. I would be tempted to observe that this is a bit like saying that millions of Americans would fire their bosses and give themselves a 1000-percent raise if they could do so by pushing a magic button, but that would mean accepting Flake's underlying premise.Why does he think that his former Senate colleagues have had it with the president? In case he hasn't noticed, with the not especially noteworthy exceptions of Mitt Romney and Ben Sasse, who have settled comfortably into their respective media niches as "sober elder statesman" and "last honest man in the GOP," Republicans are circling the wagons. This is the case across what passes for the conservative ideological spectrum in the post-Trump GOP, from hawkish moderates like Lindsey Graham to libertarians like Rand Paul to the paternalist maverick Josh Hawley. This is to say nothing of Mitch McConnell. "I've read the summary of the call. If this is the 'launching point' for House Democrats' impeachment process, they've already overplayed their hand. It's clear there is no quid pro quo that the Democrats were desperately praying for," he told Politico on Wednesday.Which seems more likely, that McConnell and his members are all pining for a return to the days when they lost two consecutive presidential elections but are burying this beautiful hope deep within their hearts, or that Flake is engaging in wish fulfillment here? From his current vantage point as a guy who gets paid to travel around the country lamenting the depravity of a president whose agenda he supported 81 percent of the time while in office (more frequently even than his Tea Party colleagues Rand Paul and Mike Lee) it might be difficult to understand, but the reality is that Trump is wildly popular with the GOP base and a boon for its members in both houses of Congress. If anything, I would guess that even Romney would not vote to remove Trump if his fans at The Atlantic would never learn about it.This doesn't mean that in personal terms they like the president who has used a party to which he has not belonged for most of his life as a vehicle for his own political ambitions without much, or indeed perhaps any, regard for its long-term fortunes. I am even willing to believe that, in the circumstances described by Flake -- i.e., in their private lives, as normal people -- some of them would even be willing to venture the occasional criticism of a twice-divorced serial philanderer who thinks that apostrophes are hyphens. But there is space for a pretty wide range of opinion between grumbling about someone in private and secretly wishing to light your party on fire.Flake also seems to be ignoring the reality that Trump's removal from office by a Republican Senate would not only be a disaster for the GOP but arguably the most radical action in the history of the American Congress. Neither of our two previously impeached presidents were removed from office. If Trump is impeached, which still seems unlikely enough anyway, the Senate is not going to bring him down.It's hard out there for an ex Arizona senator. Nobody should begrudge Flake his various new rackets. But calling on members of your party to sacrifice everything in the name of certain nebulous principles -- as opposed to actual concrete political differences -- while you yourself have nothing to lose is not exactly a profile in courage.Want more essential commentary and analysis like this delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for The Week's "Today's best articles" newsletter here.


They Will Kill You: The Secrets of the Delta Force Revealed

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 06:25 AM PDT

They Will Kill You: The Secrets of the Delta Force RevealedOne of America's top forces.


Oil shipping rates soar as U.S. supertanker sanctions rattle crude trade

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 02:02 AM PDT

Oil shipping rates soar as U.S. supertanker sanctions rattle crude tradeSINGAPORE/LONDON (Reuters) - Key oil freight rates from the Middle East to Asia rocketed as much as 28% on Friday in a global oil shipping market spooked by United States sanctions on units of Chinese giant COSCO for alleged involvement in ferrying crude out of Iran. In what the State Department called "one of the largest sanctions actions the U.S. has taken" since curbs were re-imposed on Iran in November last year, two units of COSCO were named alongside other companies in claims of involvement in sanctions-busting shipments of Iranian oil. The surprise move, affecting one of the world's largest energy shippers operating more than 50 supertankers, comes as U.S. President Donald Trump seeks to exert maximum pressure on Iran to drop nuclear programmes.


Cairo on lock-down as Egyptian government tries to head off anti-Sisi protests

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 09:40 AM PDT

Cairo on lock-down as Egyptian government tries to head off anti-Sisi protestsEgypt's government put central Cairo on lockdown Friday as it tried to head off protests against President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi but was unable to stop scattered demonstrations in other parts of the country. In an effort to prevent a repeat of last week's protests calling for Mr Sisi's overthrow, Egyptian forces sealed off Cairo's Tahrir Square and blocked several of the main bridges over the Nile. Military vehicles rumbled through otherwise largely empty streets.  But demonstrators reportedly still turned out on Warraq, a rural island in the Nile near downtown Cairo, where they chanted for Mr Sisi to resign. Government forces fired tear gas and buckshot to break up the protests, according the Mada Masr new site.   Videos showed also demonstrators in Qina, a small city south of Cairo, trampling on government posters and deriding Mr Sisi as "the date", a mocking nickname referring to the president's thinning hair.   The protests were sparked by a series of videos from Mohamed Ali, a former state building contractor now living in exile in Spain. He has alleged widespread corruption in Mr Sisi's government and has become an unlikely resistance figure with his calls for revolution.  تمزيق لافتات تأييد للسيسي في قوص بقنا صعيد مصر pic.twitter.com/cdRyWAh5cu— Amr Elqazaz (@amrsalama) September 27, 2019 By sundown on Friday, the mass protests that Mr Ali called for had failed to materialise, despite his last-minute videos urging people to take to the streets against the president. "Enough with the humiliation," he said. "Get rid get rid of him today. This is your historic chance."   However, last Friday's protests did not begin until after nightfall, when youths in Cairo, Alexandria, Suez, and other cities demonstrated.  Mr Sisi, arriving back in Cairo from a week at the UN in New York, said the protests were the work of conspirators trying to damage Egypt. "It is a war between us and them," he said.  The government staged several large pro-Sisi demonstrations, including one near Rabaa Square, where Mr Sisi's forces killed a thousand people in a single day in August 2013 while breaking up a sit-in by Islamist protesters. Supporters of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi during a rally in Cairo Credit: KHALED ELFIQI/EPA-EFE/REX  The security forces have arrested around 2,000 people since last Friday's protests, including prominent lawyers and academics. At least 76 have been "disappeared", meaning they were arrested but authorities are denying they are in custody, according to the Egypt Commission on Rights and Freedoms, a human rights group.  The top Democrat and Republican on the House foreign affairs committee put out a joint statement calling on the government to allow peaceful protests to go ahead. "Egyptians have the right to protest peacefully and to exercise that right without fear of retribution," they said.   The government postponed a football match between FC Masr and Aswan FC on security grounds, in an apparent effort to prevent crowds from gathering during the game and turning into a demonstration.


Largest captive alligator in US spends goes missing in Storm Imelda floods at height of hunting season

Posted: 28 Sep 2019 07:52 AM PDT

Largest captive alligator in US spends goes missing in Storm Imelda floods at height of hunting seasonSome people can't sleep if they know there's a spider in their house.Imagine being in Beaumont, Texas, and thinking that the largest alligator ever caught in the United States was on the loose.


The Latest: Ex-tenants say building confused them, too

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 02:49 PM PDT

The Latest: Ex-tenants say building confused them, tooThe former building residents testified Friday after the now-former officer, Amber Guyger, took the stand in her own defense. Guyger is charged with murder in the fatal shooting of 26-year-old Botham Jean last September.


A black hole is shredding a star, and NASA caught the incredible space event on camera

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 10:08 AM PDT

A black hole is shredding a star, and NASA caught the incredible space event on cameraAstronomers think the supermassive black hole weighs around six million times the sun's mass and is located about 375 million light-years away.


Family sues Best Buy after the death of a 75-year-old woman who police say was bludgeoned and set on fire by a man delivering her washing machine

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 06:11 PM PDT

Family sues Best Buy after the death of a 75-year-old woman who police say was bludgeoned and set on fire by a man delivering her washing machineEvelyn Udell's family has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Best Buy and two delivery contractors.


Tucker Carlson: Adam Schiff Is ‘Clearly, Demonstrably Mentally Ill’

Posted: 26 Sep 2019 06:18 PM PDT

Tucker Carlson: Adam Schiff Is 'Clearly, Demonstrably Mentally Ill'If you thought Tucker Carlson couldn't push the envelope any further, I have some news for you.The Fox News primetime star opened up his program on Thursday night by taking aim at House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-CA) for giving a parody account of President Donald Trump's July 25 call with the Ukrainian president, explicitly calling the California lawmaker "mentally ill" in the process.Insisting that it's "hard to see" how Trump's actions are an impeachable offense, the Fox News host turned to Thursday's testimony of acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire, which was chaired by Schiff. Claiming that it is the media's fault for setting up "terrible incentives" for people to make "extreme and mindless statements" to get on TV, Carlson then held up Schiff as a "prime example.""He recently went into a kind of trance and delivered his own prophetic version of what he believed must have happened between President Trump and the president of Ukraine," Carlson stated, playing a clip of Schiff delivering a parody version of the call at Thursday's hearing."Keep in mind, that isn't some guy babbling in the men's room at Starbucks, that is the man who chairs the mighty House Intelligence Committee," he said."We trust him with the most sensitive information and yet he is clearly, demonstrably mentally ill," Carlson added. The Fox News host didn't qualify his diagnosis of the Democratic congressman other than to suggest that it was insane to want the president impeached for pushing the Ukrainian president to look into his political rival.Carlson's latest inflammatory remarks are just the latest controversy for the conservative Fox News star. This week has seen him get into an on-air spat with his fellow colleagues Shep Smith and Judge Andrew Napolitano after one of his guests called Napolitano a "fool," an insult that went unchallenged by Carlson. It also has been less than two months since the primetime host sparked outrage for saying white supremacy is a "hoax" just three days after the El Paso shooting.The Fox host's comments also come on the heels of the backlash caused by Fox News guest Michael Knowles calling 16-year-old climate activist Greta Thunberg a "mentally ill Swedish child," prompting the network to issue a quick apology and state that they have no plans to book Knowles in the future.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.


EXPLAINED: How Ukraine Uses U.S. Military Aid (Think Russia)

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 02:35 AM PDT

EXPLAINED: How Ukraine Uses U.S. Military Aid (Think Russia)Ukrainians have the will to fight, that's clear. Moreover, Ukraine has rebuilt its once dilapidated military into the second-largest standing land army in Europe in terms of manpower. Today, after more than five years of war, Ukraine remains one of the world's top weapons-exporting nations and is able to meet many of its own defense supply needs.


Bogota in photos row over Venezuela at UN

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 02:21 PM PDT

Bogota in photos row over Venezuela at UNColombian President Ivan Duque said he handed the UN photographic evidence this week proving Venezuela was sheltering ELN rebels, but the images were duds. The pictures were contained in a 128-page dossier he handed to UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres at the General Assembly in New York on Thursday. One purportedly shows guerrillas carrying out "indoctrination" of rural schoolchildren in the Venezuelan state of Tachira in April 2018.


Philadelphia students sickened after eating laced rice cereal treats: Police

Posted: 27 Sep 2019 09:26 AM PDT

Philadelphia students sickened after eating laced rice cereal treats: PoliceSeveral children have been sickened after allegedly eating laced rice cereal treats from a fellow student, Philadelphia police say.


Malaysia PM says can't provoke Beijing on South China Sea, Uighur issue

Posted: 28 Sep 2019 04:33 AM PDT

Malaysia PM says can't provoke Beijing on South China Sea, Uighur issueMalaysia does not want to take a confrontational stance toward China over the disputed South China Sea and Beijing's alleged mistreatment of its minority Uighur Muslims, Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said in an interview published on Saturday. Malaysia is too small to face up to the Asian powerhouse, even though Chinese ships surveying its waters for oil and gas in South China Sea do so without permission, he told an online news service during a visit to New York this week. "We watch what they are doing, we report what they are doing, but we do not chase them away or try to be aggressive," Mahathir told BenarNews https://www.benarnews.org/english/news/malaysian/question-answer-09272019150003.html.


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