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GAYETY.COMMinnesota Vikings Male Cheerleaders Clap Back at Critics Amidst Heavy Online BacklashThe Minnesota Vikings recent addition of male cheerleaders has sparked a wave of controversy. Blaize Shiek and Louie Conn, rookies on the squad, quickly became the center of social media debates and conservative criticism.Former Vikings player and conservative activist Jack Brewer told Fox News Digital he was disgusted and embarrassed by the move. As a former Viking team captain who grew up a Viking fan, my dads been a Viking fan since 1972, Ive never been so disgusted and embarrassed to even have any association with the Minnesota Vikings brand, Brewer said.Brewer added that male cheerleaders risk manipulating children by presenting a different image of masculinity. He specifically claimed it could impact boys from single-parent households.Conservative voices like Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., also weighed in, suggesting that including men on NFL cheer squads undermines traditional gender roles in sports. People will actually quit buying tickets because this is the narrative theyre trying to push, Tuberville said.Vikings Stand FirmDespite the criticism, the Vikings have firmly defended Shiek and Conn. A team spokesperson told NBC News, Male cheerleaders have been part of previous Vikings teams and have long been associated with collegiate and professional cheerleading. We support all our cheerleaders and are proud of the role they play as ambassadors of the organization.The team noted that about one-third of NFL teams currently feature male cheerleaders. Both Shiek and Conn bring dance and performance experience, with Conn coming from the Iowa State Cyclones dance team.Blake and Louie Clap BackShiek and Conn have not stayed silent amid the backlash. Taking to Instagram, Shiek jokingly posted, Waitdid someone say our name? alongside a photo of himself and Conn in their cheer uniforms. The lighthearted post highlighted their enthusiasm and rookie pride.The Vikings have reiterated that the men were selected for their talent, passion for dance, and dedication to elevating the game day experience. Critics have argued that their style mirrors traditional female cheerleading moves rather than classic male stunts, but Shiek and Conn appear unfazed.By addressing detractors with humor and confidence, the two cheerleaders have helped shift the conversation from controversy to celebration of skill and inclusion.A Growing TrendMale cheerleaders are not new in professional sports. The Los Angeles Rams first added men to their squad in 2018, and the Baltimore Ravens followed. The Carolina Panthers previously featured a transgender cheerleader, showcasing the NFLs slow but steady diversification of sideline performers.For Shiek and Conn, the season promises more than just pom-poms, its a chance to redefine what it means to cheer, on their own terms, while taking criticism in stride and proving their place in the NFL spotlight.Source0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 12 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NATURE.COMRFK Jr demanded a vaccine study be retracted the journal said noNature, Published online: 22 August 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-02682-9In a rare move for a US public official, health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr called for a Danish paper finding no link between aluminium in vaccines and disease to be retracted.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 16 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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GAYETY.COMNashville Pride Faces Funding Crisis as Sponsors Pull SupportNashville Pride, one of the Souths largest LGBTQ+ celebrations, is facing a steep financial crisis after a wave of sponsors and volunteers pulled out in the months leading up to its June festival.Organizers revealed a shortfall of more than $300,000 compared to last year, raising concerns about the events sustainability. Nearly 40% of long-time corporate partners withdrew, some only days before the celebration.Corporate Retreat and Costly CancellationsAmong the most surprising losses was Vanderbilt University Medical Center, which had pledged to provide volunteer staff for the festivals medical tent. The hospital canceled one month before the event, leaving organizers to hire outside contractors at a cost of $32,000.Rainy weather added to the financial blow. With organizers expanding the festival from two days to three, attendance lagged behind expectations, cutting further into revenue.A National Trend With Local ConsequencesThe festivals struggle reflects a broader downturn in nonprofit giving nationwide, but Pride leaders say it is difficult to separate the pullback from the rise in anti-LGBTQ sentiment.Photo: John Partipilo/Tennessee LookoutPhotograph by John Partipilo/Tennessee Lookout 2025Obviously, we saw an influx of anti-LGBTQ rhetoric during the first Trump administration as well, but this time around it seems like things have more legs, said Brady Ruffin, Secretary of Nashville Prides Board of Directors. Its not only attacks on the legislative level, but its attacks on corporate funding as well.Safety Costs Add to the StrainSecurity has also become a major expense for Pride, and in the current political climate, organizers say it is non-negotiable.Its very important for us to keep our security private as a queer-centric organization, Ruffin explained. We are incredibly thankful for our partners at the Nashville Police Department, but Pride specifically started as a protest. Theres a really nuanced relationship between the LGBTQ+ community and uniform police departments.A Call to the CommunityTo bridge the gap, Nashville Pride has launched a fundraising campaign with the goal of raising $250,000 by National Coming Out Day on Oct. 11. Organizers emphasize that Pride belongs to the people, even as corporate dollars have long played a role in sustaining the event.Photo: John Partipilo/Tennessee LookoutPhotograph by John Partipilo/Tennessee Lookout 2025Pride has always been about the people. Corporate sponsors dont make Pride, but their sudden withdrawal has really put the burden back on us, Ruffin said. We may be one of the first ones in the South, or in the country, to really put out this kind of emergency call to action, but were definitely not going to be the only Pride to face this.The appeal underscores the shifting landscape for LGBTQ+ festivals nationwide, where rising costs and wavering corporate backing leave communities with a choice: step in, or risk losing some of their most visible celebrations.Anyone who would like to contribute to Nashville Prides fundraising efforts can visit savenashvillepride.org.Source0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 13 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMAnthony makes mark in Bronx debut with key HRRookie Roman Anthony hit a two-run homer in the ninth inning and drove in three runs in a memorable Yankee Stadium debut as the Red Sox notched a 6-3 victory over the Yankees in the opener of a 4-game series Thursday night.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 12 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMThaksin Shinawatra, Former Thai Premier, Cleared of Insulting MonarchyBut the reprieve for Thaksin Shinawatra, who remains a political force, did not mean that the legal troubles for him and his family were over.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMErik Menendez Has Been Denied Parole. Heres What to Know.A California parole panel said Mr. Menendez should not be released from prison, 36 years after he and his brother, Lyle, killed their parents. Lyles parole hearing is Friday.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMRed-hot Aces rout Mercury, push win streak to 9Led by A'ja Wilson's 19 points and 13 boards, the Aces rolled to their ninth straight victory Thursday night with an 83-61 win over the Mercury.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 6 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMIsraels defense minister says Gaza City could be destroyedPeople sit near makeshift burners, used to extract fuel from melted plastic, where displaced Palestinians try to make a living selling homemade fuel along the Sea Road, at dusk in the south of Gaza City, Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)2025-08-22T06:28:46Z DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) Israels defense minister warned on Friday that Gaza City could be destroyed unless Hamas accepts Israels terms, as the country prepares for an expanded offensive in the area.A day after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he would authorize the military to mount a major operation to seize Gaza City, Defense Minister Israel Katz warned that the enclaves largest city could turn into Rafah and Beit Hanoun, areas reduced to rubble earlier in the war.The gates of hell will soon open on the heads of Hamas murderers and rapists in Gaza until they agree to Israels conditions for ending the war, Katz wrote in a post on X.He restated Israels cease-fire demands: the release of all hostages and Hamas complete disarmament. Hamas has said it would release captives in exchange for ending the war, but rejects disarmament without the creation of a Palestinian state. The wide-scale operation in Gaza City could start within days. Gaza City is Hamas military and governing stronghold, atop of what Israel believes is an extensive tunnel network. It is also sheltering hundreds of thousands of civilians and still houses some of the strips critical infrastructure and health facilities. Hamas said earlier this week that it had agreed to a ceasefire proposal from Arab mediators, which if accepted by Israel could forestall the offensive. The parties do not negotiate directly and similar announcements have been made in the past that did not lead to ceasefires. The proposal outlines a phased deal involving hostage and prisoner exchanges and a pullback of Israeli troops, while talks continue on a longer-term cease-fire. Israeli leaders have resisted such terms since abandoning a similar agreement earlier this year amid divisions within Netanyahus coalition and strong opposition from his right.Many Israelis fear an assault could doom the roughly 20 hostages still alive after Hamas-led militants Oct. 7, 2023 attack. Aid groups and international leaders warn it would worsen Gazas humanitarian crisis. The logistics of evacuating civilians are expected to be daunting. Many residents say repeated displacement is pointless since nowhere in Gaza is safe, while medical groups warn Israels calls to move patients south is unworkable, with no facilities to receive them.But Netanyahu has argued the offensive is the surest way to free captives and crush Hamas.These two things defeating Hamas and releasing all our hostages go hand in hand, Netanyahu said on Thursday while touring a command center near in southern Israel.___Metz reported from Jerusalem. SAM METZ Metz covers Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and points beyond for The Associated Press. mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMInside the facility where ICE is training recruits to take on Trumps deportation goalsAn Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) instructor demonstrates getting a 170 lb. dummy into a position to be handcuffed on the agility course at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC) in Brunswick, Ga. on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Fran Ruchalski)2025-08-22T03:42:12Z BRUNSWICK, Ga. (AP) At an obstacle course in the humid Georgia heat, an instructor shows recruits how to pull a wounded partner out of danger. In a classroom with desks cluttered with thick legal books about immigration law, recruits learn about how the Fourth Amendment governs their work. And on a firing range littered with shell casings, new recruits for Immigration and Customs Enforcement practice shooting their handguns. Instructors, give me a thumbs up when students are ready to go, a voice over the loudspeaker said before a group of about 20 ICE recruits practiced drawing and firing their weapons.The Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Brunswick, Georgia, is the epicenter of training for almost all federal law enforcement officers, including the Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers who are at the center of President Donald Trumps mass deportation efforts. Now, with lots of money approved by Congress this summer starting to flow into ICE, the agency is in midst of a huge hiring effort as it aims to get thousands of new deportation officers into the field in the coming months. Stay up to date with the latest U.S. news by signing up to our WhatsApp channel. On Thursday, The Associated Press and other news organizations got a rare look at the Basic Immigration Law Enforcement Training Program that new ICE recruits specifically those in the Enforcement and Removal Operations unit responsible for finding, arresting and removing people from the country go through and what they learn. Caleb Bitello, left, ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Academy assistant director and Todd Lyons, second left, acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) speak to the press at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC) in Brunswick, Ga. on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025 about the training program ICE officers go through. (AP Photo/Fran Ruchalski) Caleb Bitello, left, ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Academy assistant director and Todd Lyons, second left, acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) speak to the press at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC) in Brunswick, Ga. on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025 about the training program ICE officers go through. (AP Photo/Fran Ruchalski) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Ramping up hiring, training ICE is getting $76.5 billion in new money from Congress to help it meet Trumps mass deportation goal. Thats nearly 10 times the agencys current annual budget. Nearly $30 billion of that money is for new staff.Theyre hiring across the agency, including investigators and lawyers, but the numbers theyre hiring in those areas pale in comparison to how many deportation officers are coming on board. Todd Lyons, the acting director of ICE, was at the training demonstration Thursday. He said the agency currently has about 6,500 deportation officers and is aiming to hire 10,000 more by the end of the year. With that hiring surge has come concerns that vetting or training of new recruits will be shortchanged. The Border Patrol went through a similar hiring surge in the early 2000s when hiring and training standards were changed; arrests for employee misconduct rose.Lyons pushed back on concerns that ICE might cut corners when it comes to training. although he said they have made changes designed to streamline the process.I wasnt going to water down training, said Lyons.Caleb Vitello, the assistant director of ICE in charge of training, says new recruits will go through about eight weeks of training at the Georgia facility. But they also have training before and after they come here. One key change, Vitello noted: ICE cut out five weeks of Spanish-language training because he said recruits were only getting to the point of being moderately competent in Spanish. He said language translation technology can help fill that void in the field. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Special Response Team members demonstrate how the team enters a residence in the pursuit of a wanted subject at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC) in Brunswick, Ga. on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Fran Ruchalski) Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Special Response Team members demonstrate how the team enters a residence in the pursuit of a wanted subject at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC) in Brunswick, Ga. on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Fran Ruchalski) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More What does the training look like?During the six-days-a-week training, new recruits live on the grounds of the sprawling facility, which is covered with pine forests and sits near the Atlantic Ocean a little less than an hours drive north of the Florida state line. Hundreds have gone through the training here in recent months. During the course, new recruits train on firearms in a large indoor shooting range that looks as big as a football field. On Thursday, the floor was littered with spent shell casings as roughly 20 new recruits wearing blue shirts and blue pants practiced shooting from a bent-elbow position and transitional shooting involving transferring their guns from one hand to another. Instructors in red shirts walked behind them, occasionally giving them instruction. Everyone wore eye protection and red, noise-reducing earmuffs with earplugs underneath.Dean Wilson, who oversees the firearms training, compared some of the operations that ICE agents face to a haunted house where they dont know what might be coming at them. We do our very best to make sure that even though theyre in that environment, that they have the wherewithal to make the proper decision, said Wilson. Nobody wants to be the one to make a bad shot, and nobody wants to be the one that doesnt make it home.In a big field with various driving tracks and courses, they also train on driving techniques how to recover from a skid on wet pavement or how to navigate a winding course similar to an urban environment where they have to come to a full stop or navigate blind corners.The curriculum also includes de-escalation techniques designed to prevent the use of force in the first place, Lyons said. In any type of law enforcement situation, he said, youd rather de-escalate with words before you have to use any use of force. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Special Response Team members demonstrate how the team enters a residence in the pursuit of a wanted subject at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC) in Brunswick, Ga. on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Fran Ruchalski) Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Special Response Team members demonstrate how the team enters a residence in the pursuit of a wanted subject at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC) in Brunswick, Ga. on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Fran Ruchalski) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Learning the law and the Fourth AmendmentNot all of the training is in the field.ICE agents like to point out that when it comes to complexity, immigration law is second only to the tax code.At the training academy, they get about 12 hours of classroom instruction on things like the Fourth Amendment the part of the Constitution that protects against unreasonable searches and seizures and the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, which has evolved over the decades and governs all facets of immigration. Those legal lessons are also interspersed throughout the rest of the training.On the desks in one classroom are training manuals and immigration law handbooks roughly two to three inches thick. Recruits learn about how to determine if someone is removable from the country, under what circumstances they can go into someones house to search and when they have to leave.ICE staff pushed back on accusations that they are indiscriminately pulling people over or setting up checkpoints in Washington, D.C., or elsewhere as part of immigration enforcement. They said they have to have probable cause to go after someone, and they do targeted operations. They said they cant and dont do traffic stops but can work with local authorities who are.Once local law enforcement makes a stop, and then they contact ICE saying we have somebody that we possibly think might be an alien, said Greg Hornsby, an associate legal adviser at ICE. And thats where we step in. REBECCA SANTANA Santana covers the Department of Homeland Security for The Associated Press. She has extensive experience reporting in such places as Russia, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMTrump embraces tough-on-crime mantra amid DC takeover as he and Democrats claim political winsPresident Donald Trump speaks with members of law enforcement and National Guard soldiers, Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)2025-08-22T04:01:25Z NEW YORK (AP) President Donald Trump stood among several hundred law enforcement officers, National Guard troops and federal agents at a U.S. Park Police operations center in one of Washington, D.C.'s most dangerous neighborhoods. As the cameras rolled, he offered a stark message about crime, an issue hes been hammering for decades, as he thanked them for their efforts.Were not playing games, he said. Were going to make it safe. And were going to then go on to other places. The Republican president is proudly promoting the work of roughly 2,000 National Guard troops in the city, loaned by allied governors from at least six Republican-led states. Theyre in place to confront what Trump describes as an out-of-control crime wave in the Democratic-run city, though violent crime in Washington, like dozens of cities led by Democrats, has been down significantly since a pandemic high. Trump and his allies are confident that his stunning decision to dispatch troops to a major American city is a big political winner almost certain to remind voters of why they elected him last fall.Democrats say this is a fight theyre eager to have. Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, an Army veteran, cast Trumps move as a dangerous political stunt designed to distract the American people from his inability to address persistent inflation, rising energy prices and major health insurance cuts, among other major policy challenges. Im deeply offended, as someone whos actually worn the uniform, that he would use the lives of these men and women and the activation of these men and women as political pawns, Moore told The Associated Press. Trumps extraordinary federal power grab comes as the term-limited president has threatened to send troops to other American cities led by Democrats, even as voters voice increasing concern about his authoritarian tendencies. And it could be a factor for both sides in elections in Virginia and New Jersey this fall and next years more consequential midterms. People rally against President Donald Trumps use of federal law enforcement and National Guard troops along the U street corridor in northwest Washington Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) People rally against President Donald Trumps use of federal law enforcement and National Guard troops along the U street corridor in northwest Washington Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Inside the White House strategyThe president and White House see Trumps decision to take over the D.C. police department as a political boon and have been eager to publicize the efforts.The White House offered a livestream of Trumps Thursday evening appearance, and on Wednesday, Vice President JD Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth made a surprise visit to Union Station, D.C.s busy transit hub, to thank members of the National Guard over Shake Shack burgers. Each morning, Trumps press office distributes statistics outlining the previous nights law enforcement actions, including total arrests and how many of those people are in the country illegally. The strategy echoes Trumps crackdown on illegal immigration, which has often forced Democrats to come to the defense of people living in the country illegally, including some who have committed serious crimes.A White House official, speaking on background to discuss internal deliberations, dismissed concerns about perceptions of federal overreach in Washington, saying public safety is a fundamental requirement and a priority for residents. Trump defended his efforts during an interview on The Todd Starnes Show Thursday. Because I sent in people to stop crime, they said, Hes a dictator. The real people, though, even Democrats, are calling me and saying, Its unbelievable how much it has helped, he said.The White House hopes to use its actions in D.C. as a test case to inspire changes in other cities, though Trump has legal power to intervene in Washington that he doesnt have elsewhere because the city is under partial federal control. Everyday Americans who support commonsense policies would deem the removal of more than 600 dangerous criminals from the streets of our nations capital a huge success, said White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers. The Democrats continue to be wildly unpopular because they oppose efforts to stop violent crime and protect law-abiding citizens. Democrats lean inMoore, Marylands Democratic governor, suggested a dark motivation behind Trumps approach, which is focused almost exclusively on cities with large minority populations led by Democratic mayors of color.Once again, we are seeing how these incredibly dangerous and biased tropes are being used about these communities by someone who is not willing to step foot in them, but is willing to stand in the Oval Office and defend them, Moore said.Even before Trump called the National Guard to Washington, Democratic mayors across the country have been touting their success in reducing violent crime. Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb, who leads the Democratic Mayors Association, noted that over half of the 70 largest Democratic-led cities in the country have seen violent crime decrease so far this year. Hes stoking racial division and stoking fear and chaos, Bibb said. We need someone who wants to be a collaborator, not a dictator. Democratic strategists acknowledge that Trumps GOP has enjoyed a significant advantage in recent years on the issues of crime and immigration issues Trump has long sought to connect. But as Democratic officials push back against the federal takeover in Washington, party strategists are offering cautious optimism that Trumps tactics will backfire. This is an opportunity for the party to go on offense on an issue that has plagued us for a long time, said veteran Democratic strategist Daniel Wessel. The facts are on our side. President Donald Trump speaks with members of law enforcement and National Guard soldiers, Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) President Donald Trump speaks with members of law enforcement and National Guard soldiers, Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A closer look at the numbersFBI statistics released this month show murder and nonnegligent manslaughter in the U.S. in 2024 fell nearly 15% from a year earlier, continuing a decline thats been seen since a coronavirus pandemic-era crime spike. Meanwhile, recent public polling shows that Republicans have enjoyed an advantage over Democrats on the issue of crime. A CNN/SSRS poll conducted in May found that about 4 in 10 U.S. adults said the Republican Partys views were closer to their own on crime and policing, while 3 in 10 said they were more aligned with Democrats views. About 3 in 10 said neither party reflected their opinions. Other polls conducted in the past few years found a similar gap.Trump also had a significant edge over Democrat Kamala Harris on the issue in the 2024 election. About half of voters said Trump was better able to handle crime.At the same time, Americans have expressed more concern about the scope of presidential power since Trump took office for a second time in January. An AP-NORC poll conducted in April found that about half of U.S. adults said the president has too much power in the way the U.S. government operates these days, up from 32% in March 2024. The unusual military presence in a U.S. city, which featured checkpoints across Washington staffed in some cases by masked federal agents, injected a sense of fear and chaos into daily life for some people in the nations capital. At least one day care center was closed Thursday as childcare staff feared the military action, which has featured a surge in immigration enforcement, while local officials raised concerns about next weeks public school openings. Moore said he would block any push by Trump to send the National Guard into Baltimore. I have not seen anything or any conditions on the ground that I think would justify the mobilization of our National Guard, he said. They think theyre winning the political argument. I dont give a s- about the political argument. ___AP writers Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux and Chris Megerian in Washington contributed. JILL COLVIN Colvin is an Associated Press national political reporter covering the 2024 presidential campaign. She is based in New York. mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMFormer Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra says he has been acquitted of royal defamationFormer Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra arrives at Criminal Court for a verdict for allegedly defaming the monarchy in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Aug. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Arnun Chonmahatrakool)2025-08-22T04:06:50Z BANGKOK (AP) Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra said he was acquitted of royal defamation by a court on Friday, in a case that could have sent him to prison for up to 15 years.The 76-year-old Thaksin, smiling as he walked away from the courtroom, responded to journalists questions with the single word: Dismissal.His lawyer, Winyat Chatmontree, also confirmed the acquittal verdict, but the Bangkok Criminal Court did not immediately issue a statement.The law on defaming the monarchy, an offense known as lese majeste, is punishable by three to 15 years in prison. It is among the harshest such laws globally and increasingly has been used in Thailand to punish government critics.The legal aid group Thai Lawyers for Human Rights has said that since early 2020, more than 270 people many of them student activists have been charged with violating the law. Winyat told reporters that the court dismissed the case against Thaksin on several grounds. He said the court found the witnesses and evidence were too weak to support conviction.Thaksin was originally charged in 2016 over remarks he made a year earlier to journalists in South Korea. The case was not pursued at that time because he was in exile and the necessary legal procedures could not be completed. Winyat said the court determined that the account of the interview presented by the prosecution was incomplete and lacked context, and a key point did not clearly refer to the monarchy. Stay up to date with similar stories by signing up to our WhatsApp channel. Winyat also said the court thought the complaint against Thaksin might have been motivated by political bias, causing his words to be unfairly interpreted. Thaksins opponents, who were generally staunch royalists, accused him of corruption, abuse of power and disrespecting then-King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who died in 2016. Thaksin has always asserted that the cases against him were politically motivated. When he was indicted last year, Thaksins freedom on bail was approved with the condition that he could not travel out of Thailand unless approved by court. His passport was confiscated.Despite facing various prosecutions since leaving office, Thaksin has spent no time in prison. He was abroad in 2006 when a military coup ousted him. He briefly returned in 2008, only to return quickly to exile to avoid a possible prison term.He returned to Thailand in 2023 when the Pheu Thai political party that he is closely associated with came to power. He was sent to serve an eight-year prison term on charges related to corruption and abuse of power but was transferred immediately to a hospital on medical grounds. After six months in a hospital suite, he was granted a pardon and parole and set free.The decision to send him to a hospital instead of prison was widely questioned as to whether he was granted a special, undeserved privilege. The Supreme Courts Criminal Division for Political Office Holders will rule next month in another case that puts him in jeopardy of imprisonment.Since his return, Thaksin has maintained a high profile, traveling the country making public appearances and political observations that could upset the powerful conservative establishment that was behind his 2006 ouster. His daughter, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, who became prime minister last year, is also in hot water. She stands accused of failing to handle in an ethical manner a June 15 call with Cambodian Senate President Hun Sen in which they discussed tensions over territory claimed by both nations. The Constitutional Court suspended her from her duties on July 1 and next week will rule whether she will lose her prime minister position for breaching ethics laws.Thais have long been accustomed to sudden changes of government due to military coups, numbering more than a dozen since the 1930s. But in the past two decades, they have increasingly seen such changes imposed by the courts, which have ousted four prime ministers and dissolved three election-winning political parties, often on narrow technical grounds.In most cases, the targets were viewed as challengers to the traditional royalist establishment, whose most powerful defenders are the army and the courts. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COM6 people are found dead at a Colorado dairy. Authorities suspect an accident involving gas exposureA sign stands at Prospect Ranch outside of Prospect Valley Dairy east of Keenesburg, Colo., on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. (Chris Bolin/Denver Post via AP)2025-08-21T20:02:22Z An apparent accident at a dairy in a rural farming community in Colorado involving exposure to gas killed six people, including a high school student, authorities said Thursday.Investigators are looking into what kind of gases may have played a role in the deaths Wednesday at Prospect Valley Dairy in Keenesburg, about 35 miles (55 kilometers) northeast of Denver. Crews recovered the bodies in a confined space at the dairy, the Southeast Weld Fire Protection District said. We are investigating these deaths as the possible consequence of gas exposure in a confined space, said Jolene Weiner, chief deputy coroner for Weld County.The identities of those who died, all Hispanic males, were being withheld pending notification of the families, Weiner said. A local school district said a high school student was among those who died. Weld County Sheriffs Office spokesperson Melissa Chesmore said her agency didnt find anything indicating a crime took place. It looks like an accident, she said, declining to elaborate or say where exactly the bodies were found, referring questions to occupational safety regulators. Chauntra Rideaux, a U.S. Department of Labor spokesperson, said in an email that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration was investigating. The farm is a member of the Dairy Farmers of America, the group said. Stay up to date with the latest U.S. news by signing up to our WhatsApp channel. We are deeply saddened by this incident, and our thoughts and most sincere condolences go out to the friends and families of the deceased. At this early stage, we have no further details, the farmer-owned cooperative said in a statement. County tax records say the property is owned by Prospect Valley Dairy LLC and list a Bakersfield, California, address for the owners. Phone messages left for a number at the California address were not immediately returned. Weld County is a major agricultural producer. Three-quarters of its land is devoted to farming and raising livestock. Its Colorados leading dairy producer and the states biggest source of beef cattle, grain and sugar beets.Census data from 2020 shows 30% of the county was Hispanic or Latino, compared to 22% for the state overall.___Lee reported from Santa Fe, New Mexico and McAvoy reported from Honolulu. Associated Press Writer Corey Williams contributed from Detroit. AUDREY McAVOY McAvoy is a Honolulu-based reporter focused on covering state government and general news in Hawaii. mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMTransfer rumors, news: Spurs turn to Nkunku after Eze snubSpurs exploring a move for Chelsea forward Christopher Nkunku after missing out when Eberechi Eze chose Arsenal. Transfer Talk has the latest news, gossip and rumors.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMFuneral home owner who stashed nearly 200 decaying bodies set to be sentenced for corpse abuseAngelika Steadman, right, reaches over to comfort Samantha Naranjo, whose grandmother Dorothy Tardif, was among the bodies found at the Return to Nature Funeral Home and Steadman's daughter, Chanelle Chaloux, has yet to be found, during a small ceremony before the start of demolition of the funeral home in Penrose, Colo., Tuesday, March 15, 2024. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP, File)2025-08-22T04:09:44Z DENVER (AP) Its been two years since nearly 200 decaying bodies were discovered throughout a fetid, room temperature building in rural Colorado. On Friday, the man responsible, a funeral home owner, is set to be sentenced in state court for 191 counts of corpse abuse.Jon Hallford and his wife, Carie, ran a morbid racket for four years out of their Return to Nature Funeral Home in Colorado Springs: assuring people they were handling their loved ones cremations only to stash the bodies in a bug-infested building and then giving them dry concrete resembling ashes.Jon Hallford is already headed to prison after pleading guilty to federal fraud charges. Fridays sentencing hearing will focus on state charges related to mistreatment of the bodies. Family members will have the chance to describe the anguish of learning a loved one slowly decayed among piles of others. To me its the heart of the case. Its the worst part of the crime, said Tanya Wilson, who is traveling from Georgia to speak at the sentencing. She hired the funeral home to cremate her mother and later discovered the supposed ashes the family spread in Hawaii werent from her mothers body, which had been wasting away in the building in Penrose, a small town 35 miles from Colorado Springs. A plea agreement calls for Hallford to receive a 20-year prison sentence for the corpse abuse charges. Stay up to date with the latest U.S. news by signing up to our WhatsApp channel. Wilson said she and some other families want Judge Eric Bentley to reject the agreement because Hallfords state sentence is expected to run concurrently with his 20-year federal sentence, meaning he could be freed many years earlier than if the sentences ran consecutively. The scale of this is staggering. Why does the state believe they deserve a plea deal? Wilson asked. There needs to be accountability.If the judge rejects the agreement, Hallford would not be immediately sentenced and the case would likely go to an arraignment, the first step toward a criminal trial, said Kate Singh with the Fourth Judicial District District Attorneys Office. Colorado has struggled to effectively oversee funeral homes and for many years had some of the weakest regulations in the nation. Its had a slew of abuse cases, including an estimated 20 decomposing corpses discovered this week at a funeral home in Pueblo. Carie Hallford is accused of the same crimes as her husband and also pleaded guilty. Her sentencing on the corpse abuse charges has not been scheduled.The couple was accused of letting 189 bodies decay. In two other instances the wrong bodies were buried. Four remains have yet to be identified, Singh said.The Hallfords got a license for their funeral home in 2017, and authorities said the bodies started piling up by 2019. Many languished for years in states of decay, some decomposed beyond recognition, some unclothed or on the floor in inches of fluid from the bodies.As the gruesome count grew, Jon and Carie Hallford were also defrauding the federal government out of nearly $900,000 in COVID-19 era aid.With the money from families and the federal government, the Hallfords bought ritzy items from stores like Tiffany & Co., a GMC Yukon and Infiniti worth $120,000 combined, laser body sculpting and $31,000 in cryptocurrency. In 2023, a putrid smell poured from the building and the police turned up. Investigators swarmed the building, donning hazmat suits and painstakingly extracting the bodies. Hallford and his wife were arrested in Oklahoma, where Jon Hallford had family, more than a month later.Families learned that their cathartic moments of grief spreading a mothers ashes in Hawaii or cradling a sons urn in a rocking chair were tainted by a deception. It was as if those signposts of the grieving process had been torn away, unraveling months and years of working through their loved ones deaths.Some had nightmares of what their relatives decayed bodies must have looked like. Others were anguished by the fear their family members souls were trapped, unable to go free.A mother, Crystina Page, demanded to watch as her sons body, rescued from the Return to Nature building, was cremated for real. Wilson, who had thought she already spread her mothers ashes in Hawaii, said the family cremated her mothers remains after they were recovered by authorities. She is waiting for the court cases to conclude before returning to Hawaii again to spread the ashes.The Hallfords pleaded guilty in the federal case to conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Jon Hallford has appealed his federal prison sentence. Carie Hallford faces a December sentencing in that case.___Brown reported from Billings, Montana. JESSE BEDAYN Bedayn is a statehouse reporter for The Associated Press based in Denver. He is a Report for America corps member. mailto MATTHEW BROWN Brown is based in Billings, Montana. He covers breaking news, the environment, politics, energy, crime and more.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMMAHA Is a Bad Answer to a Good QuestionRachael Bedard and David Wallace-Wells on Covid disillusionment and the rise of the MAHA movement.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMTrumps Gerrymandering Push Is a Form of CheatingGerrymandering is a form of cheating. And it is preventable.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMCourt orders stray dogs in New Delhi released, easing its order to move them all to sheltersActivists hold placards during a protest against recent ruling by the country's top court ordering authorities in New Delhi to remove all stray dogs from the streets and to sterilize and permanently relocate them to shelters,Thursday, Aug 14, 2025.(AP Photo/ Rafiq Maqbool)2025-08-22T06:27:08Z NEW DELHI (AP) Indias Supreme Court ordered the release of all stray dogs that were removed from New Delhi streets after sterilization and immunization following an increase in the number of people who were bitten by dogs.The courts ruling Friday modified its earlier judgment by ordering the dogs to be released to the same localities they were removed from. The order also calls for designated feeding spaces across the capital. Animal lovers and activists filed an appeal against the Aug. 11 ruling ordering permanent relocation to shelters. While many dogs roaming New Delhis streets are harmless, the courts order aimed to control rising cases of biting, including incidents involving children. Some estimates based on hospital records suggest New Delhi sees nearly 2,000 dog bite episodes every day.Rabies through dog bites is caused by a virus that invades the central nervous system and is almost always fatal if left untreated. There were 49 cases of rabies in New Delhi from January 2025 to July 2025 but it was unclear whether all of those were the result of dog bites.The courts judgment Friday ordered the dogs to be released to the same localities they were removed from and called for designated feeding spaces across the capital. The order does not apply to dogs infected with rabies or exhibiting aggressive behavior.Estimates put the number of stray dogs in New Delhi between 500,000 and 1 million.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMFamine grips Gazas largest city and is likely to spread, authority on food crises saysPalestinians struggle to get donated food at a community kitchen in Gaza City, northern Gaza Strip, Saturday, Aug. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi, File)2025-08-22T09:02:29Z GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) The worlds leading authority on food crises said Friday the Gaza Strips largest city is gripped by famine, and that it is likely to spread across the territory without a ceasefire and an end to restrictions on humanitarian aid.The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, said famine is occurring in Gaza City, home to hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, and that it could spread south to Deir al-Balah and Khan Younis by the end of next month.The IPC determination comes after months of warnings by aid groups that Israels restrictions of food and other aid into Gaza, and its military offensive, were causing high levels of starvation among Palestinian civilians, particularly children. The grim milestone the first time the IPC has confirmed a famine in the Middle East is sure to ramp up international pressure on Israel, which has been in a brutal war with Hamas since the militant groups Oct. 7, 2023, attack. Israel says it plans to soon escalate the war by seizing Gaza City and other Hamas strongholds, which experts say will exacerbate the hunger crisis. Palestinians carry sacks of flour taken from a humanitarian aid convoy in the outskirts of Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, Aug. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi, File) Palestinians carry sacks of flour taken from a humanitarian aid convoy in the outskirts of Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, Aug. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The IPC said hunger has been driven by fighting and the blockade of aid, and magnified by widespread displacement and the collapse of food production in Gaza, pushing hunger to life-threatening levels across the entire territory after 22 months of war. More than half a million people in Gaza, about a quarter of the population, face catastrophic levels of hunger, and many are at risk of dying from malnutrition-related causes, the IPC report said. Last month, the IPC said the worst-case scenario of famine was unfolding in Gaza, but stopped short of an official determination. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has denied there is hunger in Gaza, calling reports of starvation lies promoted by Hamas. After the publication of images of emaciated children in Gaza and reports of hunger-related deaths, Israel announced measures to let more humanitarian aid in. Yet the U.N. and Palestinians in Gaza say whats entering is far below whats needed. The Israeli military agency in charge of transferring aid to the territory rejected the report Friday, calling it false and biased. The agency, known as COGAT, rejected the claim that there was famine in Gaza and said that significant steps had been taken to expand the amount of aid entering the strip in recent weeks.A rapidly increasing number of people, especially young children, are dying preventable deaths from starvation and disease because Israel made starvation a core part of its campaign to control the strip, said Chris Newton, an analyst for the International Crisis Group. Israels plan to escalate the war in Gaza City weeks after a warning that famine was beginning there demonstrates how intentional the famine is and how Israel wields starvation, he said. Netanyahu says more military pressure is needed to achieve Israels goals of freeing the hostages held by Hamas and eliminating the militant group altogether. How a famine is determinedFormal famine determinations are rare. The IPC has previously determined famines in Somalia in 2011, South Sudan in 2017 and 2020, and parts of Sudans western Darfur region last year. The IPC says a famine exists in an area when all three of the following conditions are confirmed:At least 20% of households have an extreme lack of food, or are essentially starving. At least 30% of children 6 months to 5 years old suffer from acute malnutrition or wasting, meaning theyre too thin for their height. And at least two people, or four children under 5, per 10,000 are dying daily due to starvation or the interaction of malnutrition and disease.Israels offensive and its restrictions on access to Gaza have made collecting data difficult. The data analyzed between July 1 and Aug. 15 showed clear evidence that thresholds for starvation and acute malnutrition have been reached. Gathering data for mortality has been harder, but the IPC said it is reasonable to conclude from the evidence that the necessary threshold has likely been reached. Palestinians open humanitarian aid packages that were airdropped into Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana, File) Palestinians open humanitarian aid packages that were airdropped into Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The IPC warned that a third of Gazas population could face catastrophic levels of hunger by the end of September, and that this is probably an undercount.Alex de Waal, author of Mass Starvation: The History and Future of Famine and executive director of the World Peace Foundation, said that had Israel allowed the IPC better access to collect data, a famine might have been determined months ago, which would have raised global awareness sooner.Sadly, it seems that its necessary for experts to shout famine! before the world takes notice, by which time it is too late, he said. Israel has restricted aid to varying degrees throughout the war. In March, it cut off the entry of all goods, including fuel, food and medicine, to pressure Hamas to free hostages. Israel eased those restrictions in May and says theres currently no limit on how many aid trucks can enter Gaza. But it also pushed ahead with a new U.S.-backed aid delivery system that requires Palestinians to travel long distances and pass through Israeli military lines to get aid. The traditional, U.N.-led aid providers say deliveries have been hampered by Israeli military restrictions and incidents of looting, while criminals and hungry crowds overwhelm entering convoys.Witnesses, health officials and the U.N. rights office say hundreds of people have been killed by Israeli forces while seeking aid from both providers, while Israel says it has only fired warning shots and that the toll is exaggerated.A parent in Gaza City watches his children waste awayOn the eve of the war, Gaza City was home to some 700,000 people, about the population of Washington. Throughout the conflict, it has been the focus of regular Israeli bombardment and ground operations. Several neighborhoods have been almost completely destroyed. Hundreds of thousands fled under Israeli evacuation orders at the start of the war but many returned during a ceasefire earlier this year. Doctors and nurses in Gaza in recent weeks have seen rising numbers of visibly malnourished patients. Ahmad Sbeteh, 17, injured by shrapnel from a strike on a neighboring house, has lost about 15 kilograms (33 pounds), and doctors say the lack of healthy food and nutritional supplements is slowing his recovery at Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Monday, Aug. 18, 2025. Before the shrapnel injury, he had no preexisting conditions, doctors say. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana, File) Ahmad Sbeteh, 17, injured by shrapnel from a strike on a neighboring house, has lost about 15 kilograms (33 pounds), and doctors say the lack of healthy food and nutritional supplements is slowing his recovery at Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Monday, Aug. 18, 2025. Before the shrapnel injury, he had no preexisting conditions, doctors say. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Kirsty Blacka, an Australian emergency nurse who worked in Gaza Citys Al-Quds hospital through June, said emaciated men with no preexisting conditions were coming in looking like teenagers because they were starving. She said the lack of food has been compounded by contaminated water causing diarrhea and infections, and that diseases are harder to recover from when people are malnourished. If Israel evacuates people from the city ahead of its new offensive, thousands will be too weak to leave, said Blacka. Because of the starvation it will put extra strain on already depleted bodies and will lead to the death of many of the Palestinians, she said.Families in Gaza City say theyre watching their loved ones waste away. Yousef Sbetehs two teenage children were injured by shrapnel during an Israeli airstrike in June and have spent the last two months in the hospital. While there, theyve both lost weight because there hasnt been enough food, he said, adding that he cant afford to buy more because prices at markets have soared. Doctors say the teenagers had no preexisting conditions.His 15-year-old daughter Aya lost nearly 20 kilograms (44 pounds), or about 30% of her body weight, according to her doctors. Her 17-year-old brother Ahmad has lost about 15 kilograms (33 pounds). The lack of nutritional supplements and healthy food is slowing their recovery, doctors say.Doctors say she needs protein, meat and fish, Sbeteh said while sitting beside his frail daughter. But I cant provide that now. ___Mednick reported from Tel Aviv, Israel. Sally Abou AlJoud contributed from Beirut, Lebanon. SAM MEDNICK Mednick is an AP correspondent for Israel and the Palestinian Territories. She focuses on conflict, humanitarian crises and human rights abuses. Mednick formerly covered West & Central Africa and South Sudan. twitter0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.PRIDE.COMBreaking barriers, how one contestant became the first trans delegate in Miss Georgia USAI was born in the Philippines, a country where pageantry was seen as an Olympic sport. It was mesmerizing seeing the elegant dresses and how eloquently and poised the contestants answered questions on stage. I have always dreamed of competing in a pageant like Miss Universe.One roadblock is that I was born male.I was the youngest of four in a religious and traditional family. Growing up and realizing that I was different from other kids my age, I hid my attraction to the same sex from my family. I felt like I was living two distinct lives. I was Miley Stewart at home, and Hannah Montana at school. I wanted more for my life. That dream was answered when my dad told me that we are moving to the United States! I thought to myself, "I am about to move to a country where no one knows me! I could reinvent myself and be 'normal'!"This did not last long. I was very feminine, and some people at school found out that I am gay. To my surprise, no one cared. No one laughed at me or bullied me. They knew who I was, and my coming out made sense.Next step, I had to come out to my family. The thought of coming out and possibly being seen as a disappointment terrified me. I spent days debating whether I should go through with telling them. I spent hours watching "My Coming Out" videos on YouTube to encourage myself to tell my family. I spent nights crying myself to sleep, debating if I should go back to being Miley Stewart at home.At first, I told my siblings, and they were accepting and highly supportive. Now I have to tell my parents. I wasn't sure how to approach it. People in those videos suggest doing it either while in the car with them or in a public space, just in case. So many thoughts started running through my mind until one night, I decided to go out to the living room and tell my mom. She told me that it was just a phase. We ended up crying that night, but I was happy I got to tell my mom. My talk with my dad was significantly less emotional.As I went through my teens and early 20s, the puzzle pieces were finally starting to fit. I didn't have to live two different lives, and I could date whoever I wanted to! Everything was great until someone asked me if I would ever transition from male to female. I would always want to say yes, but I would pause and say "no" for fear of disappointing my family. This was the routine until, at 25, my then-best friend and I had an intense conversation about it. He told me that I "looked so happy, but something is still missing." At the end of the conversation, he told me to "live my truth and not people's expectations of it".I started my transition journey in October 2020, when I was able to live my truth and finally become Jasmine Gabrielle Basanes. This gave me so much confidence that I entered a modeling competition in 2022 and won, later signing with Slay Model Management. In 2024, I competed in my first pageant, Miss International Queen USA, held in Las Vegas, and made it to the semifinals!This refueled my love for pageantry, and I decided to apply for Miss Georgia USA.This pageant is under the Miss Universe system.After the rules were changed to be more inclusive, I became comfortable that I would be accepted. The pageant was held in Clarksville, Tennessee, as Miss Tennessee and Miss Georgia were being held simultaneously. At first, I was nervous because I did not know how the other delegates would react to seeing a trans woman on stage with them. Still, I was pleasantly surprised to see everyone be so supportive and accepting towards me. I say "pleasantly" because, being in the south, the relationship towards the transgender community is dynamic. Even with many people being supportive, some laws restrict trans rights, restrict gender affirming care, ban trans women from women's sports, and so on.My platform was focused on the importance of mental health and self-care. Mental health affects how we think, feel, and act towards others. How we treat others can profoundly impact their mental health, reminding us that we're part of their healing, struggles, and overall journey, not just our own. For my evening gown, I chose to wear a wedding dress. This is symbolic because I wanted to make a statement that trans women are women and we deserve happiness. Wedding dresses have been a symbol of femininity, and I know some individuals who are transitioning from male to female who dream of having that special day wearing a wedding dress.I stood on that stage not just as a representation of the trans community and immigrants, but for every single person who has been told 'no' and ignored simply because they are considered 'different.'I may not have won the crown, but I hope that any trans person seeing me on that stage can know that they are capable and deserving of taking up space in places that were not made for us. We all belong wherever we dream of being.As my dad says, "As long as you are not hurting anyone, you are okay."Perspectives is dedicated to featuring a wide range of inspiring personal stories and impactful opinions from theLGBTQ+ community and its allies. Visit Pride.com/submit to learn more about submission guidelines. Views expressed in Perspectives stories are those of the guest writers, columnists, and editors, and do not directly represent the views of PRIDE or our parent company, equalpride.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 4 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NATURE.COMNet zero needs AI five actions to realize its promiseNature, Published online: 22 August 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-02641-4Without artificial-intelligence technologies, balancing human-caused greenhouse-gas emissions with carbon removals by 2050 is out of reach. Action in five areas is needed to keep this goal alive.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 15 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NATURE.COMHuman brain organoids reveal new path for Alzheimers drugsNature, Published online: 21 August 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-02628-1Organ models with hallmarks of the disease show marked improvement when a proteins levels are restored.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 15 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMHow Trump Is Shaking Trust in the Economy, and Judge Orders Alligator Alcatraz Shut DownPlus, your Friday news quiz.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMThe Crowdfunded War Map That Ukrainians Check Every MorningThe online DeepState map, based on geolocated combat footage and tips from Ukrainian Army sources, draws 900,000 views each day and acts as a counterbalance to the militarys omissions.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMGaza City and Surrounding Areas Officially Hit by Famine, Global Group SaysAt least half a million people in the enclave were facing the most severe conditions measured by U.N.-backed international experts: starvation, acute malnutrition and death.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMYear Will End With 300,000 Fewer Federal Workers, Trump Official SaysThe reduction would be the largest single-year decline in civilian federal employment since World War II.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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4 Takeaways From Erik Menendezs Parole Board HearingLyle Menendez has his hearing Friday. Several of the concerns raised in denying parole to Erik suggest Lyle faces considerable hurdles in his own bid for release.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMTop European diplomat says Putin is setting a trap by demanding Ukraine concessionsIn this photo, taken on Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2025 and provided by Ukraine's 127th Separate Brigade of the Territorial Defence press service, soldiers aged 18 to 24 practice military skills on a training ground near Kharkiv, Ukraine. (Anatolii Lysianskyi/Ukraine's 127th Separate Brigade via AP)2025-08-22T09:54:56Z The European Unions foreign policy chief said Friday that the possibility of Ukraine ceding land to Russia as part of a peace deal to end their three-year war is a trap set by Russian President Vladimir Putin.The Russian leader is demanding Ukrainian concessions in return for halting his armys invasion but granting him those demands would amount to rewarding the country that started the fighting, Kaja Kallas said.The recent talk about handing Putin concessions is exactly the trap that Russia wants us to walk into, Kallas said in an interview with the BBC.I mean, the discussion all about what Ukraine should give up, what the concessions that Ukraine is willing to (make), whereas we are forgetting that Russia has not made one single concession and they are the ones who are the aggressor here, they are the ones who are brutally attacking another country and killing people, she said. U.S.-led peace efforts have struggled to get traction, despite U.S. President Donald Trump discussing the war with Putin in Alaska last week before hosting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders at the White House on Monday. Numerous details for a formal peace proposal need to be hammered out. Meanwhile, Russia has continued to attack Ukraine and has raised objections to some key Ukrainian demands.Establishing postwar Western security guarantees for Ukraine, which Kyiv insists are needed to deter another Russian attack, is under discussion by a variety of countries, Kallas said, noting that it does sound like we are some way off in terms of pinning that down. Russia is just dragging feet. Its clear that Russia does not want peace, Kallas said. President Trump has been repeatedly saying that the killing has to stop and Putin is just laughing, not stopping the killing, but increasing the killing.Ukraine, meanwhile, has hit back at Russia with long-range weapons that are targeting infrastructure supporting Moscows war effort. It has hit oil refineries, among other targets, and Russian wholesale gasoline prices have reached record highs in recent days. Ukrainian forces on Friday targeted the Druzhba oil pipeline in Russia, hitting the Unecha oil pumping station in the Bryansk region, according to the commander of Ukraines Unmanned Systems Forces, Robert Brovdy, also known as Magyar.The Druzhba pipeline starts in Russia and takes oil through Belarus and Ukraine to Slovakia and Hungary. In Russia, a section of it goes through the Bryansk region and the Unecha district.Ukraine fired HIMARS rockets and drones at the region in a combined attack, Bryansk regional Gov. Alexander Bogomaz said in a Telegram post.The pipeline supplies Hungary with more than half of its crude oil. Hungarian Foreign Minister Pter Szijjrt wrote on Facebook on Friday that the Druzhba pipeline had been attacked for the third time in a short time.This is another attack on the energy security of our country. Another attempt to drag us into war, the minister wrote.Hungary under Prime Minister Viktor Orbn has taken a combative stance toward both Kyiv and its EU backers while most EU countries have offered political, financial, and military support to Kyiv. Orbn visited Moscow to meet with Putin last month in a rare trip to Russia by a European leader.Slovakia and Hungary are the only remaining EU member states still receiving oil from Russia. The other 25 stopped buying it as part of EU sanctions following Moscows full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.___Follow APs coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NATURE.COMGlitch copNature, Published online: 22 August 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-02687-4The wrong arm of the law.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 14 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMThe Eagles face challenges as they gear up to try and repeatIt's fair to say training camp could have gone better for the Philadelphia Eagles.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COM'Dak's gotta be able to run': How will Prescott's hamstring affect his usage in 2025?A hamstring avulsion ended Prescott's 2024 season in Week 9, but he's been pushing it this offseason.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMRed Sox in must-win mode? Are Yankees back? What you should -- and shouldn't -- believe in the American LeagueHow big is this series with New York for Boston? Is Toronto the best team in the AL? We give verdicts on what it all means.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMReid's annual HBCU watch list: Ranking the top 10 prospects for the 2026 NFL draftAhead of Saturday's Cricket MEAC/SWAC Challenge Kickoff, we ranked 10 HBCU players who could be on next year's NFL draft radar.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMPreseason report cards for every single rookie selected in the 2025 draftHow did Travis Hunter look in training camp? What's next for Tyler Shough? We checked in on all 32 NFL teams' rookie classes -- all 257 draft picks.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGGetting DOGED: DOGE Targeted Him on Social Media. Then the Taliban Took His Family.by Avi Asher-Schapiro and Christopher Bing It was early morning on April 1 when Mohammad Halimi, a 53-year-old exiled Afghan scholar, got a panicked message from his son. Halimis name had just appeared in a viral post on X, shared by none other than the sites owner and the worlds richest man, Elon Musk.Halimi thought his son was joking. It was April Fools Day after all. Musk had been assigned a big job in the Trump administration, running the newly formed Department of Government Efficiency that was established to comb through the government to root out waste and fraud.Halimi had a much smaller job, working on a contract for the United States Institute of Peace, an independent nonprofit funded by Congress that promotes conflict resolution efforts around the world, including in Halimis native Afghanistan. There was no way, he thought to himself, that someone like him would have landed on Musks radar.But Halimis son was not joking. He told Halimi to go online and see for himself. The post, which Musk shared with his 222 million followers, was real. It had already been picked up by the local press back home. And it was potentially deadly.United States Institute of Peace Funded Taliban, the post read. At the bottom, the post named Halimi and described him as a former Taliban member, and the payments to him as U.S. support for the militants. Below that, thousands of comments tumbled in, calling him a terrorist and a grifter. Republican U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia later chimed in to congratulate Musk for discovering that the federal government is paying the Taliban and they covered it up.Halimi couldnt make any sense of it. Critics of U.S. foreign aid efforts might argue that his small contract of $132,000 with USIP amounted to waste. But if there was one thing Washington should have known about Halimi, it was that he was no enemy of America.It was true that hed once worked for the Taliban government that ruled Afghanistan in the 1990s, but he had switched sides after the United States invaded following 9/11. He had even served as a cabinet minister in the U.S.-backed Afghan government, where he often shared his knowledge of the Talibans internal workings with intelligence officials and military leaders.In fact, during President Donald Trumps first term in office, Halimi was part of a team of advisers that helped the U.S. prepare for difficult diplomatic talks with the Taliban, which eventually included guarantees to allow American troops safe passage out.And his political views were easy to figure out: Halimi had made numerous media appearances as one of the Talibans more ardent critics, accusing them of straying from Islams true principles.This all made him an obvious target. The Taliban had attempted to assassinate Halimi as a traitor at least three times during the U.S. occupation. And the U.S. government knew he had faced real danger in the past. He narrowly managed to flee Afghanistan in the final days before the U.S.-backed government fell to the Taliban, with the help of the second-highest-ranking CIA officer in the country. Since then, he had tried to live a mostly quiet life, partly to keep the relatives hed left behind safe from retribution.The work he was pursuing with USIP had nothing to do with supporting the Taliban. It was the opposite.ProPublica has obtained records making clear that Musk and his team at the newly formed DOGE should have known this too. Halimis work at USIP was spelled out in precise detail in the agencys records, down to the tasks he performed on specific days. His role at the institute was far from top secret, but it had been treated as highly sensitive and confidential. Among other tasks, it involved a program gathering information on the ground about living conditions for Afghan women, who are largely barred from education past primary school or from having a role in public life.Partly because of Halimis contentious history with the Taliban, the militants might equate his work at USIP to espionage and severely punish anyone involved with it. By exposing him, Musk and his team endangered those working with Halimi, as well his relatives who were still in Afghanistan. The White House and Musk did not respond to requests for comment. Halimi was forced to flee Afghanistan in 2021. I had no choice, he said. (For ProPublica) Multiple senior government officials at the State Department were warned about the danger that DOGEs callout posed to Halimis family, according to two USIP staffers interviewed by ProPublica. They were trying to stop the damage from spreading. But Musks crew was then locked in a pitched battle for control of USIP. The misleading narrative about Halimi became central to DOGEs argument; American foreign aid was corrupt and even, at times, funding Americas enemies and thats why DOGE had to take over.Those battles were playing out across the government at the time. DOGE often won, but ultimately Musks tenure was short-lived. He resigned from DOGE at the end of May, shortly before a public falling-out with Trump. DOGEs hard-charging takeovers of government agencies brought chaos and confusion and left many qualified bureaucrats jobless. But Halimi risked losing a lot more.Shortly after Halimi spoke to his son, a flood of threatening messages began appearing on his phone. The most ominous came from members of the Taliban. Just as Halimi had worried, they accused him of being a thief and traitor, which could be like a death sentence for anyone connected to him back home. My family was in great danger, Halimi thought to himself. About a week after DOGE outed him, Halimis worst fears were realized. Taliban intelligence agents in Kabul descended on the homes of his relatives and detained three of his family members. They were blindfolded, thrown into the backs of 4x4 pickup trucks and driven to a small remote prison. They were held incommunicado over several days and repeatedly beaten and questioned about Halimi and his recently publicized yet ambiguous work for the United States.The account of the beatings is based on interviews with multiple people familiar with the events. ProPublica did not interview any sources in Afghanistan, a country where people are sometimes imprisoned for speaking out against the government. Zabihullah Mujahid, chief government spokesperson for the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, said Halimi is not important to us and we do not want to talk about him that much. He added that there was no active criminal investigation targeting him. The spokesperson did not answer questions about the treatment of Halimis family, saying, I do not consider it necessary to answer.While Halimi felt powerless to do anything, his relatives in Afghanistan braced themselves for even worse. He tried to put on a brave face, though he knew from his own near-death experiences with the Taliban that the situation was increasingly bleak.To keep the morale of the family high, I did not show them my panic, he told ProPublica in one of multiple interviews conducted through a translator.Hed been frantically reaching out to his bosses in Washington to ask what was behind Musks social media blasts against him and to seek help clearing his name. But everyone Halimi worked with had been fired.A 28-year-old college dropout named Nate Cavanaugh had been installed as USIPs new president. DOGE had ousted its leader, State Department veteran George E. Moose.Halimi and his loved ones were on their own. Maybe, they hoped, this would all pass if they stayed quiet and lay low. Then Musk and DOGE took their campaign against USIP and Halimi to another level.In May, a little more than a month later, DOGE invited Fox News host Jesse Watters to sit in and film one of its team meetings. It was the first major media appearance by the larger DOGE team. For nearly 30 minutes on prime-time TV, Musk and more than a dozen triumphant young men in suits sat around a table congratulating one another. They swapped war stories about the government fraud they had exposed and the wasteful bureaucrats they had brought to heel.At that point, DOGE was riding high: It had mostly shut down the U.S. Agency for International Development, the main foreign aid agency. The watchdog Consumer Financial Protection Bureau had been reduced to a skeleton crew. And at the Department of Education, DOGE had cut hundreds of millions of dollars to an internal research arm that tracks the performance of public schools.For weeks, DOGE had been posting online hundreds of contracts it had canceled and tallying up the savings though in multiple cases, the totals were later found to be wildly off, or the contracts mostly misrepresented. The White House has defended the accuracy of DOGEs claims, with a spokesperson recently saying, All numbers are rigorously scrubbed with agency procurement officials.With Watters, the DOGE team zeroed in on government spending. Steve Davis, Musks right-hand man at DOGE, shared an eye-popping example of waste from the Education Department. He said that the department had misused taxpayer money by funding parties at Caesars Palace, a casino and hotel in Las Vegas, before DOGE implemented new requirements to submit receipts. The claim appeared to have little resemblance to the truth: One school district in Utah had used DOE funds to send teachers to an education conference hosted at a Caesars hotel. Davis did not reply to a request for comment.Musk went around the table, prodding the other members of the team as they one-upped one another with outrageous examples of their own. With each story, Watters egged them on, raising his eyebrows in disbelief. Every so often, the DOGE team would burst into laughter. The Taliban Gets DOGED The segment in which Nate Cavanaugh, Elon Musk and others mislead viewers about the content in Halimis contract (Fox News) Watch video At one point, Musk cued Cavanaugh with an awkward joke about how the work hed found being done at the United States Institute of Peace was actually the opposite of the title.Cavanaugh agreed, saying, It was by far the least peaceful agency we worked with. To prove his point, he turned toward Watters and said hed uncovered documents showing that the agency was making payments to a contractor associated with the Taliban.Watters looked at Cavanaugh in disbelief: Get out of here.This is real, Cavanaugh said. Watters raised a hand, pressing on: What was the money going to the Taliban for? Was it for opium, or weapons, or a bribe?Or nothing, Musk interjected.He and Watters burst into laughter. The chyron at the bottom of the screen read, THE TALIBAN GETS DOGED.In a statement, a spokesperson with Fox News said, Its clear ProPublica is trying to insert FOX News into this story despite acknowledging the network having no part in any unmasking or identification of the independent contractor. The spokesperson added, At no point was the contractor identified, and the focus of the interview was on extreme spending practices and potential billing fraud within government agencies.In an email, Cavanaugh said he was mandated by Trump to dismantle the USIP, and that includes the contract with former Taliban member Mohammad Qasem Halimi. Cavanaugh added, An overwhelming majority of Americans would agree that the Federal Government should not be funding former members of the Taliban when our country is $36T in debt. He did not respond to questions about why DOGE chose to publicize Halimis contract or whether it knew the risk in doing so.While DOGE initially referred to Halimi as a former Taliban member, the distinction was sometimes lost as Halimis contract became a viral social media and news story. For example, one social media post claiming that USIP had been funding multiple terrorist organizations was viewed by more than 180,000 people. And on Fox News, Cavanaugh dropped the reference that Halimi was a former Taliban member, describing his USIP work simply as payments to the Taliban.Cavanaugh told Watters that DOGE was unable to find any justification for those payments. But ProPublicas reporting showed that four weeks earlier, Cavanaugh had been sent dozens of pages of internal records from USIP outlining Halimis work in detail, according to documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act. There were invoices, project descriptions, and dates and times showing what Halimi was supposed to be doing on specific days. Cavanaugh did not respond to questions about his access to these records or how they appeared to conflict with his statements on Fox News. Timeline of EventsMarch 17: DOGE staffers, standing alongside local law enforcement officers, work their way into the USIP headquarters in downtown Washington. March 31, 3:58 p.m. EST: DOGE sends Halimi an email notifying him that his contract with USIP has been terminated. March 31, 7:17 p.m. EST: In a post on X, DOGE exposes Halimis work with the USIP, worth $132,000, and calls him a former Taliban member.March 31, 7:29 p.m. EST, to April 1, 2:41 p.m. EST: Two USIP holdover employees who supported Musks initiative and, as IT staffers, had wide access to USIP systems sent Cavanaugh and his DOGE team a series of emails with documents about Halimis employment, including receipts and a scope of work, making it clear his duties were well documented.April 1, 7:46 a.m. EST: DOGEs post about Halimis USIP contract is picked up by local press in Afghanistan, where the Taliban notice the development. Around April 9: Members of Halimis family are picked up by Taliban security forces around Kabul, taken to prison and beaten. May 1: Cavanaugh, Musk and other DOGE staffers meet with Jesse Watters on Fox News, where they describe the payments to Halimi as a rogue contract with a Taliban member. Watters asks whether taxpayer money was really being used to run drugs and guns inside Afghanistan allegations that are untrue. USIPs own records, obtained by ProPublica, show that none of the institutes work involved payments to the Taliban. Much of what Halimi did was actually routine foreign policy consulting: He provided expert advice to the State Department to help U.S. diplomats understand religious dynamics and civil society in Afghanistan. He was paid to attend Islamic conferences, where he made contact with other prominent political and religious figures across the Middle East on behalf of the USIP.He was also an adviser to USIP on womens issues in Islam, something he was uniquely qualified to do both personally and professionally. Years earlier, Halimis sister had been murdered by her husband in an act of domestic violence, and Halimi spoke about her openly and emotionally, recalled Mary Akrami, an Afghan womens rights advocate who opened the countrys first womens shelter after the Taliban fell.As an official in the government of Hamid Karzai, Halimi was an outspoken advocate for the shelter. He was one of the most supportive and open-minded religious scholars I have ever known, Akrami said in an interview.Halimi went on to serve in a number of high-profile posts in the U.S.-backed government, including as an investigator at the Supreme Court, a spokesperson for the national religious council, an adviser to the national security council, and finally the minister for religious affairs and hajj under the last democratically elected president, Ashraf Ghani. He was one of the most supportive and open-minded religious scholars I have ever known. After the Fox News interview, Halimi was struggling to move forward. By early spring, the Taliban had released his beaten and terrified family members. But they made it clear that they expected Halimi to publicly admit that he was an American spy. There were no good options. Such an admission would mean that his family would never be safe again, since theyd forever be associated with a traitor. But if he refused, they would also be under constant pressure.Halimi had barely escaped the country four years earlier, when the U.S.-backed government he worked for collapsed in the face of a rapid Taliban military advance into the capital. A prominent Taliban cleric had publicly singled him out as an apostate a traitor to Islam placing a bullseye on his head. And Halimi said that a broad amnesty offer from the Taliban, extended to most of their enemies, would not apply to him. (The Taliban spokesperson told ProPublica that Halimi was free to return to Afghanistan.)The situation was dire, and the U.S. government knew it too. In those final days, a CIA operative reached out to Halimi and directed him to catch an evacuation flight. Disguised as an ambulance driver and with his nephew donning a nurse outfit, Halimi evaded multiple Taliban checkpoints en route to the U.S.-controlled airbase at Bagram. A CIA spokesperson declined to comment. The Pentagon declined to comment and referred questions about Halimis past work with the U.S. to the State Department.I never cried harder in my life than I did that night when I left my country, he told ProPublica. But I had no choice.It wasnt Halimis first time in exile.When he was 7 years old, his mother took him and his six siblings across the border to Pakistan to escape the civil war that engulfed Afghanistan after the Soviet invasion. My earliest recollections are just of war, of violence, of blood and of killings, Halimi said. My mother used to tell me Afghanistan was a peaceful place in the past. I have no memory of it.Halimis father, the town imam in a rural Afghan village, had died when Halimi was young. He and his siblings grew up in a tent across the border within a refugee camp. From a dirt-floored classroom, Halimi found a way out through a scholarship to study Islamic law in Egypt.Halimis time in Cairo, where he socialized with international students from across the globe, changed him. He began looking at the world differently, he said, with a curiosity about other cultures and a lifelong interest in foreign languages. Halimi, front, second from the left, with Afghan students in Egypt (Courtesy of Mohammad Halimi) But by the time he returned home, a group of conservative religious students turned rebel fighters were dominating Afghanistans messy, multisided civil war and had consolidated power over the capital. They were known as the Taliban.Halimi took a job in a government office responsible for dealing with foreign diplomats, not because he believed in Taliban ideology, but because, for a man with a college degree and political aspirations, it was the only good job I could find, he said.Then came the U.S. invasion, which ousted the Taliban government and ushered in a bloody, protracted war. The George W. Bush administration ordered the detention of swaths of the Taliban government at a giant prison at Bagram Airfield. Halimi was among them. The treatment was brutal. He was constantly shackled by his hands and feet, except for short bathroom breaks. But along the way, he said, he learned English and built an understanding of his captors.While some prominent Taliban fighters and leaders were sent to Guantanamo, Halimi, as a relatively unknown bureaucrat, was part of a group that was gradually let out. Some people were enlisted to join the U.S.-backed government; their experience made them useful to Washington and its local allies efforts to understand, and even communicate with, the Taliban.In those early days of the conflict, the U.S. military and intelligence communities were under tremendous pressure to stop further attacks on the homeland. Yet they knew virtually nothing about their assumed enemy. What followed was two decades of American military intervention across the region that led to hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths and the resurgence of the very groups the U.S. once sought to unseat.When U.S. forces finally withdrew for good from Afghanistan in late 2021, so did Halimi. His country had been savaged by warring powers for decades. Somehow, he had managed to stay alive through all of it, but now there was no place for him. Somehow, he had managed to stay alive through all of it, but now there was no place for him. Nate Cavanaugh had nothing in his background to suggest he would be chosen to wind down an international conflict-resolution agency. His 15 minutes of fame on Fox News represented an unlikely turn for a young man whod spent his short career founding niche tech startups.Cavanaugh comes from a wealthy family his father built a $100 million sports supplement company and he told people he was inspired by the tech mogul Peter Thiel. He started two small companies, which focused on specialized software tools to help companies manage their finances and intellectual property. But investors in both told ProPublica that neither company successfully took off.When DOGE was announced, Cavanaugh was eager to join up, a former co-worker told ProPublica. Its not clear how he ultimately got connected to the group, but DOGE recruited heavily from young right-wing tech circles in California. Nate Cavanaugh, the DOGE team member integral to the takeover of the U.S. Institute of Peace (Eric Lee/The New York Times) Friends and former colleagues said theyd never heard him discuss American foreign policy or show an interest in geopolitics. Yet in January, as a leader in Musks DOGE, he was assigned to evaluate and oversee budget cuts across a variety of federally funded international programs. Among the agencies in Cavanaughs portfolio were the Inter-American Foundation and African Development Foundation. He was part of the DOGE team that sought cuts at the National Endowment for the Humanities and redirected its funds to build a park full of statues of American Heroes, according to a lawsuit by NEH grant recipients.But it was the U.S. Institute of Peace, housed in a futuristic, glass-encased building overlooking the Potomac River in downtown Washington, where Cavanaugh hit resistance. Established under President Ronald Reagan, the agency had once enjoyed bipartisan support. While its largely taxpayer funded, USIP is not a government agency; its contracts have not typically been posted publicly, and its employees operate with a degree of removal from U.S. officialdom. That gives the institute some ability to operate behind the scenes and establish relationships with figures at the center of complex conflicts figures such as Mohammad Halimi.Its often pushing informal diplomacy: In 2023, for example, USIP staff helped facilitate a ceasefire between Islamic rebels and the government of the Philippines in the countrys restive south.But in 2024, the Heritage Foundation which led Project 2025 published a report arguing that USIP had become a partisan, Democrat-controlled institution.When Cavanaugh and several other DOGE officials first showed up to take control of the USIP in March, he was physically blocked from entering the building by its security chief, Colin OBrien, who spent 15 years working as a police officer before joining the institute. Cavanaugh tried to enter again a little later, this time with two FBI agents in tow. OBrien blocked him again, believing Cavanaugh and DOGE had no business dismantling the USIP, which had been established by Congress as an independent entity.Over the next few days, DOGE put more pressure on OBrien. FBI agents indicated OBrien was the subject of a new Justice Department investigation. And they visited the home of one of his subordinates for questioning. Ultimately, the interim U.S. attorney in Washington at the time, Trump ally Edward Martin, demanded that USIP officials give DOGE access to the building.The next time Cavanaugh appeared at the agencys door, he and a phalanx of local police officers forced their way in. I am a firm believer that what makes this country special is that we follow laws and process, OBrien said. What happened that day was the antithesis of everything I believe in.An FBI spokesperson declined to comment on the role of FBI personnel in the takeover. Martin did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police Department of D.C. referred ProPublica to a published statement, which said that police officers spoke with the new acting USIP president and assisted him in removing unauthorized individuals from the building.Once in possession of its offices and information systems, Cavanaugh and his team fired virtually all USIP personnel, including over 100 overseas staff. With little warning or awareness of the potential danger to overseas employees, former staffers said, they shuttered USIP offices in Pakistan, Nigeria and El Salvador. After DOGE fired USIPs international security team, its staff in Libya feared for their safety and were forced to flee on their own across the border. Cavanaugh and his staff canceled more than 700 contracts over 12 days.They rifled through other USIP files, spotlighting expenditures they used to publicly embarrass the institute. On Fox, DOGE also bragged about uncovering payments for private jets, when, in fact, records show that USIP chartered a single plane for an evacuation mission out of a war zone for its staff. Cavanaugh did not answer a question about the assertion. An aircraft charter agreement shows that USIP chartered a plane during the period of the 2021 Kabul airlift in Afghanistan. (Obtained by ProPublica) Over the following weeks, the DOGE team celebrated its newfound power inside the USIP building. Members were seen smoking cigars in the office and drinking beer as they worked late into the night. The agencys insignia was torn from the entryway.DOGE was completely indifferent to the effect their actions had on human beings, said Barnett Rubin, an Afghanistan expert who has served as a senior adviser for the United Nations and State Department. All it cared about, he said, was making its enemies look bad.Months after Musks fateful retweet, Halimi is still picking up the pieces and trying to get answers.During his long career as an official in the Afghan government, Halimi often rubbed shoulders with senior U.S. diplomats and generals, but now no one in the Trump administration is calling him back. He proudly showed ProPublica a letter he received from Stephen Hadley, the former U.S. national security adviser under George W. Bush, thanking him for his contributions to promoting democracy in Afghanistan. A letter on White House letterhead sent to Halimi in 2005 from Stephen Hadley, assistant to the president for national security affairs, thanking him for his work (Obtained by ProPublica) Former senior State Department, White House and national security officials who worked on Afghanistan over the last two decades described the Trump administrations attack on Halimi as not only absurd, but also dangerous.Johnny Walsh, a former State Department official who worked with Halimi, recalled that he wanted the same thing as the Trump administration, which was for a peaceful end to the war.Lisa Curtis, a former senior adviser to the National Security Council who focused on Afghanistan in the first Trump administration, said, DOGE did not do their homework. They are putting at risk individuals who are helping the United States. DOGE did not do their homework. They are putting at risk individuals who are helping the United States. As for the graying Afghan scholar, the Taliban relented just long enough for several family members to make it out of the country. ProPublica is not disclosing how that happened or where they are for their safety, but they remain stranded without immigration status.Cavanaugh, DOGEs man inside USIP, announced he was leaving government service on Aug. 6. In a tweet, Cavanaugh thanked Trump for the opportunity to help reduce wasteful spending and said that Im hopeful the United States continues to prioritize sensible spending I believe it is critical to maintain our supremacy .USIPs operations have been essentially frozen. Its headquarters is under federal control standing empty aside from a few security guards monitoring the entrances. A new acting president, Darren Beattie, was named in late July.Beattie is a former Duke University professor and Trump speechwriter who was fired in 2018 after it came out that he spoke at a conference regularly attended by white nationalists. Beattie did not address a ProPublica question about the event but previously dismissed the criticism, calling it an honor to be attacked by the far-left.At USIP, he has promised to rebuild the organization to match the Trump administrations foreign policy priorities.In an emailed statement to ProPublica, Beattie defended the administrations treatment of Halimi. The takeover of USIP, he wrote, underscores President Trumps resolve to end the weaponization of government, cut off funding to adversaries, and shut down reckless so-called peacebuilding programs that end up undermining our national security.George Foote, the former head lawyer of USIP who still represents its old leadership in ongoing litigation against the Trump administration, called DOGEs outing of Halimi criminally careless. The USIP headquarters, with its insignia torn from the wall. The missing letters U, S, I and P form the groups acronym. (Christopher Bing/ProPublica) Halimi remains without work. He wonders how he will support his wife and children and whether theres any chance he can clear his name. At the very least, he hopes that the Trump administration will admit the error that has caused his family so much harm.In one of ProPublicas final interviews, Halimi made a last request: Could we help him get an audience with Musk?Why would one of the richest men in the world commit such an act of injustice? Halimi asked. Sometimes I think that if Elon Musk himself were fully informed about this matter, he would likely be deeply ashamed. Design and development by Allen Tan.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 6 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGInside the Memphis Chamber of Commerces Push for Elon Musks xAI Data Centerby Wendi C. Thomas, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism This article was produced for ProPublicas Local Reporting Network in partnership with MLK50. Sign up for Dispatches to get our stories in your inbox every week. Marilyn Gooch was already skeptical about one of her newest neighbors, xAIs supercomputing facility, when her cousin walked across the street in June with a blue mailer from the Greater Memphis Chamber of Commerce. Her cousin didnt know what to make of the postcard featuring the logos of nine local, state and federal agencies and the chambers assurance that billionaire Elon Musks artificial intelligence company operated in full compliance with all applicable federal, state, and local regulations and oversight. The facility part of Musks bid to dominate the AI market opened at a breakneck pace almost a year before, brought to Memphis, Tennessee, largely due to the efforts of the local Chamber of Commerce.Across the country, communities are grappling with the boom of data centers and supercomputing facilities, which consume voracious amounts of electricity and water and can emit smog-producing pollutants. In places from Maricopa County, Arizona, to Prince William County, Virginia, residents have used zoning restrictions as a means to keep supercomputers at bay an option not available to Memphians because the xAI building was already zoned for industrial use. Since the opening of the xAI supercomputing facility, Gooch had joined residents and environmental justice advocates sounding off at meetings about potential health impacts of xAI. She learned about the areas already high concentration of toxic emissions from nearby industrial plants, including an oil refinery, and the countys high asthma rates. Of greatest concern: the emissions from the dozens of methane gas turbines each roughly the size of a semitrailer that were initially used to power xAIs new facility located less than 2 miles from her home in southwest Memphis. Based on its analysis of county health ordinances and federal regulations, the Southern Environmental Law Center has asserted in multiple official and legal documents that these turbines violated the Clean Air Act and should never have been allowed; the Shelby County Health Department disagrees.Gooch saw the mailer as an attempt to quiet their concerns. First image: Heat shimmers above gas turbines at the Memphis, Tennessee, xAI site in April. Second image: Marilyn Gooch. (First image: Ariel J. Cobbert for MLK50. Second image: Kevin Wurm/MLK50/CatchLight Local/Report for America.) In the face of intense public opposition, the chamber has gone to unusual lengths to promote xAI, whose $12 billion investment the chamber believes will transform the shrinking city into a global hub of technological innovation. The chamber wants Memphis to be known as part of the Digital Delta, expanding beyond its blue-collar identity as the distribution capital of the country and FedEx headquarters.This all-out push includes a five-member special operations team to provide what it calls round-the-clock concierge service to ensure seamless execution of the companys rapid expansion plans. The chamber also managed xAIs PR efforts, and while it has not held open public meetings about xAI, it hosted at least 12 invitation-only meetings to tout the projects benefits to Memphis. And the chamber sent its first mailer in recent memory, which spread incorrect information about the governmental oversight in place to monitor Musks new facility.Former chamber president Beverly Robertson said she cant recall another instance of the chamber doing such a full-court press for a company but then again, she and others noted, Memphis has never attracted a company of xAIs scale. The public had no input into the opening of the facility in their community. As a private business, xAI had no obligation to seek community feedback, the chamber has said. And because xAI did not seek or receive tax incentives, it wasnt subject to review from government bodies or elected officials, some of whom learned about xAIs arrival from the news. The communitys lone chance to hear from xAI in person came in April during a heated health department hearing about residents concerns over the gas turbines. Brent Mayo, an xAI executive, read a statement about the companys plans to meet the highest emissions standards. He left before the public comment period began. An xAI spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment about the chambers mailer or to questions about the number of gas turbines powering the supercomputer. The Chamber of Commerce announced xAIs arrival with a page on its website titled xAI Marks Its Spot in Memphis over a photo of Mayo, center, flanked by chamber employees. (Screenshot by MLK50) In this reliably Democratic and majority-Black city, some residents were upset by Musks alignment with President Donald Trump, his brief tenure as the chainsaw-wielding head of the Department of Government Efficiency, and the antisemitic and racist posts from xAIs chatbot Grok, which is powered by the supercomputer known as Colossus. In response to this criticism, the chamber says it defends projects, not people. But what dominated the civic discussion was potential damage to the regions air from xAIs temporary turbines, especially the nitrogen oxides and formaldehyde they can emit, which contribute to smog. Even with brief exposure, smog increases the risk of respiratory problems, asthma and heart diseases, according to the World Health Organization.The mailers sent in mid-June to residents in at least two neighborhoods, including Goochs, appeared to be addressing those fears, asserting that the chamber will continue to prioritize compliance with existing standards and policies. For seven generations, Goochs family has lived in Boxtown, a Black neighborhood in southwest Memphis. Environmental justice activists say Boxtown has been plagued for decades by pollution from nearby industrial plants. In Goochs ZIP code, the median household income is just shy of $37,000 and the poverty rate is twice that of the city as a whole. Boxtown residents gathered for a National Night Out event in the neighborhood in August. (Kevin Wurm/MLK50/CatchLight Local/Report for America) Gooch took the mailer from her cousin and scanned the alphabet soup of agency acronyms for the nine the chamber claims have regulatory oversight and authority over xAIs Supercomputing Facility. Before retiring, she worked in human resources for 25 years and maintained workplace safety reports. Theres no way theyre going to be monitoring and looking at all this, she remembers thinking. Thats so far beyond their reach.Only two agencies on that mailer have clear oversight over xAIs impact on air quality and public health, the communitys primary concerns. The first is the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which under the Trump administration aims to make the United States the worlds AI capital. Local oversight falls to the Shelby County Health Department, which says it is installing a long-awaited air monitor in south Memphis. Both agencies help ensure compliance with the Clean Air Act, the enforcement of which the current administration is weakening as part of a pattern of broader environmental rollbacks. Two other agencies represented on the card Memphis Light, Gas and Water Division and the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation told MLK50: Justice Through Journalism and ProPublica that they have no authority over xAIs supercomputing facility. The other five agencies say they do oversee some aspects of the facility, such as fire safety, zoning or potential whistleblower complaints none of which address the health concerns that most preoccupied the community. The mailer sent by Greater Memphis Chamber of Commerce in June (MLK50) The Chambers mailer stating MLGW has regulatory oversight and authority over the xAI facility is in error. MLGW does not have regulatory authority or oversight of xAI or any business, Ursula Madden, Memphis Light, Gas and Waters spokesperson, said in an email. Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation spokesperson Jennifer Donnals said in an email that TDEC does not have regulatory oversight over supercomputer facilities. The agency issued a permit related to construction and stormwater management at the Colossus site, she said. Bobby White, the chambers chief government affairs officer, who said he wrote the text featured in the mailer, told MLK50 and ProPublica that hed used the word regulatory loosely. He said the chamber sent the mailers to show residents that xAI didnt set up shop in Memphis without consulting with anyone.It has been my intent to make sure people have understood that the company has essentially abided by rules and law as they currently exist, White said in a written statement. I have also in public and private ways tried to advise activists and leaders that changing this companys or any companys behavior comes down to changing the policy that allows for it.One of xAIs staunchest critics is State Rep. Justin J. Pearson, who represents a majority-Black district that includes Boxtown. Memphis Community Against Pollution, co-founded by Justin Pearson and now run by his brother KeShaun Pearson, was at the forefront of the fight to get the Shelby County Health Department to deny xAIs permit for 15 permanent turbines. It was joined by other local groups including Young, Gifted & Green, the Chickasaw Group of the Sierra Club and Tigers Against Pollution. State Rep. Justin J. Pearson, standing on the right, is one of xAIs staunchest critics. (Andrea Morales/MLK50) Justin Pearson said the chambers mailer misled residents by including agencies that have no authority or only indirect authority over xAI. Its the red handkerchief of the magician, Pearson said. The propaganda that they are putting out to try and convince people that theres nothing to see here, theres nothing to worry about, is only at the behest of a multibillion-dollar corporation. White said xAI did not ask the chamber to send the mailer and accused environmental activists of misleading residents with claims that the turbines were somehow operating counter to existing policy and regulations. He said he got involved after seeing his former sixth grade teacher, church members and community leaders hes worked with for years at a raucous town hall meeting on the subject of gas turbines, where people were being whipped into a frenzy and still leaving without good information.The chamber emphasized Whites message in a more nuanced way in a July webinar held less than a month after the mailers arrived in Goochs neighborhood: XAls presence in Memphis has occurred with the oversight of, input from, and/or strategic alignment with the following agencies/organizations, read a slide, with the logos of the same agencies.Chambers of commerce exist to promote businesses and lobby for a pro-business climate, said Darrin Wilson, an associate professor at Northern Kentucky University who studies local economic development. But he said pro-business organizations should still be expected to provide accurate information.You want to make sure that the residents of Memphis and Shelby County have 100% accurate and full information around something that is going to impact their day-to-day lives, he said, so that they can make decisions for themselves and advocate on their own behalf. First and third images: Tigers Against Pollution, an environmental group, protest against xAI at the Shelby County Health Department in Memphis in July. Second image: Surveillance cameras monitor xAIs Colossus site. (Kevin Wurm/MLK50/CatchLight Local/Report for America) The chamber maintains that xAI is an indisputable win for the city, expected to create an estimated 500 high-paying jobs and, in the first year alone, generate tens of millions of dollars in city and county property taxes, soaring to as much as $100 million next year. The citys mayor plans to direct 25% of tax revenues from xAIs first facility to the neighborhoods closest to the operation. xAI has recently committed to funding repairs and new athletic fields at four neighborhood public schools. According to press reports, xAIs presence is continuing to expand in the Memphis area. Its second supercomputer facility, Colossus 2, is expected to come online soon. Musk has announced hes moving a power plant from overseas to power Colossus 2. And just across the state line in Mississippi, an xAI-affiliated firm purchased the site of a former Duke Energy power plant less than 2 miles from Colossus 2.After months of weighing whether to approve xAIs permit request to operate 15 permanent, cleaner turbines, the county health department granted the permit in July. The Southern Environmental Law Center has appealed the permit decision to the Shelby County Air Pollution Control board, an appointed body that hears such protests. The health department did not publicly explain its decision to grant the permit. A gas turbine outside xAI in March, four months before the Shelby County Health Department approved a permit for 15 permanent turbines. (Andrea Morales/MLK50) The chamber says that xAI has taken a number of steps to address environmental concerns. It claims that emissions from the permanent turbines, which will be a backup power source, will be far less than the maximum the EPA allows. To protect the electrical grid in times of peak demand, xAI is also using Tesla Megapack batteries as another backup power source. In addition, the company is building an $80 million wastewater facility that will allow xAI, plus the Tennessee Valley Authority and a nearby steel manufacturer, to use recycled water to cool their plants instead of relying on the aquifer the region depends on. What were really seeing is a company that, quite frankly, is doing as much as you could hope a company would do in terms of being environmentally conscious, White said.Still, people in Goochs neighborhood have reason to worry about air quality. Last year, the American Lung Association gave Shelby County an F grade for ozone, an air pollutant that contributes to smog. The county also has the states highest rate of ER visits for asthma, and the city has been named an asthma capital by the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America. In southwest Memphis, the cumulative cancer risk associated with exposure to 13 carcinogens in the air was 4 times higher than the national average, according to a 2013 study by University of Memphis researchers. Many of Marilyn Goochs relatives are buried at Boxtowns New Park Memorial Gardens. (Kevin Wurm/MLK50/CatchLight Local/Report for America) Every family member that Ive had that lived in the Boxtown area has died of some form of cancer, Gooch said, acknowledging that some were smokers. Gooch, a member of the Boxtown Neighborhood Association, attended one of Whites xAI presentations at a nearby church this spring. She remembers White saying that Memphis needs more tax revenue and cant afford to let xAI, or other companies, slide across the state line to Mississippi. Shed planned to ask questions, but after listening to White focus on the finances, she decided not to. His whole spiel was about money, economics, she recalled. Not all money is good money.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 6 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.LGBTQNATION.COMProtestors vow to restore Pulse memorial crosswalk after Ron DeSantis destroys itAbout 100 people in Orlando, Florida, protested the recent painting over of a rainbow crosswalk created in memory of the 49 victims of the 2016 Pulse nightclub tragedy. State crews from the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) painted over the crosswalk without notifying city officials, at the behest of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) and orders from the current presidential administration.Local resident Dallas Perdue used chalk to recreate the crosswalks colored rectangles, but rain washed the chalk off by Thursday evening. I was just fixing what shouldnt have been, yknow, painted over in the first place, Perdue told WFTV. Related Democrat convinces colleagues to stand up to Ron DeSantis anti-Pride agenda with impassioned speech In July, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy urged governors to remove any political messages, artwork, and markings on intersections not directly related to pedestrian or driver safety. He wrote on social media, Taxpayers expect their dollars to fund safe streets, not rainbow crosswalks.A local activist told WFTV that the commemorative crosswalk followed all FDOT regulations and rules when it was first installed. Insights for the LGBTQ+ community Subscribe to our briefing for insights into how politics impacts the LGBTQ+ community and more. Subscribe to our Newsletter today Florida Rep. Randy Fine (R) told the news station, I think there are appropriate places to memorialize people. I dont think a public street is the place to promote a woke agenda. He has previously referred to LGBTQ+ people as perverts who wish to groom our children and supported numerous anti-LGBTQ+ bills, according to GLAAD.Activists told the news station that they would continue to fight for the crosswalks restoration to its former rainbow colors.Gov. DeSantis wrote via X, We will not allow our state roads to be commandeered for political purposes. He has told cities that if they dont paint over any municipal rainbow crosswalks, FDOT will do it for them. FDOT painted over the Pulse crosswalk during Thursdays early morning hours. In June,DeSantis dropped any mention of LGBTQ+ and Latin peoplefrom his remarks on the 9th anniversary of the 2016 tragedy.Pulse survivor Brandon Wolf told the new station, The cowards threatene by our lives should feel lucky they didnt have to bury the ones they love then watch the state come & bury their memory.Subscribe to theLGBTQ Nation newsletterand be the first to know about the latest headlines shaping LGBTQ+ communities worldwide.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 5 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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