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- A new COVID-19 forecast predicts more than 400,000 deaths by the end of 2020. Will the fall wave really be that big?
- 2 Black Senate hopefuls look to make history in the South — and fix health care while they're at it
- "There are tapes": Kayleigh McEnany criticized for claiming that Trump "never downplayed the virus"
- GOP turns strategy to attacking Harris over Catholic record
- Utah police must now try de-escalation first after officer shot 13-year-old with autism
- 5 Oregon towns have been 'substantially destroyed' by wildfire, governor says
- Couple missing in California fire sought shelter in a pond
- Chick-fil-A is adding three new items to its menu. What to know and when they arrive
- Navalny's condition improving, police guard stepped up: Der Spiegel
- Texas police group puts up billboard warning "enter at your own risk," saying Austin defunded police
- ‘Miracle With a Sad Ending’: Couple Survive But Lose Baby in Wildfire Chaos
- No more temperature checks? CDC changing COVID-19 screenings for international air passengers
- Outcry in Pakistan as police blame woman who was gang raped for driving at night
- Exclusive: Susan Collins' plight gets worse with new corruption allegation, possible ethics probe
- High alert: Deadly Northwest fires burn hundreds of homes
- ‘You’re a mask Nazi.’ American Airlines bans passenger over note to flight attendant
- South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem is using COVID-19 relief funds to pay for a $5 million tourism ad campaign, despite a surge in coronavirus cases following the Sturgis motorcycle rally
- US Marshals, Oklahoma police search for man accused of recording sexual assault of 6-month-old baby and posting it on social media
- Carl Bernstein says Bob Woodward's revelations about Trump are 'graver than in Watergate'
- Suspended NY HS senior arrested for showing up to school in violation of COVID-19 restrictions
- California wildfires: San Francisco sky turns apocalyptic orange
- About $500,000 in smuggled cash found in chair cushion shipped from MIA, feds say
- Pritzker Prize–Winning Architect Richard Rogers Has Announced His Retirement
- Prominent women attacked as Afghanistan eyes peace
- ‘I want to be in the Trump party’: GOP rides voter registration surge in key state
- Black Democrat urges governor to drop Black court nominee
- A sheriff launched an algorithm to predict who might commit a crime. Dozens of people said they were harassed by deputies for no reason.
- An entire university in Illinois has been told to quarantine after COVID-19 outbreak
- China says Australian embassy obstructed law enforcement in case of evacuated journalists
- The largest contemporary Muslim pilgrimage isn't the hajj to Mecca, it's the Shiite pilgrimage to Karbala in Iraq
- How Trump screwed up with Bob Woodward: It fits the president’s well-documented personality disorder
- 'Vicious little suckers': Massive clouds of mosquitoes kill cows, horses in Louisiana after Hurricane Laura
- COVID-19 silently arrived in US near Christmas — earlier than thought, UCLA study says
- Whole Foods workers say a new company policy is a 'slap in the face' and a 'disgusting abuse' of people who worked during the height of the pandemic
- Bollywood actor's death grips India with frenzied TV coverage
- UN report: Increased warming closing in on agreed upon limit
- Delta Force Soldier Selected for Medal of Honor Casts Light on Bravery of Fallen Teammate
- Trump’s overtures struggle to register with religious voters
- Was Don Lewis pushed from a plane?
Posted: 09 Sep 2020 02:54 PM PDT |
Posted: 10 Sep 2020 11:08 AM PDT |
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GOP turns strategy to attacking Harris over Catholic record Posted: 10 Sep 2020 05:40 AM PDT |
Utah police must now try de-escalation first after officer shot 13-year-old with autism Posted: 10 Sep 2020 07:26 AM PDT |
5 Oregon towns have been 'substantially destroyed' by wildfire, governor says Posted: 09 Sep 2020 03:42 PM PDT |
Couple missing in California fire sought shelter in a pond Posted: 09 Sep 2020 10:09 PM PDT Flames were bearing down on Sandy Butler's home in the wooded hills of Northern California when she called her son to say that she and her husband were going to climb a fence and try to find shelter in a nearby pond. It's the last the family heard from the couple, who were missing Thursday after a fire roared with menacing speed across the Sierra Nevada foothills and destroyed much of the town of Berry Creek. "We're still hoping and praying for good news," said Jessica Fallon, who has two children with the Butler's grandson and considers them her own grandparents. |
Chick-fil-A is adding three new items to its menu. What to know and when they arrive Posted: 10 Sep 2020 09:50 AM PDT |
Navalny's condition improving, police guard stepped up: Der Spiegel Posted: 10 Sep 2020 12:08 AM PDT Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny has made further progress in his recovery after what Germany said was poisoning with a Soviet-style Novichok nerve agent, and is able to speak again, Der Spiegel magazine reported on Thursday. The Kremlin critic is being treated in Berlin's Charite hospital after falling ill on a Russian domestic flight last month. Germany says Navalny was the victim of an attempt to kill him and has demanded an explanation from Russia. |
Posted: 10 Sep 2020 11:30 AM PDT |
‘Miracle With a Sad Ending’: Couple Survive But Lose Baby in Wildfire Chaos Posted: 10 Sep 2020 03:34 PM PDT When he couldn't reach his cousin Jake Hyland on Monday, Jim Mabry drove to his family's remote property in rural Washington state, where wildfires turned pastures of 4-foot-high sage into dust.Jake and his wife, Jamie, along with their 1-year-old son, Uriel, were visiting their land in Okanogan County when flames from the Cold Springs Fire ripped through the area. Relatives couldn't reach the couple, or emergency services, because power lines were down.On Tuesday, Mabry discovered Jake's truck stuck in a ravine, about a quarter of a mile from the land. The vehicle had blown through a barbed wire fence. Its windshield had melted, and the steering wheel and dashboard were obliterated, he recalled."When I first saw the truck, I didn't want to search," Mabry told The Daily Beast. "I was so convinced I was coming across remains. Because I didn't see any chance of them making it."Yet the Hylands made a harrowing escape, relatives said, abandoning their small pickup truck and heading to the Columbia River, where rescuers miraculously found them Wednesday morning. Their little boy did not survive.Grandmother, 12-Year-Old Grandson, Four More Die as Wildfire Smoke Enshrouds Oregon and California in DarknessNow Jake, 31, and Jamie, 26, are hospitalized in critical condition, their bodies covered in burns. Jamie, who is pregnant, has burns on 50 percent of her body, mostly on her arms, hands and face, Mabry told The Daily Beast."It's a miracle with a sad ending," he said. "They survived, but lost a child." He added, "They loved their son. He was their ray of hope."A GoFundMe page—which shows a photo of the couple and their baby smiling on their remote property just a few months ago—has raised more than $117,000 for the family. Jake, his family said, is expected to have at least four more surgeries and will be in the intensive care unit for at least two weeks.The Cold Springs wildfire is just one of a slew of blazes to decimate swaths of the Pacific Northwest and California in recent days, with fires killing at least a dozen people in that state alone, according to the LA Times. In Lyons, Oregon, 12-year-old Wyatt Tofte died beside his dog. His grandmother, Peggy Mosso, was also killed in a blaze. Officials said the death toll was expected to rise in California, Oregon, and Washington, where thousands of residents have faced evacuation orders. In California, the ferocious August Complex fire—which had burned more than 471,000 acres and was only 24 percent contained as of Thursday afternoon—was the largest blaze in state history.Also on Thursday, the National Interagency Fire Center reported 102 fires had burned through 4.3 million acres throughout the country, mostly in the West. The Cold Springs fire, which burned 172,000 acres, was 10 percent contained.Mabry said Jake's property was deeply isolated—no cell service, electricity, or running water. The closest town is a 45-minute drive. Jake and Jamie stopped at the property to drop some supplies at their Quonset hut on their way home from a wedding in Spokane, Mabry explained, noting that the blaze started around 9:45 p.m. local time Sunday, and reached the property hours later. "People have been making rude comments, about how dumb they are that they didn't get the evacuation notice," Mabry's wife, Tammie, told The Daily Beast. "It is off grid. I don't think people understand that."Mabry said the Hylands ditched the truck, which hit some rocks, and fled in the darkness early Monday morning, carrying their son and a jug of water.Authorities scheduled a search for Wednesday at 10 a.m., but Mabry said the couple was found earlier thanks to a family member's Facebook post on a local fire watch page. A boat from the Colville Tribe's fish and wildlife agency discovered the couple.According to local news channel KREM, detectives with the sheriff's office and tribal police are investigating the child's death as a homicide since the fire could have been "human-caused."Two hundred miles away, the wildfires came for virtually an entire town.Larry Frick, 53, told The Daily Beast he was visiting his son in Pullman—about 47 miles south—when heavy winds set his community of Malden ablaze on Monday.He and his wife, Chandelle, rushed home to save their dogs and cats, one of which has gone missing. They also believed Chandelle's mother was home at the time; luckily, she'd left before the fires consumed their neighborhood, ultimately destroying roughly three quarters of the homes in the town.They passed through smoke, fallen trees, and the torched houses of their neighbors. When they got home, their deck and shed were on fire, and they worked for hours to douse the flames with a garden hose and sprinkler. "The whole time, it literally felt like a war zone. Explosions were going off all through town, ammunition, propane tanks, fires blowing up," Frick said. "A couple made the ground shake.""We're still in shock," Frick added. "I feel a sense of guilt. We have everything and we really don't need anything but our power back on, and everyone around us has lost everything. They just have the shirts on their backs."As for the Hylands, relatives said they were shocked and thankful Jamie and Jake were discovered alive. "When you look at the scene, we were like… we don't know how they could have survived. The truck is like something you couldn't believe," Tammie Mabry said. Jim Mabry said he's gone through a rollercoaster of emotions since his cousin vanished. First he was told the Hyland family survived. Then he learned Uriel had died. The child had joined his parents on a visit to the property last spring during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when they took a walk to the river where they were later rescued.One recent photo shows little Uriel in a carrier on his mother's back as they roamed the land."Being a mom was her dream," Tammie said of Jamie Hyland. "She was made to be a mom." —with additional reporting from Tracy ConnorRead more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet 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. |
No more temperature checks? CDC changing COVID-19 screenings for international air passengers Posted: 10 Sep 2020 09:22 AM PDT |
Outcry in Pakistan as police blame woman who was gang raped for driving at night Posted: 10 Sep 2020 09:07 AM PDT The gang rape of a stranded woman motorist in front of her children has caused outcry in Pakistan with calls for the public hanging of the culprits. Anger over the attack on a woman who had broken down on a motorway outside Lahore was then increased after a senior police officer appeared to blame the victim for her choice of route. Police on Thursday said they had arrested 12 suspects for questioning during an extensive manhunt. The woman with her two children was driving to Gujranwala when she was forced to stop at the Gujjarpura section of the motorway after her car ran out of fuel at around 1:30am. She called relatives for help, but before they could arrive, two robbers approached the car, smashed the windows and dragged her and her children from the vehicle. The attackers also took jewellery, bank cards and £466 in cash. A senior Lahore police officer later provoked further condemnation when he appeared to blame the victim. Lahore Capital City Police Officer (CCPO) Umar Sheikh questioned why the woman had taken that route and why she had not checked her fuel tank. His comments were condemned by Shireen Mazari, the human rights minister. "For an officer to effectively blame a woman for being gang raped by saying she should have taken the Grand Trunk Road, or question as to why she went out in the night with her children is unacceptable and I have taken up this issue," she said. "Nothing can ever rationalise the crime of rape. That's it." Inspector-General of Punjab Police Inam Ghani claimed that by Thursday night officers had identified the culprits' village. Opposition leaders quickly attacked what they said was the government's breakdown in law and order. "This is a matter of national embarrassment and evidence of a completely broken down legal system," said Shehbaz Sharif, opposition leader in the national assembly. Gang rape is rare in Pakistan, although sexual harassment and violence against women is not uncommon. Nearly 1,000 women are killed in Pakistan each year in so-called "honour killings" for allegedly violating conservative norms on love and marriage. |
Posted: 09 Sep 2020 11:00 AM PDT |
High alert: Deadly Northwest fires burn hundreds of homes Posted: 08 Sep 2020 09:32 PM PDT Deadly windblown wildfires raging across the Pacific Northwest destroyed hundreds of homes in Oregon, the governor said Wednesday, warning it could be the greatest loss of life and property from wildfire in state history. Officials in some western Oregon communities gave residents "go now" orders to evacuate, meaning they had minutes to flee their homes. Fires were burning in a large swath of Washington state and Oregon that rarely experiences such intense wildfire activity because of the Pacific Northwest's cool and wet climate. |
‘You’re a mask Nazi.’ American Airlines bans passenger over note to flight attendant Posted: 09 Sep 2020 11:05 AM PDT |
Posted: 10 Sep 2020 09:33 AM PDT |
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Posted: 09 Sep 2020 02:25 PM PDT Carl Bernstein has some strong words for what his former colleague's revelations mean for the Trump presidency and democracy itself.On Wednesday The Washington Post published a preview of Bob Woodward's forthcoming book, Rage, in which Trump told Woodward in March that he knew COVID-19 was serious but "wanted to always play it down." Six months later, 190,000 people have died in the U.S. from the virus, and Woodward has just revealed that Trump's "homicidal negligence" is to blame, Bernstein told CNN.Bernstein and Woodward famously reported out the Watergate scandal that led to former President Richard Nixon's resignation. But "the facts here are even graver than in Watergate," Bernstein continued, because this "dereliction of duty" has been recorded like never before. "Thousands and thousands and thousands of people died" because Trump is "putting his own re-election before the safety, health, and well-being of the people of the United States. We've never had a president who's done anything like this before," Bernstein said.It's all going to go down as "one of the great presidential felonies of all time, maybe the greatest presidential felony, and we have the smoking gun tape of the president committing the felony," Bernstein continued. Watch all of Bernstein's scathing appearance below. More stories from theweek.com Trump knew it all along The true Election Day nightmare scenario The staggering consequences of Trump's coronavirus lies |
Suspended NY HS senior arrested for showing up to school in violation of COVID-19 restrictions Posted: 10 Sep 2020 07:35 AM PDT |
California wildfires: San Francisco sky turns apocalyptic orange Posted: 09 Sep 2020 06:38 PM PDT Residents of San Francisco woke on Wednesday morning to an apocalyptic orange sky as smoke from catastrophic wildfires in California blanketed the air and choked the sun. Fires have ravaged the state in the past month, burning at least 2.5 million acres (1 million hectares) of land. A heatwave at the weekend provided perfect conditions for an eruption of new and dangerous blazes across the state. Three people were found dead on Wednesday evening in Butte County, where the North Complex fire – one of more than two dozen in California – has spread at a ferocious rate. The fire, in Northern California, has been burning for more than three weeks before high winds and soaring temperatures helped it surge back again this week, crossing about 25 miles (40 kilometres) of mountainous terrain to destroy scores of homes. Historically, California's fire season does not start until autumn. |
About $500,000 in smuggled cash found in chair cushion shipped from MIA, feds say Posted: 09 Sep 2020 09:33 AM PDT |
Pritzker Prize–Winning Architect Richard Rogers Has Announced His Retirement Posted: 10 Sep 2020 04:50 PM PDT |
Prominent women attacked as Afghanistan eyes peace Posted: 09 Sep 2020 04:05 PM PDT |
‘I want to be in the Trump party’: GOP rides voter registration surge in key state Posted: 10 Sep 2020 01:30 AM PDT |
Black Democrat urges governor to drop Black court nominee Posted: 10 Sep 2020 12:57 PM PDT A Black Democratic state lawmaker who is challenging the appointment of a Black woman to the Florida Supreme Court contended Thursday that Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis is engaging in "racial tokenism" by choosing someone the court itself has already ruled is not eligible for the position. State Rep. Geraldine Thompson said in an online news conference that DeSantis only chose Renatha Francis for the high court because she shares his conservative ideology, not because he is trying to achieve racial diversity. Thompson says Francis doesn't meet the constitutional requirement of being a Florida Bar member for at least 10 years, a point the Supreme Court noted two weeks ago when it ruled DeSantis had exceeded his authority by appointing an ineligible candidate. |
Posted: 10 Sep 2020 12:17 PM PDT |
An entire university in Illinois has been told to quarantine after COVID-19 outbreak Posted: 09 Sep 2020 07:51 AM PDT |
China says Australian embassy obstructed law enforcement in case of evacuated journalists Posted: 10 Sep 2020 01:23 AM PDT |
Posted: 09 Sep 2020 05:17 AM PDT Every year, Shiite Muslims mark the death of Prophet Muhammad's grandson Hussain with a mourning period that lasts a total of 50 days. Ashura, the tenth day of the Islamic month of Muharram, commemorates the day Hussain died. For millions of Shiites, this mourning period culminates in a pilgrimage to Karbala in Iraq. This pilgrimage has, in recent years, become the largest gathering of people in the world for a religious reason. This year Ashura was observed on Aug. 30 and the pilgrimage, 40 days later, will end on Oct. 9, 2020. My research focuses on Shiite shrines and Muharram mourning practices. The city of Karbala, which I visited twice in 2013, is located 60 miles southwest of Baghdad and 45 miles north of Najaf, the other important Shiite shrine city in Iraq. The pilgrimage and the city of Karbala have been through many changes over a more than 1000-year-old history. This year, the pilgrimage and the holy city are faced with a new challenge: COVID-19. The historic battle at KarbalaKarbala is the place where Prophet Muhammad's grandson Hussain was killed during what is known as the Battle of Karbala in A.D. 680. According to Shiites, Hussain and his men were martyred in this battle on the day of Ashura.Following the death of Prophet Muhammad in A.D. 632, there was a dispute over who would be his rightful heir. Sunnis, who make up the majority of Muslims, believe that Abu Bakr, Muhammad's friend and father-in-law, rightly succeeded Muhammad in A.D. 632. Shiites believe that Ali, Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law, should have been Muhammad's successor.After years of civil war, as well as wars of expansion, the Arab Umayyad dynasty established its rule over the region, from the Middle East to North Africa from A.D. 661 to 750. But there were those who decried Umayyad rule.Hussain had been invited by the inhabitants of Kufa, which was a garrison town near Najaf, to come and lead them in a revolt against the Umayyad caliph in Damascus. Umayyad forces first put down the unrest in Kufa and then met and killed Hussain and his men on the desert plains of Karbala. For Shiite Muslims, Hussain was their third imam, a worldly and spiritual leader whose direct relationship to Muhammad gave him special status and authority.After Hussain's death, a tomb was soon built which attracted devotees and benefactors. Najaf is where Hussain's father, Ali, lies buried. The pilgrimage throughout historyOver the years, Hussain's shrine was destroyed, rebuilt, remodeled and expanded. Muharram mourning rituals, whether in Karbala or elsewhere, have been used for political ends. Sometimes, Muharram practices were sponsored by rulers who sought to gain popular support. At other times, the rituals turned into anti-government protests. Fearing civil unrest, some rulers prohibited or limited pilgrimage to Karbala. For example, Mutawakkil, a caliph of the Abbasid dynasty, which ruled over a vast Islamic empire from the eighth to the 13th century, feared that the rituals inflamed anti-regime fervor. He destroyed the tomb in A.D. 850 and banned the pilgrimage to Karbala. Karbala and Najaf grew in importance in the 16th century with the founding of a Shiite state in Persia, today's Iran, under Shah Ismail I. From then on, the Iraqi shrine cities attracted increasing numbers of pilgrims.Many pilgrims brought bodies of deceased relatives because of a belief that being buried close to Ali or Hussain ensures that when the deceased stands in front of God on Judgment Day, Ali or Hussain will appeal to God's mercy to allow the person's soul to enter heaven. This has led to "Wadi al-Salam," Arabic for "Valley of Peace," in Najaf becoming one of the world's largest cemeteries, holding up to 5 million corpses. The transport and burial of corpses provided employment for a wide strata of the population in Najaf and Karbala. Higher fees were charged from those wanting to be closer to Ali or Hussain in the burial site. Blaming the corpse traffic as one of the reasons for several outbreaks of cholera in 19th-century Persia and Ottoman Iraq, the Ottoman government, which ruled over Iraq from the 16th to the beginning of the 20th century, sought to restrict and control the number of corpses that were brought in. Yet even under these restrictions, around 20,000 dead bodies were brought to Najaf each year at the start of the 20th century. Today, roughly 100,000 are brought for burial in Najaf annually. From decline to rebirthUnder the authoritarian Iraqi Baath regime, from the early 1970s to 2003, Shiite pilgrimage was closely monitored and limited.Like many previous rulers, Saddam Hussain feared that the rituals would be used in order to incite rebellion against his regime, that the pilgrimage would turn into a protest. But once Saddam was overthrown by U.S.-led forces in 2003, the pilgrimage flourished again.In 2004, more than 2 million pilgrims walked to Karbala, and the most common route was from Najaf to Karbala. Since then, the pilgrimage to Karbala has even eclipsed the hajj, which annually draws between 2 and 3 million. In 2014, 17 million people reportedly completed the walk to Karbala. By 2016, the number of pilgrims increased to 22 million. This year, fear of the spread of COVID-19 has greatly restricted many pilgrimages, including the hajj. Only a limited number of Muslims already inside Saudi Arabia was allowed to attend. As a precautionary measure, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, a top Iraqi Shiite leader, encouraged his followers to mourn at home, rather than visit Karbala. For Ashura this year, Shiites gathered in Najaf and Karbala, but on a much smaller scale. There was social distancing, but not everywhere. Not all pilgrims wore masks. In the absence of stringent measures, the number of infections in Iraq has already spiked. Whether the government will respond with stricter policies for the pilgrimage at the beginning of October remains to be seen.This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts.Read more: * As coronavirus curtails travel, backyard pilgrimages become the way to a spiritual journey * Online Christian pilgrimage: How a virtual tour to Lourdes follows a tradition of innovationEdith Szanto does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment. |
How Trump screwed up with Bob Woodward: It fits the president’s well-documented personality disorder Posted: 10 Sep 2020 02:20 AM PDT |
Posted: 10 Sep 2020 03:26 PM PDT |
COVID-19 silently arrived in US near Christmas — earlier than thought, UCLA study says Posted: 10 Sep 2020 01:02 PM PDT |
Posted: 10 Sep 2020 08:29 AM PDT |
Bollywood actor's death grips India with frenzied TV coverage Posted: 08 Sep 2020 09:47 PM PDT The demise of a young movie star has transfixed India like no other news in a year of bad headlines. The abrupt death of Sushant Singh Rajput has spurred a debate about the stigma of mental health, the rarefied insider world of Bollywood, and, more recently, condemnation of the media for the non-stop coverage of the duelling accusations between Rajput's family and his girlfriend. Mumbai police initially reported Rajput's death as accidental and local media called it a suicide. |
UN report: Increased warming closing in on agreed upon limit Posted: 09 Sep 2020 04:04 AM PDT The world is getting closer to passing a temperature limit set by global leaders five years ago and may exceed it in the next decade or so, according to a new United Nations report. In the next five years, the world has nearly a 1-in-4 chance of experiencing a year that's hot enough to put the global temperature at 2.7 degrees (1.5 degrees Celsius) above pre-industrial times, according to a new science update released Wednesday by the U.N., World Meteorological Organization and other global science groups. |
Delta Force Soldier Selected for Medal of Honor Casts Light on Bravery of Fallen Teammate Posted: 10 Sep 2020 01:23 PM PDT |
Trump’s overtures struggle to register with religious voters Posted: 10 Sep 2020 01:30 AM PDT |
Was Don Lewis pushed from a plane? Posted: 10 Sep 2020 01:15 PM PDT |
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