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    Rennie Colemans Country Tracks Are for the Gays Who Have Had Enough
    Rennie Coleman is tired of waiting for country music to catch up so hes bringing his own chair to the table, cowboy hat and all.The Nashville-raised, Los Angeles-based singer-songwriter recently released Some Will Say, a country-rock track about choosing peace over chaos. His latest single, Only Tonight, a melancholic ballad about fleeting but powerful connection, dropped June 13.Both tracks are produced by Luca Brown (Shaboozey, Karol G, Kali Uchis) and mastered by Grammy winner Emerson Mancini, a trans engineer known for his work with Kendrick Lamar and Paramore. Having Emerson master these songs was a dream, Coleman says. It meant everything to have more queer hands on the project other than my own.Telling the Truth Through MusicFor Coleman, authenticity has always been at the center of his songwriting. The first good song I wrote was the first time I was honest, he says. I wasnt trying to act a certain way it was just me.That honesty fuels both singles. Some Will Say channels the strength it takes to walk away from a one-sided relationship. Weve all been the one who isnt wanted, Coleman says. But maturity means choosing yourself and sanity over something crap.His follow-up track, Only Tonight, is quieter and more reflective. Its about those rare moments where love still surprises you, he says. Even if its fleeting, it reminds you that connection is real. Its sad and hopeful at the same time like a dreamy-country music dip.As a Gemini, he adds, Im a little of both. Fast and slow. I like to sing to the heavens, and I also like singing down in the dirt.Pride, Politics, and a Pants-less Promo PhotoThough Coleman describes himself as more of a chardonnay-on-the-couch gay, releasing new music during Pride Month was intentional.Its a celebration of my people and my community, he says. And right now, it feels more important than ever for queer artists to share their art and lean on each other.That decision came with some personal fallout namely from his mother, who was nervous about the attention. She had a meltdown over one of the first promo pics I posted last month without pants on Instagram, he says. I was like, Mom, theyre just thighs. Im holding a guitar, wearing a shirt, relax.But he understands her concern. Shes just worried about my safety. She knows Ive always been vocal, and considering the current political climate, shes afraid that certain groups of the population will come for me, he says. But I told her Im not trying to taunt anyone. I just wont stop expressing myself because of fear.While hes received a handful of hateful DMs (Someone called me a meth head it made me laugh), the majority of feedback has been positive. I think people on that side need to lighten up and take some deep breaths. It takes so much more energy to hate everyone all the time, and most of it comes from deep sadness, fear, and jealousy. I dont have time for it.Finding Community in a Shifting GenreDespite the stereotypes, Coleman says country music is more open than some assume especially among the artists whove inspired him.Sure, there are plenty of people in country music who are bigots, he says. But then theres Dolly Parton, Maren Morris, Kacey Musgraves, Natalie Maines and The Chicks, Kelsea Ballerini, Tim and Faith. Those are my people.Country music is storytelling all stories and I have lots and lots to tell. Im not gonna stop just because the loudest voices are screaming for us not to exist. Nope.The reaction to his music so far has been encouraging. People keep telling me they dont even like country, but they love this song, he says of Some Will Say. That kind of support means everything.Even some past skeptics have changed their tune. A friend who once told me to give up music and try acting called me after hearing the song and said, Im so glad you found your people, and Im so glad you found your sound. I was like, thats right, he says.What Comes NextAs an independent artist, Coleman hopes the early momentum will help fund a full album. These two songs are just the warm-up, he says. I just finished writing a new one called Daddy, so get ready.Hes manifesting more studio time with Luca Brown, new collaborations (I have a song for Kacey and one for Maren call me, ladies!), and maybe even a tour.Dont Be Scared, Just Do YouFor younger queer artists considering stepping into traditional genres, Colemans advice is simple: show up fully.Trust your gut. Keep your ears open. Let the universe guide you, pay attention, and work your ass off, he says. If you can take all the nos and rejection and use them to fuel your fire, even better.Bad people are making the rules right now, but they wont be forever, he adds. Every piece of art or dance or song or window treatment has probably been touched by someone queer so dont be scared, just do you. Unapologetically.And what would younger Rennie say if he could see him now?This might sound super egotistical, he says, but if Im being one hundred percent honest, I think what a younger Rennie would say if he could see me now is, Duh.Source
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    He Was Accused of Killing His Wife. Idahos Coroner System Let Clues Vanish After a Previous Wifes Death.
    by Audrey Dutton ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up for Dispatches, a newsletter that spotlights wrongdoing around the country, to receive our stories in your inbox every week. Clayton Strong pulled up to a tiny hospital in Idaho, walked through the emergency room doors and told a clerk that his wifes body was outside in their SUV.A sheriffs deputy was at the hospital talking to Strong by the time the coroner arrived. This was an unattended death: one where no doctor could attest to a medical reason for the persons demise. That made it the coroners job to determine how and why she died.Strong, a stocky man with white hair and bushy eyebrows, explained that he and his wife lived in an RV park on the edge of the woods nearby. He said his wife had been bedridden for years with Parkinsons disease. That morning shed woken up and asked for peanut butter and water, Strong told the deputy. He found her dead some time later.The coroner looked over Betty Strongs body. It was thin and frail. He didnt see a reason to suspect anything other than a natural death for this 75-year-old woman. The sheriffs deputy seemed to be satisfied with the explanation too. So, the coroner ruled that Betty Strong died around 8:40 a.m. on Dec. 14, 2016, from complications of Parkinsons, and he signed off on allowing cremation of her body.Less than five years later, Clayton Strongs next wife turned up dead, too: shot in the chest in Texas.It turns out that both marriages had a history of domestic unrest, with visits from police who documented threats to each womans safety.Its impossible to know whether a different approach to investigating Betty Strongs death would have uncovered foul play. What is certain is that clues and evidence in the case were lost forever and Idahos system for death investigation let it happen.Family members of both women believe a more thorough investigation of the death in Idaho might have saved the life of Clayton Strongs next wife in Texas.Someone shows up with a dead body and just says they died of natural causes, said Amy Belanger, one of Betty Strongs children. I mean, really, do you just take their word for it?The answer is no, according to five of six national death investigation experts ProPublica consulted. They said the coroner should have obtained medical records to confirm Betty Strong was diagnosed with Parkinsons, examined the trailer where her husband said she died, or both.You can think of all sorts of scenarios criminal, accidental or natural that could have occurred there, said Jennifer Snippen, a death investigator, educator and consultant in Oregon. But my argument is, if you dont go to the scene and you dont look at the medical records, you just dont know.Most of the county coroners in Idaho are part-time elected officials with tiny budgets and no oversight or state funding to support their work. The national experts said that kind of system is more prone to cursory investigations like the one into Betty Strongs death.The failure to reform death investigations in Idaho has raised alarms for more than 70 years, according to current and former Idaho coroners and previous ProPublica reporting.A national magazine called Idaho the best place in the nation for a criminal to get away with murder in the literal sense because of the states antiquated county coroners system, the Idaho Statesman newspaper reported in 1951.Asked whether murderers have escaped prosecution in Idahos coroner system, Rich Riffle, coroner for the county that includes Boise, said, My humble opinion? Yes. That almost happened in 2019 when one inexperienced Idaho coroner decided to take the word of Chad Daybell that his wife, Tammy Daybell, had died in her sleep after chronic health problems, vomiting and a cough. Her body was later exhumed after his next wifes children went missing. An autopsy by the Utah medical examiners office found what medical records would have shown, had the Idaho coroner requested them: Tammy Daybell was healthy. A jury convicted Chad Daybell of murdering her by asphyxiation and of killing his next wifes two youngest children. The case is under appeal.At trial, coroner Brenda Dye said she had regrets. Her voice shaking, Dye told the court she would have ordered an autopsy if shed known better, but at that time, with my limited training and being new, I did the best I could. She declined ProPublicas interview request, citing the cases effect on her mental health. The community set up a memorial to two children who Chad Daybell was convicted of murdering; he was also convicted of killing his previous wife Tammy. The coroner originally believed Chad Daybell when he said that Tammy had died in her sleep. (John Roark/Post Register via AP) Idaho isnt the only place where death investigations fall short. Because there is no uniform federal system, the rigor with which your death is investigated depends on where you die. Other states lack enough forensic pathologists to do autopsies. And many local systems like Idaho Countys are squeezed for money.But even among its short-staffed, underfunded peers, Idaho stands out. One measure is the states autopsy rate: third-lowest for autopsies in all deaths, last in the nation for autopsies in known cases of homicide.Gov. Brad Little said in January that he would support more state resources to help Idahos coroners do their jobs. But he never got the chance; coroner-related bills passed by the Idaho Legislature this year contained no funding or other assistance for coroners and death investigations.So for now, each of Idahos 44 coroners will bear costs that other states help cover: driving a body hundreds of miles to an autopsy; paying for some of those autopsies; or trying to recruit one more person to join Idahos statewide forensic pathology workforce of three.If you dont care enough about how death investigations are done in your jurisdiction to invest in the people doing it, to provide them with the resources or to have high enough standards for the people that you hire to do this, youre going to get what you get, what you accept, said Snippen. Youre going to get what you allow to happen.Florida, 2010-2015Betty Brock was a mother of seven who enjoyed singing and art, long bicycle rides, organizing family photos and researching her ancestry.She was caring for her terminally ill husband in 2010 when Clayton Strong befriended her on the internet, according to Belanger, her daughter. Strong claimed to be basically destitute and living in his car, a backstory that appealed to a woman with a soft spot for taking in wounded people and trying to heal them with love, Belanger said.Strong drove hundreds of miles from Southwest Florida and showed up at the Brocks property in the Florida panhandle. They agreed he could sleep in his car there as long as he helped with caregiving and housework. Soon he was sleeping in an outbuilding on the property, then in the house.Bettys children were puzzled as this newcomer became a fixture in their mothers life. They wanted to give Strong a chance, but they soon grew suspicious.Betty Brocks husband died in August 2010. By January, she was Betty Strong.After their courthouse marriage, Clayton Strong used their now-shared funds to buy a Ford truck and an Airstream trailer and took his bride on the road, Belanger said. The couple visited national parks that Betty had always wanted to see. They camped and hiked their way across the continent. They bought mining claims and panned for gold in the remote Idaho wilderness. Betty and Clayton Strong. Bettys children say Clayton isolated her, threatened them when they tried to visit her, kept her from seeing her doctor, then took her to Idaho, where she died. (Courtesy of Amy Belanger) After that honeymoon, the walls around Betty Strong grew impenetrable, her children said. According to what two of her children told ProPublica and to statements two others made to police, Clayton became the gatekeeper of all communication with their mother, and he padlocked the doors of their Florida home and held the key.The last time Betty Strong saw her primary care doctor in Florida was in May 2013, according to records her son obtained after the death. Before that, she hadnt been in since 2010, the year Clayton Strong entered her life. The notes from the 2013 checkup show health issues common in older adults but no Parkinsons diagnosis, and neither Parkinsons nor other neurodegenerative diseases were listed in the family history section.The children watched from afar as the marriage devolved over the next two years. Between January 2014 and February 2015, police went to the couples residence for welfare checks and domestic disturbances at least six times, according to police reports that Belanger provided to ProPublica. Her children told police that Clayton Strong threatened to shoot them if they set foot on the property, threatened to hurt their mother if they didnt back off, and prevented her from seeing a doctor.In the first of those police visits, in January 2014, the records show that Belangers sister, who lived nearby, called the sheriff while standing outside the Strong residence, a brown house surrounded by oak trees and pines on a winding country road. A deputy arrived to find Belangers sister and Clayton Strong in a stalemate, then talked to everyone outside, according to a sheriffs office report. The deputy then watched as Betty Strong turned to her husband to ask him for permission to hug her daughter, and Clayton Strong removed a set of keys from his pocket and unlocked the porch entrance gate so Betty could go in the yard for the hug.The report says the deputy made a referral to Florida Department of Children and Families, the agency that investigates possible abuse of vulnerable adults, and that the department opened a case.A similar scene played out when one of Betty Strongs sons went to the house to check on her in February 2015. For two years, Clayton Strong turned the son away when he tried to visit, and this time Strong threatened to shoot him with a gun if he did not leave, the son told a sheriffs deputy. Clayton Strong denied that, the deputys report says.The deputy found Betty Strong alone on a bed in an RV parked behind the home, the report says. She said she had Parkinsons disease and couldnt get around well. Clayton wasnt holding her against her will, she told the deputy, but she couldnt take care of herself without him.She had a walkie-talkie. The deputy asked: Is Clayton using that radio and telling you what to say? Betty answered no while nodding her head yes. It was a chilly afternoon, and the deputy noticed Betty had a blanket but no heater. Bettys demeanor, living conditions, and the controlling behavior by Clayton warranted a referral to the Florida Department of Children and Families, the deputy wrote.Asked for the outcome of that referral, a spokesperson told ProPublica the department investigates all allegations of abuse, neglect, or exploitation but that records of those investigations are confidential under state law.Days after the referral in February 2015, police were again dispatched to the Florida home. This time, it wasnt one of Betty Strongs children who called; it was someone from adult protective services in need of police backup. According to the dispatch log, the worker said Clayton Strong has threatened before to pull a gun on her and is very anti-law enforcement.The couple left town a month later. Betty Strongs children never heard from her again. Betty Strong early in her relationship with Clayton Strong. Within a few years of this trip, Clayton told authorities shed died of Parkinsons, but her children say she never had the disease. (Courtesy of Amy Belanger) Idaho, December 2016By the time Betty Strong died in Idaho County in December 2016, she hadnt been seen in Florida in 21 months.Idaho Countys elected coroner, Cody Funke, had been in the job about as long.He knew the county well. Its vast forests, mountains and meadows stretch across more land than Massachusetts. Rugged and remote, it attracts people who want to be left alone and who distrust both government and conventional medicine. Funke, pronounced funk, was in his late 20s in 2014 when he learned his part-time job at a funeral home was being eliminated. His boss asked: Had he considered running for coroner? The coroner at the time was retiring and urged Funke to do it. So did Funkes boss from his other part-time job, as an EMT. What sealed the deal for Funke: As coroner, he would get health insurance.Funke started the job with a feeling of good luck, godspeed, youre gonna need it. There was no apprenticeship or ride-along to watch seasoned pros, like hed gotten when he trained to be an EMT. There was a training conference he attended in Las Vegas before taking office, and Funke received more than double the 24 hours of coroner education required by Idaho law. Even so, he isnt sure it was enough to prepare him. Funke learned on his first day that he wasnt getting a vehicle to move bodies from a death scene. If the local funeral homes vehicle was occupied, Funke had to use his family truck. A year after Betty Strongs death, the county commission got the coroner a vehicle: a pickup truck the sheriffs office didnt need anymore.The office he inherited also had no camera, and the county hadnt budgeted to give him one. Hed have to use his phone to take pictures of bodies and death scenes.There was no morgue.The Idaho County coroners office didnt even have an actual office.Funkes predecessors kept their files on paper, at home, he learned. The previous coroners house had flooded, so when Funke took over, all that remained fit in two manila folders.The coroners entire budget this year is $85,651. By comparison, coroners offices serving small populations had an average budget of $280,000 in 2018, according to a national study.Paid $13,000 a year, Funke is on call 24 hours a day and, last year, investigated and ruled on 71 deaths, about one every five days. Papers on an additional 102 deaths of people under a doctors care came through needing his signature for cremation.Funke does the coroner work on top of a full-time job. When a call comes in during business hours, he dips out to go to a death scene. If someone dies at dinnertime, he might not see his family until morning.He must decide with each death what the circumstances require: a simple phone call; an all-out investigation with autopsy, witness interviews, tissue samples and more; or something in the middle.To examine a death scene, Funke might have to drive three hours or longer each way. Whenever he orders an autopsy, Funke or his deputies have to take the body to the nearest autopsy center, a trip that takes a full day and usually demands an overnight stay. His current budget can cover 10 autopsies a year. Cody Funke, the Idaho County coroner, also worked full time as a city wastewater treatment operator. He now works for the state prison system while remaining the coroner. (Liesbeth Powers for ProPublica) In those first years as coroner, Funke often leaned on police.Funke found it strange that Clayton Strong had loaded his wifes body into their SUV and driven to the hospital. Most people call 911 to report a death and wait for help to arrive, Funke said. But Strong offered an explanation that seemed to satisfy the sheriffs deputy: He didnt know many people in town and wasnt sure what to do.Strong had said his wife hadnt seen a doctor because she stuck to homeopathic remedies. Thats not unusual for Funke to hear. The widower gave Funke the impression a coroner and sheriffs deputy wouldnt be welcome inside the trailer where she died. Thats not so outside the norm for Idaho County either, Funke said.Betty Strongs death looked like an easy call. So Funke helped move her body to a cot to be taken from the hospital to a local funeral home.According to a later report from the sheriffs office, Clayton Strong showed up at the funeral home that day, said he wanted her cremated and paid $2,310 in cash. The way Funke heard it from a funeral home employee a few days later, Strong paid in $100 bills out of a lunch box.The detail struck Funke as peculiar. But he let it go.Florida, 2017The couples Airstream trailer showed up one day in January 2017, parked outside their house in Florida. A neighbor called Amy Belanger with the news, and she dispatched her brother, Daniel, who lived nearby. Theyd spent almost two years fearing the worst.The only person at the house was Clayton Strong.The familys matriarch had died a few weeks ago in Harpster, Idaho, Strong said. Then he told his son-in-law to get off the property.Amy Belanger started making calls the next day. One of the first people she reached was Funke, the county coroner. She was perplexed, she said. Why hadnt anyone called her or her siblings? Why didnt he question whether Betty Strong had actually succumbed to a disease or if something else had killed her? Belanger told Funke about the history of police calls in Florida and concerns about their mothers safety.Funke thought back to what hed heard from the funeral home. A lunch box of cash for a cremation? That image never sat quite right. Now he had solid ground for suspicion. Funke told Belanger hed talk to the county prosecutor and see what could be done. The prosecutor and the sheriffs office initially told Belanger they had opened a homicide investigation, according to a detailed timeline she created at the time. But the death scene the Strongs trailer was long gone, the body cremated. The sheriffs investigator and prosecutor ultimately didnt seem to think there was enough evidence for a homicide investigation, Funke told ProPublica. (The prosecutor and sheriffs investigator did not return phone calls, emails or certified letters from ProPublica requesting comment on their decisions following Betty Strongs death.)Notes from Belangers timeline quote a Florida detective saying he was sorry the death had occurred outside his jurisdiction. He explained to her that in Florida, deputies would have had the medical examiners office verify medical records and take a blood sample.The year Betty Strong died, 20% of natural deaths investigated by a medical examiner in the part of Florida where she had lived underwent autopsies before the examiner decided the cause of death was natural. About 65% of all deaths taken in by Floridas medical examiner that year were autopsied. Both numbers dwarf Idahos coroner autopsy rates.Its not just Florida. Many states have more sophisticated systems for investigating deaths than Idahos. In much of the country, centralized state medical examiner offices oversee all death investigations or provide a backstop to elected coroners in each county. Idahos rural neighbor Montana has a hybrid system of medical examiners and coroners, supported by a coroner liaison who works with death investigators to make the process more consistent statewide. And next door in Wyoming, a state board sets rules for coroners to follow. The rules spell out what each death investigation should include: scene investigation, toxicology sample, DNA sample, photographs, external examination of the body and an inventory of property, evidence and medications.Jennifer Snippen, the death investigator in Oregon, was one of the experts who drafted the National Institute of Justices 2024 death-scene investigation guidebook.She said death investigations are more likely to be thorough when states and counties give their investigators enough funding and education, so that they have the motivation and the ability to get to as many scenes, and get as much information about every single death, as possible.Those who study the work of coroners and medical examiners in the U.S. have learned that the deaths of elderly people are especially likely to be written off as age-related, without considering whether the person may have also been a victim of abuse or neglect.Snippens research in 2023 is one of the most recent studies to confirm that. She reviewed data from thousands of cases. The person least likely to get a scene investigation or autopsy? An elderly woman who dies at home.Lauri McGivern, a nationally recognized expert in death investigations, said national standards would have Funke verify Betty Strongs Parkinsons diagnosis and ask more questions of Clayton Strong as the sole caregiver of a vulnerable adult. McGivern, who coordinates medicolegal death investigations in Vermont, reviewed the facts that Funke was given at the time of Betty Strongs death and his subsequent report at ProPublicas request.To follow national standards, McGivern said, Funke also would have gone to the Airstream trailer or asked law enforcement to examine the death scene and report back to him.But McGivern and other experts said they understand why Funke didnt follow those national guidelines because theyve seen it happen so many times in places like rural Idaho.Hes doing what he was shown how to do, McGivern said. And probably doing the best he can, with no budget and no support and no education. When Funke took over from Idaho Countys previous coroner in 2015, there was no equipment. Over the years, Funke had to get county commissioners to approve purchases like a radio to take coroner calls. (Liesbeth Powers for ProPublica) Frustrated by how little Idaho officials knew and why they hadnt dug further into her mothers death, Amy Belanger channeled her grief into trying to find answers on her own.She followed a trail of public records left by Clayton Strong. Had he harmed other women? Had he been in a relationship with anybody who went missing? I was looking into his past to see if there was a pattern like that, Belanger said. Something she could share with officials in Idaho.Then she stumbled across a document: a recent marriage license.Three months after depositing Betty Strongs body at a hospital in Idaho, Clayton Strong wed a woman from Texas.Belanger needed to warn her.Texas, 2017-2021Shirley Weatherley had a lot in common with Betty Strong. She was a mother and grandmother. Shed been married before. She lived in a small, modest home on a large piece of land in a rural locale, where shed been caring for a terminally ill former spouse when Strong contacted her on Facebook.Theyd known each other as teenagers in Lubbock. Their reconnection after he arrived at her house in Weatherford, a suburb of Fort Worth, eventually began to worry her children.He isolated her, saidJamie Barrington, Weatherleys son with a previous husband. He wouldnt let grandkids, my brother anybodyd come over, he just kept them at arms length. Shirley Weatherley (Courtesy of Jamie Barrington) Barrington said he and other members of Weatherleys family had suspicions about Strong. Then they connected with Belanger and heard what happened in Florida and Idaho.Belanger urged the family to tell their mother everything theyd heard. She actually was pleading with us to watch out, Barrington recalled. Knowing another family was worried helped fuel Amy Belangers quest for the truth about her mothers death. Her siblings chipped in to help Belanger rent a van and drive across the country in search of clues anything that could shed light on her mothers death.Once she got to Idaho, Belanger spent more than a week investigating. She met with the coroner and sheriff. She went to the mining claims the Strongs had purchased. She stayed at the RV park where Betty Strong died and interviewed the people whod owned it in 2016; they remembered talking to each other about how hinky the death and Clayton Strongs reaction to it seemed.Back in Texas, Weatherleys family tried to warn her. When they relayed the story about Betty Strong to her, Weatherley chalked it up to a grieving family trying to cope with loss by grasping for an explanation, Barrington said. After all, Strong had a death certificate that listed natural causes. The details Barrington later learned from family members and police about his mothers life with Strong were pretty horrific, he said. Weatherley had reported that Strong threatened to kill her, but no charges were filed. Then at one point, in the midst of an argument with Strong, Weatherley lobbed the accusations about Betty Strongs death at him, Barrington said. Strong flew into a rage.Weatherley called police in July 2021. She and Strong were splitting up, and he shoved her while moving his stuff out of the house, Weatherley told the officer. Strong had hurt her in the past, so she called police to make sure it didnt happen again, the officers report says. The officer got Strongs side of the story she was running him off, but he didnt push her and stuck around until Strong agreed to leave.Police would later document finding two items in the house. The first was a copy of Weatherleys will that left everything to Strong, on which shed written VOID, the second was a digital camera hidden in their bedroom. The camera contained selfies of injuries to her face and chest and a video of Strong putting his arm around her neck as she screamed for help.Strong persuaded Weatherley to let him back into their home once more on Aug. 4, 2021, according to police records.Four days later, Weatherleys son and grandson found her body wrapped in a gray tarp near the front steps to her home. Shed been shot in the chest. Authorities matched shell casings at the scene to an AK-47-style rifle, which security footage showed Strong ditching in a shopping cart outside a Walmart.Picked up later by police in Mexico, Strong died of cardiac arrest while awaiting extradition in Weatherleys killing. Mexican police booked Clayton Strong on gun charges in 2021. After the arrest, they discovered he was a suspect in the murder of his wife in Texas. (Parker County Sheriffs Office via Facebook) TodayJamie Barrington, Shirley Weatherleys son, was reluctant at first to speak publicly about his mothers death in Texas, even years later. He agreed to talk with ProPublica, he said, because he wants Idahos coroner system to improve. He said he never imagined that a death like Betty Strongs could be ruled natural based on what a spouse told authorities.I truly believe that if there had been a proper investigation and not taking his word for it, Barrington said, that it probably would have made a big difference in what happened to Shirley Weatherley.Word of Weatherleys murder eventually reached Funke, the coroner in Idaho. He said in hindsight, Strongs actions in Idaho County seem more suspicious than they did at the time to his inexperienced eyes and ears.Now, after 10 years as coroner, I would have pushed a little bit harder to have an officer or deputy follow up or go to the RV park with him. He would have asked police to use a national database one he didnt know about at the time to find Betty Strongs family members and learn more about her background. I have trust issues after cases like this, he said.Funke said the story of Betty Strongs death needs to be told, even if it shows that he and Idaho County made mistakes, because it can help lawmakers understand what is wrong with the states system.Idahos coroners need more funding, he said, because right now theyre an afterthought in county budgets. Most counties set a coroner salary at what amounts to less than minimum wage, so its impossible for someone like Funke to be coroner without a second, full-time job.These offices should be fully staffed, he said. Maybe we have one or two people that are here full time to answer questions and respond to these calls, versus, Hey, Ive got to take time off work, boss.And he believes new coroners who lack experience should be required to learn how to work a case from start to finish before theyre called out to a death like Betty Strongs.Daniel Belanger, one of Betty Strongs children, came away from his interactions with Idaho County officials convinced that the only way deaths like his mothers will be properly investigated is through legislation forcing coroners and law enforcement agencies to change their approaches.They completely dropped the ball, he told ProPublica.Amy Belanger said her family has reclaimed very few of her mothers possessions from the Airstream trailer. Strong emptied the Florida house of family heirlooms after their mothers death, Belanger said. Most of the family photo albums her mother toiled over are gone.The brown house on the winding road in Florida is still there. Belangers memories of family cookouts and holiday gatherings linger in the house; they werent wiped away by the police visits and padlocked doors. But the family home isnt the familys anymore. Years later, it is stuck in legal limbo the deed still in the name of Clayton Strong and Shirley Weatherley, the woman he married after the death of Betty Strong.
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    Public Media Can Be a Lifeline. Gutting It Hurts Everyone.
    Abandoning local public radio and TV would accelerate a dangerous trend straining civic health.
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    Revenge, Thy Name Is Emil Bove
    Trump wants his people calling the shots. And Bove has proved, above all, that he belongs to the president.
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  • Jimmy Fallon Fans the Flames of Burning MAGA Hats
    People torched the hats in videos, apparently upset about the Jeffrey Epstein case. People in China were like, Oh, come on, we worked so hard making them, Fallon said.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    What my lesbian relationship taught me about interdependence
    My girlfriend and I have a night routine that starts promptly at 8:30.After I make dinner and we trade stories about our day, we set up camp on the couch to continue watching the latest scandal in Desperate Housewives or Vanderpump Rules. We each have our jobs when it's time to finally migrate to bed. She does the dishes, and I pack our lunches for the next day. She sets up our toothbrushes, and I turn off the lights. We go to bed each setting two alarms: one for ourselves, one for the other.These may be small acts, but to me, they are everything.Being in this partnership has given me both freedom and trust in ways I didn't know were possible. Before, the idea of being in a relationship meant working hard at every corner to preserve your sense of self. Now, the forging together of our lives has brought me true peace and joy. Our relationship has brought me distinctly recognizable fulfillment in both the giving and receiving of care that feels intrinsically connected to my lesbianism.What is interdependence?So, where does this myth of independence originate?You know, the one that says our freedom is at stake if we can't be completely self-reliant. Or the one that says our identity is less than if we need something. In reality, there isn't a single person who doesn't rely on someone. Whether it's the train you take to work, the doctor you see when you're sick, the friend you call when you're sad: we need each other. We've been conditioned to believe that we can navigate life independently. But we can't. Suppose we can agree that codependency, especially in relationships, can be a symptom of heteronormativity and patriarchy. In that case, hyper-independence might seem like the natural challenger, but let me raise another point: the joy of interdependence.Interdependence doesn't have tunnel vision; there is not just "me" or "you," there is us together, us by ourselves, us for ourselves, and everything in between.Interdependence reveals that individuality and connection are two sides of the same coin. It focuses on how each person in a relationship can feel seen for who they are outside of the relationship, while also showing up for the other person. Recognizing the importance of interdependence in my relationship has alleviated any fears that mutual reliance would stifle my autonomous sense of security.We can't do it aloneAlthough lesbian relationships have often become synonymous with uhauling and quickly paced life stages, lesbian relationships, and many queer relationships in general, have grown together in the fulfillment of interdependence. My relationship with my girlfriend has shown me how self-determination and dependability flourish together when they are nurtured in queer relationships. As much as I care for my needs, I care for their needs and our mutual needs, and they do the same. The love we have for each other and for ourselves is abundant.This is evident, too, in queer relationships beyond just romantic ones. For queer people around the world, interdependence isn't a choice but an act of survival deeply ingrained in our identity. It's a chance to rest your head on the shoulder of someone you love and know they will hold you, and know you will one day return the favor. Interdependence tells us we can't do it alone. Interdependence has many faces, but it becomes blindingly apparent in the consciousness of community care for other queer people.I ask myself, then, why do queer relationships have such a strong natural proximity to interdependence? If I've noticed anything, this lifestyle is noteworthy to straight people, all the while it appears intuitively and rhythmically in my relationship. What I've learned is that to be queer (socially, politically, romantically) is to nurture the collective. It's both innate and actively conscious to care for yourself, your partner, and your community. Yes, in part, there is a sense of obligation, but along with it comes a sense of purpose and triumph.Queer joy is ingrained in interdependenceI don't just see interdependence in the mutual reliability of my relationship with my girlfriend; I also see it in the way we support each other. I see it around me everywhere; in other queer relationships, with my sister, with my best friend. I hear it in the thud of my dresser as my best friend and I help each other move into a new Brooklyn apartment on an early fall night. And I smell it in the cup of tea I pour for my girlfriend after she's had a long day. We do the work because we want to, and we want to because we care. We show up for each other because our love is an endless resource.Interdependence creates systems of care and security in the face of hardship and isolation. However, beyond just necessity, interdependence is an entry point to true partnership and intimacy. It's an undiluted act of vulnerability to put trust in someone else, to know they see you, and to trust that they will be there. Reciprocity brings true joy and fulfillment to the queer community, which is something we need now more than ever, as we are stronger and more resilient together.
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    Texas Officials Say They Didnt See the Flood Coming. Oral Histories Show Residents Have Long Warned of Risks.
    by Logan Jaffe In late September 2000, longtime Kerr County, Texas, resident W. Thornton Secor Jr. sat down with an oral historian to tell his story. Like many of the residents recorded as part of a decadeslong effort by the Kerr County Historical Commission to document the communitys history, Secor had a lot to say about the areas floods. It always seems to happen at night too, Secor said of local floods he and his family had experienced. Cant see most of it.Secor, who died in 2022, was a third-generation manager of a lodge that still operates along the Guadalupe River. His oral history shares family memories of floods going back to 1932 like the time a flood that year washed away most of the cabins his grandfather built. Now, Secors daughter, Mandi Secor Lipscomb, is left considering the future of the lodge in the aftermath of another devastating flood, on July 4. Secor Lipscomb is the fourth-generation owner and operator of the same lodge, Waltonia on the River.Often when I try to understand a place or process a big news event, I look for records kept by local historical societies and libraries. In archived documents, preserved photographs and oral history collections, one can start to see how a community understands itself. So, as news reports about the floods in the Central Texas Hill Country poured in throughout the week, I went looking for historical context. What local knowledge is held by people who live, or have lived, in whats repeatedly described as Flash Flood Alley? How have people in Kerr Countys past contended with floods of their own time? A trove of more than 70 oral histories recorded by the Kerr County Historical Commission begins to answer those questions. The recordings document memories of floods going back to 1900, but oral histories alone rarely tell a full or accurate story. Still, theres at least one conclusion to draw: Everything has a history. The flood that killed more than 130 people in the Kerr County area this month is not the first time a flash flood on the Guadalupe River took lives of people, including children. The front page of a local newspaper, the Kerrville Daily Times, on July 20, 1987. A flash flood killed 10 campers as they tried to evacuate. (Kerrville Daily Times via Newspapers.com) I keep this history in mind when I hear local and state officials say no one could have seen this coming. Take this exchange between a reporter and Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly:Reporter: Why werent these camps evacuated?Kelly: I cant answer that. I dont know.Reporter: Well youre the judge. I mean youre the top official here in this county. Why cant you answer that? There are kids missing. These camps were in harms way. We knew this flood was coming.Kelly: We didnt know this flood was coming. Rest assured, no one knew this kind of flood was coming. We have floods all the time. This is the most dangerous river valley in the United States. And we deal with floods on a regular basis. When it rains, we get water. We had no reason to believe that this was gonna be anything like whats happened here. None whatsoever. My colleague Jennifer Berry Hawes wrote last week about the uncanny similarities between the Texas floods and Hurricane Helene, which struck North Carolina last year. In both disasters, weather forecasts predicted the potential devastation, yet people were left in harms way. And as another colleague, ProPublica editor Abrahm Lustgarten, pointed out in a piece about how climate change is making disasters like the flood in Texas more common, there will be tireless and warranted analysis of who is to blame for this heart-wrenching loss in the weeks to come.Should Kerr County, where most of the deaths occurred, have installed warning sirens along that stretch of the waterway, and why were children allowed to sleep in an area prone to high-velocity flash flooding? Lustgarten wrote. Why were urgent updates apparently only conveyed by cellphone and online in a rural area with limited connectivity? As we wait for answers or as journalists dig for them the oral histories show Kerr County residents have warned one another, as well as newcomers and out-of-towners, about flooding for a long time. In his 2000 oral history, Secor said he remembered a time in the spring of 1959 when his father tried to warn one new-to-town woman about building a house so close to the river. He took her out and showed her the watermarks on the trees in front of our house and all, Secor said, likely referring to the watermarks from the flood of 1932, which a local newspaper described at the time as the most disastrous flood that ever swept the upper Guadalupe Valley. The flood killed at least seven people. Oh, she says, that will never happen again, Secor recalled. He said her body was found in a tree a few months later after a flood swept her and the roof she stood on away. Its going to surprise newcomers when we get another flood like the 32 flood, Secor said in 2000.Itll get us again someday. As the Guadalupe River rose over the July 4 weekend, the 16-cabin lodge his daughter owns was sold out and full of guests. All of them escaped the floods, said Secor Lipscomb. They ran, some barefoot in the mud, up a steep hill beyond the propertys retaining wall. They took shelter in a barn. Later, Secor Lipscomb assessed the damage to her family property. What she saw left her in tears: Four cabins had water up to the ceiling. Another two had flooded about 5 feet. But among the wreckage was a crew of nearly 40 volunteers, ready to help with the cleanup.By the time I reached out to her to ask her about her fathers oral history, six cabins and the main camp office were already demolished. The cabin her great-grandfather and grandfather built together more than 100 years ago still stood. But it wont for much longer. It is so damaged with water that it, too, will have to go. This is our family history, our family legacy, Secor Lipscomb told me. Of course were going to rebuild.When they do, their customers will be ready. Many of the families who survived the flood already told her theyll be first in line to book for the next available July 4.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    As Iran Deports a Million Afghans, Where Do We Even Go?
    Afghans being forced out of Iran are grappling with an uncertain future in Afghanistan, where widespread poverty and severe restrictions on women and girls await.
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    Afghan Women and Girls Deported From Iran Fear Returning to Afghanistan
    Get ready to cope was the message from an aid worker to women returning to Taliban rule in Afghanistan after their expulsion from Iran.
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    Supreme Court Keeps Ruling in Trumps Favor, but Doesnt Say Why
    In a series of terse, unsigned orders, the court has often been giving the green light to President Trumps agenda without a murmur of explanation.
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    Despite Dire Warnings, the Economy Is Holding Up. Can That Last?
    Economists say it will take time for the effects of trade policies to show up in economic data but acknowledge they arent sure how long.
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    Migration Fears Turn Europes Borderless Dreams Into Traffic Nightmares
    Germanys new government imposed border checks to demonstrate toughness on migration, though crossings started slowing years ago.
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  • WWW.UNCLOSETEDMEDIA.COM
    Tomorrow, LGBTQ Youth Will Lose a Lifeline. What Now?
    Gemma Brown used an LGBTQ crisis hotline for the first time when she was 10 years old. Photo by Kaoly Gutierrez for Uncloseted Media.Subscribe nowEditors note: This article includes mention of suicide and contains details about those who have attempted to take their own lives. If you are having thoughts of suicide or are concerned that someone you know may be, resources are available here.When Arden was 16, they called a suicide crisis hotline thinking their life was over.They were in an abusive relationship, regularly self-harming, and felt that nothing was helping. It was terrifying, they told Uncloseted Media.If it werent for the hotline, I would have killed myself.Since that day, Arden, now 24 years old and living in Brooklyn, has used various crisis helplines. When the 988 national suicide prevention hotline launched a Press 3 option in 2022 for LGBTQ youth, they immediately started using the resource.Arden, who identifies as nonbinary, says the LGBTQ hotline workers respected their identity and were understanding that they are not a woman. It was really affirming for a very troubling time in my life.Since then, Arden has Pressed 3 more times than they can remember, seeking help for everything from dealing with the loss of their friend, who died by suicide, to stupid cliquey gay people stuff.I remember when my friend had killed himself and I was dealing with a lot. I called them and they talked to me for over an hour because I was really upset, they say. When I called the hotline, it was a last resort. I was really at my wits' end.Ardenwhose last call to the lifeline was two weeks agois one of 1.3 million callers and chatters the LGBTQ youth hotline has served since it launched, according to federal data. The legislation that greenlit the national program, signed by Trump in 2020 during his first term, explicitly recognized that LGBTQ youth are more than 4 times more likely to contemplate suicide than their peers, with 1 in 5 LGBTQ youth and more than 1 in 3 transgender youth reporting attempting suicide.Photo by Kaoly Gutierrez for Uncloseted Media.This new option to Press 3 allowed queer youth in crisis the ability to directly connect with counselors from a set of specialized LGBTQ crisis centers. These counselors are trained in cultural competency and often bring lived experience, providing identityaffirming, empathetic support for challenges like coming out, discrimination or mental health crises.Despite the hotlines success, the Trump administration announced last month that they would be shutting it down on July 17, claiming that the service had run out of congressionally directed funding. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration said in an email to Uncloseted Media that continued funding of the Press 3 option threatened to put the entire 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline in danger of massive reductions in service.There are no plans, however, to shut down the other hotline options, including the Veterans Crisis Line, the Spanish Language Line and the Native and Strong Lifeline. And while Congress spent $33 million on the LGBTQ service last year, the cost of continuing it represents merely 0.006% of the $510 billion that suicide and self-harm costs the U.S. yearly.This is absolutely a mistake, a suicide prevention call center director told Uncloseted Media. We are concerned that this will result in increased suicide rates for LGBTQ youth.Why We Need Option 3The directors concern is supported by a 2022 research brief that found that queer college students with access to LGBTQ-specific services were 44% less likely to attempt suicide than those without it. Research also shows that a hotline specific to LGBTQ services increases the likelihood of queer youth calling.It's true for any direct service, Harmony Rhoades, associate research professor of sociology at Washington University, told Uncloseted Media. People who are in substance use recovery want to work with people who've gone through recovery themselves because they understand what that experience is. Culturally, there is not a lot of understanding of the specific experiences of someone who is LGBTQ and without specific training, a crisis counselor isnt going to be able to know the language that's going to feel affirming.Gemma Brown near High Point, North Carolina. Photo by Kaoly Gutierrez for Uncloseted Media.Connecting with someone who gets it was really helpful. Because at home, I was so isolated and I didnt really interact with other queer people, says Gemma Brown, who used the Trevor Projects chat function at 10 years old. I was an extremely self-loathing, suicidal kid who was under the impression that God hated me and I was gonna burn in hell for eternity, Brown, now 15 and living in High Point, North Carolina, told Uncloseted Media.I only used the chat feature because I was scared my parents would hear me. We shared a wall, she says. I was spiraling really bad. Id just realized I was crushing on girls, and I thought I was going to burn in hell for all eternity because that is what we are taught.Raised in a Southern Baptist Church, Brown never felt safe at home, where her father would regularly spit slurs like faggots and queers. At church, every sermon was about Sodom and Gomorrah or about how real love only existed between a man and a woman.I grew up knowing the number one thing not to be was one of the dirty queers, she says. I kept thinking, I can kill myself now and go to hell, or live longer and still go to hell. I used to have panic attacks at 9, 10 years old, just thinking about burning in hell perpetually.Photo by Kaoly Gutierrez for Uncloseted Media.Subscribe for accountability journalism.Brown remembers Caitlin, the chat counselor who helped her, being the first ever to tell her that queer love was valid.She told me shed been with her girlfriend for seven years. I didnt even believe queer people could be happy. It broke my brain in the best possible way, says Brown, who is now out and proud to her parents, who have come around, and to most of her friends on social media.Gemma and her Mom, Melanie. Photo by Kaoly Guttierez for Uncloseted Media. Arden had a similar experience. The queer line is better than the regular line, they say. I feel like its less like going through a checklist on the queer line.As a survivor of sexual assault, Arden says knowing that the counselors on the other line were trained in LGBTQ-specific trauma made it easier to reach out for help. My voice doesnt pass per se but they still respected my identity, they say.LGBTQ-specific resources for youth are critical, with 41% seriously considering suicide in 2024. In addition, queer youth are disproportionately affected by a litany of mental health issues and trauma, including physical and sexual assault, anxiety, depression, eating disorders, bullying and addiction.It's not like we're cherry-picking some random group, says Rhoades. If we are going to fund [suicide prevention], there is no reason we should do it inefficiently by not effectively targeting the people who need it most. So yes, they need specific suicide prevention services.While the hotline focuses on LGBTQ youth, they dont turn away adults who need help. Joshua Dial, 36, says that when he called 988, he was often connected to the LGBTQ youth hotline after mentioning that hes gay. I always walked away feeling better after I called," he says. There have been times when I spoke to the regular 988 crisis people, and they helped too. But they didn't understand quite as much.Dial, a Lutheran who lives in Stillwater, Oklahoma, says he wasnt always comfortable being open about his sexual orientation to his religious community and that the only way to meet other gay people was on hook-up and dating apps, which he notes are not for emotional support.I wouldn't be talking to my pastor about getting on Grindr. I can't go to my pastor and tell them what I did last weekend, he says.Photo courtesy of Dial.Dial, who was raised to believe that homosexuality is a sin, has experienced depression since the age of 16 and has also struggled with bipolar disorder, addiction and PTSD. My addiction was getting worse, and the only constant was that the line was always available, he says. I didn't have any other options, but I knew that if I called the hotline, I would get help.Dial says the emotional support he received through these phone calls kept him from self-harm and suicide. There are times when I called that number and was this close to taking a handful of pills, this close to slitting my wrist, this close to buying a gun to shoot myself. And I talked to those people, and they not only understood, but they gave me the empowerment of knowing that someone had my back.How Cutting Option 3 Affects the Whole SystemWhile the cuts are only meant to affect the hotlines support for LGBTQ youth, crisis center employees say theyll impact the entire 988 network.This being rifted does very much mean less capacity for 988 as a whole, says the suicide prevention call center director. Everyone will be affected.When the LGBTQ hotline opened up, it really lowered the volume on the mainstream counselors, a 988 hotline counselor in Washington state told Uncloseted Media. It seemed really helpful, and I didnt get a lot of LGBTQ chats after that point.The counselor at the Washington state center says they are about to lay off 42 counselors from their LGBTQ hotline. They say these roles wont be replaced on the main 988 line due to a hiring freeze. Because of this, counselors expect the number of calls they receive to double, which could dramatically increase wait times. The Washington state center did not respond to a request for comment.Even without the cuts, wait times are an issue. A 17-year-old caller from Virginia says that even the 10 minutes they had to wait for their call to be answered were painful. I was worried that nobody would want to talk to me. I was just feeling hopeless, they say. There's this one resource that I'm supposed to be able to have access to 24/7, but it just isn't as accessible as it should be. For some people, those 10 minutes are crucial.In a 2009 study of 82 patients referred to a psychiatric university hospital after a suicide attempt, nearly half reported that the period between their first thought of suicide and their actual attempt had lasted 10 minutes or less, underscoring how shorter wait times can be a matter of life and death.If we are not able to catch someone during the time that suicidal thoughts have appeared and intervene as quickly as possible, they could start figuring out how they're going to kill themselves and make it happen, says the suicide prevention call center director. And a lot of folks have access to means that can result in instant death like firearms.What Can Be Done?With the Press 3 option gone, Rhoades worries that the current spate of anti-LGBTQ legislation and hateful rhetoric toward the community will affect how counselors without queer-specific training will provide care. Were living in an unprecedented time where anti-LGBTQ hatred is being normalized, she says. It absolutely affects how young people are treated. And it filters down to crisis counselors.As Congress and the Trump administration prepare to shut down Press 3 on July 17 in an effort to save money, many believe that it will have the reverse effect.They just want these people to die. That's the message I got, says a hotline operator in Washington state, adding that the administration is not looking at the bigger picture.Subscribe nowRepresentatives and advocates are fighting for more LGBTQ mental health services. Kansas Rep. Sharice Davids reintroduced a bill last month dedicated to LGBTQ mental health resources. By increasing access to mental health support for our children and teens, we can save lives, Davids said in a press release. And last weekend, hundreds of people protested in front of Trump Tower in an effort to save the hotline.Arden says they wouldnt be here today without the lines support. I've been struggling for a long time in my life [with] self-harm and I've been clean almost two years now, they say. I would definitely not be clean if it werent for the hotline and I would probably hurt myself again.LGBTQ Crisis Helplines Still Available:The Franklin County Youth Psychiatric Crisis Line: 614-722-1800The Huckleberry House for youth experiencing homelessness also offers a teen crisis shelter helpline: 614-294-5553The Trevor Project has a crisis hotline: 1-866-488-7386Theres also a National LGBTQ Hotline: 888-843-4564Blue Lemon Counseling is also a safe space: 419-377-7576More crisis helplines can be found here.Additional reporting by Spencer Macnaughton.If objective, nonpartisan, rigorous, LGBTQ-focused journalism is important to you, please consider making a tax-deductible donation through our fiscal sponsor, Resource Impact, by clicking this button:Donate to Uncloseted Media
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    How to de-Americanize global science
    Nature, Published online: 16 July 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-02215-4The US science crisis presents an opportunity to reinvent funding and management of the global research enterprise.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Belichick pushes back on Kraft: Pats job 'big risk'
    On the heels of comments by Robert Kraft, Bill Belichick says he was the one who took the risk to join the Patriots in 1999.
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    Top storylines for NFL training camps: Positional battles, rookie breakouts, injury news
    What are the most important positional battles and injuries to monitor at NFL training camps? Ben Solak gives his picks.
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    Who are the NFL's best wide receivers? Execs, coaches and scouts help rank 2025's top 10
    Who are the top 10 receivers in the NFL? Execs, coaches and scouts rank Ja'Marr Chase, Justin Jefferson and other stars.
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    Waiver wire: Start the second half strong with these pickups
    As the MLB season's second half gets ready to begin, here are the players you should claim off the fantasy waiver wire.
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    Man United bring back classic '90s 'snowflake' away kit for 2025-26
    Manchester United have brought back a popular design from the early 1990s.
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    Ballys Bronx Casino Plan Appears Dead After Council Rejects Rezoning
    The City Council vote all but dooms the companys chances of obtaining one of up to three casino licenses that New York State is expected to award this year.
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  • Christopher Reeve to David Corenswet: The Actors Who Played Superman
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    Hollywoods Master of Dread Is Afraid of Everything
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    Upended by Meth, Some Communities Are Paying Users to Quit
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    Democrats cheer as GOP governor vetoes two anti-LGBTQ+ bills
    New Hampshires Republican Gov. Kelly Ayotte vetoed several anti-LGBTQ+ bills on Tuesday, including an anti-trans bathroom bill, a book banning bill, and a ban on teachers giving students get to know you questionnaires without parental permission.State Republicans lack the two-thirds majority needed in both the House and Senate to override the governors vetoes. Related GOP governor vetoes several anti-LGBTQ+ measures while letting others become law Advocates still celebrated the partial victory, attributing the governors vetoes to community action. One of the vetoed bills, H.B. 324, would have made it easier for parents to challenge and remove any school library materials that depict nudity, sexuaI conduct, [or] sexuaI excitement that is patently offensive to prevailing standards in the adult community with respect to what is suitable for minors. Never Miss a Beat Subscribe to our newsletter to stay ahead of the latest LGBTQ+ political news and insights. Subscribe to our Newsletter today School principals would be given 10 days to decide whether the materials violated the law and to notify complaining parents about their decision. Parents could appeal the decision to local school boards and the State Board of Education. Parents could also file civil suits against any non-compliant schools, and the state board could discipline any non-compliant educators.Opponents of the bill noted that similar laws have been used to censor age-appropriate books with LGBTQ+ themes. Teachers unions objected to the bills professional consequences for educators who refused to comply, Seacoast Online reported.In her veto message, Ayotte said the state already had procedures in place for parents to opt their children out of any instructional materials that they object to, provided that alternate materials are made available.The National Education Association of New Hampshire, the states largest teachers union, called the bill classroom censorship effort.Every student deserves to see themselves reflected in the pages of their books, said NEA New Hampshire President Megan Tuttle in a statement. Ayotte also vetoed H.B. 148, a bill that wouldve allowed businesses and organizations to ban transgender people from using facilities matching their gender identity, even in jails and mental health facilities.I believe there are important and legitimate privacy and safety concerns raised by biological males using places such as female locker rooms and being placed in female correctional facilities, Ayotte wrote in her veto message. At the same time, I see that House Bill 148 is overly broad and impractical to enforce, potentially creating an exclusionary environment for some of our citizens.Following the governors vetoes, House Democratic Leader Alexis Simpson said, Were grateful that today New Hampshire chose to protect the rights and dignity of our transgender neighbors and House Democrats will keep fighting until every Granite Stater can live freely, openly, and safely, no matter who they are.Ayotte also vetoed H.B. 446, a bill that required parents to opt in for their students to participate in any non-academic surveys. She worried the bill would lower participation in the CDCs Youth Risk Behavior Survey, an anonymous survey measuring students mental health and drug use.Subscribe to theLGBTQ Nation newsletterand be the first to know about the latest headlines shaping LGBTQ+ communities worldwide.
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    How a bipolar diagnosis benefits my research
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    Punchlines for peace
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    Transfer rumors, news: Liverpool to rival Arsenal for Real Madrid's Rodrygo
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