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- GOP claim that Trump cares about corruption takes a hit at impeachment hearing
- Sondland pressed on why Trump has blocked witnesses: 'I wish I could answer'
- Russia 'ruined' Ukrainian naval vessels before handing them back, says Ukrainian navy
- 20 of the Most Beautiful Bridges in the World
- Seller of bullets to Las Vegas gunman pleads guilty to ammo licensing offense
- Cory Booker is right: Joe Biden must be 'high' to oppose legalizing marijuana
- The Latest: 2 airmen died while landing at Oklahoma base
- Nearly ¾ of transgender people slain since 2017 killed with guns
- Trump news – live: Republicans forced to pause impeachment hearing after bombshell evidence on president from key witness Sondland triggers panic
- Israeli PM Netanyahu defiant after corruption indictment
- Yes, America Is Using Stealth Drones to Spy on Iran
- Obama Warns Technology Has Created a More Splintered World
- Billionaire Michael Bloomberg files paperwork to run for U.S. president
- Police shoot man who was 'extremely irate' on tarmac of Las Vegas airport
- American Airlines admitted a mid-air accident that knocked out 2 flight crew and forced an emergency landing was not caused by spilled soap
- Centuries of Christian anti-Semitism led to Holocaust, landmark Church of England report concludes
- Maloney hammers Sondland on changing testimony — and extracts key concession
- Zimbabwean police beat opposition supporters after rally ban
- Reeling progressives meet behind closed doors after 'Medicare for All' barrage
- A Lack of Money Will Stop Russia from Building More Stealth Fighters
- Mexicans sue Walmart over Texas shooting that left victims on both sides of border
- 'Don't let them in': Arrests made as hundreds protest Ann Coulter speech at UC Berkeley
- AP Exclusive: DOJ would take halted executions to high court
- Laura Loomer’s ‘Nonsensical’ Lawsuit Killed by Judge
- US woman could be forced to register as a sex offender after appearing topless in front of step-children
- House Democrats ponder expanding impeachment probe after Sondland 'game changer' testimony
- Dozens of dogs tested in French search for woman's forest killers
- Singapore ‘Repatriates’ Hongkonger Who Held Political Meeting
- This Means War: Yes, Russia's Su-35 Can Take on the F-15 or F-16
- Eric Trump uses father's impeachment hearing to promote family's wine
- Google's Tour Builder Is a Great New Way to Make Your Friends Hate You
- Biden, in Democratic debate, says you have to 'keep punching' to address domestic violence
- Pot stocks soar as U.S. House committee clears bill on federal weed legalization
- Death penalty sought for man accused of killing prostitutes
- A Pentagon official unexpectedly blew up Trump's defense in the Ukraine scandal and Gordon Sondland threw everyone under the bus. Here are the biggest takeaways from Wednesday's impeachment hearings.
- Iran's Guards praise 'timely' action against protesters
- President Andrew Yang's first words to Russia's Vladimir Putin: 'I'm sorry I beat your guy'
- 'The Entire System Is Designed to Suppress Us.' What the Chinese Surveillance State Means for the Rest of the World
- Vietnam to Extend Retirement Age by 2 Years for Men, 5 Years for Women
- China Is Not In Africa For Charity, But To Control Its Resources
- Joe Biden's Democratic debate word salad gives plenty to chew on
- Arizona border activist found not guilty of hiding migrants
- Police officer shot and killed while investigating home invasion in Detroit
- Gore kicking off 24 hours of climate talks around the world
- DNC Drops Lackluster Fundraising Numbers During Dem Debate
- Putin attacks 'strange' European plans to reduce gas usage
- Colbert Breaks Down Why Alexander Vindman’s Testimony Will ‘Really Enrage’ Trump
GOP claim that Trump cares about corruption takes a hit at impeachment hearing Posted: 20 Nov 2019 05:26 PM PST |
Sondland pressed on why Trump has blocked witnesses: 'I wish I could answer' Posted: 20 Nov 2019 02:57 PM PST |
Russia 'ruined' Ukrainian naval vessels before handing them back, says Ukrainian navy Posted: 21 Nov 2019 07:41 AM PST Three Ukrainian navy boats seized by Russia a year ago were vandalised before being handed back to Ukraine, the country's navy said. The fast gunboats Nikopol and Berdyansk and the tugboat Tany Kapu were welcomed by Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy and onlookers waving national flags arrived in Ochakiv, a Ukrainian naval port on the Black Sea on Wednesday evening. But Ukraine's navy said the vessels had been stripped bare and left so badly damaged that they had to be towed home by tug. "The Russians ruined them," said Admiral Ihor Voronchenko, the head of the Ukrainian Navy. "They even took the ceiling lights, plug sockets, and lavatories," he said. Mr Zelenskiy, who reviewed the vessels as they returned on Thursday morning, said: "I am very happy that our navy vessels are back where they belong. As promised, we have brought back our sailors and our ships. "Some of the equipment is missing, as well as some weapons. There will be an investigation. We will see all of the details." Russia blocked the Kerch strait with a tanker and deployed fighter jets to stop the three vessels entering the Azov Sea last year Credit: Pavel Rebrov/Reuters Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB), which oversees the border service that seized the vessels, denied tampering with the ships and said they had been "handed over to the Ukrainian side in normal condition." The three vessels were boarded by Russian forces after they tried to pass through the Strait of Kerch in November last year. Russia says they illegally violated the Russian border, then impounded the vessels and jailed 24 crew members pending trial. Ukraine described the move as an act of war and a flagrant breach of the treaty that gives the countries joint sovereignty of the only channel between the Black and Azov seas. Mr Zelenskiy said the return of the boats as the latest in a series of small steps "towards peace" ahead of a key summit with Vladimir Putin next month. Mr Zelenskiy inspects the artillery boat Nikopol Credit: Arkhip Vereshchagin/TASS The two presidents will meet in person for the first time in Paris on December 9, at talks brokered by France and Germany that are designed to end the conflict in east Ukraine, which has killed 13,000 people since 2014. In September the ships' crews were released in a prisoner swap that also saw Russia free Oleg Sentsov, a Ukrainian filmmaker and activist who had been held on trumped-up charges since the annexation of Crimea in 2014. The sides have also agreed to pull back troops from key points on the line of contact in eastern Ukraine. The narrow sea way between Crimea and Russia's Taman peninsula is the only passage for ships sailing to and from Ukraine's industrial port of Mariupol, to which the flotilla was bound when it was seized. Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 and opened a bridge across the strait in 2017 in defiance of Ukrainian objections. Mariupol is a few miles from the frontline where Ukrainian and Russian-directed separatist forces have been fighting a static war for five years. |
20 of the Most Beautiful Bridges in the World Posted: 21 Nov 2019 05:00 AM PST |
Seller of bullets to Las Vegas gunman pleads guilty to ammo licensing offense Posted: 19 Nov 2019 07:33 PM PST Douglas Haig, 57, of Mesa, Arizona, became the first and only person arrested and charged in connection with the Oct. 1, 2017, massacre, which ended when the gunman, Stephen Paddock, killed himself. Haig told reporters following his arrest early last year that none of the surplus military ammunition he sold to Paddock in September 2017 was ever fired during the killing spree, which ranks as the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history. |
Cory Booker is right: Joe Biden must be 'high' to oppose legalizing marijuana Posted: 21 Nov 2019 09:51 AM PST |
The Latest: 2 airmen died while landing at Oklahoma base Posted: 21 Nov 2019 02:53 PM PST The Latest on the crash of two Air Force training jets in northwest Oklahoma that killed two airmen. An Air Force base commander says two U.S. airmen were killed in an accident involving two jets during the landing phase of a training exercise in northwestern Oklahoma. Addressing a news conference Thursday afternoon, Vance Air Force Base Col. Corey Simmons declined to identify the two aboard the T-38 Talon who died around 9 a.m.. He says two other airmen aboard an identical jet involved in the crash are uninjured. |
Nearly ¾ of transgender people slain since 2017 killed with guns Posted: 20 Nov 2019 10:19 PM PST |
Posted: 20 Nov 2019 07:33 AM PST Donald Trump has lashed out at his Democratic opponents conducting the House impeachment inquiry, mocked key witnesses giving testimony for their sartorial choices and denied that the onset of a heart attack was what prompted his sudden trip to hospital on Saturday."These people are sick. They're sick. And the press really in this country is dangerous. We don't have freedom of the press in this country. We have the opposite. We have a very corrupt media," the president ranted from the Cabinet Room of the White House. |
Israeli PM Netanyahu defiant after corruption indictment Posted: 21 Nov 2019 12:55 PM PST Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday became the country's first prime minister to be indicted in office, on corruption charges, but defiantly condemned the "coup" against him and vowed to hold onto power. The shock announcement compounded the political chaos gripping Israel, which has been without a government for months and faces the prospect of its third election in a year. After months of suspense, Israel's longest-serving premier was charged by Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit with bribery, fraud and breach of trust. |
Yes, America Is Using Stealth Drones to Spy on Iran Posted: 21 Nov 2019 03:30 AM PST |
Obama Warns Technology Has Created a More Splintered World Posted: 21 Nov 2019 12:28 PM PST (Bloomberg) -- Former U.S. President Barack Obama warned that technology is creating a more splintered world, fueling the disparities among wealthy and poorer nations, and people within countries."The rise of extreme inequality both within nations and between nations that is being turbocharged by globalization and technology" is one of the biggest risks for young people, Obama said Thursday at Salesforce.com Inc.'s annual Dreamforce conference in San Francisco. "New technologies have allowed us reach. We have a global market. I can project my voice and you can take your technology to new markets. It has also amplified inequalities."Though his successor Donald Trump has taken presidential use of Twitter to new heights, Obama has long been associated with the tech industry. His 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns were known for their use of the internet and social media to galvanize supporters. Some of Obama's staffers came from Silicon Valley companies, including Alphabet Inc.'s Google, and there's a diaspora of former Obama administration officials who have worked in the tech industry since leaving the White House, including David Plouffe, formerly with Uber Technologies Inc. and Amazon.com Inc.'s top spokesman Jay Carney.Still, the 44th president talked about how the internet has helped divide American politics and society."People remark on the polarization of our politics and rightfully so," Obama said. "People rightfully see challenges like climate change and mass refugees and feel like things are spinning out of control. Behind that, what I see is a sense of anxiety, rootlessness and uncertainty in so many people. Some of that is fed by technology and there's an anger formed by those technologies."Social-media services including Facebook Inc. and Google's YouTube have been accused of fueling polarization with algorithms that show people news and other content that match their preconceived thinking and viewpoints."If you watch Fox News, you live in a different reality than if you read the New York Times. If you follow one rabbit hole on YouTube or the internet, then suddenly things look completely different," Obama said during his conversation with Salesforce co-Chief Executive Officer Marc Benioff. "We are siloing ourselves off in ways that are dangerous. I believed, and I still believe the internet can be a powerful tool for us to finally see each other and unify us, but right now it's disappointing."Since leaving the White House in January 2017, Obama has become a fixture on the paid-speaker circuit. Thursday's appearance at Dreamforce is at least Obama's second appearance at a tech event in San Francisco in the last two months. He also spoke at a Splunk Inc. conference in September.To contact the reporter on this story: Nico Grant in San Francisco at ngrant20@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Jillian Ward at jward56@bloomberg.net, Andrew Pollack, Alistair BarrFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Billionaire Michael Bloomberg files paperwork to run for U.S. president Posted: 21 Nov 2019 10:30 AM PST Billionaire Michael Bloomberg filed paperwork on Thursday with the Federal Election Commission to run for U.S. president as a Democrat, the latest sign that the former New York City Mayor is joining the crowded nominating contest. The filing allows Bloomberg to raise money in a bid for the White House, but an aide said on Thursday that no final decision on whether he will run has been made. Bloomberg, 77, has signaled that he plans a late-entry in the Democratic primary, suggesting he feels the field of nearly 20 candidates is vulnerable. |
Police shoot man who was 'extremely irate' on tarmac of Las Vegas airport Posted: 21 Nov 2019 12:01 PM PST |
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Centuries of Christian anti-Semitism led to Holocaust, landmark Church of England report concludes Posted: 20 Nov 2019 04:01 PM PST Centuries of Christian anti-Semitism led to the Holocaust, a landmark Church of England report has concluded. In a foreword to the report, published today, the Archbishop of Canterbury said that Christians cannot challenge and reflect on the past honestly, "until we have felt the cruelty of our history". The document, which has been three years in the making, was prepared by the Church's Faith and Order Commission and entitled: God's Unfailing World: Theological and practical perspectives on Christian-Jewish relations. It urges Christians to not only be repentant for the "sins of the past" against Jews, but also to challenge active attitudes and stereotypes. It also marks the first time that the Church of England has made an authoritative statement on the subject of anti-Semitism. The new "tool for teaching" on Christian-Jewish relations acknowledges that Christian theology played a part in the "stereotyping and persecution fo Jewish people which ultimately led to the Holocaust". 17 haunting Holocaust memorials "Conscious of the participation of Christians over the centuries in stereotyping, persecution and violence directed against Jewish people, and how this contributed to the Holocaust, Christians today should be sensitive to Jewish fears," the report said. It added that, for centuries, Christian attitudes towards Judaism have provided a "fertile seed-bed for murderous anti-Semitism", and noted that a similar hatred of Jews continues to exist today within political discourse by "pro-Palestinian advocates". Despite the Commission's report being released ahead of an imminent General Election, the report's authors would not be drawn on the anti-Semitism crisis which continues blight the Labour party. Jewish MP's including Louise Ellman and Luciana Berger have quit the Labour party after accusing leader Jeremy Corbyn of failing to stamp out anti-Semitism within the party. It also suggested that popular hymns which are interpreted in a way to "convey the teaching of contempt" of Jews for killing Jesus should be banned and "no longer be sung in public worship". The report offered the example of Charles Wesley's well-known hymn, 'Lo, He Comes with Clouds Descending': "Every eye shall now behold him/ Robed in dreadful majesty;/ Those who set at nought and sold him,/ Pierced and nailed him to the tree,/ Deeply wailing, deeply wailing, deeply wailing,/ Shall the true Messiah see." "It is possible to read lines 3-6 and imagine they are about the Jewish people as collectively guilty of crucifying the Messiah," the report notes, "who when he comes again in power and glory recognise - too late? - the terrible crime they have committed. Holocaust Survivors | The stories of those who escaped from Nazi clutches "Understood in that way, they convey the 'teaching of contempt' which the Church of England now rejects. If that were the only way to read them, they should no longer be sung in public worship." The report concluded: "Christians have been guilty of promoting and fostering negative stereotypes of Jewish people that have contributed to grave suffering and injustice. They therefore have a duty to be alert to the continuation of such stereotyping and to resist it." Six million Jews were systematically killed by the Nazis during the Holocaust. Throughout World War II, Nazi Germany killed around five million other 'untermenschen' - a the term for those the Nazis deemed as 'undesireable' or 'sub-human'. These included victims from Romani communities, disabled and homosexual people and those of other nationalities and religions. The number of Nazi victims is often disputed by Holocaust deniers. In 2016 the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, likened anti-Semitism to a "virus", adding that "it is a shameful truth that, through its theological teachings, the church, which should have offered an antidote, compounded the spread of this virus". Poll - Anti Semitism 17/11 "The fact that antisemitism has infected the body of the Church is something of which we as Christians must be deeply repentant," he added. In an afterword published by the Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis - which the Church of England describes as "honest and challenging" - he welcomed the "kinship" and "profound friendship" between Christainity and Judaism. However he also criticised the report, saying he has a "substantial misgiving" on the question of evangelism. "Namely, that it does not reject the efforts of those Christians, however many they may number, who, as part of their faithful mission, dedicate themselves to the purposeful and specific targeting of Jews for conversion to Christianity." The Bishop of Coventry, the Rt Revd Dr Christopher Cocksworth, chair of the Faith and Order Commission, said: "Assumptions about Judaism and Jewish people, past and present, colour Christian approaches to preaching, teaching, evangelism, catechesis, worship, devotion and art, whether or not Chirsian communities are conscious of their Jewish neighbours, near and far; testing out those assumptions and exploring them theologically is therefore a challenge that pertains to the whole Church. "That challenge is also, however, a previous opportunity… We are convinced that the Christian-Jewish relationship is a gift of God to the Church, which is to be received with care, respect and gratitude, so that we may learn more fully about God's purposes for us and all the world." |
Maloney hammers Sondland on changing testimony — and extracts key concession Posted: 20 Nov 2019 01:52 PM PST |
Zimbabwean police beat opposition supporters after rally ban Posted: 20 Nov 2019 12:23 PM PST Zimbabwean riot police fired tear gas and beat opposition supporters on Wednesday after barring a planned address by the main opposition leader, Nelson Chamisa, AFP journalists said. Hundreds of supporters had gathered outside the Harare headquarters of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) after the party was denied permission to hold a rally in the city's Africa Unity Square. Chamisa had been expected to make the address from the office balcony instead, but he later spoke to a few party members in a room inside the offices. |
Reeling progressives meet behind closed doors after 'Medicare for All' barrage Posted: 20 Nov 2019 09:45 AM PST |
A Lack of Money Will Stop Russia from Building More Stealth Fighters Posted: 20 Nov 2019 01:00 PM PST |
Mexicans sue Walmart over Texas shooting that left victims on both sides of border Posted: 20 Nov 2019 05:27 PM PST Ten Mexican citizens have sued Walmart over the shooting at a store in the U.S. border town of El Paso, Texas, that killed eight Mexicans and left eight more injured, saying that Walmart did not do enough to protect its customers, Mexico said on Wednesday. The suspected gunman told police he was targeting "Mexicans" in the August shooting, which killed 22 people in total. |
'Don't let them in': Arrests made as hundreds protest Ann Coulter speech at UC Berkeley Posted: 21 Nov 2019 03:34 AM PST |
AP Exclusive: DOJ would take halted executions to high court Posted: 21 Nov 2019 05:47 AM PST Attorney General William Barr told The Associated Press on Thursday that he would take the Trump administration's bid to restart federal executions after a 16-year hiatus to the Supreme Court if necessary. Barr's comments came hours after a district court judge temporarily blocked the administration's plans to start executions next month. The administration is appealing the decision, and Barr said he would take the case to the high court if Thursday's ruling stands. |
Laura Loomer’s ‘Nonsensical’ Lawsuit Killed by Judge Posted: 21 Nov 2019 10:43 AM PST Stephanie Keith/GettyFar-right conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer lost a lawsuit against a Muslim-rights organization this week after a judge ruled that her entire case was "to put it mildly, nonsensical."Loomer was a prominent anti-Muslim internet personality until she was banned from most major social media platforms beginning last year. Since then, she has launched a congressional bid, which she acknowledged in a campaign email was at least partially a ploy to have her social media accounts restored. She also filed a lawsuit against the Council on American-Islamic Relations earlier this year, accusing the civil rights group of plotting to take down her Twitter account.Many of her claims in that lawsuit originated from a prank by leftist Twitter users who quickly confessed to the stunt. That didn't stop Loomer from pursuing the lawsuit to its doomed end on Wednesday.Twitter banned Loomer in November 2018, after years of anti-Muslim posts. (She is also banned from Uber, Lyft, Venmo, GoFundMe, PayPal, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and other platforms for similar infractions.) But Loomer, who has promoted a number of conspiracy theories (she made her first headlines attempting to accuse her university of supporting ISIS) soon latched onto an elaborate explanation for her ban.Republican Lawmakers on Being Photographed With Laura Loomer: We Don't Know HerShe tried to overturn the ban by handcuffing herself to the door of Twitter's New York City offices. Twitter remained unmoved, but the stunt attracted the attention of Twitter users Nathan Bernard and Chris Gillen, who decided to pose as Twitter employees, Right Wing Watch first reported. Beginning in December, the pair sent Loomer messages claiming Twitter had met with CAIR representatives shortly before her ban.The pair said Loomer did not seek to authenticate any of their claims, including a ridiculous forged calendar they sent her, which appeared to show Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey scheduling two-and-a-half consecutive hours of meditation time every work day. "We couldn't have done it dumber," Gillen told Right Wing Watch in January. "We couldn't have been less careful. It's so obviously bullshit."The pranksters also shared audio of a phone call in which Loomer accused Dorsey of "taking money from all these Muslims and implementing Sharia law."Loomer passed the allegation to the Wall Street Journal, which implied that CAIR was among "outside groups and individuals [that] had privately lobbied Twitter executives to remove her from the site in late November." A series of right-wing news sites picked up the story, accusing CAIR and Twitter of conspiring against Loomer.Although Bernard and Gillen came clean about the stunt in January, Loomer continued to press the conspiracy theory in court. In April, she filed suit against CAIR, accusing it of "tortious interference with an advantageous business relationship" between herself and Twitter.Anti-Muslim Activist Laura Loomer to Run for CongressThat argument had a fatal flaw: Loomer had no business relationship with Twitter, a judge ruled on Wednesday."[E]ven accepting as true Plaintiffs' proposition that Defendant reported Loomer's account and convinced Twitter to ban Loomer, doing so does not create a cause of action for tortious interference with a business relationship," the judge wrote in a dismissal. "Plaintiffs' suggestion that the mere reporting of a Twitter user—however insistent such reporting may be—is sufficient to constitute tortious interference in a business relationship between Twitter and the targeted user is, to put it mildly, nonsensical."In other words, tweeting isn't a job, and getting banned isn't the same as getting fired.If Loomer wants to find the culprit behind her ban, she can look in the mirror, CAIR said after the Wednesday dismissal."We are pleased the court recognized that Loomer's complaint against CAIR was baseless," CAIR National Litigation Director Lena Masri said in a statement. "Her own pattern of anti-Muslim rhetoric is what caused Twitter and at least eight other internet platforms to ban her, not any actions by CAIR."Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Posted: 21 Nov 2019 12:32 PM PST An American woman could be forced to register as a sex offender after appearing topless in front of her step-children in her own home. Tilli Buchanan, from Utah, was charged with three counts of misdemeanour lewdness involving a child after appearing topless along with the children's father in their home last year. Ms Buchanan's lawyers are contesting the charge, arguing it is unfair to treat men and women differently for baring her chest. She said she and her husband were working in their garage in late 2017 or early 2018 and removed their shirts to prevent them from getting dusty. She told the court that when the children, aged nine and 13, entered the garage she "explained she considers herself a feminist and wanted to make a point that everybody should be fine with walking around their house or elsewhere with skin showing". "It was in the privacy of my own home. My husband was right next to me in the same exact manner that I was, and he's not being prosecuted," she said after the court hearing. The charge occurred after child welfare officials began an investigation involving the children on an unrelated matter and the children's mother reported the incident to authorities because she was "alarmed." If convicted, Ms Buchanan could be required to register as a sex offender for 10 years. Her husband was not charged. Ms Buchanan's lawyers appeared in court on Tuesday to ask a judge to overturn the charges, arguing that they are unconstitutional. The lawyers cited a previous court ruling that overturned a Colorado ban on women going topless in public. However the prosecution said that in the US, nudity is commonly understood to include women's breasts. The judge in the case, Kara Pettit, declined to rule immediately on the case, saying it was "too important of an issue". A ruling is expected in the next few months. |
House Democrats ponder expanding impeachment probe after Sondland 'game changer' testimony Posted: 20 Nov 2019 05:54 PM PST |
Dozens of dogs tested in French search for woman's forest killers Posted: 21 Nov 2019 09:22 AM PST French police investigating the death of a pregnant woman mauled to death by dogs while walking in the woods have carried out DNA tests on 67 dogs to try identify those that attacked her, investigators said Thursday. Elisa Pilarski, 29, was found dead on Saturday in Retz forest about 90 kilometres (55 miles) northeast of Paris. A deer hunt with hounds was underway in the forest where Pilarski, a dog lover, was walking her own American Staffordshire terrier. |
Singapore ‘Repatriates’ Hongkonger Who Held Political Meeting Posted: 20 Nov 2019 07:14 PM PST (Bloomberg) -- A Hong Kong resident living in Singapore has been "repatriated" home after organizing an illegal gathering of mostly ethnic Chinese last month to talk about the ongoing protests, according to local media reports.Restaurant owner Alex Yeung, along with a 55-year-old former Hong Kong resident, were issued a "stern warning" over what was said to be a gathering of about 10 people sharing their views of the escalating protests, which is an offense under the Public Order Act. Yeung, who has a Youtube channel of largely pro-Beijing content was further instructed he would not be allowed to enter Singapore again without permission from the authorities."Singapore has always been clear that foreigners should not advocate their political causes in Singapore, through public assemblies, and other prohibited means," the Singapore Police Force told Channel News Asia late on Wednesday.Speaking from Singapore's Changi Airport on Thursday morning ahead of his flight, Yeung said he was now free to go where he pleased and thanked Singapore for upholding the rule of law.Illegal Gatherings"The Singapore Police Force has made no indictment against me. I am warned to refrain from any criminal conduct in the future under their discretion," he said in a video posted to YouTube. "Singapore is a very civilized country with very good security."In 2017, Singapore revoked the permanent residency of prominent academic and China expert Huang Jing after he allegedly used his position to covertly advance the agenda of an unnamed foreign country at Singapore's expense.Hong Kong has been gripped for days by the standoff at the city's Polytechnic University, where hard-core protesters remain surrounded by police. The unrest began in June with largely peaceful marches against legislation allowing extraditions to mainland China and have since mushroomed into a broader push for demands including an independent probe into police violence and the ability to nominate and elect city leaders.Speaking to reporters on Monday, Singapore's Trade and Industry Minister Chan Chun Sing warned a similar situation could "easily happen" in his country if the government is complacent. Under restrictive laws, cause-related gatherings are illegal without a police permit and participants are subject to fines without it.\--With assistance from Chester Yung.To contact the reporter on this story: Philip J. Heijmans in Singapore at pheijmans1@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Ruth Pollard at rpollard2@bloomberg.net, Muneeza NaqviFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
This Means War: Yes, Russia's Su-35 Can Take on the F-15 or F-16 Posted: 20 Nov 2019 09:30 PM PST |
Eric Trump uses father's impeachment hearing to promote family's wine Posted: 21 Nov 2019 06:31 AM PST |
Google's Tour Builder Is a Great New Way to Make Your Friends Hate You Posted: 21 Nov 2019 12:18 PM PST |
Biden, in Democratic debate, says you have to 'keep punching' to address domestic violence Posted: 21 Nov 2019 03:31 AM PST |
Pot stocks soar as U.S. House committee clears bill on federal weed legalization Posted: 21 Nov 2019 08:49 AM PST The bill, which was passed 24 to 10 in the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, sent shares of Canopy Growth |
Death penalty sought for man accused of killing prostitutes Posted: 21 Nov 2019 01:05 PM PST Prosecutors in Florida announced Thursday that they will seek the death penalty against a man who they say preyed on prostitutes, causing panic in the Daytona Beach area over a series of killings more than a dozen years ago. Prosecutors charged Robert Hayes, 37, with three counts of first-degree murder in the slayings of three women in that area between 2005 and 2006. Laquetta Gunther, 45, was found dead in a gap between an auto parts store and a mostly empty utility building, the day after Christmas 2005. |
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Iran's Guards praise 'timely' action against protesters Posted: 21 Nov 2019 01:48 AM PST Iran's Revolutionary Guards on Thursday praised the armed forces for taking "timely" action against "rioters" and said calm had returned after days of unrest sparked by a hike in petrol prices. Motorists blocked highways in Tehran before the unrest spread to cities and towns across the country, with petrol pumps torched, police stations attacked and shops looted. "Incidents, big and small, caused by the rise in petrol price took place in (a little) less than 100 cities across Iran," said a statement on the Guards' official website Sepahnews.com. |
Posted: 20 Nov 2019 08:32 PM PST Andrew Yang didn't get much speaking time at Wednesday night's Democratic presidential debate in Atlanta, but he made memorable use of the time he got. Near the end of the debate, Yang was asked what he would say, if elected, in his first call with Russian President Vladimir Putin. "Well, first I'd say I'm sorry I beat your guy," he said. "Or not sorry," he added, after a pause for applause. "And second, I'd say the days of meddling in American elections are over, and we will take any undermining of our democratic processes as an act of hostility and aggression."Yang continued with a substantive answer, though he got a little in the weeds of mixed metaphors with his proposal for a "new World Data Organization, like a WTO for data, because right now, unfortunately, we're living in a world where data is the new oil and we don't have our arms around it."More stories from theweek.com Republicans are throwing Rudy Giuliani under the bus Lindsey Graham seems to be gearing up for an impeachment trial Schiff outlines 'the difference between Nixon and Trump' in fiery impeachment closing statement |
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Vietnam to Extend Retirement Age by 2 Years for Men, 5 Years for Women Posted: 20 Nov 2019 09:41 PM PST (Bloomberg) -- Explore what's moving the global economy in the new season of the Stephanomics podcast. Subscribe via Apple Podcast, Spotify or Pocket Cast.Vietnam will gradually extend the retirement age for men by two years and for women by five years over the next decade as part of the government's amendment to its Labor Code.Men can work until 62 by 2028 and women until 60 by 2035 from the current retirement age of 60 for males and 55 for females, the government said on its website.Under the amendments approved by the National Assembly on Wednesday, the retirement age will increase by 3 months annually for men and by 4 months each year for women starting 2021. The changes were made as Vietnam's population is maturing at a faster pace than some of its peers.The nation's elderly citizens are expected to double to 14% of the population in about 17 years and the country could become an aged society in 2035, according to a statement of the Japan International Cooperation Agency and the World Bank in August. It took Singapore 22 years and Thailand 20 years to reach the threshold for a country's population to be considered aged.The number of people joining Vietnam's work force has dropped by more than half to about 400,000 each year from an average of 1 million in the past, local newspaper Tuoi Tre reported citing Bui Sy Loi from the committee on social affairs of the National Assembly.\--With assistance from Thuy Ong.To contact the reporter on this story: Mai Ngoc Chau in Ho Chi Minh City at cmai9@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Clarissa Batino at cbatino@bloomberg.net, Ruth PollardFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
China Is Not In Africa For Charity, But To Control Its Resources Posted: 20 Nov 2019 01:30 PM PST |
Joe Biden's Democratic debate word salad gives plenty to chew on Posted: 21 Nov 2019 09:38 AM PST The former vice-president has always had an idiosyncratic way with words and the Atlanta debate offered examples galoreJoe Biden: 'Come together, man.' Photograph: Alex Wong/Getty ImagesFor those who believe that a good leader must be a good orator, there is one contradiction that stands in their way: Joe Biden. Biden, in short, can't really speak. Oftentimes, it is hard to make out exactly what his point is. And yet, he leads the polls for the Democratic nomination.Biden's faux-pas and fluffing of words used to be endearing. But recently, he has reached epic levels of word salad. In the last two Democratic debates, you would be forgiven for thinking that Biden was brought on stage unexpectedly, and rudely interrupted while he was busy thinking about bigger questions. Like whether it's the S or the C that's silent in the word scent.In case you've been itching to know what Biden's latest non-responses are, look no further. We have compiled a list of his worst word salads from last night's debate for you here. Punching domestic violenceAsked what he would do to address the problem of sexual violence and harassment against women in America, Biden had a very strange response.He would punch it. Not just once, not twice, but three times:"We have to just change the culture, period, and keep punching at it and punching at it and punching at it. It will be a big … no, I really mean it. It's a gigantic issue," he said.Maybe he stumbled so hard because of his own transgressions in the MeToo era – after being accused of unwanted touching, and asked to apologize for his intrusive questioning of Anita Hill in the 90s, Biden managed meagre non-apologies twice. I come out of the black communityAfter Cory Booker pointed out that he has tons of experience with black voters, it seemed like Biden just had to do one better. How?Well, first of all, he claimed, "I come out of a black community," which led to a whole lot of eye-rolling on Twitter.> black people of twitter, reply with a gif showing your face when joe biden said he came out of the black community demdebate> > — wikipedia brown aka silk bonnet spectre (@eveewing) November 21, 2019Then he proved that he was really important, by erasing the only black woman on stage: Biden bragged of being supported by the "only African American woman ever elected to the United States Senate", at which point Senator Kamala Harris threw her arms up in bemusement and said: "Nope. That's not true. The other one is here."He tried to clarify that he said the first African woman elected (Carol Moseley Braun) – but he didn't, here are the receipts. Let's come together, manBiden's repeated calls for us to like, "Come together, man", seem to be an attempt to show that he can bridge the divide between the Republicans and Democrats. It also seems like a phrase he comes back to whenever he's unsure of anything. Like, climate policy, for example.In this debate, Biden responded that we should "come together" when asked whether he would support a criminal investigation into President Trump over Ukraine.> Joe Biden is the only candidate who will get on the bully pulpit and say "I don't care if you're Puerto Rican or some other type of, a type of, someone from, another kinda guy, alright man we all gotta be here for this what which we're doing. Together. thank you so much."> > — looking for CoD teammates on Raya (@ByYourLogic) November 21, 2019When asked about the Republicans who want investigations into his son's business relationships in Ukraine and China, Biden said he would bring Democrats together.When asked about whether a woman is qualified to be president, he pointed out that he has brought people together – "I've done it. I've brought people together. I'm always told by everybody around here things have changed, you can't do that anymore," he said.At least he's the one candidate we can all count on to stand up, say a whole lot of nothing, and end with the word "together". |
Arizona border activist found not guilty of hiding migrants Posted: 20 Nov 2019 02:54 PM PST An Arizona jury on Wednesday found a human rights activist not guilty of harboring two migrants who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border illegally, after the U.S. government prosecuted him for giving them food, water and shelter in the desert. The Tucson jury took just over two hours to decide that Scott Warren, 37, a geography professor, provided the men with legal humanitarian aid in January 2018 and did not deliberately conceal them from U.S. Border Patrol. A previous jury was unable to decide whether he broke the law by letting the men stay in a building near Ajo, Arizona, to recover from a two-day trek. |
Police officer shot and killed while investigating home invasion in Detroit Posted: 20 Nov 2019 07:34 PM PST |
Gore kicking off 24 hours of climate talks around the world Posted: 21 Nov 2019 03:46 AM PST Former Vice President Al Gore said that even though President Donald Trump wants to back out of the Paris Climate Agreement, the U.S. cannot legally pull out until the day after next year's presidential election. "If there's a new president -- pardon me for a minute," Gore said to laughs and then loud applause, as he stretched out his arms and looked up. Gore's spirited speech Wednesday night kicked off a series of climate presentations that continued around the globe on Thursday. |
DNC Drops Lackluster Fundraising Numbers During Dem Debate Posted: 21 Nov 2019 05:48 AM PST The Democratic National Committee released its fundraising numbers during the presidential primary debate on Wednesday night, revealing that the committee lags far behind Republicans in funding for the 2020 elections.The DNC has $8.7 million in cash on hand, but it is $7 million in debt, according to its October Federal Election Commission filing. The Republican National Committee, meanwhile, had raised $156 million and had $61.4 million cash on hand as of the end of October.However, it was noted that the DNC is competing for donations with a wide field of presidential candidates, ten of which participated in Wednesday night's primary debate. At this point in 2011, when former president Barack Obama stood for reelection, the DNC had raised roughly $150 million.Bernie Sanders revealed he had personally raised $25.3 million over the past three months, leading Democratic presidential candidates in fundraising. Pete Buttigieg raised $19.1 million over the same period, followed by Kamala Harris with $11.6 million. Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren haven't yet released their fundraising numbers.The RNC has used the Democrats' impeachment inquiry against President Trump to great effect in its fundraising efforts, receiving record-breaking levels of donations in October and September with its "Stop the Madness" campaign."While Democrats are focused on their sham impeachment charade, Republicans had another record-breaking fundraising month in October — the best off-cycle October in our party's history," RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel told the Washington Examiner. "In 2020, voters will choose results over the Democrats' polarizing political rhetoric, and the RNC is in the strongest position possible to reelect President Trump and Republicans up-and-down the ballot."The RNC has been using some of its funds to help House Republicans seeking to topple Democrats in vulnerable districts. |
Putin attacks 'strange' European plans to reduce gas usage Posted: 20 Nov 2019 07:37 AM PST Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday rubbished European calls to reduce reliance on fossil fuels, saying that such ideas could lead to humans living in caves again. Speaking at an investment forum in Moscow, Putin also slammed shale gas production through fracking as dirty and environmentally damaging, saying Russia -- one of the world's top gas producers -- would never use this technology. Asked what he thought of Europe's moves to reduce use of gas, for which it is heavily dependent on Russia, Putin said that "in my view, disdaining such a clean hydrocarbon as gas is absolutely strange". |
Colbert Breaks Down Why Alexander Vindman’s Testimony Will ‘Really Enrage’ Trump Posted: 19 Nov 2019 06:48 PM PST At the end of an extremely long day of impeachment hearings, Stephen Colbert kicked off his Late Show monologue by digging into the remarkable testimony of Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman. "Vindman came to the United States as a child when his father fled the Soviet Union and went on to enlist in the Army, where he received a Purple Heart for his service in Iraq," Colbert explained. "Given his history, the only way Vindman could be more all-American is if he appeared in a Ken Burns documentary about the Statue of Liberty… which he did as a child." After playing the clip of a young Vindman telling his family's story in the 1985 film, Colbert added in a comically childish voice, "And when I grow up I want to be in the Army and testify about the president's corruption in Ukraine."The host then aired the end of Vindman's opening statement Tuesday morning in which he spoke directly to his father. "Dad, I'm sitting here today, in the U.S. Capitol talking to our elected professionals—is proof that you made the right decision 40 years ago to leave the Soviet Union," he said. "Do not worry, I will be fine for telling the truth.""That is beautiful," Colbert said in response. "That's moving and true. But you know it's going to really enrage Trump, because it features his two least favorite things: immigrants and fathers who love their sons." Later, Vindman expressed his loyalty to the United States by declaring, "Here, right matters." "Thank you, lieutenant colonel," Colbert said. "Yes, in America, right matters. You know, unless you're one of the congressmen on the right, then not so much these days." Samantha Bee Mocks GOP's 'Terrible Job' Defending Trump at Impeachment HearingsRead 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. |
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