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- Buttigieg: I won't 'take lectures on family values' from Rush Limbaugh
- Gunmen kill 24 in attack on Burkina Faso church
- 'Red flag' gun-control proposal is a recipe for decreased safety and less freedom
- Cruise passengers took Cambodia bus tours despite virus fears
- The global spread of the new coronavirus: Where is it?
- American Passenger’s Coronavirus Diagnosis Raises New Fears
- Chinese President Xi knew severity of coronavirus weeks before going public; 40 Americans on cruise ship infected
- Seattle-area teachers reported fired for being gay; Catholic school says they resigned
- Biden says he'd 'disown' anyone who made online attacks like Bernie Sanders' supporters
- Killing of 7-year-old girl stokes anger in Mexico
- Push for universal basic income will outlive Andrew Yang's 2020 presidential campaign
- Cruise operator races to track Cambodia passengers over virus fears
- A return to Auschwitz, 75 years after liberation
- Pakistan to consider importing insecticides from India to fight locusts
- American woman, 83, tests positive for coronavirus after disembarking Holland America ship
- Ocasio-Cortez faces 13 challengers – but can anyone unseat her?
- Ex-wife of man accused of killing 8 describes 1st shooting
- As Trump Gives Up on ‘Endless Wars,' Russia, China, and Iran Move In
- Cruise passengers scatter, take Cambodia bus tours despite virus fears
- Tennessee flooding: 'Unprecedented' floods make homes slide into river
- Would the Equal Rights Amendment Enshrine Abortion Rights in the Constitution?
- Police allegedly held a black student at gunpoint. Now the governor wants an investigation
- 14 Americans test positive for coronavirus after evacuation from quarantined cruise ship
- A GOP senator keeps pushing a thoroughly debunked theory that the Wuhan coronavirus is a leaked Chinese biological weapon gone wrong
- Mexican president blames murder of young girl on past governments
- North Korea vs. South Korea: Who Wins a War Straight-Up?
- Suicide bomber in SW Pakistan kills 8 at Islamist rally
- Trump attends wedding of White House aides
- Japan suffers worst economic slump in five years
- 'Everything is a mess right now': Hundreds who were stuck on Westerdam cruise ship held up in Cambodia
- Rain to drench East Coast as Great Lakes region gets snow
- Russian intelligence agents reportedly went to Ireland to inspect undersea cables, and it's reigniting fears they could cut them and take entire countries offline
- 11 Children Among 26 People Shot During Single Weekend of Gun Violence in Chicago
- Coronavirus Proves One Thing: China's Rise Is Built on Quicksand
- Indonesian authorities call for calm after radiation found at housing complex near Jakarta
- The Latest: Warren calls for party unity in taking on Trump
- Cuba burning tires to power factory as US oil sanctions bite
- American woman from cruise ship tests positive again for coronavirus
- Indiana professor is suspended for calling police on student who wouldn't switch seats
- Airlines, officials trace path of couple diagnosed with coronavirus that flew from Hawaii
- Knife-Wielding Robbers in Hong Kong Steal 600 Rolls of Toilet Paper Amid Coronavirus Panic
- The Coronavirus Comes for Taiwan
- China legal activist who called on Xi to 'give way' arrested- activists
- Trump reportedly urged the CIA to hunt and kill Osama bin Laden's son instead of more pressing terrorist threats
Buttigieg: I won't 'take lectures on family values' from Rush Limbaugh Posted: 16 Feb 2020 07:59 AM PST |
Gunmen kill 24 in attack on Burkina Faso church Posted: 17 Feb 2020 06:08 AM PST Gunmen killed twenty-four people, including a pastor, in an attack on a church during Sunday mass in northwestern Burkina Faso, four security sources told Reuters on Monday. It was not immediately clear who was responsible for the attack, which comes as jihadist groups with links to al Qaeda and Islamic State seek to gain control over once peaceful rural Burkina Faso, fuelling ethnic and religious conflict. The violence threatens to upend traditionally peaceful relations between Burkina Faso's majority Muslim community and its Christians, who represent up to a quarter of the population. |
'Red flag' gun-control proposal is a recipe for decreased safety and less freedom Posted: 16 Feb 2020 02:00 AM PST |
Cruise passengers took Cambodia bus tours despite virus fears Posted: 17 Feb 2020 12:45 PM PST |
The global spread of the new coronavirus: Where is it? Posted: 17 Feb 2020 04:39 PM PST |
American Passenger’s Coronavirus Diagnosis Raises New Fears Posted: 16 Feb 2020 12:31 PM PST Officials are scrambling to track down passengers who came into contact with an American woman who tested positive for coronavirus after leaving a cruise ship that was supposedly free of the bug.The nightmare scenario linked to the MS Westerdam, which is docked in Cambodia, came as the U.S. evacuated Americans from another cruise liner, the Diamond Princess. More than 300 passengers, including 44 Americans, were infected on that voyage.The MS Westerdam was stranded at sea for two weeks after Thailand, Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines, and Guam refused to let it dock because it had made a stop in Hong Kong.It was finally allowed to dock in Cambodia and began disembarking passengers on Friday. An 83-year-old U.S. woman who got off with her husband flew to Malaysia with 145 other cruise passengers.She later felt ill at the Kuala Lumpur airport and sought medical help. The Holland America cruise company confirmed Sunday that she had tested positive for COVID-19, as the new coronavirus originating from Wuhan, China, has been named.Now health officials must track down other travelers, who have since dispersed, to make sure they get screened for the contagious illness.Beijing's Deadly Mistakes on Coronavirus"We are in close coordination with some of the leading health experts from around the world," Dr. Grant Tarling, chief medical officer for Holland America Line, said in a statement."These experts are working with the appropriate national health authorities to investigate and follow-up with individuals who may have come in contact with the guest."Holland America said it screened 1,445 passengers on board Feb. 10 and did not find any elevated temperatures. "During the voyage there was no indication of COVID-19 on the ship," it said.But the cruise line said it had tested just 20 patients for the virus—all of whom visited the on-ship medical clinic—and all were negative. But the 83-year-old American never visited the clinic and was never tested.If she was sick while on board the Westerdam and did not develop symptoms until later, it raises the question of whether other cruise passengers, who have gone on to final destinations, could fall into the same category.The diagnosis underscores the continuing uncertainty about whether, and to what degree, the average patient can spread coronavirus before they show symptoms.As the Westerdam situation unfolded, the U.S. evacuated about 300 Americans who had been quarantined on another cruise ship, the Diamond Princess, where 355 people were infected with coronavirus.At least some of them will need to be quarantined for another two weeks once they arrive back in the U.S. Matthew Smith, who has been chronicling the on-board quarantine on Twitter, said he and his wife decided to stay behind.COVID-19 has killed 1,770 people in China, 1o5 of them on Monday, the government announced. On Sunday, Chinese officials had been quick to point out that the number of new cases had declined the three previous day and credited their infection control measures—but the number crept up again on Monday.The head of the World Health Organization cautioned that it was "impossible to predict which direction this epidemic will take," and that unpredictability could be seen in Taiwan, where officials revealed the first person to die of coronavirus was a cab driver, who got sick after picking up passengers from China, Hong Kong and Macau. One of the man's family members has also tested positive. Officials there are now trying to figure out who was in the man's cab.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: 16 Feb 2020 05:36 PM PST |
Seattle-area teachers reported fired for being gay; Catholic school says they resigned Posted: 16 Feb 2020 11:45 AM PST |
Posted: 15 Feb 2020 07:53 PM PST |
Killing of 7-year-old girl stokes anger in Mexico Posted: 17 Feb 2020 10:00 AM PST The killing of a 7-year-old girl on the southern outskirts of Mexico City has stoked rising anger over brutal slayings of women, including one found stabbed to death and skinned earlier this month. The killings have proved a politically difficult issue for President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who said protests over the killings were an attempt to distract attention from his social programs. |
Push for universal basic income will outlive Andrew Yang's 2020 presidential campaign Posted: 17 Feb 2020 02:00 AM PST |
Cruise operator races to track Cambodia passengers over virus fears Posted: 17 Feb 2020 02:04 AM PST A US cruise operator is working to track down hundreds of passengers who disembarked a luxury liner in Cambodia after one traveller was later diagnosed with the deadly new coronavirus. The Westerdam was at sea for two weeks during which it was barred from Japan, Guam, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Thailand over fears it could be carrying the virus, which originated in China and has killed nearly 1,800 people. Cambodia, a staunch ally of Beijing, allowed the ship to dock Thursday at its southern coastal town of Sihanoukville, with authorities carrying out temperature checks on passengers before they left the ship to catch flights home. |
A return to Auschwitz, 75 years after liberation Posted: 15 Feb 2020 07:47 PM PST |
Pakistan to consider importing insecticides from India to fight locusts Posted: 17 Feb 2020 04:57 AM PST Pakistan is likely to import insecticides from arch-rival India to brace itself for any locust attacks this summer, bypassing a ban on trade between the neighbouring nations. A copy of Cabinet agenda for a Tuesday meeting seen by Reuters has the import option on it. Pakistan severed all diplomatic and trade ties with New Delhi in August after India revoked the special status of Kashmir, a disputed territory between the two rivals, who have fought two of their three wars over the Himalayan region. |
American woman, 83, tests positive for coronavirus after disembarking Holland America ship Posted: 16 Feb 2020 08:35 AM PST |
Ocasio-Cortez faces 13 challengers – but can anyone unseat her? Posted: 17 Feb 2020 01:00 AM PST Eight Republicans and five Democrats are vying to take on AOC – but many voters in the district are voicing support for the congresswomanDemocratic leftist superstar Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has risen to national – and even global – fame from an unlikely position as a young first-time congresswoman from New York.But now she faces 13 different challengers, including from within her own party as well as Republicans, as she prepares for her first congressional re-election campaign. News of the multiple bids to unseat AOC, however, came as a surprise to many voters on the streets of her district in the Bronx last week.Some voters still had not heard of the progressive superstar. Others said they would weigh the merits of her rivals as the contests heat up over the summer. But most voiced support, arguing that almost two years since Ocasio-Cortez threw a grenade at the Democratic establishment by ousting incumbent Joe Crowley, her progressive agenda – touting universal healthcare and a Green New Deal – was only now taking hold in the nation's political capital."Give her a chance! We knew who she was when we sent her, that she'd make a noise, and making a noise was why we sent her," said local businessman Abdul Abbas."She's done good things for the Bronx," concurred Carol Heraldo. "I like how she presents herself as woman, that she's firm, that she took what she believed and made it real. We don't see a lot of young people accomplish a lot because they're afraid – and she's not afraid."> We knew who she was when we sent her, that she'd make a noise, and making a noise was why we sent her> > Abdul AbbasThat's not how all see it. The first-term congresswoman is facing eight Republican and five Democratic candidates aiming to unseat her. Some appear symbolic, with little fundraising potential or appetite for collecting the necessary 4,000 signatures to get on the ballot.At her first campaign rally on Saturday, Ocasio-Cortez said she hoped to multiply turnout by four, reaching 60,000 votes in the primary election. She declined to be drawn on the challengers that have lined up to contest her seat."I think everyone has a right [to run]. I of course won my seat with a primary," she told the New York Post. "I would never begrudge anyone trying to run in a primary."Ocasio-Cortez's Republican challengers certainly seem to have their work cut out for them. In 2018 she steamedrolled the Republican candidate by a margin of 78%.With about $3.4m in her campaigns re-election coffers in a solidly Democratic district, Ocasio-Cortez's Republican challengers probably plan on merely damaging her or securing a bigger national media profile by taking on such a famed opponent.John Cummings, a former police officer, raised $425,000 in 10 weeks after announcing his candidacy for the Republican nomination on Fox & Friends. Jamaican immigrant Scherie Murray gave her first interview to Fox News's Sean Hannity and raised a similar amount.But having led a campaign to prevent Amazon from establishing a headquarters in neighboring Long Island City, and established herself as a leading member of "the Squad", the self-described group of progressive congresswomen that includes Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, Ocasio-Cortez is a political target.In a district that hasn't voted Republican in half a century, the Republican candidates are tackling a candidate who has become a lightning rod for rightwing anger nationally."Anything that indicates AOC is vulnerable would be godsend to people who don't like her or are upset about the Amazon loss of 27,000 jobs in New York," said veteran Democratic party strategist Hank Sheinkopf, warning: "Politics are unstable across the nation. Things are happening that we haven't seen or thought about before."Strategically speaking, a challenge to one of the most influential voices on the American left also could affect candidates in other, more marginal races. Within New York City, more than three dozen candidates promoting progressive, generational change are taking on congressional incumbents.In her own district, enthusiasm among supporters for Ocasio-Cortez is unwavering. The Working Families party "knows Ocasio-Cortez will beat any challengers who might arise because she's fighting tirelessly for her district and her agenda speaks to the people of Queens and the Bronx", the group said in a statement to the Guardian.But the Ocasio-Cortez campaign also knows that opposition to her remains deep within the Democratic party establishment. Open warfare broke out in July when the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, took aim at her and her close colleagues in the Squad. "All these people have is their public whatever and their Twitter world," Pelosi said. "But they didn't have any following. They're four people and that's how many votes they got."In a tweeted response, Ocasio-Cortez said: "That public 'whatever' is called public sentiment. And wielding the power to shift it is how we actually achieve meaningful change in this country."The progressive-moderate split could be clearly discerned, too, in the battle last year over the election of a new Queens district attorney when Tiffany Cabán, an Ocasio-Cortez-backed candidate running on a platform to reduce record levels of incarceration, initially declared victory with a margin of 1,100 votes.But establishment-backed candidate Melinda Katz demanded a recount and ultimately pulled ahead by 55 votes after a series of court challenges over voter eligibility.Ocasio-Cortez's most coherent Democratic challenger to date is former longtime CNBC correspondent and anchor Michelle Caruso-Cabrera. Caruso-Cabrera, who published a book in 2011 called You Know I'm Right: More Prosperity, Less Government, is a skeptic of big government and a proponent of free markets.Caruso-Cabrera is a relatively recent Democratic party member who registered her candidacy last week, appear to be preparing a more serious challenge as she seeks to take on Ocasio-Cortez in the Democratic primary."Caruso-Cabrero is as wild a card as AOC was two years ago," said Sheinkopf. "Caruso-Cabrero is likely to lead a spirited challenge and could be very competitive."She certainly fancies her chances."I am the daughter and granddaughter of working-class Italian and Cuban immigrants," Caruso-Cabrera said in a statement. "I am so lucky to have had such a wonderful career and I want everybody to have the opportunity that I've had. That's why I'm running."Ocasio-Cortez's campaign declined to comment on the challenge. But people close to the campaign said Caruso-Cabrera could be AOC's most potent opponent at least from the Democratic side, even though she represents a radically different vision of the party."It'll be interesting if she decides to hide her libertarian-conservative ideology," one source said. "Certain conservatives are upset that AOC beat Crowley and over Amazon so there maybe certain Koch-type figures who have had some role in recruiting her. I don't think [Caruso-Cabrera] is going to get young Democrats from around the country to work for her, but you could see young conservative activists in the district because they all spend so much time condemning her politics or lusting after her."However, candidates on both sides will be looking to raise money from outside the relatively poor, racially diverse district. Ocasio-Cortez's fame has long transcended the borders of her hardscrabble patch of the Bronx."AOC can raise an awful lot of money throughout the country from all sorts of people, but within the district there's not an awful lot of money to raise," said Sheinkopf. |
Ex-wife of man accused of killing 8 describes 1st shooting Posted: 16 Feb 2020 07:53 PM PST Sheena May was the only witness called Sunday at the trial in Magnolia, telling jurors her divorce had become final in recent days, The Daily Leader newspaper reported. The woman's ex-husband, Willie Cory Godbolt, 37, is charged with capital murder, accused of fatally shooting the eight, including the deputy who arrived at his in-laws' home in the long Memorial Day holiday weekend of May 2017. The killings began after Godbolt entered the in-laws' home in Bogue Chitto and got into an argument with his estranged wife and her family over the couple's two children, witness Vincent Mitchell testified earlier at trial, according to The Daily Leader. |
As Trump Gives Up on ‘Endless Wars,' Russia, China, and Iran Move In Posted: 17 Feb 2020 10:08 AM PST JERUSALEM–Two decades of expanding operations against what United States Special Operations Command called a "global insurgency of state and non-state actors" has led to fatigue at home and questions abroad about U.S. strategy. Trump, Afghanistan, and 'The Tweet of Damocles'The latest Trump administration deal with the Taliban, challenges to the U.S. role in Syria and Iraq, and a potential reduction of forces in Africa point to a global trend in how the U.S. will deal with counter-insurgency in the future. What we're looking at is a global drawdown in U.S. forces committed to counter-terrorist operations at the same time President Donald Trump is demanding other countries, including NATO allies, do more. The idea is for the U.S. to focus on using technology, such as drones, while local forces do the fighting on the ground.This long-term shift has long-term consequences that mean countries such as Iran, China and Russia, which the U.S. sees as adversaries, will have a larger footprint in places where the U.S. is reducing its role. Outsourcing counter-terrorism to these countries may not have been the plan, but it is likely one outcome.U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo began a tour of Africa on Feb. 16 in Senegal where the Flintlock 2020 exercise is underway with neighboring Mauritania. Some 1,600 soldiers from 30 African states and western allies are participating in the annual drill from February 17-28. The U.S. says it is the year's "premier special operations" exercise that strengthens security across a swath of countries through what's called the Trans-Sahara Counter-Terrorism Partnership. The concept, pushed in 2018 via an act of Congress, was to improve the capabilities of countries to fight terror.But the picture is bleaker than past U.S. statements have indicated. Funding to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars to fight terror spread across Niger, Mauritania, Mali, Nigeria and a dozen states from Senegal to Somalia hasn't reduced terror and has resulted in Washington's decision to reconsider what comes next. The U.S. pulled forces out of Libya in 2019 and three Americans were killed in an attack on a base in Kenya by Somalia's Al-Shabab in January.The Other Attack on Americans That Has U.S. Forces Unnerved: KenyaAlthough Pompeo says that "we'll get it right" in terms of U.S. commitment to a swath of African states, reports indicate the U.S. is reducing the footprint on the ground. Washington has "downgraded" efforts against extremists, the New York Times reported in mid-February. France, which sent hundreds more troops to the Sahel region recently, has warned this is a bad idea. The overall numbers could mean cutting in half the U.S. presence of 5,000 troops in a dozen locations.Changes in Africa strategy are only the tip of the iceberg of a much larger policy shift. On the one hand the U.S. National Defense Strategy wants to move away from counter-insurgency to competing against large states like Iran, China and Russia. The Pentagon believes that "inter-state strategic competition, not terrorism, is now the primary concern in US national security." Since U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) expanded from 47,000 in 2007 to 80,000 today, it might be argued that the U.S. has reached peak strength in fighting terror and now can move on successfully. The problem is that from Afghanistan to the Philippines to Niger there has not been a major success.In Afghanistan, where the U.S. has been fighting the Taliban for almost 20 years, some sort of peace deal is in the works. President Donald Trump has sought to end such "endless wars," and Democrats running to replace him also want to end this one. In Iraq and Syria the U.S. appears to be reducing its role as well. Trump twice announced a withdrawal from Syria only to relent and keep troops to protect "oil" while slowly walking away from America's anti-ISIS partners in the Syrian Democratic Forces.Plans to use bases in neighboring Iraq to "watch Iran" have not panned out and the U.S. finds itself pressured to leave most of Iraq after tensions with Iran boiled over in January following U.S. decision to blow away near Baghdad airport Iran's Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani and Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis.Meanwhile, rocket fire has targeted U.S. bases and forces near the US embassy almost every week since October 2019.The long-term result in Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, and across Africa can be seen symbolically in what is already happening in the Philippines. For two decades Washington and Manila worked closely against extremist groups. Now Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte wants to scrap the Visiting Forces Agreement amid increasingly friendly relations with China.For a more isolationist-inclined American public that may not matter, but it does mean China and other countries will aid the Philippines in the fight against Islamist insurgents. That has implications across Asia and the Pacific. In Africa, Russian President Vladimir Putin has set his eyes on a larger role that includes priority access to vital mineral resources. He held a summit in October with African diplomats. Russia's Wagner group and other contractors play an increasing role in Sudan, the Central African Republic, Libya and Mozambique.In each place where the U.S. seeks a smaller footprint there will be a competition to fill the vacuum.France will try to fill it in Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, and Burkina Faso, the G5 countries it works with in the Sahel. But in many cases there won't be NATO powers that share U.S. values doing the heavy lifting. Instead it will be Russia, Iran, China, Turkey, and even Saudi Arabia or India playing a bigger role. That means counter-insurgency that looks more like Riyadh's campaign in Yemen, Russia's in Syria and Chechnya, China's in Xinjiang, Turkey's in Afrin, or India's in Kashmir. While that may fit the bill of a Trump administration that wants to spend less American treasure abroad and wants others to do more of the work, in the long term it means a fundamental change in the international role of the United States. It also means that in an attempt to shift resources to confronting major states, the U.S. will provide a vacuum for some of those states precisely–China, Russia and Iran–to play a greater role in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia.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. |
Cruise passengers scatter, take Cambodia bus tours despite virus fears Posted: 17 Feb 2020 11:16 AM PST A scramble intensified Monday to trace passengers from a US cruise liner allowed to disembark in Cambodia despite at least one traveller later being diagnosed with the deadly coronavirus. There are fears scores of cruise goers have been scattered across the world without full health checks -- as Cambodia on Monday afternoon treated a few dozen of the passengers to bus tours around the capital Phnom Penh. Passenger Christina Kerby, whose drole tweets as the Westerdam was bounced across ports drew widespread attention, admitted she "was surprised" to be allowed on a tour of the Cambodian capital before being given the complete all-clear from the virus. |
Tennessee flooding: 'Unprecedented' floods make homes slide into river Posted: 17 Feb 2020 11:18 AM PST Authorities managing dams in Tennessee and Mississippi must make difficult decisions as floodwaters swell along the states' rivers; the surging water pressing against the dams has to be released at some point, and when it does, it often spells disaster for individuals living downstream from the dams.Case in point: two large homes slid into the flood-swelled waters of the Tennessee River over the weekend. |
Would the Equal Rights Amendment Enshrine Abortion Rights in the Constitution? Posted: 17 Feb 2020 09:52 AM PST Congressional Democrats are on a quest to resurrect the Equal Rights Amendment. This week, the House of Representatives passed a measure attempting to nullify the deadline that Congress had imposed in the resolution sent to states for ratification in 1972.That deadline has long since come and gone, and the amendment failed to receive the necessary support from three-quarters of the states. But that isn't stopping Democrats from trying again, and many are convinced that it won't be long before the Equal Rights Amendment is added to the Constitution.In a vote backed by every Democratic representative and five Republicans, the House sought to erase the time limit placed on the amendment by Congress several decades ago. The move came shortly after Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg threw cold water on the progressive notion that enacting the amendment would simply be a matter of ignoring the congressionally created deadline.In remarks at the Georgetown University Law Center, Ginsburg suggested that, despite her long-time support for the amendment, it likely won't be able to come to fruition for quite some time. "I'd like to see it start over," Ginsburg said of the process to ratify the amendment. "There's too much controversy about latecomers — Virginia [approved it] long after the deadline passed," she added. "Plus, a number of states have withdrawn their ratification. So if you count a latecomer on the plus side, how can you disregard states that said, 'We've changed our minds?'"Amid the controversy, House speaker Nancy Pelosi shepherded the new resolution through her chamber on Thursday, saying as she did so that the amendment "has nothing to do with the abortion issue."Her allies beg to differ."An ERA — properly interpreted — could negate the hundreds of laws that have been passed restricting access to abortion care and contraception," according to the National Organization for Women.NARAL Pro-Choice America agrees. "With its ratification, the ERA would reinforce the constitutional right to abortion by clarifying that the sexes have equal rights, which would require judges to strike down anti-abortion laws because they violate both the constitutional right to privacy and sexual equality," the group's website states.Lawyers for the National Women's Law Center have echoed this sentiment. Emily Martin, general counsel for the NWLC, told the Associated Press last month that the ERA would enable courts to rule that abortion restrictions "perpetuate gender inequality." Kelli Garcia, director of "reproductive-justice initiatives" and NWLC senior counsel, told Vice last May that "the ERA would help create a basis to challenge abortion restrictions."A recent Politico article, meanwhile, ran under the headline "How the debate over the ERA became a fight over abortion." "Conservatives argue that because only women can have abortions, any restrictions on the procedure could be deemed unconstitutional under the ERA," the article states. But this isn't a conservative argument at all — as noted above, this is how abortion supporters themselves view the amendment.For decades, many legal scholars in favor of abortion rights have disagreed with the logic of the justices' ruling in Roe v. Wade, which legalized abortion based on a supposed right to privacy located in the Constitution. Instead, these scholars argue, abortion rights are guaranteed to women under the equal-protection clause of the 14th Amendment. The ERA would enshrine in the Constitution a similar basis for this defense of abortion."Advocates for the ERA acknowledge that abortion needs to be part of the conversation. Any debate over women's rights, they say, must also address control over when and whether to have children," the Politico piece explains. "'There are no equal rights for women without access to abortion, plain and simple,' said Alexis McGill Johnson, acting president and CEO of Planned Parenthood."The same article notes that advocates of the amendment have dismissed as "a nonstarter" proposals from pro-life groups that they would support the ERA if it included language explicitly stating that it doesn't apply to abortion.Though the text of the ERA doesn't explicitly state that it exists to protect abortion rights — and to nullify abortion restrictions, including those that prevent taxpayer-funded abortion — its own supporters have long understood it to do exactly that. |
Police allegedly held a black student at gunpoint. Now the governor wants an investigation Posted: 16 Feb 2020 04:13 PM PST |
14 Americans test positive for coronavirus after evacuation from quarantined cruise ship Posted: 17 Feb 2020 08:36 AM PST |
Posted: 17 Feb 2020 07:52 AM PST |
Mexican president blames murder of young girl on past governments Posted: 17 Feb 2020 11:01 AM PST |
North Korea vs. South Korea: Who Wins a War Straight-Up? Posted: 16 Feb 2020 12:00 PM PST |
Suicide bomber in SW Pakistan kills 8 at Islamist rally Posted: 17 Feb 2020 06:20 AM PST A powerful suicide bombing killed eight people and wounded 16 others in Pakistan's restive Baluchistan province on Monday, local police said, when it struck an Islamist rally in the regional capital. Police said the blast went off near Quetta's press club, where dozens of supporters for a Sunni militant group had gathered outside. City police chief Abur Razza Cheema said dozens of followers of the radical Ahle Sunnat Wal Jammat party were rallying to pay tribute to Islam's first caliph when the bomber blew himself up there. |
Trump attends wedding of White House aides Posted: 17 Feb 2020 04:02 AM PST |
Japan suffers worst economic slump in five years Posted: 16 Feb 2020 06:22 PM PST Japan has suffered its worst quarterly GDP contraction in more than five years, with a tax hike and a deadly typhoon taking a toll on the world's third-largest economy. The nation's gross domestic product in the three months to December shrank 1.6 percent from the previous quarter, even before the novel coronavirus outbreak in China hit Japan, according to official data published on Monday. The quarter was marked by a rise in consumption tax from eight percent to 10 percent, as well as Typhoon Hagibis, which killed more than 100 people and caused widespread flooding. |
Posted: 17 Feb 2020 02:26 PM PST |
Rain to drench East Coast as Great Lakes region gets snow Posted: 17 Feb 2020 07:17 AM PST |
Posted: 17 Feb 2020 04:49 AM PST |
11 Children Among 26 People Shot During Single Weekend of Gun Violence in Chicago Posted: 17 Feb 2020 11:51 AM PST |
Coronavirus Proves One Thing: China's Rise Is Built on Quicksand Posted: 16 Feb 2020 09:34 AM PST |
Indonesian authorities call for calm after radiation found at housing complex near Jakarta Posted: 17 Feb 2020 06:17 AM PST |
The Latest: Warren calls for party unity in taking on Trump Posted: 17 Feb 2020 02:07 PM PST Elizabeth Warren is preaching Democratic unity in taking on President Donald Trump, a challenge she framed as an existential crisis for America. Warren, having partly recovered her voice after catching a cold, said at a Monday afternoon town hall in the Las Vegas suburb of Henderson that America is at its best when it takes on a problem. The Massachusetts senator also spoke about how she's adopted policy plans and hired staff from Democrats who have dropped out of the race, including New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, former Obama administration housing chief Julián Castro, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and California Sen. Kamala Harris. |
Cuba burning tires to power factory as US oil sanctions bite Posted: 17 Feb 2020 12:10 PM PST The Cuban government has ordered a cement factory to burn old tires to power its operations and save on oil, amid a worsening fuel shortage brought on by US sanctions on the Communist island. On orders of President Miguel Diaz-Canel, the firm Cementos Cienfuegos, located in the center of the country, will receive an increasing supply of used tires to burn, the official daily Granma said Monday. Cuba has been suffering oil shortages since last September, when the administration of President Donald Trump imposed sanctions on ships carrying petroleum to the island from its main fuel supplier Venezuela. |
American woman from cruise ship tests positive again for coronavirus Posted: 16 Feb 2020 12:25 PM PST |
Indiana professor is suspended for calling police on student who wouldn't switch seats Posted: 17 Feb 2020 01:46 PM PST |
Airlines, officials trace path of couple diagnosed with coronavirus that flew from Hawaii Posted: 17 Feb 2020 10:50 AM PST |
Knife-Wielding Robbers in Hong Kong Steal 600 Rolls of Toilet Paper Amid Coronavirus Panic Posted: 16 Feb 2020 10:46 PM PST |
The Coronavirus Comes for Taiwan Posted: 17 Feb 2020 05:32 AM PST |
China legal activist who called on Xi to 'give way' arrested- activists Posted: 17 Feb 2020 03:20 AM PST |
Posted: 16 Feb 2020 10:49 PM PST |
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