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- Trump: Impeachment 'has been very hard on my family'
- South Carolina teen gets life in prison for deadly elementary school shooting
- DNC Announces 10 Candidates in Atlanta Democratic Debate
- Beshear to Kentucky teachers: Help is on the way
- Tempers flare over rebuilding of Notre-Dame spire
- An expert in fraternity hazing deaths says coddling parents are part of the problem
- 20 Great Gifts for Boys Who Love to Tinker
- Look Out, Israel: China May Have Stolen The Iron Dome
- Turkey to deport American Islamic State detainee after Greece slams door
- 'You embarrassed yourself': Kellyanne Conway blasts CNN's Wolf Blitzer for playing George Conway clip
- Fuel rations, price hike hit Iranians amid plunging economy
- Vietnam jails music teacher for 'undermining' state
- Germany’s Scholz Rejects Calls to Boost EU’s Post-Brexit Budget
- One of Jamal Khashoggi’s close friends said Twitter is the 'only free platform' for many Saudis, but it also may have led to Khashoggi’s brutal murder
- American teacher's death in D.R. is being investigated Thursday as a murder
- The Army Plans To Use These 6 Weapons In A War Against Russia Or China
- Trump attack on Yovanovitch exposes GOP's muddled impeachment defense
- Moving university to Vienna, Soros vows to defend academic freedom from Orban
- Santa Clarita shooting: What we know about the Saugus High School suspected gunman, victims
- Venezuelan opposition party says armed men raid its office
- After 9 USC deaths, students slam school's "weirdly written" letter
- Scientists Are Fighting Over One of the Hottest Places on Earth
- Pelosi: What Trump did makes what Nixon did during Watergate ‘look almost small’
- Black South Carolina Leaders Distance Themselves from Buttigieg Campaign’s ‘Douglass Plan’
- The U.S. Marine Corps Is Making Big Changes (Thanks to Threats from Russia and China)
- As Supreme Court weighs DACA, Trump pushes fiction about 'hardened criminals'
- China envoy threatens Sweden over award to detained writer Gui Minhai
- Chicago gang leader accused of trying to help Islamic State
- Iran moves on ultra-cheap petrol, starts rationing
- Jackie Speier erupts at reporter for The Hill
- Man caught at Houston airport with 35 pounds of liquid cocaine in shampoo bottles
- U.K. Parties Warned Over ‘Political Bidding War’ on Minimum Wage
- Dressed to Kill: Arming Ukraine Could Put It on a Path Towards War
- Trump Admin. Prepares Court Filings to Seize Private Land in Texas for Border Wall: Report
- Venice hit by another ferocious high tide, flooding city
- The new seal for the Navy's next aircraft carrier contains a hint about big changes coming to naval aviation
- Suspect in ‘Potomac River Rapist’ cold case arrested
- Khamenei says Iran wants removal of Israel state not people
- Gay employee says salary was halved to be even with 'females in the office'
- Ohio GOP lawmakers want to ban all abortions, charge doctors who perform them with murder
- Blankfein and Cooperman Strike Back at Warren Over Her New Ad
- Russia's Su-57: A Terrifying Stealth Fighter or Junk? China Has Thoughts.
- Authorities are searching for a woman after finding her husband's corpse in a bedroom freezer
- Republicans Thought Yovanovitch Would Be a Pushover. She Beat Them Up Instead
- American Airlines flight attendants have literally begged not to work on the Boeing 737 Max when it returns, union boss says (BA)
- See Photos of the 2020 Nissan Titan
- Authorities find malnourished girl after online teacher tip
Trump: Impeachment 'has been very hard on my family' Posted: 14 Nov 2019 06:26 PM PST |
South Carolina teen gets life in prison for deadly elementary school shooting Posted: 15 Nov 2019 10:14 AM PST |
DNC Announces 10 Candidates in Atlanta Democratic Debate Posted: 14 Nov 2019 08:43 PM PST (Bloomberg) -- The Democratic National Committee on Thursday announced the 10 candidates who will participate in the fifth Democratic primary debate in Atlanta on Wednesday.They are: Joe Biden, Cory Booker, Pete Buttigieg, Tulsi Gabbard, Kamala Harris, Amy Klobuchar, Bernie Sanders, Tom Steyer, Elizabeth Warren and Andrew Yang.Julian Castro, who participated in previous debates, most recently in October at Otterbein University in Westerville, Ohio, didn't make the cut. Another October participant, Beto O'Rourke, has dropped out of the race. Deval Patrick, a former governor of Massachusetts who announced his candidacy on Thursday, also won't be on the stage at the Tyler Perry Studios.The forum will be co-hosted by the Washington Post and MSNBC. Candidates will be questioned by four female moderators: Rachel Maddow, Andrea Mitchell and Kristen Welker from the network, and Ashley Parker from the Post.The two-hour event had a higher bar to qualify than previous debates. Candidates must have contributions from 165,000 donors, up from 135,000.And the donors must be geographically dispersed, with a minimum of 600 per state in at least 20 states. In addition, participants must either show 3% support in four qualifying national or single-state polls, or have at least 5% support in two qualifying single-state polls released between Sept. 13 and Nov. 13 in the early nominating states of Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina or Nevada.The sixth debate will take place next month in Los Angeles.To contact the reporter on this story: Max Berley in Washington at mberley@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Wendy Benjaminson at wbenjaminson@bloomberg.net, John HarneyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Beshear to Kentucky teachers: Help is on the way Posted: 15 Nov 2019 11:38 AM PST On election night, long before his win in the Kentucky governor's race became official, Democrat Andy Beshear made clear who he thought helped make it happen. "To our educators, this is your victory," Beshear proclaimed in a Nov. 5 victory speech as he maintained a slim 5,000-vote margin. Now that Republican Gov. Matt Bevin has conceded, Beshear is moving quickly to translate the political activism of teachers that began in 2018 and persisted through this year's election into tangible school improvements. |
Tempers flare over rebuilding of Notre-Dame spire Posted: 14 Nov 2019 03:14 AM PST The French army general charged with overseeing the rebuilding of Paris' fire-mangled Notre-Dame, has caused astonishment by publicly telling the cathedral's chief architect to "shut his mouth" in a sign of tension over the monument's future look. General Jean-Louis Georgelin and chief architect Philippe Villeneuve are at odds over whether to replace the cathedral's spire -- which was toppled in the April 15 blaze -- with an exact replica, or mix things up with a modern twist. |
An expert in fraternity hazing deaths says coddling parents are part of the problem Posted: 15 Nov 2019 11:32 AM PST |
20 Great Gifts for Boys Who Love to Tinker Posted: 15 Nov 2019 01:13 PM PST |
Look Out, Israel: China May Have Stolen The Iron Dome Posted: 15 Nov 2019 01:00 AM PST |
Turkey to deport American Islamic State detainee after Greece slams door Posted: 14 Nov 2019 03:21 AM PST Turkey said on Thursday it would deport an American suspected Islamic State fighter to the United States after he was refused entry to Greece, and sent eight people with links to the group to Germany and Britain. NATO allies of Turkey in Europe have been worried that Turkey's offensive last month into a Syrian border area could lead to Islamic State suspects and their families escaping from prisons and camps run by Kurdish forces. Ankara has dismissed the concerns. |
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Fuel rations, price hike hit Iranians amid plunging economy Posted: 15 Nov 2019 04:48 AM PST Across the capital, Tehran, long lines of cars waited for hours at pumping stations following the changes in energy policy, which state media announced around midnight without any prior warning to the public. The U.S. withdrew from Tehran's 2015 nuclear deal with world powers last year, and re-imposed crippling trade sanctions that have sent the Iranian economy into free-fall. In several locations, Iranian police were seen deployed near gas stations. |
Vietnam jails music teacher for 'undermining' state Posted: 15 Nov 2019 05:11 AM PST Vietnam sentenced a music teacher to 11 years in prison on Friday for Facebook posts that allegedly undermined the one-party state, which has been accused of tightening the noose on online dissent. Communist Vietnam has long jailed its critics but has come under fire recently for targeting users on Facebook, a popular forum for activists in the country where all independent media is banned. Nguyen Nang Tinh is the latest activist jailed for his Facebook comments, including posts about police brutality, land rights, and a Taiwanese steel firm that dumped toxic sludge into the ocean, killing masses of fish off the coast of Vietnam. |
Germany’s Scholz Rejects Calls to Boost EU’s Post-Brexit Budget Posted: 14 Nov 2019 06:44 AM PST (Bloomberg) -- Explore what's moving the global economy in the new season of the Stephanomics podcast. Subscribe via Apple Podcast, Spotify or Pocket Cast.German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz pushed back against calls from some member states to increase the European Union's post-Brexit budget, saying spending should be capped at the current level.Scholz told Bloomberg's "Future of German Growth" event in Berlin that he wants the trillion-euro ($1.1 trillion), seven-year budget to remain at 1% of the bloc's gross domestic product. He urged EU nations to agree a deal well before Germany takes over the bloc's presidency in the second half of next year, saying that otherwise some spending programs could be affected.The current proposal is "not a very reform budget," Scholz said in an on-stage interview with Bloomberg Senior Executive Editor for Economics Stephanie Flanders. It's unusual when "you do not dispute the things you did in the past, you just discuss what you want to have extra," he said.Britain is a net contributor to the EU and some richer members are calling for the hole it will leave in the bloc's finances to be covered by cuts for the 2021-2027 period. Poorer ones want everyone else to pay more."If we just stick to what we have, 1% of GDP, it is an increase and a big increase which will also mean billions of extra money each year to be financed by many countries and also by Germany," Scholz said.The EU's outgoing budget commissioner, Guenther Oettinger, said Thursday he sees Germany's proposal for 1% of GDP as a "starting point and not as the end point of the discussion.""Nobody from Germany has told me yet where I should make cuts in the budget," he told reporters, adding that the "chances are good" for an agreement in the spring.Scholz said the EU should move "away from unanimous votes" in some areas of policy making: "For example in foreign policy there must be the ability to have majority votes for a decision," the German finance minister said.\--With assistance from Arne Delfs.To contact the reporters on this story: Birgit Jennen in Berlin at bjennen1@bloomberg.net;Stephanie Flanders in London at flanders@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Chad Thomas at cthomas16@bloomberg.net, Iain Rogers, Chris ReiterFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
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American teacher's death in D.R. is being investigated Thursday as a murder Posted: 14 Nov 2019 06:30 AM PST |
The Army Plans To Use These 6 Weapons In A War Against Russia Or China Posted: 15 Nov 2019 05:00 AM PST |
Trump attack on Yovanovitch exposes GOP's muddled impeachment defense Posted: 15 Nov 2019 03:42 PM PST Donald Trump is alone. Not a single Republican lawmaker on the House Intelligence Committee backed up the president's midhearing attacks on veteran diplomat Marie Yovanovitch Friday as she described a Trump-fueled "smear campaign" that effectively ended her career. Not a single one sought to legitimize the "campaign of disinformation" she described, which was perpetuated by Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani and led Trump to abruptly recall her from Ukraine in May and badmouth her to Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelensky, in July. |
Moving university to Vienna, Soros vows to defend academic freedom from Orban Posted: 15 Nov 2019 10:29 AM PST Billionaire George Soros opened the new main campus of his Central European University in Vienna on Friday, saying it would not halt its struggle to defend academic freedom from Viktor Orban, the right wing leader he says hounded it from Hungary. CEU's decision last year to move the bulk of its courses out of Hungary followed a long struggle between Hungarian-born Soros, who promotes liberal causes through his charities, and Orban's anti-immigrant government. Since it was founded by Soros in 1991, CEU has been a gateway to the West for thousands of students from eastern Europe, offering U.S.-accredited graduate degree programmes in an academic climate that celebrates free thought. |
Santa Clarita shooting: What we know about the Saugus High School suspected gunman, victims Posted: 15 Nov 2019 02:34 PM PST |
Venezuelan opposition party says armed men raid its office Posted: 15 Nov 2019 03:32 PM PST A leading Venezuelan opposition party said a group of armed men with their faces covered raided its headquarters late Friday, taking cellphones, computers and ID cards from staffers and raising tensions the night before a nationwide protest against President Nicolás Maduro. Popular Will members said Juan Guaidó, who belongs to the party, was not inside at the time. Guaidó arrived at the 18th-floor office in Caracas minutes later and called for an end to Maduro's "dictatorship," saying the men who broke into the office were "cowards" for covering their faces and not identifying themselves. |
After 9 USC deaths, students slam school's "weirdly written" letter Posted: 13 Nov 2019 10:57 PM PST |
Scientists Are Fighting Over One of the Hottest Places on Earth Posted: 15 Nov 2019 08:30 AM PST |
Pelosi: What Trump did makes what Nixon did during Watergate ‘look almost small’ Posted: 14 Nov 2019 09:25 AM PST |
Black South Carolina Leaders Distance Themselves from Buttigieg Campaign’s ‘Douglass Plan’ Posted: 15 Nov 2019 06:58 AM PST Several black leaders in South Carolina who were listed as supporters of the Buttigieg campaign's "Douglass Plan" distanced themselves from the proposal and the campaign when pressed for comment, saying that the campaign was "intentionally vague" in asking for their endorsements.According to a report from The Intercept, three South Carolina black leaders — Columbia City Councilwoman Tameika Devine, Rehoboth Baptist pastor and state Representative Ivory Thigpen, and Johnnie Cordero, chair of the state party's Black Caucus — all expressed misgivings over the way that the Buttigieg campaign featured their names prominently in an open letter published in the the HBCU Times touting the plan's details."We are over 400 South Carolinians, including business owners, pastors, community leaders, and students. Together, we endorse his Douglass Plan for Black America, the most comprehensive roadmap for tackling systemic racism offered by a 2020 presidential candidate," the letter reads.Buttigieg, who polled at zero percent among black voters in South Carolina earlier this year, recently called his plan "the most comprehensive vision put forward by a 2020 candidate on the question of how we're going to tackle systemic racism in this country."When reached for comment, Devine, Thigpen, and Cordero all denied that they intended their correspondence with the Buttigieg campaign over the plan to be read as an endorsement of the candidate."Clearly from the number of calls I received about my endorsement, I think the way they put it out there wasn't clear, that it was an endorsement of the plan, and that may have been intentionally vague. I'm political, I know how that works," Devine said. "I do think they probably put it out there thinking people wouldn't read the fine print or wouldn't look at the details or even contact the people and say, 'Hey, you're endorsing Mayor Pete?'""How it was rolled out was not an accurate representation of where I stand," Thigpen added. "I didn't know about its rolling out. Somebody brought it to my attention, and it was alarming to me, because even though I had had conversations with the campaign, it was clear to me, or at least I thought I made it clear to them, that I was a strong Bernie Sanders supporter — actually co-chair of the state, and I was not seeking to endorse their candidate or the plan."Cordero, who has since been removed as a public supporter, said he did not know "how my name got on there," and was simply emailed the plan by the campaign and asked for feedback."What I was talking back and forth with them about was, who drafted the plan? I know Pete didn't draft the plan. I'm sure he had his advisers do it. But I wanna know who was involved in this plan such that you can claim that you speak for black America," Cordero said. "The long and the short of it was they never sufficiently answered my questions, so I never actually endorsed the plan. They went ahead and used my name."In a statement to National Review, the Buttigieg campaign said that "we never gave the impression publicly that these people were endorsing Pete, only that they supported the plan.""After they indicated their support, we reached out to people multiple times giving them the opportunity to review the language of the op-ed and the option to opt-out. We did hear from people who weren't comfortable being listed and we removed them," the statement said.A source with knowledge of the situation said that the campaign reached out to Devine on Thursday night, who remained supportive of the plan. It is unclear whether the campaign also reached out to Thigpen. |
The U.S. Marine Corps Is Making Big Changes (Thanks to Threats from Russia and China) Posted: 14 Nov 2019 09:00 PM PST It's no secret that the U.S. Marine Corps is changing in order to better prepare for major warfare with China and Russia. Gen. David Berger, the Marine commandant, is overseeing several studies that could result in the Corps cutting some units and adding others and, in the process, radically changing how and why it functions. |
As Supreme Court weighs DACA, Trump pushes fiction about 'hardened criminals' Posted: 14 Nov 2019 02:55 PM PST |
China envoy threatens Sweden over award to detained writer Gui Minhai Posted: 15 Nov 2019 03:51 AM PST China threatened Sweden with unspecified "counter measures" if its culture minister attends a literary award ceremony on Friday for Gui Minhai, a Swedish citizen who was abducted in Thailand in 2015 and is now in detention in China. The case of Chinese-born Gui Minhai, who studied in Sweden in the 1980s and was based in Hong Kong when he published books critical of China's leaders, has soured relations between Sweden and China. |
Chicago gang leader accused of trying to help Islamic State Posted: 15 Nov 2019 09:11 AM PST A purported street-gang leader from suburban Chicago who became radicalized in prison faces federal charges accusing him of seeking to provide money to Islamic State militants in Syria, according to a complaint unsealed Friday in U.S. District Court in Chicago. Jason Brown, the 37-year-old leader of the AHK gang, could be heard on secret FBI recordings speaking admiringly about beheadings by the Islamic State group, the 27-page complaint says. AHK, which prosecutors say traffics drugs throughout the Chicago area, is comprised of former members of the Black P-Stone, Gangster Disciples and Four Corner Hustlers who converted to Islam, the court filings say. |
Iran moves on ultra-cheap petrol, starts rationing Posted: 15 Nov 2019 06:09 AM PST Iran imposed petrol rationing and raised pump prices by at least 50 percent Friday, saying the move aims to help the needy with cash handouts and is not due to a budget deficit. The Islamic republic provides some of the most heavily subsidised petrol in the world, with the pump price previously standing at just 10,000 rials (less than nine US cents) a litre. "Increasing petrol prices is to the people's benefit and also to help the society's strata under (economic) pressure," President Hassan Rouhani told a cabinet meeting, quoted by state news agency IRNA. |
Jackie Speier erupts at reporter for The Hill Posted: 15 Nov 2019 01:07 PM PST Angered by the testimony of ousted ambassador Marie Yovanovitch, California Rep. Jackie Speier upbraided a reporter for The Hill and ripped the outlet's publication of columns by John Solomon, the conservative journalist whose work is at the center of what Yovanovitch described as a "smear campaign" against her. "I just find it reprehensible that any newspaper would just be willing to put that kind of crap out that is not — has no veracity whatsoever, and not check to see if it had any veracity," said Speier, a Democrat serving in her seventh term in the House, according to audio of the exchange reviewed by POLITICO. Speier launched into her critique of The Hill after fielding a question from its senior staff writer Scott Wong about who her dream witness would be at the impeachment proceedings. |
Man caught at Houston airport with 35 pounds of liquid cocaine in shampoo bottles Posted: 15 Nov 2019 09:15 AM PST |
U.K. Parties Warned Over ‘Political Bidding War’ on Minimum Wage Posted: 14 Nov 2019 04:01 PM PST (Bloomberg) -- Sign up to our Brexit Bulletin, follow us @Brexit and subscribe to our podcast.Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn were warned over playing election politics with the U.K. minimum wage.In a report published Friday, the Institute for Fiscal Studies said plans set out by both the Conservatives and Labour would take the statutory pay minimum to an all-time high and dramatically increase the share of private-sector employees affected. But while there is no evidence that recent minimum-wage rises had damaged employment prospects, there is now a risk of triggering a "tipping point," the IFS cautioned."We should not be setting minimum wages via a political bidding war," said IFS economist Xiaowei Xu. "If due consideration is not given to the balancing act involved, the risks to the very people the policy is intended to help may be quite severe."Under Conservative plans, the National Living Wage will rise to match two thirds of median earnings by 2024, the equivalent of 10.50 pounds ($13.50) an hour compared with 8.21 pounds now. The rate will also be extended to all workers age 21 and over.Labour is promising to go further, saying it would raise the rate to 10 pounds an hour in 2020 if it wins the Dec. 12 election and include workers under the age of 18, who are currently entitled to just 4.35 pounds.To contact the reporter on this story: Andrew Atkinson in London at a.atkinson@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Fergal O'Brien at fobrien@bloomberg.net, Lucy MeakinFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Dressed to Kill: Arming Ukraine Could Put It on a Path Towards War Posted: 14 Nov 2019 09:32 AM PST |
Trump Admin. Prepares Court Filings to Seize Private Land in Texas for Border Wall: Report Posted: 14 Nov 2019 02:28 PM PST The Trump administration is preparing to submit court filings as early as next week as a necessary step toward seizing private land in Texas for its wall on the border with Mexico, NBC reported Thursday. Administration officials still haven't said how much the government will compensate affected landowners."I still think we're on track to get the land we need for 450 miles" of border wall, Acting Commissioner of Customs and Border Protection Mark Morgan told reporters on Thursday.The government may file to appropriate the land in federal court in Texas under the Declaration of Taking Act, which would expedite the appropriation process. The law, which is meant to be used in emergencies, allows the federal government to take over the land before beginning negotiations with its former owners over compensation.Department of Justice and Department of Defense attorneys have already prepared letters of rights of entry, which inform property owners of the government's impending use of their land. Trump adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner is scheduled to meet with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers chief of engineers Todd Semonite, Assistant Defense Secretaries Kenneth Rapuano and Robert Salesses, and other officials Friday at the White House to discuss taking over lands on the southern border.The White House has previously faced legal challenges to its efforts to fund construction of the border wall. In December of 2018, Democrats refused to allocate funding for the wall in the 2019 budget, and the ensuing standoff with President Trump led to the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. Trump eventually relented, deciding instead to declare a state of emergency in order to allocate funds from the Pentagon's budget, in a move a federal judge deemed "unlawful" last month. |
Venice hit by another ferocious high tide, flooding city Posted: 15 Nov 2019 01:03 AM PST An exceptionally high tide hit Venice again on Friday just three days after the city suffered its worst flooding in more than 50 years, leaving squares, shops and hotels once more inundated. Mayor Luigi Brugnaro closed access to the submerged St. Mark's Square and issued an international appeal for funds, warning that the damage caused by this week's floods could rise to one billion euros. Local authorities said the high tide peaked at 154 cm (5.05 ft), slightly below expectations and significantly lower than the 187 cm level reached on Tuesday, which was the second highest tide ever recorded in Venice. |
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Suspect in ‘Potomac River Rapist’ cold case arrested Posted: 15 Nov 2019 04:12 AM PST Genealogy websites and a cheek swab enabled U.S. Marshals to arrest a man suspected of being the "Potomac River Rapist," who terrorized the nation's capital in the 1990s. News outlets report 60-year-old Giles Daniel Warrick is now awaiting extradition from Horry County, South Carolina. Authorities said DNA evidence matched family profiles in genealogy services, enabling investigators to narrow their search after interviewing Warrick's relatives. |
Khamenei says Iran wants removal of Israel state not people Posted: 14 Nov 2019 04:10 PM PST Iran's supreme leader said Friday that calls for the abolition of Israel which have sparked outrage in the West target the "imposed state" not the Jewish people. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the future of the land should be decided by Palestinians of all faiths, Jewish as well as Christian and Muslim. "The 'abolition of the Israeli regime' ... does not mean the abolition of Jewish people; we have no problem with them," Khamenei told a meeting of Islamic countries in Tehran, according to his official website. |
Gay employee says salary was halved to be even with 'females in the office' Posted: 15 Nov 2019 06:33 AM PST Man claims in lawsuit against New York events company that employers sought to degrade him after they learned he was gayThe New York company stages promotional events for companies including Nike, Twitter and Amazon. Photograph: Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty ImagesA gay man working at a New York events company has claimed in a discrimination lawsuit that his pay was halved so he would be on a par with "other females in the office".In the lawsuit against Eventique, a company that stages promotional events for companies including Nike, Twitter and Amazon, Wesley Wernecke claims his employers sought to alienate and degrade him after they learned he was gay, NBC news reported.Wernecke claims that a week after he was hired in June, co-workers began to make comments on his "girly" engagement ring. Asked if his wife wore a similar ring, Wernecke replied that his partner, Evan, did.It was then, he claims, that a tense office environment began to develop between him, co-workers and the company's chief executive, CEO Henry Liron David. He was then excluded from meetings and after-work drinks with "the fellas", passed over for assignments and subjected to discriminatory remarks.Wernecke was then called into David's office and told his salary was being cut by more than 50%, from $145,000 to $70,000."I couldn't sleep at night thinking that you were being paid so much more than the other females in the office," David is alleged to have told Wernecke. The CEO, the complaint alleges, "simply could not bear the thought that Eventique would continue to be represented by a gay man".Not long after, Wernecke found his salary had been cut more drastically to $58,000."David took pains to mark Wernecke as different from the other employees through these physical demonstrations," the complaint alleges. The pattern of discrimination taxed Wernecke's mental health and he began taking anti-anxiety medication to cope, he said. By October, he had been fired."Wesley was personally recruited by this employer to be a senior producer, and once [David] learned he was gay, the employer began shutting him out of the business," Wernecke's lawyer Anthony Consiglio told NBC News.A lawyer for David and Eventique described the allegations as "baseless". |
Ohio GOP lawmakers want to ban all abortions, charge doctors who perform them with murder Posted: 15 Nov 2019 08:38 AM PST |
Blankfein and Cooperman Strike Back at Warren Over Her New Ad Posted: 14 Nov 2019 10:58 AM PST (Bloomberg) -- Billionaires Lloyd Blankfein and Leon Cooperman, both targets of Elizabeth Warren's new campaign ad, struck back on Thursday.Blankfein, who ran Goldman Sachs Group Inc. until last year, said on Twitter that vilifying the rich is bad for the U.S."Maybe tribalism is just in her DNA," he wrote. Blankfein didn't return a message asking if that was a reference to the genealogy test she took to prove she's part Native American. She apologized to the Cherokee Nation this year.On CNBC, Cooperman referred directly to her heritage claims, which have included her citing her race as "American Indian.""Why did you lie on your Texas bar application in 1986?" Cooperman asked. "We don't need another fabricator in the White House."Warren's ad, which opens with her call for a wealth tax, points out that Cooperman was accused of insider trading. In 2017, the billionaire investor and his firm agreed to pay $4.9 million to resolve claims from regulators that he traded on insider information, without admitting fault.The Democrat's ad said Blankfein earned $70 million during the financial crisis and shows him saying that she prefers "cataclysmic change to the economic system as opposed to tinkering."Before President Donald Trump picked Goldman Sachs alumni for prominent posts in his administration, one of his final ads of the 2016 campaign showed Blankfein's face as the candidate said in a voiceover that a corrupt global power machine was robbing the U.S.\--With assistance from Melissa Karsh and Max Berley.To contact the reporter on this story: Max Abelson in New York at mabelson@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Michael J. Moore at mmoore55@bloomberg.net, Alan Mirabella, Alan GoldsteinFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Russia's Su-57: A Terrifying Stealth Fighter or Junk? China Has Thoughts. Posted: 15 Nov 2019 12:30 AM PST |
Authorities are searching for a woman after finding her husband's corpse in a bedroom freezer Posted: 14 Nov 2019 12:57 PM PST Authorities are searching for a woman after finding her husband's corpse in a freezer in a bedroom inside her Missouri home, where it may have been stored for nearly a year. Barbara Watters of Joplin, Mo., was charged Wednesday with abandonment of a corpse, a felony that is punishable by up to four years in prison. |
Republicans Thought Yovanovitch Would Be a Pushover. She Beat Them Up Instead Posted: 15 Nov 2019 02:21 PM PST Nicholas Kamm / AFP/ Getty ImagesBefore she even spoke on Friday, President Donald Trump's surrogates in Congress and conservative media expected Marie Yovanovitch to cry on command for the impeachment-hearing cameras. As she began testifying about the smear campaign that forced her from her ambassadorship in Ukraine, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) tweeted that impeachment wasn't about her feelings. But for over five hours, the 33-year veteran diplomat left no doubt why she was there and what she endured, even as the president himself weighed in on Twitter seeming to intimidate her as she sat in front of the congressional panel. The president's attack wasn't the only attack she brushed aside. Yovanovitch methodically outplayed a series of Republican efforts to cast her firing as normal, the president's behavior as unremarkable, and the harm she suffered as negligible–rather than the prelude to a shadow diplomatic effort to coerce Ukraine into aiding Trump's reelection. Instead, she made it clear that she would have been an obstacle to the president's pressure on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had she remained in Kyiv. At one point, she told Rep. Jim Himes (D-CT) that she would have opposed the summer 2019 suspension of $400 million in U.S. military aid and would never have asked Zelensky to pursue the conspiracy theory that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 election. Asked to affirm that Trump was legitimately concerned about Ukraine corruption, she shot back, "That's what he says."Not much of Friday's hearing, the second in the House impeachment inquiry, went the GOP's way. The exception was Rep. Chris Stewart (R-UT), who, knowing that Yovanovitch was fired before the pressure campaign on Zelensky proceeded, got her to concede she had no knowledge of criminal wrongdoing by Trump.Most of their attempts to discredit or dismiss her either fell flat or ended in retreat. Rep. Brad Wenstrup, an Ohio Republican, asked Yovanovitch to affirm that presidents get to select their ambassadors. In perhaps the most powerful line of the hearing, Yovanovitch replied, "I obviously don't dispute the president has the right to withdraw an ambassador at any time for any reason, but what I do wonder is why it was necessary to smear my reputation."Wenstrup quickly replied that wasn't his question, pressed the sound on his mic off and sat back in his chair. When the Republicans' counsel for impeachment, Steve Castor, put forward a series of public statements from 2016 from Ukrainians upset with candidate Trump, Yovanovitch frustrated a line of questioning meant to establish what Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA), the top Intelligence Committee Republican, called "Ukrainian election meddling.""Those elements you've recited don't seem to be a plan or plot of the Ukrainian government to work against President Trump. Those are isolated incidents," she said. "I've come to learn public life can be quite critical. I'd remind, again, that our own U.S. intelligence community has conclusively determined" that Russia, not Ukraine, interfered in the 2016 U.S. election.Castor also walked into a trap by asking if Trump might have been justified in feeling Ukraine was against him based on internet-borne comments. Yovanovitch, whom Trump had just disparaged in a tweet, icily replied, "Well, sometimes that happens on social media."Stewart, who called impeachment "nonsense," implied it was appropriate for Trump to seek a Ukrainian investigation of Burisma, the national-gas firm that put Joe Biden's son on its board. Yovanovitch responded that "we have a process for that" that Trump did not follow, one involving communication between the Justice Department and its Ukrainian counterpart under a mutual legal-assistance treaty. Stewart reiterated the question "regardless of the process," although corruption definitionally routes around official channels in pursuit of private agendas. Similarly, when John Ratcliffe (R-TX) asked if it was a potential "conflict of interest" for Joe Biden to seek the firing of a corrupt Ukrainian prosecutor in 2016–a central Republican defense of Trump–Yovanovitch rejected his premise. "I actually don't," she said. "I think the view was that Mr. [Viktor] Shokin was not a good prosecutor-general fighting corruption. I don't think it had to do with the Burisma case."Republicans attempted to approach Yovanovitch respectfully. They praised her service–even as they defended Trump for ending it prematurely–and gave prominence to Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) so as to avoid the optics of men attacking a woman. Yet they were at times dismissive of what Yovanovitch had described as a nightmare. Rep. Michael Conaway (R-TX), asked her basic questions about her post-ambassadorship gig at Georgetown University—how many classes does she teach? How many students does she have?—and the regard her diplomatic colleagues have for her, suggesting that she suffered no real harm after the president capped an assassination of her character by firing her.Later, Rep. Mike Quigley (D-IL) had the room laughing when he spelled out the upshot of that inquiry. "It's like a Hallmark movie," he said from the dais. "You ended up at Georgetown. This is all OK!"The ultimate sabotage to the GOP's attempt to treat Yovanovitch as an impeachment sideshow was committed by Trump himself. With a series of tweets slamming Yovanovitch as she testified, the president did plenty of work to make her appearance even more relevant to the impeachment inquiry. The ambassador—and Democratic lawmakers—said Trump's broadside was intended to intimidate not only her but future impeachment witnesses. It fueled talk of a whole new article of impeachment.Few Republicans felt compelled to justify the president's tweets. Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-N.Y.), a reliable ally of the president, said Trump is allowed to defend himself and that Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), the Democratic floor general on impeachment, had cherry-picked tweets about the ambassador to read from the dais. As the hearing wrapped, Republicans maintained that Stewart's line of questioning was the punch that would linger from the hearing. "This witness can't shed any light on what Dems claim are their impeachable offenses, and can't advance their narrative," said a senior House GOP aide.But Democrats left with the impression they got even more than they'd wanted—that a witness initially pitched as someone who could flesh out the human impact of Trump's Ukraine designs served many more purposes."You know, it's funny," said Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL), "the more the day went on, I personally thought she became more and more enlightening for purposes of our inquiry." The ambassador's appearance met a rare ending for the staid hearing rooms of Capitol Hill. Schiff closed with a thundering statement, and before Yovanovitch could even rise from her chair, the crowd in the gallery erupted in a standing ovation.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: 15 Nov 2019 08:43 AM PST |
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Authorities find malnourished girl after online teacher tip Posted: 14 Nov 2019 07:50 AM PST A teacher administering an online test who heard an 11-year-old student say she was hungry and only allowed to eat a small plate of rice each day alerted investigators in Ohio that something was amiss. Authorities found the girl was severely malnourished, living in filth and had been isolated for years. The girl weighed just 47 pounds (21.3 kilograms) when she was found in September — roughly 30 pounds (13.6 kilograms) under the average weight for a girl her age, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. |
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