• More adults are wondering if they have autism. Here are tips to seek a diagnosis
    apnews.com
    Natasha Nelson, who was diagnosed with autism in August 2023, just after her youngest daughter was also diagnosed, sits in a sensory room she uses to calm her children in her Stone Mountain, Ga. home on Friday, Feb. 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Ben Gray)2025-02-17T14:05:11Z ATLANTA (AP) Natasha Nelson, a 35-year old entrepreneur in Stone Mountain, Georgia, didnt have an innate sense of social norms. She didnt know why people meeting for the first time would choose to engage in small talk instead of deep conversations, or why people like to make their beds.Then, a few years ago, she was diagnosed with autism, just after her youngest daughter received the same. If your life has always felt like it was in chaos and you dont feel comfortable and you dont feel like you thrive and you just feel like youre constantly surviving and going from one thing to the next, what you got to lose? Nelson said, encouraging people to seek a diagnosis. Common signs of autism include trouble with social communication and a fixation on certain routines or topics Nelson says people have become my special interest now and may go unnoticed during someones childhood.But it can be costly and difficult to obtain an autism diagnosis later in life due to a shortage of medical professionals trained to work specifically with adults. Heres more information on what you should know about adult autism diagnoses. What is autism and when is it usually diagnosed?Autism spectrum disorder is a range of intellectual, language and social difficulties, like rigidly following routines, having fixed or obsessive interests and struggling to hold eye contact or understand nonverbal communication. Autism is typically diagnosed during childhood, and the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends all children be screened as early as 18 months. Why are more adults being diagnosed with autism?More adults have sought insight on their own neurodiversity in the last decade often after their children are diagnosed or after seeing social media posts. A study published last year in JAMA Network Open showed a 452% increase in autism diagnoses among adults age 26 to 34 from 2011 to 2022. Some traits of autism can go unnoticed until adulthood, when there are new social demands. Others may have learned how to hide certain behaviors, known as masking. Adults have learned to compensate over time, said Whitney Ence, a psychologist at the University of California San Francisco who works with autistic adults. They may have learned like I cant display that in public, and so I do that in private.Theres also an overlap of symptoms between various disorders like ADHD and OCD that can complicate an autism diagnosis due to difficulties with nonverbal social cues or executive functions like attention span, working memory and problem-solving. What are the symptoms of autism in adults?Symptoms present differently for everyone, and many of the traits are common for people without autism, like enjoying routines or enjoying going down rabbit holes of information. But to meet the diagnostic definition of autism, the symptoms must cause significant impairment, said Dr. Arthur Westover, a psychiatrist who specializes in autism at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center.Were human beings in general. We like routines ... just having a bit of pleasure and feeling better with routines does not mean youre autistic, Westover said. It goes a little bit deeper than that. Russell Lehmann, 34, has lived with his autism diagnosis for more than 20 years. The motivational speaker has routines that he describes as both comfortable and stressful. Eating the same food and buying the same groceries, he said, brings him comfort. But if he skips going to the gym for an hour and a half every day, he becomes overwhelmed with feelings of depression and failure. Its like no gym, no day, he said. ... My routine is an incredibly existential burden, because every night I go to bed knowing I have to do a routine I do not like simply to function. How does a diagnosis work?While there are various online screening tools, autism is a complex diagnosis, so experts recommend talking to your primary care physician for a psychiatry referral. That psychiatrist might want to interview people who were present in your early childhood, like family and friends, who can attest to symptoms being present at that time. Some psychiatrists may refer you to a psychologist, who can give you a standardized diagnostic autism test or will use their own clinical judgement. There is no brain scan or blood test for autism. Getting an autism diagnosis as an adult can be costly and take some time. Westover said theres a major shortage of specialists who work with autistic adults. Nelsons diagnosis took three years and she paid more than $3,000 out-of-pocket. Ence also suggests that you ask yourself a few questions when considering getting a professional diagnosis, and to know that you may run into a waitlist: What is leading me down this pathway to think that I need a professional diagnosis? Do I need access to services? Are there services I dont have available to me? ___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. KENYA HUNTER Hunter is an Atlanta-based public health reporter for The Associated Press, covering disabilities and sexual health. mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Trump Directive Dangerously Conflates Gender-Affirming Care with a Human Rights Violation
    www.unclosetedmedia.com
    By Jasmine MithaniThis story was originally published by the 19th, a nonprofit news network. The 19th.Subscribe nowA network working to end female genital mutilation and cutting (FGM/C) in the United States and globally says President Donald Trumps January 28 executive order attempting to restrict gender-affirming care for transgender youth wrongly and dangerously conflates the two.Opponents of transgender rights have sought for several years to co-opt anti-FGM/C laws to further gender-affirming care bans, mostly in state legislatures. The executive order builds on these efforts by directing the Department of Justice and state authorities to review and prioritize the enforcement of laws banning FGM/C, which are unrelated.FGM/C is a human rights violation and one of the most extreme forms of gender-based violence. According to the World Health Organization, FGM/C comprises all procedures that involve partial or total removal of the external female genitalia, or other injury to the female genital organs for non-medical reasons. It is practiced across many cultures and takes many forms, and is most commonly performed on young girls who are unable to consent. There are no health benefits to FGM/C, and it is more likely to cause medical complications.Subscribe nowIn contrast, gender-affirming genital surgeries like phalloplasty or metoidioplasty are medically necessary and done only with the consent of the patient. The World Professional Association for Transgender Health, the international body that publishes research-backed standards of care, does not recommend genital gender-affirming care surgeries for patients under 18. Extensive documentation from medical professionals is required for any medically necessary gender-affirming care surgery.It is estimated that in 2012, over half a million girls in the United States had either undergone FGM/C or were at risk based on the country of origin of their parents. Survivor advocates think the number could be much higher now.FGM/C has been a federal crime since 1996. The law has been revised several times most recently in 2020, when Trump signed the STOP FGM Act, which prevented defendents from using religious or cultural reasons to avoid prosecution.Forty-one states also ban FGM/C, and the laws vary, said Mariya Taher, the co-founder and executive of Sahiyo, the most prominent nonprofit dedicated to eliminating FGM/C domestically. Only a few states have comprehensive legislation, including civil remedies for survivors, education outreach and law enforcement training. Among them is Massachusetts. Taher worked for seven years to pass that law, and is now advocating for a similar bill in Connecticut. You need to do more than just make it illegal, she said.Subscribe nowThe potential weaponization of anti-FGM/C laws against transgender people has been on the radar for U.S. advocates for several years, Taher said, because they have seen attempts made on the state level.Anti-trans extremists have warped these laws to ban health care for trans people despite clear medical and ethical distinctions, said Ash Lazarus Orr, press relations manager at Advocates for Trans Equality. Orr also pointed out that this rhetoric excludes non-consensual surgeries performed on intersex youth. Many bans include a carve-out ensuring corrective surgeries remain legal for minors with intersex characteristics.Republican lawmakers in Idaho and Texas introduced bills in 2022 that would remove the word female from current legal codes banning FGM/C. Anti-FGM/C advocates helped defeat those bills, but Idaho ended up passing a separate law banning gender-affirming care for transgender youth the next year.Excluding the word female means these laws no longer prevent FGM/C because they then refer to something else entirely, said Kaitlin Mitchell, policy and advocacy coordinator at the U.S. Network to End FGM/C. Using the laws to restrict gender-affirming care instead of addressing the specific issue they were designed to make it harder for advocates to campaign for more funding or research on this little-known, severe form of gender-based violence.All the activists The 19th spoke with emphasized the importance of doing no harm to the transgender community while working to combat FGM/C. This is important too because not all survivors of FGM/C are cisgender women.Several groups hosted a briefing at the Connecticut legislature in January 2024 to discuss the importance of a state law against FGM/C. A local conservative pro-family advocacy group took the opportunity to conflate FGM/C and gender-affirming care for minors, falsely saying that the state was paying for the genital mutilation of minors. The group called attention to six cases in which patients with Medicaid or CHIP received procedures coded as mastectomies nothing to do with genitals.The legal definitions of FGM/C inherently exclude gender-affirming care, wrote Anastasia Law, the program officer for North America at Equality Now, a feminist organization supporting the rights of women and girls worldwide. FGM/C is non-consensual and without any medical purpose, whereas [gender-affirming care] is provided with robust informed consent processes and for recognized medical purposes, she continued.The U.S. Network to End FGM/C, where Mitchell works, released a statement last week condemning the executive order. Any attempt to shift focus away from protecting girls from FGM/C, preventing this specific violence, and providing services to those affected by FGM/C, especially for political purposes, is misguided and extremely harmful, it reads.Activists arent the only people fighting back against Trumps directive to use FGM/C laws to prevent gender-affirming care. Fourteen Democratic attorneys general issued a statement February 5 saying there is no connection between the two.As state attorneys general, we stand firmly in support of healthcare policies that respect the dignity and rights of all people, the statement reads. Health care decisions should be made by patients, families, and doctors, not by a politician trying to use his power to restrict your freedoms.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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  • Police arrest apparent leader of cultlike Zizian group linked to multiple killings in the US
    apnews.com
    This July 2020 photo provided by the family shows Emma Borhanian in San Francisco, whose 2022 death in Vallejo, Calif., is one of six that have been linked to a fringe group of computer scientists. (Family Photo via AP)2025-02-17T20:01:01Z BOSTON (AP) The apparent leader of a cultlike group known as the Zizians has been arrested in Maryland along with another member of the group, Maryland State Police said Monday.Jack Lasota, 34, was arrested Sunday along with Michelle Zajko, 33, of Media, Pennsylvania. They face multiple charges including trespassing, obstructing and hindering and possession of a handgun in the vehicle.A bail hearing for the the two is scheduled for 11 a.m. Tuesday at Allegany District Court.The Zizians have been tied to the killing of U.S. Border Patrol Agent David Maland near the Canadian border in January and five other homicides in Vermont, Pennsylvania and California. Maland, 44, was killed in a Jan. 20 shootout following a traffic stop in Coventry, Vermont, a small town about 20 miles (32 kilometers) from the Canadian border.Officials have offered few details of the cross-country investigation, which broke open after the Jan. 20 shooting death of Maland. Associated Press interviews and a review of court records and online postings tell the story of how a group of young, highly intelligent computer scientists, most of them in their 20s and 30s, met online, shared anarchist beliefs, and became increasingly violent. Their goals arent clear, but online writings span topics from radical veganism and gender identity to artificial intelligence.At the middle of it all is Ziz, who appears to be the leader of the strange group members who called themselves Zizians. She has been seen near multiple crime scenes and has connections to various suspects. LaSota published a dark and sometimes violent blog under the name Ziz and, in one section, described her theory that the two hemispheres of the brain could hold separate values and genders and often desire to kill each other.LaSota, who used she/her pronouns, and in her writings says she is a transgender woman, railed against perceived enemies, including so-called rationalist groups, which operate mostly online and seek to understand human cognition through reason and knowledge. Some are concerned with the potential dangers of artificial intelligence. LaSota, 34, has not responded to multiple Associated Press emails in recent weeks, and her attorney Daniel McGarrigle declined to comment when asked whether she is connected to any of the deaths. Before her weekend arrest, she missed court appearances in two states, and bench warrants have been issued for her arrest. Reached on Monday, McGarrigle would only confirm that he has represented LaSota and wouldnt confirm her arrest or any details of the latest case. MICHAEL CASEY Casey writes about the environment, housing and inequality for The Associated Press. He lives in Boston. twitter mailto
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  • The anti-Musk protest movement is expected to ramp up with Congress on recess
    apnews.com
    Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks during a rally against the policies of President Donald Trump and Elon Musk at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)2025-02-17T14:07:00Z NEW YORK (AP) Donald Trump is the president, but billionaire Elon Musk is the focus for thousands of Democratic activists launching a protest campaign this week to fight the Trump administrations push to gut federal health, education and human services agencies.Hundreds of protests are scheduled outside congressional offices and Tesla dealerships, with organizers hoping to send a pointed message to members of Congress who are on recess this week.The backlash still hasnt approached the intensity of protests during and after Trumps first inauguration eight years ago. But a loose coalition of Democrats and progressives is coalescing around Musks rise as Trumps top lieutenant and his purge of the federal bureaucracy.Hes a major weak link in the MAGA coalition, Ezra Levin, co-founder of the progressive group Indivisible, said of Musk. I cant think of something that polls worse than the richest man in the world is coming after your Social Security check or your Meals on Wheels or your Head Start. Indivisible, which claims more than 1,300 local chapters nationwide, is encouraging members to protest at the offices of their members of Congress, regardless of political party. The group also offered a step-by-step guide for protesting at dealerships for Tesla, Musks electric vehicle company.The memo encourages protesters to stay on sidewalks and public spaces and to avoid any actions that might directly interfere with business operations, such as blocking entrances or trespassing on private property. It also calls for Tesla protesters to stay on message: This is about Musks political takeover, not Tesla, SpaceX, or X as companies. People protesting Elon Musks actions in the Trump administration hold signs outside a Tesla showroom in Seattle on Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Manuel Valdes) People protesting Elon Musks actions in the Trump administration hold signs outside a Tesla showroom in Seattle on Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Manuel Valdes) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is launching what hes calling a national tour to fight oligarchy with stops in working-class districts of Iowa and Nebraska this week. Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin will hit the road for the first time as party leader as well. The newly elected DNC chair will travel to Pennsylvania, Texas, Illinois, Wisconsin and Missouri in the coming days to meet with local Democratic officials and labor leaders, spokesperson Hannah Muldavin said. Like the protesters, Martin is expected to seize on Musks role. During a meeting with labor leaders in Pittsburgh, for example, he plans to highlight Musks recent focus on the Department of Labor, which could put the integrity of data like the unemployment rate and inflation rate at risk, which is important for a stable U.S. economy and, by extension, working people, Muldavin said.Aware of the intense displeasure from their partys base, many House Democrats plan to be proactive. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., right, is joined by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., for a press conference in Statuary Hall at the Capitol, Feb. 12, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr., File) House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., right, is joined by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., for a press conference in Statuary Hall at the Capitol, Feb. 12, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr., File) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Newly elected Democratic National Committee Chairman Ken Martin speaks after winning the vote at the Democratic National Committee Winter Meeting in National Harbor, Md., Feb. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr., File) Newly elected Democratic National Committee Chairman Ken Martin speaks after winning the vote at the Democratic National Committee Winter Meeting in National Harbor, Md., Feb. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr., File) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More The House Democratic Policy and Communications Committee issued a memo ahead of the recess instructing Democrats to embrace nine days of visibility and said it was essential for members to host one town hall, in-person or via telephone, and at least one community event that highlights the devastating impacts of Trump and Musks actions. The wave of protests comes at a critical moment as fractured Democrats struggle to stop the Republican presidents purge of the federal bureaucracy, which features thousands of layoffs inside departments focused on public health, education, veterans affairs and human services, among others. Firings in recent days at the Department of Veterans Affairs include researchers working on cancer treatment, opioid addiction, prosthetics and burn pit exposure, according to U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, a Democrat from Washington state. The cuts also include more than 5,000 employees at the Department of Health and Human Services and roughly one-tenth of the workforce at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.In some cases, Musks team is trying with Trumps blessing but without congressional approval to shutter entire agencies, including the U.S. Agency for International Development, the Department of Education and the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.Trump has defended the cuts as necessary to eliminate waste and fraud. And he has praised Musks work with his Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, saying it has found shocking evidence of wasteful spending. He signed an executive order expanding Musks influence. Musk, meanwhile, has defended the swift and extensive cuts hes pushing across the federal government while acknowledging there have been mistakes.Democrats in Congress condemn the moves as dangerous, but without control of either chamber of Congress, there is little they can do to stop the Trump administration aside from turning to the courts. Still, three of the nations largest progressive groups Indivisible, MoveOn and the Working Families Party are coordinating this weeks protests to send a clear message to elected officials in both major political parties that they must do more. Still, Democratic members of Congress may face their own voters fury.MoveOn, which boasts a membership of nearly 10 million, is hosting dozens of rallies outside town halls and congressional offices for those members who do not host public events. The group will focus on persuadable House Republicans whose votes will be crucial to opposing the Trump-Musk agenda, according to a preview of its recess week plan. But there will also be rallies targeting House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, both of New York, among other Democrats.We are seeing a true resurgence in energy opposing what Trump, Musk and Republicans are doing to our country, MoveOn executive director Rahna Epting said, adding that people are mad as hell. The Working Families Party is focusing protests in the districts of vulnerable Republicans in states such as California, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The actions will feature people directly impacted by the Trump administrations cuts, including special education teachers, nurses and Head Start workers, according to Working Families spokesman Ravi Mangla.A lot of Republicans, Mangla said, have not have had their feet held to the fire.
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  • Inside Love Is a Drag a night where drag performers radically embraced queer joy in Alabama
    www.pride.com
    Alabama is embracing queer joy! Yes, even in this economy. Recently Central Alabama Pride and Beyond the Rainbow Productions teamed up for an incredible night of drag performances, community togetherness, and a radical rejection of anti-LGBTQ+ hate for their event Love Is a Drag: A Celebration of Art, Expression, and Resilience. It was an unforgettable night filled with incredible drag performances from queens including National Entertainer of the Year Gemini and RuPauls Drag Race season 17 star Kori King. The energy was crackling with a profound sense of community. It wasnt just a drag show, it was a bold, unapologetic celebration of the resilience of our community but a celebration of art and queer love. That it was taking place in Alabama was particularly poignant at a time when that community, like many others around the nation, is facing an onslaught of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation. This night was created as a political statement in direct defiance of that as well as a reminder that no matter the political climate, the LGBTQ+ community will continue to take up space, celebrate its identity, and lift each other through creativity and expression, according to the events press release. "Drag is an art form that has always been rooted in resilience, said Josh Coleman, President of Central Alabama Pride. Its about celebrating who we are, telling our stories, and creating spaces where authenticity thrives. In the face of adversity, events like this remind us of our strength, our unity, and our unwavering commitment to visibility."Keep scrolling for a peek into the incredible nights events. Follow TChelle Monroe on Instagram here. Follow Flap Jack on Instagram here. Follow Kharris on Instagram here. Follow Kam Kam on Instagram here. Follow Dominique Divine on Instagram here. Follow Kori King on Instagram here. Follow T'Chelle on Instagram here. Follow Genesis on Instagram here.Follow Kori King on Instagram here.Follow Kam Kam on Instagram here.Follow Kam Kam on Instagram here.Follow Flap Jack on Instagram here. Follow Flap Jack on Instagram here. Follow Kori King on Instagram here.Follow Kori King on Instagram here.Follow Kori King on Instagram here.Follow Kharris on Instagram here.Follow Genesis on Instagram here. Follow Central Alabama Pride on Instagram here.
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  • Elon Musks DOGE seeks access to taxpayer data at IRS: AP sources
    apnews.com
    The sign outside the Internal Revenue Service building is seen. May 4, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)2025-02-17T21:14:06Z WASHINGTON (AP) Elon Musks Department of Government Efficiency is seeking access to troves of sensitive taxpayer data at the IRS, two people familiar with the inner workings of the plan who were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly told The Associated Press on Monday. If successful, Musk and his group would have access to millions of tightly controlled files that include taxpayer information, bank records and other sensitive records. The people who spoke to the AP and requested anonymity said DOGE is specifically seeking to access the IRS Integrated Data Retrieval System, which enables employees to have instantaneous visual access to certain taxpayer accounts, according to the IRS website.Advocates fear that the potential unlawful release of taxpayer records could be used to maliciously target Americans, violate their privacy and create other ramifications. Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman, said in an emailed statement that waste, fraud, and abuse have been deeply entrenched in our broken system for far too long. It takes direct access to the system to identify and fix it. DOGE will continue to shine a light on the fraud they uncover as the American people deserve to know what their government has been spending their hard earned tax dollars on, he said. Democratic lawmakers are trying to fight against DOGE plans to access IRS data. Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., sent a letter Monday to acting IRS Commissioner Douglas ODonnell, demanding copies of any memos that would grant IRS system access to Musk or DOGE. The senators are also seeking justifications for DOGE efforts to inspect tax returns and private bank records. Along with fears that DOGE access to taxpayer data may not be legal, we are also extremely concerned that DOGE personnel meddling with IRS systems in the middle of tax filing season could, inadvertently or otherwise, cause breakdowns that may delay the issuance of tax refunds indefinitely, the letter reads. Any delay in refunds could be financially devastating to millions of Americans who plan their budgets around timely refunds every spring.Jan. 27 was the official start date of the 2025 tax season, and the IRS expects more than 140 million tax returns to be filed by the April 15 deadline. The Washington Post on Sunday first reported on DOGEs plans to access taxpayer data. The news comes as the IRS plans to lay off thousands of probationary workers in the middle of tax season, according to two sources familiar with the agencys plans who were unauthorized to discuss them publicly. Cuts could happen as soon as this week. Previously, IRS employees involved in the 2025 tax season were told they will not be allowed to accept a buyout offer from the Trump administration until after the taxpayer filing deadline, according to a letter sent recently to IRS employees.Additionally, attorneys general from 14 states challenged the authority of DOGE to access sensitive government data housed at Treasury and exercise virtually unchecked power in a lawsuit filed Thursday. The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Washington, says the actions taken by Musk at the helm of DOGE can only be taken by a nominated and Senate-confirmed official. It cites constitutional provisions that delineate the powers of Congress and the president.A new account on Musks social media site X, called DOGE IRS, says, DOGE is seeking help from the public! The account asks users to reach out with insights on finding and fixing waste, fraud and abuse relating to the Internal Revenue Service. FATIMA HUSSEIN Hussein reports on the U.S. Treasury Department for The Associated Press. She covers tax policy, sanctions and any issue that relates to money. twitter mailto
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  • Four top New York City officials resign as turmoil ripples over Mayor Adams corruption case
    apnews.com
    This image provided by Office of the New York Mayor shows New York Mayor Eric Adams as he speaks during an address from City Hall, Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025. (Ed Reed/Office of the New York Mayor via AP)2025-02-17T21:13:36Z NEW YORK (AP) Four top deputies to New York City Mayor Eric Adams are resigning in the latest fallout from the Justice Departments push to end a corruption case against Adams and ensure his cooperation in President Donald Trumps immigration crackdown a bargain that has raised questions about the mayors political independence and ability to lead the city.In a statement Monday, Adams confirmed the departures of First Deputy Mayor Maria Torres-Springer, Deputy Mayor for Operations Meera Joshi, Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services Anne Williams-Isom and Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Chauncey Parker.I am disappointed to see them go, but given the current challenges, I understand their decision and wish them nothing but success in the future, said Adams, who faces several challengers in Junes Democratic primary. But let me be crystal clear: New York City will keep moving forward, just as it does every day. City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams became the latest Democrat to call on the mayor to resign, saying that with the deputy mayor resignations its clear he has now lost the confidence and trust of his own staff, his colleagues in government, and New Yorkers. Speaker Adams is not related to the mayor.Torres-Springer, Joshi and Williams-Isom told agency heads and staff in a memo that they were exiting because of the extraordinary events of the last few weeks. They did not give a date for their departures, but Adams said they and Parker will remain for the time being to ensure a seamless transition.Adams has faced increasing scrutiny since the Justice Departments second-in-command ordered federal prosecutors in Manhattan last week to drop the mayors corruption case. Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove wrote that the case had unduly restricted Mayor Adams ability to devote full attention and resources to the illegal immigration and violent crime. That directive touched off firestorms within the Justice Department and New York political circles, with seven federal prosecutors quitting in protest including the interim U.S. attorney for Manhattan and fellow Democrats calling on Adams to resign.On Friday, after a week of recriminations and resignations, Bove and a pair of Justice Department officials from Washington stepped in and filed paperwork asking Manhattan federal Judge Dale E. Ho to dismiss the case. Ho has yet to take action on the request.Adams, a former police captain, pleaded not guilty last September to charges that he accepted more than $100,000 in illegal campaign contributions and lavish travel perks from foreign nationals looking to buy his influence while he was Brooklyn borough president campaigning to be mayor.The Justice Department said in its filing Friday that it was seeking to dismiss Adams charges with the option of refiling them later, which critics see as a carrot to ensure his compliance on the Republican presidents objectives. In his memo ordering prosecutors to ditch the case, Bove said the new, permanent U.S. attorney would review the matter after the November election. It certainly sounds like President Trump is holding the mayor hostage, Rev. Al Sharpton, an Adams ally, said Tuesday. I have supported the mayor, but he has been put in an unfair position even for him of essentially political blackmail.Political leaders, including Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez and Nydia Velzquez, and Lt. Gov. Antonio Delgado, have called on Adams to step down. But Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul has said shes taking a more deliberative approach. The allegations are extremely concerning and serious, but I cannot as the governor of this state have a knee-jerk, politically motivated reaction like a lot of other people are saying right now, she told MSNBC on Thursday. Ive got to do it smart, whats right and Im consulting with other leaders in government right now.The drama over Adams legal case played out as the mayor met with Trumps border czar in New York on Thursday and announced increased cooperation on the Trump administrations efforts to remove immigrants, including reestablishing an office for immigration authorities at the citys notorious Rikers Island jail. In their memo to staff announcing their exits, Torres-Springer, Joshi and Williams-Isom wrote: Due to the extraordinary events of the last few weeks and to stay faithful to the oaths we swore to New Yorkers and our families, we have come to the difficult decision to step down from our roles. JAKE OFFENHARTZ Offenhartz is a general assignment reporter in the New York City bureau of The Associated Press. twitter mailto MICHAEL R. SISAK Sisak is an Associated Press reporter covering law enforcement and courts in New York City, including former President Donald Trumps criminal and civil cases and problems plaguing the federal prison system. twitter mailto
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  • Delta Airlines flight flips over on landing at Torontos Pearson Airport and 8 people are hurt
    apnews.com
    This image taken from video provided by CTV shows emergency crews responding at Toronto Pearson Airport after a plane crash, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025. (CTV via AP)2025-02-17T20:45:42Z TORONTO (AP) A Delta Airlines plane flipped upon arrival at Torontos Pearson Airport on Monday and at least eight people are injured.The airport confirmed on X that an incident occurred with the Delta flight from Minneapolis and that all passengers and crew are accounted for. One passenger is critically injured and seven others were also hurt, paramedics said. Video from the scene showed the plane upside down on the snowy tarmac as emergency workers hose it down. The plane was somewhat obscured by snow from a winter storm that hit Toronto over the weekend.Emergency teams are responding, the airport said in a post on the social platform X. All passengers and crew are accounted for.Delta said in a statement it was aware of reports of Endeavor Flight 4819 operating from Minneapolis/St. Paul to Toronto-Pearson International Airport as involved in an incident. Ontarios Premier Doug Ford said on X he is relieved there are no casualties after the incident at Toronto Pearson. Provincial officials are in contact with the airport and local authorities and will provide any help thats needed, Ford said. Toronto is the capital of Ontarios province.It is at least the fourth major aviation mishap in North America in the past month. A commercial jetliner and an Army helicopter collided near the nations capital on Jan. 29, killing 67 people. A medical transportation plane crashed in Philadelphia on Jan. 31, killing the six people on board and another person on the ground and 10 were killed in a plane crash in Alaska. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • A look at recent aviation disasters in North America
    apnews.com
    This photo provided by the U.S. Coast Guard on Feb. 7, 2025, shows a small commuter plane that crashed in western Alaska on a flight that was bound for the hub community of Nome. (U.S. Coast Guard via AP, File)2025-02-18T00:36:22Z The crash of a Delta Airlines plane in Toronto is the fourth major aviation disaster in North America in the last month.Heres a look at each of the crashes.Passenger plane flips during landing in Toronto A Delta Airlines plane arriving Monday at Torontos Pearson Airport from Minneapolis flipped and landed on its roof, injuring at least 17 people. The airport confirmed that an incident occurred Monday with the Delta flight and that all 80 passengers and crew are accounted for. Ornge air ambulance said it was transporting one child to Torontos SickKids hospital and two adults with critical injuries to other hospitals in the city.Video from the scene showed the Mitsubishi CRJ-900LR upside down on the snowy tarmac as emergency workers hose it down. According to the Meteorological Service of Canada, the airport was experiencing blowing snow and winds of 32 mph (51 kph) gusting to 40 mph (65 mph). The temperature was about 16.5 degrees (minus 8.6 Celsius). Endeavor Air, based in Minneapolis, is a Delta subsidiary and the worlds largest operator of CRJ-900 aircraft, a popular regional jet developed by Canadian aerospace company Bombardier.The Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement that the Transportation Safety Board of Canada will head up the investigation and provide any updates. Commuter plane crashes in Alaska, killing all 10 aboard A small commuter plane on its way to Nome crashed on Feb. 6, killing the pilot and nine passengers. The Bering Air single-engine turboprop Cessna Caravan was traveling from Unalakleet when it disappeared about an hour after taking off. The Coast Guard said the aircraft went missing about 30 miles (48 kilometers) southeast of Nome.After a wide search, the planes splintered body and debris were found the next day on the sea ice. The day of the crash there was light snow and fog, with a temperature of 17 degrees (minus 8.3 Celsius).The commuter flight was part of a workhorse network of short-hop flights that people in the immense and rugged state rely on to get to medical appointments, attend work meetings, buy essential supplies or even travel to away sports games.The victims included two men who were on a work trip to service a heat recovery system vital to a communitys water treatment plant, a retired teacher who was on a trip mentoring other teachers, and another person who was flying for a doctors appointment. Air ambulance crashes onto busy Philadelphia street, killing seven A medical transport jet with a child patient, her mother and four others aboard crashed into a Philadelphia neighborhood on Jan. 31, exploding in a fireball that engulfed several homes. The crash killed seven people, including all those aboard, and injured 19 others. The Learjet 55 took off and then plummeted in a steep descent, crashing less than a minute after takeoff from the Northeast Philadelphia Airport. The plane hit the ground during a busy Friday evening less than 3 miles (5 kilometers) from the airport, leaving a crash scene of at least four blocks. A father who was inside his car when the small plane crashed was among those killed.The plane operated by Jet Rescue Air Ambulance was on its way to Mexico, returning the child, who had spent months in treatment at Shriners Childrens Philadelphia hospital.Jet Rescue is based in Mexico and has operations both there and in the U.S. Helicopter and plane collide near Washington, killing 67A midair collision between an Army helicopter and an American Airlines flight about to land at Washingtons Ronald Reagan National Airport on Jan. 29 killed all 67 people aboard the two aircraft. It was the countrys deadliest aviation disaster since 2001.The regional jet out of Wichita, Kansas, was carrying 60 passengers and four crew and preparing to land when the helicopter apparently flew into its path, causing a collision that sent both aircraft into the icy waters of the Potomac River. The UH-60 Black Hawk, based at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, was on a training exercise and carried three soldiers. Among those killed were members of the Skating Club of Boston who were returning from a development camp that followed the 2025 U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita.The victims also included a group of hunters returning from a guided trip in Kansas, four members of a steamfitters local union in suburban Maryland, nine students and parents from Fairfax County, Virginia, schools and two Chinese nationals.
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  • Border towns residents rebuild in south Lebanon as Hezbollah leader calls for Israeli withdrawal
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    A Lebanese man watches bulldozers at work on the Hamamis hill, background, near the town of Khiam, southern Lebanon, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)2025-02-17T19:11:30Z KHIAM, Lebanon (AP) Sabah Abdullah comes to her hometown in Lebanon every morning and sits next to her destroyed home. She is waiting for experts from Hezbollahs construction arm to compensate her for the damage caused by the Israel-Hezbollah war that has left her homeless.The 66-year-old woman from Khiam now rents a home in the nearby village of Kawkaba and is repairing her small grocery store, which was badly damaged by the 13-month war that ended in late November as a result of a U.S.-brokered ceasefire. The war has left more than 4,000 people dead and over 16,000 wounded in Lebanon and caused damage worth billions of dollars. Damage can be compensated but the loss of souls cannot be replaced, said Abdullah as she sat on a plastic chair in the sun outside her shop. Israeli forces will remain in parts of southern Lebanon The 60-day ceasefire that was supposed to end on Jan. 27 with an Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon and Hezbollah ending its armed presence along the border area was extended until Tuesday. But an Israeli official said Monday that Israeli forces will remain in five strategic locations in southern Lebanon after the deadline.One of these locations is the Hamamis hill on the southern outskirts of Khiam. On Monday, bulldozers could be seen from a distance at work building what appeared to be fortifications in an apparent sign that Israels military is planning to stay long beyond Tuesdays deadline.Hezbollah leader Naim Kassem said in a speech Sunday that Israel has to fully withdraw from Lebanon on Tuesday, saying there is no pretext for five points nor other details. He added that the Lebanese state should prevent Israel from staying in the country after Tuesday as stated in the ceasefire deal. The Israel-Hezbollah war began a day after Hamas carried out its deadly attack in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023 killing 1,200 people and taking about 250 people hostage triggering the Israel-Hamas war. The Israel-Hezbollah war intensified as of Sept. 23, when Israel expanded its attacks and killed Hezbollahs longtime top leader and one of its founders, Hassan Nasrallah. Widespread damage in KhiamKhiam, one of the largest towns close to the Israeli border, suffered widespread damage, including entire blocks that were turned to piles of debris, while graffiti left behind by Israeli troops could be seen on the walls as well as inside homes. The towns cemetery suffered severe damage, with many graves blown out. On Monday, workers were removing debris in different locations in Khiam as many residents come during the day to spend a few hours at their homes and leave before sunset since the town still has no electricity or running water. New poles were being put in place by the countrys state-run electricity company as the infrastructure suffered severe damage.In Khiam everyone was martyred, read a graffiti on a wall in Arabic. Khiam is Golanis graveyard, another one read referring to Israels Golani Brigade.In a building on the eastern edge of Khiam, a woman showed a journalist a Star of David sprayed in red at the entrance of her apartment. The woman, who asked not to be named for safety reasons, then walked through her apartment showing a reporter the damage in the sitting room and kitchen. Abdallah said when she first came to Khiam days after the ceasefire went into effect in late November, she found that hungry cats and dogs inside her badly damaged shop had eaten cakes, croissants and chocolates. The metal door of her shop was blown wide open, she said. Seeing her home, which was built by her late father, destroyed saddened her but Abdallah said she is happy that none of her siblings or relatives were hurt during the war.The future is obscureAbdallah said that soon after the war ended, Hezbollahs construction arm Jihad al-Binaa paid her $12,000, of which $8,000 were to compensate her for lost furniture and $4,000 for a years rent.Abdallah said that since the Israel-Hezbollah war began she rented a house in Marakaba and had spent most of her savings and was selling some of her jewelry. She said she is now waiting for government experts to visit her and estimate the losses to pay her for rebuilding her two-story house that she shared with her brother. I will rebuild my house but the future is obscure. We live close to the border, Abdallah said, referring to repeated wars with Israel over the past decades.Another Khiam resident, Dalal Abdallah, said if Israel decides to stay in Lebanon, Israel will be eventually forced to leave again.Valuable blood and souls were paid for this land, she said. She added that no one should think that we will leave our land.
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  • Death of South Korean actor at 24 sparks discussion about social media and internet culture
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    South Korean actor Kim Sae-ron arrives at the Seoul Central District Court in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, April 5, 2023. (Yonhap via AP)2025-02-18T06:03:17Z SEOUL, South Korea (AP) South Korean actor Kim Sae-rons death this week has triggered an outpouring of grief and calls for changes to the way the countrys celebrities are treated in the public arena and on social media, which critics say can foster a culture of harassment. The 24-year-old, who began her career as a child actor and earned acclaim for her roles in several domestic films, including the 2010 crime noir The Man from Nowhere, was found dead by a friend at her home in the countrys capital, Seoul, on Sunday. The National Police Agency has said that officers are not suspecting foul play and that Kim left no note. Once among the brightest stars on South Koreas vibrant movie and television scene, Kim struggled to find work after a 2022 drunk driving incident, for which she was later fined in court.Online posts in South Korea are notoriously harsh toward celebrities who make missteps, especially women, and Kim faced constant negative coverage from news organizations that capitalized on public sentiment. Newspapers and websites criticized her whenever she was seen partying with friends, or when she complained about her lack of work and nasty comments on social media. She was even criticized for smiling while filming an independent movie last year. Following Kims death, several of the countrys major newspapers on Tuesday published editorials and opinion pieces lambasting the toxic online comments about the actor. Some invoked the 2019 deaths of K-Pop singers Seol-li and Goo Hara and the 2023 death of Squid Games actor Lee Sun-kyun while calling for a change in the harsh, zero-tolerance culture toward celebrities. The Hankook Ilbo newspaper said the countrys media outlets were part of the problem, lamenting that some outlets continued to exploit Kim for clicks even after her death, using provocative headlines that highlighted her past struggles. The watchdog Citizens Coalition for Democratic Media on Tuesday criticized news organizations for blaming social media without considering their own sensational and provocative reporting.Born in 2000, Kim began her acting career at age 9, with the 2009 film A Brand New Life, portraying a girls struggles to adjust to a new life after being left at an orphanage by her father. She rose to stardom with The Man from Nowhere, which was one of the biggest hits in the South Korean movie scene that year and won her a domestic acting award. She starred in various movies and TV shows before the 2022 drunk driving incident. Gold Medalist, Kims former management agency, did not immediately answer calls for comment. KIM TONG-HYUNG Kim has been covering the Koreas for the AP since 2014. He has published widely read stories on North Koreas nuclear ambitions, the dark side of South Koreas economic rise and international adoptions of Korean children. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Social Security head steps down over DOGE access of recipient information: AP sources
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    A Social Security card is displayed Oct. 12, 2021, in Tigard, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)2025-02-18T02:28:02Z WASHINGTON (AP) The Social Security Administration s acting commissioner has stepped down from her role at the agency over Department of Government Efficiency requests to access Social Security recipient information, according to two people familiar with the officials departure who were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.Acting Commissioner Michelle Kings departure from the agency over the weekend after more than 30 years of service was initiated after King refused to provide DOGE staffers at the SSA with access to sensitive information, the people said Monday. The White House has replaced her as acting commissioner with Leland Dudek, who currently works at the SSA, the people said. White House spokesperson Harrison Fields released a statement Monday night saying: President Trump has nominated the highly qualified and talented Frank Bisignano to lead the Social Security Administration, and we expect him to be swiftly confirmed in the coming weeks. In the meantime, the agency will be led by a career Social Security anti-fraud expert as the acting commissioner. Fields added, President Trump is committed to appointing the best and most qualified individuals who are dedicated to working on behalf of the American people, not to appease the bureaucracy that has failed them for far too long. Kings exit from the administration is one of several departures of high-ranking officials concerned about DOGE staffers potential unlawful access to private taxpayer information. DOGE has accessed Treasury payment systems and is attempting to access Internal Revenue Service databases.Since Republican President Donald Trump has retaken the White House, his billionaire adviser Elon Musk has rapidly burrowed deep into federal agencies while avoiding public scrutiny of his work through the DOGE group. Nancy Altman, president of Social Security Works, an advocacy group for the preservation of Social Security benefits, said of DOGEs efforts that there is no way to overstate how serious a breach this is. And my understanding is that it has already occurred. The information collected and securely held by the Social Security Administration is highly sensitive, she said. SSA has data on everyone who has a Social Security number, which is virtually all Americans, everyone who has Medicare, and every low-income American who has applied for Social Securitys means-tested companion program, Supplemental Security Income.If there is an evil intent to punish perceived enemies, someone could erase your earnings record, making it impossible to collect the Social Security and Medicare benefits you have earned.The future of Social Security has become a top political issue and was a major point of contention in the 2024 election. About 72.5 million people, including retirees, disabled people and children, receive Social Security benefits. FATIMA HUSSEIN Hussein reports on the U.S. Treasury Department for The Associated Press. She covers tax policy, sanctions and any issue that relates to money. twitter mailto
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  • Mexican musical legend Paquita la del Barrio dies at 77
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    Paquita La Del Barrio performs at the 14th Annual Latin Grammy Awards at the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino, Nov. 21, 2013, in Las Vegas. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP), File2025-02-17T19:23:19Z MEXICO CITY (AP) Mexican musical legend Paquita la del Barrio, known for her powerful voice and fierce defense of women, died at her home in Veracruz early Monday at the age of 77.Her passing was announced on her official social media accounts and confirmed by her representatives to The Associated Press. The state capital of Veracruz will mourn the loss of the iconic singer, who had faced a number of recent health problems.With deep pain and sadness we confirm the sensitive passing of our beloved Paquita la del Barrio at her home in Veracruz, the statement said. She was a unique and unrepeatable artist who will leave an indelible mark in the hearts of all of us who knew her and enjoyed her music. Born Francisca Viveros Barradas, Paquita la del Barrio captivated audiences with songs of heartbreak and betrayal, including anthems like Rata de dos patas and Tres veces te enga. While her fan base was predominantly women, her powerful performances also drew men to her concerts. At the beginning, many men said Why would I go, to get shamed? ... Now they join the concerts. They go with their girlfriend, their wife and they love it, Paquita said in a 2016 interview with the AP. A two-time Grammy and Latin Grammy nominee, Paquita la del Barrio received recognition from across the industry, including the Billboard Latin Music Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2021, which was presented to her by Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny. News of her death sparked an outpouring of grief on social media. The Latin Grammys and Apple Music were among the many who took to social media to mourn her passing.RIP Paquita la del Barrio, the feminist icon from Mexico who sang what others were afraid to say, wrote Apple Music on the social platform X.____Follow APs coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america
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  • Top Russian and US officials are set to hold talks on Ukraine war without Kyiv
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    Kirill Dmitriev, the head of the Russian Direct Investment Fund, right, and Maria Medvedeva, the deputy CEO for external communication for the fund, walk across the Ritz Carlton hotel in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Baraa Anwer)2025-02-18T06:18:20Z RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) Top Russian and U.S. officials are set to hold talks hold talks in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday in a bid to improve their ties and negotiate an end to the war in Ukraine. The meeting between the two countries top diplomats in Riyadh would be their most significant since the Russia invaded its neighbor almost three years ago, and is meant to pave the way for a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Trump earlier this month upended U.S. policy toward Ukraine and Russia, saying he and Putin had agreed to begin negotiations on ending the war. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Putins foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov arrived in the Saudi capital on Monday night. Ushakov said the talks would be purely bilateral and would not include Ukrainian officials.U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, national security adviser Mike Waltz and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff will meet the Russian delegation, State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said. The recent U.S. diplomatic blitz on the war has sent Kyiv and key allies scrambling to ensure a seat at the table amid concerns that Washington and Moscow could press ahead with a deal that wont be favorable to them. France called an emergency meeting of European Union countries and the U.K. on Monday to decide how to respond. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Monday his country wont accept the outcome if Kyiv doesnt take part. U.S.-Russia talks would yield no results without Ukrainian officials, Zelenskyy said on a conference call with journalists from the United Arab Emirates. Ahead of the talks, Kirill Dmitriev, the head of the Russian Direct Investment Fund who the Kremlin said might join the meeting, underscored the importance of the meeting in comments to The Associated Press. Good U.S.-Russia relations are very important for the whole world. Only jointly can Russia and the U.S. address lots of world problems, resolve for global conflicts and offer solutions, Dmitriev, who said he and his team would focus on economic issues at the talks, told AP. The Saudi-owned satellite channel Al Arabiya, citing the Russian delegation, described Moscows priority as real normalization with Washington.For Saudi Arabia, the talks are a major step toward a goal de facto leader Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has pursued throughout the war putting the kingdom in the middle of diplomatic negotiations. It has helped in prisoner negotiations and hosted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for an Arab League summit in the kingdom in 2023. Zelenskyy will likely travel to Saudi Arabia later this week.For Prince Mohammed, once described as a pariah by former President Joe Biden over the 2018 killing of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi, hosting such talks burnish the otherwise-tarnished image the West has for him. LikeAhead of the summit, the Saudi daily newspaper Okaz described the moment as the worlds eye on Riyadh. Writing in the London-based but Saudi-owned newspaper Asharq Al Awsat, journalist Mishari al-Dhaidi described the summit as a major step on the international political chess arena, revealing the status of Saudi Arabia and its positive influence for the benefit of the people all the people, he wrote. the neighboring United Arab Emirates, the prince also has maintained close relations to Russia throughout its war on Ukraine, both through the OPEC+ oil cartel and diplomatically as well. Hosting the summit also balances the harsh criticism recently levied by the kingdoms tightly controlled media at President Donald Trump over his repeated comments that he wants the U.S. to own the Gaza Strip, which has been devastated by the Israeli military offensive there since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack. The Palestinians want Gaza and the West Bank for a future state, something backed by the wider Arab world and nearly all of the international community.___Litvinova reported from Tallinn, Estonia. Associated Press writers Jon Gambrell in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contributed to this report. BARAA ANWER Anwer is a video journalist for The Associated Press, specializing in news coverage across the Gulf region. twitter instagram mailto DASHA LITVINOVA Litvinova is an Associated Press correspondent covering Russia, Belarus, Central Asia and the Caucasus. She is part of the team that covers the Russia-Ukraine war. She has covered Russia and the region for over a decade. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Researchers link a gene to the emergence of spoken language
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    Casts of skulls are seen inside an exhibit of early human species inside the Smithsonian Hall of Human Origins, Thursday, July 20, 2023, at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)2025-02-18T10:01:04Z Why did humans start speaking? Scientists suggest genetics played a big role and they say the evolution of this singular ability was key to our survival.A new study links a particular gene to the ancient origins of spoken language, proposing that a protein variant found only in humans may have helped us communicate in a novel way. Speech allowed us to share information, coordinate activities and pass down knowledge, giving us an edge over extinct cousins like Neanderthals and Denisovans.The new study is a good first step to start looking at the specific genes that may affect speech and language development, said Liza Finestack at the University of Minnesota, who was not involved with the research. What scientists learn may someday even help people with speech problems. The genetic variant researchers were looking at was one of a variety of genes that contributed to the emergence of Homo sapiens as the dominant species, which we are today said Dr. Robert Darnell, an author of the study published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications. Darnell has been studying the protein called NOVA1 and known to be crucial to brain development since the early 1990s. For the latest research, scientists in his lab at New Yorks Rockefeller University used CRISPR gene editing to replace the NOVA1 protein found in mice with the exclusively human type to test the real-life effects of the genetic variant. To their surprise, it changed the way the animals vocalized when they called out to each other. Baby mice with the human variant squeaked differently than normal littermates when their mom came around. Adult male mice with the variant chirped differently than their normal counterparts when they saw a female in heat. Both are settings where mice are motivated to speak, Darnell said, and they spoke differently with the human variant, illustrating its role in speech. This isnt the first time a gene has been linked to speech. In 2001, British scientists said they had discovered the first gene tied to a language and speech disorder.Called FOXP2, it was referred to as the human language gene. But though FOXP2 is involved in human language, it turned out that the variant in modern humans wasnt unique to us. Later research found it was shared with Neanderthals. The NOVA1 variant in modern humans, on the other hand, is found exclusively in our species, Darnell said.The presence of a gene variant isnt the only reason people can speak. The ability also depends on things like anatomical features in the human throat and areas of the brain that work together to allow people to speak and understand language.Darnell hopes the recent work not only helps people better understand their origins but also eventually leads to new ways to treat speech-related problems.University of Minnesotas Finestack said its more likely the genetic findings might someday allow scientists to detect, very early in life, who might need speech and language interventions.Thats certainly a possibility, she said.---The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. LAURA UNGAR Ungar covers medicine and science on the APs Global Health and Science team. She has been a health journalist for more than two decades. twitter mailto
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  • Pro-Russian hackers attack Italian websites after president compares invasion of Ukraine to Nazis
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    2025-02-18T10:55:28Z MILAN (AP) A pro-Russian hacker group attacked Italian government websites on Tuesday in what it said was a reaction to a speech by Italian President Sergio Mattarella that compared Russias invasion of Ukraine to the Nazis wars of conquest.The NoName57 hacker group, which announced the attacks on social media, hit the websites of the defense, interior and transport ministries, as well as law enforcement agencies. Access to the sites was spotty.The group on Monday it attacked Italian banks, ports, airports and local transport agencies, but those attacks did not cause major disruptions.In a speech in Marseille, France on Feb. 5, Mattarella said that patterns that led to World War II were repeating, including wars of conquest. This was the project of the Third Reich in Europe. Todays Russian aggression against Europe is of this nature, he said.Russias foreign ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, expressed dismay about Mattarellas remarks.Mattarellas office has declined to comment on the attacks.
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  • Dying to serve: Dozens of recruits have died nationwide while training to become police officers
    apnews.com
    2025-02-18T09:05:04Z Ronald Donats longtime dream of becoming a police officer was in jeopardy.The 41-year-old struggled to stand after completing a flurry of pushups, sprints and pullups in the notoriously grueling start of physical training that recruits call Hell Day.You are dead! classmates recall a sergeant berating Donat, ordering him to sit on concrete at the suburban Atlanta police academy.Donat, a Haitian immigrant on his third attempt to land a law enforcement job, assured instructors he wasnt giving up. He managed to get off the ground and rejoin recruits in a bear crawl exercise. But he soon went limp. Sharline Volcy shows a picture of her husband, Ronald Donat, on Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Orange, N.J. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Sharline Volcy shows a picture of her husband, Ronald Donat, on Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Orange, N.J. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More One hundred minutes after training began that October 2021 morning, he was dead, according to records obtained by The Associated Press.Donat is among at least 29 recruits who died during basic training at law enforcement academies around the country in the last decade, an AP investigation found. Most died of exertion, dehydration, heat stroke and other conditions tied to intense exercise often on the first day of training, like Donat. Others died several weeks in, sometimes after suffering trauma during boxing or use-of-force drills or collapsing during high-stakes timed runs on hot days. Experts and police advocates were surprised by APs findings based on an extensive review of lists of law enforcement deaths in every state, workplace safety records and news reports and said many of the deaths were preventable. No federal agency or outside organization comprehensively tracks recruit deaths, unlike officers who die in the line of duty. A memorial Sharline Volcy set up in honor of her husband, Ronald Donat, is seen Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, at her home in Orange, N.J. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) A memorial Sharline Volcy set up in honor of her husband, Ronald Donat, is seen Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, at her home in Orange, N.J. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Training shouldnt have one death, much less 29, said David Jude, a retired Kentucky State Police academy commander and instructor. To hear that number, it is shocking.Black recruits represented nearly 60% of those who died, a striking disparity given that federal data show Black officers make up 12% of local police forces. Many carried sickle cell trait, a condition most prevalent among Black Americans that increases the risk of serious injury following extreme exertion. Overall, the deaths amount to a tiny percentage of the nations 800,000 sworn officers but highlight another hazard in a profession where shootings, car accidents and other dangers are part of the job.APs tally shows the deaths have grown at a time when departments are tapping an older and more diverse pool of applicants to address officer shortages. More than two-thirds of the deaths occurred since 2020. A heartbreaking string of deathsA Texas recruit collapsed minutes after instructors denied his request for water, saying: You cant get water in a fight, video obtained by AP shows.An Arkansas cadet died after he was forced to run wearing long pants in the scorching midday sun. A North Carolina trainees temperature was 106 degrees an hour after his death, when he had no water breaks during an hourlong obstacle course.Citing similar cases, one expert warned in a medical journal in mid-2023 of a troubling spate of exertional collapse and death of police trainees.This sad tragedy is preventable, but will not become so until our police chiefs begin to heed the message, wrote Dr. Randy Eichner, a retired University of Oklahoma professor who has long studied exertion-related deaths. At least 29 recruits have died during basic training at law enforcement academies nationwide in the last decade according to new reporting by the Associated Press. Experts say many of deaths could have been prevented. (AP video: Mark Vancleave and Ryan J. Foley) But deaths have only continued to mount. At least five were recorded in 2024, including a New York City recruit who died of heat stroke, a Kentucky man who exerted himself during water-based survival training and a Massachusetts cadet who became unresponsive during defensive tactics training.Police leaders say some deaths can be prevented through improved awareness and practices, acknowledging that the field needs to better screen for and accommodate health conditions that put recruits at risk and to rein in unnecessarily harsh drills.Not only are we potentially putting students in danger, but were also putting instructors in precarious situations where they may not know about the risks, said Jude, an expert witness in the 2022 death of 38-year-old Jonesboro, Arkansas, recruit Vincent Parks. Jude cited a law passed in Arkansas, amid outrage over video showing Parks collapsing while training on a hot afternoon, as a positive step. It requires trainers be educated on heat exhaustion, dehydration and symptoms of sudden cardiac arrest, and mandates that instructors remove cadets from physical activities if they faint or lose consciousness. This photo provided by the Jonesboro Police Department shows Vincent Parks in 2022. (Jonesboro Police Department via AP) This photo provided by the Jonesboro Police Department shows Vincent Parks in 2022. (Jonesboro Police Department via AP) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More APs investigation found instances in which recruits who were in serious medical distress were pushed to continue training before they died. In addition to calling off drills in such cases, academy leaders must ensure adequate hydration and breaks and limit training when heat makes it unsafe, experts said.Bill Alexander, CEO of the National Law Enforcement Memorial in Washington, said the number of deaths could be reduced but probably not eliminated given the nature of policing, which can require chasing and arresting combative suspects. If youre training people physically and if youre training them hard, youre going to have these very rare medical events, said Alexander, who previously led an academy in Maryland. Have a news tip?Contact APs global investigative team at [emailprotected]. For secure and confidential communications, use the free Signal app +1 (202) 281-8604. Still, some leaders say the field needs urgent action to better protect recruits.It was just heartbreaking. Ill never forget it. And Ill do anything at all to get this message out, said Sheriff Charmaine McGuffey of Hamilton County, Ohio, who witnessed the 2023 death of 36-year-old Marcus Zeigler after he collapsed during a training run. Were talking about life or death.An eager recruit for a department in need When Ronald Donat arrived at the Gwinnett County Police Department Academy in Lawrenceville, Georgia, he thought hed finally found his place in law enforcement.He always wanted to become an officer, but his wife, Sharline Volcy, said she initially discouraged him due to safety concerns when their children were young. Both immigrated from Haiti in the 1990s to New Jersey, where they met at church. Sharline Volcy poses for a portrait on Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Orange, N.J. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Sharline Volcy poses for a portrait on Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Orange, N.J. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Donat earned a college degree and worked various jobs, including installing satellites and cable, but longed for the responsibility and community service that policing would bring.He finally applied but was initially passed over. When Gwinnett County recruited applicants from New Jersey, Donat applied because he already had a sister living in Georgia, Volcy said.Georgias second-largest police agency, Gwinnett County has held hiring events around the country as it struggles to fill hundreds of vacancies. Its offered bonuses to combat the officer shortage, which grew during the coronavirus pandemic and 2020 protests against police brutality. In this photo provided by Sharline Volcy, Volcy, her husband Ronald Donat, their two daughters and two other relatives pose for a photo at a 2016 family picnic in West Orange, N.J. (Sharline Volcy via AP) In this photo provided by Sharline Volcy, Volcy, her husband Ronald Donat, their two daughters and two other relatives pose for a photo at a 2016 family picnic in West Orange, N.J. (Sharline Volcy via AP) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More A physician who evaluated Donat for the department concluded he was healthy, with no concerning conditions, according to a form the doctor submitted to the states police standards agency. Following the normal process for the county and most U.S. police departments, the doctor didnt screen Donat for sickle cell trait.Donat began working out with other recruits, passed a state-mandated physical fitness test and was given badge 2423. He smiled for a selfie in a squad car. He shared advice with a classmate: Never give up.Most departments lack policies on sickle cell traitUp to 3 million Black citizens in the U.S. have sickle cell trait, yet many adults with the genetic condition dont know their status, researchers say. Unlike people with sickle cell disease, they carry only one gene for sickle cell, and one normal gene.The condition, which is diagnosed through a blood test, doesnt usually affect their daily lives. But it can cause decreased blood flow and muscle breakdown after intense exertion, dehydration or high body temperatures. In very rare cases, that can result in collapse and death. Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More The NCAA and U.S. military now screen recruits for the condition, which has contributed to some deaths during football practices and boot camps. Researchers say exertional deaths among college athletes plummeted after NCAA-mandated testing and precautions went into effect in 2010, while the impact of the military programs is under review. Slowly building intensity, resting between drills, remaining hydrated during workouts and responding quickly to signs of distress are recommended.Most police departments have no such screening programs. Many longtime law enforcement trainers say theyve never heard of the condition, which AP found was cited as a contributing factor in several deaths and serious injuries of recruits. Sharline Volcy holds a photo from her wedding to Ronald Donat, on Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Orange, N.J. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Sharline Volcy holds a photo from her wedding to Ronald Donat, on Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Orange, N.J. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More McGuffey, the Ohio sheriff, said the cause of Marcus Zeiglers death was initially a mystery. Before his collapse in May 2023, Zeigler was in peak condition and a top recruit, she said.The sheriff said she learned about sickle cell trait afterward from another employee, who himself had been seriously injured during academy training. She asked the coroner to investigate whether Zeigler had the condition. After ruling that Zeigler died of exertional heatstroke, the coroners office added sickle cell trait as a contributing factor.Since the death, Hamilton County has started screening recruits for the condition, which costs $75 per test. A physical and mental test For Donat and his 27 classmates, academy staffers planned an intense hourlong workout -- a first-day ritual designed to test physical and mental fitness.Pushups. Flutter kicks. More pushups. Hill sprints. Burpees. Pullups. Bear crawls.Trainers say the exercises set the tone for the monthslong academy, which seeks to instill a never-quit mindset and prepare recruits for the most dangerous aspects of policing. But the military-style drills have long led to allegations of harsh treatment that cross the line into hazing.The risks were so well-known that an ambulance usually sat nearby on the first day at the Gwinnett County academy. But that year, a major declined the staffs request, saying an ambulance would create the perception of danger, according to statements in an internal investigation report.Donat kept up with classmates for 45 minutes but became exhausted during a set of pullups and couldnt complete the next exercise, air squats. A diagram shows an obstacle course that Ronald Donat completed in less than two minutes as part of a required physical ability test to join the department. Credit: Gwinnett County Police Department record A diagram shows an obstacle course that Ronald Donat completed in less than two minutes as part of a required physical ability test to join the department. Credit: Gwinnett County Police Department record Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More An instructor ordered Donat to sit: You are dead! six recruits recalled him screaming, according to the investigation.The instructor insisted that he told Donat You are done! Either way, it was intended as a reminder, the investigation found, that giving up on police work could lead to death.Donat didnt want to quit. Three minutes later, he got up with the help of another recruit and got in formation for a 25-foot bear crawl. Everything is all right, Donat, a recruit assured him. But Donat collapsed and stopped breathing.A paramedic on scene quickly treated Donat with oxygen and chest compressions. An ambulance arrived 10 minutes later.After Donat was pronounced dead at a hospital, instructors wondered whether his life could have been saved with an ambulance on site. Widow Sharline Volcy holds a picture of her deceased husband, Roland Donat, Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Orange, N.J. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Widow Sharline Volcy holds a picture of her deceased husband, Roland Donat, Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Orange, N.J. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Changes but no discipline after a Georgia deathHours after Donat died, Gwinnett County released a statement saying Donat had been instructed by supervising staff to rest after becoming lethargic. A fellow recruit who saw that statement on the news questioned the claim, texting classmates, as far as I know I never heard that or saw that. One responded that Donat was last seen in the planking position before his collapse.A county medical examiner ruled Donat died of natural causes, saying he had an enlarged heart prone to abnormal rhythms. That shocked his wife, Volcy, who said her husband was a fit soccer player with no known heart issues.The autopsy report didnt mention sickle cell trait. Volcy believes her husband had it shes learned their daughters do, she said, and she has tested negative. Today, Gwinnett County still doesnt screen recruits for the condition, spokesperson Sgt. Collin Flynn said.The departments investigation, completed weeks after Donats death, found no policy violations and resulted in no disciplinary action. A major who led the investigation concluded, I cannot imagine a scenario, had different actions been taken, that would have changed the tragic death of Recruit Donat.Still, the department now requires an ambulance with emergency responders on scene during the first day of physical training, Flynn said. Changes to the workout allow instructors to keep a closer eye on those who are struggling, he said.The Occupational Safety and Health Administration didnt investigate because local government agencies arent under its jurisdiction. Thats the case in many states, which have not extended workplace safety protections to municipal employees such as police officers.Families of deceased recruits face obstacles to recognition, benefitsBecause most of the recruits in APs investigation hadnt been sworn in as officers before they died, their names dont appear on the national memorial for deceased officers or some state memorials. And many of their families cant qualify for death benefits. This undated photo provided by the Knoxville, Tenn., Police Department shows Wisbens Antoine. (Knoxville Police Department via AP) This undated photo provided by the Knoxville, Tenn., Police Department shows Wisbens Antoine. (Knoxville Police Department via AP) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Aware of those stakes last year, the police chief in Knoxville, Tennessee, summoned a judge to the hospital room of unconscious recruit Wisbens Antoine.On that February night, a fellow recruit took the oath on behalf of Antoine, whod collapsed during training a week before graduation.Hours later, Officer Antoine, 32, died.Like Donat, he was a Haitian immigrant who left behind a wife and two daughters.In Gwinnett County, officials honored Donat by adding his name to its Fallen Heroes Memorial in 2022. But his name isnt on federal or state memorials. Donats family was ineligible for state death benefits because he hadnt graduated.Congress in 2021 passed a law allowing trainees relatives to be eligible for the same federal death benefits as those of sworn officers. The program includes a payment of nearly $450,000, plus college assistance. This undated photo provided by the Knoxville, Tenn., Police Department shows Tristants Simpson, a fellow recruit class member, taking the police oath on behalf of Wisbens Antoine, while Sgt. Jimmy Wilson, Police Chief Paul Noel, Mayor Indya Kincannon, Officer Terry Crowe and Municipal Court Judge Tyler Caviness, look on. (Scott Erland/Knoxville Police Department via AP) This undated photo provided by the Knoxville, Tenn., Police Department shows Tristants Simpson, a fellow recruit class member, taking the police oath on behalf of Wisbens Antoine, while Sgt. Jimmy Wilson, Police Chief Paul Noel, Mayor Indya Kincannon, Officer Terry Crowe and Municipal Court Judge Tyler Caviness, look on. (Scott Erland/Knoxville Police Department via AP) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More But three years later, Volcy said, shes still awaiting a ruling from the Department of Justice on her application for benefits, which she said she desperately needs to afford college tuition and other expenses.Volcy was unaware of the investigation into her husbands death until AP gave her the report last year. She said the department put recruits like Donat and their families at risk.It is disappointing to know that excessive strain and physical activities brought an end to his life, Volcy said. What was supposed to be a new beginning, a lifetime achievement, a dream come true turned children into orphans, a wife into a widow and a lifetime of grief. RYAN J. FOLEY Foley covers state and national news for The Associated Press and is based in Iowa City, Iowa. A 20-year AP veteran, hes known for investigative reporting and using open records laws to obtain information. twitter mailto
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  • Saudi Arabias crown prince wins points for hosting the Russia-US summit on Ukraine
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    Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman gestures during a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Monday Feb. 17, 2025. (Evelyn Hockstein/Pool Photo via AP)2025-02-18T12:00:47Z DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) Saudi Arabias crown prince may not be inside the room for the first high-level talks between Russia and the United States over Moscows war on Ukraine on Tuesday, but Mohammed bin Salman still wins the day for hosting the gathering that could be a game changer in the bloody conflict.The assertive 39-year-old heir to the throne in the oil-rich kingdom already has taken over Saudi Arabia as its de facto leader under his father, the 89-year-old King Salman. But the princes war in Yemen and the 2018 killing of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi, which U.S. intelligence agencies believe came at his orders, tarnished his reputation internationally. Crown Prince Mohammed now finds himself at the center of the Trump administrations outreach to Russia, a country Saudi Arabia carefully maintained ties to during the war through the OPEC+ oil cartel. The prince likely caught President Donald Trumps attention when he announced plans for a $600 billion investment in the United States prompting the American leaders musings about whether to make Saudi Arabia the location for his first foreign trip in this presidency. And with Trump suggesting his first meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin something Moscow hopes can bring it in from the cold of Western nations will take place in Saudi Arabia, Prince Mohammed is likely to remain a top player. As the summit opened, the state-run Saudi Press Agency announced that upon directives from the royal, talks between Russa and the U.S. are taking place in Riyadh as part of the kingdoms ongoing efforts to promote global security and peace firmly putting Prince Mohammeds fingerprints on the proceedings. Risks remain for the princes strategyThe strategy still holds risks for Prince Mohammed, particularly as the shaky ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war that ravaged the Gaza Strip remains in question. Trumps repeated comments that he wants the U.S. to own the Gaza Strip have inflamed the Arab world. The Palestinians want Gaza and the West Bank for a future state, something backed by nearly all of the international community.Also, Saudi state media in recent days have openly criticized Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu something that was avoided while Prince Mohammed weighed a possible diplomatic recognition deal with Israel under the Biden administration. The idea of an American ownership of Gaza as muddy as to what that would mean exactly has similarly angered Saudis who support the Palestinians. The Saudi Foreign Ministry, in a quickly reaction to Trumps initial remarks, said its unwavering position is nonnegotiable and not subject to compromises. But the kingdom did not criticize Trump directly. Then theres Trump longstanding criticism of OPEC, in which Saudi Arabia remains the top power. In January, Trump claimed OPEC price cuts would be able to automatically stop the tragedy thats taking place in Ukraine. One way to stop it quickly is for OPEC to stop making so much money and to drop the price of oil, because they have it nice and high, Trump said in January. And if you have it high, that war is not going to end so easily. However, global oil prices are down from highs of over $120 a barrel in 2022 after Russias full-scale invasion of Ukraine, to around $75 a barrel today. The lower prices threaten Prince Mohammeds ambitious projects, including his vision of the futuristic city of Neom, priced at $500 billion. The princes peace push eases the burden on Saudi Arabia During years in the cold after the Khashoggi killing, both Russia and China offered Saudi Arabia and Prince Mohammed the cachet of being respected by Moscow and Beijing, bypassing persistent human rights concerns of the West. Prince Mohammed has hosted and spoken by phone with both Chinese President Xi Jinping and Putin.Then, a 2023 Chinese-mediated deal on the kingdom reestablishing ties with Iran have Prince Mohammed a new opportunity to show the U.S. that others can shape Mideast politics. It also eased a major security concern for the kingdom after a likely Iranian attack in 2019 temporarily halved the kingdoms oil production. What the kingdom perceived as a slow American response to that attack and others, by the Iran-backed Yemeni rebels, has promoted Saudi Arabia to hedge its risks through outreach to both Western friends and foes alike. In the Saudi-owned, London-published newspaper Asharq Al Awsat, journalist Mishari al-Dhaidi described the summit as restoring dialogue between the two poles of the world and saying exuberantly that it opens a window of hope to let in fresh air and a bright ray that spreads the leaves of optimism.It is a major step on the international political chess arena, revealing the status of Saudi Arabia and its positive influence for the benefit of the people all the people, he wrote.Flowery language aside, Prince Mohammeds strategy appears to be working at the moment regardless of the outcome of Tuesdays meeting. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is expected in Saudi Arabia on Wednesday and Trump himself may turn up sooner or later. ___EDITORS NOTE Jon Gambrell, the news director for the Gulf and Iran for The Associated Press, has reported from each of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Iran and other locations across the Mideast and wider world since joining the AP in 2006. JON GAMBRELL Gambrell is the news director for the Gulf and Iran for The Associated Press. He has reported from each of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Iran and other locations across the world since joining the AP in 2006. twitter instagram mailto
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  • Billionaire Jim Ratcliffes first year at Man United has not gone to plan
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    Manchester United's head coach Ruben Amorim reacts after Leicester's Bobby Decordova-Reid scored the opening goal during the English FA Cup fourth round soccer match between Manchester United and Leicester City at the Old Trafford stadium in Manchester, England, Friday, Feb. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Dave Thompson)2025-02-18T12:43:26Z MANCHESTER, England (AP) Its been a year since one of Britains richest men bought into its most famous soccer team and vowed to bring the good times back. So far, it hasnt gone to plan for Manchester United or Jim Ratcliffe. The record 20-time English champion is languishing in the bottom half of the Premier League, losing vast sums of money every year and facing fan unrest.Even head coach Ruben Amorim said recently that this might be the worst team in the clubs storied history. Thats not all on Ratcliffe, the billionaire owner of petrochemicals giant INEOS, but it has been a rocky start since he paid $1.3 billion for an initial 25% stake in United and assumed control of its soccer operations. There have been high profile hirings and firings, brutal cost cutting, a hike in ticket prices and new lows on the field for a team that had been in decline for more than a decade before he became minority owner. While there was triumph in the FA Cup last year, that success has been overshadowed by supporter protests, job losses, unconvincing transfers and humbling defeats. Bold plansRatcliffe said his investment was just the beginning of our journey to take Manchester United back to the top of English, European and world football. Those ambitions feel further away now than they have in decades, with United 15th in the standings and closer to the relegation zone than the top six after a woeful campaign. Sundays 1-0 loss to Tottenham was the 12th in the league this season and an eighth under Amorim, who only took charge in November. Amorim said: I have a lot of problems, my job is so hard, but I am here to continue my job to the next week with my beliefs. Major overhaulHe was one of a number of key hires made as part of Ratcliffes overhaul of Uniteds soccer operations. Omar Berrada was lured away from Manchester City to become CEO and Dan Ashworth left Newcastle to take up the role of sporting director. Jason Wilcox, formerly director of Citys academy, became technical director. Key figures at Ratcliffes Ineos Sport, Dave Brailsford and Jean-Claude Blanc, were appointed to the board and Amorim became the final piece of a new leadership team after former manager Erik ten Hag was fired in October. But that restructuring has been far from a smooth process. Ten Hag was fired three months after being handed a one-year contract extension with United having lost four of its opening nine league games.Ashworth left the club less than six months after taking up his role, and after months of negotiations to take him away from Newcastle. They were expensive missteps.In total it cost United 10.4 million pounds ($13.09 million) to pay off Ten Hag and his staff and another 11 million pounds ($13.85 million) to trigger Amorims release from Sporting Lisbon. It was reported it cost between 2 and 3 million pounds ($2.5-3.78 million) to hire Ashworth, who spent five months on gardening leave during negotiations with Newcastle. Cost cuttingThose numbers make uncomfortable reading at a time when United has implemented cost-saving initiatives that it said included staff redundancies of around 250 roles. More could be on the way, according to reports. In October it emerged that managerial great Alex Ferguson was not beyond the reach of those measures. He will step down from his lucrative role as club ambassador at the end of the season.In addition to cuts, United raised its lowest-priced tickets to 66 pounds ($81) partway through the season, up from 40 pounds ($49).It defended that decision by telling fans it could not sustain its current financial losses and was in danger of breaching league rules if it did not act. United reported losses last year of 113.2 million pounds ($140 million).We will get back to a cash positive position as soon as possible and we will have to make some difficult choices to get there, it said in a letter to fans. Fan protestsThat explanation has not gone down well with supporters. Fans should not be paying the price for previous bad ownership & bad management, Manchester United Supporters Trust posted on X. The supporters bring far more value than the simple collective ticket revenue.Supporters spent years trying to drive out the American Glazer family, which is still majority owner, and there continues to be anger towards them after Ratcliffes investment. There have been jeers for the team while Uniteds performances on the field have continued to slide. New lowsRatcliffes first season as co-owner saw United endure its worst league campaign in 34 years when it finished in eighth place. The end of his first full season could be even worse. The last time it lost 12 of its first 25 games in a league season was in the 1973-74 campaign when it was relegated from the top flight. Transfer strategyUnited has spent around $260 million on players in the two transfer windows under Ratcliffe, but the squad still looks well short of the quality required to challenge for the title. Forward Joshua Zirkzee has struggled to adapt to the Premier League and defender Leny Yoro missed a large part of the season through injury. The pressure of complying with the leagues financial rules has placed uncertainty on Uniteds ability to spend big in the summer to bring in players to suit Amorims preferred system, and there is unlikely to be a quick fix. Stadium rebuildRatcliffe wants a world class stadium, either by way of redeveloping Uniteds iconic Old Trafford or building one from new. His plans, which include an ambitious redevelopment of the surrounding area, have been backed by the U.K. government. Financing them, however, is another issue and it is not yet clear where that money will come from. The modernization of Uniteds Carrington training ground is well underway after 50 million pounds ($63 million) of investment.The futureUnited hasnt lifted the league title since Fergusons last season in 2013 and behind the scenes the focus is on winning it for a record-extending 21st time. But with Liverpool on course to equal Uniteds haul of 20 this season, it is the clubs great rival from Merseyside that could set that new bar first. Ratcliffe is a hugely successful businessman but, as he is discovering, that does not guarantee success in soccer. ___James Robson is at https://twitter.com/jamesalanrobson___AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • French lawmakers mull banning headscarves in sport. Amnesty International says its discriminatory
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    Morocco's Nouhaila Benzina walks around the ground during a familiarization tour ahead of her Women's World Cup Group H match with Germany in Melbourne, Australia, on July 23, 2023. (AP Photo/Victoria Adkins, File)2025-02-18T13:15:20Z Amnesty International is urging French lawmakers to reject a bill this week that would ban headscarves in all sporting competitions.The bill is backed by right-wing senators and will be debated from Tuesday in the upper house of the French parliament. Its aim is to ban all ostensibly religious clothing and symbols during competitions. Amnesty International says the move would be discriminatory.The vote is likely to refuel the lingering debate on secularism still volatile more than a century after the 1905 law on separation of church and state that established it as a principle of the French Republic.Until now, sporting federations have been free to decide whether or not to allow headscarves, with two of the countrys most powerful sports, soccer and rugby, opting to ban them.The bill is at an early stage and this weeks vote marks the beginning of a long legislative process with an uncertain outcome. Even if senators vote in favor, the bills future will remain unclear since the lower house has the final say. To pass, the bill would need a coalition of forces that dont usually collaborate in the deeply divided lower house. Amnesty Internationals calls come after French sprinter Sounkamba Sylla said last summer she was barred from the opening ceremony at the Paris Olympics because she wears a hijab. She was eventually allowed to take part wearing a cap to cover her hair. France enforces a strict principle of lacit, loosely translated as secularism. At the Games, the president of the French Olympic Committee said its Olympians were bound by the secular principles that apply to public sector workers in the country, which include a ban on hijabs and other religious signs. At the Paris Olympics, Frances ban on French women athletes who wear headscarves from competing at the Games drew international outrage, said Anna Bu, an Amnesty International researcher on gender justice. Just six months on, French authorities are not only doubling down on the discriminatory hijab ban but are attempting to extend it to all sports.Experts appointed by the UN Human Rights Council have previously criticized the decision by the French soccer and basketball federations to exclude players wearing the hijab, and the French governments decision to prevent its athletes wearing headscarves from representing the country at the Paris Games.Amnesty International said the bill in reality targets Muslim women and girls by excluding them from sporting competitions if they wear a headscarf or other religious clothing. Lacit...which is theoretically embedded in the French constitution to protect everyones religious freedom, has often been used as a pretext to block Muslim womens access to public spaces in France, Amnesty International said. Over several years, the French authorities have enacted laws and policies to regulate Muslim womens and girls clothing, in discriminatory ways. Sport federations have followed suit, imposing hijab bans in several sports.Two years ago, Frances highest administrative court said the countrys soccer federation was entitled to ban headscarves in competitions even though the measure can limit freedom of expression. Wielding the principle of religious neutrality enshrined in the constitution, the countrys soccer federation also does not make things easy for international players who want to refrain from drinking or eating from dawn to sunset during the Ramadan, Islamic holy month.Supporters of the bill cite growing attacks on secularism in sport, arguing that its core values are based on a principle of universality. To protect sports grounds from any non-sporting confrontation, they say, a principle of neutrality needs to be implemented to ensure that no political, religious or racial demonstration or propaganda can be promoted.The bill also states that using part of a sports facility as a place of worship would be a misuse of its purpose, and bans the wearing of religious clothing, such as the burkini, in public swimming pools. By placing the wearing of a headscarf on the spectrum of attacks on secularism, which range from permissiveness to terrorism, this legislation, if passed, would fuel racism and reinforce the growing hostile environment facing Muslims and those perceived to be Muslim in France, Amnesty International said.___Associated Press reporter Sylvie Corbet contributed to this story. SAMUEL PETREQUIN Petrequin has been covering sports and general news for The Associated Press for more than two decades. twitter mailto
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  • Villagers in southern Lebanon prepare to return home as Israeli army withdraws under ceasefire deal
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    A destroyed mosque, caused by the Israeli air and ground offensive, is seen in the town of Khiam, southern Lebanon, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)2025-02-18T08:29:25Z DEIR MIMAS, Lebanon (AP) Israeli forces withdrew Tuesday from border villages in southern Lebanon under a deadline spelled out in a U.S.-brokered ceasefire agreement that ended the latest Israel-Hezbollah war, but stayed put in five strategic overlook locations inside Lebanon. Top Lebanese leaders denounced the continued presence of the Israel troops as an occupation and a violation of the deal, maintaining that Israel was required to make a full withdrawal by Tuesday. The troops presence is also a sore point with the militant Hezbollah group, which has demanded action from the authorities.Lebanese soldiers moved into the areas from where the Israeli troops pulled out and began clearing roadblocks set up by Israeli forces and checking for unexploded ordnance. They blocked the main road leading to the villages, preventing anyone from entering while the military was looking for any explosives left behind. Most of the villages waited by the roadside for permission to go and check on their homes but some pushed aside the roadblocks to march in. Elsewhere, the army allowed the residents to enter. Many of their houses were demolished during the more than year-long conflict or in the two months after Novembers ceasefire agreement, when Israeli forces were still occupying the area.In the border village of Kfar Kila, people were stunned by the amount of destruction, with entire sections of houses wiped out. What Im seeing is beyond belief. I am in a state of shock, said Khodo Suleiman, a construction contractor, pointing to his destroyed home on a hilltop. There are no homes, no plants, nothing left, said Suleiman, who had last been in Kfar Kila six months ago. I am feeling a mixture of happiness and pain.In the main village square, Lebanese troops deployed as a military bulldozer removed rubble from the street.Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said the Israeli army will stay in a buffer zone in Lebanon in five control posts to guard against any ceasefire violations by Hezbollah. He also said the army had erected new posts on the Israeli side of the border and sent reinforcements there. We are determined to provide full security to every northern community, Katz said.However, Lebanons three top officials the countrys president, prime minister and parliament speaker in a joint statement said that Israels continued presence at the five locaions was in violation of the ceasefire agreement. They called on the U.N. Security Council to take action to force a complete Israeli withdrawal.The continued Israeli presence in any inch of Lebanese territory is an occupation, with all the legal consequences that result from that according to international legitimacy, the statement said.The Israeli troop presence was also criticized in a joint statement by the U.N. special coordinator for Lebanon, Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, and the head of the U.N. peacekeeping force in the country, Lt. Gen. Aroldo Lzaro.The two, however, warned that this should not overshadow the tangible progress that has been made since the ceasefire agreement. Near the Lebanese villages of Deir Mimas and Kfar Kila, hundreds of villagers were gathered early on Tuesday morning as an Israeli drone flew overhead.Atef Arabi, who had been waiting with his wife and two daughters before sunrise, was eager to see whats left of his home in Kfar Kila. I am very happy I am going back even if I find my home destroyed, said the 36-year-old car mechanic. If I find my house destroyed I will rebuild it.Later on Tuesday, Kfar Kilas mayor Hassan Sheet told The Associated Press that 90% of the village homes are completely destroyed while the remaining 10% are damaged. There are no homes nor buildings standing, he said, adding that rebuilding will start from scratch.The Lebanese militant group Hezbollah began firing rockets across the border on Oct. 8, 2023, one day after a deadly Hamas-led incursion into southern Israel that sparked the war in Gaza. Israel responded with shelling and airstrikes in Lebanon, and the two sides became locked in an escalating conflict that became a full-blown war last September. More than 4,000 people were killed in Lebanon and more than 1 million were displaced at the height of the conflict, more than 100,000 of whom have not been able to return home. On the Israeli side, dozens of people were killed and some 60,000 are displaced.Hussein Fares left Kfar Kila in October 2023 for the southern city of Nabatiyeh. When the fighting intensified in September he moved with his family to the city of Sidon where they were given a room in a school housing displaced people.Kfar Kila saw intense fighting and Israeli troops later detonated many of its homes.I have been waiting for a year and the half to return, said Fares who has a pickup truck and works as a laborer. He said he understands that the reconstruction process will take time.I have been counting the seconds for this day, he said.___Associated Press writer Tia Goldenberg in Jerusalem contributed to this report.
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  • Hamas says it will free 6 living hostages and hand over four bodies, accelerating Gaza releases
    apnews.com
    Displaced Palestinians, traveling in vehicles, wait to cross through a security checkpoint at the Netzarim corridor as they make their way from central Gaza to the northern Gaza Strip, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)2025-02-18T13:21:25Z CAIRO (AP) A top Hamas leader says the militant group will release six living Israeli hostages on Saturday and the bodies of four others on Thursday, a surprise increase that apparently comes in return for Israel allowing mobile homes and construction equipment into the devastated Gaza Strip.The six are the last living hostages set to be freed under the ceasefires first phase. The warring sides have yet to negotiate the second and more difficult phase, in which Hamas says it will release dozens more hostages in exchange for a lasting ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal.Hamas leader Khalil al-Hayya, in prerecorded remarks, said the Bibas family would be included in the handover of four bodies, apparently referring to Shiri Bibas and her two young sons, Ariel and Kfir, who for many Israelis embody the captives plight.Israel has not confirmed their deaths, and the prime ministers office urged the public not to distribute photos, names and rumors. Israel has said it was gravely concerned about the Bibas family, while Hamas said they were killed in an Israeli airstrike early in the war. Yarden Bibas, the husband and father, was kidnapped separately and released this month. Kfir, who was 9 months old at the time, was the youngest hostage taken in Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, attack that triggered the war. A video of the abduction showed Shiri swaddling her redheaded boys in a blanket and being whisked away by armed men. An Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with regulations, said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had agreed to allow long-requested mobile homes and construction equipment into Gaza as part of efforts to accelerate the hostages release.Hamas last week threatened to hold up releases, citing the refusal to allow in mobile homes and heavy equipment among other alleged violations of the truce. Israel is expected to continue releasing hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, including many serving life sentences for deadly attacks, in exchange for the hostages. Others were detained without charge.The ceasefire that began in mid-January has paused the deadliest fighting ever between Israel and Hamas, surged aid into devastated Gaza and allowed hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to return to their homes as Israeli forces withdrew from much of the territory.Israelis and Palestinians marked 500 days of war on Monday.Major challenges are ahead. Israels government says it wants to eliminate Hamas military and governing capabilities in Gaza. But the militant group quickly reasserted its control of the territory during the ceasefire despite losing leaders and many fighters.In addition, U.S. President Donald Trump s proposal to relocate the Palestinians out of Gaza so the U.S. can redevelop the territory has been rejected by the Arab world and by the Palestinians, who fear theyll never be allowed to return. Egypt is working on a counter-plan to rebuild without moving Palestinians.Israel has embraced the plan, and it and the Trump administration have emphasized they share the same goals in the war. Israelis were horrified by the sight of three emaciated hostages in an earlier release this month, and revelations about hostages being held alone, barefoot or in chains have increased the pressure on Netanyahus government to push ahead with the ceasefires next phase.Under the current phase, Hamas is gradually releasing 33 Israeli hostages, eight of whom are believed to be dead. If the upcoming releases go as planned, four bodies will remain and are set to be returned next week.Hamas-led militants would still hold some 70 captives, around half believed to be dead.The ceasefires current phase ends at the beginning of March, and there are fears that fighting will resume. Talks on the second phase were to start early this month.The militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted around 250 in the Oct. 7 attack. More than half the captives have been released in ceasefire agreements and other deals, while eight have been rescued in military operations.Israels air and ground war killed over 48,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to Gazas Health Ministry, which does not say how many were combatants. The offensive destroyed vast areas of Gaza and displaced most of its population of 2.3 million. ___Melzer reported from Nahariya, Israel.___Follow APs war coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war
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  • UN human rights chief accuses Rwanda-backed rebels in east Congo of killing and recruiting children
    apnews.com
    M23 rebels guard outside the South Kivu province administrative office, at the centre of east Congo's second-largest city, Bukavu, Sunday, Feb. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/Janvier Barhahiga)2025-02-18T11:55:48Z DAKAR, Senegal (AP) The U.N. human rights chief accused Rwanda-backed rebels who seized a second major city in eastern Congo of killing children and attacking hospitals and warehouses storing humanitarian aid.Volker Trk said in a statement Tuesday that his office confirmed cases of summary execution of children by M23 after they entered the city of Bukavu last week. We are also aware that children were in possession of weapons.He provided no details or did not refer to specific events, but U.N. agencies have previously accused both Congolese government forces and the rebels of recruiting children. The United Nations Human Rights Council earlier this month launched a commission that will investigate atrocities, including rapes and killings akin to summary executions committed by both sides since the beginning of the year.The M23 rebels on Sunday captured Bukavu, the city of 1.3 million people, after seizing Goma, 100 kilometers (62 miles) to the north last month. At least 3,000 were reported killed and thousands displaced in the Goma fighting. Early Tuesday, the bodies of over 20 people were recovered in Bukavu, Franois Moreillon, from the International Committee of the Red Cross, told The Associated Press. The M23 is the most prominent of more than 100 armed groups vying for control of eastern Congos trillions of dollars in mineral wealth thats critical for much of the worlds technology. The rebels are supported by about 4,000 troops from neighboring Rwanda, according to U.N. experts. Rwanda accuses Congo of enlisting Hutu fighters responsible for the 1994 genocide of minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus. M23 says its fighting to protect Tutsis and Congolese of Rwandan origin from discrimination and wants to transform Congo from a failed into a modern state though critics say its a pretext for Rwandas involvement. Unlike in 2012, when the M23 briefly seized Goma and withdrew after international pressure, analysts have said the rebels this time are eyeing political power.The decades-long fighting has displaced more than 6 million people in the region, creating the worlds largest humanitarian crisis.
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  • Attacks by Sudanese RSF paramilitaries leave hundreds dead in White Nile State
    apnews.com
    This is a locator map for Sudan with its capital, Khartoum. (AP Photo)2025-02-18T14:12:55Z CAIRO (AP) Attacks by Sudans paramilitary Rapid Support Force have killed hundreds of civilians, including infants, in White Nile state, Sudanese officials and rights groups said Tuesday.Sudans Foreign Ministry said in a statement cited by Egyptian state-run Qahera News TV that the paramilitary group targeted civilians in the past few days in villages in the al-Gitaina area after they were certain of their crushing defeat by the Sudanese army. The statement put the death toll at 433, while the Preliminary Committee of Sudan Doctors Trade Union put that figure at 300. Emergency Lawyers, a rights group tracking violence against civilians, said in a statement Tuesday morning that more than 200 people, including women and children, were killed in RSF attacks and hundreds of others were injured over the past three days.The attacks included executions, kidnapping, forced disappearance, looting, and shooting those trying to escape, the group said. Minister of Culture and Information Khalid Ali Aleisir said on Facebook that recent attacks by the RSF in Al-Kadaris and Al-Khalwat villages in White Nile state are the latest systematic violence against defenseless civilians. The Sudanese military said Saturday it had advanced in White Nile and liberated more cities and villages, cutting crucial supply routes to the RSF, a rival group it has battled for control of the country since April 2023. The war in Sudan has killed more than 24,000 people and driven over 14 million people about 30% of the population from their homes, according to the United Nations. An estimated 3.2 million Sudanese have crossed into neighboring countries including Chad, Egypt and South Sudan.The U.N. on Tuesday said that throughout 2024, its human rights office documented more than 4,200 civilian killings, adding that the total number is likely much higher. Meanwhile, Norways Minister of International Development smund Aukrust denounced an escalation in violence and attacks against civilians.I am deeply concerned about the sharp increase in civilian deaths caused by the intensified conflict in Sudan. I am also shocked by reports of indiscriminate attacks against civilians and civilian infrastructure. Any such attacks must stop immediately, Aukrust said.The developments on the ground have given the military the upper hand in the war as the paramilitary suffered multiple blows, including losing control of the city of Wad Medani, the capital of Gezira province, and other areas in the province. The Sudanese military also regained control of the countrys largest oil refinery.The RSF appears to have lost control of the Greater Khartoum area and the cities of Omdurman and Khartoum Bahri.The war has showed no end in sight despite international mediation attempts, including a U.S. assessment that the RSF and its proxies are committing genocide.
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  • Leonard Peltier leaves prison after Biden commuted his sentence in the killing of two FBI agents
    apnews.com
    American Indian activist Leonard Peltier speaks during an interview at the U.S. Penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kan., April 29, 1999. (Joe Ledford/The Kansas City Star via AP, File)2025-02-18T05:01:32Z SUMTERVILLE, Fla. (AP) Native American activist Leonard Peltier was released from a Florida prison on Tuesday, weeks after then-President Joe Biden angered law enforcement officials by commuting his life sentence in the 1975 killings of two FBI agents.For nearly half a century, Peltiers imprisonment has symbolized systemic injustice for Native Americans across the country who believe in his innocence. The decision to release the 80-year-old to home confinement was celebrated by supporters.He represents every person whos been roughed up by a cop, profiled, had their children harassed at school, said Nick Estes, a professor of American Indian Studies at the University of Minnesota and a member of the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe who advocated for Peltiers release.But the move just before Biden left office also prompted criticism from those who say Peltier is guilty, including former FBI Director Christopher Wray, who called him a remorseless killer in a private letter to Biden obtained by The Associated Press. Granting Peltier any relief from his conviction or sentence is wholly unjustified and would be an affront to the rule of law, Wray wrote. The commutation was not a pardon for crimes committed, something Peltiers advocates have hoped for since he has always maintained his innocence.Peltier left the prison Tuesday morning in an SUV, according to a prison official. He didnt stop to speak with reporters or his supporters outside the gates. One of his attorneys, Jenipher Jones, said Peltier was looking forward to going home.Were so excited for this moment, Jones said. He is in good spirits. He has the soul of a warrior.After being released from USP Coleman, a high-security prison, Peltier planned to return to North Dakota, where he is expected to celebrate with friends and family on Wednesday.Biden commuted Peltiers sentence Jan. 20, noting he had spent most of his life in prison and was now in poor health. We never thought he would get out, Ray St. Clair, a member of the White Earth Band of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe, said shortly before Peltiers release. It shows you should never give up hope. We can take this repairing the damage that was done. This is a start.Peltier, an enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians in North Dakota, was active in the American Indian Movement, which beginning in the 1960s fought for Native American treaty rights and tribal self-determination.The group grabbed headlines in 1969 when activists occupied the former prison island of Alcatraz in the San Francisco Bay, and again in 1972, when they presented presidential candidates with a list of demands including the restoration of tribal land. After they were ignored, they seized the headquarters of the Bureau of Indian Affairs.From then on, the group was subject to FBI surveillance and harassment under a covert program that sought to disrupt activism and was exposed in 1975. Peltiers conviction stemmed from a confrontation that year on the Oglala Sioux Indian Reservation in Pine Ridge, South Dakota, in which FBI agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams were killed. According to the FBI, the agents were there to serve arrest warrants for robbery and assault with a dangerous weapon. Prosecutors maintained at trial that Peltier shot both agents in the head at point-blank range. Peltier acknowledged being present and firing a gun at a distance, but he said he fired in self-defense. A woman who claimed to have seen Peltier shoot the agents later recanted her testimony, saying it had been coerced.He was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder and given two consecutive life sentences.Two other movement members, co-defendants Robert Robideau and Dino Butler, were acquitted on the grounds of self-defense.Peltier was denied parole as recently as July and was not eligible to be considered for it again until 2026.Leonard Peltiers release is the right thing to do given the serious and ongoing human rights concerns about the fairness of his trial, his nearly 50 years behind bars, his health and his age, Paul OBrien, executive director with Amnesty International USA, said in a statement before Peltiers release. While we welcome his release from prison, he should not be restricted to home confinement. Prominent Native American groups like the National Congress of the American Indian have called for Peltiers release for decades, and Amnesty International considered him a political prisoner. Prominent supporters over the years included South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu, civil rights icon Coretta Scott King, actor and director Robert Redford and musicians Pete Seeger, Harry Belafonte and Jackson Browne.Generations of Indigenous activists and leaders lobbied multiple presidents to pardon Peltier. Former Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, a member of the Pueblo of Laguna and the first Native American to hold the secretarys position, praised Bidens decision. I am grateful that Leonard can now go home to his family, she said Jan. 20 in a post on X. I applaud President Biden for this action and understanding what this means to Indian Country. As a young child, Peltier was taken from his family and sent to a boarding school. Thousands of Indigenous children over decades faced the same fate, and were in many cases subjected to systemic physical, psychological and sexual abuse. He hasnt really had a home since he was taken away to boarding school, said Nick Tilsen, who has been advocating for Peltiers release since he was a teen and is CEO of NDN Collective, an Indigenous-led advocacy group based in South Dakota. So he is excited to be at home and paint and have grandkids running around.___Brewer reported from Norman, Oklahoma. GRAHAM LEE BREWER Brewer reports for the APs Race and Ethnicity team, focusing on Indigenous communities and tribal nations. He is a citizen of the Cherokee Nation and is based in Oklahoma. twitter mailto
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  • Why Is a Government Contractor Trying to Buy iPhone Hacking Tech From Us?
    www.404media.co
    On January 24 we received a pretty unusual email. The sender, a procurement officer from government contractor Cirrus Systems, wanted to buy multiple licenses for Graykey, the iPhone and Android hacking technology widely used by U.S. law enforcement and agencies.Hello sales Team, I hope this email finds you well, the email started. I would be grateful if you provide us with best/lowest price quote for the following items for Federals demand. Please assist in me in the below.This was a government contractor trying to buy a phone hacking tool directly from a group of journalists. So, pretty weird.The email included a table laying out how many licenses Cirrus Systems is after (it looks like four). A statement of work (SOW) then lists what specific capabilities the desired system must be capable of doing. They include full forensic acquisition capability for the latest generations of iOS as implemented on the latest iPhone (iPhone 16 at this time) cellular telephones, and the same for the latest generations of Android.Graykey, owned by the company Magnet Forensics, is a staple across local, state, and federal U.S. law enforcement agencies, with officials using it constantly to unlock and extract data from seized mobile phones. Recently 404 Media published a never-before-seen list of what specific devices Graykey was able to access. On its website, Magent says that Graykey is restricted to select countries. Graykey is not available to the private sector.A screenshot of the email. Image: 404 Media.The end user, the email said, would be Washington Headquarters Services (WHS), an agency that provides human resources, personnel security, and other services to the Office of the Secretary of Defense and other Department of Defense components. The date of closing was February 13, the email added.The contractor does business as Cirrus Systems but the company itself is called FSR Consulting LLC, according to the email. FSR Consultings customers include the U.S. Coast Guard, the Department of Energy, the National Institutes of Health, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the Navy, the Air Force, and other government agencies, according to public procurement records.Do you know anything else about Graykey? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at +44 20 8133 5190. Otherwise, send me an email at joseph@404media.co.Weirdly, this isnt the first time someone has tried to buy something from me that is typically limited to just governments. In 2019 a Saudi cybersecurity company wanted to source zero day exploits from me.I dont know whether WHS got the Graykeys it was after. Plenty of other agencies have, though. One procurement record this month points to Graykey license renewals for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.Neither Cirrus Systems or the DoD responded to a request for comment.
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  • GOOD NEWS: LGBTQ Youth Activists in Texas Curb Censorship and New Jersey Law Protects Transgender Students from Discrimination
    glaad.org
    Major legal victories break through the anti-LGBTQ fury of the current administration and anti-LGBTQ politicians against youth and teen populations across the country. In Texas, the student-led policy organization Students Engaged in Advancing Texas (SEAT) championed additional temporary injunctions on a Texas law barring freedom of speech for minors. Meanwhile, New Jersey Superior Court upheld [...]The post GOOD NEWS: LGBTQ Youth Activists in Texas Curb Censorship and New Jersey Law Protects Transgender Students from Discrimination first appeared on GLAAD.
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  • All 80 aboard a Delta jet survive after it flips then bursts into flames on a Toronto runway
    apnews.com
    This image taken from video provided by CTV shows an aerial view of the overturned plane at Toronto Pearson Airport, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (CTV via AP)2025-02-18T16:35:47Z TORONTO (AP) The Delta Air Lines jet came down fast, wobbled so hard that it lost its right wing, and burst into flames on a runway in Toronto. The aircraft slid to a stop, upside down, leaving a trail of black smoke in its wake. Miraculously, all 80 people on board the flight from Minneapolis to Torontos Pearson International Airport survived the crash Monday. Most of them walked away with minor injuries, the airports chief executive said. Delta said some of the 18 injured were released from hospitals Tuesday.Authorities said the cause of the crash remains under investigation. Communications between the tower and pilot were normal on approach and its not clear what went wrong when the plane touched down. At the time of the flights arrival, Pearson was experiencing blowing snow and winds of 32 mph (51 kph) gusting to 40 mph (65 kph), according to the Meteorological Service of Canada. The temperature was about 16.5 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 8.6 degrees Celsius). Peter Carlson, a passenger traveling to Toronto for a paramedics conference, said the landing was very forceful.All the sudden everything just kind of went sideways and the next thing I know, its kind of a blink and Im upside down still strapped in, he told CBC News. Canadian authorities held two brief news conferences Monday but provided few details. The aircraft was a Mitsubishi CRJ-900 made by the Canadian company Bombardier. We are very grateful there was no loss of life and relatively minor injuries, Deborah Flint, CEO of Greater Toronto Airports Authority, told reporters. Delta CEO Ed Bastian said in a statement that the hearts of the entire global Delta family are with those affected. The crash was the fourth major aviation accident in North America in recent weeks. A commercial jetliner and an Army helicopter collided near Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 29, killing 67 people. A medical transportation plane crashed in Philadelphia on Jan. 31, killing the six people on board and another person on the ground. And on Feb. 6, 10 people were killed in a plane crash in Alaska. The last major crash at Pearson was on Aug. 2, 2005, when an Airbus A340 from Paris skidded off the runway and burst into flames in stormy weather. All 309 passengers and crew aboard Air France Flight 358 survived.The Delta flight was cleared to land at about 2:10 p.m. Audio recordings show the control tower warned the pilots of a possible air flow bump on approach. It was windy, but the airplanes are designed and certified to handle that, said John Cox, CEO of aviation safety consulting firm Safety Operating Systems in St. Petersburg, Florida. The pilots are trained and experienced to handle that.The plane came to a rest at the intersection of Runways 23 and 15L. Carlson said when he took off his seat belt he crashed onto the ceiling, which had become the floor. He smelled gas, saw aviation fuel cascading down the cabin windows and knew he needed to get out, but his paramedic skills kicked in and he looked for those he could help. Carlson and another man assisted a mother and her young son out of the plane and then Carlson dropped onto the tarmac. He said snow was blowing but I didnt care how cold it was, didnt care how far I had to walk, how long I had to stand all of us just wanted to be out of the aircraft.Cox, who flew for U.S. Air for 25 years and has worked on U.S. National Transportation Safety Board investigations, said the CRJ-900 has been in service for decades and does a good job of handling inclement weather, but that its unusual for any plane to end up on its roof. Weve seen a couple of cases of takeoffs where airplanes have ended up inverted, but its pretty rare, Cox said.Among the questions that need to be answered, Cox said, is why the crashed plane was missing its right wing. He said the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder will be imperative to understanding what actually occurred.The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement that the Transportation Safety Board of Canada would head up the investigation and provide any updates. The NTSB in the U.S. said it was sending a team to assist.Endeavor Air, based in Minneapolis, is a subsidiary of Delta Air Lines and the worlds largest operator of CRJ-900 aircraft. The airline operates 130 regional jets on 700 daily flights to over 126 cities in the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean, according to the companys website. ___Casey reported from Concord, New Hampshire. Associated Press journalists Michael Sisak in New York, Jack Dura in Bismarck, North Dakota, Alex Veiga in Los Angeles, and Jim Morris in Vancouver, British Columbia, contributed reporting. MICHAEL CASEY Casey writes about the environment, housing and inequality for The Associated Press. He lives in Boston. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Arctic air sweeping south over Plains shatters record temperatures in North Dakota
    apnews.com
    People shovel snow to dig out their cars in Montreal, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025, after over 70 centimetres of snow fell in 4 days, breaking a snowfall record in the city. (Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press via AP)2025-02-18T16:41:05Z BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) North Dakota felt more like the North Pole on Tuesday as lows broke records in the state capital of Bismarck and other parts of the state that had stood for more than a century.Bismarck hit minus 39 on Tuesday, breaking the record of minus 37 (-38.3 C) set in 1910 for the same date, said National Weather Service Meteorologist James Telken in Bismarck. And late on Monday, Bismarck set a record of minus 35, shattering a 150-year-old record of minus 30 for the date of Feb. 17.Much of the Midwest including Iowa, Minnesota and Nebraska also is gripped by low temperatures double digits below zero. People should make sure to bundle up with hats, jackets and other winter gear even if they are outside for only a few minutes in such subzero cold, and they should bring pets indoors, Telken said. Warm clothing is especially important for drivers should they become stranded, he added. A gradual warmup is expected with lows on Wednesday night across most of North Dakota forecasted to be in the minus 10s to minus 20s. By Thursday, lows are projected to be in the single digits above and below zero.Forecasted highs for Monday are in the 50s for parts of southwestern and south-central North Dakota, he said. JACK DURA Dura covers the North Dakota state government for The Associated Press. He is based in Bismarck, North Dakota. twitter mailto
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  • Sidelined by Trump, Macron tries to rally Europe on Ukraine. But divisions run deep
    apnews.com
    French President Emmanuel Macron, center right, walks with Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, center left, as she leaves the Elysee Palace, after an informal meeting of leaders from key European Union nations and the United Kingdom, in Paris, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Aurelien Morissard)2025-02-18T16:29:44Z PARIS (AP) French President Emmanuel Macron painted a veneer of European unity by inviting a small number of handpicked European leaders to the lyse Palace, while the Trump administration sidelined the continent by moving ahead with direct negotiations on Tuesday with Russia on the war in Ukraine. But beneath the diplomatic pageantry, cracks in European consensus were hard to ignore.One question loomed: Could Europe take charge of its own security, or would it remain reactive to U.S. and Russian decisions?From Macrons push for European-led defense to Keir Starmers third way diplomacy, Giorgia Melonis balancing act between Brussels and Washington, and Olaf Scholz s resistance to breaking with NATO, Europe remains divided on its next move. France Macron seeks to take the leadBy hosting the Monday summit in his Parisian palace, Macron reinforced his image of the imperial French Sun King and his bid to become the dominant voice on Ukraine and European security. With Germanys Scholz politically weakened and potentially soon out of office, the U.K. outside the EU, and Italy leaning toward Trump, Macron has emerged as the blocs de facto leader in a push for strategic autonomy.With a presidential mandate until 2027 and Frances nuclear arsenal making it Europes only atomic power, Macron has positioned himself as the only politician with both the ambition and authority to act. His proposal for a European-led security force in Ukraine, even in a limited training and logistics role, fits into his broader push for a continent less dependent on Washington. But forging consensus is proving difficult: Germany is resisting, key frontline EU nations were left out of the summit, and Trumps unpredictability clouds Europes security outlook.Macron has sought to impose himself as Europes strongman, said French political analyst Jean-Yves Camus. United Kingdom Starmers third way strategyKeir Starmer is charting a different course, positioning himself as Europes key link to Washington while maintaining a firm pro-Ukraine stance. Having met Trump before the election I like him a lot, the U.S. president said the British prime minister is set to travel to Washington next week in what some see as an effort to bridge the U.S.-Europe divide, and a hallmark of the special relationship.While Trump moves toward de-escalation in Ukraine, Starmer is doubling down on support for Kyiv, stating the U.K. is ready and willing to send British troops if necessary. This stance stands in contrast to Macron and Scholzs more cautious approach.Starmers surprising decision not to sign a key international declaration on the future of AI last week aligning with the U.S. rather than the EU has raised questions about whether Britain is shifting closer to Washington on broader geopolitical issues. The U.K. is unique in that its practically the only major ally that Trump hasnt purposefully antagonized since his inauguration, said Anand Sundar, a special advisor at the European Council on Foreign Relations. The Starmer government is doing everything it can to not put a target on its back.Some analysts suggest Starmer is positioning himself as Trumps European whisperer, able to influence the White House while staying in step with Europe. Italy Melonis balancing actGiorgia Meloni, a Trump ally and the only leader of a major European economy to attend his inauguration in January, arrived late to the Paris summit and left without making a public statement moves observers saw as signs of skepticism toward the meeting.According to Italian news agency ANSA, Meloni questioned why the summit was held in Paris rather than Brussels, the EUs natural decision-making hub, and criticized the exclusion of frontline states such as the Baltic nations, Sweden, and Finland.At the summit, she pushed back against deploying European troops to Ukraine, calling it the most complex and least effective option - especially without firm security guarantees for Kyiv.Observers noted that Meloni echoed some of U.S. Vice President JD Vances criticism of Europes reliance on U.S. protection. We shouldnt be asking what the Americans can do for us, but what we must do for ourselves, she said, according to ANSA.Despite her skepticism, Meloni still engaged in the talks, bringing Italys concerns over long-term European military commitments to the table. Hungary Orbans absenceNotably absent from the Paris talks was Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbn, a close Trump ally and frequent critic of EU policies. While no official reason was given for his exclusion, some observers saw it as a pointed message from Paris and its European allies about the limits of engagement with leaders seen as too closely aligned with Trumps worldview.Germany Scholzs irritation If Macron is stepping forward, Scholz is pushing back. At the summit, the German Chancellor rejected Macrons proposal for a European-led security force in Ukraine, calling it completely premature and highly inappropriate given the ongoing war.Scholz didnt hide his frustration, saying he was a little irritated that peacekeeping forces were even being discussed at the wrong time. He insisted NATO not an independent European force must remain the foundation of security.Due to its historical legacy from the world wars, some argue that Germany has always been willing to cede European security leadership to France, a role the French have pursued since President Charles de Gaulle. At the same time, the debate over military spending is intensifying, as NATO officials stress the alliances 2% GDP target is now a baseline rather than a cap.
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  • What to know about the airplane that crashed and flipped while landing at Torontos airport
    apnews.com
    This image taken from video provided by CTV shows an aerial view of the overturned plane at Toronto Pearson Airport, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (CTV via AP)2025-02-18T16:18:37Z A passenger jet flipped onto its roof while landing in Toronto, Canada, the fourth major aviation accident in North America in the past three weeks. While at least 18 people were injured, all 80 people on board the Delta Air Lines flight from Minneapolis survived the crash Monday. Here are some things to know about the crash: What caused the airplane to flip?Communications between the tower at Torontos Pearson International Airport and the pilot were normal on approach and right now its not clear what went wrong when the plane touched down.Were strong winds a factor in the crash?Toronto Pearson Fire Chief Todd Aitken has said the runway was dry and there was no cross-wind conditions.Audio recordings indicate that the control tower warned the pilots of a possible air flow bump on the approach. Winds were gusting up to 40 mph (65 kph) during the day at the airport, according to the Meteorological Service of Canada. But airplanes and pilots should be equipped to handle those kind of winds while landing, said John Cox, CEO of aviation safety consulting firm Safety Operating Systems in Florida. Were the passengers badly injured? Those hurt had relatively minor injuries, the airports chief executive said. The airport fire chief said 18 passengers were taken to the hospital. An air ambulance operator said it had transported one pediatric patient and two adults to hospitals. Delta said Tuesday that some of those injured had been released. What happened inside the plane? One passenger told told CBC News that he found himself upside down and still strapped in his seat after a forceful landing. Peter Carlson said he crashed onto the ceiling when he took off his seat belt and smelled gas. He and another man helped a mother and her young son out of the plane before getting out. Who is investigating? The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said the Transportation Safety Board of Canada will lead the investigation. The National Transportation Safety Board in the U.S. said it was sending a team to assist. Is it safe to fly?The fourth major aviation accident in North America in less than a month has many people concerned about the safety of flying. Fatal crashes remain rare and the track record of U.S. airlines is remarkably safe.But there have been deadly crashes recently around the world and U.S. officials have been raising concerns about an overtaxed and understaffed air traffic control system for years___Associated Press writers John Wawrow and Michael Casey contributed to this report. JOHN SEEWER Seewer covers state and national news for The Associated Press and is based in Toledo, Ohio. twitter mailto
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  • The Gayming Awards & WOW Presents Plus team up for an epic celebration of LGBTQ+ video games
    www.pride.com
    Hello, hello, hello, gaymers! The biggest night in LGBTQ+ gaming, the Gayming Awards 2025, has a new streaming home: WOW Presents Plus. Today, Gayming Magazine and World of Wonder released a joint press release announcing that the fifth annual Gayming Awards will air globally, exclusively on the streaming platform on Tuesday, July 8. Its a development that Robin Gray, Gayming Magazine & Gayming Awards founder, has been building toward for years. From the very beginning, weve always sought to establish the Gayming Awards as a key cultural moment, and with the Gayming Awards 2025 broadcasting on the biggest and best LGBTQ+ streaming platform, Im thrilled to see this journey take its next big step, Gray stated in the announcement. At a time where LGBTQ+ rights and culture are being erased, the Gayming Awards stand proudly and firmly as a key beacon of hope in uplifting, celebrating and uniting our community through the power of video games. A huge thank you to World of Wonder for believing in our mission and giving us this awesome platform.Were excited to announce that Awards Season just got a little bit gayer. WOW Presents Plus, the #1 place in the world to watch Drag Race, is holding space for queer video game excellence as the exclusive streamer of the Gayming Awards, added Randy Barbato and Fenton Bailey, co-founders of World of Wonder.Last year, the event saw more than 1.4 million viewers either live or via social clips, so the move to streaming was the natural next step for the event, which celebrates queer excellence across the video gaming world. This year also sees some changes as well as some additions to the list of categories including the LGBTQ+ Voice Actor of the Year, Community Impact Award, and LGBTQ+ Content Creator of the Year. Once again, they will be honoring winners in the categories of the Game of the Year, Authentic Representation Award, and Best LGBTQ+ Character Award. Best LGBTQ+ Indie Game Award, and more. The Gayming Awards 2025 are sponsored by MyNerdLife and Gay Water. More sponsors and supporters will be revealed soon. Submissions are now open at GaymingAwards.com.
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  • Jennifer Lopez and Troye Sivan to Headline Historic WorldPride Music Festival Alongside Other Stars in Washington, D.C.
    gayety.co
    The WorldPride Music Festival is set to be an unforgettable celebration, with global superstars Jennifer Lopez and Troye Sivan leading a star-studded lineup of artists at RFK Festival Grounds in Washington, D.C. on June 6 and 7. The festival, which marks the 50th anniversary of Pride in the nations capital, is poised to be the largest LGBTQ+ music festival in history and the focal point ofSource
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  • Leader of cultlike Zizians linked to 6 killings ordered held without bail in Maryland
    apnews.com
    This image taken from video provided by WCAX shows police cars closing off a road after a shooting involving a U.S. Border Patrol agent on Interstate 91 near Coventry, Vt., on Jan. 20, 2025. (WCAX via AP, File)2025-02-18T15:25:37Z CUMBERLAND, Md. (AP) A Maryland court on Tuesday ordered a blogger known as Ziz who leads a cultlike group connected to six killings held without bail.The blogger, Jack LaSota, 34, of Berkeley, California, was arrested Sunday along with Michelle Zajko, 32, of Media, Pennsylvania, and Daniel Blank, 26, of Sacramento, California. They face charges including trespassing, obstructing and hindering and possession of a handgun in a vehicle.The Zizians have been tied to the killing of U.S. Border Patrol Agent David Maland near the Canadian border in January and five other killings in three states.LaSota, Zajko and Blank were arrested in Frostburg, Maryland, on Sunday afternoon.The judge in the case ordered LaSota held without bail citing concerns about her being a flight risk and a danger to public safety. Prosecutors said LaSota appears to be the leader of an extremist group known as Zizians that has been linked to killings. The three were expected to appear remotely for a bail hearing Tuesday at Allegany District Court in Cumberland, Maryland, court officials said.The Zizians have been tied to the death of a woman during an attack on a California landlord in November 2022, the landlords subsequent slaying in January, the December 2022 deaths of Zajkos parents in Pennsylvania and a highway shootout last month in Vermont that left U.S. Border Patrol Agent David Maland and a car passenger dead. A Frostburg resident told police he wanted three suspicious people off his property after theyd parked two box trucks there and asked to camp for a month, according to police documents. They were dressed in black and two wore gun belts holding ammunition, according to police. Officers found a rifle in the back of one truck and a handgun on the front floorboard. Zajko, who refused to put her hands behind her back and was taken to the ground, also was carrying a handgun, police said. Maland, 44, was killed in a Jan. 20 shootout following a traffic stop in Coventry, Vermont, a small town about 20 miles (32 kilometers) from the Canadian border. Felix Bauckholt, a passenger in the car, also died, and the driver, Teresa Youngblut, has pleaded not guilty to federal firearms charges.Officials have said the guns they were carrying were bought by a person of interest in the Dec. 31, 2022, deaths of Richard and Rita Zajko in Chester Heights, Pennsylvania, and that Youngblut had been in close contact with a person of interest in a homicide in Vallejo, California.Maximilian Snyder, who applied for a marriage license with Youngblut in November, is charged with the Jan. 17 stabbing death of Curtis Lind, a Vallejo landlord who had survived an earlier attack by members of the Zizian group and was set to testify against them. Officials have offered few details of the cross-country investigation, but Associated Press interviews and a review of court records and online postings tell the story of how a group of young, highly intelligent computer scientists, most of them in their 20s and 30s, met online, shared anarchist beliefs, and became increasingly violent. Their goals arent clear, but online writings included topics such as radical veganism, gender identity and artificial intelligence.At the middle of it all is Ziz, the leader of the strange group whose members are sometimes called Zizians in online forums.LaSota published a dark and sometimes violent blog under the name Ziz and, in one section, described her theory that the two hemispheres of the brain could hold separate values and genders and often desire to kill each other.LaSota, who used she/her pronouns, and in her writings says she is a transgender woman, railed against perceived enemies, including so-called rationalist groups, which operate mostly online and seek to understand human cognition through reason and knowledge. Some are concerned with the potential dangers of artificial intelligence.LaSota has not responded to emails from the AP in recent weeks, and her attorney Daniel McGarrigle declined to comment on whether she is connected to any of the deaths. Shes wanted for arrest in two states for missing court appearances. McGarrigle would only confirm Monday that he has represented LaSota and wouldnt confirm her arrest or any details of the latest case. Attempts to reach attorneys for Zajko and Blank were not successful.Pennsylvania state police records describe Daniel Blank as Michelle Zajkos housemate in Vermont. In January 2023, police investigating the shooting deaths of Zajkos parents detained both LaSota and Blank at a hotel where Zajko was staying. Blank was not charged. LaSota was charged with obstructing law enforcement and disorderly conduct.___Associated Press writer Michael Casey in Boston contributed to this story. PATRICK WHITTLE Whittle is an Associated Press reporter based in Portland, Maine. He focuses on the environment and oceans. twitter mailto
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  • As Israel uses US-made AI models in war, concerns arise about techs role in who lives and who dies
    apnews.com
    Relatives of Samira Ayoub, and her three granddaughters, Rimas, 14; Taline, 12, and Liane, 10, weep over their coffins in the town of Ainata, south Lebanon, Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2023, after they were killed in an Israeli drone strike while in a car near the Lebanon-Israel border. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari, File)2025-02-18T12:06:02Z TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) U.S. tech giants have quietly empowered Israel to track and kill many more alleged militants more quickly in Gaza and Lebanon through a sharp spike in artificial intelligence and computing services. But the number of civilians killed has also soared, fueling fears that these tools are contributing to the deaths of innocent people.Militaries have for years hired private companies to build custom autonomous weapons. However, Israels recent wars mark a leading instance in which commercial AI models made in the United States have been used in active warfare, despite concerns that they were not originally developed to help decide who lives and who dies.The Israeli military uses AI to sift through vast troves of intelligence, intercepted communications and surveillance to find suspicious speech or behavior and learn the movements of its enemies. After a deadly surprise attack by Hamas militants on Oct. 7, 2023, its use of Microsoft and OpenAI technology skyrocketed, an Associated Press investigation found. The investigation also revealed new details of how AI systems select targets and ways they can go wrong, including faulty data or flawed algorithms. It was based on internal documents, data and exclusive interviews with current and former Israeli officials and company employees.This is the first confirmation we have gotten that commercial AI models are directly being used in warfare, said Heidy Khlaaf, chief AI scientist at the AI Now Institute and former senior safety engineer at OpenAI. The implications are enormous for the role of tech in enabling this type of unethical and unlawful warfare going forward. This compilation video of airstrikes by the Israel Defense Forces was part of a post on the agencys website in February 2023 describing the Israeli militarys use of artificial intelligence systems in the war in Gaza. The rise of AI As U.S. tech titans ascend to prominent roles under President Donald Trump, the APs findings raise questions about Silicon Valleys role in the future of automated warfare. Microsoft expects its partnership with the Israeli military to grow, and what happens with Israel may help determine the use of these emerging technologies around the world.The Israeli militarys usage of Microsoft and OpenAI artificial intelligence spiked last March to nearly 200 times higher than before the week leading up to the Oct. 7 attack, the AP found in reviewing internal company information. The amount of data it stored on Microsoft servers doubled between that time and July 2024 to more than 13.6 petabytes roughly 350 times the digital memory needed to store every book in the Library of Congress. Usage of Microsofts huge banks of computer servers by the military also rose by almost two-thirds in the first two months of the war alone. Israels goal after the attack that killed about 1,200 people and took over 250 hostages was to eradicate Hamas, and its military has called AI a game changer in yielding targets more swiftly. Since the war started, more than 50,000 people have died in Gaza and Lebanon and nearly 70% of the buildings in Gaza have been devastated, according to health ministries in Gaza and Lebanon. The APs investigation drew on interviews with six current and former members of the Israeli army, including three reserve intelligence officers. Most spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss sensitive military operations.The AP also interviewed 14 current and former employees inside Microsoft, OpenAI, Google and Amazon, most of whom also spoke anonymously for fear of retribution. Journalists reviewed internal company data and documents, including one detailing the terms of a $133 million contract between Microsoft and Israels Ministry of Defense.The Israeli military says its analysts use AI-enabled systems to help identify targets but independently examine them together with high-ranking officers to meet international law, weighing the military advantage against the collateral damage. A senior Israeli intelligence official authorized to speak to the AP said lawful military targets may include combatants fighting against Israel, wherever they are, and buildings used by militants. Officials insist that even when AI plays a role, there are always several layers of humans in the loop.These AI tools make the intelligence process more accurate and more effective, said an Israeli military statement to the AP. They make more targets faster, but not at the expense of accuracy, and many times in this war theyve been able to minimize civilian casualties.The Israeli military declined to answer detailed written questions from the AP about its use of commercial AI products from American tech companies.Microsoft declined to comment for this story and did not respond to a detailed list of written questions about cloud and AI services provided to the Israeli military. In a statement on its website, the company says it is committed to champion the positive role of technology across the globe. In its 40-page Responsible AI Transparency Report for 2024, Microsoft pledges to manage the risks of AI throughout development to reduce the risk of harm, and does not mention its lucrative military contracts. Have a news tip?Contact APs global investigative team at [emailprotected]. For secure and confidential communications, use the free Signal app +1 (202) 281-8604. Advanced AI models are provided through OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, through Microsofts Azure cloud platform, where they are purchased by the Israeli military, the documents and data show. Microsoft has been OpenAIs largest investor. OpenAI said it does not have a partnership with Israels military, and its usage policies say its customers should not use its products to develop weapons, destroy property or harm people. About a year ago, however, OpenAI changed its terms of use from barring military use to allowing for national security use cases that align with our mission. Relatives of Samira Ayoub, and her three granddaughters, Rimas, 14; Taline, 12, and Liane, 10, weep over their coffins in the town of Ainata, south Lebanon, Nov. 7, 2023, after they were killed in an Israeli drone strike while in a car near the Lebanon-Israel border. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari, File) Relatives of Samira Ayoub, and her three granddaughters, Rimas, 14; Taline, 12, and Liane, 10, weep over their coffins in the town of Ainata, south Lebanon, Nov. 7, 2023, after they were killed in an Israeli drone strike while in a car near the Lebanon-Israel border. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari, File) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Students display a poster of the three sisters, Liane, 10; Taline, 12, and Rimas, 14, who were killed with their grandmother, Samira Ayoub, by an Israeli airstrike days earlier, during a protest in front of the headquarters of U.N. Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) in Beirut, Lebanon, Nov. 9, 2023. Arabic words read, From Ainata to Gaza, living children on the path to Jerusalem (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein, File) Students display a poster of the three sisters, Liane, 10; Taline, 12, and Rimas, 14, who were killed with their grandmother, Samira Ayoub, by an Israeli airstrike days earlier, during a protest in front of the headquarters of U.N. Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) in Beirut, Lebanon, Nov. 9, 2023. Arabic words read, From Ainata to Gaza, living children on the path to Jerusalem (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein, File) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More The human toll of AIIts extremely hard to identify when AI systems enable errors because they are used with so many other forms of intelligence, including human intelligence, sources said. But together they can lead to wrongful deaths.In November 2023, Hoda Hijazi was fleeing with her three young daughters and her mother from clashes between Israel and Hamas ally Hezbollah on the Lebanese border when their car was bombed.Before they left, the adults told the girls to play in front of the house so that Israeli drones would know they were traveling with children. The women and girls drove alongside Hijazis uncle, Samir Ayoub, a journalist with a leftist radio station, who was caravanning in his own car. They heard the frenetic buzz of a drone very low overhead. Soon, an airstrike hit the car Hijazi was driving. It careened down a slope and burst into flames. Ayoub managed to pull Hijazi out, but her mother Ayoubs sister and the three girls Rimas, 14, Taline, 12, and Liane, 10 were dead. In this footage from a store's security camera video, members of the Hijazi family get into a car in the Lebanese border village of Bilda, headed toward Beirut on Sunday, Nov. 5, 2023. (AP Photo) Before they left their home, Hijazi recalled, one of the girls had insisted on taking pictures of the cats in the garden because maybe we wont see them again. In the end, she said, the cats survived and the girls are gone.Video footage from a security camera at a convenience store shortly before the strike showed the Hijazi family in a Hyundai SUV, with the mother and one of the girls loading jugs of water. The family says the video proves Israeli drones should have seen the women and children.The day after the family was hit, the Israeli military released video of the strike along with a package of similar videos and photos. A statement released with the images said Israeli fighter jets had struck just over 450 Hamas targets. The APs visual analysis matched the road and other geographical features in the Israeli military video to satellite imagery of the location where the three girls died, 1 mile (1.7 kilometers) from the store.An Israeli intelligence officer told the AP that AI has been used to help pinpoint all targets in the past three years. In this case, AI likely pinpointed a residence, and other intelligence gathering could have placed a person there. At some point, the car left the residence. This satellite image shows where the family stopped at a convenience store before an Israeli airstrike hit their car about one mile away. (AP Marshall Ritzel/Planet Labs) This satellite image shows where the family stopped at a convenience store before an Israeli airstrike hit their car about one mile away. (AP Marshall Ritzel/Planet Labs) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Humans in the target room would have decided to strike. The error could have happened at any point, he said: Previous faulty information could have flagged the wrong residence, or they could have hit the wrong vehicle.The AP also saw a message from a second source with knowledge of that airstrike who confirmed it was a mistake, but didnt elaborate. A spokesperson for the Israeli military denied that AI systems were used during the airstrike itself, but refused to answer whether AI helped select the target or whether it was wrong. The military told the AP that officials examined the incident and expressed sorrow for the outcome.How it worksMicrosoft and the San Francisco-based startup OpenAI are among a legion of U.S. tech firms that have supported Israels wars in recent years. Google and Amazon provide cloud computing and AI services to the Israeli military under Project Nimbus, a $1.2 billion contract signed in 2021 when Israel first tested out its in-house AI-powered targeting systems. The military has used Cisco and Dell server farms or data centers. Red Hat, an independent IBM subsidiary, also has provided cloud computing technologies to the Israeli military, and Palantir Technologies, a Microsoft partner in U.S. defense contracts, has a strategic partnership providing AI systems to help Israels war efforts. Google said it is committed to responsibly developing and deploying AI that protects people, promotes global growth, and supports national security. Dell provided a statement saying the company commits to the highest standards in working with public and private organizations globally, including in Israel. Red Hat spokesperson Allison Showalter said the company is proud of its global customers, who comply with Red Hats terms to adhere to applicable laws and regulations.Palantir, Cisco and Oracle did not respond to requests for comment. Amazon declined to comment. This image from Israeli Defense Forces drone video shows a car in crosshairs, moments before it was destroyed in the town of Ainata, southern Lebanon, near the border with Israel, Nov. 5, 2023. (IDF via AP) This image from Israeli Defense Forces drone video shows a car in crosshairs, moments before it was destroyed in the town of Ainata, southern Lebanon, near the border with Israel, Nov. 5, 2023. (IDF via AP) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More The Israeli military uses Microsoft Azure to compile information gathered through mass surveillance, which it transcribes and translates, including phone calls, texts and audio messages, according to an Israeli intelligence officer who works with the systems. That data can then be cross-checked with Israels in-house targeting systems and vice versa. He said he relies on Azure to quickly search for terms and patterns within massive text troves, such as finding conversations between two people within a 50-page document. Azure also can find people giving directions to one another in the text, which can then be cross-referenced with the militarys own AI systems to pinpoint locations.The Microsoft data AP reviewed shows that since the Oct. 7 attack, the Israeli military has made heavy use of transcription and translation tools and OpenAI models, although it does not detail which. Typically, AI models that transcribe and translate perform best in English. OpenAI has acknowledged that its popular AI-powered translation model Whisper, which can transcribe and translate into multiple languages including Arabic, can make up text that no one said, including adding racial commentary and violent rhetoric.Should we be basing these decisions on things that the model could be making up? said Joshua Kroll, an assistant professor of computer science at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California, who spoke to the AP in his personal capacity, not reflecting the views of the U.S. government. The Israeli military said any phone conversation translated from Arabic or intelligence used in identifying a target has to be reviewed by an Arabic-speaking officer.Errors can still happen for many reasons involving AI, said Israeli military officers who have worked with the targeting systems and other tech experts. One intelligence officer said he had seen targeting mistakes that relied on incorrect machine translations from Arabic to Hebrew. The Arabic word describing the grip on the launch tube for a rocket-propelled grenade is the same as the word for payment. In one instance the machine translated it wrong, and the person verifying the translation initially didnt catch the error, he said, which could have added people speaking about payments to target lists. The officer was there by chance and caught the problem, he said.Intercepted phone calls tied to a persons profile also include the time the person called and the names and numbers of those on the call. But it takes an extra step to listen to and verify the original audio, or to see a translated transcript.Sometimes the data attached to peoples profiles is wrong. For example, the system misidentified a list of high school students as potential militants, according to the officer. An Excel spreadsheet attached to several peoples profiles titled finals in Arabic, contained at least 1,000 students names on an exam list in one area of Gaza, he said. This was the only piece of incriminating evidence attached to peoples files, he said, and had he not caught the mistake, those Palestinians could have been wrongly flagged. The remains of a Hyundai SUV are seen in the town of Ainata, a Lebanese border village with Israel in south Lebanon, Nov. 6, 2023, after Samira Ayoub, and her three granddaughters, Rimas, 14; Taline, 12, and Liane, 10, were killed in the car during an Israeli airstrike the previous evening. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari) The remains of a Hyundai SUV are seen in the town of Ainata, a Lebanese border village with Israel in south Lebanon, Nov. 6, 2023, after Samira Ayoub, and her three granddaughters, Rimas, 14; Taline, 12, and Liane, 10, were killed in the car during an Israeli airstrike the previous evening. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More He said he also worried that young officers, some still younger than 20, under pressure to find targets quickly with the help of AI would jump to conclusions. AI alone could lead to the wrong conclusion, said another soldier who worked with the targeting systems. For example, AI might flag a house owned by someone linked to Hamas who does not live there. Before the house is hit, humans must confirm who is actually in it, he said.Obviously there are things that I live peacefully with and things that I could have done better in some targeted attacks that Im responsible for, the soldier told the AP. Its war, things happen, mistakes happen, we are human. Tal Mimran served 10 years as a reserve legal officer for the Israeli military, and on three NATO working groups examining the use of new technologies, including AI, in warfare. Previously, he said, it took a team of up to 20 people a day or more to review and approve a single airstrike. Now, with AI systems, the military is approving hundreds a week. Mimran said over-reliance on AI could harden peoples existing biases. Confirmation bias can prevent people from investigating on their own, said Mimran, who teaches cyber law policy. Some people might be lazy, but others might be afraid to go against the machine and be wrong and make a mistake. Deep tiesAmong U.S. tech firms, Microsoft has had an especially close relationship with the Israeli military spanning decades.That relationship, alongside those with other tech companies, stepped up after the Hamas attack. Israels war response strained its own servers and increased its reliance on outside, third-party vendors, according to a presentation last year by the militarys top information technology officer. As she described how AI had provided Israel very significant operational effectiveness in Gaza, the logos of Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud and Amazon Web Services appeared on a large screen behind her. Weve already reached a point where our systems really need it, said Col. Racheli Dembinsky, commander of the Center of Computing and Information Systems, known by its Hebrew acronym, Mamram.One three-year contract between Microsoft and the Israeli Ministry of Defense began in 2021 and was worth $133 million, making it the companys second largest military customer globally after the U.S., according to a document reviewed by the AP. The Israeli military is classified within Microsoft as an S500 client, meaning that it gets top priority as one of the companys most important customers globally. The Israeli militarys service agreements with Microsoft include at least 635 individual subscriptions listed under specific divisions, units, bases or project code words. Subscription names reviewed by the AP included Mamram and 8200, an elite intelligence unit known for its technological prowess.One urgent Azure support ticket filed about two weeks after the Oct. 7 attack asked for delays of planned maintenance outages for the rest of the year due to the war, because any downtime could have a direct impact on life-saving systems. The request was flagged as being from Glilot 8200, a highly secure army base that houses Unit 8200, responsible for clandestine operations, collecting signal intelligence and code decryption, cyber warfare and surveillance.Records show Microsofts global Azure support team responded to about 130 direct requests from the Israeli military through the first 10 months of the war. Microsofts consulting services unit also works closely with Israels military, which represented half of that sections overall revenue, an internal document said. An Israeli flag is draped over the Microsoft offices in a building in the Gav Yam technology park in Beersheba, Israel, May 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Sam Mednick) An Israeli flag is draped over the Microsoft offices in a building in the Gav Yam technology park in Beersheba, Israel, May 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Sam Mednick) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Within Israel, a team of at least nine Microsoft employees is dedicated to serving the militarys account. Among them is a senior executive who served 14 years in Unit 8200 and a former IT leader for military intelligence, according to their online resumes. Microsoft data is housed in server farms within two massive buildings outside Tel Aviv, enclosed behind high walls topped with barbed wire. Microsoft also operates a 46,000-square-meter corporate campus in Herzliya, north of Tel Aviv, and another office in Gav-Yam in southern Israel, which has displayed a large Israeli flag. The Israel Defense Forces has long been at the forefront of deploying artificial intelligence for military use. In early 2021, it launched Gospel, an AI tool that sorts through Israels vast array of digitized information to suggest targets for potential strikes. It also developed Lavender, which uses machine learning to filter out requested criteria from intelligence databases and narrow down lists of potential targets, including people. Lavender ranks people between 0 and 100 based on how likely it is they are a militant, said an intelligence officer who used the systems. The ranking is based on intelligence, such as the persons family tree, if someones father is a known militant who served time, and intercepted phone calls, he said. In May 2021, the Israeli military launched what Israeli intelligence officials described as their First AI War, an 11-day bombing campaign against Hamas. At the time, Israeli military officials described AI as a force-multiplier, allowing them to carry out far more airstrikes than in prior conflicts. A 2021 post by the Israeli military also described the stakes surrounding the use of AI in war: Unlike in the realms of AdTech and Gaming, wrong decisions in the realm of intelligence may cost lives, it read. The same post described the militarys incorporation of AI approaches to analyze the emotional tone of communications, a technique experts have found can fail to pick slang, jargon or nuance in peoples speech.Pushback from workersThe relationship between tech companies and the Israeli military also has ramifications in the U.S., where some employees have raised ethical concerns. In October, Microsoft fired two workers for helping organize an unauthorized lunchtime vigil for Palestinian refugees at its corporate campus in Redmond, Washington. Microsoft said at the time that it ended the employment of some people in accordance with internal policy but declined to give details.Hossam Nasr, one of the employees fired by Microsoft who works with the advocacy group No Azure for Apartheid, said he and former colleagues are pushing for Microsoft to stop selling cloud and AI services to the Israeli military.Cloud and AI are the bombs and bullets of the 21st century, Nasr said. Microsoft is providing the Israeli military with digital weapons to kill, maim and displace Palestinians, in the gravest moral travesty of our time. In April, Google fired about 50 of its workers over a sit-in at the companys California headquarters protesting the war in Gaza. Google employee Emaan Haseem talks to the media as other demonstrators protest against the war in Gaza and Googles work with the Israeli government, April 16, 2024, in front of the Google offices in Sunnyvale, Calif. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group via AP) Google employee Emaan Haseem talks to the media as other demonstrators protest against the war in Gaza and Googles work with the Israeli government, April 16, 2024, in front of the Google offices in Sunnyvale, Calif. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group via AP) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Former Google software engineer Emaan Haseem was among those fired. Haseem said she worked on a team that helped test the reliability of a sovereign cloud a secure system of servers kept so separate from the rest of Googles global cloud infrastructure that even the company itself couldnt access or track the data it stores. She later learned through media reports that Google was building a sovereign cloud for Israel. It seemed to be more and more obvious that we are literally just trying to design something where we wont have to care about how our clients are using it, and if theyre using it unfairly or unethically, Haseem said. Google said the employees were fired because they disrupted work spaces and made colleagues feel unsafe. Google did not respond to specific questions about whether it was contracted to build a sovereign cloud for the Israeli military and whether it provided restrictions on the wartime use of its AI models.Gaza is now in an uneasy ceasefire. But recently, the Israeli government announced it would expand its artificial intelligence developments across all its military branches.Meanwhile, U.S. tech titans keep consolidating power in Washington. Microsoft gave $1 million to Trumps inauguration fund. Google CEO Sundar Pichai got a prime seat at the presidents inauguration. And OpenAI CEO Sam Altman met with the president on Trumps second full day in office to talk up a joint venture investing up to $500 billion for AI infrastructure. In a new book set to be published Tuesday, Palantir CEO Alexander Karp calls for the U.S. military and its allies to work closely with Silicon Valley to design, build and acquire AI weaponry, including the unmanned drone swarms and robots that will dominate the coming battlefield.The fate of the United States, and its allies, depends on the ability of their defense and intelligence agencies to evolve, and briskly, Karp wrote, according to an advance copy obtained by the AP.After OpenAI changed its terms of use last year to allow for national security purposes, Google followed suit earlier this month with a similar change to its public ethics policy to remove language saying it wouldnt use its AI for weapons and surveillance. Google said it is committed to responsibly developing and deploying AI that protects people, promotes global growth, and supports national security. Mahmoud Adnan Chour, center, the father of three girls, Rimas, 14; Taline, 12, and Liane, 10, who were killed with their grandmother Samira Ayoub, by an Israeli airstrike, weeps during their funeral procession in the town of Ainata, a Lebanese village near the border with Israel, Nov. 7, 2023. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari, File) Mahmoud Adnan Chour, center, the father of three girls, Rimas, 14; Taline, 12, and Liane, 10, who were killed with their grandmother Samira Ayoub, by an Israeli airstrike, weeps during their funeral procession in the town of Ainata, a Lebanese village near the border with Israel, Nov. 7, 2023. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari, File) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More As tech companies jockey for contracts, those who lost relatives still search for answers.Even with all this pain, I cant stop asking: Why? said Mahmoud Adnan Chour, the father of the three girls killed in the car in southern Lebanon, an engineer who was away at the time. Why did the plane choose that car the one filled with my childrens laughter echoing from its windows?___Biesecker reported from Washington and Burke from San Francisco. AP reporters Abby Sewell and Sarah El Deeb in Beirut, Julia Frankel and Natalie Melzer in Jerusalem, Dake Kang in Beijing and Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this report.___Contact APs global investigative team at [emailprotected] or https://www.ap.org/tips/___The Associated Press receives financial assistance from the Omidyar Network to support coverage of artificial intelligence and its impact on society. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find APs standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org. MICHAEL BIESECKER Biesecker is a global investigative reporter for The Associated Press, based in Washington. He reports on a wide range of topics, including human conflict, climate change and political corruption. twitter instagram mailto SAM MEDNICK Mednick is the West and Central Africa reporter for the Associated Press. She focuses on conflict, humanitarian crises and human rights abuses. twitter GARANCE BURKE Garance is a global investigative journalist. twitter mailto
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  • Internet reacts to plane crashes by imagining Pete Buttigieg as a superhero and MAGA is furious
    www.pride.com
    A record number of planes have crashed in the U.S. since President Donald Trump took office, and while MAGA wants to blame former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, the internet is calling him a superhero.Since Trump took office less than two months ago, there have already been five airplane crashes, and while the MAGA leader has blamed the Biden Administration and DEI hires (diversity, equity, and inclusion) and current the more likely culprit are the changes the Trump administration has made to the Federal Aviation Administration. Since taking office on January 20, the White House has fired less than 400 of the 45,000 FAA employees, according to current Transpiration Secretary Sean Duffy, who has blamed his predecessor for the steep increase in the number of plane crashes despite no longer being in office, The Independent reports.Buttigieg called out Duffy, posting, How many FAA personnel were just fired? What positions? And why? (@) His post came after it was announced that a Delta Airlines flight crashed upside down in Toronto, injuring 18 of the 80 passengers. This was just the latest in a handful of disastrous plane crashes that have taken place since Trump took office last month. Two pilots were ejected when a military flight in San Diego crashed in the bay late last week, 67 people were killed on January 29 when a military helicopter collided with an American Eagle Flight near Reagan National Airport, at least one person was killed when a small plane veered off the runway in Arizona and crashed into another plane, 10 people were killed when a commuter flight in Alaska crashes, and the wing of a Japan Airlines plane hit the tail of a Delta Airlines flight while taxiing at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on February 6, LGBTQ+ Nation reports.Duffy responded by blaming Buttigieg for the failing FAA system, writing on X (formerly Twitter) that he didnt address the air traffic controller shortage or update the World War II-era air traffic control system and accused him of treating the department like a slush fund.Mayor Pete chose to use this amazing departmentthat is so critical to Americas successas a slush fund for the green new scam and environmental justice nonsense, Duffy posted. Not to mention that over 90% of the workforce under his leadership were working from home - including him. The building was empty! (@) But people across the internet are portraying Buttigieg as a superhero who was single-handedly keeping airplanes in the air. According to WVTM 13, prior to the start of Trumps second term, there hadnt been a lethal plane crash in the U.S. since 2019, when a PenAir Flight crashed, killing one person. (@) (@) While Republicans are busy blaming Buttigieg who is no longer the head of the transpiration department and DEI hires, this influx of plane crashes has inspired countless memes of Buttigieg.You gotta be fking kidding me. Apparently, Pete Buttigieg held together space and time through sheer force of will, one person wrote on X, while others imagined Buttigieg as Superman, Spiderman, and other superheroes holding planes in the air all by himself. Keep scrolling to see the funniest memes of Super Pete Buttigieg! (@) "Pete Buttigieg keeping the planes in the sky for the last 4 years:" (@) "Pete Buttigieg the past 4 years:" (@) "ANOTHER plane crash under Trump. Pete Buttigieg up until the day before Trump took office::" (@) "pete buttigieg in the shadows for the last 4 years:" (@) "Mr. Pete keeping all the planes in air through sheer force of will" (@) "You gotta be fucking kidding me. Apparently, Pete Buttigieg held together space and time through sheer force of will." (@) "This is what Pete Buttigieg was doing as Secretary of Transportation, apparently." (@) "Pete Buttegieg for the last four years....whenever any plane, train or truck started to look dodgy..." (@) "How Pete Buttigieg was keeping those planes in the sky" (@) "Pete Buttigieg holding up every single air craft in the US while he was Transportation Secretary" (@) "Damn. Gay Mayor Pete was really keeping those planes in the sky with his bare hands." (@) "Planes werent falling out of the sky or crashing into each other when Joe and Mayor Pete were in charge. Just saying." (@) "No planes crashed under Mayor Pete. Get gay. It saves lives." (@) "Shit was NOT crashing with Sec. Pete Buttigieg in office" (@) "Mayor Pete was really keeping our shit together with krazy glue and duct tape"
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  • Cynthia Erivo is set to play Jesus in 'Jesus Christ Superstar' this summer
    www.pride.com
    Cynthia Erivo is temporarily hanging up her broomstick and picking up the cross as she prepares for her new role Jesus Christ.It was announced on Tuesday that the Wicked star would be stepping into the unfashionable sandals of the Christian Messiah himself in an upcoming production of Jesus Christ Superstar at the Hollywood Bowl."Just a little busy this Summer," she wrote in her Instagram stories after the news broke. "Cant wait!!"Jesus Christ Superstar is an iconic Andrew Lloyd Webber rock opera reimagining the final days of Jesus through the eyes of Judas, delving into the fame, doubts, and betrayals with the help of song. It was first produced in 1971 and has sparked plenty of accusations of blasphemy over the years from religious groups.MAGA is already fully stepping up to the plate to reenact the same tired, ignorant protests here based purely on Erivos casting. But fans who know the talent shes bringing to the stage are ready to shove them aside and vie for seats at this limited engagement. (@) "Just gonna pull up a chair with some popcorn and wait for the inevitable MAGA meltdown" (@) "Before the discourse starts because I know its inevitable: Yea, this is a rock opera musical loosely based the Passion. Its been out since the 70s. Yes, the role of Jesus has been portrayed by Black actors. Yes, the role of Jesus has been portrayed by female actors." (@) "smth abt jesus being a black sapphic woman im so excited for this omg" (@) "It's an unserious campy musical for 3 nights not a biopic, stay out of theater business." (@) "jesus stans getting brave in the quotes when cynthia easily outsings" (@) "Cynthia being Jesus Christ and Ariana being God" (@) "You know who also defied gravity?" (@) The remainder of the cast has yet to be announced, but fans are already eagerly awaiting news on who will be stepping into the role of Judas.For those lucky enough to be in or around Los Angeles, performances of Jesus Christ Superstar will take place at the Hollywood Bowl from August 1-3, 2025.
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  • Pedro Pascal Portrays Gay Ex-Lover and Domingos Brother in Surprise Cameo on SNL 50
    gayety.co
    During Saturday Night Lives 50th anniversary special, Pedro Pascal and Bad Bunny made surprise appearances that left fans talking. The sketch, centered around the recurring character Domingo, played by Marcello Hernndez, became an instant highlight with unexpected twists and memorable guest stars. Domingo, a charismatic and flamboyant Latin lover, has earned a reputation for disrupting specialSource
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  • Chappell Roan Teases New Country Song The Giver Through Interactive Instagram Stunt
    gayety.co
    Pop artist Chappell Roan is once again teasing fans with her upcoming single, The Giver, a country-tinged track that has generated significant buzz since her debut of it on Saturday Night Live (SNL) last November. Over the weekend, Roan raised the stakes with an interactive stunt that made her followers work a bit harder to get a taste of the highly anticipated song. This time, Roan took to herSource
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  • Texas measles cases are up, and New Mexico now has an outbreak. Heres what you need to know
    apnews.com
    Measles and tetanus vaccine vials are ready to be administered at the Dallas County Health & Human Services immunization clinic in Dallas, on March 8, 2019. (Vernon Bryant/The Dallas Morning News via AP)2025-02-18T19:25:36Z The measles outbreak in rural West Texas has grown to 58 cases as of Tuesday, and eight people in neighboring eastern New Mexico also have been diagnosed with measles. Public health officials in New Mexico have said they suspect some of the states cases are linked to the Texas outbreak, but havent confirmed it. Measles is a highly contagious disease. Heres what you should know about how to protect yourself against measles, as well as whats happening in Texas and New Mexico.Where are measles spreading currently?The West Texas cases are concentrated in Gaines County, which has 45 infections. Terry County to the north has nine confirmed cases, while Lubbock and Lynn counties have a case each and Yoakum County has two.The Texas Department of State Health Services said Monday that 13 people are hospitalized with measles. State health officials say this outbreak is Texas largest in nearly 30 years. Health department spokeswoman Lara Anton said last week that cases have been concentrated in a close-knit, undervaccinated Mennonite community especially among families who attend small private religious schools or are homeschooled.At least three of the New Mexico cases are in Lea County, which borders Gaines County in Texas. The state health department has said people may have been exposed at a grocery store, an elementary school, a church, Nor-Lea Hospital and a Walgreens in Hobbs, New Mexico. What is measles?Measles a respiratory virus that can survive in the air for up to two hours. Up to 9 out of 10 people who are susceptible will get the virus if exposed, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Most kids will recover from the measles if they get it, but infection can lead to dangerous complications like pneumonia, blindness, brain swelling and death. Is the vaccine safe?Yes, the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine is safe and highly effective in preventing measles infection and severe cases of the disease. The first shot is recommended for children between 12 and 15 months old and the second between 4 and 6 years old. The vaccine series is required for kids before entering kindergarten in public schools nationwide.Before the vaccine was introduced in 1963, the U.S. saw some 3 million to 4 million cases per year. Now, its usually fewer than 200 in a normal year.There is no link between the vaccine and autism, despite a now-discredited study and health disinformation.Why do vaccination rates matter? In communities with high vaccination rates above 95% diseases like measles have a harder time spreading through communities. This is called herd immunity. But childhood vaccination rates have declined nationwide since the pandemic and more parents are claiming religious or personal conscience waivers to exempt their kids from required shots.The U.S. saw a rise in measles cases in 2024, including an outbreak in Chicago that sickened more than 60. Five years earlier, measles cases were the worst in almost three decades in 2019.Gaines County has one of the highest rates in Texas of school-aged children who opt out of at least one required vaccine, with nearly 14% of K-12 children in the 2023-24 school year. Health officials say that number is likely higher because it doesnt include many children who are homeschooled and whose data would not be reported. What are public health officials doing to stop the spread?Health workers are hosting regular vaccination clinic and screening efforts in Texas. They are also working with schools to educate people about the importance of vaccination and offering shots.___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. DEVI SHASTRI Shastri is a public health reporter for The Associated Press, based in Milwaukee. She covers housing access, the social safety net, medical misinformation and other topics that influence the health of communities broadly. twitter mailto
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  • Trump administration gives schools a deadline to end DEI programs or risk losing federal money
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump waves from his vehicle as he arrives at the Trump International Golf Club, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025, in West Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)2025-02-18T15:44:05Z Follow live updates on President Donald Trump and his new administration. WASHINGTON (AP) The Trump administration is giving Americas schools and universities two weeks to eliminate diversity initiatives or risk losing federal money, raising the stakes in the presidents fight against wokeness and sowing confusion as schools scramble to comply.In a memo Friday, the Education Department gave an ultimatum to stop using racial preferences as a factor in admissions, financial aid, hiring or other areas. Schools are being given 14 days to end any practice that treats students or workers differently because of their race.Educators at colleges nationwide were rushing to evaluate their risk and decide whether to stand up for practices they believe are legal. The sweeping demand threatens to upend all aspects of campus operations, from questions on college applications to classroom lessons and campus clubs. Its meant to correct what the memo described as rampant discrimination in education, often against white and Asian students.Schools have been operating on the pretext that selecting students for diversity or similar euphemisms is not selecting them based on race, said Craig Trainor, acting assistant secretary for civil rights. No longer. Students should be assessed according to merit, accomplishment and character. The guidance drew sharp backlash from civil rights groups and university groups. Some believe its vague language is meant to have a chilling effect, pressuring schools to eliminate anything touching on the topic of race even if it may be defensible in court. Creating a sense of risk around doing work that might promote diverse and welcoming campuses is much more of the goal than a clear statement of existing law, said Jonathan Fansmith, senior vice president of government relations at the American Council on Education, an association of college presidents.The memo is an extension of President Donald Trumps executive order banning diversity, equity and inclusion programs. It essentially reflects a change in the federal governments interpretation of antidiscrimination laws. As legal justification, it cites the 2023 Supreme Court decision barring race as a factor in college admissions. Although the ruling applied only to admissions, the memo says it applies more broadly. Put simply, educational institutions may neither separate or segregate students based on race, nor distribute benefits or burdens based on race, it said.On Monday the Education Department announced it also cut $600 million in grants for organizations that train teachers. The programs promoted divisive concepts like DEI, critical race theory and social justice activism, the department said.The new guidance seeks to remove race from areas including financial aid, housing, graduation ceremonies, hiring and promotion. It also takes aim directly at college admissions, suggesting colleges have sought to work around the Supreme Courts decision.Using non-racial information as a proxy for race will now be viewed as a violation of federal law, the memo said. As an example, it said its unlawful for colleges to eliminate standardized testing requirements to achieve a desired racial balance or to increase racial diversity. Dozens of colleges across the U.S. have dropped SAT and ACT requirements in recent years for a variety of factors.The guidance reaches beyond the scope of the Supreme Courts decision and is almost certain to be challenged in court, said Angel B. Prez, CEO of the National Association for College Admission Counseling. While the Supreme Court decision bans race as a factor in evaluating applicants, the memo aims to ban race even in the recruitment of potential students, he said.Practices that have long been commonplace could suddenly become legal liabilities, Prez said, including recruiting in underrepresented areas or buying lists of potential students with certain academic and demographic information.Companies including the College Board and ACT have long sold lists of students to colleges, acting as a matchmaker and providing a pool of potential applicants who meet certain criteria. Colleges and universities are going to find themselves between a rock and a hard place, Prez said. They know that what theyre doing is not illegal, but they are worried that if they do not comply, not having federal funding will decimate them.College application essays are targeted by the memo, raising questions about how far colleges can go in inviting students to share their personal experiences, including their race. The guidance says colleges cant use essays as a way of predicting a students race. In the Supreme Court decision, Chief Justice John Roberts said nothing in the ruling prevents colleges from considering an applicants discussion of how race affected his or her life, though he warned that colleges couldnt simply use essays as an indirect workaround to consider applicants race. In a campus letter at the University of Michigan, President Santa J. Ono said leaders are working to understand the implications.Some colleges said they expect little change from the memo. At Oregon State University, a legal review concluded that its programs are fully compliant with all state and federal laws, according to a campus message from Rob Odom, vice president of university relations and marketing.The department memo appears to take aim at scholarships reserved for students from certain racial backgrounds. Theres been legal debate about whether the Supreme Court decision extends to financial aid, with some schools and institutions deciding to scrap racial requirements for certain scholarships.The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators said theres no consensus on the question, and the group is trying to understand how the memo could affect student aid.What we do know, however, is that 14 days is insufficient time for schools to assess and implement any necessary changes to be in compliance, the group said in a statement. The last thing students need when making plans about how to pay for college is uncertainty over when or whether they will receive financial aid theyve been relying on.The confusion around Trumps order was apparent at last weeks confirmation hearing for education secretary nominee Linda McMahon. Asked whether classes on African American history would run afoul of the presidents order, McMahon said she wasnt quite certain.___The Associated Press education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find APs standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org. COLLIN BINKLEY Binkley covers the U.S. Education Department and federal education policy for The Associated Press, along with a wide range of issues from K-12 through higher education. twitter mailto
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  • Musk Ally Demands Admin Access to System That Lets Government Text the Public
    www.404media.co
    A worker at the General Services Administration told colleagues in a Slack message Tuesday that they have resigned in protest after Elon Musk ally Thomas Shedd requested admin/root access to all components of the Notify.gov system, which is a government system used to send mass text messages to the public that contains information the worker said is highly sensitive and would give Shedd unilateral, private access to the personal data of members of the public.Shedd is a former Tesla engineer who now runs Technology Transformation Services (TTS), a group of coders and software engineers within the GSA, who is closely allied with Elon Musk and DOGE. Notify.gov contains not just the phone numbers of everyday people but also information about whether they participate in government programs such as Medicaid, which is based on a person's financial situation. In recent days, Musk has become obsessed with the idea of "fraud" in Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security, and in identifying those he suspects are committing fraud.The TTS commissioner, Thomas Shedd, has required us to provide admin/root access to all components of the Notify.gov system, the Slack message, seen by 404 Media starts. It then says this would allow Shedd to view all personally identifiable information (PII) moving through the Notify system, including phone numbers and variable data for members of the public. It says Shedd would be able to download and store this data without anybody else receiving a notification.I dont believe that I can operate a program and system without the ability to manage access to PII, they added. As a result, I have submitted my resignation to GSA. Today will be my last day.404 Media previously obtained leaked audio from a meeting Shedd had with TTS employees in which he suggested that a tool called login.gov could be turned into an information sharing platform across government agencies that could be used to identify people doing fraud. He also suggested that many government employees could be replaced with AI coding agents that would be created by his team.Notify.gov is a platform that allows government agencies to text people. Examples shown in a demo include, for example, telling someone that their Medicaid coverage is expiring and must be renewed alongside instructions to renew it.The resignation note. Full text belowSources at TTS told 404 Media that the fact Shedd wants access to Notify.gov is scary news.Someone at TTS resigned rather than surrender a vast trove of data to Thomas Shedd, one employee said. Im scared that well run out of people who will tell him no.The employee told 404 Media that "Notify contains PII, including at least: names, phone numbers, and the status of participating in public benefit programs which are based on financial status."Another employee also told 404 Media that the development was concerning, and that granting Shedd admin access to the system outside of established protocols would be dangerous for the resigning worker to do.The Federal Information Security Management Act of 2002 (FISMA) requires creating these policies for every information system, the second employee told 404 Media. They are a legal requirement. The policies spell out who can have access and under what circumstances. An authorizing official must accept the policy by formally signing it and personally accepting the risk.Do you know anything else about TTS, GSA, or DOGE? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at +1 202 505 1702. Otherwise, send me an email at jason@404media.co.FISMA says that to provide someone access to a system they must go through an Authorization to Operate (ATO) process that determines who should have access to what systems, and for what reasons. The resigning worker said in their Slack message that they had been instructed to skip that process and place the system in non-compliance.The worker who resigned said in their resignation note that Shedd would have unfettered, private access to the information of anyone who has interacted with the Notify system.Here is the full message:The TTS commissioner, Thomas Shedd, has required us to provide admin/root access to all components of the Notify.gov system. With this access: Thomas would be able to view all personally identifiable information (PIl) moving through the Notify system, including phone numbers and variable data for members of the public. This information exists in our Ul, cloud.gov-managed resources, and AWS resources. Thomas would be able to download and store this data without anybody else receiving a notification. Thomas would be able to fully manage the access of others, including granting the same access to others or removing it from existing team members. Granting the same access would, of course, grant the same ability to view and download PII.We have not received a justification for this request, which makes it difficult to suggest alternative approaches that would accomplish Thomas's goals while still being protective of PlI for members of the public. We have made clear to Thomas that this level of permission would allow access to PII. While we have suggested alternatives, such as read-only access, Thomas has continued to request full admin/root access.We also believe that this level of access for somebody outside of the product team is not contemplated by the system's authority to operate. While it's entirely possible to properly update the SSPP [System Security and Privacy Plan] to add this sort of access using our established ATO [Authorization to Operate] processes, we have been instructed to skip that process and place the system in non-compliance until the access is remediated.I don't believe that I can operate a program and system without the ability to manage access to PII. As a result, I have submitted my resignation to GSA. Today will be my last day.It has truly been a pleasure to work with each and every one of you. I have valued your individual and collective contributions toward building a new-to-government shared system that has already had an impact. I have valued your care, commitment, and diligence. We have built a program together on a stable foundation, which can allow it to survive even beyond our time on this team. I am proud of that, and l am proud of you.The GSA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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  • Marti Gould Cummings Talks Impact of Drag and Amplifying LGBTQ Voices in Divisive Times
    glaad.org
    A staple in the New York City drag scene, Marti Gould Cummings has made a name for themselves as a drag queen and beyond. On top of numerous ad campaigns and being featured on the pages ofVogueand being featured on the Out100 list, Cummings hosted their own Logo talk showThe Marti Report. Now, Cummings hosts [...]The post Marti Gould Cummings Talks Impact of Drag and Amplifying LGBTQ Voices in Divisive Times first appeared on GLAAD.
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  • Potential Gay Scenes and Incest? Whats Going On With The White Lotus Season 3?
    gayety.co
    The White Lotus is back with a shocking season three that has many wondering how much of a gay storyline viewers will be getting this time around. Looking at the cast for this new installation for the franchise on HBO, cast members Carrie Coon and Aimee Lou Wood grace the screens alongside others like Natasha Rothwell as Belinda back for another stay at the infamous resort chain.Source
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  • Pete Buttigieg Criticizes Trump Administration for FAA Firings Amid Plane Crashes: The Flying Public Needs Answers
    gayety.co
    Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg is calling out the Trump administration for its decision to fire hundreds of Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) employees while a series of troubling plane crashes continue to raise concerns about air safety. The latest incident occurred yesterday when a Delta Air Lines flight, originating from Minneapolis, crashed upside down in TorontoSource
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  • US Postal Service head DeJoy to step down after 5 years marked by pandemic, losses and cost cuts
    apnews.com
    Postmaster General of the United States Louis DeJoy speaks during a news conference, Dec. 20, 2022, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)2025-02-18T20:27:15Z WASHINGTON (AP) Louis DeJoy, the head of the U.S. Postal Service, intends to step down, the federal agency said Tuesday, after a nearly five-year tenure marked by the coronavirus pandemic, surges in mail-in election ballots and efforts to stem losses through cost and service cuts.In a Monday letter, Postmaster General DeJoy asked the Postal Service Board of Governors to begin looking for his successor. As you know, I have worked tirelessly to lead the 640,000 men and women of the Postal Service in accomplishing an extraordinary transformation, he wrote. We have served the American people through an unprecedented pandemic and through a period of high inflation and sensationalized politics.DeJoy took the helm of the postal service in the summer of 2020 during President Donald Trumps first term. He was a Republican donor who owned a logistics business before taking office and was the first postmaster general in nearly two decades who was not a career postal employee. DeJoy developed a 10-year plan to modernize operations and stem losses. He previously said that postal customers should get used to uncomfortable rate hikes as the postal service seeks to stabilize its finances and become more self-sufficient. The plan calls for making the mail delivery system more efficient and less costly by consolidating mail processing centers. Critics, including members of Congress from several states, have said the first consolidations slowed service and that further consolidations could particularly hurt rural mail delivery. DeJoy has disputed that and told a U.S. House subcommittee during a contentious September hearing that the Postal Service had embarked on long-overdue investments in ratty facilities and making other changes to create a Postal Service for the future that delivered mail more quickly. DeJoy also oversaw the postal service during two presidential elections that saw spikes in mail-in ballots. Ahead of the 2020 presidential election, a federal judge limited one of the postal services cost-cutting practices after finding it contributed to delays in mail delivery. DeJoy had restricted overtime payments for postal workers and stopped the agencys longtime practice of allowing late and extra truck deliveries in the summer of 2020. The moves reduced costs but meant some mail was left behind to be delivered the following day.DeJoy said in his letter that he was committed to being as helpful as possible in facilitating a transition.
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  • Trump will sign new executive orders while his first joint TV interview with Musk airs in prime time
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump gestures to supporters gathered for a Presidents Day rally as he leaves the Trump International Golf Club, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025, in West Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)2025-02-18T16:17:28Z WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) President Donald Trump on Tuesday was set to sign new executive orders from his Florida home while his first joint TV interview with adviser Elon Musk airs in prime time.Trumps Florida home will also be the setting for an awards program by a conservative group led by Mike Flynn, who briefly served as national security adviser in the Republican presidents first term. Trump was spending part of Tuesday at his golf club in West Palm Beach, Florida. The White House had no immediate comment on the executive actions Trump was signing later Tuesday at Mar-a-Lago, his private club and residence in Palm Beach. In the first weeks of Trumps second term, he has used executive orders signed statements about how the president wants the federal government to be managed to address issues including border security, the environment and transgender rights. Trump and Musk, head of the new Department of Government Efficiency, gave their first joint interview to Sean Hannity of Fox News Channel. The interview was taped on Friday at the White House and is set to air as Musk leads Trumps effort to cut federal spending and slash the federal workforce. Musk has drawn criticism from Democrats in Congress and others for the methods he and his team at DOGE are using to cut spending, including foreign aid, and eliminate jobs across the bureaucracy. The Fox News interview also follows Musks appearance with Trump in the Oval Office last week, when both defended Musks approach to federal cost-cutting. In an excerpt from the interview that Fox News released on Sunday, Musk said he used to be adored by the left but less so these days because of the work hes doing at Trumps direction. They call it Trump derangement syndrome. You dont realize how real this is until you cant reason with people, Musk said, adding that normal conversations with Democrats about the president are impossible because its like theyve become completely irrational. Trumps Mar-a-Lago club is the setting Tuesday night for an awards program by Americas Future, which is led by Flynn to preserve individual rights and promote American values and traditions, according to its website. The event, celebrating American exceptionalism, will honor one member from the Army, the Navy, the Marines, the Air Force and the Space Force. The event includes a poolside reception, musical performances and dinner in Mar-a-Lagos Grand Ballroom, where other award presentations are expected from a lineup that includes such names as Russell Brand, Ted Nugent and Mike Tyson.Its unclear whether Trump will participate in the event. ___Follow the APs coverage of President Donald Trump at https://apnews.com/hub/donald-trump. DARLENE SUPERVILLE Superville covers the White House for The Associated Press, with a special emphasis on first ladies and first families. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Co-Owner of The Stonewall Inn, Stacy Lentz, speaks with Uncloseted days after references to transgender people were removed from Stonewall National Monument website
    www.unclosetedmedia.com
    In a powerful conversation with Uncloseted, Spencer Macnaughton sits down with Stacy Lentz, co-owner of The Stonewall Inn, just days after the National Park Service removed references to transgender people from the Stonewall National Monument website. Lentz, a longtime advocate for LGBTQ rights, unpacks the significance of this erasure, calling it a blatant attempt to rewrite history and exclude the very people who led the fight for equality.
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  • Jennifer Lopez, Troye Sivan To Headline WorldPride Music Festival; RuPaul, Sasha Colby, Kim Petras and More Set For 50th Year of D.C.s LGBTQ Fest
    glaad.org
    Washington D.C. is set to be the location of the largest LGBTQ+ music festival in history come June. The WorldPride Music Festival will take place on June 6 and 7 with GLAAD Media Award honorees Jennifer Lopez and Troye Sivan headlining. This event will be the epicenter of WorldPride celebrations in Washington D.C., marking 50 [...]The post Jennifer Lopez, Troye Sivan To Headline WorldPride Music Festival; RuPaul, Sasha Colby, Kim Petras and More Set For 50th Year of D.C.s LGBTQ Fest first appeared on GLAAD.
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  • Gus Kenworthy is Offering Steamy Polaroids in His New Book Club
    gayety.co
    Olympic silver medalist and popular LGBTQ+ figure Gus Kenworthy is adding a new title to his impressive resume: book club curator. The British-American athlete, known for his prowess in freestyle skiing, his social media presence, and his advocacy for the LGBTQ+ community, has teamed up with Allstora to create a unique, monthly Coffee Table Book Club. Kenworthy, born in ChelmsfordSource
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