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WWW.ESPN.COMVegas laments missed call in G2 loss to OilersJust when it appeared that the Vegas Golden Knights finally found an opening in overtime, their chances of winning Game 2 were quickly closed shut in controversial fashion.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 153 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMMeet Pope Leo XIVWe guide you through coverage of the new pontiff and his views.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 156 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMAfter the BlastExploring a photograph of the aftermath of a deadly airstrike at a Gaza City restaurant.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 152 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMU.S. v. Google: What Both Sides Argued in a Hearing to Fix Its Search MonopolyThe Justice Department and Google are wrapping up a three-week hearing that could have a major impact on the search giant and how people gather information online.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 153 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMHow iPhone Apps Are Changing After a Recent App Store RulingA federal judges recent ruling has made it possible for apps to sell software and subscriptions outside the App Store without having to pay a commission.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 141 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMHow Apple Created a Legal Mess When It Skirted Judges RulingCourt documents show the company commissioned a sham report and lied on the stand to justify its actions, which will cast a shadow over future lawsuits.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 155 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMMost Americans disapprove of Trumps treatment of colleges, a new AP-NORC poll findsPeople walk between buildings, Dec. 17, 2024, on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)2025-05-09T11:01:46Z WASHINGTON (AP) A majority of U.S. adults disapprove of President Donald Trumps handling of issues related to colleges and universities, according to a new poll, as his administration ramps up threats to cut federal funding unless schools comply with his political agenda.More than half of Americans, 56%, disapprove of the Republican presidents approach on higher education, the survey from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds, while about 4 in 10 approve, in line with his overall job approval.Since taking office in January, Trump has tried to force change at universities he says have become hotbeds of liberalism and antisemitism. The spotlight most recently has been on Harvard University, where Trumps administration has frozen more than $2.2 billion in federal grants, threatened to strip the schools tax-exempt status, and demanded broad policy changes. The Trump administration also has cut off money to other elite colleges, including Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania and Cornell University, over issues including the handling of pro-Palestinian activism and transgender athletes participation in womens sports. Harvard has framed the governments demands as a threat to the autonomy that the Supreme Court has long granted American universities. The poll shows a disconnect between the Trump administrations targeting of universities and an American public that sees them as key to scientific research, new ideas and innovative technology. About 6 in 10 U.S. adults say colleges and universities make more of a positive contribution to medical and scientific research than a negative one, and a similar share favors maintaining federal funding for scientific research. Lets talk about Harvard for a minute, said Freddy Ortega, 66, a Democrat and a retired military veteran in Columbus, Georgia. The way he took away all that money in funding, impacting things that Harvard has been working on for the betterment of the world. One man should not have that much power, Ortega continued. This is something for Congress to deal with.Ortega, whos Hispanic, also said hes concerned about Trumps attempts to dismantle diversity, equity and inclusion programs across U.S. society. I came up in the military. I know the good that those programs do, he said. It changes the direction that peoples lives are going to take. Republicans are divided on cuts to colleges federal fundingTrumps stance on higher education resonates more strongly with Republicans, most of whom see college campuses as places where conservatives are silenced and liberal ideas run unchecked. About 8 in 10 Republicans approve of how Trump is handling issues related to colleges and universities which, notably, is higher than the share of Republicans, 70%, who approve of his handling of the economy and about 6 in 10 say theyre extremely or very concerned about liberal bias on campus. Republicans are more divided, however, on withholding federal funding from schools unless they bow to Trumps demands. About half are in favor, while about one-quarter are opposed and a similar share are neutral. Im all for it, said Republican voter Hengameh Abraham, 38, a mother of two in Roseville, California. She supports cutting federal funds and opposes DEI programs, saying she emigrated to America from Iran as a teenager and worked hard to get ahead in school without the help of affirmative action programs.Your racial identity, nationality and background should not be a factor in getting accepted to college or getting a job, said Abraham. She supports Trumps focus on campus antisemitism. When pro-Palestinian protests swept U.S. colleges last year, some of the demonstrators messaging was anti-U.S., she said. I do not think if you have any kind of anti-American agenda or slogan that you should be allowed on a university campus in the United States, she said.In Harvards case, Trump has threatened to remove its tax-exempt status, and his administration has implemented funding cuts. Those measures are divisive among the general public: Nearly half oppose withholding federal funding as a punitive action, while about one-quarter favor it. About one-quarter are neutral. Charles Jolivette, 43, a college career counselor who lives in New Orleans, sees Trumps education policies as an attack on free speech and people of color.Not only is the president going after anyone he feels is an opponent and anyone who is not compliant, but hes attacking some of the most important elements of our society, said Jolivette, a Democrat. Its rampant bullying from the president of the United States, who is supposed to be crossing the aisle. The cost of tuition far outweighs other concernsA top concern of most Americans is the cost of a college degree. About 6 in 10 U.S. adults are extremely or very concerned about the cost of tuition. That concern is shared by majorities of Democrats and Republicans and far outweighs concerns about antisemitism and liberal bias on campuses among the general public. College costs a lot more than it needs to. To get an education, you should not have to break your pocketbook, said Eunice Cortez, 68, a Republican near Houston.Cortez, whos originally from Mexico, did not go to college, but she made sure her U.S.-born children did and is proud that her grandchildren are getting college degrees. She supports Trump but is concerned that some of his policies, including funding cuts, will make it harder for people who need tuition aid to get an education. She sees it as the government getting in the way of an educated society.The poll shows a divide between college-educated Americans and those without college degrees, highlighting a possible cultural rift that Trump has seized on in the past.Most Americans with a college degree, 62%, are opposed to withholding funding from universities that dont comply with the presidents requirements, while those without a college degree are split, with about 3 in 10 in favor, a similar share opposed, and about 4 in 10 saying they dont have an opinion.Kara Hansen, 40, a registered independent in Seminole, Oklahoma, is a few credits shy of a college degree. She supports the idea of dismantling the Education Department to shake things up. But she said shes concerned by what she calls Trumps authoritarian tendencies and a growing fear on college campuses to speak up and voice opinions.It feels like everybody has a muzzle on, Hansen said. They cant fully express themselves because theyre afraid of getting in trouble, and afraid of Trump.About 3 in 10 U.S. adults say students or professors can freely speak their minds a lot on college and university campuses. About 4 in 10 say they can do this to some extent. Republicans feel their views are stifled: About 8 in 10 say liberals can speak their minds a lot or some on campus, but fewer than half say the same about conservatives.___Gecker reported from San Francisco.___The AP-NORC poll of 1,175 adults was conducted May 1-5, using a sample drawn from NORCs probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for adults overall is plus or minus 4 percentage points.___The Associated Press education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find the APs standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org. JOCELYN GECKER Gecker is an Associated Press reporter covering education with a focus on social media and youth mental health. twitter mailto LINLEY SANDERS Sanders is a polls and surveys reporter for The Associated Press. She develops and writes about polls conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, and works on AP VoteCast. twitter0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 141 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMVaccine teams in Mexico scramble over measles outbreak rippling out from Mennonite communityMennonites Abraham Fehr and Katarina Wall hold their baby as he gets vaccinated weeks after the family fell sick with measles during an outbreak in Cuauhtemoc, Chihuahua state, Mexico, Thursday, May 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Megan Janetsky)2025-05-09T05:10:51Z CUAUHTEMOC, Mexico (AP) In a rickety white Nissan, nurse Sandra Aguirre and her vaccination team drive past apple orchards and cornfields stretching to the desert horizon. Aguirre goes door to door with a cooler of measles vaccines. In one of Latin Americas biggest Mennonite communities, she knows many will decline to be vaccinated or even open their doors. But some will ask questions, and a handful might even agree to get shots on the spot. Were out here every single day, said Aguirre, pausing to call out to an empty farm, checking for residents. To gain trust of the Mennonites because theyre reserved and closed-off people you have to meet them where theyre at, show a friendly face.Aguirres work is part of an effort by health authorities across the country to contain Mexicos biggest measles outbreak in decades, as cases climb not only here but in the U.S. and Canada. In Mexico, cases have been concentrated in the Mennonite community long skeptical of vaccines and distrustful of authorities in the northern border state of Chihuahua. Officials say results of their campaign alongside Mennonite leaders have been mixed they cite tens of thousands of new vaccinations in Chihuahua, but infections have ballooned and spread past the community to Indigenous and other populations. Federal officials have documented 922 cases and one death in Chihuahua. Officials, health workers and local leaders say the numbers are likely underestimated, and misinformation about vaccines and endemic distrust of authorities are their biggest obstacles. Pressed against the fringes of the small northern city of Cuauhtemoc, the Mennonite settlement here spans about 40 kilometers (25 miles). With 23,000 residents, its one of Cuauhtemocs primary economic engines, but its an isolated place where families keep to themselves. Some have turned to social media and anti-vaccine websites for research. Others use little technology but visit family in the United States, where they also hear misinformation which then spreads through word of mouth. Chihuahua is a particularly worrisome place, officials say as a border state, the risk that the preventable disease will continue spreading internationally and affect the most vulnerable is high. We have a massive flow of people, said Alexis Hernndez, a Cuauhtemoc health official. That makes things a lot more complicated.The spread of measles in MexicoMexico considered measles eliminated in 1998. But its vaccination rate against the virus was around 76% as of 2023, according to the World Health Organization a dip from previous years and well below the 95% rate experts say is needed to prevent outbreaks. Mexicos current outbreak began in March. Officials traced it to an 8-year-old unvaccinated Mennonite boy who visited relatives in Seminole, Texas at the center of the U.S. outbreak. Cases rapidly spread through Chihuahuas 46,000-strong Mennonite community via schools and churches, according to religious and health leaders. From there, they said, it spread to workers in orchards and cheese plants. Gloria Elizabeth Vega, an Indigenous Raramuri woman and single mother, fell sick in March. Because shes vaccinated, measles didnt occur to her until she broke out in hives. Her supervisor at the cheese factory who also caught measles told her she had to take 10 days of leave and docked her pay 40% for the week, Vega said. Its rare for vaccinated people to get measles, but officials say that may account for up to 10% of cases here, though theyre milder. Vega tucked herself away in the back of her two-room home, hoping her daughter and mother also vaccinated wouldnt get sick. She wishes people would think of others when considering vaccination. They say, Well, I have enough to be fine, she said. But they dont think about that other person next to them, or wonder if that person has enough to live off of.Vaccination isnt required in Mexico. Schools can request vaccination records, federal health department spokesman Carlos Mateos said, but they cannot deny anyone access to education. In Chihuahua, some schools started reaching out to parents for copies of vaccination cards and encouraging shots, said Rodolfo Corts, state health ministry spokesman. Its unknown how many in the Mennonite community have gotten the vaccine which is safe, with risks lower than those of measles complications. Gabriella Villegas, head of vaccination at a clinic treating Mennonites with measles, estimated 70% of community members are not vaccinated. Other health authorities estimated the vaccination rate around 50%. Along with measles, misinformation is spreading Mennonites who spoke to The Associated Press most on condition of anonymity, fearing backlash repeatedly cited vaccine misinformation. One man said U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has a long record of promoting anti-vaccine views and has called vaccination a personal choice, is a hero. I dont accept vaccines; its that easy. Because thats where freedom of expression comes in, said the man, Jacob Goertzen. If we cant make out own decisions, we dont live in a democracy. Hernndez, Cuauhtemocs health director, said outside influences affect community vaccine views. The Mennonite population has a lot of access to social media and family members in the U.S. and Canada, where there are a lot of myths that have taken hold and many more anti-vaccine groups than we have in Mexico, he said. During nurse Aguirres vaccination drive, one man simply said people here prefer to cure themselves in their own way. A mother described getting sick with measles as a privilege and spoke of putting her unvaccinated 5- and 7-year-olds in a party so everyone could get sick and recover a risky tactic doctors have long denounced. Mexicos lone death from measles was a 31-year-old Mennonite man in the settlement who had diabetes and high blood pressure, underlying conditions that often complicate sicknesses. Mexicos vaccination effortsMost people in Indigenous and other communities quickly agreed to vaccinate, officials told AP, but in Mennonite areas crews have to do more vigorous outreach the door-to-door visits, follow-up calls and conversations, and involvement of local leaders. In Cuauhtemocs settlement, thats leaders like Jacob Dyck Penner. As colony president, he and other leaders closed school for two weeks to slow infections, have made a push to show residents theyre working with health authorities, and are encouraging vaccination. Leaders translate health information into Low German, the native language of most of the community. Penner and others are assisting vaccination teams, making sure families know how to access health services. We had to find this way, together with doctors, to not pressure people or inspire distrust, so they can take their time and make their own decision to accept (being vaccinated), Penner said.Medics report more people visiting clinics, seeking vaccines for measles and other diseases. Still, Penner said, there a swath of people will always reject vaccinations. For this mother, lifes now paycheck to paycheckHealth officials like Hernndez say theyre concerned in particular for vulnerable populations including Indigenous groups, many of whom have fewer resources to cope. Vega, the single mother who got measles, said her job at the cheese factory was once a blessing, providing health insurance and steady pay. But the forced leave and docked pay left her reeling. She said shes living paycheck to paycheck and wonders how shell pay the bills her daughters school supplies, lunches, tennis shoes. I have a daughter to keep afloat, she said. Its not like I have the option to wait and pay for things, for food. ____Associated Press videojournalist Martn Silva Rey contributed to this report from Cuauhtemoc, Mexico. MEGAN JANETSKY Megan Janetsky covers migration, conflict, human rights and politics in Mexico and Central America for The AP based in Mexico City. Previously, she covered Cuba and the Caribbean for The AP and worked as freelance journalist in Colombia, reporting across South America. twitter instagram facebook mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 145 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMDaughter says mom gave me life twice with kidney donation as pair graduate nursing school togetherKidney donor Nija Butler and kidney recipient Ambrealle Brown are photographed the day before graduating from Baton Rouge General's School of Nursing on April 28, 2025 in central Louisiana. (AP Photo/Stephen Smith)2025-05-09T04:05:32Z BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) For years, Ambrealle Brown was forced to put her dreams of becoming a nurse on hold due to a life-threatening kidney disease that left her temporarily incapacitated. Amid inner doubts about whether she would ever return to living a normal life, Browns mother stepped in and offered to donate her kidney. Doctors performed Louisianas first robotic kidney transplant, giving Brown a renewed chance at life and Nija Butler the opportunity to see her daughter thrive. Nearly two years after the successful transplant, the Louisiana mother and daughter shared another journey. Donning white caps and gowns, they walked across the stage together in Baton Rouge and graduated from nursing school. As parents, we always tell our children, we would die for you, and kids dont always understand that kind of love, Butler, 48, said. I would have given anything for her to live. I mean that from the bottom of my heart, without a second thought. During an interview with The Associated Press last month, the two women reflected on their journey together and the challenges they have overcome. The Louisiana mother-daughter duo has always been close. Butler gave birth to her daughter when she was in high school, and as a result, they grew up together. Butler poured herself into raising her daughter and son, and Brown planned to become a nurse. But in 2016, when Brown was diagnosed with Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), a rare kidney disease that can cause kidney failure, everything changed. Her prognosis quickly worsened. One day, Brown, who was taking prerequisite courses for nursing school, felt her legs tighten to the point that she could not move. Shortly after, Browns doctor delivered detrimental news: Brown would either need to start dialysis or have a kidney transplant to survive. The average wait for a kidney transplant in the U.S. can vary from two to five years, or longer, depending on certain factors, based on data from the National Kidney Foundation. Brown desperately hoped for a new kidney. But as she awaited news of a transplant, she was forced to turn to dialysis a treatment that lasted nine to 13 hours, every single day. Browns daily life was limited, and she had to stop school.After years of dialysis, Butler said she saw a shift in her daughter, who was typically optimistic. It was like she wanted to give up, Butler recalled about a phone call with her daughter. She was tired of just being connected to a tube that her life revolved around.Although doctors had previously told Butler she likely wasnt a match to be a kidney donor for her daughter, she still scheduled an appointment to get tested the next day. She opted not to tell her daughter, not wanting to get her hopes up in case it wasnt a viable match. Soon after, Brown got news she had been waiting five years to hear she was getting a new kidney. She called her mother to tell her, but her mom already knew. Confused, Brown asked her mother how she would know that. Its me, Butler responded. The two underwent surgery in March 2023, with Tulane University School of Medicine doctors performing the states first kidney transplant using a robotic surgical system. The practice offers increased precision so the procedure is minimally invasive, hoping there will be less pain and a speedier recovery.After the successful surgery, Brown returned her focus to school. Her mother decided to get her registered nurses license as well. For 16 months, they were attached at the hip. They sat together, studied together, and, in April, graduated from the Baton Rouge General School of Nursing together.I couldnt have done it without her because nursing school is hard, Brown, 34, said. Im happy that I was able to go through that milestone with her side by side.Brown has accepted a job at a burns intensive care unit, and Butler is continuing her career at a psychiatric facility. The ladies hope their story inspires others to never give up and also spread awareness about the importance of medical testing and the donor and transplant process. Thank you for giving me life twice, Brown said to her mother. I have to keep saying that because you gave me a second chance at life, and most people dont get do-overs.Butler wiped away a tear and, without skipping a beat, said, And I would do it again.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 146 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NATURE.COMA pope, a polymath and plucky women: Books in briefNature, Published online: 09 May 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01419-yAndrew Robinson reviews five of the best science picks.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 145 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMWhat must Arsenal fix to win the Premier League next season?On Sunday, Arsenal will give Liverpool a guard of honor. How can they avoid a repeat next term?0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 154 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMWhy Lamine Yamal is already better than Messi in some waysLamine Yamal is only 17 and he's one of the world's best players -- and probably the best teenager ever.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 125 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMRanking this weekend's fights: From Navarrete-Suarez to Lubin-HolmesNick Parkinson ranks this weekend's fights from best to worst and explains what's at stake.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 144 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COM2025 college baseball hitter rankings: The best hitters in the gameWho are the best hitters in college baseball? Kiley McDaniel breaks it down.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 142 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMIs there a path for Belal to catch GSP?Georges St-Pierre, Dan Hardy and other welterweight champs explain Belal Muhammad.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 151 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMTrump Says U.S. Will Impose More Sanctions on Russia if It Does Not Agree to an Extended TrucePresident Trump made his threat in a post on Truth Social that came after a phone call with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 142 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMJustice for Cwecwe: Report of a Childs Rape Enrages South AfricansA mothers call for justice has challenged a culture of shame and inspired a nationwide movement to tackle the crisis of sexual violence.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 143 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMWho Competes With Meta? Its Future Depends on the Answer.At a landmark antitrust trial, a judge is weighing how to define competition for the social media giant in order to decide whether it broke the law.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 151 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMHow the TV Hit Fallout Became a Champion of Made-in-CaliforniaThe shows producer, Jonathan Nolan, has put himself at the forefront of Hollywoods push to get California to approve $750 million in tax rebates.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 152 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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The NYC Apartment Where Christo and Jeanne-Claude Cast Their SpellsThe couples lives are preserved in a SoHo building where for decades they plotted their monumental projects.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 149 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMTrump floats cutting China tariffs to 80% ahead of meeting as he looks to deescalate trade warPresident Donald Trump speaks to reporters after David Perdue was sworn in as U.S. Ambassador to China during a ceremony in the Oval Office of the White House, Wednesday, May 7, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)2025-05-09T11:39:51Z WASHINGTON (AP) President Donald Trump on Friday floated cutting tariffs on China from 145% to 80% ahead of a weekend meeting among top U.S. and Chinese trade officials as he looks to deescalate the trade war.Top U.S. officials are set to meet with a high-level Chinese delegation in Switzerland in the first major talks between the two nations since Trump sparked a trade war with stiff tariffs on imports.80% Tariff on China seems right! Up to Scott B, Trump wrote on his social media account on Friday morning, referring to Scott Bessent, his Treasury chief, who has been a point person on trade. The Republican president also called on China to open its markets to the U.S., writing: WOULD BE SO GOOD FOR THEM!!! CLOSED MARKETS DONT WORK ANYMORE!!!Bessent and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will meet with their counterparts in Geneva in the most-senior known conversations between the two countries in months, the Trump administration announced this week. It comes amid growing U.S. market worry over the impact of the tariffs on the prices and supply of consumer goods. No country has been hit harder by Trumps trade war than China, the worlds biggest exporter and second largest economy. When Trump announced his Liberation Day tariffs on April 2, China retaliated with tariffs of its own, a move that Trump viewed as demonstrating a lack of respect. The tariffs on each others goods have been mounting since then, with the U.S. tariffs against China now at 145% and China tariffs on the U.S. at 125%. Trump had previously said that he wouldnt lower the tariffs against China to hold substantive talks. But he showed signs of softening during an Oval Office appearance on Thursday, when he said he could lower the 145% rate charged on Chinese goods if the weekend talks go well. Were going to see, Trump said. Right now, you cant get any higher. Its at 145, so we know its coming down. The presidents team has acknowledged that the 145% tariff was not sustainable, as taxes at that rate were effectively an embargo on any trade between the two countries.But it remains unclear how Trump can reconcile the contradictions in his stated goals. He wants large amounts of tariff revenues to offset his income tax cuts, but he also wants deals to increase market access for U.S. goods that would likely require lower tariffs. His aides have said he wants to isolate China, yet his tariffs on other trade partners make it difficult to create a durable alliance on trade. SEUNG MIN KIM Kim covers the White House for The Associated Press. She joined the AP in 2022 and is based in Washington. twitter mailto JOSH BOAK Boak covers the White House and economic policy for The Associated Press. He joined the AP in 2013. twitter mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 131 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.404MEDIA.COWell, Well, Well: Meta to Add Facial Recognition To Glasses After AllOn Wednesday, The Information reported that Meta is working on facial recognition for the companys Ray-Ban glasses. This sort of technologycombining facial recognition with a camera feedis something that big tech including Meta has been able to technically pull off, but has previously decided to not release. There are serious, inherent risks with the idea of anyone being able to instantly know the real identity of anyone who just happens to walk past their camera feed, be that in a pair of glasses or other sort of camera.The move is an obvious about-face from Meta. Its also interesting to me because Metas PR chewed my ass off when I dared to report in October that a pair of students took Metas Ray-Ban glasses and combined them with off-the-shelf facial recognition technology. That tool, which the students called I-XRAY, captured a persons face, ran it through an easy to access facial recognition service called Pimeyes, then went a step further and pulled up information about the subject from random the web, including their home address and phone number.When I contacted Meta for comment for that story, Dave Arnold, a spokesperson for the company, said in an email he had one question for me. That Pimeyes facial recognition technology could be used with ANY camera, correct? In other words, this isn't something that only is possible because of Meta Ray-Bans? If so, I think that's an important point to note in the piece, he wrote.This is true. But entirely misses the point of why the students created the tool with Metas Ray-Ban glasses. They said themselves in a demonstration video they identified dozens of people without their knowledge. You do that by wearing a pair of glasses that look like any other. Metas Ray-Bans do have a light that turns on when its recording, but according to the new report, Meta is questioning whether new versions of its glasses need this.I replied to Arnold spelling this out a bit. Yes, it could theoretically work with other cameras. That being said, they didnt stick a GoPro onto their bodywhich would undermine the surreptitious nature of it. They used smart glasses, which Meta makes, I wrote.We published the article under the headline Someone Put Facial Recognition Tech onto Meta's Smart Glasses to Instantly Dox Strangers. Arnold had an issue with that.I saw the article, and respectfully, I think the headline as written could be misleading to readers. It says someone put facial recognition tech ONTO Meta's Smart Glasses, which sounds like someone's hacked the device, or installed facial recognition device on the glasses themselves, when in reality, they are live-streaming from the glasses to Instagram and then they use a program to monitor the stream. I think that is an important distinction. Is it possible to update the headline to reflect the nuance here?I didnt update the piece or reply because this is a distinction without any real meaning. Into the glasses, onto the glasses, with, glued to, whatever. The impact is what matters, and the project was done on Metas glasses.Do you work at Meta? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.Arnold left it at that for the time being. We then recorded a podcast episode about the students tool, and Arnold had some more complaints. He wanted to talk about the headline of the podcast, which was The Smart Glasses That Dox Strangers.Arnold wrote:You say in the podcast that the glasses don't have facial recognition capabilities, and you've previously acknowledged that this could be done with any camera/recording device, but a headline saying smart glasses that dox strangers clearly makes it sound like this is an issue that is specific to the glasses, or that the facial recognition was executed on the glasses themselves vs. the reality, which is that this was all run by a program on their laptop. This is despite the fact that the students themselves have said publicly: We do not want this to be a criticism of their product at all, and we just had them on handthis could have been done on a phone camera. I realize we may not agree on everything here, but surely you can appreciate how headlines like this are misleading for readers.Someone Put Facial Recognition Tech onto Metas Smart Glasses to Instantly Dox StrangersThe technology, which marries Metas smart Ray Ban glasses with the facial recognition service Pimeyes and some other tools, lets someone automatically go from face, to name, to phone number, and home address.404 MediaJoseph CoxNo, I dont appreciate that. I also dont care if the students didnt intend their project to be a criticism of Metas smartglasses or not. The fact is, they built a doxing tool with Metas glasses, tested it on multiple unsuspecting members of the public without consent, and specifically chose Metas glasses because they allow a user to scan a face in a stealthier manner than jamming a phones camera in someones face, for example. The intellectual dishonesty at the expense of protecting the brand at all costs here is embarrassing.I replied: We think the headline is fair and accurate.I followed up with Arnold on Thursday to ask for comment for this piece too. I asked, does his earlier stance that this is not specifically a Meta problem, but a broader one, still stand? And what was their statement on The Information report?Arnold wrote back: 404 Media's previous reporting misleadingly implied that the students' experiment was uniquely possible with Ray-Ban Meta glasses, despite the fact that the students themselves acknowledged 'this could have been done on a phone camera.' Our objection to this still stands.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 180 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.PRIDE.COMNot quite business casual: How to show up as your whole self in the workplaceI'll never forget the first day on the job in my authentic form.It was a day or two after I held my own "coming out" party as my trans self. The party included some friends, relatives, and a coworker or two. At the time, I worked as a desk clerk at the local museum and the local orchestra's theatre box office. I did all the work to "prep" my colleagues at both jobs: provided HR departments with my legal name change papers; informed my immediate colleagues (though they had known weeks and months in advance); and even wrote up a blog post-turned-email on my new legal name, pronouns, and the importance of understanding and respecting them.After a few hours of smiling and helping guests, my boss at the museum pulled me to the side. With a smile I thought equated to a rainbow emoji, she passive-aggressively told me that my eyelashes were lovely but "a bit too much." With a small smile, I nodded and took them off to the staff room.If only I knew this was the start of a long journey dealing with similar actions.Out of Office: Coming Out at Work as a Trans PersonThere's coming out, and then there's coming out at work. One is a declaration of identity, and the other is a risk decision.Let me explain.Coming out as trans in the workplace is not a moment of clarity wrapped in a neat little bow. It's a thousand paper cuts of disclosure: the HR form, the Zoom meeting, and side chats with a coworker who stumbles over when referring to your former or chosen name like a lava flow. When your health insurance and livelihood hang in the balance, coming out isn't just brave but a negotiation.And, sometimes, not always a fair one, especially when the Man with the Orange Face and his folk make it even harder for us to thrive.If you're like me, you probably drafted words or prepped yourself in a mirror of coming out that sometimes reads like a corporate apology statement. You may have whispered, "I'm transitioning," in a one-on-one the way most people admit to forgetting a deadline. You may have overcompensated with work for weeks, hoping no one would say the wrong thingand knowing someone inevitably would.And if you're lucky, you may have been met with support, celebration, and maybe even an awkward "I watched Pose once!" comment from someone in Accounting.But before we get to the office confetti, let's rewind.Coming Out to Yourself, FirstBefore you come out to Brenda in Finance, come out to yourself in the bathroom mirror. And take your time.No rule says you have to disclose your identity at work. There's no medal for being the first out trans person in your office, like there's no penalty for choosing peace and privacy over visibility. Whether you're a trans femme software engineer, a nonbinary barista, or a gender-expansive guidance counselor, your identity is valid regardless of who knows it.Know Your Rights, Even If They Feel Like SuggestionsDepending on where you live, the protections for trans workers range from rock solid to barely a rumor.In the U.S., the Supreme Court's Bostock v. Clayton County decision means it's technically illegal to fire someone for being transgender. That's the law. But the reality? Trans people are still disproportionately fired, misgendered, passed over, and victims of aggression in the workplace to push them out.When I was still at the museum, I increasingly dealt with what I now realized were microaggressions that ranged from how I looked "overdressed" at work to "not looking happy when I arrived" minutes after walking into the museum (yes, that one was on a performance review.) Despite being one of two non-white staffers promoted to full-time, they slowly began to pull back on my hours to the point that I lost the insurance benefits that helped me at the start of my transition. It increasingly felt like they wanted me there for diversity points but didn't truly value me.So, before you write that coming-out message or change your email signature, check your company's non-discrimination policy. Do they list "gender identity" explicitly? Do they have a trans-inclusive health plan? An LGBTQ+ employee resource group? A clue?Because being out at work shouldn't feel like spelunking into HR's inbox without a rope.Choose Your Own (Coming Out) AdventureSome people send a big email to everyone in the organization. Others drop it in one-on-ones. I wish I had included a surprise party with a gender reveal cake. There's no right way to come out at the workplace. But I would suggest thinking about three things:Audience: Who needs to know? (Just your boss? The team?)Tone: Do you want to educate, update, or just inform? (You don't have to write a dissertationunless you want to.)Support: Do you have an ally in the room, someone who can back you up, correct pronouns gently, and advocate if needed?Looking back, I feared coming out at the orchestra more than at the art museum. The art museum conveyed avant-garde and a safe space for diversity (I presumed). Meanwhile, the dedicated patrons who volunteered, sat on committees, and donated some serious money always gave the vibe that their safe space was somewhat conservative. But I was surprised to receive a warm welcome when I came out at that workplace. Was there a slight bump in the road? Absolutely. A day or so after my mass email, one coworker who worked in the Development Office explained he would have difficulty going by my new name and pronouns, not to mention the occasional asks if they could go by my nickname. But if they could pronounce Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninoff, they could best learn to say my name equally.You don't have to be funny or fabulous or write the Dear White People of coming out emails. You have to be clear to them and always be kind to yourself.Manage the Fallout or the Glow-UpSome workplaces surprise you in the best ways. A bouquet shows up on your desk. Someone buys you lunch. Your email and signature updates are met with nothing but hearts and "Thank you for sharing."Other times? The air gets thick. A colleague calls you by your old name in a meeting. Your manager avoids eye contact. The guy who always overshares about his CrossFit regime suddenly gets quiet.Coming out is a mirror. It shows you who's been listening and, sadly, who's been pretending. And it can be deeply disappointing. Here's the thing: people will get it wrong. Someone will say "transgendered." Someone will ask if you've had any surgeries. Someone will say they couldn't "tell" like it's a compliment. You don't have to educate them. You don't have to smile.But you do get to correct them. You do get to document it. And you do get to put your mental health first.No job is worth your dignity. No paycheck is worth your peace.Making Space for Yourself and OthersThe moment after you come out of work can be strangely anticlimactic. You might feel underwhelmed or overwhelmed. You might find yourself overexplaining or over-apologizing. You may overperform to prove that you're still a team player, hoping they still see you as 'professional' and 'normal.'But, my dear, you never were normal. You're a trans trailblazer in a world full of binary spreadsheets and gendered bathrooms. And just by being out, if you choose to be, you open the door for someone else to walk through. Because visibility isn't everything, but it means something.Sometimes, coming out at work doesn't just shift how others see you. Many times, it shifts how you see yourself. A new confidence, a deeper breath, a refusal to shrink into the person they hired before they knew the full story. Some will cheer you on as you get comfortable and confident in your skin.And expect others who will fear and loathe you because they cannot dim the glory of your shine.I won't lie. It's hard. It's risky. It's rarely as simple as clicking "Send." But one day, a new hire might scroll through the org chart, see you, and realize they aren't alone. One day, a colleague might thank you for quietly helping them understand the trans person in their life, be it a child or a neighbor. One day, you might catch your reflection in the elevator mirror and smile, knowing you're no longer pretending.You Are LimitlessI finally left the Memorial Art Gallery at the University of Rochester exactly 19 months after the start of my transition. After all the aggression, I realized that the professional path wasn't for me. But at the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra? I was there for another four years, moving up the ladder from a desk clerk at their box office to working in their Marketing department as a Content Manager and ending the last leg of my stint there as a Director of Content & Digital Marketing. It wasn't always rosy there. But I was always allowed to grow professionally because I grew into my authentic self.And I continue to grow every day.So, whether you're crafting a coming out email or just surviving another day in the cubicle that smells like printer ink and repression (not to mention those awful overhead lights!), remember:You deserve to be seen.You deserve to be respected.And you deserve to take up space.Keep glowing and growing,Your Lovable Trans AuntieYour Lovable Trans Auntie is our go-to advice column for lifes biggest (and messiest) questionslove, work, identity, and everything in between. With a signature blend of warmth, wit, and just the right amount of sass, Auntie offers readers a uniquely trans perspective thats as affirming as it is entertaining. Whether dishing out heartfelt wisdom, practical advice, or a little tough love, Auntie is here to remind everyone that theyre never alone on this journeyGot a crush but dont know how to tell them youre trans? Wondering how to deal with that coworker who still forgets your pronouns? Trying to navigate family drama, dating dilemmas, or just figuring out who you are? Aunties got you. Submit your questions to voices@equalpride.com.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 141 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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THEONION.COMCardinal Passed Over For Pope Devoted Life To God For NothingVATICAN CITYAngrily stomping on his vestments and throwing his zucchetto on the ground, Cardinal Pietro Parolin told reporters Friday that being passed over for pope meant he had devoted his life to God for absolutely nothing. Five goddamn decades of faith, dedication, and service in the name of our Lord and Savior, and this is the thanks I get? said the 70-year-old Veteran Vatican diplomat, adding that he would have spent his life mired in sin if he knew it was going to end withCardinal Robert Prevost being elected the 267th Pope of the Catholic Church. Seriously. I spent 56 years living a moral, humble, and charitable life to get snubbed by some catty Cardinals at their stupid little Conclave. I took a vow of celibacy for Gods sake! Everyone must think Im such an idiot. A distraught Parolin added that he knew he should have listened to his gut, never joined the seminary, and devoted his life to Islam instead.The post Cardinal Passed Over For Pope Devoted Life To God For Nothing appeared first on The Onion.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 156 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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THEONION.COMDad Impressed By How Easily New Lawn Mower Tore Through Sons LegDANBURY, CTExpressing immense satisfaction with the recently purchased devices performance, area dad Frank Hoyer confirmed Friday that he was impressed by how easily a new lawn mower tore through his son Alans leg. Look at this thing godidnt even hiccup gliding through all that tibia! Hoyer said as he wiped a streak of blood from his brow, adding that he reckoned the machine could have handled a leg twice as large as his sons without any difficulty. Boy, you can really feel that extra horsepower at work. All that bone and sinew would have been way too much for our old mower to handle. I doubt it could have made it past your ankle. But this beaut handled that big, bony kneecap no problem, nice and smooth. And that high-capacity bag could probably hold a couple dozen more legs before Id ever have to empty it! Sorry, pal, but I cant take you to the hospital just yet. Ive got to see what else this baby can do! At press time, Hoyer reportedly asked his son to stick out his other leg so he could show off the lawn mowers power to their neighbor Jim.The post Dad Impressed By How Easily New Lawn Mower Tore Through Sons Leg appeared first on The Onion.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 136 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMFormer Supreme Court Justice David Souter, a Republican who became a liberal darling, dies at 85The Supreme Court at sunset in Washington, Feb. 13, 2016. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick, File)2025-05-09T13:11:37Z WASHINGTON (AP) Retired Supreme Court Justice David H. Souter, the ascetic bachelor and New Hampshire Republican who became a darling of liberals during his nearly 20 years on the bench, has died. He was 85.Souter died Thursday at his home in New Hampshire, the Supreme Court said in a statement Friday.He retired from the court in June 2009, giving President Barack Obama his first Supreme Court vacancy to fill. Obama chose Sonia Sotomayor, the courts first Latina justice.Souter was appointed by Republican President George H.W. Bush in 1990. He was a reliably liberal vote on abortion, church-state relations, freedom of expression and the accessibility of federal courts.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 140 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMDavid H. Souter, Republican Justice Who Allied With Courts Liberal Wing, Dies at 85He left conservatives bitterly disappointed with his migration from right to left, leading to the cry of no more Souters.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 152 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.404MEDIA.COMan Disappeared by ICE Was on El Salvador Flight Manifest, Hacked Data ShowsRicardo Prada Vsquez, a Venezuelan man whose family says he was disappeared and who wasnt included on a previously leaked government list of people sent to a notorious mega prison in El Salvador, was included on a private airlines flight manifest to the country, according to hacked airline data obtained and analyzed by 404 Media.That means a private charter flight company might have more accurate information on where people are being deported than the government, experts say, and raises questions about the process being used to deport people.While the government initially declined to say where Prada had been sent before eventually admitting he was sent to El Salvador, the man was on a manifest for a March 15 flight held by GlobalX, one of ICEs primary charter companies. The news also raises questions about whether other people whose families are unaware of their whereabouts may be in El Salvador too.Do you know the name of anyone else who has been deported but their whereabouts are unknown? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.There are so many levels at which this concerns me. One is they clearly did not take enough care in this to even make sure they had the right lists of who they were removing, and who they were not sending to a prison that is a black hole in El Salvador, Michelle Bran, executive director of Together and Free, a group that has been working with families of deported people, including Pradas, told 404 Media. They weren't even keeping accurate records of who they were sending there. What that says about how much due process or how much accuracy there is in the rest of the assessments of whether these people should be on those planes at all follows very closely behind that.The hacked flight data provides new insight into where exactly the U.S. government and one of its airline contractors transported Prada after his arrest in January. According to the data obtained by 404 Media, Prada was listed on a flight from Valley International Airport in Harlingen, Texas, to Comayagua International Airport, also known as Palmerola International Airport, in Honduras. The flight had 163 booked passengers, according to the data. Harlingen is along the U.S.-Mexico border and has an immigration court.Then, he was listed on a second flight from Comayagua International Airport to El Salvador International, according to the data. 0:00 /0:04 1 Visualization of the flight data. Made by 404 Media in FlightMapper. We are in touch with Ricardo's family and are exploring litigation to secure his release from CECOT. We are working to offer representation but are facing serious barriers to ensure Ricardo has access to justice, as he is being held incommunicado in horrific conditions, Ben Levey, a staff attorney with the National Immigrant Justice Centers Asylum Project, told 404 Media.GlobalX is a charter company that handles many of ICEs deportation flights. In 2024, 74 percent of ICEs more than 1,500 removal flights were on GlobalX plans, according to a data set from Tom Cartwright who tracks ICE Air flights which the Project on Government Oversight reported on in March.Earlier this week 404 Media reported a hacker targeted GlobalX and stole passenger and flight information from the company. This is the data that includes details on Pradas deportation.Prada was detained when he was working a food delivery job in Detroit, picked up an order at a McDonalds, then took a wrong turn onto the Ambassador Bridge which leads to Canada, The New York Times previously reported. Prada was taken into custody when he tried to re-enter the U.S., and was put in detention and ordered deported. On March 15 he told a friend in Chicago he was one of a number of detainees in Texas who expected to be sent to Venezuela, the report added.Around this time the Trump administration flew three planes carrying Venezuelans to El Salvador. But as the Times and other outlets reported, Prada was not on a list of 238 people deported to El Salvador. CBS published that list on March 20, and later reported that it could not find criminal records for 75 percent of the Venezuelans. Friends and family of Prada told the Times that he had simply disappeared and we know nothing, nothing.It was only after coverage saying Prada had disappeared that the Department of Homeland Securitys X account said On March 15, Prada was removed to El Salvador. In that X post, DHS repeated the claim that Prada is confirmed member of Tren de Aragua [TdA], a Venezuelan gang that the government has said is controlled by Venezuelas president. When contacted for comment for this story, DHS replied with the same statement posted to its X account, which said that after Prada being referred to secondary inspection Further investigation resulted in Prada being designated a public safety threat as a confirmed member of TdA and in violation of his conditions of admission. Prada was apprehended and transferred to ICE Michigan for detention. On Feb. 27, an immigration judge ordered Prada removed from the U.S.Immigration and legal experts 404 Media spoke to said the fact that in some cases GlobalX had a more accurate list of people who were sent to El Salvador than the federal government seems to have had is highly concerning.These manifests suggest that the government has access to information that it apparently did not initially disclose to a court about the fate of deported Venezuelan men who have been ordered back to this country, Laura Rivera, an attorney at Just Futures Law, told 404 Media.There have been longstanding issues with locating people held in Department of Homeland Security custody due to transfers between different facilities, as well as a lack of access to legal counsel and interpretation, Kathleen Bush-Joseph, policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institutes U.S. Immigration Policy Program, told 404 Media in an email. But especially in recent years, under both the Biden and Trump administrations, really fast deportations have made it even more difficult to verify where people are, with families sometimes not learning that their relatives have been deported until after they are already back in their home country, or in the case of Alien Enemies Act deportations, a third country.She added that with fast deportations, even different officials have seemed unaware of noncitizens' locations because of the speed at which they were removed.GlobalX, Airline for Trumps Deportations, HackedHackers say they have obtained what they say are passenger lists for GlobalX flights from January to this month. The data appears to include people who have been deported.404 MediaJoseph CoxBran from Together and Free was also the immigration detention ombudsman and head of the family reunification task force at the Department of Homeland Security in the Biden administration, where her job was to specifically review situations like this and to make sure they did not happen.If they didn't even set up a system in which to accurately track who they were removing, who, according to them, are terrorists and serious gang members, people that were being accused of that, to me that means they have zero respect for the value of those lives and for the due process involved in carrying out an operation like this, Bran said.If you don't know who you're sending, how do we know that you even took the proper steps and care in identifying the right people to get on those planes?, Bran added. It seems pretty clear that they didn't [take the proper care], if they don't even know who was on the plane. It's pretty shocking.The Venezuelan nationals deported to El Salvador were done so under Trumps invocation of the Alien Enemies Act (AEA). The government believes this allows it to deport people without an immigration hearing if they are identified as a member of Tren de Aragua. However, a declassified memo reported on by the Times says U.S. intelligence agencies do not believe the gang is controlled by Venezuela's president, undercutting the provided justification for using that law.They weren't even keeping accurate records of who they were sending there.This week multiple judges blocked the Trump administration from deporting people under the AEA, various media outlets reported. In one of those, the judge said that none of the requirements for the invocation of the AEA had been metbecause Tren de Aragua is not a nation or government. This followed an earlier similar ruling on May 1.Rivera said reporting around this undermines Trumps spurious claims that these men are all gang members and that Venezuelas Maduro regime is directing this gang. With those justifications stripped away, what remains is the lawless expulsion of scores of people apparently based on their nationality, something that should move all people of conscience to demand their return.The hacker also defaced GlobalXs website with a message that pointed to the May 1 ruling from U.S. District judge Fernando Rodriguez which said the president unlawfully invoked the AEA as part of those deportations.Anonymous has decided to enforce the Judge's order since you and your sycophant staff ignore lawful orders that go against your fascist plans, the message said, referring to the Anonymous umbrella that some hackers claim their hacks under.404 Media verified the data at the time by cross-referencing the flight and passenger data with well-known and less-known flights and deportees. On May 5, Politico revealed the identity of a second man deported to El Salvador by mistake, the first being Maryland resident Kilmar Abrego Garcia. That second man was Daniel Lozano-Camargo, and 404 Media also found his name in the hacked GlobalX data. Crucially, his identity was only revealed publicly after the hack happened, meaning the hacker could not have fabricated his inclusion.There's mistakes in the best of times, right? And the fact that this was done the way it was done, you're gonna have even more mistakes, Bran said. It's catastrophic. We're talking about disappearing people and sending them into a black hole, accusing them of very serious things, and not documenting how you came to that conclusion or who you did it with.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 174 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen