• Red carpet, fashion and music: F1 launches its 2025 season Hollywood style
    apnews.com
    Ferrari driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain poses for cameras as he arrives to the F1@75 launch event at the O2 arena in London, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)2025-02-18T10:45:05Z LONDON (AP) Formula 1 is kick-starting its 75th anniversary season with music, glitz and glamor Tuesday as the race series aims to reach beyond a sports audience with a two-hour televised arena show.Lewis Hamilton arrived wearing a tie in Ferrari red for his biggest event yet since joining the Italian team, before the seven-time champion emerged to rousing cheers in a full race suit to present the teams livery alongside teammate Charles Leclerc.Asked to pick a word to describe his mood ahead of the new season, Hamilton picked invigorated, because I feel so full of life and so much energy, because everythings new.Just focused on whats up ahead. Im so proud to be part of the team, something new and exciting for me.The F1 75 Live event at Londons O2 arena is the first time the sport hosted its own large-scale launch event, rather than leaving it to the individual teams. Drivers arrived on the red carpet for a televised two-hour show unlike any other event in F1 history.Lavish team presentations have included a James Bond parody for Aston Martin, a line of drummers with glowing sticks, cars sliding down the stage on motorized platforms and a comedy skit that played on Racing Bulls sponsor-heavy full name. Lewis Hamilton arrived wearing a tie in Ferrari red for the seven-time champions biggest event yet since joining the Italian team.The live crowd of F1 fans brought some unpredictability, with some boos for a mention of the governing body, the FIA, which has been in dispute with drivers over how it enforces punishments for swearing, and for Red Bull team principal Christian Horner. There were also musical acts like country singer Kane Brown, who introduced Haas, British band Take That. American rapper and singer MGK, also known as Machine Gun Kelly, gave the show a high-energy, guitar-heavy intro.Teams will present their 2025 liveries, but dont have to show off the actual cars theyll race this season. Teams are still allowed to hold their own launch events to present their 2025 cars, as McLaren and Williams did last week. It comes at a time when F1 is keen to expand beyond a sports audience, with races in cities like Miami and Las Vegas, a movie called F1 starring Brad Pitt releasing in June, and the ongoing popularity of the Drive To Survive series on Netflix.To have this many fans out shows that we bring the sport together away from the racetrack. Theres a lot of excitement, McLaren chief executive Zak Brown said Tuesday.The Brad Pitt movie will no doubt create a huge amount of awareness for the sport. Netflix, Im sure, knowing what happened last year, will be a drama-filled television show again, which has been great for all of us. So I think the sports going from strength to strength.Drivers broadly welcomed the new launch show, though two-time champion Fernando Alonso warned it could be a little bit of distraction at a time when drivers and teams are fine-tuning their approach to the season.Asked if he thought the launch would become a regular event, Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said: Im sure if they think they can make some money out of it, well be doing this most years.F1s preparations for the new season which marks the series 75th anniversary continue with preseason testing next week at the Bahrain International Circuit. The first race is the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne on March 16.___AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing
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  • A deeper look at the talks between US and Russian officials and what comes next
    apnews.com
    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, U.S. National Security Advisor Mike Waltz and U.S. Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff attend an interview after meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Russian President Vladimir Putin's foreign policy advisor Yuri Ushakov, at Diriyah Palace, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (Evelyn Hockstein/Pool Photo via AP)2025-02-18T21:05:30Z RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) Top U.S. and Russian officials had their most extensive high-level engagement since Moscow sent troops into Ukraine almost three years ago, meeting for nearly four hours Tuesday in Saudi Arabia as President Donald Trump sought to advance his goal of ending the fighting in Ukraine and mending ties with Moscow.The delegations led by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said the discussions were a good first step.They agreed to set up teams to look into restoring staffing at the U.S. and Russian embassies in Moscow and Washington that have been decimated by a series of tit-for-tat diplomatic expulsions. The effort is aimed at using those channels to support Ukraine peace negotiations and to explore ways to restart economic and global cooperation. A Russian official pointed to possible joint energy ventures. However, the rapprochement may come at a cost to the transatlantic alliance of the U.S. and Europe and significantly damage Washingtons standing with Ukraine as well as with other nations counting on U.S. leadership in NATO and elsewhere for their security and protection. During former President Joe Bidens administration, the U.S. and Europe focused on isolating Russia and defending the post-World War II international order.Heres a look at the meeting and what comes next: Reestablishing tattered diplomatic relationsFirst on both countries list of accomplishments was an agreement to end what has been years of dwindling diplomatic relations that hit a post-Cold War low point after Russian President Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022.The meeting, which came just a week after Trump spoke to Putin by phone, was the first substantive face-to-face discussion between the nations top diplomats since former Secretary of State Antony Blinken met Lavrov in Geneva in January 2022 in an unsuccessful bid to prevent the Ukraine conflict.Lavrov said after Tuesdays talks that the sides agreed to fast-track the appointment of new ambassadors, adding that senior diplomats from the two countries will meet shortly to discuss specifics related to lifting artificial barriers to the work of the U.S. and Russian embassies and other missions.In reality, the decimation of the U.S. and Russian embassies personnel began well before Russian troops rolled into Ukraine in 2022, starting after 2014 Russias annexation of Crimea that was seen as illegal by most of the world during the Obama administration, which ordered several Russian offices in the U.S. to close.It picked up steam after the 2018 poisoning in Britain of an exiled Russian spy and his daughter, which British authorities blamed on Russia, and resulted in mass expulsions of diplomats and the closure of numerous consulates in both countries and Europe.Asked by The Associated Press if the U.S. now considered those cases closed, Rubio declined to say but said it would be impossible to get a Ukraine peace agreement without diplomatic engagement.Im not going to negotiate or talk through every element of the disruptions that exist or have existed in our diplomatic relations, on the mechanics of it, he said. Bringing an end to the conflict cannot happen unless we have at least some normalcy in the way our diplomatic missions operate in Moscow and in Washington, D.C. Negotiating an end to the conflict in UkraineThe two sides agreed to set up high-level working groups to begin exploring a negotiated end to the conflict. It was not immediately clear when these teams would first meet, but both said it would be soon.As to concessions that may need to be made by all sides, Trumps national security adviser, Mike Waltz, who participated in the talks Tuesday, said the issue of territory and security guarantees would be among the subjects discussed.Rubio said a high-level team, including experts who know technical details, will begin to engage with the Russian side on parameters of what an end to this conflict would look like.On the key issue of a prospective peacekeeping mission to monitor a potential ceasefire in Ukraine, the top Russian diplomat said Moscow would not accept any troops from NATO members, repeating its assertion that Ukraines bid to join the Western military alliance poses a major security issue.We explained that the deployment of troops from the countries that are NATO members, even if they are deployed under the EU or national flags, will not change anything and will certainly be unacceptable for us, Lavrov said. Exclusion of Ukraine and Europe from the talksNeither Ukraine nor European nations were invited to Tuesdays talks in Riyadh, but U.S. officials said there is no intention to exclude them from peace negotiations should they begin in earnest.No one is being sidelined here, Rubio said. Obviously, theres going to be engagement and consultation with Ukraine, with our partners in Europe and others. But ultimately, the Russian side will be indispensable to this effort.Waltz agreed: If youre going to bring both sides together, you have to talk to both sides. ... We are absolutely talking to both sides.He noted that Trump spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy immediately after speaking with Putin last week and that U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Rubio met Friday with Zelenskyy in Germany. Still, Zelenskyy was clearly peeved at being omitted from the meeting, postponing plans to visit Saudi Arabia on Wednesday to avoid any linkage of his trip with Tuesdays U.S.-Russia talks.This whole negotiation from the start seems very tilted in Russias favor. And its even a question whether it should be termed a negotiation or in some sense, a series of American capitulations, said Nigel Gould-Davies, senior fellow for Eurasia and Russia at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London and a former British ambassador to Belarus.Meanwhile, European leaders who have been among Ukraines staunchest supporters held an emergency summit a day ahead of the Riyadh talks. Immediately after the talks, Rubio briefed the foreign ministers of France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom and the EUs high representative for foreign affairs.Possible lifting of U.S. sanctions against RussiaAsked whether the U.S. could lift sanctions against Moscow imposed during the Biden presidency, Rubio noted that to bring an end to any conflict, there has to be concessions made by all sides and were not going to predetermine what those are.Asked if the U.S. could officially remove Lavrov from its sanctions list, Rubio said that were just not at that level of conversation yet.Potential U.S.-Russian cooperationKirill Dmitriev, head of the Russian Direct Investment Fund who joined the Russian delegation in Riyadh, told reporters that Russia and the U.S. should develop joint energy ventures.We need joint projects, including in the Arctic and other regions, he said.Should the parties succeed in negotiating an end to the Ukraine conflict, Rubio said, it could open incredible opportunities to partner with the Russians on issues that hopefully will be good for the world and also improve our relations in the long term.He did not say what those would entail.___Isachenkov reported from Moscow. Associated Press Writer Emma Burrows in London contributed to this report.
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  • Queer Las Vegas: Where to stay, play and slay
    newsisout.com
    Las Vegas is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the country (and the world). With an estimated 175 casinos and 156,000 hotel rooms, just waiting for tourists, Las Vegas fits a lot into relatively small space. As a queer traveler, Im always looking for places that are welcoming and Las Vegas overwhelmingly fits that bill. Thinking of taking a trip to Sin City anytime soon? Then heres a handy guide to making the most out of queer Las Vegas.So many optionsPicking a place to stay in Las Vegas can feel daunting, with so many choices and locations. On the Strip, youll find dozens of hotels and resorts, the majority of which are very LGBTQ+ welcoming. The Sahara, Caesars Palace, and The Cosmopolitan are all recommended by Las Vegas Pride.Off the Strip, The Rio recently hosted the LGBTQ+ Task Forces conference Creating Change. Staff were trained on how to best welcome and accommodate LGBTQ+ visitors, and that care was felt throughout the casino and resort. The Rio has recently undergone massive renovations, including refreshed rooms in one of its towers. The remodeled rooms are spacious and clean, with separate sitting areas from the sleeping quarters. If you dont mind staying off the Strip, its a solid option.Also off the Strip and right next to the Las Vegas Convention Center is the Westgate Las Vegas Resort & Casino, home to Las Vegas PRIDE Family Bingo.One thing I noticed about hotels and casinos in Las Vegas was a lack of gender-neutral or even family restrooms. While visiting the Strip with a trans nonbinary friend, finding a safe and accessible restroom option proved challenging. In places like the Arts District, gender-neutral bathrooms were far more prevalent. Its certainly something for Las Vegas to consider if it wants to appeal to LGBTQ+ guests.Let me entertain youThe Rollerdancers at Discoshow welcome the audience. Photo: News is Out Head over to the Linq Hotel and Experience to catch the shimmer of Las Vegass newest show. Discoshow takes audiences on a trip back in time to the days of disco, with an immersive experience that will have you dancing the night away. After meeting Discoshows resident roller hosts, youll move into a black box theatre where the action and 70s tunes are nonstop. As the dancers move throughout the space, each has a storyincluding a blossoming gay romance. Wear comfortable shoes because youll be learning dance steps and moving throughout the space the entire time.One of the more sumptuous venues in Las Vegas, hosting the Data Von Teese residency. Photo: News is Out Americas queen of burlesque, Dita Von Teese, quite literally dazzles in her Las Vegas residency at the Venetian. With impeccable costumes covered in rhinestones and glittery baubles, Von Teeses show is a nod to both classic burlesque and the heyday of the Vegas showgirl. She is flanked by a cast of fellow burlesque dancers, including sword swallowers and a trio of male dancers performing a queer tango. If you pay attention, youll catch references to Gypsy Rose Lee and even the infamous Las Vegas film Showgirls.Kennedy Davenport is one of the queens starring in RuPaul Live! Photo: News is OutRuPauls Drag Race Live! at the Flamingo features a rotating cast of RuGirls, performing killer lip-syncs, skits, and more. While the performance I attended started with a bit of low energy, by mid-show the performers found their groove with the audience. Asia OHara, Derrick Barry, Eureka OHara, and Jaida Essence Hall are just some of the queens you may catch at your performance.Brunch has never slayed so hard as it does at Gipsy. Photo: News is Out If you cant get enough drag, then youll want to head to Drag Brunch at Gipsy Nightclub. Las Vegas attracts some of the best drag artists in the country, and its evident in the high-energy performances and epic mixes at Gipsy. At the performance I attended, the crowd went wild over a medley of Chappell Roan songs, while another performer literally climbed the walls and hung from the ceilinga perfectly chaotic (yet controlled) afternoon out in Las Vegass queer neighborhood, The Fruit Loop.Right next door to Gipsy is Las Vegas famed LGBTQ+ bar and lounge, Piranha Nightclub. Piranha has a residency of popular drag queens, including RuPauls Drag Race performer Alexis Mateo. Each night, you can catch special performances, themed dance parties like Latin Nights and guest DJs from around the country.At the Neon Museum, there are some pieces of queer history, like this Liberace sign. Photo: News is Out What would Las Vegas even be without the famed neon signs, blinking and beckoning up and down the Strip. The Neon Museum seeks to preserve this unique part of Las Vegas history, showcasing creaking, rusted signs of yesteryear alongside more recent additions. Massive metal signsmany of which still workshine for guests and take you back to a time when celebrities like Liberace and Debbie Reynolds ruled the desert oasis.Bevs and bitesThere is no shortage of food experiences in Las Vegas, from high end restaurants to fast casual, but heres a list of places to consider.Setting the night on fire at Scotch 80 Prime. Photo: News is Out Tucked inside the Palms Casino and Resort, is Scotch 80 Prime, a high-end steakhouse that carries an elevated old school Vegas vibe. Playful cocktails exist alongside the classics, while seafood towers and tins of caviar pair with succulent wood-fired steaks.The Dirty Martini Salad really capture the taste of the cocktail. Photo: News is Out Whether you are heading to Discoshow or not, Diner Ross at the Linq is a unique experience. Walking into the restaurant, which has a connection to the show, is like stepping back into the late 70s. With its expertly decorated melange of browns and oranges, servers and staff wear curated vintage outfits and serve up culinary homages to the time period with dishes like Dirty Martini Salad and Steelhead Trout Almondine.Want to try a little bit of everything? Then a food tour might be on the menu. The team at Lip Smacking Foodie Tours will take you on an adventure through The Strip. The moveable feast of sorts starts at a restaurant in a casino (mine started at the Arias Javier with delightful enchiladas) and continues as you move on through the resort. You can expect to dine in at least three high end restaurants, while meeting fellow diners and learning about Las Vegas history. Want to go all out? Add a helicopter tour to your post-desert plans.While many tourists visiting Las Vegas never leave the Strip, theres a lot to love outside of Las Vegas Boulevard.Afterlife Tea and Boba Room is a queer and women-owned little oasis outside of the action, where you can pick up a variety of boba drinks and vegan treats. Afterlife also supports several community groups, offers meetups and displays local artists in the cafe.A plant based NoPastrami sandwich from No Butcher. Photo: News is Out For more vegan options and a cant miss experience, stop by No Butcher, a meatless deli in Las Vegas KoreaTown neighborhood. This LGBTQ+-owned spot is making their own plant based cheeses and meats like NoPepperoni and NoTuna, plus fresh beverages, salads and desserts. (I personally recommend the NoPastrami sandwich on fresh break with the gluten-free almond cookie.)Off the beaten pathIf you can, plan to spend some time outside of the casinos and resorts and head to the Las Vegas Arts District, located just a short Uber ride from the Strip. There you will find a bustling scene of vintage shops, art galleries, restaurants and experiences.Burlesque costumes and Gypsy Rose Lees trunk are on display at the Burlesque Hall of Fame. Photo: News is Out The Burlesque Hall of Fame is located right in the district, with a small but mighty collection of burlesque history. A wall of pasties from famed burlesque dancers, Gypsy Rose Lees steamer trunk and hundreds of images tell the story of burlesque in the U.S. and beyond. There are even the ashes of some of burlesques famed divas housed at the location.If you have shopping on your mind and the luxury shops and casino gift stores arent cutting it, youll be in luck in the Arts District.Akin Cooperative features wares from local artists from jewelry to home decor to apparel. Order a glass of wine or craft beer while you shop at this queer-friendly establishment, which brings all the good vibes.Just a couple doors down is Good Wolf Lifestyle Co., an airy shop with independent fashion labels and surprisingly affordable options. Owner Sean Blanchard was a delight to talk to, and enthusiastic about showing off the latest arrivals and piling up options outside of my fitting room. Yes, I did walk away with an incredible crop top.If vintage is your bag, then find your way to the Antique Alley Mall. A treasure trove of vintage Vegas souvenirs, independent sellers have their own stalls, and a friendly staff welcome you through the door.Welcome to The Writers Block. Photo: News is Out Finally, even casual readers will be entranced by The Writers Block, an independent bookstore on the outskirts of Downtown Las Vegas (that was founded by a gay couple!). The front of The Writers Block features a coffee shop, which leads into an almost ethereal shop, filled with books and trinkets. Cardboard cutouts of James Baldwin and Virgina Wolfe, along with several hundred artificial birds, beckon you to get lost in the expertly curated sections.Las Vegas isnt just about the bright lights and big casinosits a city full of experiences that make it a must-visit for LGBTQ+ travelers. Whether youre catching a drag show, exploring the Arts District, or grabbing a bite at a queer-owned caf, theres something for everyone. From high-energy nightlife to hidden gems that feel like home, Vegas delivers on spectacle, community, and plenty of unforgettable moments.The post Queer Las Vegas: Where to stay, play and slay appeared first on News Is Out.
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  • 6 times AOC destroyed MAGA with an epic clapback
    www.pride.com
    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) is one of the most progressive members of Congress, frequently standing up for immigrants, the LGBTQ+ community, and working-class Americans despite being leveled with frequent attacks from MAGA politicians. Through a grassroots campaign, AOC was able to go from working as a bartender and volunteer for Sen. Bernie Sanders to Capitol Hill where shes managed to make an impression as one of four ultra-progressive congresswomen known as The Squad. Now, she stays in the headlines by fighting for marginalized groups, workers' rights, and green initiatives and for verbally crushing Republicans who try to stand in her way. She speaks with power, is quick-witted enough to leave Republicans reeling, and refuses to let MAGA politicians insult her or walk all over her!Calling Trump's Border Czar a 'coward'After holding an online know your right seminar for her constituents, many of whom are immigrants, Ocasio-Cortez was threatened by Trumps controversial new Border Czar Tom Homan, who went on Fox News twice in one day to announce that he's working with the Department of Justice to investigate whether the congresswomans webinar was helping people evade U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).Ocasio-Cortez didnt let the threat stand. Instead, she shot back by calling out Homan for being a coward and pointing out that everything she said was protected by the 4th Amendment. This is why you fight these cowards," she wrote on Bluesky. "The moment you stand up to them, they crumble. Homan has nothing. The Fourth Amendment is clear and I am well within my duties to educate people of their rights. He can threaten me with jail and call names all he wants. Hes got nothing else.After Homan had appeared on Laura Ingraham's show to say that AOC is "gonna be in trouble now," the New York Democrat didn't hold back, mocking him on Bluesky by writing, "'MaYbe shEs goiNg to be in TroUble nOw' Maybe he can learn to read. The Constitution would be a good place to start."AOC's brutal takedown of transphobes (@) In December 2023, Ocasio-Cortez clashed with the GOP who were proposing restrictions targeting transgender women athletes. The New York representative called out Republicans for expending so much time and energy on a marginalized group that makes up such a tiny percentage of the population before pointing out that the purpose of a lot of these anti-trans policies also seems to be a desire to control womens bodies and invade their privacy.Why so much effort and dedication to such a tiny portion of the U.S. population when there virtually is no major issue that this is precipitating? she said. And I started to realize that a lot of these proposals involve invasion of privacy of all women.Ocasio-Cortez then slammed the panel of men who have dubious motives and havent thought about the biology and privacy consequences of all women trans or cis gender.AOC calls out sexism and demands and apology (@) Back in 2020, Ocasio-Cortez took to the floor of the House to clapback at Rep. Ted Yoho (R-Fla), who had called her a fking bitch after she had told him he was rude for putting his finger in her face and saying her disgusting and dangerous.AOC called out the misogyny in the vulgar language used by the Republican congressman. This issue is not about one incident. It is cultural. It is a culture of lack of impunity, of accepting of violence and violent language against women and an entire structure of power that supports that," she said, as reported by NPR.Yoho gave a weak apology and claimed that as a married man and father to two daughters, he would never use the language Ocasio-Cortez accused him of.But the New York representative refused to back down, announcing that she could not sit back and allow victims of verbal abuse or her nieces to see this language used without standing up for herself. "Having a daughter does not make a man decent. Having a wife does not make a decent man. Treating people with dignity and respect makes a decent man. And when a decent man messes up, as we all are bound to do, he tries his best and does apologize," she said.Reading Marjorie Taylor Greene for filth (@) Ocasio-Cortez ruthlessly mocked Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) after the Georgia congresswoman was tapped to work with Elon Musks Department of Government Efficient (DOGE).This is good, actually. She barely shows up and doesnt do the reading. To borrow a phrase I saw elsewhere, its like giving someone an unplugged controller, AOC wrote on X about MTGs new position.She continued to roast Greene, as well as Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, who was originally brought on to be one of DOGEs co-chairs. Absolutely dying at those two now getting assigned the privilege of working with MTG. That is actually hilarious. Enjoy, fellas! Very prestigious post you have there, she postedAOC calls Trump out at the DNC (@) Former Vice President Kamala Harris may not have won the presidential election, but AOC made sure to use her time at the podium at the Democratize National Convention to call out Trump for being a sell out.In her fiery and powerful speech, Ocasio-Cortez praised Harris campaign for being from the middle class while blasting Trump for his greed, ABC 15 reported. We know that Donald Trump would sell this country for a dollar if it meant lining his own pockets and greasing the palms of his Wall Street friends, she said. I, for one, am tired of hearing how a two-bit union buster thinks of himself as more of a patriot than the woman who fights every single day to lift working people out form under the boots of greed trampling on our way of life.AOC called Trump a 'rapist'See on InstagramThe day before Trumps inauguration, AOC took to Instagram to let people know why she wasnt going to be in attendance, and she didnt mince words.All these journalists are like, Congresswoman, are you going to the inauguration, Congresswoman, are you going to inauguration, are you going to the inauguration? Let me make myself clear: I dont celebrate rapists, so no, Im not going to the inauguration, she said in the video she posted, captioning it, Guess Im old school that way.
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  • Meet Sebastian Gonzalez the sexy 'Magic Mike' dancer who'll make you sweat
    www.pride.com
    Let's take this pony for a ride.Sebastian Gonzalez is one of the most recognizable queer dancers in Hollywood right now and it doesn't hurt that he's very easy on the eyes.Following his runs in Magic Mike Live and RuPaul's Drag Race Live in Las Vegas, the crooner is now going viral for his sexy dance moves on social media. In fact, his choreographed dance to the viral "eat the cat" sound from the 2024 presidential debate has racked up millions of views."TikTok has definitely been a good outlet! Magic Mike took a big portion of my career and I'm very grateful, but I was only able to have a certain type of persona and a certain type of style," Gonzalez tells PRIDE. See on Instagram Although Gonzalez has moved on from his Magic Mike days, fans will still see him using his signature steamy moves in a ton of his videos. The star even joked that people will routinely see him grab his downstairs area on camera as a force of habit."It's so engrained in my body from Magic Mike. It's just where my hand falls. I don't put thought into it! People always ask why I'm always grabbing myself. I promise you, it's not intentional! I had to grab it for seven years for Magic Mike. I'm glad some people like it!"Gonzalez is now residing in Los Angeles and keeping himself very busy. Since his appearance during the makeover challenge on season 16 of RuPaul's Drag Race, the dancer has already appeared on the current season during RuPaul's performance of "Devil Made Me Do It (Fred Velvette Remix).""I would do whatever Drag Race wants me to do. It is my favorite TV show. People that made me feel safe are drag queens. They pushed me into being a dancer. Drag Race really just feels like home."Fans can keep up with Sebastian Gonzalez by following him on Instagram. To see the full interview, check out the video at the top of the page.
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  • Kennedy says panel will examine childhood vaccine schedule after promising not to change it
    apnews.com
    Robert F. Kennedy Jr., speaks after being sworn in as Health and Human Services Secretary in the Oval Office at the White House, Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025, in Washington. (Photo/Alex Brandon)2025-02-18T22:39:32Z WASHINGTON (AP) To earn the vote he needed to become the nations top health official, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. made a special promise to a U.S. senator: He would not change the nations current vaccination schedule.But on Tuesday, speaking for the first time to thousands of U.S. Health and Human Services agency employees, he vowed to investigate the childhood vaccine schedule that prevents measles, polio and other dangerous diseases.Nothing is going to be off limits, Kennedy said, adding that pesticides, food additives, microplastics, antidepressants and the electromagnetic waves emitted by cellphones and microwaves also would be studied.Kennedys remarks, which circulated on social media, were delivered during a welcome ceremony for the new health secretary at the agencys headquarters in Washington as a measles outbreak among mostly unvaccinated people raged in West Texas. The event was held after a weekend of mass firings of thousands of HHS employees. More dismissals are expected. In his comments Tuesday, Kennedy promised that a new Make America Healthy Again commission would investigate vaccines, pesticides and antidepressants to see if they have contributed to a rise in chronic illnesses such as diabetes and obesity that have plagued the American public. The commission was formed last week in an executive order by Donald Trump immediately after Kennedy was sworn in as the presidents new health secretary. That directive said the commission will be made up of cabinet members and other officials from the administration and will develop a strategy around childrens health within the next six months. Kennedy said it will investigate issues, including childhood vaccinations, that were formally taboo or insufficiently scrutinized. His call to examine the vaccination schedule raises questions about his commitment to Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy, a Louisiana physician who harbored deep misgivings over the health secretarys anti-vaccine advocacy. Cassidy ultimately voted to send Kennedys nomination to the Senate floor after he said Kennedy gave him assurances that he would not alter the federal vaccine schedule. On this topic, the science is good, the science is credible, Cassidy said during a Senate floor speech earlier this month explaining his vote. Vaccines save lives. They are safe.Rigorous studies of thousands of people followed by decades of real-world use have proven that the vaccines approved by the Food and Drug Administration for both children and adults safely and effectively prevent diseases.Cassidy said during his Senate speech last month that Kennedy had made a number of promises that stemmed from intense conversations to garner his support. Specifically, Cassidy said Kennedy would maintain the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommendations without changes.Those recommendations are what pediatricians around the country use to decide the safest and most effective ages at which to offer vaccinations to children. The committee meets every year to review the latest data on both old and new vaccines to ensure there are no red flags for safety or other issues before publishing its annual schedule. When contacted about Kennedys remarks, Cassidys office did not comment.Kennedy gained a loyal following for his nonprofit by raising objections to COVID-19 protocols and doubts around the COVID-19 vaccine. Despite his work, Kennedy repeatedly told senators that he was not anti-vaccine during his confirmation hearings.Dr. Paul Offit, an infectious-disease expert at Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia who sits on a federal vaccine panel, didnt believe him.I think he will do everything he can to make vaccines less available and less affordable because hes an anti-vaccine activist, Offit, who developed the rotavirus vaccine that is on the CDCs childhood immunization schedule, said last week.Kennedy promised staffers on Tuesday during his speech that he would keep an open mind in his new job and asked them to return the favor.A lot of times when I read these articles characterizing myself, I think I wouldnt want to work for that guy, either, Kennedy said, eliciting some laughs from the crowd. Lets start a relationship by letting go of any preconceived perceptions you may have of me. ___Associated Press writers Matthew Perrone and Lauran Neergaard in Washington contributed to this report. 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. AMANDA SEITZ Seitz is an Associated Press reporter covering federal health care policy. She is based in Washington, D.C. twitter mailto
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  • Federal judge wont immediately block Elon Musk or DOGE from federal data or worker layoffs
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as Elon Musk listens in the Oval Office at the White House, Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025, in Washington. (Photo/Alex Brandon)2025-02-18T21:29:51Z WASHINGTON (AP) A federal judge refused Tuesday to immediately block billionaire Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency from accessing government data systems or participating in worker layoffs. U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan found that there are legitimate questions about Musks authority, but said there isnt evidence of the kind of grave legal harm that would justify a temporary restraining order. The decision came in a lawsuit filed by 14 Democratic states challenging DOGEs authority to access sensitive government data. The attorneys general argued that Musk is wielding the kind of power that the Constitution says can only be held by those who are elected or confirmed by the Senate. The Trump administration, for its part, has maintained that layoffs are coming from agency heads, and asserted that despite his public cheering of the effort Musk isnt directly running DOGEs day-to-day operations himself. DOGE has tapped into computer systems across multiple agencies with the blessing of President Donald Trump, digging into budgets and searching for what he calls waste, fraud and abuse, even as a growing number of lawsuits allege DOGE is violating the law. Chutkan recognized the concerns of the group of states, which include New Mexico and Arizona. DOGEs unpredictable actions have resulted in considerable uncertainty and confusion, she wrote. Their questions about Musks apparent unchecked authority and lack of Congressional oversight for DOGE are legitimate and they may be able to successfully argue them later. Still, at this point, it remains unclear exactly how DOGEs work will affect the states, and judges can only issue court only issue orders to block specific, immediate harms, she found. Chutkan, who was nominated by Democratic President Barack Obama, previously oversaw the now-dismissed criminal election interference case against Trump in Washington, D.C. __ LINDSAY WHITEHURST Whitehurst covers the Supreme Court, legal affairs and criminal justice for The Associated Press in Washington, D.C. Past stops include Salt Lake City, New Mexico and Indiana. twitter mailto
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  • BBC Dismisses Rumors That Doctor Who and Ncuti Gatwa Are Facing Cancellation Over Woke Backlash
    gayety.co
    The BBC has firmly denied rumors suggesting that Doctor Who and its lead star, Ncuti Gatwa, are facing cancellation due to alleged wokery in its storylines. The broadcaster called recent tabloid reports incorrect, dismissing claims that the long-running sci-fi series is in danger of being axed. The speculation arose following an article published by The Sun on 17 FebruarySource
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  • Trumps firing of 1,000 national park workers raises concerns about maintenance and operating hours
    apnews.com
    In this undated photo, a rainbow appears after a hike to the top of Old Rag Mountain in Shenandoah National Park near Sperryville in Madison County, Va. (Frank Green/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP, File)2025-02-18T22:40:38Z WASHINGTON (AP) The Trump administration has fired about 1,000 newly hired National Park Service employees who maintain and clean parks, educate visitors and perform other functions as part of its broad-based effort to downsize government.The firings, which werent publicly announced but were confirmed by Democratic senators and House members, come amid what has been a chaotic rollout of an aggressive program to eliminate thousands of federal jobs plan led by billionaire Elon Musk and the new Department of Government Efficiency, an outside-government organization designed to slash federal spending. Adding to the confusion, the park service now says it is reinstating about 5,000 seasonal jobs that were initially rescinded last month as part of a spending freeze ordered by President Donald Trump.Seasonal workers are routinely added during the warm-weather months to serve more than 325 million visitors who descend on the nations 428 parks, historic sites and other attractions each year. Park advocates say the permanent staff cuts will leave hundreds of national parks including some of the most well-known and most heavily visited sites understaffed and facing tough decisions about operating hours, public safety and resource protection. Fewer staff means shorter visitor center hours, delayed openings and closed campgrounds, said Kristen Brengel, senior vice president of government affairs at the National Parks Conservation Association, an advocacy group. Trash will pile up, restrooms wont be cleaned, and maintenance problems will grow, she predicted. Guided tours will be cut back or canceled and, in the worst cases, public safety could be at risk.The Trump administrations actions are pushing an already overwhelmed Park Service to its breaking point, Brengel said. And the consequences will be felt in our parks for years. A spokesperson for the Interior Department, which oversees the park service, declined to comment Monday. A separate email to the park service received no answer.Democrats on the House and Senate Appropriations Committees confirmed the firings as part of a larger list of terminations ordered by the Trump administration.There is nothing efficient about indiscriminately firing thousands upon thousands of workers in red and blue states whose work is badly needed,' said Sen. Patty Murray. D-Wash., vice chair of the Appropriations panel, who blamed both Trump and Musk.Two billionaires who have zero concept of what the federal workforce does are breaking the American government decimating essential services and leaving all of us worse off, Murray said.Among other cuts, 16 of 17 supervisory positions at Wyomings Grand Teton National Park were eliminated, Brengel said, leaving just one person to hire, train and supervise dozens of seasonal employees expected this summer at the popular park where thousands of visitors marvel at grizzly bears and bison.At Virginias Shenandoah National Park, meanwhile, fee collectors and trail maintenance employees were laid off, potentially making trails at the popular park near Washington, D.C., unpassable after heavy rains. Theyre basically knee-capping the very people who need to train seasonal employees who work as park rangers, maintenance staff and trail managers, Brengel said in an interview. It puts the park in an untenable position. Youre going to hurt tourism.The firings may force small parks to close visitor centers and other facilities, while larger parks will have to function without cultural resources workers who help visitors interpret the park, fee collectors and even wastewater treatment operators, she said. Stacy Ramsey, a ranger at the Buffalo National River in Arkansas, wrote on Facebook that she was fired on Friday. She had been a probationary employee in the first year of a four-year position funded by the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, the climate law signed by former President Joe Biden.Did those who made the decision know or care that the main objective of my position is to provide preventive search and rescue education, to keep park visitors safe? she asked in a widely shared Facebook post. Brian Gibbs, who had been an environmental educator at the Effigy Mounds National Monument in Iowa, was heartbroken after losing what he called his dream job on Friday. I am the defender of your public lands and waters,' Gibbs wrote on Facebook in another widely shared post. I am the motivation to make it up the hill...the Band-Aid for a skinned knee and the lesson that showed your children that we live in a world of gifts not commodities. That gratitude and reciprocity are the doorway to true abundance, not power, money or fear.A freeze on spending under a five-year-old law signed by Trump also jeopardizes national parks, Brengel and other advocates said. The Great American Outdoors Act, passed with bipartisan support in 2020 and signed by Trump, authorizes $6.5 billion over five years to maintain and improve national parks. The program is crucial to whittling down a massive maintenance backlog at the parks and is frequently hailed as a success story by lawmakers from both parties. The freeze could slow road and bridge improvements at Yellowstone National Park, which is in the midst of a $216 million project to improve safety, access and experience on park roads. The project is mostly funded by the Great American Outdoors Act.Democratic senators denounced the job cuts, saying in a letter before the mass firings were imposed that if a significant number of National Park Service workers take an early retirement package offered by Trump or are terminated from their positions, park staffing will be in chaos. Not only does this threaten the full suite of visitor services, but could close entire parks altogether, the senators wrote.The letter was led by Sens. Jeff Merkley of Oregon and Angus King of Maine and signed by 20 other senators.Gutting staff at national park units will devastate local gateway communities where parks generate significant economic activity from hotels to restaurants to stores to outfitters, the senators wrote. Park visitors supported an estimated 415,000 jobs and $55.6 billion in total economic activity in 2023, they said.Ramsey wrote on Facebook that she assisted with at least 20 search-and-rescues on the Buffalo National River in Arkansas over the past five years. She said she worked as a river ranger, upper district fee collector, interpreter and even helped with concessions and maintenance during her time at the park.The Buffalo, established as the first national river in the U.S. by Congress in 1972, flows freely through the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas for 135 miles of quiet pools, majestic bluffs and churning rapids. It is one of the few remaining undammed rivers in the lower 48 states.Ramsey stayed in the river ranger job despite opportunities for more permanent positions, she said, because I loved looking out for the safety of people on the river.I truly loved my job, she wrote. The river is home to me.___ MATTHEW DALY Daly covers climate, environment and energy policy for The Associated Press. He is based in Washington, D.C. twitter mailto
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  • Trump has signed an executive order on IVF. Heres what you should know about the procedure
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump speaks at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (Pool via AP)2025-02-18T23:40:35Z President Donald Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order aiming to reduce the costs of in vitro fertilization, a medical procedure that helps people facing infertility build their families.Americans need reliable access to IVF and more affordable treatment options, as the cost per cycle can range from $12,000 to $25,000, the order said. Providing support, awareness, and access to affordable fertility treatments can help these families navigate their path to parenthood with hope and confidence.The order instructed the assistant to the president for domestic policy to give Trump a list of policy recommendations on protecting IVF access and aggressively reducing out-of-pocket and health plan costs for IVF treatment within 90 days.IVF became a talking point during the 2024 presidential campaign when Alabama agreed to protect in vitro fertilization providers from legal liability a couple of weeks after the state Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos can be considered children under state law. Trump said at the time he strongly supported its availability. And a June poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that about 6 in 10 U.S. adults support protecting access to IVF, with 26% neutral and about 1 in 10 opposed. In 2018, assisted reproductive technology, including IVF, contributed to 2% of all infants born in the United States, according to a report by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Heres what to know about this increasingly common fertility treatment. What is IVF? The procedure offers a possible solution when a woman has trouble getting pregnant, and its normally tried after other, less expensive fertility treatments have failed.It involves retrieving the womans eggs and combining them in a lab dish with a mans sperm to create a fertilized embryo, which is then transferred into her uterus in an attempt to create a pregnancy.IVF is done in cycles and may take more than one. The procedure can use a couples eggs and sperm or those from a donor. Does insurance cover the procedure?Insurance coverage of IVF and other fertility treatments can be patchy and depends on who provides insurance for the patient. More large employers are offering the coverage to attract and keep workers. Many businesses also are extending coverage beyond those with an infertility diagnosis, making it accessible to LGBTQ+ couples and single women. Government-funded programs such as Medicaid largely limit fertility treatment coverage. Coverage is less common among smaller employers.Critics have said the lack of widespread coverage creates a divide, limiting treatments mainly to people who can pay thousands of dollars out of pocket. What is the history of IVF?The first baby conceived through IVF was born in 1978 in England. But the first in the U.S. was in 1981 in Norfolk, Virginia, with the birth of Elizabeth Carr.Her mother, Judith Carr, had had three abnormal pregnancies, forcing the removal of her fallopian tubes. She and her husband sought treatment from Howard and Georgeanna Jones, doctors who opened a fertility clinic at Eastern Virginia Medical School. The Norfolk clinic faced resistance before it even opened. When it sought a required state certificate in 1979, more than 600 people jammed into a public hearing. Several women voiced support for IVF and testified about wanting to start a family, while anti-abortion groups raised concerns about doctors interfering with human conception and embryos being discarded.Despite proposed state legislation to stop the clinic, it opened in 1980, with others following soon afterward in California, Tennessee and Texas. By 1988, at least 169 in vitro centers were operating in 41 states.The use of IVF continued to grow, but sentiments against it never really went away in the American anti-abortion movement, said Margaret Marsh, a history professor at Rutgers University in New Jersey.Many abortion opponents had made an uneasy peace with the technology as a treatment for infertility, Marsh said. But opposition to IVF has gained momentum since the overturn of Roe v. Wade in 2022. Not everyone in the anti-abortion movement opposes these reproductive technologies, but many do, she said. How are embryos made? The treatment often uses hormones to trigger ovulation so multiple eggs are produced and a needle is used to remove them from the ovaries.Eggs can be fertilized by adding the sperm to the eggs in a lab, or a single sperm can be injected into each egg.The fertilized egg is cultured over about five to six days to create the blastocyst the early stage of an embryo and is either transferred or stored for future use, said Dr. Jason Griffith, a reproductive endocrinologist in Houston.Griffith said that on day three after fertilization, an embryo is anywhere from six to 10 cells. By day six, its between 100 and 300 cells. In comparison, he said, a person contains more than 1 trillion cells. How are embryos frozen and stored?Frozen embryos can be used for future pregnancies, and the vast majority survive the thawing process.The freezing process involves replacing the water in embryo cells with a protectant fluid and flash-freezing with liquid nitrogen, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine. Frozen embryos are stored in tanks containing liquid nitrogen at hospital labs or reproductive medicine centers. Griffith said they can also be kept in storage facilities contracted by health care facilities, especially when they are stored for many years. Frozen embryos can be safely preserved for a decade or more. Griffith said conditions are monitored in these facilities and there are physical security mechanisms to safeguard the tanks and backup generators in case of power outages.___Ungar reported from Louisville, Kentucky. Associated Press writers Tom Murphy in Indianapolis and Ben Finley in Norfolk, Virginia contributed reporting. ___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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  • Top 10 'He-Man' characters ranked by how LGBTQ-coded they are
    www.pride.com
    Our childhoods were so gay!While you were busy staring at Nicholas Galitzines bulging muscles as he gets ready to play He-Man in the upcoming live-action movie (no judgement, we were too!), Jon Xue Zhang was cast as Ram-Man and it got us thinking: Which He-Ma characters are the gayest?Not only will Galatzine and his giant muscles be in the film, but the entire cast is stacked. Out star Sasheer Zamata (Suzie) is set to star alongside Camila Mendes (Teela), Jared Leto (Skeletor), Idris Elba (Duncan/Man-at-Arms), Morena Baccarin (The Sorceress), James Purefoy (King Randor), Alison Brie (Evil-Lyn), Charlotte Riley (Queen Marlena), Jhannes Haukur Jhannesson (Malcolm/Fisto), Sam C. Wilson (Trap Jaw), Hafthor Bjornsson (Goat Man) and Kojo Attah (Tri-Klops).Masters of the Universe is based on the 80s cartoon that might not have been textually gay but was HEAVILY queer-coded. From the unrequited love story between Skeletor and He-Man to the design of the muscular crop-top wearing heroes and villains to the names of characters (Ram-Man and Fisto? Cmon!), the show was super gay.Masters of the Universe is set to land in theaters on Jun 5, 2026.Editors note: This is all in good fun, no one is outting your childhood faves. So don't @ us! 10. Man-E-FacesMan-E-Faces has the power to change his face from a man to a robot or a monster. Seems like a talent that would come in handy when youve been on the apps a little too long and need to change things up!9. Man-At-ArmsMan-At-Arms wears crop-top armor and fur briefs, has a 70s porn stache, and likes to take long trips with Prince Adam. So, basically, hes gay with a capital G.8. Ram-ManRam-Man is a gender non-conforming king who wears a skirt and is a human battering ram, meaning he spends his days ramming other men in the, well, just use your imagination...7. Prince AdamHe-Man is Prince Adams alter and its frequently suggested that He-Man living a double life is a metaphor for being a closeted gay man. Plus, the guy loves to wear pink and has a close relationship with Man-At-Arms. Listen, Prince Adam is clearly on the DL.6. He-ManHe-Man is the twunkiest of twunks! He loves to show off his abs, has close relationships with other men, and turns away from two women being intimate. Gaaaaaay!5. LeechLeech is a He-Man villain with the power to suck the life out of people. And the action figure that they used to sell of the character called him the Evil monster of power suction. So basically he was the 1980s throat goat.4. SkeletorSkeletor is so clearly a queen. Hes dramatic, can read someone for filth, and lusts after He-Man (even if hell never admit it). Sometimes Jennifer Coolidge is right and the gays are evil!3. Beast Man (@) Beast Man is Skeletors lackey who he constantly verbally abuses. Hes also covered in fur, wears bondage gear, and has a whip. What were saying is that hes clearly a bear who tops from the bottom!2. FistoI'm really not sure we need anything beyond his name for this one. I mean, Fisto? Plus, he offered to give He-Man a hand. They knew what they were doing!1. Plunder the SpoilerIn the episode Quest for He-Man, a rabbit-headed villain name Plunder the Spoiler on the planet Trannis (were heavily side-eyeing these names), who compliments He-Man as a powerful-looking brute and offers to make great use of his muscles. And if that wasnt gay enough for you, He-Man leaves by flying off straddling Plunders rocket. Hot.
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  • Brazils prosecutor-general files charges against ex-President Bolsonaro over alleged coup plan
    apnews.com
    Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro arrives for a luncheon with senators from his support base, at the National Congress building in Brasilia, Brazil, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres)2025-02-19T00:00:19Z RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) Brazils prosecutor-general on Tuesday filed charges against former President Jair Bolsonaro for attempting a coup to stay in office after his 2022 election defeat.Prosecutor-General Paulo Gonet alleges that Bolsonaro and 33 others participated in plan to remain in power despite losing to current President Luiz Incio Lula da Silva.Last November, Federal Police filed a 884-page report with Gonet detailing the scheme. They allege it involved systematically sowing distrust of the electoral system among the populace, drafting a decree to give the plot a veneer of legality, pressuring top military brass to go along with the plan, and inciting a riot in the capital. The Supreme Court will analyze the charges and, if accepted, Bolsonaro will stand trial.The far-right leader denies wrongdoing. I have no concerns about the accusations, zero, Bolsonaro told journalists earlier on Tuesday during a visit to the Senate in Brasilia.Have you seen the coup decree, by any chance? You havent. Neither have I, he added.A lawyer for Bolsonaro did not immediately respond to a request for comment.____Savarese reported from Sao Paulo.____Follow APs coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america MAURICIO SAVARESE Savarese is a reporter since 2004, with a vast experience covering soccer and politics. English, Espaol, Portugus, some French and a bit of Italian. twitter instagram facebook mailto
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  • White House says Elon Musk is not in charge at DOGE, but is advising the president
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump listens as Elon Musk, joined by his son X A-Xii, speaks in the Oval Office at the White House, Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025, in Washington. (Photo/Alex Brandon)2025-02-18T18:20:55Z WASHINGTON (AP) The White House says billionaire Elon Musk is not technically part of the Department of Government Efficiency team that is sweeping through federal agencies, but is rather a senior adviser to President Donald Trump.Musks exact role could be key in the legal fight over DOGEs access to government data as the Trump administration moves to lay off thousands of federal workers. Defining him as an adviser rather than the administrator in charge of day-to-day operations at DOGE could help the administration as it pushes back against a lawsuit arguing Musk has too much power for someone who isnt elected or Senate-confirmed. The declaration was filed Monday as the Trump administration fends off the lawsuit from several Democratic states that want to block Musk and the DOGE team from accessing government systems. The litigants say Musk is wielding virtually unchecked power in violation of the Constitution. The Trump administration, on the other hand, says Musk is not a DOGE employee and has no actual authority to make government decisions himself, Joshua Fisher, director of the White House Office of Administration, said in court papers. The documents do not name the administrator of DOGE, whose work Musk has championed in posts on his social-media platform X and in a public appearance at the White House. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt declined Tuesday to tell reporters at the White House who the DOGE administrator is, though minutes before she said in an interview with Fox News Channel that Musk has been tasked with overseeing the effort on behalf of the president. Layoffs, she told reporters, are up to individual agency heads. Elon Musk, just like everybody else across the federal government, works at the direction of President Trump, Leavitt said.The DOGE team has roamed from agency to agency, tapping into computer systems, digging into budgets and searching for waste, fraud and abuse, while lawsuits pile up claiming Trump and DOGE are violating the law. At least two are targeting Musk himself. Last week, Musk called for the U.S. to delete entire agencies from the federal government as part of the push to radically cut spending and restructure its priorities.U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan seemed skeptical in a hearing Monday when Justice Department lawyers asserted that Musk has no formal authority.I think you stretch too far. I disagree with you there, Chutkan said.___Associated Press writer Will Weissert contributed to this story. LINDSAY WHITEHURST Whitehurst covers the Supreme Court, legal affairs and criminal justice for The Associated Press in Washington, D.C. Past stops include Salt Lake City, New Mexico and Indiana. twitter mailto
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  • A$AP Rocky dives into Rihannas arms as not guilty verdict is read at felony assault trial
    apnews.com
    A$AP Rocky hugs attorney Joe Tacopina after he was found not guilty during his trial Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, in Los Angeles. (Daniel Cole/Pool Photo via AP)2025-02-18T22:56:27Z LOS ANGELES (AP) A$AP Rocky dove from the defense table into the arms of Rihanna Tuesday as a clerk read the not guilty verdict at his trial on two felony counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm. The Los Angeles courtroom, full of fans of the hip-hop performer and his singing superstar partner, exploded into screaming glee as Rocky and Rihanna embraced and sobbed. After a three-week trial, the jury deliberated for just three hours to reach the verdict that spared Rocky, whose legal name is Rakim Mayers, a prison sentence that could have run more than two decades. Thank yall for saving my life, he told the jurors as they left the Los Angeles courtroom. Amid the chaos, it took the clerk a while to read the second not guilty verdict, though it was very unlikely the jury would split on the counts. On the eve of trial, Rocky turned down a prosecution offer of just six months in jail, along with probation and other conditions, if he would plead guilty to one count. Insisting on his innocence, Rocky decided to gamble that a jury would feel the same. It paid off. The jurors felt at least that there was reasonable doubt of his guilt. Rihanna cried and hugged the defense lawyers, as did Rocky. She attended the trial sporadically and brought the couples two sons 2-year-old RZA Athelston Mayers and 1-year-old Riot Rose Mayers for some of the closing arguments. The verdict came at the height of Rockys fame, if not the pinnacle of his music career. The three-time Grammy nominee, fashion mogul and actor has a banner year in the works, and can now look to it without the threat of prison hanging over him. He is scheduled to headline the Rolling Loud music festival in March; he is one of the celebrity co-chairs of fashions biggest night, the Met Gala, in May; and he stars with Denzel Washington in director Spike Lees film Highest 2 Lowest, set for release in early summer. Prosecutors and their witnesses said that he was beefing with a former friend, A$AP Relli, with whom he had been in a crew who called themselves the A$AP Mob since high school. They said the two men met up in Hollywood on Nov. 6, 2021, and after a scuffle Rocky pulled the gun and fired twice at Relli, who said one of the shots grazed his knuckle but was not seriously hurt. Rockys lawyer Joe Tacopina said in his closing argument that Relli is an angry pathological liar who committed perjury again and again and again and again.Rockys lawyers and witnesses they called said Rocky had shot a prop gun that only fires blanks, which he had been carrying for security since taking it from a music video set months earlier. They said he fired it as a warning because Relli was attacking another member of their crew. The jurors were told that despite three years passing since the incident, no one mentioned the phony gun to authorities until the day jury selection began at the trial. They were also instructed that if they found that Rocky reasonably believed that he or one of the two friends with him that night were in imminent danger of injury, and that he used reasonable force, they could find the defendant not guilty. It wasnt immediately clear whether they reached the verdict because they believed he was in fact carrying a prop gun or that he acted in self-defense. They did not have to agree on their reasoning, or explain it outside of the jury room. They just had to reach the same conclusion. Rocky opted not to testify in his own defense. In his closing argument, Deputy District Attorney John Lewin urged the jurors not to be influenced by the celebrity or family aspects of the case, and suggested Rihanna bringing the kids to closing arguments was an attempt to manipulate the jury.You are not allowed to consider how this might affect Rihanna and his kids, the prosecutor said. We are all responsible for our own actions in the world.After the verdict, Tacopina said outside the courthouse that Rocky did not want her here, I will tell you that.He said Rocky wanted to shield her from this. Wild horses couldnt keep her away.I cant imagine this has been anything but a life-altering experience for them, he said. ANDREW DALTON Dalton covers entertainment for The Associated Press, with an emphasis on crime, courts and obituaries. He has worked for the AP for 20 years and is based in Los Angeles. mailto
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  • Trump says AP will continue to be curtailed at White House until it changes style to Gulf of America
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump speaks at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (Pool via AP)2025-02-19T01:08:52Z President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he will continue to restrict The Associated Press access to his events and news conferences until the news outlet goes along with his renaming of the Gulf of Mexico in its reports. He acknowledged that the move was a presidential retaliation against the news agencys editorial policy. Were going to keep them out until such time as they agree that its the Gulf of America, Trump said, speaking to reporters who witnessed the signing of an executive order at Mar-a-Lago, his Florida estate. Were very proud of this country, and we want it to be the Gulf of America.It was the first time the president himself had commented on the issue since the White House began not allowing AP to cover several of his events last week. Two journalists from AP were denied entrance to Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday; they watched a live television feed of Trumps remarks and were unable to ask questions. Shortly after taking office, Trump renamed the international body of water, which borders the United States, Mexico and other countries and has been named the Gulf of Mexico for more than 400 years. The AP, whose influential Stylebook is the arbiter for editorial choices at thousands of news outlets and other editorial operations, said it would continue to use Gulf of Mexico and note Trumps decision, to ensure that names of geographical features are recognizable around the world. The Associated Press just refuses to go with what the law is, Trump said, an apparent reference to his executive order renaming the Gulf. No law prevents the AP from choosing the style it deems fit. AP spokeswoman Lauren Easton said Tuesday that this is about the government telling the public and press what words to use and retaliating if they do not follow government orders. The White House has restricted APs coverage of presidential events because of how we refer to a location. AP frames it as a free-speech issueWhile the AP has framed the dispute as a First Amendment issue, Trumps team says access to its events most of which are funded by tax dollars is a privilege extended by invitation, and that while AP is still permitted on White House grounds, it no longer has the right to be part of pools that cover events where space is limited.While Trump characterized AP as standing alone against the name change, outlets like The New York Times and The Washington Post are also using Gulf of Mexico. Fox News Channel said it will use Gulf of America as a reference. Axios, noting that it primarily serves a U.S. audience, said its reference will be Gulf of America (renamed by the U.S. from Gulf of Mexico). Additionally, APs myriad customers that use its content follow AP style. Its all part of an ongoing series of actions by the White House that has targeted legacy media. The Pentagon has evicted eight news organizations from workspaces at the Pentagon, and Trump is continuing his lawsuit against CBS News for how it edited a 60 Minutes interview with his Democratic opponent, Kamala Harris, last fall.Elon Musk, who is coordinating cutbacks in government staffing for Trump, posted on his X social media platform after a 60 Minutes broadcast Sunday that people there deserve a long prison sentence. Trump has issues with AP beyond the Gulf disagreementThrough a story in Axios over the weekend, the Trump administration broadened its complaints against the AP beyond the Gulf dispute. White House deputy chief of staff Taylor Budowich told Axios that the administration is concerned about AP weaponizing language through their Stylebook to push a partisan world view.Specifically, it objects to the Stylebooks use of the phrase gender-affirming care to describe medical treatments for transgender people, and the capitalization of Black and not white in racial descriptions.Trump said that some of the phrases that the AP wants to use are ridiculous and obsolete. I guess some are OK, but many arent, the president said, without being specific.He also said, referring to himself in the third person, that AP has been very, very wrong on the election on Trump and the treatment of Trump and other things having to do with Trump and Republicans and conservatives. And theyre doing us no favors. And I guess Im doing them no favors. Thats the way life works. It was unclear which election he was referring to. The AP reported Joe Biden as the winner of the 2020 election against Trump, and Trump the victor over Harris last fall.Trumps Mar-a-Lago appearance on Tuesday was opened to several news outlets that were not part of the small group of reporters that have been traveling with the president in Florida since Friday. Among the outlets admitted into Mar-a-Lago Tuesday were The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Axios, Fox News Channel and Agence France-Presse.___AP White House correspondent Darlene Superville contributed to this report. David Bauder writes about media for the AP. Follow him at http://x.com/dbauder and https://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social DAVID BAUDER Bauder is the APs national media writer, covering the intersection of news, politics and entertainment. He is based in New York. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Tens of millions of dead people arent getting Social Security checks, despite Trump and Musk claims
    apnews.com
    A Social Security card is displayed Oct. 12, 2021, in Tigard, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)2025-02-19T00:11:18Z WASHINGTON (AP) The Trump administration is falsely claiming that tens of millions of dead people over 100 years old are receiving Social Security payments. Over the past few days, President Donald Trump and billionaire adviser Elon Musk have said on social media and in press briefings that people who are 100, 200 and even 300 years old are improperly getting benefits a HUGE problem, Musk wrote, as his Department of Government Efficiency digs into federal agencies to root out waste, fraud and abuse.It is true that improper payments have been made, including some to dead people. But the numbers thrown out by Musk and the White House are overstated and misrepresent Social Security data. Here are the facts: What has the Trump administration said about payments to centenarians?On Tuesday, Trump said at a press briefing in Florida that we have millions and millions of people over 100 years old receiving Social Security benefits. Theyre obviously fraudulent or incompetent, Trump said.If you take all of those millions of people off Social Security, all of a sudden we have a very powerful Social Security with people that are 80 and 70 and 90, but not 200 years old, he said. He also said that theres one person in the system listed as 360 years old.Late Monday, Musk posted a slew of posts on his social media platform X, including: Maybe Twilight is real and there are a lot of vampires collecting Social Security, and Having tens of millions of people marked in Social Security as ALIVE when they are definitely dead is a HUGE problem. Obviously. Some of these people would have been alive before America existed as a country. Think about that for a second How big of a problem is Social Security fraud?A July 2024 report from Social Securitys inspector general states that from fiscal years 2015 through 2022, the agency paid out almost $8.6 trillion in benefits, including $71.8 billion or less than 1% in improper payments. Most of the erroneous payments were overpayments to living people.In addition, in early January, the U.S. Treasury clawed back more than $31 million in a variety of federal payments not just Social Security payments that improperly went to dead people, a recovery that former Treasury official David Lebryk said was just the tip of the iceberg. The money was reclaimed as part of a five-month pilot program after Congress gave the Department of Treasury temporary access to the Social Security Administrations Full Death Master File for three years as part of the omnibus appropriations bill in 2021. The SSA maintains the most complete federal database of individuals who have died, and the file contains more than 142 million records, which go back to 1899, according to the Treasury.Treasury estimated in January that it would recover more than $215 million during its three-year access period, which runs from December 2023 through 2026.So are tens of millions of people over 100 years old receiving benefits?No.Part of the confusion comes from Social Securitys software system called COBOL, which has a lack of date type in its programming. This means that some entries with missing or incomplete birthdates will default to a reference point of more than 150 years ago. The news organization WIRED first reported on the use of COBOL programming language at the Social Security Administration. Additionally, a series of reports from the Social Security Administrations inspector general in March 2023 and July 2024 state that the agency has not established a new system to properly annotate death information in its database, which included roughly 18.9 million Social Security numbers of people born in 1920 or earlier but were not marked as deceased. This does not mean, however, that these individuals were receiving benefits.The agency decided not to update the database because of the cost to do so, which would run upward of $9 million. A July 2023 Social Security OIG report states that almost none of the numberholders discussed in the report currently receive SSA payments. And, as of September 2015, the agency automatically stops payments to people who are older than 115 years old. What are some of the concerns about misinformation on Social Security payments?Chuck Blahous, a senior research strategist at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, said, Two cheers for Elon Musk if he can root out and put a stop to improper payments. But to pick the places in the federal government where error rates are high, Social Security would be near the bottom of the list, not near the top, Blahous said. Medicaid improper payment rates are quite substantial, and soared after the Medicaid expansion of the ACA.By all means go after any improper payments that are found, but lets not pretend thats where the systems biggest financial problems are, he said.Sita Nataraj Slavov, a professor of public policy at the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University, said the claims by Musk and Trump will make people think the solutions to the governments financial problems are simpler than they appear.The real concern is that this claim may mislead people into thinking theres an easy fix to Social Securitys financial problems that we can somehow restore solvency without making sacrifices through higher taxes or lower benefits, Slavov said. This is simply not true. What does the White House say about the criticism?Karoline Leavitt, the White House spokesperson, referred back to the Social Securitys inspector general report.A previous investigation revealed the SSA paid at least $71.8 billion in improper payments, she said. The Social Security Administration is now working to find even more waste, fraud, and abuse in the Administrations whole-of-government effort to protect American taxpayers. __ 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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  • Brothers of the Desert Now Accepting Applicants for Their 2025 Scholarship
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    Brothers of the Desert is proud to have contributed over $20,000 in scholarships to various organizations throughout the Coachella Valley. In 2023, they united in a pivotal decision to launch their very own scholarship program, specifically crafted to tackle the unique challenges faced by young men in our community. This philanthropic group is thrilled to []The post Brothers of the Desert Now Accepting Applicants for Their 2025 Scholarship appeared first on GEDmagazine.
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  • Five Arrested in Death of Transgender Man in New York; Investigation Ongoing
    gayety.co
    New York State Police have arrested five individuals in connection with the disappearance and death of a 24-year-old transgender man from Minnesota, authorities said. The victim, identified as Sam Nordquist, was reported missing earlier this week. The investigation began Sunday after police received a welfare check request from Nordquists family. Officials confirmed Thursday that human remainsSource
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  • Columbine survivor Anne Marie Hochhalter, who forgave gunmans mother, dies at 43
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    Columbine High School shooting survivor Anne Marie Hochhalter reacts during a vigil remembering the 25th anniversary of the mass shooting, April 19, 2024, in Denver. (AP Photo/Jack Dempsey, File)2025-02-18T23:57:26Z DENVER (AP) Anne Marie Hochhalter, who was partially paralyzed in the Columbine High School shooting but found strength to forgive and to heal her soul after bonding with another family devastated by the tragedy, has died. She was 43.Hochhalter was found in her home in suburban Denver on Sunday. Her family suspects she died of natural causes stemming from her injuries in the 1999 shooting in which 12 students and a teacher were killed.The investigation into how she died has been transferred to the office that conducted the autopsies of those killed at Columbine, the coroners office for Adams and Broomfield counties said. Hochhalter in 2016 wrote a letter to one of the gunmens mother saying, Bitterness is like swallowing a poison pill, and offering her forgiveness. Attending a vigil on the tragedys 25th anniversary last year after skipping a similar event five years earlier she said she was flooded with happy memories from her childhood and wanted those killed remembered for how they lived, not how they died. Hochhalter struggled with intense pain from her gunshot wounds over the past 25 years. Yet her brother said she was tireless in her drive to help others from people with disabilities to rescue dogs and members of her family.She was helpful to a great many people. She was really a good human being and sister, her brother, Nathan Hochhalter, said Tuesday. Her own tragedy was compounded six months after the shooting, when her mother, Carla Hochhalter, went into a pawnshop, and asked to look at a gun before using it on herself. In the wake of her mothers death, Anne Marie Hochhalter was embraced by another family who lost a daughter at Columbine. Sue Townsend, whose stepdaughter, Lauren Townsend, was killed, reached out to help Hochhalter as a means of easing ease her own pain. At first, Townsend took Hochhalter to doctors appointments and physical therapy, but their bond soon deepened as they got lunch and went shopping together and eventually began sharing family dinners and vacations. Townsend and her husband, Rick, called Hochhalter their acquired daughter.On a trip to Hawaii together, Hochhalter, who used a wheelchair, was able to float in a lagoon pain-free, she said. This relationship would never had happened if it hadnt been for Columbine. So I tried to focus on the gift that Columbine gave us in Anne Marie instead of what it took away, Townsend said.In 2016, the mother of one of the Columbine gunmen, Sue Klebold, released a memoir exploring the causes of her sons violence and ways to prevent future attacks through mental health awareness. Hochhalter said at the time she was grateful that Klebold was donating the book proceeds to help those with mental illness. Hochhalter said her mother suffered from depression and did not believe the shootings were directly to blame for her death. She said she was sure Klebold had agonized over what she could have done differently just as she had thought of ways she could have prevented the death of the mother she loved. A good friend once told me, Bitterness is like swallowing a poison pill and expecting the other person to die. It only harms yourself. I have forgiven you and only wish you the best, Hochhalter said in a message she posted on Facebook. She also included a photo of a card Sue and Tom Klebold sent to her as she recovered in the hospital after the shooting.Hochhalter attended the 25th anniversary vigil in April with her brother, who was trapped in a classroom during the shooting. She had not attended the 20th anniversary event because of post-traumatic stress disorder, she said in a social media post last year.Ive truly been able to heal my soul since that awful day in 1999, she wrote.
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  • Dominican officials cram thousands of inmates facing no charges into overcrowded prisons
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    Inmates stand inside a corridor during time they are allowed to be outside of their cells at Najayo jail in San Cristobal, west of Santo Domingo, May 30, 2007. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa, File)2025-02-19T05:05:11Z SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) Theyre known as frog men, inmates who are forced to sleep on prison floors across the Dominican Republic, often next to overflowing toilets or holes in the ground that serve as one.Thousands of them are crammed into the countrys severely overcrowded prisons, some operating at seven times their capacity. A majority languish there without ever having been charged with a crime, and activists warn they face inhuman conditions and a lack of medical care.Despite promises to improve the system, critics say the Dominican Republic continues to push for and allow pretrial detentions in nearly all criminal cases where no charges have been filed and has made few changes as problems within prisons keep mounting.Prisons have become no mans land, said Rodolfo Valentn Santos, director of the Dominican Republics National Public Defense Office. Over 60% of the countrys roughly 26,000 inmates are being held under preventive detention, without any charges, according to the National Public Defense Office. Proponents argue the measure aims to protect society and allows authorities time to collect evidence in a case. But some detainees have spent up to 20 years in prison without ever being found guilty of a crime, Valentn said.He noted that the countrys Constitution and penal code dictate that preventive detention is an exceptional measure. There are six other measures that dont involve prison time, including bail, but Valentn said they are rarely used. We have a situationOn a recent afternoon, Darwin Lugo and Yason Guzmn walked out of La Victoria National Penitentiary, in the northeast corner of the sprawling capital, Santo Domingo.The prison was built for a maximum of 2,100 inmates but holds more than 7,000 of them, with more than 3,300 under pretrial detention, according to the National Public Defense Office. It is the countrys oldest and most populated prison.You have to watch out for your life, said Lugo, who with Guzmn visited several friends held there, some under pretrial detention.There are a lot of them who are not doing well, Guzmn said of inmates there. Theres extreme poverty.They said their friends, who have spent more than five years incarcerated there, are well-connected and only occasionally request money or ask that their cell phones SIM card be recharged.Last year, at least 11 inmates died at La Victoria following a short circuit in a cell that sparked a fire and an explosion. It was one of the countrys deadliest prison fires since 2005, when at least 134 inmates were killed in the eastern town of Higey after rival gangs set their bedding ablaze.After last years fire at La Victoria, Dominican President Luis Abinader appointed former prisons director Roberto Santana as head of a commission tasked with overhauling and improving the countrys more than 40 prisons.We must admit, gentlemen, that we have a situation in all of the countrys prisons, Abinader said when he announced the appointment last March. He also announced that money recovered from corruption cases would help fund construction of new prisons. Santana has long called for the closure of La Victoria and the 15 de Azua prison, located in the countrys western region. The commission he leads is working on those and other monumental tasks, free from outside interference, he said.We dont take orders from politicians or anyone else, said Santana, who previously trained staff for the new prisons built in the early 2000s.Santana, who once served as president of the Federation of Dominican Students in the 1970s, was arrested multiple times under President Joaqun Balaguer, known for having political opponents and dissidents jailed and sometimes killed.Santana knows first-hand the conditions of La Victoria he spent two years in solitary confinement there. On the brink of collapseIn the early 2000s, the Dominican Republic began building 21 new prisons to improve conditions. They were staffed by trained personnel, not police and soldiers, which oversee the countrys other 19 prisons.But conditions in the new prisons have deteriorated, according to the Dominican Republics National Commission of Human Rights.The Dominican Republics prison system is on the brink of collapse, the commission said in its 2023 report, the latest one available.In prisons across the country, overcrowding is rampant. Cells lack bathrooms, natural light and ventilation, leading to worsening health conditions. Some 5,000 inmates are ill with conditions ranging from heart problems to cancer to HIV, but they receive only the most basic medication, if that, and some prisons have no medical staff, according to Valentn, whose office issues a yearly in-depth report on the conditions of all prisons.In its 2023 report, the latest year available, his office called for the closure of prisons including one in the north coastal city of Nagua. The level of overcrowdingmakes it impossible to achieve true rehabilitation for the inmates since they have been forgotten by the state, the report read. In the conditions they are in, it is obvious that they are treated as objects and not as human beings endowed with rights.Another prison was so overcrowded that the government held inmates outdoors in trucks with metal roofs that broiled under the sun, sparking lawsuits, Valentn said.A spokesperson for Col. Roberto Hernndez Basilio, director of prisons, did not respond to requests for an interview. Hernndez has previously said his office is taking measures to improve conditions.Meanwhile, Dominican Attorney General Miriam Germn Brito has repeatedly spoken out against pretrial detention but noted that the decision lies in the hands of judges. A spokesperson for Germn said she is not granting media interviews.Both Santana and Valentn said they believe government corruption is one reason the country has dragged its feet in overhauling the system, accusing soldiers and police who run prisons of benefiting from illegal activities.Public corruption also prompted authorities to halt construction of a much-touted prison in recent years that was expected to ease overcrowding.Even as that half-built prison wastes away, Santana said he expects that 25 new prisons capable of holding more than 20,000 inmates will be built by 2028.While those are expected to help ease overcrowding, concerns remain. Activists note that inmates are not freed even when a judge has legally released them.The National Commission of Human Rights noted that roughly 2,700 inmates are still in prison because their paperwork is paralyzed in backlogged courts. Meanwhile, hundreds of others remain incarcerated despite being officially freed because they owe the government money and are unable to pay fines ordered by a judge.____Follow APs coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america
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  • Malaysia is betting on data centers to boost its economy. But experts warn they come at a price.
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    Construction workers walk outside a data center building under construction in Johor Bahru town at Johor state, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2024. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)2025-02-19T05:01:06Z JOHOR BAHRU, Malaysia (AP) Winson Lau has always had contingency plans. But he wasnt prepared for data centers.Lau relies on water and electricity to operate his thriving export business in Malaysias Johor province, where he raises a kaleidoscope of tropical fish in rows of aquariums, including albino fish with red spots that can fetch up to $10,000 from collectors. His contingency plans in the event of an outage involve an intricate system of purifying wastewater through friendly bacteria and an alarm system to quickly switch to backup power.But these measures cant compete with the gigantic, power-guzzling and thirsty data centers being built in Johor. The province is on track to have at least 1.6 gigawatts of data centers at any given moment from nearly nothing in 2019, making it the fastest-growing data center market in Southeast Asia, according to a report published in April. Data centers are large, windowless buildings filled with racks of computers that need lots of electricity. To prevent overheating, they rely on energy-intensive air conditioning systems using pumped water. Increasingly used by tech companies for running artificial intelligence systems, the power demand from future facilities in Malaysia may rise to over 5 gigawatts by 2035, according to researchers at Malaysias Kenanga Investment Bank. This is more than half of Malaysias entire renewable capacity in 2023. Over 95% of the energy available to Malaysia in 2022 was from fossil fuels, according to the International Energy Agency. The country is now fifth-largest exporter of liquefied natural gas globally. And with planned renewable projects, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said in September that the country was confident of a surplus of energy to fuel large projects and keep exporting. But Lau doesnt fancy the chances of his homegrown business competing against the foreign-funded behemoths for energy. Even without data centers, Malaysia is susceptible to power interruptions because of storms, including one that lasted 30 minutes last year and killed 300,000 fish, costing Lau over $1 million. He worries that data centers would result in longer outages. To survive, he is moving to Thailand and already scouting potential locations for a new fish farm. Big data center is coming and there is shortage of power, he said. Itll be crazy. Costs versus benefitsMalaysia is betting that potential economic growth from data centers justifies the risk. Once touted as an Asian tiger on the cusp of becoming rich, its industries shrunk in the late 1990s after the Asian financial crisis. It has since languished in the middle-income trap. Data centers, the government hopes, will modernize its economy and indirectly create thousands of high-paying jobs.But experts worry that Malaysia, and others like Vietnam, Indonesia and India vying for billion-dollar investments from tech giants, may be overstating data centers transformative capabilities that also come at a price: Data centers gobble up land, water and electricity while creating far fewer jobs than they promise. Most data centers provide 30 to 50 permanent jobs while the larger ones create 200 jobs at most, according to a report by the American nonprofit Good Jobs First. Add to this the rapid increase in power and water use and some experts like Sofia Scasserra, who researches digital economies at the Amsterdam-based think tank Transnational Institute, said that tech companies exploiting resources in poorer countries while extracting data from their populations to get rich is akin to digital colonialism. She compared data extraction to silver mining in Bolivia, which enriched colonial Spain but left nothing behind for Latin America.They are extracting data in the same way. Data doesnt even leave (behind) taxes, she said. Indeed, only a small portion of Malaysias data center capacity is actually for Malaysian users. Through a network of submarine cables that fans out into the world, they service East Asia, China and Europe. And the data centers themselves are run by foreign companies like Americas Equinix and Microsoft as well as Chinese competitor GDS Holdings that works with tech giants like Alibaba. These data centers are also on the front lines of AI competition between the U.S. and China. Shortly before he left office, U.S. President Joe Bidens administration proposed new rules that would limit exports of advanced AI chips made by U.S. companies like Nvidia, part of a strategy to deprive China and other U.S. adversaries from gaining access to AI technology through data centers in places likes Southeast Asia and the Middle East. Although its unclear if the Trump administration will retain the policy, which hasnt yet taken effect, GDS Holdings saw its stock drop more than 18% on the day of the announcement. Filling the voidFor now, artificial intelligence is driving the hunger for even more data centers, with tech companies seeking out bigger and cheaper sites worldwide as a part of a global strategy, said Rangu Salgame, chairman and CEO of Singapores Princeton Digital Group, which is building a 170-megawatt site in Johor. Data centers larger than 40 megawatt typically need land the size of seven football fields about enough power for 36,000 American homes, according to data center service provider Stream Data Centers. Thats costly to build in rich nations like the U.S., which over time has built more data centers than any other country but where land comes at a high price. Enter Malaysia, with its inexpensive land, excess power capacity and tax incentives. The country was the fastest growing data center market in Asia Pacific in the first half of 2024, according to global real estate firm Cushman and Wakefield. This makes Malaysia the eighth-largest data center market in terms of operations and the fifth-largest behind China, India, Japan and Australia when accounting for projects already in the pipeline. Globally Malaysia ranks 14th in terms of operational capacity still smaller than Frankfurt, London, Amsterdam, Paris and Dublin but it is on track to be among the top 10 markets in five to seven years, according to Pritesh Swamy, who heads research on data centers in Asia for the real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield.We are talking about a region that really grew at a pace that nowhere in the world has seen, Salgame said.Next door to Malaysia is Singapore, which paused the construction of new data centers in 2019. The moratorium was over concerns that the energy-guzzling infrastructure was straining the tiny countrys limited resources. In 2019, data centers consumed 7% of the total electricity in the city-state that imports both power and water while aiming to reach net-zero emissions by 2050. They have been trying to build data centers sustainably since 2022, when the moratorium ended. In the meantime, Malaysia has stepped in to fill the void, attracting investments of over $31 billion three times the investments for 2023 in the first 10 months of 2024, according to research by real estate firm Knight Frank. Johor already has 22 mostly foreign data centers spanning over 21 hectares, according to the research firm Baxtel. Thats the equivalent of nearly 40 football fields, although not all of the data centers are operational. Concerns over power and water shortagesThe data centers that are running look anonymous from the outside. But they can be identified by the tell-tale signs of barbed wire fences, CCTV cameras and patrolling security guards. Elsewhere, a thicket of cranes and workers operating construction machinery is transforming the landscape in the sleepy province. Salgame said that he hoped data centers could accelerate clean energy growth and experts like Putra Adhiguna of the Jakarta-based think tank Energy Shift Institute agreed that this could happen, but warned that the sheer volume of unforeseen, future demand complicates the transition.Add data centers on top of that, it just becomes much more challenging, he said.Tropical Malaysia is warmer than the countries that were initially preferred by data centers, including Ireland, and would require more water and power for cooling, said Alex de Vries, the founder of Digiconomist, a research company studying the unintended consequences of digital trends. He said that these companies are moving to new countries after their promises of economic growth were found to be empty. And while new solar or wind farms can be built faster than other forms of energy, data centers need a lot of electricity from the get-go. These big tech companies are trying to distract you from the really simple math, he said.Malaysia acknowledges that the energy demand from data centers is substantial but believes that Johors rise as a data center powerhouse will make it a key player in Southeast Asias digital ecosystem, said Malaysian Investment, Trade and Industry minister Tengku Zafrul Aziz in an email. He added that Malaysia was writing efficiency guidelines for data centers and has a policy to let them buy clean energy directly from producers.But concerns are rising among residents about potential water shortages in the future echoing the concerns of other developing countries like Chile. Malaysia, like much of Southeast Asia, is at risk of extreme weather including drought, according to a 2022 U.N. climate change report. Francis Hutchinson, an analyst at Singapores ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, said that Johor has faced recent disruptions and new stressors, like a growing population and water parks to boost tourism, could exacerbate the crisis. Water, more than power, is a potential issue, he said.______AP writer Eileen Ng contributed from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and Matt OBrien in Providence, Rhode Island contributed to this report..______The Associated Press climate and environmental 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. ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL Ghosal covers the intersection of business and climate change in southeast Asia for The Associated Press. He is based out of Hanoi in Vietnam. twitter mailto VINCENT THIAN Thian is a Malaysia-based photographer for The Associated Press. twitter instagram facebook mailto
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  • Trump imposes his vision on America in departure from first-term stumbles
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    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)2025-02-19T05:01:08Z WASHINGTON (AP) Months into his first term as president, Donald Trump was furious with the snowballing Russia investigation and ordered White House Counsel Don McGahn to make sure that special counsel Robert Mueller got fired.Mueller has to go, McGahn recalled Trump saying. Call me back when you do it.But McGahn didnt do it, and Trump didnt even bring it up the next time they saw each other. Such incidents were common during Trumps initial experience in the White House, where officials would soften or ignore his most outrageous decisions and the president seemed unwilling to enforce his will.Its hard to imagine the same thing happening during Trumps second term. Instead of repeating his laissez-faire attitude toward his own administration, the Republican president is asserting control at every opportunity, backed up by loyalists at all levels of government. Despite occasional disorganization and confusion, theres a headstrong determination to push through any obstacles. Trump doesnt just want to change course from Joe Bidens presidency, his team is holding back congressionally authorized funding championed by his predecessor. Not only did Trump officials tell the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to stop working, his team set up a tip line so people could report unauthorized actions taken by staff at the agency.Trump wasnt satisfied with simply firing all the board members at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. He made himself chairman. This time, Trump seems to be saying, his orders will not be ignored. This time, there will be follow through. The White House summarizes Trumps approach with the mantra promises made, promises kept. Administration officials also dismiss concerns that the president is exercising too much control. They say Trump is entitled to impose his vision on the government that he was elected to lead. Others see something darker and more menacing for the country and its future. Donald Trumps instincts havent changed, said Timothy Naftali, a Columbia University historian. Hes just angrier, meaner and more effective than he was in his first term.Trump often felt like he was undermined in his first term by the deep state, a term used by his allies to describe civil servants and career officials. Now, hes moving swiftly to cut the federal bureaucracy with the help of Elon Musk, the billionaire entrepreneur Trump has empowered to oversee the downsizing of the workforce.Weve never had a president come into office with such a deep desire for revenge, Naftali said. Donald Trump is trying to hollow out institutions that he thinks embarrassed him.The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which was created to protect Americans from financial fraud, abuse and deceptive practices, has been brought to a standstill. The U.S. Agency for International Development, a leading distributor of humanitarian assistance, was shut down.A prime target is the Department of Justice, which infuriated Trump by investigating him during his first term and after leaving office. He was indicted twice by federal authorities, although the cases were dropped after he won last years election because sitting presidents cant be prosecuted while in office. Now Trump has placed loyalists in leadership positions, such as Emil Bove, the acting deputy attorney general who was previously Trumps defense attorney. Last week, Bove pushed to drop corruption charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, saying it was more important for Adams to help Trump enact stricter immigration policies. The pending prosecution has unduly restricted Mayor Adams ability to devote full attention and resources to the illegal immigration and violent crime that escalated under the policies of the prior Administration, Bove wrote. Several prosecutors in New York and Washington resigned in protest, and a court hearing is scheduled for Wednesday.Trump said that he wasnt involved in the decision to drop the case against Adams, but hes previously said that the mayor had been unfairly targeted for political reasons. Another example of Trumps heavy-handed approach this time has been his handling of criminal charges against supporters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Hours after taking the oath of office a month ago, the president pardoned roughly 1,500 people, including those who attacked police officers. Then his administration decided to push even further. Thousands of FBI employees are being questioned about their role in Jan. 6 investigations, with suggestions that they could face punishment.Bove said agents who simply followed orders and carried out their duties in an ethical manner were not at risk, adding that the only individuals who should be concerned ... are those who acted with corrupt or partisan intent. Its a sharp change from Trumps first administration, which included a number of establishment figures who resisted his impulses.Olivia Troye, a former national security official who has been a critic of Trump, said staff members would confer with each other after meetings with the president.Why dont you hold on that before you go do something, and lets see what happens, Troye recalled people saying. Lets see if it passes.The mixed signals were partly a matter of inexperience. The president and some of his advisers had never served in government. During the first administration, quite frankly, they had no idea what they were doing, Troye said. Now they have people in place who were there the first time around. Theyve been preparing to execute for several years.Trump has taken a scorched-earth approach to uprooting diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, commonly known as DEI. Hes signed executive orders to end the programs, but that wasnt enough for his administration. Messages distributed by the Office of Personnel Management, which functions as the human resources agency for the federal government, said employees should not try to disguise these programs by using coded or imprecise language. Anyone who sees evidence of DEI should immediately disclose it.There will be no adverse consequences for timely reporting this information, the messages said. However, failure to report this information within 10 days may result in adverse consequences. CHRIS MEGERIAN Megerian covers the White House for The Associated Press. He previously wrote about the Russia investigation, climate change, law enforcement and politics in California and New Jersey. twitter mailto
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  • Nearly 300 deportees from US held in Panama hotel as officials try to return them to their countries
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    Panama's Minister of Public Security Frank Alexis Abrego, speaks to reporters after watching people board a repatriation flight bound for Colombia at Albrook Airport in Panama City, Feb. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)2025-02-19T00:30:16Z PANAMA CITY (AP) Panama is detaining in a hotel nearly 300 people from various countries deported under U.S. President Donald Trump, not allowing them to leave while waiting for international authorities to organize a return to their countries.More than 40% of the migrants, authorities say, wont voluntarily return to their homeland. Migrants in the hotel rooms held messages to the windows reading Help and We are not save (sic) in our country.The migrants hailed from 10 mostly Asian countries, including Iran, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Afghanistan, China and others. The U.S. has difficulty deporting directly to some of those countries so Panama is being used as a stopover. Costa Rica was expected to receive a similar flight of third-country deportees on Wednesday.Panamas Security Minister Frank Abrego said Tuesday the migrants are receiving medical attention and food as part of a migration agreement between Panama and the U.S. The Panamanian government has now agreed to serve as a bridge or transit country for deportees, while the U.S. bears all the costs of the operation. The agreement was announced earlier this month after U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubios visit. Panamanian President Jos Ral Mulino, who faces political pressure over Trumps threats of retaking control of the Panama Canal, announced the arrival of the first of the deportation flights last Thursday. The confinement and legal limbo the deportees face has raised alarm in the Central American country, especially as images spread of migrants peaking through the windows of their rooms on high floors of the hotel and displaying the notes pleading for help.Abrego denied the foreigners are being detained even though they cannot leave the rooms of their hotel, which is being guarded by police.Abrego said that 171 of the 299 deportees have agreed to return voluntarily to their respective countries with help from the International Organization for Migration and the U.N. Refugee Agency. U.N. agencies are talking with the other 128 migrants in an effort to find a destination for them in third countries. Abrego said that one deported Irish citizen has already returned to her country. Those who do not agree to return to their countries will be temporarily held in a facility in the remote Darien province through which hundreds of thousands of migrants have crossed on their journey north in recent years, Abrego said.The Panamanian Ombudsmans Office was scheduled to provide more details on the deportees situation later Tuesday.
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  • Israels West Bank crackdown triggers a wave of displacement unseen in decades
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    A road barrier blocking access to the Ennab Israeli military checkpoint, leading toward the northern West Bank city of Tulkarem, reads "No future in Palestine," near the West Bank village of Ennab Monday, Feb. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)2025-02-19T06:40:29Z FARA REFUGEE CAMP, West Bank (AP) By car and on foot, through muddy olive groves and snipers sight lines, tens of thousands of Palestinians in recent weeks have fled Israeli military operations across the northern West Bank the largest displacement in the occupied territory since the 1967 Mideast war.After announcing a widespread crackdown against West Bank militants on Jan. 21 just two days after its ceasefire deal with Hamas in Gaza Israeli forces descended on the restive city of Jenin, as they have dozens of times since Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel. But unlike past operations, Israeli forces then pushed deeper and more forcefully into several other nearby towns, including Tulkarem, Fara and Nur Shams, scattering families and stirring bitter memories of the 1948 war over Israels creation.During that war, 700,000 Palestinians fled or were forced from their homes in what is now Israel. That Nakba, or catastrophe, as Palestinians call it, gave rise to the crowded West Bank towns now under assault and still known as refugee camps.This is our nakba, said Abed Sabagh, 53, who bundled his seven children into the car on Feb. 9 as sound bombs blared in Nur Shams camp, where he was born to parents who fled the 1948 war. Tactics from Gaza Humanitarian officials say they havent seen such displacement in the West Bank since the 1967 Mideast war, when Israel captured the territory west of the Jordan River, along with east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, displacing another 300,000 Palestinians.This is unprecedented. When you add to this the destruction of infrastructure, were reaching a point where the camps are becoming uninhabitable, said Roland Friedrich, director of West Bank affairs for the U.N. Palestinian refugee agency. More than 40,100 Palestinians have fled their homes in the ongoing military operation, according to the agency. Experts say that Israels tactics in the West Bank are becoming almost indistinguishable from those deployed in Gaza. Already, President Donald Trumps plan for the mass transfer of Palestinians out of Gaza has emboldened Israels far-right to renew calls for annexation of the West Bank.The idea of cleansing the land of Palestinians is more popular today than ever before, said Yagil Levy, head of the Institute for the Study of Civil-Military Relations at Britains Open University. The Israeli army denies issuing evacuation orders in the West Bank. It said troops secure passages for those wanting to leave on their own accord. Seven minutes to leave home Over a dozen displaced Palestinians interviewed in the last week said they did not flee their homes out of fear, but on the orders of Israeli security forces. Associated Press journalists in the Nur Shams camp also heard Israeli soldiers shouting through mosque megaphones, ordering people to leave.Some displaced families said soldiers were polite, knocking on doors and assuring them they could return when the army left. Others said they were ruthless, ransacking rooms, waving rifles and hustling residents out of their homes despite pleas for more time.I was sobbing, asking them, Why do you want me to leave my house? My baby is upstairs, just let me get my baby please, Ayat Abdullah, 30, recalled from a shelter for displaced people in the village of Kafr al-Labd. They gave us seven minutes. I brought my children, thank God. Nothing else.Told to make their own way, Abdullah trudged 10 kilometers (six miles) on a path lighted only by the glow from her phone as rain turned the ground to mud. She said she clutched her children tight, braving possible snipers that had killed a 23-year-old pregnant woman just hours earlier on Feb. 9.Her 5-year-old son, Nidal, interrupted her story, pursing his lips together to make a loud buzzing sound.Youre right, my love, she replied. Thats the sound the drones made when we left home. Hospitality, for nowIn the nearby town of Anabta, volunteers moved in and out of mosques and government buildings that have become makeshift shelters delivering donated blankets, serving bitter coffee, distributing boiled eggs for breakfast and whipping up vats of rice and chicken for dinner. Residents have opened their homes to families fleeing Nur Shams and Tulkarem.This is our duty in the current security situation, said Thabet Amar, the mayor of Anabta.But he stressed that the towns welcoming hand should not be mistaken for anything more. We insist that their displacement is temporary, he said. Staying putWhen the invasion started on Feb. 2, Israeli bulldozers ruptured underground pipes. Taps ran dry. Sewage gushed. Internet service was shut off. Schools closed. Food supplies dwindled. Explosions echoed. Ahmad Sobuh could understand how his neighbors chose to flee the Fara refugee camp during Israels 10-day incursion. But he scavenged rainwater to drink and hunkered down in his home, swearing to himself, his family and the Israeli soldiers knocking at his door that he would stay.The soldiers advised against that, informing Sobuhs family on Feb. 11 that, because a room had raised suspicion for containing security cameras and an object resembling a weapon, they would blow up the second floor. The surveillance cameras, which Israeli soldiers argued could be exploited by Palestinian militants, were not unusual in the volatile neighborhood, Sobuh said, as families can observe street battles and Israeli army operations from inside.But the second claim sent him clambering upstairs, where he found his nephews water pipe, shaped like a rifle.Hours later, the explosion left his nephews room naked to the wind and shattered most others. It was too dangerous to stay.They are doing everything they can to push us out, he said of Israels military, which, according to the U.N. agency for refugees, has demolished hundreds of homes across the four camps this year.The Israeli army has described its ongoing campaign as a crucial counterterrorism effort to prevent attacks like Oct. 7, and said steps were taken to mitigate the impact on civilians. A chilling returnThe first thing Doha Abu Dgehish noticed about her familys five-story home 10 days after Israeli troops forced them to leave, she said, was the smell. Venturing inside as Israeli troops withdrew from Fara camp, she found rotten food and toilets piled with excrement. Pet parakeets had vanished from their cages. Pages of the Quran had been defaced with graphic drawings. Israeli forces had apparently used explosives to blow every door off its hinges, even though none had been locked. Rama, her 11-year-old daughter with Down syndrome, screamed upon finding her dolls skirt torn and its face covered with more graphic drawings.AP journalists visited the Abu Dgehish home on Feb. 12, hours after their return.Nearly two dozen Palestinians interviewed across the four West Bank refugee camps this month described army units taking over civilian homes to use as a dormitories, storerooms or lookout points. The Abu Dgehish family accused Israeli soldiers of vandalizing their home, as did multiple families in Fara.The Israeli army blamed militants for embedding themselves in civilian infrastructure. Soldiers may be required to operate from civilian homes for varying periods, it said, adding that the destruction of civilian property was a violation of the militarys rules and does not conform to its values.It said any exceptional incidents that raise concerns regarding a deviation from these orders are thoroughly addressed, without elaborating.For Abu Dgehish, the mess was emblematic of the emotional whiplash of return. No one knows when theyll have to flee again.Its like they want us to feel that were never safe, she said. That we have no control. ISABEL DEBRE DeBre writes about Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay for The Associated Press, based in Buenos Aires. Before moving to South America in 2024, she covered the Middle East reporting from Jerusalem, Cairo and Dubai. twitter mailto
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  • How US tech giants supplied Israel with AI models, raising questions about techs role in warfare
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    An Israeli flag is draped over the Microsoft offices in a building in the Gav Yam technology park in Beersheba, Israel, on Thursday, May 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Sam Mednick)2025-02-18T12:12:11Z 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, along with 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 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. 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. 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. Israels Use of AI and Cloud Computing Soared During WarAmong 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 Col. Racheli Dembinsky, 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.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. Microsoft declined to provide any comment for this story and did not respond to a detailed list of written questions about the cloud and AI services it provides to the Israeli military.In an expansive statement on its website, the company says respecting human rights is a core value of Microsoft and 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 map, measure, and manage generative AI risks throughout the development cycle to reduce the risk of harm, and does not mention its lucrative military contracts.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.The Israeli military declined to answer detailed written questions from The AP about its use of commercial AI products from American tech companies, but said its analysts use AI-enabled systems to help identify targets and independently examine them together with high-ranking officers to meet international law, weighing the military advantage against the collateral damage. 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. 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. Other U.S. Tech Firms Also Work With Israels MilitaryGoogle 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 IDF 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, while Palantir Technologies, a Microsoft partner in U.S. defense contracts, has a strategic partnership providing AI systems to help Israels war efforts. 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.What Is Commercial AI Used For?The Israel Defense Forces 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.Are Israels AI Systems Reliable?Errors can happen for many reasons involving AI, said Israeli military officers who have worked with the targeting systems and other tech experts. Intercepted phone calls tied to a persons profile 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.The Israeli military says a person who knows Arabic is supposed to check translations. Still, one intelligence officer said he had seen targeting mistakes that relied on incorrect machine translations from Arabic to Hebrew.___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. 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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  • Philippine village battles dengue by offering bounties for mosquitos dead or alive
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    A mosquito, captured by a resident, flies to a glass enclosure with a UV light trap in Mandaluyong city, Philippines as their village started offering bounty for captured mosquitos, dead or alive, as part of an anti-dengue campaign on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)2025-02-19T07:40:19Z MANILA, Philippines (AP) A village in the densely populated Philippine capital region launched a battle against dengue Wednesday by offering a token bounty to residents for captured mosquitos dead or alive.The unusual strategy adopted by the Addition Hills village in Mandaluyong City reflects growing concern after the nearby city of Quezon declared an outbreak of the mosquito-borne illness over the weekend. Eight more areas reported an upsurge in cases of the potentially deadly viral infection.At least 28,234 dengue cases have been recorded in the Philippines this year up to Feb. 1, a 40% increase compared to the same period last year, according to health department statistics. Quezon City declared a dengue outbreak Saturday after deaths this year reached 10 people, mostly children, out of 1,769 residents infected.A urban village of more than 100,000 residents living in crowded neighborhoods and residential condominium towers, Addition Hills has done clean-ups, canal de-clogging and a hygiene campaign to combat dengue. But when cases spiked to 42 this year and two young students died, village leader Carlito Cernal decided to intensify the battle. There was an alarm, Cernal told The Associated Press. I found a way. Residents line up to show their captured mosquito larvas in Mandaluyong city, Philippines as their village started offering bounty for captured mosquitos, dead or alive, as part of an anti-dengue campaign on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila) Residents line up to show their captured mosquito larvas in Mandaluyong city, Philippines as their village started offering bounty for captured mosquitos, dead or alive, as part of an anti-dengue campaign on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Village chief Carlito Cernal, center, pours a container with mosquito larvas that was captured by a resident in Mandaluyong city, Philippines as their village started offering bounty for captured mosquitos, dead or alive, as part of an anti-dengue campaign on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila) Village chief Carlito Cernal, center, pours a container with mosquito larvas that was captured by a resident in Mandaluyong city, Philippines as their village started offering bounty for captured mosquitos, dead or alive, as part of an anti-dengue campaign on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More A resident shows his captured mosquito which he placed inside a plastic cup in Mandaluyong city, Philippines as a village started offering bounty for captured mosquitos, dead or alive, as part of an anti-dengue campaign on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila) A resident shows his captured mosquito which he placed inside a plastic cup in Mandaluyong city, Philippines as a village started offering bounty for captured mosquitos, dead or alive, as part of an anti-dengue campaign on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Residents will get a reward of one Philippines peso (just over 1 cent) for every five mosquitos or mosquito larva they turn in, Cernal said. Critics warned the strategy could backfire if desperate people start breeding mosquitoes for the reward. Cernal said that was unlikely because the campaign would be terminated as soon as the uptick in cases eases.As the campaign began, about a dozen mosquito hunters showed up at the village office. Miguel Labag, a 64-year-old scavenger, handed a jug with 45 dark mosquito larvas squirming in some water and received a reward of nine pesos (15 cents).This is a big help, Labag said, smiling. I can buy coffee. Michael Labag shows the 9 pesos reward he got from the 45 mosquito larvas he captured in Mandaluyong city, Philippines as the village started offering bounty for captured mosquitos, dead or alive, as part of an anti-dengue campaign on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila) Michael Labag shows the 9 pesos reward he got from the 45 mosquito larvas he captured in Mandaluyong city, Philippines as the village started offering bounty for captured mosquitos, dead or alive, as part of an anti-dengue campaign on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Dengue is a mosquito-borne viral infection found in tropical countries worldwide. It can cause joint pain, nausea, vomiting and rashes, and in severe cases can cause breathing problems, hemorrhaging and organ failure. While there is no specific treatment for the illness, medical care to maintain a persons fluid levels is seen as critical.Officials in another village in Quezon City were considering releasing swarms of frogs to eat mosquitoes.Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa said its crucial to clean up mosquito breeding sites, and for anyone who might be infected to seek immediate medical attention. Despite an increase in dengue infections, the Philippines has managed to maintain low mortality rates, he said.Dengue cases surged unexpectedly ahead of the rainy season, which starts in June, likely because of intermittent downpours that have left stagnant pools of water where dengue-causing mosquitos can breed, Health Undersecretary Alberto Domingo said, adding that climate change was likely contributing to off-season downpours.
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  • Trumps Labor Department pick has union support. Worker advocates wonder how much power shed have
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    Former Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer, R-Ore., President-elect Donald Trump's pick for Secretary of Labor, left, is pictured on Capitol Hill, Jan. 14, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)2025-02-19T10:00:08Z NEW YORK (AP) Union leaders have described President Donald Trumps nominee to lead the Department of Labor as a friend of organized labor. But as her confirmation hearing begins Wednesday, advocates for workers rights question whether Lori Chavez-DeRemer will be able to uphold that reputation in an administration that has fired thousands of federal employees.Chavez-DeRemer, a former Republican member of Congress from Oregon and former mayor of a small city on the edge of liberal-leaning Portland, is scheduled to appear before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions, the first stop in her confirmation process. During her one term as a congresswoman, Chavez-DeRemers voting record earned her strong union support. Some political observers surmised that Trump picked her as his labor secretary as a way to appeal to voters who are members of or affiliated with labor organizations. She is the daughter of a Teamster member. Before she lost her House reelection bid in November, Chavez-DeRemer backed the PRO Act, legislation that would allow more workers to conduct union organizing campaigns and penalize companies that violate workers rights. The bill, one of former President Joe Bidens priorities, passed the House in 2021 but didnt gain traction in the Senate. If confirmed as secretary, Chavez-DeRemer would be in charge of the Department of Labors nearly 16,000 full-time employees and a proposed budget of $13.9 billion in fiscal year 2025. She would set priorities that impact workers wages, ability to unionize, and health and safety, as well as employers rights to fire employees. But its unclear how much power Chavez-DeRemer will be able to wield as Trumps Cabinet moves to slash U.S. government spending and the size of the federal workforce. During his first month in office, the president froze trillions of dollars in federal funding and offered buyouts to most federal workers. His administration last week started laying off nearly all probationary employees who had not yet gained civil service protection. Billionaire Elon Musk, who leads Trumps Department of Government Efficiency, has called for getting rid of entire agencies. The Department of Labor is the agency where people in building are supposed to wake up every day thinking about how they can improve the lives of working people, said Adam Shah, director of national policy at Jobs with Justice, a nonprofit organization that promotes workers rights. Its quite possible that no matter what the secretary of labor stands for, the billionaire embedded in the Trump administration, who is so keen on destroying the institutions, will be interested in gutting the Department of Labor.In January, Trump fired two of three Democratic commissioners serving on the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, a federal agency that enforces civil rights in the workplace. He also fired the acting chair of the National Labor Relations Board, Gwynne Wilcox, the first Black woman to serve as an NLRB member, as well as General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo. Wilcox sued the Trump administration, arguing that federal law protects her from being arbitrarily dismissed. Republicans have made inroads with working-class voters. Despite decades of labor unions siding with Democrats, and Trumps apparent support for firing striking workers, his populist appeal gained him votes from rank-and-file union members. Many major unions, including the AFL-CIO and the United Auto Workers, endorsed Democrat Kamala Harris in the presidential race. The International Brotherhood of Teamsters declined to endorse a candidate, and Teamsters leader Sean OBrien spoke at the Republican National Convention. The Teamsters have endorsed Chavez-DeRemers nomination. Some observers expect Chavez-DeRemer to receive more votes from Senate Democrats than some of Trumps other Cabinet selections did. But the same positions that won her support from unions may make her a harder sell with business groups; the American Trucking Associations and the International Franchise Association said they hoped she would disavow her past support for the Pro Act by working to get it overturned. Emily Twarog, an associate professor in the school of labor and employment relations at the University of Illinois, said a question mark hangs over the labor secretary-designate even if she gets the Senate committees approval. With the ongoing efforts by the current administration to limit or eliminate certain government functions, how much will she actually be able to do to help workers in the Department of Labor if theres limited funding and restrictions put on the work that can be done? Twarog said. CATHY BUSSEWITZ Bussewitz is a national business reporter for The Associated Press. She writes about the workplace, job issues and wellness. twitter mailto
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  • Trump administration halts support for representing unaccompanied children in immigration court
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    A U.S.-born toddler sits on her mother's lap as Nora Sandigo, who runs a non-profit dedicated to supporting immigrant families, explains migrants' legal rights and options to prepare their families in case a parent were to be detained or deported, Friday, Jan. 17, 2025, in Homestead, Fla. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)2025-02-19T02:05:33Z WASHINGTON (AP) The Trump administration on Tuesday stopped support for legal representation in immigration court for children who enter the United States alone, a setback for those fighting deportation who cant afford a lawyer.The Acacia Center for Justice says it serves 26,000 migrant children under its federal contract. The Interior Department gave no explanation for the stop-work order, telling the group only that it was done for causes outside of your control and should not be interpreted as a judgment of poor performance. The halt remains in effect until further notice.The Interior Department and Health and Human Services Department, which oversees unaccompanied migrant children, did not respond to requests for comment late Tuesday.Acacia says it runs the legal aid program through a network of 85 organizations nationwide that represent children under 18. The halt comes shortly after the Justice Department briefly stopped support for other contacts to provide legal information and guidance to people facing deportation. It restored funding after being sued by advocacy groups. People fighting deportation may hire attorneys at their own expense, but the government does not provide them. Groups that rely on federal support to represent children said the most vulnerable would suffer most under the decision to halt work on the $200 million contract.Expecting a child to represent themself in immigration court absurd and deeply unjust, said Christine Lin, director of training and technical assistance at the Center for Gender & Refugee Studies.___
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  • EU envoys approve more sanctions against Russia to mark the third anniversary of its war on Ukraine
    apnews.com
    The cargo ship Laodicea sails through the Bosphorus Strait in Istanbul, Turkey, on July 7, 2022. An Associated Press investigation showed that the ship, owned by the Syrian government, was part of an extensive Russian-run smuggling operation that has been hauling stolen Ukrainian grain from ports in occupied Crimea to customers in the Middle East. (AP Photo/Yoruk Isik, File)2025-02-19T10:25:40Z BRUSSELS (AP) European Union envoys have approved a new raft of sanctions against Russia, with the measures set to enter into force next week on the third anniversary of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, a top EU official and diplomats confirmed on Wednesday.The move comes with the Europeans sidelined from U.S.-led talks to end the war.The EU has slapped several rounds of sanctions on Russia since President Vladimir Putin ordered his troops into Ukraine in February 24, 2022. More than 2,300 officials and entities usually government agencies, banks and organizations have been hit.The diplomats confirmed approval of the sanctions the 16th package of measures including travel bans, asset freezes and trade restrictions on condition that they not be named. The measures are still not entirely finalized until EU foreign ministers endorse them on Monday, allowing them to enter force. Among the latest sanctions are measures targeting Russias so-called shadow fleet of ships that it exploits to skirt restrictions on transporting oil and gas, or to carry stolen Ukrainian grain. Some 70 vessels believed to be part of the shadow fleet will be added to more than 50 already listed. EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, whose services drafted some of the measures for consideration, welcomed their prospective adoption by the 27-nation blocs ambassadors. The EU is clamping down even harder on circumvention by targeting more vessels in Putins shadow fleet and imposing new import and export bans. We are committed to keep up the pressure on the Kremlin, she said in a social media post.Almost 50 Russian officials will be targeted, joining a list that already includes Putin, several of his associates and scores of lawmakers, while dozens more entities face sanctions. Among the measures are restrictions on 13 Russian banks and 3 financial institutions, the diplomats said.The sanctions would also place restrictions on the use of 11 ports and airports in Russia that the EU considers are being used to help Moscow bypass an oil price cap and other measures already imposed by the bloc.Trade bans on some chemicals and aluminum are also included. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Winters next wave of storms takes aim at the East Coast
    apnews.com
    The sun breaks through overcast skies as ice forms along Lake Michigan and the South Haven Lighthouse Monday, Feb. 17, 2025, in South Haven, Mich. (Don Campbell/The Herald-Palladium via AP)2025-02-19T05:07:03Z NORFOLK, Va. (AP) The latest in a long line of winter storms is taking direct aim at the East Coast, threatening to dump heavy snow and some ice in several states.A storm that dropped snow in the Midwest was spreading across the Tennessee and Ohio Valleys on Wednesday, bringing more misery to some places just starting to clean up from deadly weekend floods.Up to 10 inches (25 centimeters) of snow was possible along the Atlantic Coast in Virginia and significant ice accumulations were forecast in eastern North Carolina, the National Weather Service said.Elsewhere, a polar vortex took over from Montana to southern Texas. Bismarck, North Dakota, hit minus 39 degrees (minus 39.4 C) early Tuesday, breaking a record for the date set in 1910. The biggest batch of record cold temperatures are likely to hit early Thursday and Friday, said weather service meteorologist Andrew Orrison. Deja storm all over again North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein declared a state of emergency Tuesday in anticipation of Wednesdays ice-and-snow mix.What we fear the most are road conditions and loss of power due to ice accumulation, Stein said Tuesday on the social platform X. So folks need to be prepared. Virginia remained under a similar declaration that Gov. Glenn Youngkin issued for another storm on Feb. 10 that allowed the National Guard and state agencies to assist local governments. Both Stein and Youngkin asked motorists to stay off roads. Snow after floodsWeekend storms that pummeled the eastern U.S. killed at least 17 people, including 14 in Kentucky, where a half-foot (15 centimeters) or more of snow was expected starting Wednesday.This is a snowstorm in the middle of a natural disaster, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said Tuesday.In southern West Virginia, weekend floods killed three people in McDowell County, destroyed roads and severed public water systems. Thousands remained without power Tuesday night. Shelters were open at multiple churches and schools while more than a dozen locations were serving hot meals.The incoming snowstorm is going to severely hinder, if not halt, a lot of the efforts that we have, said McDowell County Commissioner Michael Brooks. We want to ensure that we are doing our best to at least keep people warm. Bone-chilling coldMore than 80 million people in the nations midsection were in the midst of gripping cold, the weather service said. Hundreds of public school districts canceled classes or switched to online learning for a second day Wednesday in Oklahoma, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri. Some relief was in sight with readings expected to climb above freezing by the weekend.Stephanie Hatzenbuhlers family has been contending with the cold in many ways on their farm and ranch west of Mandan, North Dakota, from their calving operation, to vehicles and equipment starting without issues, to their coal-fired furnace keeping up.Theres always something new to learn and something new to experience. It doesnt matter how many times youve done this, so you have to adapt, said Hatzenbuhler, who called the cold spell the Siberian experience. Slick roads caused minor injuries in the crash of a tractor-trailer carrying eggs on the Will Rogers Turnpike in northeastern Oklahoma on Tuesday.Expensive cargo right now, the Oklahoma Highway Patrol said on X.___Raby reported from Charleston, West Virginia. Associated Press writers from across the U.S. contributed to this report. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Black Queer Youth to Look Out for: A Look at Our Black Activists of Our 2025 20 Under 20 Program
    glaad.org
    The voices of Black queer youth are powerful, necessary, and deeply deserving of amplification. In a world that too often seeks to silence them, it is imperative that we advocate for their right to be heard, supported, and celebrated. The intersection of Blackness and queerness carries a legacy of resilience and radical change, and the [...]The post Black Queer Youth to Look Out for: A Look at Our Black Activists of Our 2025 20 Under 20 Program first appeared on GLAAD.
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  • Vatican authorities say the pope now has pneumonia in both lungs. How worrying is that?
    apnews.com
    Candles with the pictures of Pope Francis are the laid under the statue of late Pope John Paul II outside Agostino Gemelli Polyclinic in Rome, Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, where the Pontiff is hospitalized since Friday, Feb. 14. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)2025-02-19T11:13:41Z LONDON (AP) Vatican officials said late Tuesday that Pope Francis had developed pneumonia in both lungs, further complicating the pontiffs recovery. The 88-year-old pope was hospitalized Friday after a weeklong bout of bronchitis worsened. On Monday, doctors said he had developed a mix of infections in his respiratory tract.On Wednesday, the Vatican said Pope Francis had a tranquil night, woke up and had breakfast, saying he was in good spirits. Heres a look at what a pneumonia diagnosis can mean and potential treatments doctors might be trying: Whats happened?Pope Francis was admitted to Romes Gemilli hospital in fair condition on Friday after his bronchitis worsened. On Monday, doctors said he had developed a polymicrobial respiratory tract infection, or a mix of viruses, bacteria and possibly other organisms were growing in his respiratory tract.Late Tuesday, the Vatican said a chest scan showed he had developed pneumonia in both lungs, requiring additional medication.Bronchitis occurs when the airways in the lung, known as the bronchial tubes, become inflamed, leading to coughing and mucus production. That infection can sometimes spread to the lungs, resulting in pneumonia, an inflammation of the lungs thats typically caused by an infection. How serious is this?Doctors say pneumonia in anyone can be serious, but for someone of the popes age, its particularly worrying.One of the risk factors for more serious infection, like older age, meaning anyone over 65, said Dr. Meredith McCormack, director of pulmonary and critical care medicine at Johns Hopkins University.Even though the pope lost part of his right lung decades ago, McCormack said that shouldnt necessarily compromise his recovery, adding that she would be more concerned about any possible signs of weakness in His Holiness.Being a more frail older person can increase your risk of having complications, she said, noting that having to use a wheelchair could be considered a sign of frailty. The pope has relied on a wheelchair for more than two years.It appears, however, that the pope is not bed-bound. He has been able to get out of bed and his heart function is good, according to a Vatican official. What kind of treatments are available?Beyond antibiotic drug therapy, there are multiple treatments available, including supplemental oxygen and therapies to support the lungs and body while its trying to recover.Dr. Andrew Chadwick, a respiratory and intensive care specialist at Oxford University Hospital in Britain, said steroids and antibiotics would be the core elements of the popes care, alongside nursing care and chest physiotherapy.Physiotherapy can help patients clear the fluids building up in their lungs, particularly if they arent very mobile themselves.McCormack of Johns Hopkins said that severe cases of pneumonia were typically treated for about one to two weeks but that recovery in an older person could extend beyond that. What will doctors be looking out for in the next few days?Mainly, theyll be hoping that the popes condition doesnt deteriorate further.While we give antibiotics and other therapies, were waiting for the body to respond, McCormack said. If he just stays as he is while hes fighting off the infection and has a gradual recovery, that lack of worsening would be an encouraging sign.Dr. Maor Sauler, who specializes in adult pulmonary and critical care at Yale University, said that antibiotics typically need the lungs to be working to recover from infections, including pneumonia, but the ability of lungs to recover diminishes with age. When anyone has pneumonia, theres a good chance we can treat it, he said. However, it is also one of the leading causes of death. And so there are also situations where, despite our best efforts, we cannot clear the infection. ___Nicole Winfield in Rome contributed to this report. ___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.
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  • Justice Department and New York City mayor face judges scrutiny in bid to dismiss criminal charges
    apnews.com
    New York City mayor Eric Adams attends a news conference regarding a police officer that was shot in New York, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)2025-02-19T05:04:02Z NEW YORK (AP) Justice Department lawyers and New York City Mayor Eric Adams are set to face a federal judge who is signaling that hes unlikely to rubber stamp their request to drop the mayors corruption charges weeks before an April trial.Judge Dale E. Ho in Manhattan scheduled the Wednesday afternoon hearing after three government lawyers from Washington made the dismissal request on Friday. Manhattans top federal prosecutor resigned after she refused an order to do so.Ho already indicated that the hearing was likely to be only an initial step when he wrote in an order Tuesday that one subject on the agenda will be a discussion of procedure for resolution of the motion.Also set for discussion are the reasons for the request to dismiss the indictment against the Democrat that charges the first-term mayor with accepting over $100,000 in illegal campaign contributions and lavish travel perks from a Turkish official and business leaders seeking to buy his influence while he was Brooklyn borough president. He has pleaded not guilty. Early last week, Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove told prosecutors in New York in a memo to drop the charges because the prosecution has unduly restricted Mayor Adams ability to devote full attention and resources to the illegal immigration and violent crime. He said charges could be reinstated after Novembers mayoral election. Two days later, then-interim U.S. Attorney Danielle Sassoon wrote to Attorney General Pam Bondi, saying Boves request to drop charges in return for assistance in enforcing federal immigration laws would betray Bondis own words that she will not tolerate abuses of the criminal justice process, coercive behavior, or other forms of misconduct. Dismissal of the indictment for no other reason than to influence Adamss mayoral decision-making would be all three, Sassoon, a Republican, said of what she called a quid pro quo deal as she offered to resign. She also said prosecutors were about to bring additional obstruction of justice charges against Adams. Bove responded to Sassoon with apparent anger, accepting her resignation and accusing her of pursuing a politically motivated prosecution despite an express instruction to dismiss the case. He then informed her that two prosecutors assigned to the case were suspended with pay and that an investigation would determine if they keep their jobs.If either of those prosecutors wished to comply with his directive to dismiss charges, he welcomed them to do so, but Hagan Scotten quit the following day, writing in a resignation letter that he supported Sassoons actions.Scotten wrote to Bove that it would take a fool or a coward to meet his demand to drop the charges, but it was never going to be me.In all, seven prosecutors, including five high-ranking prosecutors at the Justice Department in Washington, had resigned by Friday.Since then, a small army of former prosecutors have gotten behind the defiant stand by Sassoon and other prosecutors. On Friday, seven former Manhattan U.S. attorneys, including James Comey, Geoffrey S. Berman and Mary Jo White, issued a statement lauding Sassoons commitment to integrity and the rule of law.On Monday, three former U.S. attorneys from New York, New Jersey and Connecticut submitted papers to Ho suggesting that he appoint a special prosecutor if he finds the Justice Department acted improperly or that he order all evidence be made available to state and local prosecutors.A former Watergate prosecutor filed papers separately, telling the judge to reject the governments request and consider assigning a special counsel to explore the legal issues and ultimately consider appointing an independent special prosecutor to try the case.Also Monday, Justice Connection, an organization advocating for Justice Department employees, released a letter signed by over 900 former federal prosecutors to career federal prosecutors that said they have watched with alarm as values foundational to a fair and justice legal system have been tested. In the letter, the former prosecutors said they salute and admire the courage many of you have already exhibited. You have responded to ethical challenges of a type no public servant should ever be forced to confront with principle and conviction, in the finest traditions of the Department of Justice.On Tuesday, Alex Spiro, a lawyer for the mayor, wrote to the judge, saying those who believed that Adams struck a quid pro quo with prosecutors were wrong.There was no quid pro quo. Period, he said. 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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  • Trump is living in a Russian-made disinformation space, says Ukraines Zelenskyy
    apnews.com
    Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky gives a press conference in Kyiv, Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (Tetiana Dzhafarova/Pool Photo via AP)2025-02-19T09:26:37Z KYIV, Ukraine (AP) Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Wednesday that U.S. President Donald Trump is living in a Russian-made disinformation space as a result of his administrations discussions with Kremlin officials.Zelenskyy said he would like Trumps team to be more truthful.He made the comments shortly before he was expected to meet with Keith Kellogg, the U.S. special envoy for Ukraine and Russia, who arrived in Kyiv on Wednesday. Kellogg will meet Zelenskyy and military commanders as the U.S. shifts its policy away from years of efforts to isolate Russian President Vladimir Putin. Trump suggested Tuesday that Kyiv was to blame for the war, which enters its fourth year next week, as talks between top American and Russian diplomats in Saudi Arabia sidelined Ukraine and its European supporters.French President Emmanuel Macron was to hold a videoconference on Ukraine later Wednesday with leaders of over 15 countries, mostly European nations, with the aim of gathering all partners interested in peace and security on the continent, his office said. Key European leaders held an emergency meeting in Paris on Monday after they felt they had been sidelined by the Trump administration. Trumps comments are likely to vex Ukrainian officials, who have urged the world to help them fight Russias full-scale invasion that began Feb. 24, 2022.Trump also said at Mar-a-Lago that Zelenskyys rating stood at 4%. Zelenskyy replied in a news conference in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv that we have seen this disinformation. We understand that it is coming from Russia. He said that Trump lives in this disinformation space.Trump also suggested Ukraine ought to hold elections, which have been postponed due to the war and the consequent imposition of martial law, in accordance with the Ukrainian Constitution.Zelenskyy questioned claims, which he didnt specify, that 90% of all aid received by Ukraine comes from the United States. He said that, for instance, about 34% of all weapons in Ukraine are domestically produced, over 30% of support comes from Europe, and up to 40% from the U.S. The battlefield has also brought grim news for Ukraine in recent months. A relentless onslaught in eastern areas by Russias bigger army is grinding down Ukrainian forces, which are slowly but steadily being pushed backward at some points on the 1,000-kilometer (600-mile) front line.Trump told reporters at his Florida residence Tuesday that Ukraine should have never started the war and could have made a deal to prevent it.Kellogg said his visit to Kyiv was a chance to have some good, substantial talks. Zelenskyy was due to travel to Saudi Arabia on Wednesday but canceled his trip in what some analysts saw as an attempt to deny legitimacy to the U.S.-Russia talks about the future of his country.American officials have signaled that Ukraines hopes of joining NATO in order to ward off Russian aggression after reaching a possible peace agreement wont happen. Zelenskyy says any settlement will require U.S. security commitments to keep Russia at bay. We understand the need for security guarantees, Kellogg said in comments carried by Ukrainian public broadcaster Suspilne Novyny on his arrival at Kyiv train station.Its very clear to us the importance of the sovereignty of this nation and the independence of this nation as well. ... Part of my mission is to sit and listen, the retired three-star general said.Kellogg said he would convey what he learns on his visit to Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio to and ensure that we get this one right.___Follow APs coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine JUSTIN SPIKE Spike is an Associated Press reporter based in Budapest, Hungary. twitter mailto HANNA ARHIROVA Arhirova is an Associated Press reporter covering Ukraine. She is based in Kyiv. twitter instagram mailto
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  • From farms to bakeries, egg shortages and price hikes are challenging small businesses
    apnews.com
    The price is displayed on the edge of an empty shelf used to display eggs at a grocery store, Feb. 12, 2025, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV, file)2025-02-18T16:29:19Z NEW YORK (AP) Small business owners that rely on eggs for their products are facing sticker shock because the usually reliable staple is in short supply.Avian flu is forcing farmers to slaughter millions of chickens a month, causing U.S. egg prices to skyrocket. The average price of a dozen Grade A eggs in U.S. cities reached $4.95 in January, eclipsing the previous record of $4.82 set two years earlier and more than double the low of $2.04 that was recorded in August 2023. The Agriculture Department predicts prices will soar another 20% this year.Most owners are taking the increase in stride, looking at it as just one of many hurdles they constantly face. But if the problem persists, they could be forced to raise prices or adjust their products.Liz Berman is the owner and sole proprietor of The Sleepy Baker in Natick, Massachusetts. She specializes in custom, from-scratch cakes but also sells cupcakes, cookies, pies and other baked goods. Eggs are just one of the baking ingredients experiencing price shocks. Items such as cocoa powder and butter have gone up as well. And price isnt the only issue. Its not just the cost of eggs, right? Its also just the availability, she said. She prefers to buy medium-sized white shelled eggs, buying a box with 18 dozen eggs, but two weeks ago those were unavailable, so she had to buy brown eggs in individual cartons of 12. It sounds kind of silly, but when I Im the sole proprietor and I have a huge volume of work, to have to take a dozen of eggs out of my walk-in at a time as opposed to a flat of eggs, its just its a pain, she said.She doesnt think prices will ease anytime soon. Cocoa powder prices have been elevated for years.I think ultimately Im going to have to increase my prices, which is hard because thats going to mean that theres a category of customer that wont order from me anymore, she said. In Princeton, New Jersey, John Nachlinger, owner of the Bad Cookie Company, is imposing a temporary 25 cent per cookie surcharge to help mitigate added costs. As cookies are already a tight-margin food, these increases have really hurt our bottom line, Nachlinger said. He said he doesnt want to permanently raise prices or adjust the size of his cookies since he hopes the egg situation is temporary. We want to bring value to our customers, he said.At Daisies, a pasta restaurant in Chicago, chef/partner Joe Frillman and chef/partner Leigh Omilinsky havent raised prices but are thinking of adjusting menu items.Omilinsky said she is thinking of adding more vegan and egg-free deserts to the menu and has been working more with flax seeds. She said the shortage has made her more conscious of the ingredients she is using and wasting less.You know, if we need egg yolks we are absolutely saving those whites, she said. Meanwhile, Frillman said the restaurant has shifted to making pastas that use less eggs.Weve just changed the shape of the noodle, he said. We use an extruder which is a piece of equipment that allows us to basically extrude pasta without eggs. Depending on how long the egg shortage lasts, they could adjust menu items too, he said. We have a pappardelle on our menu thats been on since day one, he said. If this gets to the point where its just cost prohibitive, its very egg yolk heavy, we would then transfer to something like a spaghetti or a fettuccine that is a similar noodle that we can make without eggs.Meanwhile, Stephanie Maynard, co-owner of Ox Hollow Farm in Roxbury, Connecticut, faces a different issue: skyrocketing demand. The farm she owns with her husband produces beef, pork, poultry, eggs and vegetables. They have 950 laying hens, with 300 more coming in March. The winter is generally a quieter time as the farm prepares for busy spring and summer months, increasing the inventory on hand until it is ready to sell. But this year, theyre rushing to increase egg production for customers at greenmarkets. People who might normally buy eggs at supermarkets are turning to greenmarkets due to the shortages, and regular customers are increasing their orders just to make sure they have eggs, she said.We have developed a rapport with our customers. I know a lot of them by name and face, she said. And now youre seeing people that youve never seen attend a market before. So Im drawing a lot of new customers in to get eggs at the market. MAE ANDERSON Anderson reports for The Associated Press on a wide range of issues that small businesses face. She is based in New York. twitter mailto
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  • Podcast: DOGE's Website, Hacked
    www.404media.co
    This week we start with Jason's story about anyone being able to push updates to DOGE.gov website. Then we talk about other stories with the DEI.gov and Waste.gov sites. After the break, Sam tells us all about some lawyers who get caught using AI in a case. In the subscribers-only section, we chat about a true crime documentary YouTube channel where the murders were all AI-generated.Listen to the weekly podcast onApple Podcasts,Spotify, orYouTube. Become a paid subscriber for access to this episode's bonus content and to power our journalism.If you become a paid subscriber, check your inbox for an email from our podcast host Transistor for a link to the subscribers-only version! You can also add that subscribers feed to your podcast app of choice and never miss an episode that way. The email should also contain the subscribers-only unlisted YouTube link for the extended video version too. It will also be in the show notes in your podcast player. Anyone Can Push Updates to the DOGE.gov WebsiteElon Musk's Waste.gov Is Just a WordPress Theme Placeholder PageLawyers Caught Citing AI-Hallucinated Cases Call It a 'Cautionary Tale'A True Crime Documentary Series Has Millions of Views. The Murders Are All AI-Generated
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  • A comprehensive look at DOGEs firings and layoffs so far
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump listens as Elon Musk speaks in the Oval Office at the White House, Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025, in Washington. (Photo/Alex Brandon)2025-02-19T14:05:45Z WASHINGTON (AP) Thousands of federal government employees have been shown the door in the first month of President Donald Trumps administration as the White House and its Department of Government Efficiency fire both new and career workers, tell agency leaders to plan for large-scale reductions in force and freeze trillions of dollars in federal grant funds.It is affecting more than just the national capital region, home to about 20% of the 2.4 million members of the civilian federal workforce, which does not include military personnel and postal employees workers. More than 80% of that workforce lives outside the Washington area.There is no official figure available of the total firings or layoffs. The Associated Press tallied how agencies are being affected based on AP reporting and statements from lawmakers and employee unions. Here is a look at some of the broad and specific ways federal agencies and employees are being affected by the administrations reductions, as of Wednesday: Deferred resignation proposal for federal workersThe White House offered a deferred resignation proposal in exchange for financial incentives, like months of paid leave, to almost all federal employees who opted to leave their jobs by Feb. 6.But just before that deadline, a federal judge blocked Trumps plan, wanting to hear arguments from the administration and the labor unions, which said the offer was illegal.According to the Office of Personnel Management, about 75,000 federal employees had accepted the offer as of Feb. 12. Probationary employee layoffsThere have also been wide-ranging layoffs of probationary employees those generally on the job for less than a year and who have yet to gain civil service protection. Potentially hundreds of thousands are affected.On Feb. 13, the administration ordered agencies to lay off nearly all such workers. According to government data maintained by OPM, 220,000 federal employees had less than a year on the job as of March 2024. Department of Veterans AffairsOn Feb. 13, the Department of Veterans Affairs announced the dismissal of more than 1,000 employees who had served for less than two years. According to Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., that included researchers working on cancer treatment, opioid addiction, prosthetics and burn pit exposure.Education DepartmentAt least 39 people have been fired from the Education Department, including special education specialists and student aid officials, according to a union that represents agency workers.There have also been nearly $900 million in cuts to the departments Institute of Education Services, which tracks the progress of Americas students. It is unclear to what degree the institute would continue to exist. Industry experts said at least 169 contracts were terminated Feb. 10.Energy DepartmentHundreds of federal employees tasked with working on the nations nuclear weapons programs were laid off Feb. 13, but that move was largely rescinded hours later, according to a memo obtained by the AP. Three U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation said as many as 350 employees at the National Nuclear Security Administration were ousted, with some losing access to email before they had learned they were fired. Department of Health and Human ServicesThe cuts include more than 5,000 employees at the Department of Health and Human Services.At the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly 1,300 probationary employees roughly one-tenth of the agencys total workforce are being forced out. The Atlanta-based agencys leadership was notified of the decision Feb. 14, according to a federal official who was at the meeting and was not authorized to discuss the orders and spoke on condition of anonymity.Department of Homeland SecurityThe probationary cuts included more than 130 employees at the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which oversees the nations critical infrastructure, including the federal efforts to secure election systems. It is not clear whether those included 17 employees who had worked on election security and had already been placed on leave.Four employees at the Federal Emergency Management Agency its chief financial officer, two program analysts and a grant specialist were fired Feb. 11 over payments to reimburse New York City for hotel costs for migrants. Internal Revenue ServiceThe IRS will lay off thousands of probationary workers in the middle of tax season, according to two people familiar with the agencys plans who were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity. It is unclear how many IRS workers will be affected or when the cuts will happen.National Park ServiceThe administration has fired about 1,000 newly hired National Park Service employees who maintain and clean parks, educate visitors and perform other functions.The firings were not publicly announced but were confirmed by Democratic senators and House members. Adding to the confusion, the park service now says it is reinstating about 5,000 seasonal jobs that were initially rescinded last month.Seasonal workers are routinely added during the warm-weather months to serve more than 325 million annual visitors who descend on the nations 428 parks, historic sites and other attractions. Consumer Financial Protection BureauThe administration has ordered the agency created after the 2008 financial crisis and subprime mortgage-lending scandal to stop nearly all its work, effectively shutting it down. Agriculture DepartmentThe new agriculture secretary, Brooke Rollins, said on Feb. 14 that her agency had invited Elon Musks DOGE team with open arms and that layoffs will be forthcoming.Foreign aid and developmentTrump swiftly ordered a halt to much of the aid that the United States sends abroad. Several weeks later, the pause is on pause.In his first week in office, Trump issued an executive order directing a 90-day hold on most of the foreign assistance disbursed through the State Department. Secretary of State Marco Rubio issued several specific exemptions, including emergency food programs and military aid to Israel and Egypt from the freeze on foreign assistance. But thousands of U.S.-funded humanitarian, development and security programs worldwide stopped work or prepared to do so.Without the money to pay staff, aid organizations including the U.S. Agency for International Development began laying off hundreds of employees. Crews removed the agencys signage from its Washington headquarters.But on Feb. 13, a federal judge considering some of the lawsuits challenging agency cuts ordered the administration to temporarily lift the funding freeze.Federal grants and loansThe White House said last month it was pausing federal grants and loans as the Republican administration began an across-the-board ideological review.The freeze could affect trillions of dollars and cause widespread disruption in health care research, education programs and other initiatives. Even grants that have been awarded but not spent are supposed to be halted.The use of Federal resources to advance Marxist equity, transgenderism, and green new deal social engineering policies is a waste of taxpayer dollars that does not improve the day-to-day lives of those we serve, said a memo from Matthew Vaeth, the acting director of the Office of Management and Budget.Democrats and independent organizations said the move was illegal because Congress had already authorized the funding.Inspectors generalEach of the federal governments largest agencies has its own independent inspector general who is supposed to conduct objective audits, prevent fraud and promote efficiency.Trump has fired at least 17 of them, including watchdogs he appointed in his first term. At least one Democratic appointee, Michael Horowitz at the Justice Department, was spared.Trump told reporters that its a very common thing to do and that he would put good people in there that will be very good.Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York said the firings were a chilling purge. Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a top Trump ally, acknowledged that the firings may have violated the law, but he added, Just tell them you need to follow the law next time.Department of JusticeIts normal for politically appointed U.S. attorneys to be replaced, but it is not standard procedure for career prosecutors to be ousted with a change in administrations. The Justice Department said last month that it had fired more than a dozen employees who worked on criminal prosecutions of Trump by special counsel Jack Smiths team.By tradition, career employees remain with the department across presidential administrations regardless of their involvement in sensitive investigations. Multiple senior career officials were also reassigned.State DepartmentA large number of senior career diplomats who served in politically appointed leadership positions as well as in lower-level posts at the State Department left their jobs at the demand of the new administration.It was not immediately clear how many nonpolitical appointees were being asked to leave.___Kinnard can be reached at http://x.com/MegKinnardAP MEG KINNARD Kinnard covers national politics for The Associated Press. She lives in South Carolina. twitter instagram mailto
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  • Migrant groups say racist attacks increase in German city after deadly Christmas market violence
    apnews.com
    An election poster of the far-right anti-immigrant party Alternative For Germany party AfD, with with the slogan reading "It's time for a country that is still a home country", is displayed in a street, in Magdeburg, Germany, Friday, Feb. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)2025-02-19T07:32:47Z MAGDEBURG, Germany (AP) When Haben Gebregergish first immigrated to the German city of Magdeburg seven years ago, the Eritrean immigrant was walking to the supermarket with her child when an intoxicated woman approached her on the street. At the time, Gebregergish did not speak German well enough to comprehend what the woman was saying. But Gebregergish says that when the woman threw a beer bottle at her head, she immediately understood.It was one of her first encounters with racism, but certainly not the last. In the aftermath of a deadly attack at a Christmas market in Magdeburg late last year, Gebregergish and other migrants who have settled in the city say they have experienced a sharp increase in racism and anti-immigration sentiments.We are the same as you, Gebregergish said earlier this month. We are not different. Just like you, we have feelings. Sometimes we are sad, sometimes we are happy, just like everyone else. The Christmas market violence was one of five high-profile attacks committed by immigrants in the past nine months that have made migration a key issue as the country heads toward an early election on Sunday. The suspect, a Saudi doctor, drove into the holiday market teeming with shoppers and left five women and a 9-year-old boy dead and 200 people injured. The suspect arrived in Germany in 2006 and had received permanent residency, and authorities say the suspect does not fit the usual profile of perpetrators of extremist attacks. He is being held in custody as authorities investigate him. Just one day after Dec. 20 violence, there was a large right-wing demonstration in Magdeburg, and verbal and physical attacks on people with a migrant background have increased significantly in the city since then, according to the German-Syrian Cultural Association in Magdeburg.The migrant community and the advice centers report that attacks have increased by more than 70% here in the city, said Saeeid Saeeid, who came to Germany from Syria seven years ago and is a member of the association. Racism already exists here and everywhere. But it has increased enormously since the attack. Ketevan Asatiani-Hermann, newly elected chair of the board for the Advisory Council for Integration and Migration in Magdeburg, said victims of racist attacks in the city often do not feel support from politicians or police. The hatred has always been there, people just didnt dare to say it so clearly before, said Asatiani-Hermann, who came to Magdeburg in 2011 from Georgia.Officers sometimes target or search the victims first before the perpetrator, she alleged, and they also worry reporting an attack could have a negative impact on their residence status.The Magdeburg Police Department did not respond to multiple requests for comment.Mayor Simone Borris, in a statement, said: Cohesion and community are fundamental values of a city that are inviolable. The mayor also referred media to online services for migrants, and said the citys Cooperation with the Advisory Council for Integration and Migration will be expanded. Magdeburg is located in the former communist east, an area where the far-right and anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has its highest support. The party is polling in second place going into the upcoming election with about 20% support and is fielding its first candidate to lead the country. Even though its highly unlikely to take a share of power soon, it has become a factor that other politicians cant ignore and has helped shape Germanys debate on migration.The elections outcome and a potential gain in influence for AfD could have a large impact on Magdeburgs politics and everyday life, Asatiani-Hermann said.Saeeid said the citys migrants feel alone, and want to hear directly from their elected officials to address their concerns.We will not allow Magdeburg to become a playing field for racism and hatred, he said.__Dazio reported from Berlin. STEFANIE DAZIO Dazio covers Northern Europe from Berlin for The Associated Press. She previously covered crime and criminal justice from Los Angeles. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Native American activist released from prison will be welcomed to North Dakota home
    apnews.com
    In this photo released by NDN Collective, Native American activist Leonard Peltier poses for pictures as he was released from a Florida prison on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, weeks after then-President Joe Biden angered law enforcement officials by commuting his life sentence to home confinement in the 1975 killings of two FBI agents. (Angel White Eyes, NDN Collective via AP)2025-02-19T05:09:18Z BELCOURT, N.D. (AP) Supporters of Native American activist Leonard Peltier plan to welcome him back to his North Dakota community on Wednesday, a day after his release from a Florida prison where he had been serving a life sentence in the 1975 killings of two FBI agents.Peltier, 80, is expected to join family and supporters at an events center in Belcourt, a small town just south of the Canadian border on the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians reservation.Were so excited for this moment, Jenipher Jones, one of Peltiers attorneys said soon before his release. He is in good spirits. He has the soul of a warrior.Then-President Joe Biden commuted Peltiers life sentence to home confinement, leading to his release Tuesday from the Coleman penitentiary. Peltier was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder and given two consecutive life sentences stemming from a 1975 confrontation on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. FBI agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams were killed, and while Peltier acknowledged firing shots during the confrontation, he denied being the person whose shots killed the men. Native Americans widely believe he was a political prisoner who was wrongly convicted because he fought for tribal rights as a member of the American Indian Movement. Some in law enforcement have argued for years against freeing Peltier. As Biden considered his options as his term ended, former FBI Director Christopher Wray sent the president a letter in which he called Peltier a remorseless killer who should remain in prison.In a statement about the commutation, Biden said numerous individuals and groups supported releasing Peltier due to the time he spent in prison, his age and his leadership role among Native Americans.
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  • Oscar presenters will include Selena Gomez and Oprah Winfrey. Heres what to know about the show
    apnews.com
    An Oscar statue appears at the 91st Academy Awards Nominees Luncheon, Feb. 4, 2019, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Danny Moloshok/Invision/AP, File)2025-02-05T18:46:59Z After devastating wildfires tore through Los Angeles, the 97th Academy Awards are going forward.Like the Grammys and other awards shows this year, the ceremony will be transformed by the fires and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has pledged to help its members and the broader film community recover.Heres everything you need to know about this years show:When are the Oscars?The Academy Awards will be held on Sunday, March 2, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. The show, to be broadcast live by ABC, is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. Eastern/4 p.m. Pacific. Are the Oscars streaming?For the first time, the Oscars will be streamed live on Hulu. You can also watch via Hulu Live TV, YouTubeTV, AT&T TV and FuboTV. With authentication from your provider, you can watch on ABC.com and the ABC app. Whos hosting the Oscars?For the first time, Conan OBrien is hosting the Academy Awards. OBrien, the late-night host turned podcaster and occasional movie star, said upon the announcement: America demanded it and now its happening: Taco Bells new Cheesy Chalupa Supreme. In other news, Im hosting the Oscars. How have the wildfires altered the show?The wildfires that consumed large parts of Los Angeles in early January led some to call for the cancellation of the Academy Awards. The academy twice postponed the announcement of nominations but never pushed the March 2 date of the ceremony. Academy leaders have argued the show must go ahead, for their economic impact on Los Angeles and as a symbol of resilience. Organizers have vowed this years awards will celebrate the work that unites us as a global film community and acknowledge those who fought so bravely against the wildfires.Still, the fires have curtailed much of the usual frothiness of Hollywoods awards season. The film academy canceled its annual nominees luncheon.For many involved in the Oscars, the fires have been felt acutely. OBriens Pacific Palisades home survived but his family has been unable to go back to it. OBriens assistant and podcast co-host Sona Movsesian lost her home.I know so many people who lost their homes and Im just, was ridiculously lucky, OBrien told The Associated Press. So we want to make sure that that show reflects whats happening and that we put a light on the right people in the right way. Whos presenting at the Oscars?More stars were added to the presenter lineup Wednesday, including Selena Gomez, Oprah Winfrey, Joe Alwyn, Goldie Hawn, Ben Stiller, Ana de Armas, Sterling K. Brown, Willem Dafoe, Lily-Rose Depp and Connie Nielsen. Theyll join the likes of Halle Berry, Penlope Cruz, Elle Fanning, Whoopi Goldberg, Scarlett Johansson, John Lithgow, Amy Poehler, June Squibb and Bowen Yang, as well as last years acting winners Emma Stone, Robert Downey Jr., Cillian Murphy, DaVine Joy Randolph on the Oscar stage. Though the academy initially said it would bring back the fab five style of presenting the acting awards, with five previous winners per category, organizers have reportedly abandoned those plans for this years ceremony. Nick Offerman will also be participating as the Oscars announcer. Will there be any performances?The academy has announced that, unlike previous years, the original song nominees will not be performed this time. That doesnt mean there wont be music, though. Wicked, one of the biggest box-office hits of 2024, could feasibly figure into the Oscar plans. (Its songs werent eligible for best song since, hailing from the Broadway musical, they arent original to the movie.) Whats nominated for best picture?The 10 nominees for best picture are: Anora; The Brutalist; A Complete Unknown; Conclave; Dune: Part 2; Emilia Prez; Im Still Here; Nickel Boys; The Substance; WickedHow can I watch the Oscar-nominated films?Some of the nominees are still in theaters, but many of this years Oscar nominees are streaming on various platforms. The AP has this handy guide to help with Oscar cramming.Who are the favorites?More than most years, thats a tricky question, but a front-runner has emerged after Anora took the top awards at the Producers Guild and the Directors Guild over the weekend. The best picture race had been seen as unusually wide open, with Anora, Conclave, The Brutalist, A Complete Unknown and Emilia Prez all having legitimate hopes of winning. In the acting categories, Demi Moore (The Substance) is favored for best actress, although Mikey Madisons BAFTA win for Anora makes it more of a race. Adrien Brody (The Brutalist) is most likely in best actor, Zoe Saldaa (Emilia Prez) is the supporting actress front-runner and Kieran Culkin (A Real Pain) is the favorite for best supporting actor. None of those awards, however, is considered definite locks. Whats the deal with Emilia Prez?Jacques Audiards Emilia Prez, a narco-musical about a Mexican drug lord who undergoes gender affirming surgery, comes in with a leading 13 nominations. The film, at one point, seemed like Netflixs best chance yet to land the streamer its first best picture win. Its star, Karla Sofa Gascn, made history by becoming the first openly trans actor nominated for an Oscar. But no nominee has had a rockier post-nominations Oscar campaign. After old offensive tweets by Gascn were uncovered, the actress issued an apology. The fallout, though, has badly damaged a movie that was already a divisive contender, and led Netflix to radically refocus its flagging campaign. ___For more coverage of this years Academy Awards, visit: https://apnews.com/hub/academy-awards
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  • Trump officials want to ban junk food from SNAP. Past efforts show its not easy to do
    apnews.com
    Jaqueline Benitez, who depends on California's SNAP benefits to help pay for food, shops for groceries at a supermarket in Bellflower, Calif., on Feb. 13, 2023. (AP Photo/Allison Dinner, File)2025-02-19T14:20:49Z A push to ban sugary drinks, candy and more from the U.S. program that helps low-income families pay for nutritious food has been tried before but it may soon get a boost from new Trump administration officials. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the newly confirmed health and human services secretary, and Brooke Rollins, the new agriculture secretary, have both signaled that they favor stripping such treats from SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.Kennedy has been most vocal, calling for the government to stop allowing the nearly $113 billion program that serves about 42 million Americans to use benefits to pay for soda or processed foods.The one place that I would say that we need to really change policy is the SNAP program and food stamps and in school lunches, Kennedy told Fox News host Laura Ingraham last week. There, the federal government in many cases is paying for it. And we shouldnt be subsidizing people to eat poison. In one of her first interviews after being confirmed, Rollins said she looked forward to working with Kennedy on the issue. When a taxpayer is putting money into SNAP, are they OK with us using their tax dollars to feed really bad food and sugary drinks to children who perhaps need something more nutritious? Rollins said. These are all massive questions were going to be asking and working on in the coming months and years. But removing certain foods from SNAP known for years as food stamps isnt as simple as it sounds. The program is run by the USDA, not HHS, and is administered through individual states. It is authorized by the federal Food and Nutrition Act of 2008, which says SNAP benefits can be used for any food or food product intended for human consumption, except alcohol, tobacco and hot foods, including those prepared for immediate consumption.Excluding any foods would require Congress to change the law or for states to get waivers that would let them restrict purchases, said Katie Bergh, a senior policy analyst for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonpartisan research group. Over the past 20 years, lawmakers in several states have proposed stopping SNAP from paying for bottled water, soda, chips, ice cream, decorated cakes and luxury meats like steak. None of those requests have ever been approved under either Republican or Democratic presidents, Bergh said. In the past, Agriculture Department officials rejected the waivers, saying in a 2007 paper that no clear standards exist to define foods as good or bad, or healthy or not healthy. In addition, the agency said restrictions would be difficult to implement, complicated and costly. And they might not change recipients food purchases or reduce conditions such as obesity. Anti-hunger advocates point to research that shows SNAP recipients are no more likely than other low-income Americans to buy sugary drinks or snack foods. And they say that limiting food choices undermines the autonomy and dignity of people who receive, on average, about $187 per month or about $6.16 per day, according to latest figures. This is just another way to cut benefits, said Gina Plata-Nino, a deputy director at the Food Research and Action Center, a nonprofit advocacy group. Its like, how do we restrict people more? How do we stigmatize them more? Bills are pending in Congress and in several states to restrict SNAP benefits from paying for soda, candy and other items. Rep. Josh Breechan, an Oklahoma Republican, sponsored the Healthy SNAP Act. If someone wants to buy junk food on their own dime, thats up to them, he said. But what were saying is, Dont ask the taxpayer to pay for it and then also expect the taxpayer to pick up the tab for the resulting health consequences.One SNAP recipient said she uses her monthly $291 benefit to buy necessities such as meat, oil, milk and coffee. Martina Santos, 66, of New York City, supplements those foods with fresh vegetables and fruits from a pantry run by the West Side Campaign Against Hunger, where shes also a volunteer. Because she has diabetes and other health conditions, she said she understands the importance of using the benefits only for nutritious options. For me, SNAP is to be used toward healthy food to get people to avoid all the disease theyre having around right now: obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, Santos said.In Kansas and elsewhere, bills that would ban soft drinks and candy highlight some of the challenges of such changes. Several pending bills seek to keep SNAP from paying for soft drinks, but they would continue to allow drinks containing milk, milk alternatives like soy or almond milk, or drinks with more than 50% vegetable or fruit juice. Candy is characterized as any unrefrigerated, flourless preparation of sugar, honey or other natural or artificial sweeteners in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts or other ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, drops or pieces. By that definition, Kit Kat and Twix bars, which contain flour, wouldnt be banned. And juices that contain high amounts of sugar, but are more than half fruit juice by volume, would be allowed. Such conundrums have stymied changes to the SNAP program for decades. But this moment could be different, said Dr. Anand Parekh, chief medical officer of the Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank based in Washington, D.C.The momentum behind Kennedys Make America Healthy Again movement could spur a new focus on solutions to poor diets that account for leading risk factors for early disease and death. When we talk about the SNAP program, we have to remind people that the N stands for nutrition, Parekh said. Its about time that both parties can come together and see what are the innovations here to improve diet quality and nutrition.___Associated Press video journalist Mary Conlon contributed to this report. ___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.
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  • Learn a few laundry secrets from the baseball pros the clubhouse staffers who wash MLB uniforms
    apnews.com
    San Francisco Giants clubhouse attendant Riley Halpin gathers a mound of dirty clothes in the clubhouse after spring training baseball practice at the team's facility, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025, in Scottsdale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)2025-02-19T15:22:44Z SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) From the pinstripes of New York all the way to the Dodger blues of Los Angeles, there is a strong connection among the clubhouse staffers who wash the dirt-caked, hard-worn uniforms of the major leagues.Just like the players who wear the jerseys.The clubhouse community is really close, says Riley Halpin, 29, a clubhouse attendant for the San Francisco Giants.Theres not a guy in the league I dont think that I cant call with a laundry question that wont answer it, says Kiere Bulls, a home clubhouse manager for the Pittsburgh Pirates.On the eve of another season as players throw their spring training apparel into hampers on wheels in Arizona and Florida here is a closer look how laundry is done in the major leagues, along with a few tips for your own dirty uniforms and other items at home: Dirt is worse than grass stainsTEAM: Chicago White SoxLAUNDERER: Rob Warren, clubhouse managerTIP: Dirt on uniforms is more difficult to get out than grass stains. When it comes to the biggest laundry challenges, he preaches patience. Well throw it in, and then usually check it again, he says. Well run it through once and then after that first load is when we kind of do the scrubbing and spraying.QUOTABLE: So well get the first load started within 15, 20 minutes after the end of a game, Warren says. Basically as soon as we have enough to start a load, well start a load. Things will change that time. Sometimes a win is quicker or shorter, or you know, getaway day, hopefully quicker. First, soak itTEAM: Cleveland GuardiansLAUNDERER: Sam Hindes, home clubhouse supervisorTIP: Soaking is important. When it comes to tough stains, sometimes they let the uniforms soak overnight in a mixture of detergent and other products. Then a big thing that works is a lot of people dont know that pressure, like not necessarily a pressure washer, but the higher the pressure on the water, the better it gets stains out, he says. I never really knew that until I started doing the uniforms. QUOTABLE: Hindes says position players usually have the dirtiest uniforms one in particular. Jos Ramrez is one that you always know is going to come back that night and its going to need some work on it, Hindes says. He has pine tar on his jersey and hes always out there, hes a grinder. He steals bases. Hes always diving all over the place. He plays his heart out. Let that pretreat sit for a bitTEAM: New York YankeesLAUNDERER: Lou Cucuzza Jr., director of clubhouse operationsLAUNDRY TIP: Its all about pretreating and letting the pretreat treatment soak in for a while. So if youve got something dirty and youre pretreating it, dont throw it right into the machine because that pretreats just going to get washed away. You want that pretreat really to soak up that stain and separate the fibers of the uniform or apparel, whatever youre wearing.QUOTABLE: The clay that surrounds the field differs around the majors, presenting a unique challenge So we could come off the road or Ill get a team off the road that played, lets say, in Baltimore. They have a tough clay or Boston, their clay is very different than the clay at Yankee Stadium, Cucuzza says. The clay at Yankee Stadium, I have no problem getting visiting uniforms clean. Its really quick. Sometimes Ill get a team, maybe from Baltimore, and its like, wow, thats a tough red clay. Its a little hard getting out so it may have to go through two washes to get it out. Make sure youre using the right solutionsTEAM: Philadelphia PhilliesLAUNDERER: Sean Bowers, home clubhouse assistantTIP: Using the right chemicals is crucial. Some of the laundry chemicals in big league clubhouses arent widely available, but Bowers says he likes Goof Off for pine tar stains and detergents with protein release for dirt-related issues.QUOTABLE: When the field gets painted, getting the paint out is really tough. Just a regular grass stain I can get out fairly easily. But the paint, especially around opening day or after theres concerts and where the stage was, they have to take care of that part of the field. Those outfielders, its really difficult to get that out. Spray, spray and spray againTEAM: Pittsburgh PiratesLAUNDERER: Kiere Bulls, home clubhouse managerTIP: For uniforms (and, presumably, anything else) caked with dirt, Bulls recommends spraying off as much of it as possible before it even goes into the laundry. He has some chemicals that he uses at the ballpark, but he likes OxiClean and Shout for dirt predicaments at home.QUOTABLE: Theres a lot of times that if a players real, real bad that it may have to get washed three times just to get the stains out. But the uniforms are hung dry. ... They dont go in the dryer. They just get washed and hung right outside the lockers.If at first you dont succeed ... TEAM: San Francisco GiantsLAUNDERER: Riley Halpin, clubhouse attendantTIP: Halpin says washing uniforms is a trial-and-error process much of the time. Obviously when it comes to the at-home kind of washing, you dont have these top-of-the-line chemicals that professional teams have, he says. So I would say just do a little bit of research. ... Find out what the top kind of brands people are using at the Walmarts and stuff like that. And go with it.QUOTABLE: Halpin says he gets to the ballpark around noon for a typical night game and leaves around 1 a.m. Its long days. But its kind of what you sign up for, you know, with this job. And its super cool just to obviously get to do what we get to do. So we all put up with it. ___AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb JAY COHEN Cohen is a national baseball writer and an editor on the APs sports desk. Based in Chicago, he also covers hockey, football and basketball, along with international water polo. twitter facebook RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Meta Sues Alleged Violent Extortionist For Holding Instagram Accounts Hostage
    www.404media.co
    This article was produced in collaboration with Court Watch, an independent outlet that unearths overlooked court records. To subscribe to Court Watch, click here.Meta is suing a scammer who allegedly and prolifically extorted people by banning and unbanning their Instagram accounts.The lawsuit, filed on Tuesday, is against Idriss Qibaa, who ran the Unlocked 4 Life extortion scheme, according to an earlier criminal complaint filed by prosecutors. Qibaa, a self-described professional when it comes to the banning and unbanning of Instagram accounts, admitted on Adam 22s No Jumper podcast in January 2024 that he had over 200 people who pay him monthly to maintain access to their accounts, and claimed he made more than $600,000 a month with this scheme. On the podcast episode, Adam mentioned that celebrities have fallen victim to similar extortion crimes, and Qibaa responded that theyre getting extorted.Scammer Allegedly Makes $600,000 a Month Holding Instagram Accounts HostageThe case of Unlocked4Life, who outed himself on Adam-22s No Jumper podcast, shows how Instagram account scammers have escalated to violence and intimidation too.404 MediaSamantha ColePart of the Unlocked 4 Life extortion scheme included threatening to murder victims if they didnt cooperate, according to the criminal complaint. A federal grand jury in the District of Nevada indicted Qibaa in August 2024 in a case thats ongoing, charging him with two counts of violating interstate communications law for sending messages threatening to injure or kill two victims. The indictment goes into detail about the harassment Qibaa allegedly doled out against people who didnt comply with his scheme, including sending hundreds or thousands of text messages, racial slurs, messages threatening to kill them, and photos of a man with a bloodied face. Heres the last guy who came to take photos/came near my home, that text said. In one case, he threatened to blast out a victims social security number and demanded she pay him $20,000 to stop harassing her, according to court documents.Do you know anything else about social media account extortion? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at sam.404. Otherwise, send me an email at sam@404media.co.Metas new complaint accuses Qibaa of selling unauthorized Instagram services including (a) the ability to disable user accounts; (b) user account reinstatement services intended to circumvent enforcement actions taken by Meta in response to users who violated the Instagram Terms of Use (Terms) and other rules that govern access to and use of Instagram, including Instagrams Community Standards (collectively, Instagram Terms and Policies); and (c) fake engagement services intended to artificially inflate followers on Instagram user accounts, among other things. The complaint also claims that Qibaa was running the same grift on X, YouTube, TikTok, Snapchat, and Telegram.In February 2024, Meta sent Qibaa a cease-and-desist letter, revoked his licenses to access Facebook and Instagram, and disabled his accounts, according to the complaint. But Qibaa made new Instagram accounts to get around the bans, Meta alleges.Metas complaint is a look into how easy it is to manipulate its own reporting and moderation features. The company says Qibaa got peoples Instagram accounts banned by simply submitting fake reports claiming they were violating the platforms terms. When Qibaa submitted the misleading reports, Meta alleges, Instagram disabled the account on the same day, and in some cases, reinstated it on the same day, too.
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  • The Humane AI Pin: A $700 Brick of E-Waste
    www.404media.co
    Roughly 10 months after it was released, the Humane AI Pin, a terribly executed and terrible product is now officially a $700 brick of e-waste after the company sold its software to HP and told its dozens of customers that they are now out of luck.Every Humane AI Pin ever created will stop functioning at the end of the month. Well, that is not exactly correct. As Engadget has pointed out, Humane told customers that nearly every function of the AI pin will stop working on February 28, but that true diehards can continue to access offline features, which primarily seems to be checking whether the battery is charged or not: After February 28, 2025, AI Pin will still allow for offline features like battery level, etc., but will not include any function that requires cloud connectivity like voice interactions, AI responses, and Center access. Humane went on to say that We encourage you to recycle your AI Pin through an e-waste recycling program.We Can, and We Must, Clown on the Humane AI Pin ForeverThe Humane Ai Pin joins a rich tradition of terrible tech products that includes the Juicero, Coolest Cooler, and Magic Leap that we must remember forever.404 MediaJason KoeblerIf you are not familiar, the AI Pin is a $700 piece of junk that was supposed to be an AI assistant but instead barely worked, was perhaps a fire hazard, and whose main functionality was triggering fragile venture capitalists on Twitter who self-immolated when the reviews were understandably very bad.There is very little to say about the Humane AI pin right now other than they are very lucky that the vast majority of tech journalists in the United States are too busy writing about the Elon Musk-led ransacking of the federal government to dunk on this company in the way it truly deserves (we are also doing this but need a break for five minutes).The company and the tech was wildly hyped, wasted gazillions of dollars (it raised $240 million in funding), made something terrible, existed for less than a year, and are now hazardous e-waste that is a huge pain in the ass to safely dispose of. The saving grace of all of this is that Humane sold so few devices (roughly 10,000) that the number of consumers who are affected is relatively low as these things go and therefore, there are fewer of them that need to be recycled.The Humane AI Pin is the latest in a long line of internet of things devices that cost a lot and then became e-waste when the company decided to stop supporting it or went out of business.On recycling: I have been to electronics recycling centers, and small wearables like this are labor intensive to recycle because they have small, difficult-to-remove batteries. An iFixit teardown wondered whether Humane pin was one of the worst devices ever, and stated that both the Humane AI pin and the Rabbit R1, another AI wearable, have batteries that are a pain to remove, hidden behind thoroughly glued-down panels, and that making the battery so difficult to reach is perplexing at best.Anyways, we must never forget the Humane AI Pin. Good job everyone.
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  • A$AP Rocky has been found not guilty in a shooting trial. Heres what to know about the case
    apnews.com
    A$AP Rocky, center right, speaks next to attorney Chad Seigel after he was found not guilty in his trial Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)2025-02-18T21:32:33Z LOS ANGELES (AP) A jurys acquittal of A$AP Rocky on Tuesday put to rest a case that has hung over the hip-hop star for years and threatened to derail his life and career.Rocky was charged with two felony counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm, filed after a November 2021 incident in which a former friend said the rapper shot at him in Hollywood, grazing his knuckles.Rocky had been free on bail since his 2022 arrest, but he faced immediate incarceration if he had been convicted. Rocky pleaded not guilty, rejected a plea deal that would have involved very little jail time and opted not to testify during the case.He appeared nervous ahead of the verdict and leaped into the arms of Rihanna, his longtime partner, once it was clear the jury acquitted him.Thank yall for saving my life, he told the panel as they left.Heres some key elements of the case and how it played out: What jurors decidedUltimately, it took the jury of seven women and five men roughly three hours to decide the case, finding Rocky not guilty of the two felonies. Key evidence and testimony A$AP Rellis testimony made up the bulk of the prosecutions case. One surveillance camera captured the sound of the shots being fired. Another partially captured a scuffle shortly before the shooting. Yet another camera captured the incident itself, though it is small and blurry in the corner of the frame.Jurors also considered text messages to Rocky and others that Relli sent before and after the incident. Relli has also filed a lawsuit, and said in the communications that he had a greater desire to be paid by Rocky rather than to see him prosecuted.Rockys lawyer Joe Tacopina said in his closing argument that Relli is an angry pathological liar who committed perjury again and again and again and again.Defense witnesses included two members of Rockys inner circle who testified that he carried the prop gun. The penalty Rocky faced if convictedIf convicted of both charges, Rocky faced up to 24 years in prison. A conviction would have likely had immediate consequences, especially if he was taken into immediate custody.In addition to his life with Rihanna and their two young children, Rocky has a packed public schedule the next few months.Whats next for A$AP Rocky after his acquittalIts a major year for Rocky, with three big events on the horizon.In March, hell headline the Rolling Loud music festival in Los Angeles.In May, hell be at the Met Gala, the biggest fashion carpet of the year, as a celebrity co-chair along with LeBron James and Pharrell Williams. And this summer, hell add major motion picture actor to his resume as the co-star with Denzel Washington in director Spike Lees film Highest 2 Lowest. Rihannas role in the caseBefore the trial started, whether Rihanna would appear was one of the biggest unanswered questions. Even the judge asked Tacopina if shed show: Shes welcome to be here whenever she wants Id just like to know.Tacopina said it was unlikely, but as the case progressed, Rihanna became a frequent observer in the courtroom. Her first appearances were surreptitious, with few noticing her presence in the courtroom the first day.But eventually Rihanna started entering and exiting the courthouse via public entrances, where photographers and fans waited.She surprised everyone during closing arguments last week by bringing the couples sons, 2-year-old RZA Athelston Mayers and 1-year-old Riot Rose Mayers, to the proceedings.She watched the verdict and received a jubilant Rocky in her arms when he leaped into the audience after his acquittal. A$AP Rocky and A$AP RelliThe trial had its roots in high school in New York, when the Harlem-raised Rakim Mayers, now known as A$AP Rocky, met Terell Ephron, known as A$AP Relli, who was the trials most important witness.Ephron testified that he brought Rocky into a crew of young creators who called themselves A$AP for Always Strive and Prosper.A feud developed after Rocky achieved widespread fame, and came to a head in Hollywood on the night of Nov. 6, 2021, when Ephron said Rocky fired at him three or four times, the shots grazing his knuckles.Ephron went to the police two days later, and brought shell casings he had picked up himself. Rockys lawyers seized on recordings of a man who sounded like Relli saying he would stop participating in the criminal case when he was paid in a lawsuit; Relli said the recording was fake. Other key players in the trialSuperior Court Judge Mark Arnold, a former sheriffs deputy, has an affable but no-nonsense style and dispenses with many court formalities. In an uncommon move in LA County courts, he allowed cameras in court for nearly the entire trial.I believe that the public deserves to see what goes on in the courtroom, he said before the trial.Tacopina has also represented other hip-hop figures, including Meek Mill and YG. The lawyer who normally practices in New York is gregarious, quick with a joke and always happy to talk to the media, but can be ruthless in cross-examination. Deputy District Attorney John Lewin, best known for his successful murder prosecution of real estate scion Robert Durst, was a late addition to the prosecution team. Hes also known for his aggressive cross-examination, including a relentless, weekslong questioning of Durst.He sparred continuously with Tacopina throughout the trial, but ultimately came up short of a conviction once the case was in the jurys hands.
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  • Trump administration labels 8 Latin American cartels as foreign terrorist organizations
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump speaks at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (Pool via AP)2025-02-19T17:24:19Z WASHINGTON (AP) The Trump administration is formally designating eight Latin American crime organizations as foreign terrorist organizations, upping its pressure on cartels operating in the U.S. and on anyone aiding them.The move, carrying out a Jan. 20 executive order by President Donald Trump, names Tren de Aragua in Venezuela, MS-13 in El Salvador and others. The designation will be published in Thursdays edition of the Federal Register, according to a notice Wednesday.The Republican president has made securing the U.S.-Mexico border among his top priorities, vowing to carry out mass deportations, sending active duty troops to the border and reaching deals with some countries to take in more migrants. The notification is due for formal publication in the federal register Thursday.The foreign terrorist organization label is unusual because it deploys a terrorist designation normally reserved for groups like al-Qaida or the Islamic State group that use violence for political ends not for money-focused crime rings such as the Latin American cartels. The Trump administration argues that the international connections and operations of the groups including drug trafficking, migrant smuggling and violent pushes to extend their territory warrant the designation. Critics of the move call it an unnecessarily broad and harsh one that could damage relations and paralyze trade with Latin America. Businesses, banks and buyers could fear possible U.S. prosecution if they knowingly or unknowingly have any transactions that touch the world of the cartels. Such cartels permeate Mexicos economy, dealing not only in drug trafficking and migrant smuggling but fighting for control of the multibillion-dollar avocado business.Aid groups say some past U.S. designations of groups as foreign terrorist organizations have threatened overall food imports into countries, for example, by making shipping companies fearful that U.S. prosecutors may accuse them of directly or indirectly supporting the targeted groups. Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum responded to Trumps order last month that set up the new formal designation by saying Mexico would defend its sovereignty and independence while seeking coordination.We all want to fight the drug cartels, Sheinbaum said. The U.S. in their territory, us in our territory. ELLEN KNICKMEYER Knickmeyer covers foreign policy and national security for The Associated Press. She is based in Washington, D.C. twitter
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  • Fed judge's brutal takedown of Trump DOJ attorney over trans military ban case is *chef's kiss* perfection
    www.pride.com
    A federal judge forcefully rebuked the Trump administrations defense of its sweeping ban on transgender military service members, exposing the policy as a baseless attack on trans troops and calling the governments arguments frankly ridiculous and demeaning.During a heated hearing in Talbott v. Trump in Washington D.C. on Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes toxto task over the administrations claim that allowing transgender service members to use their preferred pronouns undermines military readiness.Can we agree that the greatest fighting force... is not going to be impacted in any way by less than one percent of the soldiers using a different pronoun than others might want to call them? Reyes asked.Lynch refused to concede the point, prompting an exasperated Reyes to dismantle the argument. Would you agree with me that if our military is negatively impacted in any kind of way that matters we all have a lot bigger problems than pronoun use? We have a military that is incompetent. Any common-sense, rational human being knows that it doesnt.Reyes didnt stop there. According to The Independent, she mocked the administrations insistence that pronoun usage could be a national security issue. If you want to get me an officer of the U.S. military who is willing to get on the stand and say that because of pronoun usage, the U.S. military is less prepared I will be the first to buy you a box of cigars.A policy of pure prejudice Activists participate in a rally at the Reflecting Pool of the U.S. Capitol April 10, 2019 in Washington, DC. Democratic lawmakers joined activists to rally against the transgender military service ban. Alex Wong/Getty ImagesThe case stems from President Donald Trumps January 27 executive order, which directed the Department of Defense to halt gender-affirming care for trans service members and block new enlistments of anyone with a history of gender dysphoria. Trumps handpicked Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, has aggressively enforced the order, making it one of the most extreme anti-LGBTQ+ military policies in modern history.Trumps executive order doesnt just ban gender-affirming careit openly disrespects and erases trans identities. The order claims that the adoption of a gender identity inconsistent with an individuals sex conflicts with a soldiers commitment to an honorable, truthful, and disciplined lifestyle, even in ones personal life. It even goes as far as to state:A mans assertion that he is a woman, and his requirement that others honor this falsehood, is not consistent with the humility and selflessness required of a service member.Reyes was having none of it. The Independent reports that she repeatedly pressed Lynch on whether that language was designed to degrade transgender people.The government is not willing to take a position [that] to categorically call a group of people selfish is demeaning? she asked. The answer is yes it is, no it isnt, or I cant say.Reyes also pointed out that the order portrays transgender service membersmany of whom have risked their lives in combatas inherently dishonest, dishonorable, and lacking integrity.[The order] calls an entire category of people dishonest, dishonorable, undisciplined, immodest, who lack integritypeople who have taken an oath to defend this country, people who have been under fire, people who have received medals for taking fire for this country, Reyes said, according to a transcript by Politicos Kyle Cheney on BlueSky. She then put the governments case in stark terms: I want to know from the government whether that language expresses 'animus.' Does that express animus?Lynch attempted to sidestep the question, saying, Not in any constitutional before Reyes cut him off. In a commonsense way, she interjected. This is a policy from the President of the United States affecting thousands of people... to call an entire group of people, lying dishonest people who are undisciplined, immodest, and have no integrity. How is that anything other than showing animus?When Lynch claimed he did not have an answer, Reyes shot back: You do have an answer, you just don't want to give it.According to Cheney, Reyes then declared that she was changing her courtroom policy to bar anyone who graduated from the University of Virginia School of Law from appearing before her, saying, Theyre all liars and lack integrity and are undisciplined and cant possibly meet the high rigors of being a lawyer for the government. She then ordered Lynch to sit down on that basis.After he complied, she called him back up and asked whether that situation demonstrated animus. If Im intersex, where am I allowed to go?The Independent notes that Reyes also took issue with Trumps broader attack on trans and nonbinary identities, particularly his executive order declaring that the U.S. government only recognizes two genders.This executive order is premised on an assertion thats not biologically correct, Reyes said. There are anywhere near 30 intersex examples. Anyone who doesnt have XX or XY chromosomes is not just male or female, theyre intersex.She posed a question: If Im intersex, where am I allowed to go?The government had no answer.Hegseths role in Trumps anti-trans military purge U.S. Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth holds his closing press conference at the end of defense ministers' meetings at NATO headquarters on February 13, 2025 in Brussels, Belgium.Omar Havana/Getty ImagesAs The Advocate previously reported, Hegseth has gone even further than Trumps order, implementing new restrictions that systematically strip transgender service members of their rights.A February 7 memo from Hegseth mandates that all military branches immediately halt gender-affirming health care, freeze promotions for transgender personnel, and deny enlistment to anyone with a history of gender dysphoria.Hegseth, a longtime opponent of LGBTQ+ inclusion, echoed Trumps rhetoric, dehumanizing transgender troops by calling their identities a falsehood and claiming that gender diversity is incompatible with active duty. His views are not newhis 2024 book, The War on Warriors, explicitly argued that transgender people should never be allowed to serve.The fight isnt overReyes is considering whether to block Trumps order while litigation continues. Meanwhile, the administration faces multiple legal challenges over its broader effort to strip away trans rightsincluding its attempt to eliminate federal recognition of transgender people and its attacks on gender-affirming care nationwide.
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  • A look at the 8 Latin American crime groups designated as terrorist organizations by the US
    apnews.com
    A soldier enters a bullet-riddled home covered by the initials of the Gulf Cartel (CDG) and Zetas (Z) in Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas state, Mexico, Sept. 6, 2014. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo, File)2025-02-19T17:59:30Z MEXICO CITY (AP) The United States government is formally designating eight Latin American organized crime groups that also operate in the U.S. to be foreign terrorist organizations. They are involved in drug trafficking, migrant smuggling and extend their territory through violence.The Trump administration is applying a terrorist designation thats normally reserved for groups like the Islamic State group or al-Qaida that use violence for political ends not for money-focused crime rings such as the Latin American cartels. The aim is to increase pressure on the groups and anyone who the U.S. sees as aiding them. The designation will be published in Thursdays edition of the Federal Register, according to a notice Wednesday.Heres a look at the eight Latin American drug cartels labeled as foreign terrorist organizations: Sinaloa Cartel MexicoThe Sinaloa Cartel, through various incarnations, is Mexicos oldest criminal group dating to the 1970s. It is a criminal conglomerate, an umbrella of sorts for various groups, based in the mountains of the state by the same name in northwest Mexico. It holds firm control of the western portion of the U.S.-Mexico border.Sinaloa moves all sorts of drugs across continents using boats, planes, migrants and cross-border tunnels. Its considered the most corrupting criminal organization in Mexico. A former security chief was convicted of helping them.One of their most lucrative businesses in recent years has been the production of the synthetic opioid fentanyl, blamed for tens of thousands of overdose deaths each year in the U.S. Sinaloa imports the precursor chemicals from China, produces the drug and smuggles it across the border.The arrest of Sinaloas eldest leader, Ismael El Mayo Zambada in July set off months of internal jockeying for power between Zambada loyalists and sons of the cartels best known former leader Joaqun El Chapo Guzmn, already serving a life sentence in the U.S. Jalisco New Generation Cartel MexicoThe gruesome discovery of some thirty dismembered bodies dumped in the hotel zone of Veracruz in 2011 announced the arrival of the Zeta Killers, who soon established themselves as the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, a hyper-violent and fast-growing group that spread through sort of franchise agreements with local gangs.Jalisco, named for a west-central Mexican state where its based, has aggressively attacked Mexican authorities, including military helicopters, using explosive-dropping drones and improvised explosive devices. It even attempted a spectacular assassination of the then-Mexico City police chief now Mexicos security director in the heart of the capital.Led by Nemesio El Mencho Oseguera, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration says Jalisco distributes tons of cocaine, methamphetamine and fentanyl in all 50 states. Gulf Cartel and Northeast Cartel MexicoBoth the Gulf Cartel and Northeast Cartel operate along the eastern end of the U.S.-Mexico border, moving drugs, immigrants, guns and money in what is the most direct route to the U.S. from Central and South America.The Gulf Cartel has a long history in Mexico, but has fractured in recent years spurring frequent clashes between factions. Its former leader, Osiel Crdenas Guilln (now imprisoned in Mexico after serving a sentence in the U.S.), recruited members of Mexicos military in the late 1990s to form a fearsome element known as the Zetas that eventually split and became their own drug trafficking organization.The Northeast Cartel is a remnant of the Zetas.The Northeast cartel has retained a relatively small portion of what the Zetas once ruled through relentless violence. Their base is Nuevo Laredo, the busiest commercial port on the U.S.-Mexico border.La Nueva Familia Michoacana and United Cartels MexicoThese local organized crime groups, operating in west-central Mexico, produce synthetic drugs, but they are a concern to the U.S. because of something else: avocados.Security analyst David Saucedo points out that the state of Michoacan exports $2.8 billion of avocados, a trade threatened by local criminal groups. U.S. inspectors working in Michoacan checking for pests have been threatened on multiple occasions by these groups, which control production and, to an extent, the price of avocados through extortion and threats to growers. Tren de Aragua VenezuelaThis organized crime group emerged from a prison in central Venezuela more than a decade ago. In recent years, it has spread from Chile to the United States, capitalizing on the exodus of some 8 million Venezuelans escaping their countrys political and economic crises.While its origins are in drug trafficking, its main businesses are migrant smuggling, human trafficking, sexual exploitation and forced labor. Its known for extreme violence decapitations and burying victims alive that has generated panic in countries across the hemisphere.U.S. authorities say Tren de Aragua insinuated itself into criminal networks in South America, launders its proceeds through crypto currencies and now poses a threat in various U.S. cities. Trump and his allies have seized on the gangs presence and made it the face of the alleged threat posed by undocumented immigrants. Mara Salvatrucha El SalvadorAlso known as MS-13, this violent street gang was one that Trump seized on during his first presidency as the threat posed by immigration, much like hes using Tren de Aragua now. What he failed to mention was that it originated in Los Angeles in the 1980s in communities made up largely of refugees from El Salvadors civil war and other immigrants, but grew to include many U.S. citizens in its ranks.In the U.S. the gang is known for brutal violence and street-level drug drug sales.Deported Salvadorans spread the gang to El Salvador where it quickly grew, corrupting and overwhelming local authorities. The gang and its rivals controlled swaths of territory, forcibly recruiting and extorting residents.The gang has been severely weakened in El Salvador since President Nayib Bukele launched an all-out assault on it and other street gangs nearly three years ago. His administration has arrested more than 80,000 people during that time for alleged gang ties, though civil rights groups say there has been little due process.__AP journalist Ellen Knickmeyer in Washington, D.C. contributed to this report.
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  • Trump throws Senate GOP budget bill in turmoil as Vance heads to Capitol Hill to meet with senators
    apnews.com
    The Capitol is seen framed through a window in the Cannon House Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)2025-02-19T18:26:22Z WASHINGTON (AP) No sooner had Senate Republicans voted to begin work on $340 billion budget bill focused on funding the White Houses mass deportations and border security agenda than President Donald Trump threw it into turmoil.Trump on Wednesday criticized the approach from the Senate Budget Committee chairman, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and sided with the House GOPs broader, if politically difficult, plan that includes $4.5 trillion in tax cuts and other priorities. Senators wanted to address those later, in a second package. Vice President JD Vance was on his way to Capitol Hill to confer privately with Republican senators.Unlike the Lindsey Graham version of the very important Legislation currently being discussed, the House Resolution implements my FULL America First Agenda, EVERYTHING, not just parts of it! Trump posted on social media. Trump wants the Houses version passed as a way to kickstart the process and move all of our priorities to the concept of, ONE BIG BEAUTIFUL BILL.The Senates Republican leadership is scrambling after being blindsided by the post.As they say, I did not see that one coming, said Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D. Thune had engineered the two-bill approach as a way to deliver an early victory for the White House and had pushed the Senate forward while the House is away on recess this week, saying it was time to act. Thune was meeting privately in his office with Graham. Were planning to proceed, but obviously we are interested in, and hoping to hear with more clarity where the White House is coming from, Thune said.The sudden turn of events means more upheaval in the difficult budget process. Republicans have majority control of the House and Senate, but face big hurdles in trying to put the presidents agenda into law as Democrats prepare to counter the onslaught of actions from the White House. Late Tuesday, Republicans had pushed ahead on the scaled-back budget bill, on a party-line vote, 50-47, in what was supposed to be the first step in unlocking Trumps campaign promises tax cuts, energy production and border controls and dominating the agenda on Capitol Hill.But it also comes as the administrations Department of Government Efficiency effort is slashing costs across government departments, leaving a trail of fired federal workers and dismantling programs on which many Americans depend. Democrats, having floundered amid the initial upheaval coming from the White House, have emerged galvanized as they try to warn the public about what is at stake.These bills that they have have one purpose and that is theyre trying to give a tax break to their billionaire buddies and have you, the average American person, pay for it, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York told The Associated Press.Schumer convened a private call over the weekend with Democratic senators and agreed on a strategy to challenge Republicans for prioritizing tax cuts that primarily flow to the wealthy at the expense of program and service reductions in health care, scientific research, veterans services and elsewhere. This is going to be a long, drawn-out fight, Schumer said.The Senates budget process begins this week, with an initial 50 hours of debate followed by an expected all-night session with lots of attempts to amend the package. The Republican package would allow $175 billion to be spent on border security, including money for mass deportation operations and building the U.S.-Mexico border wall, in addition to a $150 billion boost to the Pentagon and $20 billion for the Coast Guard.Republicans are determined to push ahead after Trump border czar Tom Homan and top aide Stephen Miller told senators privately last week that they are running short of cash to accomplish the presidents immigration priorities.Trump met with Republican senators last month, expressing no preference for one bill or two, but just that Congress get the result.The Senate Budget Committee said its package would cost about $85.5 billion a year, for four years of Trumps presidency, paid for with new reductions and revenues elsewhere that other committees will draw up. Eyeing ways to pay for it, Republican senators are considering a rollback of the Biden administrations methane emissions fee, which was approved by Democrats as part of climate change strategies in the Inflation Reduction Act, and hoping to draw new revenue from energy leases as they aim to spur domestic energy production.The House GOP bill is multiple times larger, with $4.5 trillion in tax cuts and $1.5 trillion in spending reductions over the decade across Medicaid health care programs, food stamps and other services used by large swaths of the country. The cuts could ultimately grow to $2 trillion to appease hard-right conservatives. The budget plans are being considered under whats called the reconciliation process, which allows passage on a simple majority vote without many of the procedural hurdles that stall bills. Once rare, reconciliation is increasingly being used in the House and Senate to pass big packages on party-line votes when one party controls the White House and Congress.During Trumps first term, Republicans used the reconciliation process to pass the GOP tax cuts in 2017. Democrats used reconciliation during the Biden presidency era to approve COVID relief and also the Inflation Reduction Act.
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