Yahoo! News: Education News
Yahoo! News: Education News |
- Kushner named Trump’s border-wall czar — along with practically everything else in government
- Utah banning ‘conversion therapy’ with Mormon church backing
- TSA officers find high-capacity gun magazines hidden in an infant toy at Orlando airport
- NGO accuses North Korea of institutionalised child sex abuse
- An Air Canada Boeing 787 flying across the Atlantic was forced to turn back after its windshield cracked
- AOC Raised More for Reelection Campaign Last Quarter Than All Other House Dems, Including Pelosi
- Saudi crown prince visits UAE amid push to end Yemen war
- Gillum sets sights on denying Trump victory in Florida in 2020
- 24-Cylinder Monster Truck Big Rig Sells for $12 Million
- Texas inmate freed while innocence claims investigated
- 71 Gifts That Give Good Vibes
- UPDATE 1-Merkel wants Europe to aim for joint stance on China and 5G
- Swing state Democrat flips on impeachment
- ‘She slipped': Grandfather speaks on 1-year-old’s fatal fall from Royal Caribbean cruise ship
- Supreme leader says Iranians foiled 'very dangerous' plot
- Obama's candidate for 2020: None of the above
- One of Supreme Court's most important abortion cases has just begun
- Police cited 55 people for eating on San Francisco trains. Only nine were white
- Epstein Suicide: Guards Say They're Scapegoats for a Broken System
- Dubai court reduces sentence for editor who killed his wife
- Back to the Future: China is Putting Hypersonic Missiles on a 1950s Bomber
- U.S. rejects proposal for spy swap of ex-Marine held in Russia
- Freed UK hostage and wife say chained, threatened in Philippines
- White House officials resigned over Trump threat to freeze Ukraine aid, official says
- ‘Anti-Islam’ Europe Is No Place for Azerbaijan, President Says
- Revealed: Buttigieg 2020 campaign took money from top Kavanaugh lawyers
- Gabbard Continues to Slam Clinton for Russian ‘Grooming’ Remarks
- China's H-20 Stealth Bomber Could Be the U.S. Military's Worst Nightmare
- Hawaii man arrested for 'extreme stalking' of family in Utah
- 20 of the World's Most Stunning Public Staircases
- PREVIEW-Bronx man, battling own legal woes, brings gun rights case to U.S. Supreme Court
- Trump will ‘absolutely’ designate Mexican cartels like CJNG as terrorists. Will it help?
- New toll road cuts Moscow-Saint Petersburg drive in half
- Woman kept husband’s body in freezer for up to 11 years
- The Latest: Airports hit in stormy California
- The Uyghur Emergency
- Why NATO Is Stronger Than Ever
- Police chief blasted over handling of aide's alleged racism
- How Climate Change Exacerbates Gender Inequality Across the Globe
- China media releases court footage showing alleged spy confessing to fraud
- How Devin Nunes lawsuit threat undermines Donald Trump's impeachment defense
- Lawsuit: Alabama Sheriff 'Big John' Williams shot in parking lot 'without provocation'
- France raises possible return of Iran nuclear sanctions
- 7 Amazing Facts About the Speedy Cheetah
- Buttigieg claims 2nd while Warren sinks in new 2020 poll
Kushner named Trump’s border-wall czar — along with practically everything else in government Posted: 26 Nov 2019 02:33 PM PST President Trump has recently tasked his son-in-law — whose to-do list already includes brokering peace in the Middle East, leading U.S. trade policy, reorganizing the entire U.S. government and reforming the criminal justice system — with overseeing the construction of his border wall ahead of the 2020 election. |
Utah banning ‘conversion therapy’ with Mormon church backing Posted: 27 Nov 2019 07:58 AM PST Utah is on its way to becoming the 19th state to ban the discredited practice of conversion therapy in January after state officials formed a proposal that has the support of the influential Church of a Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Republican Gov. Gary Herbert announced Tuesday night that church leaders back a regulatory rule his office helped craft after legislative efforts for a ban on the therapy failed earlier this year. The faith known widely as the Mormon church opposed a previous version of the rule because it wanted assurances that church leaders and members who are therapists would be allowed to provide spiritual counseling for parishioners or families — which were included in the latest conversion therapy ban plan. |
TSA officers find high-capacity gun magazines hidden in an infant toy at Orlando airport Posted: 27 Nov 2019 11:10 AM PST |
NGO accuses North Korea of institutionalised child sex abuse Posted: 27 Nov 2019 02:50 AM PST North Korean children are "constantly in danger" of sexual abuse and resulting social stigma without any chance to seek legal protection, a Seoul-based rights group said on Wednesday. Activists with PSCORE, or People for Successful Corean Reunification, interviewed more than 200 young male and female North Koreans who had fled to settle in the affluent, democratic South for a study on child abuse at home, at school and in state facilities such as prison camps and orphanages. In a 195-page report, "Inescapable Violence: Child Abuse within North Korea", the group described sexual abuse as "institutionalised and widely accepted as a normal part of life". |
Posted: 26 Nov 2019 07:27 AM PST |
AOC Raised More for Reelection Campaign Last Quarter Than All Other House Dems, Including Pelosi Posted: 27 Nov 2019 08:02 AM PST Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D., N.Y.) raised more funds for her reelection campaign than all other Democrats in the House, including Speaker Nancy Pelosi, according to federal elections commission data.Ocasio-Cortez raked in $1.42 million between July 1 and September 30, outstripping Adam Schiff (D., Calif.), who raised $1.26 million over the same period, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.), who raised $1.26 million, the New York Post first reported. All three are up for reelection in 2020."This is very rare, unique," political consultant George Arzt told the Post. "I can't recall anyone raising this much money during the first year in office."Contributions under $200 comprised most of the donations to Ocasio-Cortez, at $1.1 million in total contributions. Several Republican challengers are competing to oust the freshman congresswoman in her district, which comprises parts of Queens and the Bronx, but none of those challengers has so far matched her fundraising abilities.Arzt emphasized that Ocasio-Cortez "is a celebrity who gained attention from people across the country, and many on the left support her."While she outstripped Pelosi in fundraising over the summer, Pelosi has raised more funds than Ocasio-Cortez overall since January. The Nancy Pelosi Victory Fund, which helps other Democrats besides Pelosi, has raised over $11 million since the beginning of the year.The freshman New York congresswoman has already established herself as a fundraising powerhouse. In July, Politico reported that she hasn't been hurt by relying on small donations, instead channeling her star power in the progressive community to solicit contributions."There used to be a single path to fundraising success in DC — cultivating industry lobbyists," Jeff Hauser, the executive director of the Revolving Door Project, told Politico. "That path still exists, but it's not as lucrative as becoming a national icon for aggressively populist performance in office. |
Saudi crown prince visits UAE amid push to end Yemen war Posted: 27 Nov 2019 08:25 AM PST |
Gillum sets sights on denying Trump victory in Florida in 2020 Posted: 26 Nov 2019 12:53 PM PST |
24-Cylinder Monster Truck Big Rig Sells for $12 Million Posted: 26 Nov 2019 03:15 PM PST |
Texas inmate freed while innocence claims investigated Posted: 26 Nov 2019 09:11 AM PST A Houston man serving a life sentence for a 2010 fatal stabbing was freed on bond Tuesday while authorities reinvestigate his case, including new DNA evidence that his lawyers say exonerates him. Lydell Grant has been in prison for seven years for the killing of 28-year-old Aaron Scheerhoorn outside of a Houston club. Grant was convicted in 2012. |
Posted: 26 Nov 2019 09:57 AM PST |
UPDATE 1-Merkel wants Europe to aim for joint stance on China and 5G Posted: 27 Nov 2019 01:55 AM PST German Chancellor Angela Merkel called on European countries on Wednesday to agree a common approach towards China and the rollout of the next generation 5G mobile network. Some German lawmakers want to exclude China's Huawei from 5G contracts, following warnings by the United States that this could lead to spying for Beijing. Huawei denies the allegations made by Washington. |
Swing state Democrat flips on impeachment Posted: 26 Nov 2019 09:49 AM PST |
‘She slipped': Grandfather speaks on 1-year-old’s fatal fall from Royal Caribbean cruise ship Posted: 26 Nov 2019 06:54 AM PST |
Supreme leader says Iranians foiled 'very dangerous' plot Posted: 27 Nov 2019 02:26 AM PST Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Wednesday praised the country's people for foiling a "very dangerous" plot, after violence erupted during protests this month against a fuel price hike. "The people foiled a deep, vast and very dangerous conspiracy on which a lot of money was spent for destruction, viciousness and the killing of people," Khamenei said, quoted by state television. On Twitter, Khamenei expressed his "heartfelt gratitude and appreciation" to the Iranian nation in a post alongside pictures of a massive pro-government rally held in Tehran on Monday. |
Obama's candidate for 2020: None of the above Posted: 26 Nov 2019 12:01 PM PST |
One of Supreme Court's most important abortion cases has just begun Posted: 26 Nov 2019 12:21 AM PST |
Police cited 55 people for eating on San Francisco trains. Only nine were white Posted: 26 Nov 2019 02:15 PM PST New data renews concerns about racial profiling, just weeks after viral video showed police detaining a black man who was eating a sandwichPassengers wait for a Bart train to depart the Fruitvale station in Oakland, California. Photograph: Ben Margot/APPolice officers for the San Francisco Bay Area commuter train system disproportionately target black riders with citations for eating and drinking, according to new data, renewing concerns about racial profiling.The Bay Area Rapid Transit (Bart) data was released following a viral video showing police handcuffing a 31-year-old black man who was cited for eating a breakfast sandwich on his way to work. The new records show that more than 81% of people stopped for eating and drinking on Bart since 2014 were people of color, and that the vast majority of them were black.Stops for eating and drinking on trains or platforms are infrequent within Bart, the train system that runs between San Francisco, Oakland and surrounding suburbs. Of 55 people cited for this offense over the last five years, 33 were black passengers, representing 60% of the citations. Nine of the stops were white passengers, seven were listed as Hispanic, five were categorized as "other" and one was unknown, according to the data, which was obtained by the San Francisco Examiner.Only 10% of Bart's total riders are black. Ridership data, collected last year, showed that 35% of overall riders are white, 32% are Asian/Pacific Islander and 17% are Latino.Bart spokeswoman Alicia Trost said in an email that the data shows citations are "very rare" and are "handed out at stations across the system".She said: "When an officer witnesses someone eating, they remind the rider that eating is not allowed and if the rider puts the food away no citation is necessary. It is a rare occurrence to need to issue a citation after reminding the rider not to eat."John Burris, a civil rights lawyer representing Steve Foster, the man stopped in the recent video, said Tuesday that the data was not surprising and was evidence of racial profiling. "This is a form of biased policing, and it's very harmful to African Americans. Other people eat sandwiches all the time, and they don't get stopped."The 15-minute video that received national attention showed a white Bart police officer stopping Foster at the station in Pleasant Hill, north-east of Oakland. The footage showed the officer holding on to Foster's backpack and telling him he was not free to go until he identified himself and that he was resisting arrest. Backup officers arrived, and Foster was handcuffed and taken away in front of morning commuters.The citation he received required him to pay a $250 fine or do 48 hours of community service."It was so insulting to him and disturbing," said Burris. "He was humiliated in front of all the people on Bart."The video sparked protests and widespread criticism, and Bart leaders eventually apologized and promised to investigate. Bob Powers, Bart's general manager, said at the time he was "disappointed how the situation unfolded".A citation or arrest for a minor infraction like eating can escalate to a significantly more serious conflict, said Cat Brooks, the co-founder of the Anti Police-Terror Project in Oakland."Eating a sandwich is certainly not a reason to throw yet another black body into the criminal justice system," she said. "We have to hold these cops accountable for racial profiling."Bart police have long faced scrutiny for brutality and racial profiling, in particular following the 2009 killing of Oscar Grant, an unarmed 22-year-old shot dead on the Fruitvale station platform. There have since been a number of other killings and allegations of abuse by Bart police.Bart should not be citing anyone for eating in the first place, Brooks said.Burris said there should be better training to prevent biased policing, and that it was wrong to handcuff riders for eating.Trost, the Bart spokeswoman, said all officers receive training in "fair and impartial policing, bias-based policing … and de-escalation".The Bart controversy comes as the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) in New York is facing intense backlash over a number of viral videos of police, including the arrest of a food vendor selling churros, and an incident in which officers pulled guns on a teenager accused of fare evasion. * This article was amended on 27 November 2019 to correct a mathematical error. |
Epstein Suicide: Guards Say They're Scapegoats for a Broken System Posted: 26 Nov 2019 06:18 AM PST NEW YORK -- Two jail guards who were on duty when Jeffrey Epstein killed himself browsed the internet and napped during the night before his body was found, instead of checking on him every half-hour as they were required to do, prosecutors have said. The guards then lied, prosecutors said, on official logs, indicating that they had made the rounds when they had not.Attorney General William Barr said last week that Epstein's death resulted from "a perfect storm of screw-ups."But lawyers for the guards, who have been criminally charged, suggested in court Monday that their clients were being made into scapegoats for larger problems in the federal prison system that contributed to Epstein's death.The Manhattan jail where Epstein hanged himself has long been plagued by staff shortages and the two guards, Michael Thomas and Tova Noel, had already done several tours of overtime that week.In addition, Epstein was left alone without a cellmate that night and morning, even though he had tried to take his own life about three weeks earlier."Unfortunately, the decisions that led to the death of Mr. Epstein were not only because of what my client did or did not do," Montell Figgins, the lawyer for Thomas, said. "It was because of a system that failed completely.""Where are the supervisors?" Figgins added. "Where are the people who make the policy decisions? Why didn't Mr. Epstein have a cellmate at the time that this happened?"Figgins made his remarks outside U.S. District Court in Manhattan after a hearing at which Judge Analisa Torres set a trial date of April 20 for Thomas and Noel, who face charges that include making false records and conspiracy to defraud the United States. Both have pleaded not guilty.Noel's lawyer, Jason E. Foy, said that he had not seen the evidence against his client, but he vowed to investigate her case vigorously. He said he believed there were "outside circumstances that are driving this prosecution."Foy, who also spoke after the hearing, said the charges did not "sound like your regular false-document case," an apparent reference to the unusual circumstances and high-profile nature of Epstein's death.The U.S. attorney's office in Manhattan and the Bureau of Prisons declined to comment on the lawyers' assertions.The indictment charging the two guards highlighted lapses in the operation of a high-security unit at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York, where Epstein, a financier, was awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges when he died.The indictment also offered the first official narrative of the events preceding his death. It said that security cameras did not show anyone entering the cell block where Epstein was housed, suggesting that despite the conjecture and conspiracy theories swirling around Epstein and his connections to powerful people, his death was a suicide as New York City's chief medical examiner ruled.At the hearing Monday, a prosecutor, Rebekah A. Donaleski, told Torres that the discovery materials the government would provide to defense lawyers included hundreds of hours of video recordings from inside the jail.Although Donaleski did not elaborate on the recordings' contents, the indictment said that video obtained from the jail's internal video surveillance system confirmed that no one visited the tier where Epstein was being held after about 10:30 p.m. on Aug. 9."This was the last time anyone, including any correctional officer, walked up to, let alone entered, the only entrance to the tier in which Epstein was housed until approximately 6:30 a.m. on Aug. 10," when his body was found, the indictment said.The defense lawyers said in court that they wanted prosecutors to provide them with additional evidence that might be used at trial. Figgins cited an internal investigation by the Justice Department inspector general's office into the circumstances surrounding Epstein's death. The results of that inquiry will not be made public, officials have said.Outside the courthouse, Figgins said that there had been an unfair "rush to judgment" in the case and that the two guards were being made to pay for the problems of an entire system."Does anyone think that throughout the United States that these are the only two guards that may have taken a nap overnight on their shift?" he said. "I highly doubt it."The attention that Epstein's suicide has brought to prison conditions, inmate supervision and mental health issues around the country was reinforced Sunday with a letter published in The New York Times by Richard M. Berman, the federal judge in Manhattan who presided in Epstein's criminal case before his suicide.Berman wrote that the indictment of the two guards was not the "full accounting" to which Epstein's alleged victims, the public and his family were entitled."We all agree that it is unthinkable that any detainee, let alone a high-profile detainee like Mr. Epstein, would die unnoticed at the Metropolitan Correctional Center," the judge wrote.He said it would be "a tragic and costly missed opportunity" for the Bureau of Prisons and the attorney general "to fail to undertake -- and to make public -- an in-depth evaluation of prison conditions (not only at the MCC) and to carry out appropriate reforms."This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2019 The New York Times Company |
Dubai court reduces sentence for editor who killed his wife Posted: 27 Nov 2019 12:21 AM PST A British newspaper editor convicted of killing his wife with a hammer had his sentence reduced by Dubai's Court of Appeal on Wednesday. The court ordered that former Gulf News editor Francis Matthew must serve a seven-year sentence for manslaughter in the 2017 killing of his wife, Jane. Matthew had received as much as a 15-year sentence for the killing. |
Back to the Future: China is Putting Hypersonic Missiles on a 1950s Bomber Posted: 26 Nov 2019 03:00 PM PST |
U.S. rejects proposal for spy swap of ex-Marine held in Russia Posted: 27 Nov 2019 09:23 AM PST The United States rejected on Wednesday a suggestion it seek a prisoner swap involving a former U.S. Marine jailed in Russia for nearly a year over spying allegations, and called for his immediate release. Paul Whelan, who holds U.S., British, Canadian and Irish passports, was detained by agents from Russia's Federal Security Service in a Moscow hotel room on Dec. 28 last year. After a U.S. diplomat visited him in jail on Wednesday, the U.S. embassy complained about Whelan's declining health and called Russia's treatment of him "shameful", saying Moscow had refused to allow the diplomat to bring him Thanksgiving dinner. |
Freed UK hostage and wife say chained, threatened in Philippines Posted: 26 Nov 2019 02:11 AM PST A British man and his wife rescued this week from Islamist captors in the Philippines' south say they were chained and threatened with beheading if they didn't deliver a ransom. The couple, shaken but unharmed, told their nearly two-month ordeal to reporters after escaping during a firefight Monday between Philippine troops and the Islamic State-linked Abu Sayyaf group. The husband, named by British authorities as Alan Hyrons, painted a "very humiliating and degrading" life in captivity, with little to eat in a haze of constant fear. |
White House officials resigned over Trump threat to freeze Ukraine aid, official says Posted: 27 Nov 2019 06:12 AM PST Two officials at the White House budget office have resigned over disagreements on a hold on $400m of congressionally approved military aid to Ukraine, according to a transcript of testimony from a career official during the impeachment inquiry into Donald Trump.Mark Sandy — associate director for national security at the White House Office of Management and Budget — testified that the unnamed employees had resigned "in part" due to the decision to withhold assistance to Ukraine. |
‘Anti-Islam’ Europe Is No Place for Azerbaijan, President Says Posted: 27 Nov 2019 03:32 AM PST (Bloomberg) -- President Ilham Aliyev said Azerbaijan won't seek closer integration with Europe, which he accused of discriminating against Muslims and undermining his country's traditional values."Where shall we integrate?" Aliyev said in a rare public criticism of the West in a speech to university students and teachers in the capital, Baku, on Tuesday. "Shall we integrate with those who are saying 'Stop Islam'? Shall we integrate to a place where there's no difference being made between men and women? We definitely shall not."Aliyev's remarks mark a departure from the national security strategy he approved in 2007, which said energy-rich Azerbaijan targets membership in European and Euro-Atlantic alliances. The majority Muslim but secular nation of 10 million people sandwiched between Iran and Russia forged close political and economic ties with the U.S. and the European Union after declaring independence from the former Soviet Union in 1991.The president's speech "was his acknowledgment of the failure of secularism and western values in Azerbaijan," prominent Azeri journalist Khadija Ismayil wrote on Facebook. Ismayil, who's known for investigative reports into Aliyev's undeclared family businesses, was sentenced to prison in 2015 and freed the following year after international criticism of her detention and trial.Energy PartnerThe U.S. helped Azerbaijan build oil and gas pipelines westward bypassing Russia. The EU regards Azerbaijan as a strategic energy partner and began talks in 2017 on a new framework agreement with Baku.While Aliyev and his late father Heydar, who ruled Azerbaijan for 10 years before his death in 2003, refused to join Russian-led military and economic blocs, U.S. and EU criticism of the poor state of democracy and human rights in Azerbaijan have strained relations. Aliyev won a landslide to secure a fourth term and extend his rule for seven years in 2018 elections seen as flawed by Western observers and boycotted by opposition parties.The president is "quite sincere" in his opposition to European integration because "Europe means democracy, free elections, rule of law, universal human rights and social welfare," Altay Goyushov, an opposition politician who heads the Baku Research Institute, a think tank in the city, wrote on Facebook."Aliyev wants to see a medieval monarchy in Azerbaijan," he said.To contact the reporter on this story: Zulfugar Agayev in Baku at zagayev@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Torrey Clark at tclark8@bloomberg.net, Tony HalpinFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Revealed: Buttigieg 2020 campaign took money from top Kavanaugh lawyers Posted: 27 Nov 2019 05:34 AM PST Campaign admits mistake in accepting thousands of dollars from Alexandra Walsh and Beth Wilkinson, who represented nomineePete Buttigieg's campaign said it would return the money to the lawyers who represented Brett Kavanaugh. Photograph: Christopher Aluka Berry/ReutersPete Buttigieg's 2020 campaign is returning thousands of dollars in donations from two top Washington lawyers who represented Brett Kavanaugh in his controversial confirmation hearing, saying it will not accept funds from people who helped secure the justice's seat on the supreme court.Buttigieg's campaign received $7,200 from Alexandra Walsh – $3,150 of which had already been returned because it exceeded limits – and attended a fundraiser in July that was co-hosted by the Washington lawyer. Buttigieg also received $2,800 from Beth Wilkinson, Walsh's law partner, who also represented Kavanaugh.When asked by the Guardian about the donations, the campaign said it had overlooked the lawyers' role in the Kavanaugh confirmation and had made a mistake in accepting the donations.It said: "With nearly 700,000 donors, a contribution we would otherwise refuse sometimes gets through. We believe the women who have courageously spoken out about Brett Kavanaugh's assault and misconduct, and we thank the Guardian for bringing this contribution to our attention."A spokesperson added: "[Kavanaugh] should have never been put on the supreme court and this campaign will not accept donations from those who played a role in making that happen. Accordingly, we will be returning this contribution and others from this firm."Walsh and Wilkinson are frequent donors to Democratic causes. During this 2020 election cycle, Wilkinson has donated $1,000 to the California senator Kamala Harris's campaign and $2,800 to the Colorado senator Michael Bennet's campaign. Wilkinson also gave $2,800 to the New York senator Kirsten Gillibrand, who has since dropped out of the race and has been an outspoken critic of Kavanaugh.The Washington law firm Wilkinson Walsh Eskovitz represented the then nominee for the supreme court after Christine Blasey Ford accused him of sexually assaulting her when both were high school students in suburban Maryland. Walsh and Wilkinson led the charge defending Kavanaugh, even as more accusations of sexual misconduct were unearthed, and painted the judge as the victim of an "outrageous" campaign.In one case, Wilkinson questioned why women who accused Kavanaugh of assault had not immediately gone to the police to report alleged assaults, instead of members of Congress, and insisted that Kavanaugh treated women with dignity and respect.The judge has denied all of the allegations against him.In another case, Walsh sought to downplay comments that were made in Kavanaugh's high school yearbook. When the New York Times reported that Kavanaugh was listed as a member of the "Renate Alumni" – a reference to a classmate from a neighbouring Catholic girls' school that appeared to insinuate sexual conquest – Walsh was quoted in a statement as saying that Kavanaugh had been friends with Renate in high school and had "admired her very much". She also stated that the two had once shared a "brief kiss goodnight".When asked about the reference, Renate Dolphin told the New York Times that the insinuation in Kavanaugh's yearbook was "hurtful and simply untrue". She also denied Walsh's assertion that she and Kavanaugh had ever kissed.Walsh did not respond to a request for comment about the Buttigieg campaign's decision to reject her donations. Wilkinson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.The Harris and Bennet campaigns did not return a request for comment on the donations they received from Wilkinson. Gillibrand's office also did not return a request for comment.The Buttigieg campaign has been a vocal critic of Kavanaugh and has said that, if elected, he would choose a supreme court justice similar to Ruth Bader Ginsberg, who shared his "progressive values". |
Gabbard Continues to Slam Clinton for Russian ‘Grooming’ Remarks Posted: 27 Nov 2019 05:25 AM PST Representative Tulsi Gabbard (D., Hawaii) continued to lash out at Hillary Clinton on Tuesday following the former presidential candidate's insinuation that Gabbard's presidential policy platform was based on advancing Russian interests."I think they've got their eye on someone who's currently in the Democratic primary and are grooming her to be the third-party candidate," Clinton said on the Campaign HQ podcast in October. According to Clinton, Gabbard was "the favorite of the Russians. They have a bunch of sites and bots and other ways of supporting her so far."When asked about the comments, Clinton spokesman Nick Merrill seemed to confirm that she had been referring to the Russians, when he said, "If the nesting doll fits." But Clinton later backtracked and insisted she was referring to Republicans, not the Russians, as "grooming" Gabbard.Speaking on Tuesday with stand-up comedian Joe Rogan on "The Joe Rogan Experience," Gabbard and the host both criticized Clinton for her comments."When you look at the media establishment pushing a lot of the same narrative and a lot of the same message, then you can see how someone gets away with calling a sitting member of Congress, a candidate for president, a soldier actively serving in the National Guard, veteran of two Middle East deployments, basically a traitor of the country that I love and that I'm willing to lay my life down for," Gabbard told Rogan. "And to get away with it without any evidence or basis whatsoever."When Rogan asked how Clinton was able to make her accusation without any evidence to support it, Gabbard blamed the "power of the Clinton machine" and "the power of the political establishment" for allowing Clinton's accusation to go unchecked.Gabbard is currently polling at below 2 percent of the national Democratic primary vote, according to RealClearPolitics. The congresswoman raised considerable controversy by meeting with Syrian dictator Bashar al Assad in 2017. |
China's H-20 Stealth Bomber Could Be the U.S. Military's Worst Nightmare Posted: 25 Nov 2019 07:30 PM PST |
Hawaii man arrested for 'extreme stalking' of family in Utah Posted: 27 Nov 2019 05:39 AM PST |
20 of the World's Most Stunning Public Staircases Posted: 27 Nov 2019 05:00 AM PST |
PREVIEW-Bronx man, battling own legal woes, brings gun rights case to U.S. Supreme Court Posted: 27 Nov 2019 03:01 AM PST Two weeks before Efrain Alvarez and his attorneys asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear their challenge to a New York City regulation that limited where licensed handgun owners could transport their weapons, police officers showed up at his Bronx apartment and took away all his firearms. From two imposing steel vaults in the back bedroom, they confiscated around 45 firearms, including five handguns. |
Trump will ‘absolutely’ designate Mexican cartels like CJNG as terrorists. Will it help? Posted: 27 Nov 2019 02:25 PM PST |
New toll road cuts Moscow-Saint Petersburg drive in half Posted: 27 Nov 2019 07:06 AM PST President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday opened what has been billed as Russia's first modern motorway, almost halving the driving time between the two biggest cities of Moscow and Saint Petersburg. The "Neva" toll road, running 669 kilometres (416 miles) and named after Saint Petersburg's main river, is Russia's first long-distance toll road. It boasts no traffic lights and a higher maximum speed limit of 130 kilometres per hour (81 miles per hour) versus 110 kph on other roads. |
Woman kept husband’s body in freezer for up to 11 years Posted: 27 Nov 2019 04:49 AM PST |
The Latest: Airports hit in stormy California Posted: 26 Nov 2019 07:38 AM PST Stormy weather and a power outage have affected two Northern California airports as a storm hits the region. KPIX-TV says the Federal Aviation Administration imposed a ground delay at San Francisco International Airport Tuesday because of the weather, cutting the number of arrivals in half. The airport reported several hundred delayed flights and about two dozen cancellations. |
Posted: 27 Nov 2019 08:42 AM PST When people talk about what the Chinese government is doing to the Uyghur people in northwest China, they tend to refer to the Nazis. They can be excused.In April 2018, Jerome A. Cohen raised the specter of the Nazis. He is considered the dean of China scholars in the United States, born in 1930. He is a very careful, judicious man. He would not use the N-word -- "Nazi" -- lightly. But he said that what was happening to the Uyghurs reminded him of his relatives in Austria and Germany. Some 40 of them were killed.At the beginning of this month, Fred Hiatt of the Washington Post had an article headed "In China, every day is Kristallnacht." He noted that you are not supposed to bring up the Nazis, because the Holocaust was a unique event. Yet, in a discussion of northwest China, the Nazis are hard to avoid.The government has rounded up more than a million Uyghurs and other minorities, throwing them into concentration camps, or "reeducation" camps. These camps constitute a Chinese gulag archipelago.Among the Uyghurs, there are a relative handful of militants, as there are among the Rohingyas (the minority people whom the Burmese government has brutalized). This gives the government an excuse to go after everyone -- think of Lidice, multiplied untold times.Some Uyghur inmates have been tortured to death; many have been driven to suicide. The Chinese government aims to stamp out Uyghur culture, religion, language -- all of it.The government has moved ethnic Chinese men into Uyghur homes, to act as substitute fathers and husbands. The real fathers and husbands are away in the camps (if they are indeed still alive).Also, the government gets them young. The government rounds up young Uyghurs, before they have committed any "crime," even in the Communist Party's eyes. In Cuba, the government has done the same thing, for decades. The Cuban government commonly arrests people on the charge of "pre-criminal social dangerousness."On Monday, the Associated Press had a staggering report. It talks of "the Chinese government's deliberate strategy to lock up ethnic minorities even before they commit a crime, to rewire their thoughts and the language they speak." The report also cites a slogan -- a mission statement, if you will -- from the Ministry of Justice: to "wash brains, cleanse hearts, support the right, remove the wrong."In Xinjiang Province, where the Uyghurs live -- the Uyghurs themselves call it "East Turkestan" -- the Chinese government has created a near-perfect Orwellian police state. As the AP reports,> Beijing is pioneering a new form of social control using data and artificial intelligence. Drawing on data collected by mass surveillance technology, computers issued the names of tens of thousands of people for interrogation or detention in just one week.In charge of Xinjiang is Chen Quanguo, a notorious name in China. Earlier in this decade, he was sent to Tibet, to subdue that proud, rebellious people. He did such a good job of it, he was sent to Xinjiang to do the same, and worse. "Round up everyone who should be rounded up," is his word.This directive is contained in an astonishing trove of documents, given to the New York Times. The documents come from inside the Chinese Communist Party and number more than 400 pages. They were given to the Times by some brave, daring leaker. They make for horrifying reading.So does the AP report, which also relies on documents. Here is one excerpt from that report -- a story, a piece of testimony -- for those who can stomach it:> Mamattursun Omar, a Uighur chef arrested after working in Egypt, was interrogated in four detention facilities over nine months in 2017. Omar told the AP that police asked him to verify the identities of other Uighurs in Egypt.> > Eventually, Omar says, they began torturing him to make him confess that Uighur students had gone to Egypt to take part in jihad. They strapped him to a contraption called a "tiger chair," shocked him with electric batons, beat him with pipes and whipped him with computer cords.> > "I couldn't take it anymore," Omar said. "I just told them what they wanted me to say."> > Omar gave the names of six others who worked at a restaurant with him in Egypt. All were sent to prison.In response to the AP, the Chinese government has said, "Fake news." Unfortunately, it is not.Xinjiang Province, or East Turkestan, is probably the biggest human-rights emergency in the world right now (unless you consider North Korea, which is an ongoing emergency). China in general is a kind of emergency. As Jerry Cohen has said, Xi Jinping -- the CCP No. 1 -- is presiding over the most repressive period in China since Mao's Cultural Revolution.What can be done, for the Uyghurs in particular? Beijing should be made to pay a price. Business as usual should be disrupted. What is happening in northwest China is not normal, and the world should not proceed normally.Free World companies that abet China's repression should be sanctioned and shamed. Chinese officials themselves should be sanctioned, if not shamed. The Winter Olympics are scheduled for Beijing in 2022 -- why?Above all, Free World governments should call attention to this emergency. They should shine a light on it. Dictatorships like to operate in secrecy. Darkness is their friend, and so is silence. People with megaphones should not shut up about this.The president of the United States has the biggest megaphone of all. He should give voice to American values and stand up for freedom, as our leaders long have, however unevenly.William F. Buckley Jr. used to say that everyone has a tank of indignation. You can't be indignant about every injustice, all day. So, what are you going to spend your tank on? There is no better "spending," today, than the horror faced by Uyghurs. |
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