Yahoo! News: Iraq
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- Boeing 737 slides off runway into Florida river, 21 hurt
- For Jews, America was once exceptional. Now, anti-Semitism is as strong here as in Europe.
- Ilhan Omar: Democratic congresswoman fires back at Mike Pence in row over Venezuela
- UNCC student to be honored, Kentucky Derby and spring meteor shower: 5 things you need to know this weekend
- Couple Says American Airlines Employee Called Police Officer `A Killer`
- Guatemalan boy who died in US custody suffered from brain infection
- Hardships from Hawaii volcano stretch on 1 year later
- Envoy says US ready for 'all sides' to lay down arms in Afghan war
- The Farcical Bill Barr Scandal
- 2020 Vision: ‘Buttabeep, Buttaboop,’ Buttigieg — Who’s winning the Oprah primary?
- The 2019 Volkswagen Arteon in Photos
- Venezuela's neighbors accuse Maduro of protecting 'terrorist groups' in Colombia
- The Latest: NTSB says plane in river had no prior accidents
- 'It was a lot of shots': 911 calls from UNC Charlotte shooting describe campus in chaos
- Measles-plagued Scientology ship leaves St Lucia
- Ted Bundy: Who was the serial killer and how did he die?
- Sri Lanka blasts show Asia is fertile ground for IS ideology
- Donald Trump Has Finally Found His Soulmate: William Barr
- The U.S. Air Force First F-35 Combat Doesn’t Prove Anything
- Verizon’s new BOGO deal covers iPhones, Pixels, and Samsung phones
- Trump says he and Putin discussed getting humanitarian aid to Venezuela
- 2020 Toyota Prius Prime Gets Many Upgrades, Still Lags behind Its Competitors in EV Driving Range
- 2020 Democratic presidential candidates argue surging US economy is not benefiting all Americans
- William Barr: The New Cheney
- ExxonMobil sues Cuban companies for nationalized assets
- Protect your Apple Watch Series 4 from scratches with this $9 clear case
- UPDATE 2-Trump, Putin discuss possible new nuclear accord -White House
- The Latest: Lawyer: Family got 'transformational' settlement
- House Democrat expects vote 'next week' to hold attorney general in contempt
- Apple Watch Series 4 has never been as cheap as it is in this surprise sale
- UPDATE 1-Trump says he will decide over next week whether to let McGahn testify for Congress
- 'If I was black I'd be picking cotton': Ohio teen's racist prom proposal sparks backlash
- These Wireless Earbuds Cost Way Less Than Beats
- 12 killed in pro-regime attacks on northwestern Syria
- Economy Surges in April, Adding 263,000 Jobs
- 10-month-old baby dies after migrant family's raft capsizes in Rio Grande
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Boeing 737 slides off runway into Florida river, 21 hurt Posted: 03 May 2019 10:52 PM PDT The Jacksonville Sheriff's Office said on Twitter that all 21 of the injured were taken to a hospital, where they were listed in good condition. The plane, a chartered Boeing 737-800 arriving from Naval Station Guantanamo Bay in Cuba with 136 passengers and seven crew members, crashed into the St. Johns river at the end of the runway at Naval Air Station Jacksonville at about 9:40 p.m. local time, a spokesman for the Florida air base said. Every person is alive and accounted for," the sheriff's office said on Twitter. |
For Jews, America was once exceptional. Now, anti-Semitism is as strong here as in Europe. Posted: 03 May 2019 02:00 AM PDT |
Ilhan Omar: Democratic congresswoman fires back at Mike Pence in row over Venezuela Posted: 04 May 2019 07:48 AM PDT Ilhan Omar has hit back after US Vice President Mike Pence said she "does not know what she is talking about" in regards to ongoing political unrest in Venezuela.Ms Omar, one of the first Muslim women to serve in the US congress, argued that America was partly to blame for the conflict in Venezuela.Mr Pence's criticism of her views was something "women of colour have heard" before, she said."Instead of 'we disagree,' it's 'she doesn't know what she's talking about'. They have to make us feel small," the Minnesota Democrat tweeted. "This from an administration that thinks climate change is a Chinese hoax".Ms Omar apportioned blame on American foreign policy for the political turmoil in Venezuela – arguing the US promotes regime change that is harmful to both America and the people in the countries targeted."A lot of the policies that we have put in place has kind of helped lead the devastation in Venezuela, and we've sort of set the stage for where we're arriving today," Ms Omar said."This particular bullying and the use of sanctions to eventually intervene and make regime change really does not help the people of countries like Venezuela, and it certainly does not help and is not in the interest of the United States."Ms Omar made the remarks during an appearance on the radio programme Democracy Now! where she discussed US interventions in Central America broadly and the long term impacts of US sanctions.Sanctions have been a key US foreign policy tool for several decades now, and the Trump administration can be noted for its heavy use of the measure.Asked why he criticised Ms Omar on social media, Mr Pence told Fox News anchor Sandra Smith it was "because the congresswoman doesn't know what she's talking about.""Nicolas Maduro is a socialist dictator who has taken what was once one of the most prosperous nations in this hemisphere and brought it literally to a level of deprivation and oppression and poverty that we have never seen," Mr Pence said of the embattled Venezuelan president. "That is not a result of US policies."Ms Omar's remarks come as protests continue in Venezuela, where National Assembly and opposition leader Juan Guaido unsuccessfully tried to initiate a military uprising against Mr Maduro earlier this week. The Trump administration announced support for Mr Guaido in January, recognising him as the country's interim president over Mr Maduro and looking for ways to support him economically.In March, the US administration implemented new sanctions on Venezuela in order to force Mr Maduro to relinquish his power to Mr Gauido.Mr Guaido's efforts and those sanctions culminated this week in mass protests in the Venezuelan capital of Caracas, where violence erupted as Mr Guaido and Mr Maduro battled for power. Economic conditions in Venezuela have deteriorated since Mr Maduro – who has repeatedly blamed attempts to overthrow him on the US - took power in 2013. The oil-rich country is plagued with economic and political turmoil – with hyperinflation leaving the currency practically worthless and causing the cost of essentials to skyrocket, leaving many unable to afford basics such as food and medicine. |
Posted: 04 May 2019 02:31 AM PDT |
Couple Says American Airlines Employee Called Police Officer `A Killer` Posted: 03 May 2019 11:01 AM PDT |
Guatemalan boy who died in US custody suffered from brain infection Posted: 03 May 2019 09:13 AM PDT Juan De León Gutiérrez, 16, travelled to the US from Camotán, hoping to be reunited with his older brother A group of migrant families walk from the Rio Grande near McAllen, Texas, on 14 March. Photograph: Eric Gay/AP A Guatemalan boy who died at a Texas children's hospital after being detained on the US southern border was suffering from a brain infection, the Guardian has learned. He was the third migrant child from Guatemala to die in US government custody in the past five months. Juan De León Gutiérrez, 16, had travelled to the US from Camotán, a poor rural community in the Chiquimula region of eastern Guatemala, hoping to be reunited with his older brother. It is unclear when or where the boy first fell ill, but he died on Tuesday, days after being detained by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and transferred to a government-contracted children's detention shelter. "My son was always healthy," his mother, Tránsito Gutiérrez Oloroso, told local newspaper Prensa Libre. "I ask that they treat his remains with dignity." Juan was diagnosed with a frontal lobe infection at Driscoll children's hospital in Corpus Christi. Medical treatment – including surgery to alleviate the pressure caused by the infection – failed, and he died on 30 April after several days in intensive care. The boy's older brother, who lives in Texas, visited him in hospital. Consular officials in McAllen hope to repatriate his body to Guatemala within the next few days. Silvia Samines, the deputy Guatemala consul in McAllen, said that efforts had been made to obtain humanitarian visas for the boy's parents so that they could visit him in hospital, but they were unable to travel due to their advanced age. "We have started the relevant procedures in order to repatriate the body as soon as possible," she said. The 16-year-old was under the care of the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) when he fell ill. ORR contracts private firms and charities to house thousands of children separated from their parents at the border by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) officials – as well as those detained after making the perilous overland journey from Central America without adult relatives. Two other Guatemalan children died in US custody within weeks of each other in December 2018, but unlike the latest case, they were in custody of CBP. Jakelin Caal, seven, who died on 8 December at an El Paso children's hospital, and Felipe Gómez Alonzo, eight, who died on Christmas Eve at a New Mexico hospital, were part of a mass exodus from the impoverished Central American country. Almost two-thirds of Guatemala's population live in poverty and half its children suffer from chronic malnutrition. In November, Guatemalans overtook Mexicans as the largest nationality taken into CBP custody – an extraordinary figure considering that the population of Mexico is seven times larger than that of its southern neighbour. Juan entered the US near El Paso, and was detained by CBP on 19 April. He was taken by Ice agents on 20 April to a children's facility in Brownsville which is run by Southwest Key – a not-for-profit organisation which houses up to 5,000 migrant children in more than 20 shelters. Juan was in apparently good health when he arrived, but the next morning he was taken to an emergency room after complaining of a fever, chills and a headache. He was discharged back to the shelter later that day, according to a statement by the Administration for Children and Families (ACF). The boy's health deteriorated, and he was returned to the emergency room by ambulance on 22 April, said ACF. From there, the sick boy was admitted to the intensive care unit at the children's hospital with the brain infection. Southwest Key has not commented on Juan's death, but an ACF spokeswoman, Evelyn Stauffer, said in a statement: "Arrangements were made for the minor's brother and Guatemalan consular officials to visit the minor while he was hospitalised. The family who resides in the home country received frequent updates from hospital staff. The cause of death is currently under review, and, in accordance with standard ORR policies and procedures, the case will be subject to full review." |
Hardships from Hawaii volcano stretch on 1 year later Posted: 03 May 2019 03:33 PM PDT |
Envoy says US ready for 'all sides' to lay down arms in Afghan war Posted: 04 May 2019 08:59 AM PDT The US special envoy tasked with forging a peace deal with the Taliban said Saturday that America stands ready for "all sides" to lay down arms in the 17-year conflict. Peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad is leading the latest round of talks with the Taliban in Doha, where the two foes are pursuing a deal that would see the withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan in return for Taliban security guarantees. Khalilzad's comments come a day after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said he was prepared to call an "immediate" and "permanent" ceasefire -- but the Taliban rebuffed the offer. |
The Farcical Bill Barr Scandal Posted: 03 May 2019 03:30 AM PDT An investigation into whether the president of the United States committed treason has devolved into a squabble over Attorney General Bill Barr's brief letter saying that he didn't.We've gone from Donald Trump allegedly betraying the nation to Bill Barr allegedly betraying the nation, from potential Trump impeachment to potential Barr impeachment.Barr's offense, of course, is writing a quick letter summarizing the top-line conclusions of the Mueller report. Ever since, he's been the focus of conspiracy theories and the target of smears.The anti-Barr fury reached a new level with the news that Robert Mueller wrote him a letter complaining about the summary. Not since the Zimmermann telegram has a missive so exercised Washington, at least the segment of it that's been in a perpetual lather of outrage since November 2016.Let's be clear: If Barr wanted to cover for Trump, he could have crimped the Mueller probe, sat on the report or redacted the report into meaninglessness. He did none of the above.No one can claim his summary of findings was inaccurate. According to Barr, even Mueller conceded as much in a phone call. Mueller instead complained about the press coverage of the Barr summary, which isn't, strictly speaking, the attorney general's responsibility.Barr's conduct is defensible on its own terms. He wanted to get the basic verdict out because the investigation had so roiled our national life, especially the possibility that there was collusion with the Russians.When Mueller came back to him with a request for release of the summaries from the report, Barr declined because he didn't want to get into piecemeal releases when the full report would soon be available.That's what makes the controversy so nonsensical. Barr went further than required by the regulations to release the entirety of the report, letting everyone decide for themselves. What else was he supposed to do?Of course, Barr's summary letter inevitably lacked the narrative force and details of the 400-page report, but we know that . . . because he released the report.The notion that Barr was deceptive in congressional testimony is similarly absurd. In an exchange with Senator Chris Van Hollen last month, he was asked if Mueller supported his "conclusion," meaning his judgment that the president didn't obstruct justice. Barr accurately said he didn't know.Representative Charlie Crist asked Barr if he knew what Mueller officials anonymously complaining about his letter were referring to. Barr said he didn't (he presumably hadn't talked to these anonymous officials), but volunteered that they probably wanted more information out.Ultimately, the firestorm over Barr's letter is a misdirection, and he's a scapegoat. If Robert Mueller wanted to recommend charging Trump with obstruction of justice, he could have done so. Instead, he punted, and now he — or people around him — is upset that the Barr letter accurately stated his convoluted not-guilty/not-exonerated bottom line.As for the Democrats, if they disagree with Barr's conclusion that Trump didn't commit a chargeable crime, it is fully within their power to impeach the president for abuse of power.Democrats still want someone else to do their work for them. First, they wanted Mueller to blow Trump out of the water, and now they want Barr to adopt a frankly adversarial posture toward the president.Barr is not the one distorting procedure or norms here. It's the Mueller team that declined to make a call on whether Trump had committed a crime or not (the job we ordinarily ask prosecutors to do), yet catalogued his conduct in a quasi-indictment written for public consumption (which prosecutors aren't supposed to do) and, now we know, cared very much about the media narrative around its report (a public-relations or partisan question, not a legal one).That Barr and his letter are the focus of such political and media ire is a symptom of the lunacy of this era, rather than anything rotten in his Department of Justice.© 2019 by King Features Syndicate |
2020 Vision: ‘Buttabeep, Buttaboop,’ Buttigieg — Who’s winning the Oprah primary? Posted: 03 May 2019 10:13 AM PDT |
The 2019 Volkswagen Arteon in Photos Posted: 03 May 2019 10:28 AM PDT |
Venezuela's neighbors accuse Maduro of protecting 'terrorist groups' in Colombia Posted: 03 May 2019 06:01 PM PDT The Lima Group regional bloc on Friday accused the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro of protecting "terrorist groups" in Colombia, keeping up pressure days after an attempted military uprising failed to dislodge Maduro from power. The bloc, a dozen countries in the Americas that meet regularly to discuss Venezuela, did not provide details on the groups in Colombia that it alleged Maduro was protecting. |
The Latest: NTSB says plane in river had no prior accidents Posted: 04 May 2019 03:23 PM PDT |
'It was a lot of shots': 911 calls from UNC Charlotte shooting describe campus in chaos Posted: 03 May 2019 02:38 PM PDT |
Measles-plagued Scientology ship leaves St Lucia Posted: 03 May 2019 08:54 AM PDT A cruise ship owned by the Church of Scientology that was quarantined in St Lucia for two days because of a measles case has left the Caribbean island and was headed toward Curacao on Friday, maritime tracking services said. The Freewinds left the port capital Castries on Thursday at 11:15pm (0315 GMT Friday) and was cruising toward Willemstad in Curacao, a distance it previously covered in two days, according to myshiptracking.com and cruisin.me. A spokeswoman for St Lucia's health ministry confirmed that the ship had left the island. |
Ted Bundy: Who was the serial killer and how did he die? Posted: 03 May 2019 11:44 AM PDT Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile, a biopic about serial killer Ted Bundy, has just been released.Zac Efron portrays the murderer in the Netflix film, while Lily Collins stars as Bundy's former girlfriend Elizabeth Kloepfer.Bundy is believed to have started killing and assaulting women in the 1970s, murdering dozens of them until the end of the decade.Here is what you should know about Bundy before you see Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile:Who was Ted Bundy?Theodore Robert Bundy was born on 24 November, 1946 in Burlington, Vermont, and grew up in Tacoma, Washington. He dropped out of college before returning to the University of Washington and obtaining a degree in psychology in 1970, per a New York Times article published in 1978 while he was on trial.Bundy later entered law school but abandoned those studies as well. By 1971, Bundy was volunteering at a suicide hotline where he met the true crime writer Ann Rule, who later authored the book The Stranger Beside Me about her friendship with Bundy.Did Ted Bundy confess to his crimes?Bundy confessed to 30 killings across seven states by the time of his death.However, the actual death toll might be higher. Several unsolved murders have been linked to Bundy, even though evidence hasn't been sufficient to establish culpability.Bundy himself suggested that the actual number of his victims might be higher.When and how did he die?Bundy was executed by electrocution on 24 January, 1989, after being convicted on three separate murder cases – the killing of 12-year-old Kimberly Diane Leach, and the slayings of Margaret Bowman and Lisa Levy at the Chi Omega sorority house at Florida State University.He was 42 years old at the time of his death.More than 100 people cheered outside the Florida State Prison, setting off firecrackers and lighting sparklers, according to the Associated Press's report of the execution.Who was his girlfriend Elizabeth Kloepfer?Kloepfer, a single mother, started dating Bundy in 1969. The relationship started until the mid 1970s.Around that time, Kloepfer developed doubts about Bundy and gave his name to the police, though authorities didn't consider him a serious suspect.Kloepfer published a book about her relationship with Bundy, titled The Phantom Prince: My Life with Ted Bundy, in 1981 under the name Elizabeth Kendall. Bundy was on death row at the time.She has remained out of the public eye for years, and Michael Werwie, the screenwriter of Extremely Wicked, told Vanity Fair she was "not findable". |
Sri Lanka blasts show Asia is fertile ground for IS ideology Posted: 02 May 2019 07:51 PM PDT The Islamic State group's self-proclaimed "caliphate" may have collapsed in the Middle East but Asia provides fertile territory for a resurrection, analysts say, as last month's bloody Easter Sunday suicide attacks in Sri Lanka have shown. Factors including poverty, discrimination, radicalisation via social media, weak governance, and poor gathering and sharing of intelligence mean the region is vulnerable to attacks by extremists operating under the IS banner -- even if they aren't directly supported by the group. IS lost the last of its Middle East territory in late March but analysts warned the defeat would not kill off their ideology, and just weeks later the group claimed responsibility for one of the worst militant strikes on civilians in Asia. |
Donald Trump Has Finally Found His Soulmate: William Barr Posted: 03 May 2019 05:00 AM PDT Comey published his column the same day Attorney General William Barr testified in the Senate about how he went about ingesting, publishing and spinning Special Counsel Robert Mueller's Russia report. Barr ran interference for Trump throughout the hearing and the president's apparent ability to co-opt Barr troubled Comey. |
The U.S. Air Force First F-35 Combat Doesn’t Prove Anything Posted: 03 May 2019 05:00 PM PDT If dropping bombs on caves and tunnels were a guarantee of a weapon's success, the F-35 would be awesome.On April 30, two U.S. Air Force F-35A stealth fighters attacked ISIS positions in Iraq. "The F-35As conducted the airstrike using a Joint Direct Attack Munition to strike an entrenched Daesh tunnel network and weapons cache deep in the Hamrin Mountains, a location able to threaten friendly forces," according to the Air Force announcement.The strike marked the first time—or at least the first public admission—that the Air Force had used the Lightning II in combat. In September 2018, the Marine Corps became the first U.S. service to fly an F-35 combat mission, with a strike against Taliban positions in Afghanistan, followed by more than 100 F-35B sorties in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria from aircraft based on the amphibious assault ship USS Essex. First blood for the F-35 probably belongs to the Israeli Air Force, which has sent its F-35Is on missions over Syria.The initial Marine F-35 strikes in Afghanistan, and before that, Air Force F-22s attacking Taliban drug labs, drew as much ridicule as praise. Some questioned the use of expensive aircraft (the F-35 costs around $100 million apiece, the F-22 $400 million) to take out huts and tunnels. An F-35 mission costs $35,000 per flying hour, while for the F-22, it's $70,000. |
Verizon’s new BOGO deal covers iPhones, Pixels, and Samsung phones Posted: 03 May 2019 02:56 PM PDT Verizon is back at it with another of its BOGO (buy one get one) devices offers, this time coinciding with Mother's Day which is right around the corner.The limited-time deals are live now, and they include the usual pretty solid offers on some of the hottest smartphones by making them available for free or at a discount when you purchase another phone at full-price. The BOGO this time includes the opportunity to score $1,100 in bill credits when you buy two new Pixel 3s and you also add a new unlimited line. You'll save $300, no trade-in required, when you buy a new Pixel 3, then you'll get another $800 via bill credits when you buy another either Pixel 3 or 3XL, along with the unlimited line.As we always note with these BOGOs from Verizon, there are important caveats. For this particularly offer, both of the new Pixels would need to be paid for on a monthly installment plan. Within two months, the $1,100 would then begin to be applied to your bill, spread over 24 months.It's definitely a good deal if you're already a Verizon customer and thinking about a new line and device. The same goes for anyone thinking about becoming a Verizon customer. The full rundown of deals and the relevant details can be found on Verizon's site here, and among the other offers as part of this BOGO, you can: * Buy one Samsung Galaxy S10+ and get $750 off a Galaxy 10, 10+, 10e or Note 9. * Buy one Samsung Galaxy S10 5G and get $750 off a Galaxy 10, 10+, 10e or Note 9. * Finally, if you buy an iPhone XR, iPhone XS MAX, iPhone XS, or iPhone X you can get a free iPhone XR (or take $750 off a second iPhone X model).Verizon hasn't specified an end-date for this particular BOGO, but since it's tied to Mother's Day you've got at least all of next week, through Sunday May 12, to take advantage of it. |
Trump says he and Putin discussed getting humanitarian aid to Venezuela Posted: 03 May 2019 02:34 PM PDT In a rare call, Trump and Putin spoke for more than an hour, their first known conversation since December and since tensions flared in Venezuela, where Washington backs opposition leader Juan Guaido and Moscow supports President Nicolas Maduro. "We talked about many things, Venezuela was one of the topics," Trump told reporters at the White House. "And he (Putin) is not looking at all to get involved in Venezuela other than he would like to see something positive happen for Venezuela, and I feel the same way. |
2020 Toyota Prius Prime Gets Many Upgrades, Still Lags behind Its Competitors in EV Driving Range Posted: 03 May 2019 08:17 AM PDT |
2020 Democratic presidential candidates argue surging US economy is not benefiting all Americans Posted: 03 May 2019 03:48 PM PDT |
Posted: 04 May 2019 02:30 AM PDT I can't think of a better illustration of our partisan divide than the reactions to Attorney General William Barr's testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee Wednesday. Democrats are furious at Barr's defense of his rollout of the Mueller report and his assertions of executive power. Some Democrats want Barr to resign, others want him to be impeached, and Nancy Pelosi says he's guilty of lying to Congress. Republicans have found a hero.Barr is the new Dick Cheney: a stocky, bespectacled, confrontational, blunt, intelligent, unapologetically conservative, experienced, high-powered official who believes in and fights for the office of the president. Just as Democrats loathed Cheney as a bugaboo manipulating President George W. Bush to further the interests of Halliburton, they attack Barr as a dishonest factotum of President Trump's. The qualities that drove Democrats batty over Cheney — his inscrutability, his cleverness, his asperity, and above all his success — make them incensed about Barr. These happen to be qualities Republicans find appealing.What's behind conservative support for Cheney and Barr is their lack of embarrassment. Most Washingtonians, no matter their party, find it important to be held in esteem by the city's tastemakers, who are overwhelmingly liberal. Not these two. The classic Cheney moment was his 2004 exchange with Pat Leahy on the Senate floor. Cheney complained that Leahy had called him a war profiteer. Leahy responded that Cheney had said he was a bad Catholic. So Cheney ended the conversation by telling Leahy to perform a physically impossible four-letter act. "You'd be surprised at how many people liked that," Cheney recollected in a 2010 interview. "It's sort of the best thing I ever did." He's selling himself short.Republican fans of Barr circulated clips of his Senate appearance Wednesday even as media coverage of his testimony was uniformly negative. No Democrats are held in less esteem by conservatives than are the ones on the Judiciary Committee. They will never live down their treatment of Brett Kavanaugh. Trump supporters nodded in agreement when Barr said the controversy over his March 24 description of the Mueller report is "mind-bendingly bizarre." They chuckled when he said Mueller's March 27 letter to him was "a bit snitty and I think it was probably written by one of his staff members." They guffawed when Barr described the verb "spying" as "a good English word." They cheered when Richard Blumenthal asked for notes Barr had taken of his phone conversation with Mueller and Barr told him no. "Why should you have them?"Where his predecessor was genial and deferential to Congress and the press, Barr is disdainful and combative. At his April 18 press conference before the publication of the Mueller report, a CBS reporter asked Barr if his use of the word "unprecedented" to describe the circumstances of the Russia investigation was "quite generous to the president and his feelings and emotions." Barr replied, "Is there another precedent for it?" "No," the reporter acknowledged sheepishly. Another reporter wondered, "Is it an impropriety for you to come out and sort of spin the report before people are able to read it?" Barr said, "No," and left the room. Lib owned.In 2001, Cheney fought with Henry Waxman over records related to the former's energy task force. Almost two decades later, Barr and Jerry Nadler face each other in a standoff over whether a sitting attorney general ought to be questioned by staff counsel. Not even CNN "could locate an instance where a Cabinet official was interviewed by staff members during a public hearing before the House Judiciary Committee." But that hasn't stopped Nadler from claiming there's "ample precedent" for his request. Committee Democrat Steve Cohen accuses Barr of being afraid of staff attorneys, but anyone who's watched Barr before Congress knows he doesn't spook easily. The fight with Nadler is over optics. Nadler wants his hearing to evoke memories of Watergate and Iran-Contra. Barr has no problem denying him the opportunity.The Democrats have a dilemma. Their base would like to impeach Trump, but the public at large is against it, and Democratic voters themselves don't put impeachment high on the priority list. The people most interested in impeachment, it seems, are cable-news anchors and the same four Democrats — SwalwellSchiffLieuBlumenthal — who appear on their shows day after day. Pelosi has adopted a too-clever-by-half strategy of letting the committee chairmen hound the Trump administration while leadership resists full-bore impeachment. The danger of overreach is real.Barr is an obstacle not just because of his support for a strong presidency. He also shows every sign of wanting to get to the bottom of malfeasance at the FBI and DOJ during the 2016 campaign. His critics decry his use of the word "spying" to describe surreptitious intelligence gathering on Trump advisers, but the day after his Senate testimony the New York Times revealed that George Papadopoulos had been contacted by a second FBI employee as part of the Bureau's counterintelligence probe. It was another vindication of Barr, who had told Congress last month the question wasn't if spying had occurred, but if it had been "adequately predicated.""I think we did the right thing," Dick Cheney tells James Rosen in Cheney One on One. "And I don't have any problem defending it." Bill Barr gives every indication of feeling the same way. That's why he's become a Democratic target. And a GOP star.This article originally appeared in the Washington Free Beacon. |
ExxonMobil sues Cuban companies for nationalized assets Posted: 03 May 2019 09:57 PM PDT US giant ExxonMobil has filed a lawsuit against Cuba's state-owned oil company and a major business group for what it called "unlawful trafficking" of its assets after Fidel Castro's 1959 revolution. The suit, filed Thursday in federal court in Washington, seeks $280 million from Cuba-Petroleo (Cupet) and Cimex, which operates service stations on the island nation. The lawsuit from America's biggest oil producer came as the administration of US President Donald Trump lifted the suspension of Title III of the 1996 Helms-Burton Act. |
Protect your Apple Watch Series 4 from scratches with this $9 clear case Posted: 03 May 2019 03:25 PM PDT The cheapest Apple Watch Series 4 model you can buy costs $400, and it goes all the way up to $1,500 depending on how fancy you want to get. In other words, you're making a pretty sizable investment regardless of which model you choose. Do yourself a favor and spend another $9 to protect your precious watch from scratches by picking up a Smiling Apple Watch 4 Clear Case With Built in TPU Screen Protector. It's available for both the 40mm and 44mm models, and it might be the best $9 you spend all month.Here's some additional info from the product page: * [Designed for the 40mm or 44mm] This case fit for apple watch 2018 newest series 4 Apple Watch 40mm, high-quality TPU case with built in screen protector. * [Precise cutout]: This 40mm watch case was designed with precise cutouts for functional buttons and ports. * [Ultra Slim]: This apple watch case front cover is only 0.3mm and total 0.5oz weight not add any bulk and you will not lose any touch sensitivity. * [Shock-proof]: Made of high quality, anti-scratch TPU, this case covers the full front and curved edges of the iwatch, offering full protection for your apple watch against scratches, drops, and bumps. * Includes: 2 pack high quality TPU case for the 40mm or 44mm series 4 apple watch |
UPDATE 2-Trump, Putin discuss possible new nuclear accord -White House Posted: 03 May 2019 09:13 AM PDT U.S. President Donald Trump spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin for more than an hour on Friday, discussing the possibility of a new nuclear accord, North Korean denuclearization, Ukraine and the political situation in Venezuela, the White House said. White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders told reporters Trump and Putin talked about the possibility of a new multilateral nuclear accord between the United States, Russia and China, or an extension of the current U.S.-Russia strategic nuclear treaty. |
The Latest: Lawyer: Family got 'transformational' settlement Posted: 03 May 2019 01:04 PM PDT |
House Democrat expects vote 'next week' to hold attorney general in contempt Posted: 03 May 2019 04:58 PM PDT |
Apple Watch Series 4 has never been as cheap as it is in this surprise sale Posted: 03 May 2019 04:58 AM PDT Yesterday evening, we told you about the first big Apple Watch Series 4 sale. It came as a complete surprise when Amazon slashed a number of different Apple Watch S4 models to their lowest prices ever, and readers rushed to the site to take advantage of these killer deals. Well, it hasn't even been 24 hours but we're telling you about it again. Why? Because the odds are fairly good that these deals will end at some point over the weekend, and we want to make sure that as many people as possibly have the opportunity to snag an Apple Watch Series 4 at all-time low prices.Amazon has slashed $50 off the wildly popular Apple Watch Series 4 in Space Gray Aluminum Case with a Black Sport Band in both 40mm and 44mm sizes, which drops the price to $349 and $379, respectively. The Space Gray model with a Black Sport Loop Band is also down to $349 for the 40mm model and $379 for the 44mm model. Finally, you can also save $50 on the Apple Watch Series 4 in Silver Aluminum Case with a Seashell Sport Loop Band. We have no idea when prices will be this low again, so hurry!Here's more info from the product page: * GPS * Over 30% larger display and 50% louder speaker * Electrical and optical heart sensors * Digital Crown with haptic feedback * 50% louder speaker * S4 SiP with faster 64-bit dual-core processor * Improved accelerometer and gyroscope for fall detection * Swim proof - Water resistant upto 50 meters * watch OS 5 * Aluminum case |
UPDATE 1-Trump says he will decide over next week whether to let McGahn testify for Congress Posted: 03 May 2019 12:25 PM PDT U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday said he will decide in the coming days whether he will allow former White House lawyer Don McGahn to testify before U.S. lawmakers or whether he will invoke executive privilege to block his testimony. U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler last Monday subpoenaed McGahn to testify before the panel in its investigation of possible obstruction of justice by Trump. "That'll all be determined over the next week or so," Trump told reporters on Friday when asked if he had decided whether to invoke executive privilege over the subpoena, adding that he had been transparent with Special Counsel Robert Mueller. |
Posted: 03 May 2019 03:00 AM PDT |
These Wireless Earbuds Cost Way Less Than Beats Posted: 03 May 2019 01:54 PM PDT |
12 killed in pro-regime attacks on northwestern Syria Posted: 03 May 2019 08:58 AM PDT Attacks by Syrian regime forces and their Russian allies killed 12 civilians in the country's northwest on Friday in the latest violation of an eight-month-old truce, a war monitor said. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said four women were among the 12 people killed in shelling and airstrikes on several towns and villages in Idlib and neighbouring Hama province. "The attacks have been continuously escalating for four days," Observatory head Rami Abdul Rahman told AFP. |
Economy Surges in April, Adding 263,000 Jobs Posted: 03 May 2019 09:59 AM PDT Economic growth exceeded expectations in April as the market added 263,000 new jobs and unemployment sank to its lowest level in 49 years, according to Labor Department data released Friday.The 263,000 new jobs easily surpassed the 217,000 analysts had predicted, while unemployment dropped 0.2 points to 3.6 percent, its lowest level since December 1969.The average wage grew 0.2 percent, 6 cents, to $27.77 an hour, falling just short of expectations. Average hourly earnings growth held steady at 3.2 percent year over year, while the average work week shrank by a tenth of an hour to 34.4 hours.The economic expansion is months away from breaking the record for the longest in U.S. history as the economy continues to add jobs despite a labor market close to saturation: The drop in the unemployment rate was aided by the exit of 490,000 workers from the labor force, bringing the labor-force-participation rate down to 62.8 percent.The biggest gains were seen in professional and business services, which added 76,000 new jobs, construction, which added 33,000 new jobs, health care, which added 27,000 new jobs, and social assistance, which added 26,000 new jobs.The Labor Department also revised job-gain estimates for the previous two months to 189,000 new jobs in March and 56,000 in February, for a total of 16,000 more new jobs than previously estimated. |
10-month-old baby dies after migrant family's raft capsizes in Rio Grande Posted: 03 May 2019 09:30 AM PDT |
SpaceX forced to delay NASA launch over drone ship glitch Posted: 03 May 2019 10:22 AM PDT Resupply missions to the International Space Station are typically routine affairs, and SpaceX has completed well over a dozen such missions ahead of this week's CRS-17 venture. Unfortunately for both NASA and SpaceX, their plans have been derailed not once, but now twice.The original planned launch of CRS-17 was to take place on Wednesday of this week, but NASA was forced to cancel after a power issue aboard the ISS required immediate attention. The rescheduled launch was to happen today, Friday, but that, too, has been scrubbed. According to NASA, SpaceX had to pull the plug at the last minute due to a glitch in the company's drone ship which is responsible for catching the Falcon 9 when it returns back to Earth."This morning's launch attempt has scrubbed due to a drone ship power issue," NASA explained in a very brief statement. "The next launch opportunity will be at 2:48 a.m. EDT Saturday, May 4."SpaceX's statement offered a bit more detail while also noting a second issue that needed to be cleared up in short order. "Standing down today due to an electrical issue on the Of Course I Still Love You droneship," the company said via Twitter. "Teams will also address the ground side helium leak before tomorrow's backup launch opportunity at 2:48 a.m. EDT, 6:48 UTC."Today's launch window was instantaneous, meaning that if everything wasn't perfect at the exact moment the launch was planned for there would be no opportunity clear things up. SpaceX had already begun its live streaming coverage of the launch when it was forced to announce the delay, which was a bit of a bummer.At the moment, everything would appear to be in order for a Saturday morning launch, but as both SpaceX and NASA have demonstrated this week, issues tend to come out of nowhere when rockets and space stations are involved. |
40 Foods Graduates Actually Want You To Serve At Their Graduation Party Posted: 03 May 2019 11:13 AM PDT |
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