Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Yahoo! News: Weight Loss News

Yahoo! News: Weight Loss News


Centrist Dem Amy McGrath beats Charles Booker in Kentucky primary to face McConnell

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 09:42 AM PDT

Centrist Dem Amy McGrath beats Charles Booker in Kentucky primary to face McConnellThe former fighter pilot leveraged a massive fundraising advantage and absentee votes to survive a challenge from the progressive state senator.


Man arrested over fatal shooting in Kentucky park at center of protests

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 01:14 AM PDT

Man arrested over fatal shooting in Kentucky park at center of protests"The man has been participating in the protest since the beginning and he had been arrested a couple of times in the past several weeks," Schroeder said. Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer said he was saddened by the incident. The park has been a focal point of protests against the death of Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old emergency medical technicinan who was killed in a hail of gunfire when drug investigators burst into her home in Louisville on March 13.


Couple draw guns at crowd heading to St. Louis mayor's home

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 01:03 AM PDT

Couple draw guns at crowd heading to St. Louis mayor's homeA white couple who stood outside their St. Louis mansion and pointed guns at protesters support the Black Lives Matter movement and don't want to become heroes to those who oppose the cause, their attorney said Monday. Video posted online showed Mark McCloskey, 63, and his 61-year-old wife, Patricia, standing outside their Renaissance palazzo-style home Sunday night in the city's well-to-do Central West End neighborhood as protesters marched toward the mayor's home to demand her resignation. Mark McCloskey told KMOV-TV that he and wife, who are personal injury lawyers, were facing an "angry mob" on their private street and feared for their lives Sunday night.


School teacher who self-quarantined at Connecticut home for three weeks vanishes after going for a walk in early May

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 03:05 PM PDT

School teacher who self-quarantined at Connecticut home for three weeks vanishes after going for a walk in early MayGil Cunha was last seen just after midnight on May 7, 2020, at his parents' home on Overlook Avenue in West Haven, Connecticut. Later that morning, Gil's parents figured he was out for one of his daily walks. He never returned. Gil had been self-quarantining in his room the prior three weeks due to COVID-19 symptoms. He left behind two cell phones, his passport, credit cards and cash. The only item that appears to be missing is his driver's license. The West Haven Police Department is inve


Robbery Caught On Camera In Kips Bay

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 03:33 AM PDT

Robbery Caught On Camera In Kips BayPolice are searching for a man seen on video putting a woman into a chokehold and then stealing her bag.


Coming Soon: Russian Bombers (Now Armed with Hypersonic Missiles?)

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 02:30 PM PDT

Coming Soon: Russian Bombers (Now Armed with Hypersonic Missiles?)Hypersonic missiles have been seen as a potential game changer, with some in the U.S. military warning that there is really no defense against the missiles due to their speed.


Trump in ‘fragile’ mood and may drop out of 2020 race if poll numbers don’t improve, GOP insiders tell Fox News

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 08:27 AM PDT

Trump in 'fragile' mood and may drop out of 2020 race if poll numbers don't improve, GOP insiders tell Fox NewsDonald Trump may drop out of the 2020 presidential race if he believes he has no chance of winning, a Republican Party operative reportedly told Fox News.The claim comes in a report in the president's favourite news outlet that cites a number of GOP insiders who are concerned about Mr Trump's re-election prospects amid abysmal polling numbers.


'It makes it very difficult to fire them': police union contracts protect bad officers, critics warn

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 03:00 AM PDT

'It makes it very difficult to fire them': police union contracts protect bad officers, critics warnOversight in many US police forces has been rendered ineffective by union contracts accused of thwarting disciplinary proceedings A court in 2009 convicted Washington DC police officer Michael Sugg-Edwards of sexually assaulting a teenage woman in his squad car. After conducting its own internal investigation, the department quickly fired the then 35-year-old officer.But, six years later, Sugg-Edwards was back on the force. A provision in the police union's contract allowed him to appeal against the decision to a union-selected arbitrator who reversed the department's firing and reinstated him – with back pay.Such protections for officers who commit crimes are not unique to Washington. About 475 police union contracts at the nation's largest departments hold similar arbitration provisions, according to a 2019 Loyola University study. Those are accompanied by a startling array of other complex protections that shield officers accused of often violent misconduct from accountability.It all builds up to form a picture of how police contracts – which, like other labor contracts, govern the working conditions under which officers operate – have rendered police departments' disciplinary and oversight processes ineffective as officers are rarely held accountable for wrongdoing. That then encourages the police violence that sparked the massive nationwide protests in the wake of George Floyd's killing by a white police officer in Minneapolis."These [contract provisions] tie the hands of police chiefs and others who are trying to hold police officers accountable," said Carl Takei, an ACLU senior staff attorney focused on police practices. "It makes it very difficult to fire or discipline officers who engage in misconduct."The protections' impact on officer accountability is documented in a growing body of empirical studies and analyses. Nearly 90% of contracts at 178 midsize-to-large departments have at least one "problematic provision" that "could thwart legitimate disciplinary actions against officers engaged in misconduct,," Loyola policing scholar Stephen Rushin wrote in a 2017 study of contracts and police bills of rights.Among police-friendly provisions that Rushin and Campaign Zero, an activist group that tracks police union contracts, identified in separate analyses of over 650 departments:• 137 police agencies prohibit investigators from interrogating officers immediately after an incident. Louisiana's bill of rights grants officers 30 days, while Chicago officers are provided 48 hours.> It makes it very difficult to fire or discipline officers who engage in misconduct> > Carl Takei• 184 jurisdictions allow officers to review evidence against them before being interrogated.• 47 agencies require expungement of police misconduct records, in some cases after as little as two years. Others entirely shield disciplinary records from the public.• 74 departments don't allow an officer's misconduct history to be considered in future cases.• At least 40 departments require taxpayers to cover an officer's defense expenses.Rushin said the protections' impact is clear: "We have definitely made a lot of collective bargaining concessions at a substantial number of departments that can make it extremely difficult to hold police officers accountable."That's illustrated in the Floyd case. The Minneapolis police department contract and Minnesota police of bill of rights helped protect officer Derek Chauvin, who, before killing Floyd by kneeling on his neck, had been investigated by internal affairs at least 17 times since 2001.Per the union contract and bill of rights, the department erases exonerated or unsubstantiated misconduct records; delays interviews for 48 hours after an incident; prohibits meaningful civilian review boards; grants officers access to some evidence in an investigation; allows disciplinary action to be overturned by an arbitrator; and requires the public to pay for an officer's defense.Even amid intense public outcry, most details of previous complaints against Chauvin remain hidden from the public.A recent study strongly suggests contractual protections increase violent behavior among officers. It examined violent misconduct records after a 2003 Florida supreme court ruling that allowed the state's sheriff's departments to unionize. City departments already had collective bargaining rights, so the study compared violent incidents at the two types of departments.It found a 40% increase in violence – like assault and excessive force – at the sheriff's departments and no increase at the city departments."We really think what's driving this is decreased deterrence of wrongdoing from collective bargaining, and that's a really significant part of the policing story," said John Rappaport, one of its authors and a policing scholar at the University of Chicago Law School.Officers may feel safe committing crimes because data suggests that those who engage in misconduct are rarely disciplined internally.A Chicago police review taskforce found only 7% of complaints resulted during a four-year period in disciplinary action, and arbitrators reversed or reduced punishments in 73% of those cases. The report stated that collective bargaining agreements "provide an unfair advantage to officers" and "have essentially turned the code of silence into official policy".The officer who shot Laquan McDonald 16 times in the back escaped discipline in more than 20 complaints against him for excessive force. The Chicago police contract offers a range of protections from delaying interrogations to arbitration. Meanwhile, a Washington Post investigation of large departments found more than 450 out of nearly 2,000 officers fired for wrongdoing were reinstated, despite committing often violent crimes.In San Antonio, an officer fired twice for challenging handcuffed suspects to fight him for their freedom was reinstated by an arbitrator both times. A second San Antonio officer who engaged in unauthorized car chases was also reinstated twice. In Columbus and Oklahoma, officers who kicked men in the head were rehired.Cities made many of the disciplinary concessions to unions in lieu of pay increases during the 1980s when municipal tax revenue was tight. Unions won't give up those protections, Rushin said, which leaves it to politicians to enact change.He noted state lawmakers can force transparency by opening the collective bargaining process. In Washington, legislation approved this month takes away the union's ability to negotiate disciplinary processes and gives that authority to the police chief and mayor, the DC council chairman, Phil Mendelson, told the Guardian."When police have the ability to kill somebody, the disciplinary process should not be bargained for," he said. "When the police have the ability to take away liberty, the police should not be policing themselves."


Pakistani PM says 'no doubt' that India was behind stock exchange attack

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 04:37 AM PDT

Pakistani PM says 'no doubt' that India was behind stock exchange attackPakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan told parliament on Tuesday he had no doubt that India was behind an attack on the stock exchange building in the southern city of Karachi. Four gunmen armed with grenades attacked the Pakistan Stock Exchange on Monday, killing two guards and a policeman before security forces killed the attackers. "There is no doubt that India is behind the attack," Khan said in his address to parliament - a charge that India had denied a day earlier.


China enacts sweeping national security law seen as major blow to Hong Kong autonomy

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 06:13 AM PDT

China enacts sweeping national security law seen as major blow to Hong Kong autonomy"It's really the biggest crisis Hong Kong has faced in its modern history," said China-watcher Benedict Rogers.


Confederate flag losing prominence 155 years after Civil War

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 09:37 PM PDT

Confederate flag losing prominence 155 years after Civil WarLong a symbol of pride to some and hatred to others, the Confederate battle flag is losing its place of official prominence 155 years after rebellious Southern states lost a war to perpetuate slavery. Mississippi's Republican-controlled Legislature voted Sunday to remove the Civil War emblem from the state flag, a move that was both years in the making and notable for its swiftness amid a national debate over racial inequality following the police killing of George Floyd in Minnesota. Mississippi's was the last state flag to include the design.


'Dirty' depiction of Kim's wife outraged NKorea: Russian envoy

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 12:37 AM PDT

'Dirty' depiction of Kim's wife outraged NKorea: Russian envoyNorth Korea's fury over anti-Pyongyang leaflets launched from the South is driven by "dirty, insulting" depictions of leader Kim Jong Un's spouse, Russia's top envoy in the reclusive country has said. In recent weeks Pyongyang has issued a series of vitriolic condemnations over anti-North leaflets which defectors based in the South send across the militarised border -- usually attached to balloons or floated in bottles. The campaigns have long been a point of contention between the two Koreas, but this time, Pyongyang upped the pressure, blowing up a liaison office and threatening military measures.


Groups in wine, real estate, and technology have scrapped the word 'master' from their standard lingo

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 05:37 PM PDT

Groups in wine, real estate, and technology have scrapped the word 'master' from their standard lingoSome groups have revised their official terminology in a reckoning of systemic racism across industries in the US.


Study This Submarine: Could It Sink a U.S. Navy Aircraft Carrier?

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 11:00 PM PDT

Study This Submarine: Could It Sink a U.S. Navy Aircraft Carrier?"The ambush tactics for which the mini-sub is designed seem to fit the pattern of recent Iranian weapons procurement and their expressed interest in building a robust anti-access/area denial capability."


Poll: Biden, Trump locked in dead heat in Ohio, where Trump won by 8 in 2016

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 08:17 AM PDT

Poll: Biden, Trump locked in dead heat in Ohio, where Trump won by 8 in 2016Trump's job approval has remained about the same in Ohio for the past year, with 44% of those polled approving of the job he's done.


Colorado officers placed on leave after photos near site of Elijah McClain's death

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 11:20 PM PDT

Colorado officers placed on leave after photos near site of Elijah McClain's deathA statement from the interim police chief of Aurora, Colorado, does not detail the substance of the photos.


Pakistani pilots question government list of 'dubious' pilots

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 06:23 AM PDT

Pakistani pilots question government list of 'dubious' pilotsPakistani airline pilots and their union have raised questions about a government list of 262 pilots with "dubious" credentials, saying it is full of discrepancies. Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan announced last week the grounding of 262 airline pilots suspected of dodging their exams, a move that caused global concern. The minister said the pilots included 141 from Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), nine from Air Blue, 10 from Serene Airline, and 17 from Shaheen Airlines.


One man killed and another wounded in Seattle's occupied protest zone

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 08:06 AM PDT

One man killed and another wounded in Seattle's occupied protest zoneOne man was killed and another wounded early Monday in Seattle's "occupied" protest zone - the second deadly shooting in the area. Police said the shooting happened before dawn in the city's Capitol Hill neighborhood, near downtown. The Seattle Times reports that Harborview Medical Center said one wounded man was brought to the hospital in a private vehicle at about 3:15 a.m. The second was brought by Seattle Fire Department medics about 15 minutes later. The hospital said one man died and the other was in critical condition, Seattle police did not immediately release more information about the shooting. Demonstrators have occupied several blocks around the Seattle Police Department's East Precinct and a park for about two weeks after police abandoned the precinct following standoffs and clashes with protesters calling for racial justice and an end to police brutality.


China cuts Uighur births with IUDs, abortion, sterilization

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 09:04 PM PDT

China cuts Uighur births with IUDs, abortion, sterilizationThe Chinese government is taking draconian measures to slash birth rates among Uighurs and other minorities as part of a sweeping campaign to curb its Muslim population, even as it encourages some of the country's Han majority to have more children. While individual women have spoken out before about forced birth control, the practice is far more widespread and systematic than previously known, according to an AP investigation based on government statistics, state documents and interviews with 30 ex-detainees, family members and a former detention camp instructor. The campaign over the past four years in the far west region of Xinjiang is leading to what some experts are calling a form of "demographic genocide."


US could buy Turkey’s Russian-made S-400 under Senate proposal

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 02:42 PM PDT

US could buy Turkey's Russian-made S-400 under Senate proposalThe U.S. would be able to buy Turkey's Russian-made S-400 air defense system under legislation proposed in the Senate last week.


Fire kills 1, ruins 40 homes in Calif. desert town

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 10:13 PM PDT

Fire kills 1, ruins 40 homes in Calif. desert townA brush fire killed one person and destroyed about 40 homes in a remote desert town near the shrinking Salton Sea, California's largest lake, authorities said Monday. (June 30)


Mississippi votes to strip Confederate emblem from state flag

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 06:09 PM PDT

Mississippi votes to strip Confederate emblem from state flagThe southern state of Mississippi is the last in the US to feature the emblem on its flag.


The A-12 Avenger Shows Why The Navy Needs A Long-Range Strike Aircraft

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 11:00 PM PDT

The A-12 Avenger Shows Why The Navy Needs A Long-Range Strike AircraftThe Navy's carrier air wings would have greatly benefited from an A-12-like capability had the program survived.


Tokyo court rejects damages for man forcibly sterilised at age 14

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 01:30 AM PDT

Tokyo court rejects damages for man forcibly sterilised at age 14A Japanese pensioner forcibly sterilised as a 14-year-old under a now-defunct eugenics law failed Tuesday in a legal bid for $280,000 in state compensation. According to local media, Tokyo District Court found the government was not obliged to pay the man compensation because the 20-year statute of limitations had passed. Last year, the government passed legislation offering the victims 3.2 million yen each ($29,700), an amount campaigners slammed as "failing to meet the seriousness" of the issue.


Federal appeals court upholds GOP-enacted voting restrictions in Wisconsin

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 04:46 AM PDT

Federal appeals court upholds GOP-enacted voting restrictions in WisconsinThe judicial panel found that the state can restrict early voting hours and restored a requirement that people must live in a district for 28 days.


Iran records highest daily death toll from COVID-19

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 11:54 AM PDT

Iran records highest daily death toll from COVID-19The 162 deaths reported on Monday exceed the previous record on April 4, when the health ministry reported 158 deaths in a day. The Islamic Republic has recorded a total of 10,670 deaths and 225,205 infections from the coronavirus, health ministry spokeswoman Sima Sadat Lari said in a statement on state TV. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the highest authority in Iran, expressed concern on Monday about the rising number of deaths.


Putin unveils monument to fallen Red Army WWII soldiers

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 06:51 AM PDT

Putin unveils monument to fallen Red Army WWII soldiersRussian President Vladimir Putin and his counterpart from Belarus on Tuesday unveiled a monument honoring the fallen Red Army soldiers who fought in one of the most bloody battles of World War II. Putin and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko traveled to the village of Khoroshevo, just outside Rzhev, about 200 kilometers (about 125 miles) northwest of Moscow for a somber ceremony that involved goose-stepping troops laying wreaths to the towering figure of a soldier. The battle of Rzhev, in which the Red Army launched a series of offensives in 1942-1943 to dislodge the Wermacht from its positions close to Moscow, involved enormous Soviet losses from persistent, poorly prepared attacks against well-fortified Nazi positions.


Trump accuses California Democrats of 'incredible stupidity' in row over John Wayne's white supremacy remarks

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 06:12 AM PDT

Trump accuses California Democrats of 'incredible stupidity' in row over John Wayne's white supremacy remarksDonald Trump is accusing some Democratic officials of "incredible stupidity" for calling for actor John Wayne's name to be removed from an airport in California even after an interview resurfaced of "The Duke" embracing white supremacy.John Wayne Airport in southern California serves Orange County and Los Angeles. Mr Trump in January 2016, as a presidential candidate, held a special event at the John Wayne Birthplace Museum in Winterset, Iowa. He spoke at a lectern with a wax statue of the late actor behind him.


Coronavirus: US officials warn 'this is just the beginning'

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 07:26 AM PDT

Coronavirus: US officials warn 'this is just the beginning'A top US health expert says the US is not like other countries, because it has "way too much virus".


Xi Jinping’s Internal Great Wall

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 07:40 AM PDT

Xi Jinping's Internal Great WallLike the Great Wall of generations past, Xi's Internal Great Wall will continue to keep China behind the rest of the world because a nation that suppresses its own people is not a nation the world can trust to do business fairly.


'It's my dam': Ethiopians unite around Nile River mega-project

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 06:44 AM PDT

'It's my dam': Ethiopians unite around Nile River mega-projectLast week, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's press secretary took a break from official statements to post something different to her Twitter feed: a 37-line poem defending her country's massive dam on the Blue Nile River. "My mothers seek respite/From years of abject poverty/Their sons a bright future/And the right to pursue prosperity," Billene Seyoum wrote in her poem, entitled "Ethiopia Speaks". As the lines indicate, Ethiopia sees the $4.6 billion (four-billion-euro) Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam as crucial for its electrification and development.


Israel orders evangelical Christian media network God TV to take channel off air

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 10:47 AM PDT

Israel orders evangelical Christian media network God TV to take channel off air"The channel does not appeal to the Christian population in Israel, but rather to the Jews," said Israel's broadcasting regulator.


CanSino's COVID-19 vaccine candidate approved for military use in China

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 10:44 PM PDT

CanSino's COVID-19 vaccine candidate approved for military use in ChinaChina's military has received the greenlight to use a COVID-19 vaccine candidate developed by its research unit and CanSino Biologics after clinical trials proved it was safe and showed some efficacy, the company said on Monday. The Ad5-nCoV is one of China's eight vaccine candidates approved for human trials at home and abroad for the respiratory disease caused by the new coronavirus.


Texas Bar Owners Sue Over Reimposed Coronavirus Restrictions

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 07:36 AM PDT

Texas Bar Owners Sue Over Reimposed Coronavirus RestrictionsSeveral Texas bar owners on Monday sued over Governor Greg Abbott's order to shut down their businesses again as coronavirus cases in the state soar.Texas reported a record high on Monday of 5,913 individuals hospitalized for the coronavirus, and new cases of the virus rose on Saturday to a record daily high of 6,263 confirmed new cases. Deaths from the virus have remained level, however.The bar owners filed lawsuits in Austin, Houston, and Galveston, charging that the governor has exceeded his authority under the state constitution to order bars to close again and claiming that the restrictions are being unfairly imposed on bars while other businesses, such as nail and hair salons, are allowed to continue operating. The owners are demanding that Abbott call the state legislature into a special session to handle the issue."Gov. Abbott continues to act like a king," said Jared Woodfill, a lawyer representing the bar owners. "Abbott is unilaterally destroying our economy and trampling on our constitutional rights."Abbott rolled back his state's reopening process on Friday, singling out activity in bars as a driving factor of the spike in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations Texas has experienced."As I said from the start, if the positivity rate rose above 10%, the State of Texas would take further action to mitigate the spread of COVID-19," the Republican governor said. "At this time, it is clear that the rise in cases is largely driven by certain types of activities, including Texans congregating in bars."The governor's slowdown of the reopening process reimposes restrictions on businesses he had allowed to reopen at partial capacity, including bars, restaurants, gyms, malls, and bowling alleys. Bars were required to close at 12 p.m. on Friday but are allowed to remain open for delivery and take-out orders. Restaurants may operate dine-in service at 50 percent capacity, down from the 75 percent capacity Abbott approved earlier this month. The majority of gatherings of 100 or more people must gain approval from local governments.The announcement came two days after Abbott warned that the coronavirus is now spreading in Texas at an "unacceptable rate" and pleaded with residents to wear masks in public and continue practicing social distancing.Several other states have seen their coronavirus cases spike in the last several weeks, including Florida, Arizona, and California. Along with Texas, Alabama, Missouri and Nevada.


Two Tulsa police officers fighting for their lives after being shot during traffic stop; Suspect in custody

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 08:22 PM PDT

Two Tulsa police officers fighting for their lives after being shot during traffic stop; Suspect in custodyThe man accused of shooting two Tulsa police officers in the head has been arrested, according to officials.


Venezuela sanctions set off fight for 'plundered' oil cargo

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 05:09 AM PDT

Venezuela sanctions set off fight for 'plundered' oil cargoFor two months, the Malta-flagged oil tanker Alkimos has been quietly floating off the Gulf Coast of Texas, undisturbed by the high-stakes legal fight playing out in a federal courtroom as a result of American sanctions on Venezuela. The commercial dispute, which hasn't been previously reported, has all the drama of a pirate movie: a precious cargo, clandestine sea maneuvers and accusations of a high seas heist. It pits Evangelos Marinakis, one of Greece's most powerful businessmen and owner of its most successful soccer club, Olympiakos, against a fellow shipping magnate from Venezuela, Wilmer Ruperti, who has a long history of helping the country's socialist leaders.


German officials were so alarmed by Trump's conversations with Angela Merkel that they took extra steps to make sure they stayed secret, according to a CNN report

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 07:45 PM PDT

German officials were so alarmed by Trump's conversations with Angela Merkel that they took extra steps to make sure they stayed secret, according to a CNN reportCNN's sources said President Donald Trump attacked Angela Merkel in a "very aggressive" manner, accusing her of "being in the pocket of the Russians."


India bans TikTok, WeChat and dozens more Chinese apps

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 04:02 PM PDT

India bans TikTok, WeChat and dozens more Chinese appsThe Indian government says it has banned 59 apps with links to China on national security grounds.


Russia vs. NATO: Welcome to the Fourth Battle of the Atlantic

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 04:14 AM PDT

Russia vs. NATO: Welcome to the Fourth Battle of the AtlanticThe Russian submarine threat is significant.


Lebanon army scraps meat from meals as prices skyrocket

Posted: 30 Jun 2020 09:26 AM PDT

Lebanon army scraps meat from meals as prices skyrocketThe Lebanese army has scrapped meat from all meals it offers to soldiers on duty as food prices skyrocket because of a deepening economic crisis, state media said Tuesday. Lebanon is in the throes of its worst economic downturn since the 1975-1990 civil war, with poverty surging to now afflict around half of the population. Although its currency is officially pegged at 1,507 pounds to the dollar, a shortage of hard currency has seen its black market value plummet to more than 8,000 to the greenback.


Black Americans experiencing deadly secondary trauma during pandemic and protesting, experts say

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 09:55 AM PDT

Black Americans experiencing deadly secondary trauma during pandemic and protesting, experts say"...The disproportionate death rate of black and brown people from Covid-19 is no coincidence. It is directly related to the history of racial oppression in our nation."


U.S. starts paring back Hong Kong's special status due to security law

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 01:50 PM PDT

U.S. starts paring back Hong Kong's special status due to security lawThe United States began eliminating Hong Kong's special status under U.S. law on Monday, halting defense exports and restricting the territory's access to high technology products as China prepares new Hong Kong security legislation. The Commerce Department said it was suspending "preferential treatment to Hong Kong over China, including the availability of export license exceptions," adding that further actions to eliminate Hong Kong's privileged status were being evaluated. "We urge Beijing to immediately reverse course and fulfill the promises it has made to the people of Hong Kong and the world," it said.


The Coronavirus Plus the Flu Could Equal a Devastating Fall and Winter, CDC Director Says

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 02:45 PM PDT

The Coronavirus Plus the Flu Could Equal a Devastating Fall and Winter, CDC Director SaysCDC Director Dr. Robert Redfield warns of a challenging fall and winter because the coronavirus and flu will circulate at the same time.


George Floyd: At least one ex-officer intends to plead not guilty as judge sets tentative murder trial date

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 03:06 PM PDT

George Floyd: At least one ex-officer intends to plead not guilty as judge sets tentative murder trial dateThe four former Minneapolis police officers charged in the killing of George Floyd could face a jury trial in March, as a judge warned the men to avoid speaking publicly about the case during a hearing on Monday.Three ex-officers appeared in-person at a Hennepin County court in Minnesota, while Derek Chauvin – who was captured on witness video kneeling on Mr Floyd's neck – attended the hearing remotely via video conference from Ramsey County Correctional Centre, where he is being held on a $1.25 million bail.


Monday, June 29, 2020

Yahoo! News: Weight Loss News

Yahoo! News: Weight Loss News


Trump shares video of man chanting, 'White power' in protest clash

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 07:19 AM PDT

Trump shares video of man chanting, 'White power' in protest clashPresident Trump promoted a video Sunday that featured clashing protesters, one of whom chants, "White power." The video was apparently shot in the Villages, Fla.


Russia denies being behind a mysterious radiation leak making its way across Scandinavia

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 02:37 AM PDT

Russia denies being behind a mysterious radiation leak making its way across ScandinaviaFinland, Sweden, and Norway reported increased levels of three radioactive isotropes in June. Russia said its nuclear plants are working as normal.


One Killed in Shooting Near Seattle ‘Autonomous Zone’

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 06:54 AM PDT

One Killed in Shooting Near Seattle 'Autonomous Zone'One victim was killed and another injured in a Monday morning shooting near the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest in Seattle.The shooting occurred at the corner of 12 Ave. and Pike Street, which sits at the southeast corner of the CHOP. A spokeswoman for Harborview Medical Center' told Fox News that the injured victim was in critical condition in the hospital's intensive care unit.Protestors set up camp in Cal Anderson Park, two blocks from the place of the shooting, for three weeks after police abandoned Seattle's sixth precinct building. Several shootings have occurred in or near the six-block area of the CHOP, leading many protesters to leave.However, some have refused to evacuate, with organizers attempting to move the locus of the camp from the park to the police precinct. The violence, along with a large increase in homeless people and complaints from local businesses, "makes us have to worry about extra stuff going on down there that doesn't necessarily pertain to why CHOP's here," a CHOP security volunteer told the Seattle Times.Seattle police chief Carmen Best told CNN that officers were working to reopen the area for city officers."This is not a line in the sand, but it's absolutely necessary for public safety that we are able to respond from that area," Best said. "So we want to do as much as we can to work with the folks who are left, but we recognize that at some point there is going to be a reckoning for how we can get this resolved."


76 coronavirus cases have been linked to one Michigan bar

Posted: 27 Jun 2020 11:15 AM PDT

76 coronavirus cases have been linked to one Michigan barHealth officials urged anyone who visited the establishment between June 12 and June 20 to self-quarantine for 14 days.


Attorney for family of missing soldier calls on Congress to launch investigation against Fort Hood, launches "I am Vanessa" campaign

Posted: 27 Jun 2020 03:25 PM PDT

Attorney for family of missing soldier calls on Congress to launch investigation against Fort Hood, launches "I am Vanessa" campaignAs the search for 20-year-old Private First Class Vanessa Guillen continues, the Guillen family attorney, Natalie Khawam has requested a congressional investigation into Fort Hood and Vanessa's disappearance. Vanessa was last seen on April 22, 2020, in a parking lot at Fort Hood, in Texas, where she's stationed. Her car keys, barracks room key, identification card and wallet were later found in the armory room where she was working earlier in the day. Her phone is still missing. The U.S. Army


Supreme Court clears way for federal executions to resume

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 10:07 AM PDT

Supreme Court clears way for federal executions to resumeAttorney General William Barr announced last year the federal government would conduct its first executions since 2003 using the drug pentobarbital


Syed Ali Geelani: Kashmir leader quits Hurriyat Conference

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 04:47 AM PDT

Syed Ali Geelani: Kashmir leader quits Hurriyat ConferenceSyed Ali Geelani has been heading political opposition to Indian rule in Kashmir for decades.


HOUSTON WEATHER: Mostly dry week with Saharan dust moving back in

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 01:57 AM PDT

HOUSTON WEATHER: Mostly dry week with Saharan dust moving back in        A few showers will be possible Monday but most of us will stay dry. Saharan dust returns Tuesday.


A Closer Look at William Wegman’s Picture-Perfect Postcard Art

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 08:35 AM PDT

Shootings across Chicago kill 3 kids; activists seek change

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 08:05 AM PDT

China forcibly sterilises Uighurs to control population: report

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 08:58 AM PDT

China forcibly sterilises Uighurs to control population: reportChinese authorities are carrying out forced sterilisations of women in an apparent campaign to curb the growth of ethnic minority populations in the western Xinjiang region, according to research published Monday. The report, based on a combination of official regional data, policy documents and interviews with ethnic minority women, has prompted an international group of lawmakers to call for a United Nations investigation into China's policies in the region. The move is likely to enrage Beijing, which has denied trampling on the rights of ethnic groups in Xinjiang, and which on Monday called the allegations "baseless".


Chinese coronavirus vaccine approved for use in country's military after clinical trials

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 07:03 AM PDT

Chinese coronavirus vaccine approved for use in country's military after clinical trialsChina's military has approved a coronavirus vaccine developed by its own research staff and a Chinese biotech firm, it was announced on Monday. The vaccine was given the green light for use by troops after trials proved it was both safe and effective, said CanSino Biologics, the biotech firm involved. However, its use for the time being will be restricted to military personnel, who offer a tighter medical control group than the general public. The vaccine candidate, named Ad5-nCoV, was developed jointly by CanSino and the Beijing Institute of Biotechnology in the Academy of Military Medical Sciences. It has been in development since March. CanSino said the results showed the vaccine candidate has potential to prevent diseases caused by the coronavirus, which has killed half a million people globally. The company added that it was not yet possible to say if it could be a commercial success, which would depend on being able to produce the vaccine cheaply as well as safely.


Supreme Court strikes down consumer agency's autonomy in win for Trump administration

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 10:14 AM PDT

Supreme Court strikes down consumer agency's autonomy in win for Trump administrationThe case was a major test of the separation of powers between the executive and legislative branches.


Exclusive: NRA has shed 200 staffers this year as group faces financial crisis

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 02:00 AM PDT

Exclusive: NRA has shed 200 staffers this year as group faces financial crisisGun rights organization may struggle to support Trump in 2020 election amid layoffs and furloughsAfter spending over $30m to help elect Donald Trump in 2016, the National Rifle Association faces a deepening financial crisis with over 200 staff layoffs and furloughs in 2020, according to three NRA sources, gun analysts and documents.The situation is likely to hinder efforts by the gun rights group to help Trump and other Republicans win in November's election.The 200-plus layoffs and furloughs, which have not previously been reported and were mainly at NRA headquarters in Virginia, were spurred by declines in revenues and fundraising, heavy legal spending, political infighting, and charges of insider self-dealing under scrutiny by attorneys general in New York and Washington DC, the sources say."The widespread Covid layoffs and furloughs have further harmed both the NRA's legal capacity and political influence beyond what was already a troubling deterioration," said one NRA official who requested anonymity to discuss internal matters. The official added the outlook this year for NRA political spending was "deeply concerning."NRA staff learned about the furloughs, plus 20% staff pay cuts, four-day work weeks and other belt tightening, in an April email from Wayne LaPierre, the longtime top executive of the NRA, which claims it has 5 million members.LaPierre's email to the "NRA family" said "we have lost significant revenue" and linked the austerity moves to the pandemic's stay-at-home orders. The email said the NRA hoped to bring back those furloughed when its finances improved.The NRA declined to comment on the extent of the layoffs and furloughs, which sources said were continuing.The NRA's financial problems were palpable long before the pandemic but have increased due to a few factors, including the cancellation of a number of NRA fundraising dinners following the onset of Covid-19.The NRA typically pulls in tens of millions of dollars yearly from Friends of NRA dinners in many states, but most were canceled after January and February, said the sources.The NRA's woes, say gun analysts, are expected to sharply reduce spending this year compared with the $30m the group spent on ads to help Trump win in 2016. They are also likely to mean cuts to its once formidable get out the vote operations in key states that historically provide big boosts to GOP candidates. Overall in 2016, the NRA spent close to $70m on ads and voter mobilization drives, say NRA sources.In 2018, the NRA's financial problems caused it to spend a relatively lackluster $9.4m on the midterm elections, and gun control groups outspent the NRA for the first time, which analysts say helped the Democrats win the House majority."The NRA is entering the summer and fall campaign with a series of crippling financial, legal, and political problems," said Robert Spitzer, a political science professor at Cortland State University in New York.Spitzer added: "As its anemic political spending in the 2018 midterm election showed, they will not be able to match anything like the roughly $70m they spent in 2016, as they continue to be plagued by a major revenue shortfall, a fact exacerbated by the impact of the coronavirus shutdown."The drop in revenues accelerated in 2019 when several large NRA donors began a drive to oust LaPierre over allegations of mismanagement and self-dealing, and to promote reforms. The website helpsavethenra.com, which is headlined "Retire LaPierre", boasted in December that $165m in donations and planned gifts had been withheld.The donor revolt has been spurred in part by several reports of lavish personal spending by LaPierre. The Wall Street Journal revealed last year that according to the NRA's former ad firm Ackerman McQueen, which has been in legal battles with the NRA and LaPierre, he took about $240,000 worth of trips to Italy, Hungary, the Bahamas and other locales that were charged to the ad firm. The Journal reported that the ad firm had paid for about $200,000 in expensive suits for LaPierre, including some from a Beverly Hills boutique.LaPierre's yearly salary in 2018 was close to $2m.Two Democratic attorneys general in New York and DC have reportedly been investigating whether the NRA abused its non-profit tax-exempt status in different ways such as improperly transferring funds from an NRA Foundation to the NRA.Further, the AGs are said to be examining the allegations of self-dealing by NRA leaders, including financial transactions involving LaPierre, the NRA and the former ad firm.If the AGs bring charges, the NRA could lose its coveted non-profit status in New York, where it has long been chartered.The NRA's top outside lawyer has said it is complying with the investigations but has attacked the NY AG's "zeal" and "the investigation's partisan purposes".During the pandemic, the NRA and pro-gun allies have waged successful legal battles in a number of states to make gun shops and shooting ranges "essential" businesses and circumvent stay-at-home measures.But in mid-June, second-amendment advocates and the NRA suffered a stinging legal setback when the supreme court declined 10 petitions to review lower court rulings involving gun laws in several states, including Illinois and Massachusetts, which have banned assault weapons.The NRA attacked the high court's "inaction" in a statement, blasting it for allowing "so-called gun safety politicians to trample on the freedom and security of law-abiding citizens".Due to the pandemic, the NRA earlier this year canceled its annual meeting in Nashville, which Trump has faithfully attended since taking office to solidify his NRA ties. It is now slated to be held on 5 September in Springfield, Missouri.At last year's meeting was concluding, Trump in a tweet urged his NRA allies to "stop the internal infighting" amid the charges of self-dealing by its leaders and to "get back to GREATNESS. FAST." For now, Trump's aspirations for a speedy NRA recovery seem largely unfulfilled.


Four men were charged for trying to tear down a statue of President Andrew Jackson near the White House

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 02:27 PM PDT

Four men were charged for trying to tear down a statue of President Andrew Jackson near the White HouseJackson owned at least 95 slaves at his Tennessee plantation and brought some of them with him to the White House.


Systemic changes must go beyond just policing. Human and social services need reform, too.

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 04:00 AM PDT

Systemic changes must go beyond just policing. Human and social services need reform, too.Institutional racism is not found just in the police — it's woven into schools, mental health clinics and housing providers.


China to impose visa restrictions on U.S. individuals over Hong Kong

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 12:37 AM PDT

China to impose visa restrictions on U.S. individuals over Hong KongBeijing said on Monday it will impose visa restrictions on U.S. individuals with "egregious conduct" on Hong Kong-related issues, mirroring U.S. sanctions against unnamed Chinese officials deemed responsible for curbing freedoms in the city. The announcement comes as the top decision-making body of China's parliament deliberates a draft national security law for Hong Kong that pro-democracy activists in the city fear will be used to eliminate dissent and tighten Beijing's control. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian, who announced the new sanctions during a press briefing in response to a question about Washington's new visa restrictions, did not specify which U.S. individuals have been targeted.


Russia's opposition flounders as Putin changes constitution

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 09:04 PM PDT

Russia's opposition flounders as Putin changes constitutionRussia's opposition is denouncing this week's vote on President Vladimir Putin's constitutional reforms as a joke, pointing out that copies of the amended basic law are already on sale in Moscow bookshops. From liberal reformers to Communists, Kremlin critics say the vote -- which started last week and ends on Wednesday -- is a thinly veiled attempt to keep Putin, 67, in power for life. Russia's top opposition figure Alexei Navalny, who last summer rallied thousands against suspected voter fraud in Moscow, has also shown little interest in combating the reforms.


See This Odd Plane? Russia Tried to Build a Stealth 'F-35'. They Failed

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 05:30 AM PDT

See This Odd Plane? Russia Tried to Build a Stealth 'F-35'. They FailedThe story of the ill-fated MiG 1.44.


After Asking Americans to Sacrifice in Shutdown, Leaders Failed to Control Virus

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 08:15 AM PDT

After Asking Americans to Sacrifice in Shutdown, Leaders Failed to Control VirusWASHINGTON -- More than four months into fighting the coronavirus in the United States, the shared sacrifice of millions of Americans suspending their lives -- with jobs lost, businesses shuttered, daily routines upended -- has not been enough to beat back a virus whose staying power around the world is only still being grasped.The number of new U.S. cases this last week surged dangerously high, to levels not ever seen in the course of the pandemic, especially in states that had rushed to reopen their economies. The result has been a realization for many Americans that however much they have yearned for a return to normalcy, their leaders have failed to control the coronavirus pandemic. And there is little clarity on what comes next."There has to be a clear coherent sustained communication, and that has absolutely not happened," said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious diseases specialist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. "We've had just the opposite and now it's hard to unring a whole series of bells."There was "real hubris" on the part of public health officials at the very start, Schaffner said, that the United States could lock down and contain the virus as China had. That futile hope helped create an unrealistic expectation that the shutdown, while intense, would not be for long, and that when it was lifted life would return to normal.That expectation was reinforced by President Donald Trump, who has downplayed the severity of the crisis, refused to wear a mask and began calling for states to open even as the virus was surging. A lack of federal leadership also meant that states lacked a unified approach.With no clear message from the top, states went their own ways. A number of them failed to use the shutdown to fully prepare to reopen in a careful manner. As Americans bought precious time trying to keep the virus at bay, experts advised that states urgently needed to establish a robust system for tracking and containing any new cases -- through testing, monitoring and contact tracing. Without this, the pandemic would simply come roaring back.Testing and contact tracing efforts were ramped up, but not enough in some places. Even states that did embark on ambitious plans to do contact tracing struggled. Health officials in Massachusetts, which has one of the country's most established tracing programs, said in May that only about 60% of infected patients were picking up the phone.Just as the country needed to stay shut down longer, many states -- mostly with Republican governors -- took their foot off the brake, and Trump cheered them on.In early May, when more than half of U.S. states had begun reopening parts of their economies, most failed to meet the nonbinding criteria recommended by the Trump administration itself to resume business and social activities.The White House's nonbinding guidelines suggested that states should have a "downward trajectory" of either documented coronavirus cases or of the percentage of positive tests.Yet most states that were reopening failed to adhere to even these ill-defined recommendations. They had case counts that were trending upward, positive test results that were rising, or both, raising concerns among public health experts.The virus has proved formidable around the world, resisting global efforts to find a treatment, refusing to fade in summer weather and unrelenting in exploiting weaknesses in government responses, even in countries whose responses to the virus have been considered a success -- and where the threat seemed tamed.Germany, whose handling of the virus was considered a success, had to reimpose lockdowns on two counties where there was a spike of cases in slaughterhouses and low-income housing blocks. Singapore experienced a second wave of infections in April.And in China, which adopted some of the world's strictest measures to contain the virus, Beijing suffered this month a new surge of cases, causing flights to be canceled and schools to be closed.Much of the challenge stems from major gaps in knowledge about how the virus works. In addition to chasing a vaccine, scientists around the world are still trying to unravel important mysteries, including how long immunity lasts after infection and why some people get so much sicker than others.For Americans, a troubling new reality set in this week: Even as some parts of the country, like New York, were finally getting the virus under control, it was surging anew in others, like a terrifying sequel, threatening lives and livelihoods.New virus cases were on the rise in 29 states Friday as the outlook worsened across much of the nation's South and West.On Saturday, Florida reported more than 9,500 new coronavirus cases, beating its record for the second consecutive day. At least 980 new cases were added in Nevada, more than double the state's previous daily high. And in South Carolina, officials announced more than 1,600 new cases, nearly 300 more than the previous record, set a day before.In Florida and Texas, governors closed bars Friday, as they scrambled to control what appeared to be a brewing public health catastrophe. All this is leaving people with a strange sense of deja vu and a bitterness at public officials for what felt like a fumbling of people's sacrifices."Are we doing a full circle? Yes," said Judy Ray, 57, a cosmetologist and hairdresser in Florida who was laid off from her job at a barbershop at Walt Disney World Resort in March."Everyone is passing the buck," she said of political leaders in Florida. "You don't see the chain of command actually working."Ray, a Disney employee for 13 years, said she had not received any unemployment benefits -- federal or state, in the 10 weeks she has been off. She has called the unemployment office hundreds of times since March, including this week, when she said she broke down into tears of frustration after being told her case was still pending. She has sliced $200 out of her monthly budget and has been paying her mortgage from her savings."I don't think they care about what we've had to go through," Ray said of state authorities. "It means that we are the ones that hurt. You know?"Many Americans started in the pandemic with a strong feeling of solidarity, not unlike the days after 9/11. They closed their businesses, stayed inside, made masks and wiped down their groceries. In a country often riven by politics, polls showed broad agreement that shutting down was the right thing to do.But months of mixed messages have left many exhausted and wondering how much of what they did was worth it.Tony Jacobs, owner and proprietor of Sideshow Books, a used book store in Los Angeles, said in the early weeks of the lockdown he had taken to delivering books by bike around the neighborhood in a mask and gloves."I thought it would be an effective way to stop the virus -- if we just locked down for two or three weeks, we could knock it out of LA," he said. "I felt that was the civic duty, and that everybody was going to be compensated for doing the civic duty."The plight of California has served as a warning that even states that were more aggressive in their strategies have not been entirely successful.California, which had the first stay-at-home order in the United States this spring, allowed businesses to reopen weeks ago as the state felt it had the virus under control. That seems to be changing: California reported its highest single-day total this week and announced more than 5,600 new cases Friday.The rise comes despite the fact that the state has hired and trained thousands of contact tracers. It has also dramatically ramped up testing. And the millions of face masks that were promised early on have begun to finally materialize.Jacobs felt the lockdown had been squandered and his business hung out to dry. As for whether Jacobs' sacrifices were worth it, he said, "Oh God, no."In recent weeks, some conservatives said they had an additional concern: After weeks of being told that going to church, attending funerals, and participating in protests was a willful, careless spurning of science, political leaders and some public health officials condoned -- and even joined -- the crowds protesting the killing of George Floyd."It's just a real social whiplash," said Philip Campbell, vice president of a pest control company in Central Michigan, who took part in the first protests against the lockdown in Lansing in April from the cab of his truck. "Two weeks ago you can't go out because you are going to kill grandma. Now it's 'you have an obligation to go out.' It leaves me feeling that the science and the public health authorities have been politicized."Americans' trust in the federal government has been falling for decades, but the recent months of muddied messaging have left many even more skeptical of public officials."I'm not angry, I'm disappointed, disappointed in the government, very much so," said Gail Creary, who owns Humble Care, an assisted living facility in south Miami-Dade County, Florida. She and her sister take care of six older adults in a three-bedroom house in the suburbs. "I think they should really have taken better control of this."She laments that there isn't more widespread testing and contact tracing. She wonders why other countries have done a better job than the United States has. Her home country of Jamaica did better, she said."We have a governor who can't even say, 'Hey we're making wearing a mask mandatory,' " she said."What did America do with that time?"Schaffner offered a bleak prognosis for the country's next chapter with the virus. He said he did not expect the country to return to a full lockdown, so in order to contain the infection people would have to begin to change behaviors in ways that were uncomfortable, unfamiliar -- wearing masks, not gathering in large groups indoors, staying 6 feet apart."The only alternative until we have a vaccine is all of these behavioral interventions that we know work," he said. But, he added, "The governors are all on different pages. It is no wonder that the average person is confused."Silvana Salcido Esparza, 59, chef and owner of Barrio Cafe in Phoenix, said a group of restaurant owners asked the governor to keep the state closed for longer, but it opened anyway -- as did most restaurants. Now when she drives by, she sees "they are packed, there's no social distancing inside."She said she spent her retirement money trying to keep her business afloat, but in April, had to close her newest restaurant, Barrio Cafe Gran Reserva."I had to sacrifice it," she said, noting ruefully that it had been nominated for a James Beard Foundation Award. "I'm almost 60. I was going to retire in two years. That's not going to happen now."This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2020 The New York Times Company


Biden campaign says 36% of senior staff are people of color

Posted: 27 Jun 2020 05:06 PM PDT

Biden campaign says 36% of senior staff are people of colorJoe Biden's campaign says a little more than a third of its senior staff are people of color, sharing staff diversity data after facing pressure to answer questions on the issue. The campaign said that 36% of its senior staff are people of color, but did not disclose how much of its overall campaign staff are people of color. The Biden campaign released the data after the presumptive Democratic nominee was pressed at a forum on Asian American and Pacific Islander issues.


Wildfire Spreading Rapidly on Traverse Mountain 'Started by Fireworks'

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 02:48 AM PDT

Wildfire Spreading Rapidly on Traverse Mountain 'Started by Fireworks'

A large brush fire, estimated to have reached 150 to 200 acres, was “rapidly spreading” on Traverse Mountains near Lehi, Utah, on June 27, according to ABC4.

Utah Fire Info reported that the fire was “started by fireworks” and said “strong, gusty winds” were responsible for the rapid spread of the fire across the mountain side.

Lehi Community Emergency Response Team issued an evacuation order in a quarter mile radius in the city.

Video shows the fire burning on the mountain side from a residential area in the hills of the city of Lehi. Credit: Jeremy Roberts via Storyful


Egyptian belly dancer sentenced to prison for 'sexually suggestive' posts amid social media crackdown

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 04:17 AM PDT

Egyptian belly dancer sentenced to prison for 'sexually suggestive' posts amid social media crackdownA high-profile Egyptian belly dancer has been sentenced to three years in prison and received a £15,000 fine for sharing photos and videos of herself on social media that were deemed to incite "debauchery" and "immorality" in a country with conservative social norms. Cairo's Misdemeanours Economic Court said on Saturday that Sama El-Masry had violated family principles and values with posts that the public prosecution described as sexually suggestive, and that she had managed the social media accounts with the aim of committing "immorality". Ms El-Masry, who has over three million Instagram followers, denied the accusations, saying the content was stolen and shared from her phone without consent. She was arrested in April as part of an investigation into "suggestive" social media posts during a wave of arrests of female Instagram and TikTok stars on charges of promoting debauchery and prostitution on social media. "There is a huge difference between freedom and debauchery," said John Talaat, a member of parliament who asked for legal action against Ms El-Masry and others. He told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that Ms El-Masry and the other social media influencers were destroying family values and traditions, activities that were banned by the law and the constitution. Mr Talaat said the other influencers were expected to face the same prison terms as Ms El-Masry as they had committed the same crime. The court also ordered the 42-year-old dancer to be put under police surveillance for three years, according to news site Egypt Today. Ms El-Masry said she would appeal the sentence. Since President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi came into power in 2014, hundreds of journalists, activists, lawyers and intellectuals have been arrested in the name of state security. Young TikTok stars have become the latest target of Egyptian state authorities. In May, a 17-year-old girl posted a TikTok video of herself crying, saying she had been gang-raped by a group of young men. The authorities swiftly arrested her and charged her with "promoting debauchery". Two years ago, Egypt brought in a cybercrime law giving the government power to censor the internet and conduct surveillance of communications.


Air Force Takes Control of Joint DC Base

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 06:58 AM PDT

Air Force Takes Control of Joint DC BaseAfter a decade of overseeing Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling in the National Capital Region, the U.S. Navy is handing over primary authority for the base to the Air Force.


More Chinese regions brace for floods as storms shift east

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 01:31 AM PDT

More Chinese regions brace for floods as storms shift eastTorrential rain is set to hit China's eastern coastal regions this week after overwhelming large parts of the southwest, inundating villages and tourist spots and displacing more than 700,000 people, state weather forecasters said on Monday. Nearly 14 million people in 26 different provinces had been affected by storms and floods by Friday, with 744,000 evacuated, the China Daily reported, citing the Ministry for Emergency Management. Much of the damage has hit southwestern regions like Guangxi and Sichuan, and the municipality of Chongqing on the upper reaches of the Yangtze river last week experienced its worst floods since 1940.


Canadian detainee's wife 'disappointed' Trudeau rules out swap with China

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 05:04 PM PDT

Canadian detainee's wife 'disappointed' Trudeau rules out swap with ChinaThe wife of one of two Canadians imprisoned in China said Sunday she is "disappointed" by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's refusal to consider a swap for a detained Huawei executive facing extradition to the United States. Trudeau firmly rejected appeals that he intervene in the extradition proceedings against Meng Wanzhou, Huawei's chief financial officer, in order to win the release of Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor.


Minneapolis Spends Thousands on Private Security for City Councilmen amid Calls to ‘Defund’ the Police

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 05:04 AM PDT

Minneapolis Spends Thousands on Private Security for City Councilmen amid Calls to 'Defund' the PoliceMinneapolis has spent over $63,000 to provide private security for members of its city council, which has been outspoken in calls to defund the police department following the death of George Floyd.Andrea Jenkins (Ward 8), Phillipe Cunningham (Ward 4), and Alondra Cano (Ward 9) are being provided details that cost $4,500 a day, a city spokesperson confirmed to local outlet FOX9.While Cano did not return a request for comment, Cunningham said he was not "comfortable publicly discussing the death threats against me," but said the security was temporary. Jenkins — an African American man who identifies as a woman — told FOX9 that the security was over concern for "the large number of white nationalist(s) in our city and other threatening communications I've been receiving."A Minneapolis Police Department spokesperson told FOX9 that the police had not been made aware of any threats against city council members.The city spokesperson explained that the current measures are "a temporary bridge" to more formal procedures for council members, and are not expected to pass $175,000, which would require official approval by the City Council.Last week, the Minneapolis City Council voted 12-0 to further advance a proposal for dismantling the city's police department. City Council president Lisa Bender has argued in response to questions over safety that fear comes from "a place of privilege.""I think we need to step back and imagine what it would feel like to already live in that reality where calling the police may mean more harm instead," she told CNN earlier this month.


These 5 Weapons Made Nazi Germany a Military Superpower

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 06:15 AM PDT

These 5 Weapons Made Nazi Germany a Military SuperpowerHitler's most fearsome weapons.


Greta Thunberg accused German Chancellor Angela Merkel of lining up to take a selfie with her just to 'look good'

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 06:19 AM PDT

Greta Thunberg accused German Chancellor Angela Merkel of lining up to take a selfie with her just to 'look good'Thunberg castigated Angela Merkel and other world leaders at the UN summit as stealing her dreams, but they still craved an Instagram moment with her.


GOP Senator Urges Trump to Publicly Wear Mask: ‘Would Be a Sign of Strength’

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 09:29 AM PDT

GOP Senator Urges Trump to Publicly Wear Mask: 'Would Be a Sign of Strength'Retiring Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) implored President Donald Trump to publicly wear a mask on Sunday in order to cool the politicization of mask-wearing, appealing to the president's vanity in the process.With coronavirus cases and hospitalizations surging across the nation and states pulling back on reopening their economies, Alexander was asked by CNN's Manu Raju on Sunday morning about the president's resistance to symbolically embrace a basic safety protocol."You, I see you wearing your red-and-black plaid mask throughout the capitol, your staff does as well," Raju noted on CNN's Inside Politics. "The president, however, he refuses to wear one. The vice president continues to say this is an issue states should decide. Should the White House do more and the president do more to urge Americans to wear masks?"Alexander, who is leaving office at the end of the year, said he wished Trump "would wear a mask when it is appropriate," adding that "millions of Americans admire him" and would therefore follow his lead. Recent polls show that while the vast majority of Americans say they've been wearing masks in public spaces, more Democrats than Republicans have worn face coverings amid the pandemic.The Tennessee lawmaker went on to point out that the administration's public health experts have all said social distancing, mask-wearing, and hand washing can help contain the disease before reiterating that Trump publicly wearing a mask would "get rid of this political debate.""The stakes are much too high for that," he added. "So I understand why he does it. Most of the time he's with people who have been tested, he's been tested, so they're not infecting others. But there are times when he could wear a mask, the vice president could wear a mask, it would signal to the country to do so."The conservative senator ended his plea to Trump by playing to the president's well-known obsession with appearing strong and tough."People admire him and will follow his lead," Alexander concluded. "So I think it would be a sign of strength if he would from time to time wear a mask and remind everyone that it is a good way to help with this disease."Vice President Mike Pence said on Sunday that while the administration believes "people should wear masks wherever social distancing is not possible," the decision should be left up to the states and localities. At the same time, he defended his and Trump's lack of public mask-wearing, noting that he's worn a mask "several times" and Trump has done so at least once.With COVID-19 cases exploding in Arizona and Texas, masks have continued to be a hot-button political topic in the Republican-led states. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has pleaded with Texans to wear masks in public but has declined to issue a statewide mandate; in fact, he banned localities from imposing penalties for not wearing one, though he has recently allowed them to require mask use at businesses. In Arizona, meanwhile, a councilman came under fire when he protested against a local requirement to wear masks by quoting George Floyd's "I can't breathe" plea.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.


Supreme Court refuses to block upcoming federal executions

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 06:39 AM PDT

Supreme Court refuses to block upcoming federal executionsThe Supreme Court on Monday refused to block the execution of four federal prison inmates who are scheduled to be put to death in July and August. The executions would mark the first use of the death penalty on the federal level since 2003. Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor noted that they would have blocked the executions from going forward.


Robert Jenrick under fresh pressure after whistleblower claims he ignored pleas to block Westferry project

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 10:43 AM PDT

Robert Jenrick under fresh pressure after whistleblower claims he ignored pleas to block Westferry projectRobert Jenrick has found himself under fresh pressure, after a whistleblower claimed he ignored pleas from senior officials to block the controversial Westferry printworks project. The Housing Secretary reportedly overruled objections from civil servants and lawyers to greenlight Tory donor Richard Desmond's £1 billion development in January, with one source saying he showed "total disregard" for the law. Mr Jenrick had weeks earlier watched a promotional video for the luxury East London project on the businessman's mobile phone during a dinner at the Savoy hotel in London. Home Secretary Priti Patel insisted she would not "be watching videos" at Conservative fundraisers when quizzed on the matter on Sunday. Ms Patel also argued that going to Tory events would "absolutely not" help a person's chances in securing planning permission as she described the matter as "closed". She told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show: "I haven't followed the details of every single decision on this but what I do know and what I can tell you is that the correspondence, the documentation is out in the public domain on this particular application - and rightly so. "The papers have been published, the Secretary of State has followed all issues around transparency. "It has been discussed in Parliament a number of times, questions have been answered on this and the matter is deemed to be closed."


Poland's Duda leads in presidential election first round

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 10:37 PM PDT

Poland's Duda leads in presidential election first round Latest poll shows Andrzej Duda ahead with almost 42 percent of votes against Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski with 30.4 percent.


Saharan dust cloud hits Southern states in U.S. already struggling with coronavirus surge

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 10:14 AM PDT

Saharan dust cloud hits Southern states in U.S. already struggling with coronavirus surgeFlorida in particular faces a greater risk from the dust as the state experiences record-breaking coronavirus numbers, its ICU capacity under 25 percent.


Take a Lesson From History: Millions Died the First Time We Fought North Korea

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 09:30 PM PDT

Take a Lesson From History: Millions Died the First Time We Fought North Korea"I shrink—I shrink with a horror that I cannot express in words—at this continuous slaughter of men in Korea."


‘Recipe for disaster’: Fauci urges Americans to buckle down on coronavirus preventative measures

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 05:59 AM PDT

'Recipe for disaster': Fauci urges Americans to buckle down on coronavirus preventative measuresMeanwhile, the White House press secretary insisted the U.S. is "at a place where we can handle the cases that we're seeing."


Don't blame Sharia for Islamic extremism -- blame colonialism

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 02:21 PM PDT

Don't blame Sharia for Islamic extremism -- blame colonialismWarning that Islamic extremists want to impose fundamentalist religious rule in American communities, right-wing lawmakers in dozens of U.S. states have tried banning Sharia, an Arabic term often understood to mean Islamic law. These political debates – which cite terrorism and political violence in the Middle East to argue that Islam is incompatible with modern society – reinforce stereotypes that the Muslim world is uncivilized. They also reflect ignorance of Sharia, which is not a strict legal code. Sharia means "path" or "way": It is a broad set of values and ethical principles drawn from the Quran – Islam's holy book – and the life of the Prophet Muhammad. As such, different people and governments may interpret Sharia differently. Still, this is not the first time that the world has tried to figure out where Sharia fits into the global order. In the 1950s and 1960s, when Great Britain, France and other European powers relinquished their colonies in the Middle East, Africa and Asia, leaders of newly sovereign Muslim-majority countries faced a decision of enormous consequence: Should they build their governments on Islamic religious values or embrace the European laws inherited from colonial rule? The big debateInvariably, my historical research shows, political leaders of these young countries chose to keep their colonial justice systems rather than impose religious law. Newly independent Sudan, Nigeria, Pakistan and Somalia, among other places, all confined the application of Sharia to marital and inheritance disputes within Muslim families, just as their colonial administrators had done. The remainder of their legal systems would continue to be based on European law. To understand why they chose this course, I researched the decision-making process in Sudan, the first sub-Saharan African country to gain independence from the British, in 1956.In the national archives and libraries of the Sudanese capital Khartoum, and in interviews with Sudanese lawyers and officials, I discovered that leading judges, politicians and intellectuals actually pushed for Sudan to become a democratic Islamic state. They envisioned a progressive legal system consistent with Islamic faith principles, one where all citizens – irrespective of religion, race or ethnicity – could practice their religious beliefs freely and openly."The People are equal like the teeth of a comb," wrote Sudan's soon-to-be Supreme Court Justice Hassan Muddathir in 1956, quoting the Prophet Muhammad, in an official memorandum I found archived in Khartoum's Sudan Library. "An Arab is no better than a Persian, and the White is no better than the Black." Sudan's post-colonial leadership, however, rejected those calls. They chose to keep the English common law tradition as the law of the land. Why keep the laws of the oppressor?My research identifies three reasons why early Sudan sidelined Sharia: politics, pragmatism and demography.Rivalries between political parties in post-colonial Sudan led to parliamentary stalemate, which made it difficult to pass meaningful legislation. So Sudan simply maintained the colonial laws already on the books. There were practical reasons for maintaining English common law, too. Sudanese judges had been trained by British colonial officials. So they continued to apply English common law principles to the disputes they heard in their courtrooms. Sudan's founding fathers faced urgent challenges, such as creating the economy, establishing foreign trade and ending civil war. They felt it was simply not sensible to overhaul the rather smooth-running governance system in Khartoum.The continued use of colonial law after independence also reflected Sudan's ethnic, linguistic and religious diversity.Then, as now, Sudanese citizens spoke many languages and belonged to dozens of ethnic groups. At the time of Sudan's independence, people practicing Sunni and Sufi traditions of Islam lived largely in northern Sudan. Christianity was an important faith in southern Sudan. Sudan's diversity of faith communities meant that maintaining a foreign legal system – English common law – was less controversial than choosing whose version of Sharia to adopt. Why extremists triumphedMy research uncovers how today's instability across the Middle East and North Africa is, in part, a consequence of these post-colonial decisions to reject Sharia. In maintaining colonial legal systems, Sudan and other Muslim-majority countries that followed a similar path appeased Western world powers, which were pushing their former colonies toward secularism. But they avoided resolving tough questions about religious identity and the law. That created a disconnect between the people and their governments.In the long run, that disconnect helped fuel unrest among some citizens of deep faith, leading to sectarian calls to unite religion and the state once and for all. In Iran, Saudi Arabia and parts of Somalia and Nigeria, these interpretations triumphed, imposing extremist versions of Sharia over millions of people.In other words, Muslim-majority countries stunted the democratic potential of Sharia by rejecting it as a mainstream legal concept in the 1950s and 1960s, leaving Sharia in the hands of extremists.But there is no inherent tension between Sharia, human rights and the rule of law. Like any use of religion in politics, Sharia's application depends on who is using it – and why.Leaders of places like Saudi Arabia and Brunei have chosen to restrict women's freedom and minority rights. But many scholars of Islam and grassroots organizations interpret Sharia as a flexible, rights-oriented and equality-minded ethical order. Religion and the law worldwideReligion is woven into the legal fabric of many post-colonial nations, with varying consequences for democracy and stability.After its 1948 founding, Israel debated the role of Jewish law in Israeli society. Ultimately, Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion and his allies opted for a mixed legal system that combined Jewish law with English common law. In Latin America, the Catholicism imposed by Spanish conquistadors underpins laws restricting abortion, divorce and gay rights.And throughout the 19th century, judges in the U.S. regularly invoked the legal maxim that "Christianity is part of the common law." Legislators still routinely invoke their Christian faith when supporting or opposing a given law. Political extremism and human rights abuses that occur in those places are rarely understood as inherent flaws of these religions. When it comes to Muslim-majority countries, however, Sharia takes the blame for regressive laws – not the people who pass those policies in the name of religion.Fundamentalism and violence, in other words, are a post-colonial problem – not a religious inevitability. For the Muslim world, finding a system of government that reflects Islamic values while promoting democracy will not be easy after more than 50 years of failed secular rule. But building peace may demand it.This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts.Read more: * What Sharia means: 5 questions answered * How Islamic law can take on ISIS * Trump's travel ban is just one of many US policies that legalize discrimination against MuslimsMark Fathi Massoud has received fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Andrew Mellon Foundation, Fulbright-Hays, and the University of California. Any views expressed here are the author's responsibility.


New Yorkers who travel to Florida, Texas, and other states with high COVID-19 infection rates will lose paid sick leave benefits

Posted: 28 Jun 2020 01:00 PM PDT

New Yorkers who travel to Florida, Texas, and other states with high COVID-19 infection rates will lose paid sick leave benefitsAlabama, Arizona, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, Nevada, South Carolina, Utah, and Texas all currently have positive test rates higher than 10%.


Mexico launches raids after assassination attempt of police chief

Posted: 27 Jun 2020 11:43 AM PDT

Mexico launches raids after assassination attempt of police chiefThree people were killed in Friday's extremely violent ambush but Mexico's police chief survived.


Russia's mining giant admits to dumping contaminated water into Arctic tundra

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 03:38 AM PDT

Russia's mining giant admits to dumping contaminated water into Arctic tundraRussia's mining giant Norilsk Nickel has admitted to spilling wastewater into the wild less than a month after it caused a disastrous oil spill in the same region. Environmentalists and journalists in the Arctic city of Norilsk on Sunday caught an enrichment plant owned by Norilsk Nickel dumping water full of heavy metals into the Arctic tundra. The Novaya Gazeta newspaper published footage from outside the city of Norilsk, showing metal pipes leading from a reservoir and releasing foaming liquid into the nearby woods. The journalists called the police to the scene, prompting the workers to begin to dismantle the pipes. Environmental activists who took samples at the site of the spill were stopped at the local airport over the weekend and barred from shipping them to Moscow for tests. An official quoted by the Tass news agency on Monday said that up to 6,000 cubic metres of "unknown liquid with a chemical odour" is believed to have been pumped into tundra. London-traded Norilsk Nickel later on Sunday admitted to the incident, saying that it has suspended the workers who decided to pump the water into the tundra. Unnamed workers at the Talnakh plant reportedly suspected that the reservoir for the liquid used to process minerals would soon get overflow and decided to dump the wastewater into the nearby tundra. Investigators are looking into the incident. Norilsk Nickel, with the market capitalisation of £36 billion, is a major taxpayer in the region, employing more than 73,000 people. The metal company's environmental record came into question last month when some 20,000 metric tonnes of diesel fuel spilled into the river system from a tank at a power plant it owns. The fuel spill, which has been blamed on thawing permafrost, has been described as the Arctic's worst since the 1989 accident off the coast of Alaska. Vladimir Chuprov, project director at Greenpeace Russia, says that the Arctic spill has shed the light on the magnitude of day-to-day pollution in Norilsk by one of the country's biggest industrial companies. "Norilsk Nickel has been dumping waste water, which is proved by satellite images," he said, adding that it is high time that the company "stops hiding the violations and gets down to rectifying them." Norilsk Nickel insists that it responds to all reports about potential environmental damage.


Report: Many Americans say it would be 'inappropriate' for either party to dispute the election

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 05:50 AM PDT

Report: Many Americans say it would be 'inappropriate' for either party to dispute the electionDespite a number of Americans who say they could dispute the 2020 elections, a large majority still say a democratic system is a good way to govern.


US carriers drill after Southeast Asian nations rebuke China

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 12:47 AM PDT

US carriers drill after Southeast Asian nations rebuke ChinaA look at recent developments in the South China Sea, where China is pitted against smaller neighbors in multiple territorial disputes over islands, coral reefs and lagoons. Two U.S. Navy aircraft carrier strike groups are conducting dual operations in the Philippine Sea in a show of the service's ability to rapidly deploy overwhelming force in support of allies locked in disputes with China. "The U.S. Navy regularly conducts integrated strike group operations to support a free and open Indo-Pacific, and promote an international rules-based order wherein each country can reach its potential without sacrificing national sovereignty," the release said.


Syria ends tycoon Makhlouf's duty free contracts

Posted: 29 Jun 2020 06:28 AM PDT

Syria ends tycoon Makhlouf's duty free contractsSyria's government has announced the termination of duty free contracts with companies affiliated with President Bashar al-Assad's billionaire cousin Rami Makhlouf as part of an ongoing spat between the two men. The economy ministry, in a post Sunday on Facebook, said contracts had been cancelled to manage and operate duty free markets across Syria, including at Damascus airport and border posts with Lebanon and Jordan. The companies are mostly owned by Makhlouf who presides over an empire of businesses, including Syria's largest mobile operator Syriatel.