• Ukrainian war veteran amputees learn adaptive skiing in Oregon
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    Ukrainian veterans Denys Kryvodubski, left, Stanislav Povkhan, center, and Mikhailo Danylo, top right, ski down a slope to warm up during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)2025-03-10T04:04:28Z HOODOO SKI AREA, Ore. (AP) Ukrainian war veteran Oleksandr Shvachka lost his left leg to Russian tank fire outside Kyiv. Three years on, the latest step in his physical and mental rehabilitation recently unfolded under a brilliant blue sky on a snow-covered mountain more than 5,000 miles (8,047 kilometers) away.Shvachka, 38, was one of five Ukrainian veterans who came to the Pacific Northwest for ski lessons this month with Oregon Adaptive Sports, an organization working to make sports more accessible to people with disabilities. On a recent day, he listened attentively to an instructor before launching himself down a slope at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon, leaning on two hand-held outriggers, which resemble forearm crutches with short skis at the ends, for turns and balance as he picked up speed. Oleksandr Shvachka prepares to put on a prosthetic leg after a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Oleksandr Shvachka prepares to put on a prosthetic leg after a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Ukrainian veteran Stanislav Povkhan places an American flag sticker on his prosthetic leg after a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veteran Stanislav Povkhan places an American flag sticker on his prosthetic leg after a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Equipment used by Oregon Adaptive Sports is seen at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Equipment used by Oregon Adaptive Sports is seen at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Ukrainian veterans Denys Kryvodubski, left, Stanislav Povkhan, center, and Mikhailo Danylo, top right, ski down a slope to warm up during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veterans Denys Kryvodubski, left, Stanislav Povkhan, center, and Mikhailo Danylo, top right, ski down a slope to warm up during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Shvachka was wounded in the village of Makariv outside the capital of Kyiv in March 2022, shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine the previous month. He said skiing on the mountain was an amazing emotion. Its a new experience, and Im so happy, he said.The Oregon city of Corvallis has been sister cities with Uzhhorod in western Ukraine for over 30 years. Its sister city association is hosting the veterans, some of whom have been recovering in Uzhhorods rehabilitation hospital, as well as two Ukrainian ski coaches, association co-founder Carol Paulson said. Ukrainian veterans Mikhailo Danylo, left, and Artem Pogorilyi laugh after a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veterans Mikhailo Danylo, left, and Artem Pogorilyi laugh after a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Ukrainian veterans Artem Pogorilyi, left, and Stanislav Povkhan, right, ski during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veterans Artem Pogorilyi, left, and Stanislav Povkhan, right, ski during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More The ski programs goal is to improve the veterans physical and mental health and teach the Ukrainian ski coaches how to use adaptive ski equipment so they can share that knowledge with the war-torn countrys thousands of amputees. The group had four days of lessons over the course of two weeks. It reminds them that they can participate fully in life, Paulson said. The best thing is the feeling that they get not only of independence, but just of well-being.In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Paulson taught adaptive skiing to Vietnam War veterans who had lost limbs. She saw how being active on the mountain improved their mood and wanted to offer the same experience to Ukrainian war veterans. Ukrainian veterans and instructors are reflected in ski goggles as they talk during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veterans and instructors are reflected in ski goggles as they talk during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Ukrainian veteran Stanislav Povkhan, center, participates in a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veteran Stanislav Povkhan, center, participates in a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Ukrainian veteran Oleksandr Shvachka skis during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veteran Oleksandr Shvachka skis during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More The peacefulness of skiing compared to other sports, too, is special, she said. Its quiet. You have the pristine snow and the breeze of the wind.For Shvachka, adaptive sports have been key in his physical and mental rehabilitation, while the other veterans provide motivation, he said.In 2023, with his prosthetic leg, Schvachka ran a 10K race organized by the U.S. Marine Corps in Washington, D.C., and competed with other Ukrainian veteran amputees in Arnold Classic Europe, an offshoot of a fitness and body-building competition founded by Arnold Schwarzenegger. Ukrainian veteran Stanislav Povkhan adjusts his head covering as he pauses after going down a slope during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veteran Stanislav Povkhan adjusts his head covering as he pauses after going down a slope during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Ukrainian veteran Artem Pogorilyi poses for a photo after a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veteran Artem Pogorilyi poses for a photo after a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More A worker with Oregon Adaptive Sports hands Ukrainian veteran Oleksandr Shvachka a cup of water during a break in a lesson on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) A worker with Oregon Adaptive Sports hands Ukrainian veteran Oleksandr Shvachka a cup of water during a break in a lesson on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More In that multi-sport event, a group of eight veterans used ropes to pull four semitruck cabs weighing 35 tons (31.7 metric tons) over 65 feet (20 meters) in a little more than 30 seconds, according to the events Instagram page, which described it as a strongman world record.Pat Addabbo, executive director of Oregon Adaptive Sports, said the ski lessons highlight the transformative power of sport. Ukrainian veterans and ski instructors talk before going on a chair lift during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veterans and ski instructors talk before going on a chair lift during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Ukrainian veteran Oleksandr Shvachka shows a Ukrainian flag that is signed to members of Oregon Adaptive Sports after a lesson on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veteran Oleksandr Shvachka shows a Ukrainian flag that is signed to members of Oregon Adaptive Sports after a lesson on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More What youre seeing here today is a great example of that people from across the world, coming to our little ski area here in Oregon, to learn these life-changing skills that they hopefully can take home with them and teach others, Addabbo said.The Ukrainian veterans and ski instructors will take outriggers with them back to Ukraine so they can start teaching three-track skiing using one full-size ski and two outriggers to others who have lost limbs. Ukrainian veteran Denys Kryvodubski poses for a photo after a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veteran Denys Kryvodubski poses for a photo after a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More I think we are starting a new era of our war veteran rehabilitation program, said Kristian Minai, one of the Ukrainian instructors. Minai also coaches Ukraines national deaf ski team and is working on developing a national Paralympics ski team.Maybe, some day, we will see them from the podium in the Paralympic Games, he added with a smile. Ukrainian veteran Denys Kryvodubski skis during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Ukrainian veteran Denys Kryvodubski skis during a lesson with Oregon Adaptive Sports on the three track skiing method at Hoodoo Ski Area in central Oregon on Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More CLAIRE RUSH Rush is an Associated Press reporter covering Oregon state government and general news in the Pacific Northwest more broadly. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • The cute whiskers are back on. Rare Mediterranean monk seals are cared for in a Greek rehab center
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    Renos-Pantelis, with a GPS tracking device glued on its back is seen at the Attica Zoological Park, in eastern Athens, Greece, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)2025-03-10T05:24:36Z ATHENS, Greece (AP) Panagis hauls himself out of the pool at a rehabilitation center in Greece and scurries over for a delectable lunch: whole mackerel. Its been about three months since the orphaned seal pup was found struggling in the coastal waters of Cyprus. Soon, hell be well enough to go home.Panagis is one of dozens of Mediterranean monk seals, or Monachus monachus, that have been nursed back to health by Greeces MOm, a charity dedicated to the care and protection of the rare marine mammal whose population had dwindled so dramatically that at one point it faced extinction.Thanks to conservation efforts, the seals with the big, round eyes and prominent whiskers are now making a remarkable comeback. Nearly half of their estimated global population of 800 live in Greek waters, where the extensive coastline offers an abundance of sea caves that provide shelter for females to rear their young. From near extinction to recoverySleek and remarkably fast in the water, the monk seal is a skillful hunter and can consume up to 3 kilograms (6 pounds) of fish, octopus and squid a day. But its not averse to a ready meal, and can rip through fishing nets to steal fish which led fishermen to view them as pests. For decades, they were hunted, contributing to a major population decline between the 1960s and 1980s that led the International Union for Conservation of Nature, or IUCN, to list them as critically endangered.When conservation efforts began in the 1980s, combined with outreach programs to educate the public and fishermen society gradually began to change and the population began to recover, said Panagiotis Dendrinos.Dendrinos, a marine biologist and coordinator of the Hellenic Society for the Study and Protection of the Monk Seal or MOm that has pioneered the Monachus monachus conservation program, says the monk seal is the only seal species in the Mediterranean Sea and also one of the rarest species of seal and marine mammal in the world. To protect an animal like the Mediterranean monk seal in its natural environment, you essentially have to protect the entire marine ecosystem, he said.Conservation efforts have paid off, and in recent years, the species climbed down a notch on the IUCNs Red List of threatened species to endangered. About a year ago improved one step further, to vulnerable.A unique seal rehabUsually contacted by members of the public who find an animal in distress, MOm specialists tend to adult seals on location where possible, and transport young seals to the organizations rehabilitation center housed in the grounds of Athens zoo, on the outskirts of the Greek capital.There, the young mammals are looked after by veterinarians, fed a special diet to provide them with the best nutrition and hone their swimming skills in a pool. Their carers give them names often after the people who found them but make sure contact with humans is kept to a minimum to prepare the animals for their return into the wild. The young seals typically stay in the rehab center for several months, until theyve put on enough weight and their natural hunting instinct kicks in, allowing them to fend for themselves. They are then tagged so they can be tracked, and re-introduced into the wild. MOm, the only center of its kind in the region, has cared for about 40 seals from far and wide, both on location and in its facilities, Dendrinos said. This year, we had a really pleasant surprise, he said. A female seal that had been treated and released four years ago was spotted nursing a pup.Planes, boats and cars to the rescuePanagis was found in Cyprus, near where the body of his mother had been found a few days earlier. Alerted by locals, the organization arranged for the seal to be flown to Athens.Transportation is carried out with whatever is available, said veterinary assistant Nikitas Vogiatzis, shortly after feeding Panagis. Either by plane, or by boat, or even by taxi. Konstantina came in a taxi, Panagis by plane, Renos came on a boat, he said, listing MOms most recent wards. Weighing just under 15 kilograms (33 pounds) when he arrived, the now 3-month-old seal has reached over 40 kilograms (88 pounds). Panagis is nearly ready for his return trip home, which MOm experts hope will happen in May. Back into the wildRenos short for Renos-Pantelis was found in November in the small Aegean island of Anafi by a nurse and a military conscript whom he was named after. The seal pup was shipped to MOms facility. He got medical treatment and was put on a special diet until he was old enough to move on to solid fish the mackerel that Panagis is so fond of.He recovered and on a cold, sunny February day, it was his turn to head back into the wild. MOm personnel loaded him into a crate and whisked him by speedboat to the uninhabited islet of Gyaros, the closest marine protected area to Athens.The release location is chosen based on there being enough food, and there being no disturbance by people, which is very important, said Vogiatzis, the veterinary assistant. The crate is placed near the water, he said. Then, you open the door, you say a prayer and you say: So long.Renos crate was deposited on a beach and the door opened. The young seal sniffed the air timidly, and waited. Slowly, he inched his way out of the crate, then picked up speed as he belly-hauled his way down the beach, splashed into the sea and was gone.___Associated Press photographer Thanassis Stavrakis in Gyaros, Greece, contributed to this report.
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  • What to know ahead of the talks between the US and Ukraine in Saudi Arabia
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    President Donald Trump, right, meets with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the Oval Office at the White House, Friday, Feb. 28, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/ Mystyslav Chernov)2025-03-10T04:38:52Z DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) Saudi Arabia is set to host talks Tuesday between the United States and Ukraine after an argument erupted during President Volodymyr Zelenskyys Feb. 28 visit to the White House. Riyadh, the capital of the oil-rich kingdom, may seem like an unusual venue for talks aimed at smoothing over relations after the blowup. But Saudi Arabia under its assertive Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has been positioning itself as an ideal location for possible peace negotiations between Kyiv and Moscow and even the first face-to-face talks between Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump. Heres what to know about why this meeting is taking place and Saudi Arabias role: Why are these talks happening?U.S. and Ukrainian officials will meet after the Oval Office meeting between Zelenskyy, Trump and U.S. Vice President JD Vance descended into an extraordinary 10-minute argument before journalists. Trump at one point admonished Zelenskyy by angrily saying: Youre gambling with World War III, and what youre doing is very disrespectful to the country. Zelenskyy ended up leaving the White House without signing a deal that included granting the U.S. access to Ukraines rare earth minerals. Kyiv hoped that deal would ensure the continued flow of U.S. military support that Ukraine urgently needs as it battles Russia in the war that began after Moscows full-scale invasion in February 2022. Where will these talks take place?Saudi Arabias Foreign Ministry in a statement Friday identified the location for the talks as Jeddah, a port city on the Red Sea. Its not clear why the kingdom picked Jeddah as opposed to Riyadh, Saudi Arabias capital city where the initial Russia-U.S. talks took place on Feb. 18. However, Jeddah has hosted other diplomatic engagements in the past and is home to royal palaces. Saudi Arabias Foreign Ministry said the kingdom would continue to pursue a lasting peace to end the Ukrainian crisis. The kingdom has continued these efforts over the past three years by hosting many meetings on this matter, the Foreign Ministry said. Who will attend the talks?Zelenskyy plans to visit Saudi Arabia on Monday ahead of the talks. He earlier delayed a trip to the kingdom after traveling to the neighboring United Arab Emirates, which also has been considered as a possible venue for peace talks between Kyiv and Moscow. We continue working on the relevant steps with our partners who want peace, who want it just as much as we do, Zelenskyy said Friday. There will be a lot of work here in Europe, with America in Saudi Arabia we are preparing a meeting to accelerate peace and strengthen the foundations of security.Zelenskyy wrote online that a team including his chief of staff Andriy Yermak, Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiha and Defense Minister Rustem Umerov traveling with him to Saudi Arabia will take part in the talks. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio will lead the American team for the Ukrainian talks and meet with Prince Mohammed.Sybiha also spoke Friday with Rubio ahead of the talks. Sybiha described it as a constructive call. A two-sentence readout from the State Department said Rubio underscored President Trump is determined to end the war as soon as possible and emphasized that all sides must take steps to secure a sustainable peace. Why are these talks in Saudi Arabia? Since assuming power in Saudi Arabia, Prince Mohammed took an aggressive posture both at home and abroad. His public image reached its nadir with the 2018 slaying of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, believed by the United States and others to be at the princes orders. In the last two years, however, Prince Mohammed instead has reached a dtente with Iran, hosted Zelenskyy for an Arab League summit and been involved in negotiations over the wars in Sudan and the Gaza Strip. Riyadh also maintained ties to Russia through the OPEC+ oil cartel while Western nations levied sanctions against it. Thats reasserted the role the kingdom long has perceived itself as having being the leader of the Sunni Muslim world and a dominant force in the Middle East. Hosting Russia-U.S. talks, possibly drawing Trump to the kingdom for his first foreign trip in this term through investments and other possible meetings only raise Saudi Arabias profile further as a neutral territory for high-stakes negotiations. Saudi Arabias autocratic government, compliant media and distance from the war also allows for talks to take place in a tightly controlled country with relative privacy. What does this mean for the war and the wider world?Trump remains focused on reaching some kind of peace deal to stop the war. His approach toward Ukraine so far has relied far more on stick than carrot limiting their access to intelligence and weaponry. While conciliatory toward Putin, Trump recently also threatened new sanctions against Russia over its ceaseless attacks on Ukrainian cities. If Ukraine and the U.S. reach some sort of understanding acceptable to Trump, that could accelerate his administrations push to talks. However, the rest of Europe remains skeptical as theyve been sidelined from the talks. The European Union last week agreed to boost the continents defenses and to free up hundreds of billions of euros for security. JON GAMBRELL Gambrell is the news director for the Gulf and Iran for The Associated Press. He has reported from each of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Iran and other locations across the world since joining the AP in 2006. twitter instagram mailto
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  • North Korea fires several ballistic missiles into sea after US, South Korea began military drills
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    Protesters shout slogans during a press conference demanding to stop the upcoming Freedom Shield military exercise between the U.S. and South Korea, near the Defense Ministry in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, March 10, 2025. The letters read "Stop, War exercise." (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)2025-03-10T05:34:32Z SEOUL, South Korea (AP) North Korea fired several ballistic missiles into the sea on Monday, South Koreas military said, hours after South Korean and U.S. troops kicked off their large annual combined drills, which the North views as an invasion rehearsal. South Koreas Joint Chiefs of Staff said the missile firings, North Koreas fifth missile launch event this year, were detected from the Norths Hwanghae province but gave no further details such as how far they flew.Earlier Monday, the South Korean and U.S. militaries began their annual joint military exercises, which are scheduled to last 11 days. The Freedom Shield command post exercise began after the South Korean and U.S. militaries paused live-fire training while Seoul investigates how two of its fighter jets mistakenly bombed a civilian area during a warm-up drill last week. The drills start drew the condemnation of nuclear-armed North Korea, which issued a government statement calling the exercises a dangerous provocative act that increases the risks of military conflict.About 30 people were injured, two of them seriously, when two South Korean KF-16 fighter jets mistakenly fired eight MK-82 bombs on a civilian area in Pocheon, a town near the North Korean border, on Thursday. The bombing occurred while South Korean and U.S. forces were engaging in a live-fire drill ahead of the larger Freedom Shield exercise. In a background briefing to domestic reporters on Monday, the South Korean air force repeated its initial assessment last week that one of the KF-16 pilots had entered the wrong coordinates for a bombing site. The unidentified pilot didnt recognize the error during a pre-takeoff check and, rushing to meet scheduled timing, failed to visually verify the target before proceeding with the bombing. The second pilot had the correct coordinates but focused only on maintaining formation with the other aircraft and dropped the bombs following the first pilots instructions, failing to recognize they deviated from the right target, according to the content of the briefing provided to The Associated Press. Gen. Lee Youngsu, chief of staff of the South Korean air force, bowed and apologized Monday over the injuries and property damage caused by the incident, which he said should have never happened and must never happen again.Both the South Korean and U.S. militaries have halted all live-fire exercises in South Korea following the mishap. South Korean military officials say live-fire training will resume after they complete the ongoing investigation on the bombing and formulate preventative steps.The Freedom Shield exercise marks the first large-scale joint exercise since U.S. President Donald Trump began his second term. It comes amid growing tensions with North Korea over its nuclear ambitions and its alignment with Russia in President Vladimir Putins war on Ukraine. Trump, who met North Korean leader Kim Jong Un three times during his first term, has expressed his willingness to reach out to Kim again to revive diplomacy, which collapsed due to disagreements over exchanging U.S.-led sanctions against the North and the Norths denuclearization steps. But Pyongyang has yet to respond to his overture and has continued its fiery rhetoric against Washington and Seoul over their joint military exercises, which Kim portrays as rehearsals for invasion. In a statement issued through state media Monday, the North Korean Foreign Ministry called the Freedom Shield exercise an aggressive and confrontational war rehearsal that risks triggering physical conflict on the Korean Peninsula.The ministry reiterated Kims state goals for a radical growth of his nuclear force to counter what he claims as growing threats posed by the U.S. and its Asian allies. KIM TONG-HYUNG Kim has been covering the Koreas for the AP since 2014. He has published widely read stories on North Koreas nuclear ambitions, the dark side of South Koreas economic rise and international adoptions of Korean children. twitter mailto
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  • Floodwaters still threaten parts of Australias east coast as tropical storm cleanup begins
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    A vehicle sits in flood waters in the Brisbane suburb of Oxley, Australia, Monday, March 10, 2025. (Jono Searle/AAP Image via AP)2025-03-10T05:51:36Z WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) Australias prime minister cautioned that the fallout from a vicious tropical storm over the weekend was far from over as parts of two states remained inundated with perilous floodwaters on Monday, even as the initial threat from the deluge continued to recede.One person was killed and several others injured after heavy rain lashed Australias east coast on Saturday, toppling trees and power lines and inundating some parts of Queensland and New South Wales with record downpours. The two states escaped the level of chaos forecast from the tropical low weather system, which was earlier expected to make landfall as the first tropical cyclone to hit south east Queensland in 51 years before weakening as it approached.Still, 200,000 homes and businesses were without power in the region on Monday afternoon after the storm prompted the biggest blackout in Queenslands history and more than 700 schools were closed for the day. Those living near rivers and creeks were urged to evacuate or stay indoors as water levels continued to rise in some areas with more rain forecast triggering further warnings during the day. Disaster was declared for the city of Ipswich, west of Brisbane, where a river was expected to flood overnight. People in surrounding suburbs were ordered to leave their homes. Meanwhile, in other towns where floodwaters began to recede a cleanup began as power was restored for tens of thousands of people. The scale of the damage was not immediately clear. Workers whose livelihoods were hampered by the storm will be eligible for welfare payments for up to 13 weeks beginning Tuesday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters on Monday. In the city of Lismore in New South Wales, two military trucks helping with the rescue efforts on Saturday rolled over, injuring 13 of the 36 personnel travelling in them. One remained in hospital on Monday with injuries that were not life-threatening, Australias Defense Minister Richard Marles said. The single casualty of the crisis was a 61-year-old man who disappeared in a flooded river near the New South Wales town of Dorrigo, police said. His body was recovered on Saturday. Albanese warned residents of the two stricken states not to be complacent as flood warnings lingered to follow officials directives. If its flooded, forget it, he said, referring to traveling in or entering inundated areas.Cyclones are common in Queenslands tropical north but are rare in the states temperate and densely populated southeast corner that borders New South Wales. Tropical Cyclone Alfred was last week expected to become the first cyclone since 1974 to cross the Australian coast near Queenslands state capital of Brisbane, Australias third-most populous city.But it weakened Saturday to a tropical low, defined as carrying sustained winds of less than 63 kph (39 mph).Authorities had feared similar scenes to those eastern Australia experienced during massive floods in 2011 and in a series of 2022 events in which more than 20 people died. CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-MCLAY Graham-McLay is an Associated Press reporter covering regional and national stories about New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific Islands by putting them in a global context. She is based in Wellington. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Canadas next prime minister managed the financial crisis, then Brexit and now Trumps trade war
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    Liberal Leader Mark Carney smiles as he delivers his victory speech during the Liberal leadership announcement in Ottawa, Ontario, Sunday, March 9, 2025. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press via AP)2025-03-10T04:06:28Z TORONTO (AP) Canadas next prime minister has helped run two Group of Seven economies in crisis before and now will try to steer Canada through a looming trade war brought by U.S. President Donald Trump, a threat of annexation and an expected federal election. Former central banker Mark Carney will become prime minister after the governing Liberal Party elected him its leader Sunday in a landside vote with 85.9% support. Carney, 59, replaces Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who announced his resignation in January but remains prime minister until his successor is sworn in in the coming days. Carney is widely expected to trigger an election the coming days or weeks amid Trumps sweeping tariff threats. Canada didnt ask for this fightWe didnt ask for this fight. But Canadians are always ready when someone else drops the gloves, Carney said. The Americans, they should make no mistake, in trade, as in hockey, Canada will win.Carney said Canada will keep its initial retaliatory tariffs in place until the Americans show us respect.Carney navigated crises when he was the head of the Bank of Canada and when in 2013 he became the first noncitizen to run the Bank of England since it was founded in 1694. His appointment won bipartisan praise in the U.K. after Canada recovered from the 2008 financial crisis faster than many other countries. He helped managed the worst impacts of Brexit in the U.K. The opposition Conservatives hoped to make the election about Trudeau, whose popularity declined as food and housing prices rose and immigration surged.Trumps trade war and his talk of making Canada the 51st U.S. state have infuriated Canadians, who are booing the American anthem at NHL and NBA games. Some are canceling trips south of the border, and many are avoiding buying American goods when they can. Canadian nationalism surgesThe surge in Canadian nationalism has bolstered the Liberal Partys chances in a parliamentary election expected within days or weeks, and Liberal showings have been improving in opinion polls.The Americans want our resources, our water, our land, our country. Think about it. If they succeed they would destroy our way of life, Carney said. In America health care is big business. In Canada it is a right.Carney said America is a melting pot. Canada is mosaic, he said. America is not Canada. And Canada will never, ever will be a part of America in any way, shape or form.After decades of bilateral stability, the vote on Canadas next leader now is expected to focus on who is best equipped to deal with the United States.These are dark days, dark days brought on by a country we can no longer trust, Carney said. We need to pull together in the tough days ahead.Trump has postponed 25% tariffs on many goods from Canada and Mexico for a month, amid widespread fears of a broader trade war. But he has threatened other tariffs on steel, aluminum, dairy and other products.Carney picked up one endorsement after another from Cabinet ministers and members of Parliament since declaring his candidacy in January. He is a highly educated economist with Wall Street experience who has long been interested in entering politics and becoming prime minister, but he lacks political experience.Trudeau previously offered to make him finance minister. Carney has said former Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper also offered to make him finance minister. Former Goldman Sachs executiveCarney is a former Goldman Sachs executive. He worked for 13 years in London, Tokyo, New York and Toronto, before being appointed deputy governor of the Bank of Canada in 2003.In 2020, he began serving as the United Nations special envoy for climate action and finance.The other top Liberal leadership candidate was former Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, who received just 8% of the vote. Trudeau told Freeland in December that he no longer wanted her as finance minister, but that she could remain deputy prime minister and the point person for U.S.-Canada relations. Freeland resigned shortly after, releasing a scathing letter about the government that proved to be the last straw for Trudeau. Either Carney will call an election in the coming days or weeks, or the opposition parties in Parliament could force one with a no-confidence vote later this month.Trudeau urged Liberals supporters to get involved.This is a nation-defining moment. Democracy is not a given. Freedom is not a given. Even Canada is not a given, Trudeau said.
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  • Japans Nissan tests driverless vehicles in city streets filled with cars and people
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    In this photo released by Nissan Motor Corp., its driverless vehicle, center, drives along a street in Yokohama, near Tokyo in February 2025. (Nissan Motor Corp. via AP)2025-03-10T04:01:10Z YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP) The van makes its way slowly but surely through the city streets, braking gently when a car swerves into its lane. But its steering wheel is turning on its own, and theres no one in the drivers seat.The driverless technology from Nissan Motor Corp., which uses 14 cameras, nine radars and six LiDar sensors installed in and around the vehicle, highlights Japans eagerness to catch up with players like Googles Waymo that have taken the lead in the U.S. Japan, home to the worlds top automakers, has not kept pace with the global shift to autonomous driving, so far led by China and the U.S. But momentum is building. Waymo is going to land in Japan this year. Details havent been disclosed, but it has a partnership with major cab company Nihon Kotsu, which will oversee and manage their all-electric Jaguar I-PACE sport-utility vehicles, first in the Tokyo area, still with a human cab driver riding along. During Nissans demonstration, the streets were bustling with other cars and pedestrians. The vehicle stayed within the maximum speed limit in the area of 40 kph (25 mph), its destination set with a smartphone app. Takeshi Kimura, the Mobility and AI Laboratory engineer at Nissan, insists an automaker is more adept at integrating self-driving technology with the overall workings of a car simply because it knows cars better.How the sensors must be adapted to the cars movements, or to monitor sensors and computers to ensure reliability and safety requires an understanding of the auto system overall, he said during a recent demonstration that took reporters on a brief ride. Nissans technology, being tested on its Serena minivan, is still technically at the industrys Level Two because a person sits before a remote-control panel in a separate location outside the vehicle, in this case, at the automakers headquarters, and is ready to step in if the technology fails. Nissan also has a human sitting in the front passenger seat during the test rides, who can take over the driving, if needed. Unless there is a problem, the people in the remote control room and the passenger seat are doing nothing. Nissan plans to have 20 such vehicles moving in the Yokohama area in the next couple of years, with the plan to reach Level Four, which means no human involvement even as backup, by 2029 or 2030. Autonomous vehicles can serve a real need given the nations shrinking population, including a shortage of drivers.Other companies are working on the technology in Japan, including startups like Tier IV, which is pushing an open source collaboration on autonomous driving technology.So far, Japan has approved the use of so-called Level Four autonomous vehicles in a rural area in Fukui Prefecture, but those look more like golf carts. A Level Four bus is scuttling around a limited area near Tokyos Haneda airport. But its maximum speed is 12 kmph (7.5 mph). Nissans autonomous vehicle is a real car, capable of all its mechanical workings and speed levels. Toyota Motor Corp. recently showed its very own city or living area for its workers and partnering startups, near Mount Fuji, being built especially to test various technology, including autonomous driving.Progress has been cautious. University of Tokyo Professor Takeo Igarashi, who specializes in computer and information technology, believes challenges remain because its human nature to be more alarmed by accidents with driverless vehicles than regular crashes. In human driving, the driver takes responsibility. Its so clear. But nobody is driving so you dont know who will take responsibility, Igarashi told The Associated Press.In Japan, the expectation for commercial services is very high. The customer expects perfect quality for any service restaurants or drivers or anything. This kind of auto-driving is a service form a company, and everybody expects high quality and perfection. Even a small mistake is not acceptable. Nissan says its technology is safe. After all, a human cant be looking at the front, the back and all around at the same time. But the driverless car can, with all its sensors. When a system failure happened during the recent demonstration, the car just came to a stop and all was well. Phil Koopman, professor of electrical and computer engineering at Carnegie Mellon University, believes the autonomous vehicle industry is just getting started. The main problem is whats known as edge cases, those rare but dangerous situations that the machine has not yet been taught to respond to. Using autonomous fleets of a significant size for some time is needed for such edge cases to be learned, he said.We will see each city require special engineering efforts and the creation of a special remote support center. This will be a city-by-city deployment for many years, said Koopman.There is no magic switch.___Yuri Kageyama is on Threads: https://www.threads.net/@yurikageyama YURI KAGEYAMA Kageyama covers Japan news for The Associated Press. Her topics include social issues, the environment, businesses, entertainment and technology. twitter instagram facebook mailto
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  • A one-day strike at 13 German airports, including the main hubs, brings most flights to a halt
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    Airport workers protest during a strike of the union ver.di at the airport in Duesseldorf, Germany on Monday, March 10, 2025, when all major airports in Germany went on a warning strike. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner)2025-03-10T07:49:05Z BERLIN (AP) A one-day strike by workers at 13 German airports, including the Frankfurt and Munich hubs and all the countrys other main destinations, caused the cancelation of most flights on Monday.The 24-hour walkout, which started at midnight, involves public-sector employees at the airports as well as ground and security staff. At Frankfurt Airport, 1,054 of the days 1,116 scheduled takeoffs and landings had been canceled, German news agency dpa reported, citing airport traffic management. All of Berlin Airports regular departures and arrivals were canceled, while Hamburg Airport said no departures would be possible. Cologne/Bonn Airport said there was no regular passenger service and Munich Airport advised travelers to expect a greatly reduced flight schedule.The ver.di service workers unions strike targeted the Hamburg, Bremen, Hannover, Berlin, Duesseldorf, Dortmund, Cologne/Bonn, Leipzig/Halle, Stuttgart and Munich airports. At the smaller Weeze and Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden airports, only security workers were called out. The union announced the strike on Friday. But at Hamburg Airport, it added a short-notice walkout on Sunday to the strike on Monday, arguing that it must ensure the measure was effective. The so-called warning strike, a common tactic in German wage negotiations, relates to two separate pay disputes: negotiations on a new pay and conditions contract for airport security workers, and a wider dispute over pay for employees of federal and municipal governments. The latter already has led to walkouts at Cologne/Bonn, Duesseldorf, Hamburg and Munich airports. Pay talks in that dispute are due to resume on Friday, while the next round of talks for airport security workers is expected to start on March 26.
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  • What makes Greenland a strategic prize at a time of rising tensions? And why now?
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    In this file photo dated July 2007, an Inuit seal hunter touches a dead seal atop a melting iceberg near Ammassalik Island, Greenland. (AP Photo/John McConnico, file)2025-03-10T06:05:54Z NUUK, Greenland (AP) When U.S. President Donald Trump first suggested buying Greenland in 2019, people thought it was just a joke. No one is laughing now.Trumps interest in Greenland, restated vigorously soon after he returned to the White House in January, comes as part of an aggressively America First foreign policy platform that includes demands for Ukraine to hand over mineral rights in exchange for continued military aid, threats to take control of the Panama Canal, and suggestions that Canada should become the 51st U.S. state.Why Greenland?Increasing international tensions, global warming and the changing world economy have put Greenland at the heart of the debate over global trade and security, and Trump wants to make sure that the U.S. controls this mineral-rich country that guards the Arctic and North Atlantic approaches to North America. Who does Greenland belong to?Greenland is a self-governing territory of Denmark, a long-time U.S. ally that has rejected Trumps overtures. Denmark has also recognized Greenlands right to independence at a time of its choosing.Amid concerns about foreign interference and demands that Greenlanders must control their own destiny, the islands prime minister called an early parliamentary election for Tuesday.The worlds largest island, 80% of which lies above the Arctic Circle, is home to about 56,000 mostly Inuit people who until now have been largely ignored by the rest of the world. Why are other countries interested in Greenland?Climate change is thinning the Arctic ice, promising to create a northwest passage for international trade and reigniting the competition with Russia, China and other countries over access to the regions mineral resources.Let us be clear: we are soon entering the Arctic Century, and its most defining feature will be Greenlands meteoric rise, sustained prominence and ubiquitous influence, said Dwayne Menezes, managing director of the Polar Research and Policy Initiative.Greenland located on the crossroads between North America, Europe and Asia, and with enormous resource potential will only become more strategically important, with all powers great and small seeking to pay court to it. One is quite keen to go a step further and buy it.The following are some of the factors that are driving U.S. interest in Greenland.Arctic competitionFollowing the Cold War, the Arctic was largely an area of international cooperation. But climate change, the hunt for scarce resources and increasing international tensions following Russias invasion of Ukraine are once again driving competition in the region.Strategic importanceGreenland sits off the northeastern coast of Canada, with more than two-thirds of its territory lying within the Arctic Circle. That has made it crucial to the defense of North America since World War II, when the U.S. occupied Greenland to ensure that it didnt fall into the hands of Nazi Germany and to protect crucial North Atlantic shipping lanes. The U.S. has retained bases in Greenland since the war, and the Pituffik Space Base, formerly Thule Air Force Base, supports missile warning, missile defense and space surveillance operations for the U.S. and NATO. Greenland also guards part of what is known as the GIUK (Greenland, Iceland, United Kingdom) Gap, where NATO monitors Russian naval movements in the North Atlantic. Natural resourcesGreenland has large deposits of so-called rare earth minerals that are needed to make everything from computers and smartphones to the batteries, solar and wind technologies that will power the transition away from fossil fuels. The U.S. Geological Survey has also identified potential offshore deposits of oil and natural gas. Greenlanders are keen to develop the resources, but they have enacted strict rules to protect the environment. There are also questions about the feasibility of extracting Greenlands mineral wealth because of the regions harsh climate.Climate changeGreenlands retreating ice cap is exposing the countrys mineral wealth and melting sea ice is opening up the once-mythical Northwest Passage through the Arctic. Greenland sits strategically along two potential routes through the Arctic, which would reduce shipping times between the North Atlantic and Pacific and bypass the bottlenecks of the Suez and Panama canals. While the routes arent likely to be commercially viable for many years, they are attracting attention. Chinese interestIn 2018, China declared itself a near-Arctic state in an effort to gain more influence in the region. China has also announced plans to build a Polar Silk Road as part of its global Belt and Road Initiative, which has created economic links with countries around the world. Then-U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo rejected Chinas move, saying: Do we want the Arctic Ocean to transform into a new South China Sea, fraught with militarization and competing territorial claims? A Chinese-backed rare earth mining project in Greenland stalled after the local government banned uranium mining in 2021. IndependenceThe legislation that extended self-government to Greenland in 2009 also recognized the countrys right to independence under international law. Opinion polls show a majority of Greenlanders favor independence, though they differ on exactly when that should occur. The potential for independence raises questions about outside interference in Greenland that could threaten U.S. interests in the country.
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  • South Africas giant playwright Athol Fugard, whose searing works challenged apartheid, dies aged 92
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    Actress Amy Irving sits with actor-director-playwright Athol Fugard during rehearsals of the play "The Road to Mecca" on Feb. 29, 1988 in New York. (AP Photo/Mario Cabrera, File)2025-03-10T07:50:54Z CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) Athol Fugard, South Africas foremost dramatist who explored the pervasiveness of apartheid in such searing works as The Blood Knot and "Master Harold... and the Boys, has died. He was 92.The South African government confirmed Fugards death and said the country has lost one of its greatest literary and theatrical icons, whose work shaped the cultural and social landscape of our nation.Six of Fugards plays landed on Broadway, including two productions of Master Harold... and the Boys, in 1982 and 2003.Because Fugards best-known plays center on the suffering caused by the apartheid policies of South Africas white-minority government, some among Fugards audience abroad were surprised to find he was white himself.Master Harold... and the Boys is a Tony Award-nominated work set in a South African tea shop in 1950. It centers on the relationship between the son of the white owner and two Black servants who have served as surrogate parents. One rainy afternoon, the bonds between the characters are stressed to breaking point when the young man begins to abuse his elders. In plain words, just get on with your job, the boy tells one servant. My mother is right. Shes always warning me about allowing you to get too familiar. Well, this time youve gone too far. Its going to stop right now. Youre only a servant in here, and dont forget it. When it opened in Johannesburg in 1983 at the height of apartheid in the audience was anti-apartheid activist Desmond Tutu. I thought it was something for which you dont applaud. The first response is weeping, Tutu, who died in 2021, said after the final curtain. Its saying something we know, that weve said so often about what this country does to human relations. The Road to Mecca, with its three white characters, touches on apartheid of a different sort. It concerns an adventurous artist named Miss Helen, at odds with and cut off from the rigid and unyielding Afrikaners around her. Its her eccentric artwork that severs her from society and makes her the subject of a fight for control. A production opened in San Francisco in 2023, prompting the San Francisco Chronicles theater critic to note that its central concern how to deal with people who are aging and alone feels ripe for our own moment of declining birth rates and increasing life expectancy amid a fraying social safety net. Fugard once told an interviewer that the best theater in Africa would come from South Africa because the countrys daily tally of injustice and brutality has forced a maturity of thinking and feeling and an awareness of basic values I do not find equaled anywhere in Africa.Fugard was born in Middleburg in the semiarid Karoo on June 11, 1932. His father was an English-Irish man whose joy was playing jazz piano. His mother was Afrikaans, descended from South Africas early Dutch-German settlers, and earned the familys income by running a store.Fugard said his first trip into Johannesburgs Black enclave of Sophiatown since destroyed and replaced with a white residential area was a definitive event of my life. I first went in there as the result of an accident. I suddenly encountered township life. This ignited Fugards longstanding urge to write. He left the University of Cape Town just before he would have graduated in philosophy because I had a feeling that if I stayed I might be stuck into academia.Fugard became a target for the apartheid government and his passport was taken away for four years after he directed a Black theater workshop, The Serpent Players. Five workshop members were imprisoned on Robben Island, where South Africa kept political prisoners, including Nelson Mandela. Fugard and his family endured years of government surveillance; their mail was opened, their phones tapped, and their home subjected to midnight police searches.He hitchhiked through Africa in 1953 with South African poet Perseus Adams, and ended up working as a sailor, the only white seaman on his ship. Fugards theater experience was confined to acting in a school play until 1956, when he married actor Sheila Meiring and began concentrating on stage writing. He and Meiring later divorced. He married second wife Paula Fourie in 2016. He took a job in 1958 as a clerk with a Johannesburg Native Commissioners Court, where Black people who broke racial laws were sentenced, one every two minutes.We were absolutely broke. I needed a job and I needed information on the pass system, Fugard said. His job included witnessing the caning of lawbreakers. It was the darkest period of my life.He got some satisfaction in putting a small wrench in the works, by shuffling up the charge sheets, delaying proceedings enough for friends of the Black detainees to get them lawyers. Fugard wrote, directed and acted in his early productions. On the eve of the opening of A Lesson From Aloes, at Johannesburgs Market Theater, Fugard dismissed one of the three performers and took the role himself.Later in life, Fugard taught acting, directing and playwriting at the University of California, San Diego. In 2006, the film Tsotsi, based on his 1961 novel, won international awards, including the Oscar for foreign language film. He won a Tony Award for lifetime achievement in 2011.More recent plays include The Train Driver (2010) and The Bird Watchers (2011), which both premiered at the Fugard Theatre in Cape Town. As an actor, he appeared in the films The Killing Fields and Gandhi. In 2014, Fugard returned to the stage as an actor for the first time in 15 years in his own play, Shadow of the Hummingbird, at the Long Wharf in New Haven, Connecticut. Kennedy reported from New York. MARK KENNEDY Kennedy is a theater, TV, music, food and obit writer and editor for The Associated Press, as well as a critic for theater, movies and music. He is based in New York City. twitter mailto
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  • Meet the federal worker who went rogue: I hope that it lights a fire under people
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    Karen Ortiz, an administrative judge at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, poses for photos, Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)2025-03-10T04:17:40Z NEW YORK (AP) To billionaire Elon Musk and his cost-cutting team at the Department of Government Efficiency, Karen Ortiz may just be one of many faceless bureaucrats. But to some of her colleagues, she is giving a voice to those who feel they cant speak out.Ortiz is an administrative judge at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission -- the federal agency in charge of enforcing U.S. workplace anti-discrimination laws that has undergone tumultuous change since President Donald Trump took office. Like millions of other federal employees, Ortiz opened an ominous email on Jan. 28 titled Fork in the Road giving them the option to resign from their positions as part of the governments cost-cutting measures directed by Trump and carried out by DOGE under Musk, an unelected official.Her alarm grew when her supervisor directed administrative judges in her New York district office to pause all their current LGBTQ+ cases and send them to Washington for further review in order to comply with Trumps executive order declaring that the government would recognize only two immutable sexes male and female. Ortiz decried managements lack of action in response to the directive, which she said was antithetical to the EEOCs mission, and called upon some 185 colleagues in an email to resist complying with illegal mandates. But that email was mysteriously deleted, she said. The next day, after yet another frustrating Fork in the Road update, Ortiz decided to go big, emailing the EEOCs acting chair Andrea Lucas directly and copying more than 1,000 colleagues with the subject line, A Spoon is Better than a Fork. In it, Ortiz questioned Lucass fitness to serve as acting chair, much less hold a license to practice law. I know I take a great personal risk in sending out this message. But, at the end of the day, my actions align with what the EEOC was charged with doing under the law, Ortiz wrote. I will not compromise my ethics and my duty to uphold the law. I will not cower to bullying and intimidation. Ortiz is just one person, but her email represents a larger pushback against the Trump administrations sweeping changes to federal agencies amid an environment of confusion, anger and chaos. It is also Ortizs way of taking a stand against the leadership of a civil rights agency that last month moved to dismiss seven of its own cases representing transgender workers, marking a major departure from its prior interpretation of the law. Right after sending her mass email, Ortiz said she received a few supportive responses from colleagues -- and one calling her unprofessional. Within an hour, though, the message disappeared and she lost her ability to send any further emails.But it still made it onto the internet. The email was recirculated on Bluesky and it received more than 10,000 upvotes on Reddit after someone posted it with the comment, Wow I wish I had that courage. AN AMERICAN HERO, one Reddit user deemed Ortiz, a sentiment that was seconded by more than 2,000 upvoters. Who is this freedom fighter bringing on the fire? wrote another. The EEOC did not feel the same way. The agency revoked her email privileges for about a week and issued her a written reprimand for discourteous conduct.Contacted by The AP, a spokesperson for the EEOC said: We will refrain from commenting on internal communications and personnel matters. However, we would note that the agency has a long-standing policy prohibiting unauthorized all-employee emails, and all employees were reminded of that policy recently.A month later, Ortiz has no regrets.It was not really planned out, it was just from the heart, the 53-year-old told The Associated Press in an interview, adding that partisan politics have nothing to do with her objections and that the public deserves the EEOCs protection, including transgender workers. This is how I feel and Im not pulling any punches. And I will stand by what I wrote every day of the week, all day on Sunday. Ortiz said she never intended for her email to go beyond the EEOC, describing it as a love letter to her colleagues. But, she added, I hope that it lights a fire under people. Ortiz said she has received a ton of support privately in the month since sending her email, including a thank-you letter from a California retiree telling her to keep the faith. Open support among her EEOC colleagues beyond Reddit and Bluesky, however, has proven more elusive. I think people are just really scared, she said.William Resh, a University of Southern California Sol Price School of Public Policy professor who studies how administrative structure and political environments affect civil servants, weighed in on why federal workers may choose to say nothing even if they feel their mission is being undermined. We can talk pie in the sky, mission orientation and all these other things. But at the end of the day, people have a paycheck to bring home, and food to put on a table and a rent to pay, Resh said. The more immediate danger, he said, is the threat to ones livelihood, or inviting a managers ire. And so then thats where you get this kind of muted response on behalf of federal employees, that you dont see a lot of people speaking out within these positions because they dont want to lose their job, Resh said. Who would?Richard LeClear, a U.S. Air Force veteran and EEOC staffer who is retiring early at 64 to avoid serving under the Trump administration, said Ortizs email was spot on, but added that other colleagues who agreed with her may fear speaking out themselves.Retaliation is a very real thing, LeClear said.Ortiz, who has been a federal employee for 14 years and at the EEOC for six, said she isnt naive about the potential fallout. She has hired attorneys, and maintains that her actions are protected whistleblower activity. As of Friday, she still had a job but she is not a lifetime appointee and is aware that her health care, pension and source of income could all be at risk. Ortiz is nonetheless steadfast: If they fire me, Ill find another avenue to do this kind of work, and Ill be okay. They will have to physically march me out of the office.Many of Ortizs colleagues have children to support and protect, which puts them in a more difficult position than her to speak out, Ortiz acknowledged. She said her legal education and American citizenship also put her in a position to be able to make change.Her parents, who came to the United States from Puerto Rico in the 1950s with limited English skills, ingrained in her the value of standing up for others. Their firsthand experience with the Civil Rights Movement, and her own experience growing up in mostly white spaces in Garden City on Long Island, primed Ortiz to defend herself and others.Its in my DNA, she said. I will use every shred of privilege that I have to lean into this. Ortiz received her undergraduate degree at Columbia University, and her law degree at Fordham University. She knew she wanted to become a judge ever since her high school mock trial as a Supreme Court justice. Civil rights has been a throughline in her career, and Ortiz said she was super excited when she landed her job at the EEOC.This is how I wanted to finish up my career, she said. Well see if that happens.________The Associated Press women in the workforce and state government coverage receives financial support from Pivotal Ventures. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find APs standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org. CLAIRE SAVAGE Savage is a national reporter for the APs Business team. She covers women in the workforce and is based in Chicago. twitter instagram mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • AI made its way to vineyards. Heres how the technology is helping make your wine
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    Tyler Klick, Partner/Viticulturist of Redwood Empire Vineyard Management, looks up toward a solar panel while being interviewed about Lumo smart irrigation valves in a Cabernet Sauvignon vineyard during an interview in Geyserville, Calif., Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)2025-03-10T10:26:51Z LOS ANGELES (AP) When artificial intelligence-backed tractors became available to vineyards, Tom Gamble wanted to be an early adopter. He knew there would be a learning curve, but Gamble decided the technology was worth figuring out.The third-generation farmer bought one autonomous tractor. He plans on deploying its self-driving feature this spring and is currently using the tractors AI sensor to map his Napa Valley vineyard. As it learns each row, the tractor will know where to go once it is used autonomously. The AI within the machine will then process the data it collects and help Gamble make better-informed decisions about his crops what he calls precision farming.Its not going to completely replace the human element of putting your boot into the vineyard, and thats one of my favorite things to do, he said. But its going to be able to allow you to work more smartly, more intelligently and in the end, make better decisions under less fatigue. Gamble said he anticipates using the tech as much as possible because of economic, air quality and regulatory imperatives. Autonomous tractors, he said, could help lower his fuel use and cut back on pollution. As AI continues to grow, experts say that the wine industry is proof that businesses can integrate the technology efficiently to supplement labor without displacing a workforce. New agricultural tech like AI can help farmers to cut back on waste, and to run more efficient and sustainable vineyards by monitoring water use and helping determine when and where to use products like fertilizers or pest control. AI-backed tractors and irrigation systems, farmer say, can minimize water use by analyzing soil or vines, while also helping farmers to manage acres of vineyards by providing more accurate data on the health of a crop or what a seasons yield will be. Other facets of the wine industry have also started adopting the tech, from using generative AI to create custom wine labels to turning to ChatGPT to develop, label and price an entire bottle. I dont see anybody losing their job, because I think that a tractor operators skills are going to increase and as a result, and maybe theyre overseeing a small fleet of these machines that are out there, and theyll be compensated as a result of their increased skill level, he said.Farmers, Gamble said, are always evolving. There were fears when the tractor replaced horses and mules pulling plows, but that technology proved itself just like AI farming tech will, he said, adding that adopting any new tech always takes time.Companies like John Deere have started using the AI that wine farmers are beginning to adopt. The agricultural giant uses Smart Apply technology on tractors, for example, helping growers apply material for crop retention by using sensors and algorithms to sense foliage on grape canopies, said Sean Sundberg, business integration manager at John Deere.The tractors that use that tech then only spray where there are grapes or leaves or whatnot so that it doesnt spray material unnecessarily, he said. Last year, the company announced a project with Sonoma County Winegrowers to use tech to help wine grape growers maximize their yield. Tyler Klick, partner at Redwood Empire Vineyard Management, said his company has started automating irrigation valves at the vineyards it helps manage. The valves send an alert in the event of a leak and will automatically shut off if they notice an excessive water flow rate.That valve is actually starting to learn typical water use, Klick said. Itll learn how much water is used before the production starts to fall off.Klick said each valve costs roughly $600, plus $150 per acre each year to subscribe to the service.Our job, viticulture, is to adjust our operations to the climatic conditions were dealt, Klick said. I can see AI helping us with finite conditions.Angelo A. Camillo, a professor of wine business at Sonoma State University, said that despite excitement over AI in the wine industry, some smaller vineyards are more skeptical about their ability to use the technology. Small, family-owned operations, which Camillo said account for about 80% of the wine business in America, are slowly disappearing many dont have the money to invest in AI, he said. A robotic arm that helps put together pallets of wine, for example, can cost as much as $150,000, he said. For small wineries, theres a question mark, which is the investment. Then theres the education. Whos going to work with all of these AI applications? Where is the training? he said.There are also potential challenges with scalability, Camillo added. Drones, for example, could be useful for smaller vineyards that could use AI to target specific crops that have a bug problem, he said it would be much harder to operate 100 drones in a 1,000 acre vineyard while also employing the IT workers who understand the tech. I dont think a person can manage 40 drones as a swarm of drones, he said. So theres a constraint for the operators to adopt certain things.However, AI is particularly good at tracking a crops health including how the plant itself is doing and whether its growing enough leaves while also monitoring grapes to aid in yield projections, said Mason Earles, an assistant professor who leads the Plant AI and Biophysics Lab at UC Davis.Diseases or viruses can sneak up and destroy entire vineyards, Earles said, calling it an elephant in the room across the wine industry. The process of replanting a vineyard and getting it to produce well takes at least five years, he said. AI can help growers determine which virus is affecting their plants, he said, and whether they should rip out some crops immediately to avoid losing their entire vineyard. Earles, who is also cofounder of the AI-powered farm management platform Scout, said his company uses AI to process thousands of images in hours and extract data quickly something that would be difficult by hand in large vineyards that span hundreds of acres. Scouts AI platform then counts and measures the number of grape clusters as early as when a plant is beginning to flower in order to forecast what a yield will be.The sooner vintners know how much yield to expect, the better they can dial in their wine making process, he added.Predicting what yields youre going to have at the end of the season, no one is that good at it right now, he said. But its really important because it determines how much labor contract youre going to need and the supplies youll need for making wine.Earles doesnt think the budding use of AI in vineyards is freaking farmers out. Rather, he anticipates that AI will be used more frequently to help with difficult field labor and to discern problems in vineyards that farmers need help with.Theyve seen people trying to sell them tech for decades. Its hard to farm; its unpredictable compared to most other jobs, he said. The walking and counting, I think people would have said a long time ago, I would happily let a machine take over. SARAH PARVINI Parvini covers artificial intelligence for The Associated Press. She is based in Los Angeles. mailto
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  • Tibetans scuffle with police outside the Chinese Embassy in India as they mark uprising anniversary
    apnews.com
    Police try to detain protesting Tibetan exiles during a protest outside Chinese embassy to mark the 1959 uprising in Tibet against the Chinese rule on this day, in New Delhi,India, Monday, March, 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup)2025-03-10T09:58:34Z NEW DELHI (AP) Dozens of Tibetan protesters clashed with police outside the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi on Monday as Tibetans living in exile marked the 66th anniversary of their uprising against China that was crushed by Chinese forces. As in past years, police blocked the protesters from entering the embassy and briefly detained some of them after wrestling them to the ground.Hundreds also marched in the north Indian town of Dharamshala, the seat of the exiled Tibetan government and home of Dalai Lama, their 89-year-old spiritual leader. Separately, about a hundred Tibetan women gathered at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi, an area designated for protests close to Parliament.The protesters shouted anti-China slogans, carried Tibetan flags and played the national anthems of Tibet and India.India considers Tibet to be part of China, although it hosts the Tibetan exiles. The 1959 independence uprising was quelled by the Chinese army, forcing Dalai Lama and his followers into exile in India. Many had their faces painted in colors of the Tibetan national flag. The demonstrators observed a minute of silence to remember Tibetans who lost their lives in the struggle against China. Monks, activists, nuns and schoolchildren marched across the town with banners reading, Free Tibet and Remember, Resist, Return. Penpa Tsering the president of the Central Tibetan Administration, as the exiled Tibetan government calls itself accused Chinas leadership of carrying out a deliberate and dangerous strategy to eliminate the very identity of the Tibetan people. This marks the darkest and most critical period in the history of Tibet, Tsering told the gathering. As we commemorate the Tibetan National Uprising Day, we honor our brave martyrs, and express solidarity with our brothers and sisters inside Tibet who continue to languish under the oppressive Chinese government. The Tibetan government-in-exile in India accuses China of denying the most fundamental human rights to people in Tibet and trying to expunge the Tibetan identity. China claims Tibet has been part of its territory for centuries, but the Tibetans say the Himalayan region was virtually independent until China occupied it in 1950.The Dalai Lama denies Chinas claim that he is a separatist and says he only advocates substantial autonomy and protection of Tibets native Buddhist culture.___Bhatia reported from Dharamshala, India.
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  • Trump loves the Gilded Age and its tariffs. It was a great time for the rich but not for the many
    apnews.com
    U.S. President Donald Trump, right, chats with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Nov. 9, 2017. (AP Photo/Andy Wong, File)2025-03-10T11:29:56Z WASHINGTON (AP) In President Donald Trumps idealized framing, the United States was at its zenith in the 1890s, when top hats and shirtwaists were fashionable and typhoid fever often killed more soldiers than combat. It was the Gilded Age, a time of rapid population growth and transformation from an agricultural economy toward a sprawling industrial system, when poverty was widespread while barons of phenomenal wealth, like John D. Rockefeller and J.P. Morgan, held tremendous sway over politicians who often helped boost their financial empires. We were at our richest from 1870 to 1913. Thats when we were a tariff country. And then they went to an income tax concept, Trump said days after taking office. Its fine. Its OK. But it would have been very much better. The desire to recreate that era is fueled by Trumps fondness for tariffs and his admiration for the nations 25th president, William McKinley, a Republican who was in office from 1897 until being assassinated in 1901. Though Trumps early implementation of tariffs has been inconsistent with him imposing them, then pulling many back he has been steadfast in endorsing the idea of 21st century protectionism. There have even been suggestions that higher import tariffs on the countrys foreign trading partners could eventually replace the federal income tax. Experts on the era say Trump is idealizing a time rife with government and business corruption, social turmoil and inequality. They argue hes also dramatically overestimating the role tariffs played in stimulating an economy that grew mostly due to factors other than the U.S. raising taxes on imported goods. And Gilded Age policies, they maintain, have virtually nothing to do with how trade works in a globalized, modern economy. The most astonishing thing for historians is that nobody in the Gilded Age economy except for the very rich wanted to live in the Gilded Age economy, said Richard White, a history professor emeritus at Stanford University. Trump says high tariffs and low interest rates, like those the U.S. had after the Civil War, can hastily pay down todays federal debt and fatten government coffers while boosting domestic manufacturers and enticing foreign producers to move to the U.S. Its not a new theme for him. I am a Tariff Man, Trump declared in a 2018 online post. Campaigning for a second term last fall, Trump said of the McKinley era, We were a very wealthy country, and were going to be doing that now. Today, he says tariff is his favorite word and represents a very powerful weapon that politicians havent used because they were either dishonest, stupid or paid off in some other form. The White House has rushed to raise tariffs on imports from China and on aluminum and steel made abroad while promising that import levies will soon increase on the European Union, as well as new, foreign-made cars, microchips and pharmaceuticals. Trump also increased tariffs on Canada and Mexico, though he later delayed most of them. He has similar plans for potentially every country the U.S. does business with, saying broad reciprocal import taxes are coming April 2nd and will be consistent with levies other countries charge U.S. manufacturers to export their goods. Dartmouth College economics professor Douglas Irwin said Trump advocating for modern tariffs by pointing to the 1890s is flawed.We did grow rapidly in the late 19th century, he said. But its a stretch to attribute it to tariffs.The president is more accurate when he paints with a broader brush and says, Look, this entire period with fiscal surpluses we grew rapidly. Thats true of this 40-year period, added Irwin, author of Clashing over Commerce: A History of U.S. Trade Policy.But, when you dig down to the details and say, We raised tariffs in this instance, thats where things go awry. Or the story doesnt quite hold together as well, Irwin said. Was America really at its wealthiest from 1870 to 1913? The Gilded Age featured extraordinary wealth for a small class of people that largely obscured rampant poverty for many other Americans. The name comes from a 1873 novel, co-written by Mark Twain, which satirized the greed and deceit of the eras government and politicians. Many contemporary leaders were openly influenced by the famed robber barons, builders of monopolies who stoked industrialization while shaping the way millions of other Americans lived and worked. Rockefeller became the exemplar of the era when his Standard Oil empire made him the worlds first billionaire. Morgan was an investment banker and legendary financier of industrial interests. Cornelius Vanderbilt amassed a breathtaking fortune through shipping and railroads, while steel magnate Andrew Carnegie was also a dedicated philanthropist who argued the rich had a moral responsibility to use their wealth to better a deeply unequal society. Overall, the U.S. economy grew rapidly between 1870 and 1913, though there were dips and recessions, too. Some historians call it the second industrial revolution because of major increases in manufacturing and factory output. New industries like steel, electricity and petrochemicals boomed, as did sectors including construction and machinery. But White said those years were marked by erratic economic growth, and those upturns were mostly fueled by millions of immigrants joining the U.S. workforce. Indeed, the number of U.S. residents jumped from 38.5 million-plus in 1870 to more than 106 million by 1920. Another factor was the seizing of land from Native Americans during U.S. expansion west. That meant exploiting natural resources along the way including gold, silver, timber, grazing and farmland, as well as coal, copper and oil, especially after the discovery of the Spindletop geyser in Texas in 1901. Average wages rose, but so did inequality, with almost no social safety net. Working conditions were often so abhorrent, meanwhile, that the labor movement began gaining strength, as did progressive politicians clamoring for breaking up monopolies. This is the height of antimonopoly, political turmoil, the rise of labor in the United States, said White, author of The Republic for Which it Stands: The United States during Reconstruction and the Gilded Age, 1865-1896. And the reason was, people did not regard this as a particularly healthy economy.In fact, despite the growth, standards of living fell, including life expectancy and key health indicators, White said. Could tariffs replace the federal income tax? The modern federal income tax came into fruition with the ratification of 16th Amendment in 1913, ending the 43-year era when Trump says the country was wealthiest. He has not expressly detailed plans to end a national income tax since retaking the White House, and he cant do so without an act of Congress and upending the federal budget in almost incalculable ways. In fiscal year 2024, the federal government collected about $4 trillion in individual income tax and tax withholdings, according to the Treasury Department, compared with customs duties accounting for around $76.4 billion.But the president nonetheless signed a Day 1 executive order calling for the creation of the External Revenue Service to collect tariffs, duties, and other foreign trade-related revenues. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick suggested Trumps goal there was to abolish the Internal Revenue Service and let all the outsiders pay.Republican strategist Karl Rove, author of The Triumph of William McKinley: Why the Election of 1896 Still Matters, has defended the notion of low, reciprocal tariffs on U.S. foreign trading partners. But Rove also says that tariffs cant realistically replace a federal income tax. He noted in a February op-ed that from 1863 to 1913 tariffs brought in nearly half the U.S. governments revenue but last year they accounted for less than 2% of federal revenue. Why does Trump so revere McKinley? In his inaugural address, Trump called McKinley a great president and natural business man, who he said made our country very rich through tariffs and through talent. Hours later, he signed an executive order overturning an Obama administration directive and renaming Americas tallest peak Mount McKinley. But todays economy is immeasurably different than in McKinleys time.Global communication is now virtually instantaneous. Back then, communication was cumbersome and products were often fully assembled before being exported. Shipping could take months. Todays goods often contain raw material components or parts that need to be assembled that are sourced all over the world and then built in places different from where they are ultimately sold. The disruption of such carefully calibrated, multinational logistical systems by the coronavirus pandemic was a key reason why everything from leather couches to flooring to microchips for new cars suddenly became scarce. And that helped feed record inflation beginning in 2021 that continues to dog the U.S. economy today. Robert W. Merry, author of President McKinley: Architect of the American Century, said McKinley was the leading voice on tariffs at a time when they dominated policy discussions because they were the federal governments chief source of revenue, given that no income tax existed. But Trump differs with McKinley in using tariffs as a bludgeon to get other countries to do our bidding on efforts that have nothing to do with revenue, or economic matters or trade. The president has done that with Canada and Mexico, using tariff threats to try to force those countries to take harder lines against drug smuggling and illegal immigration. Nobody would have even considered such a thing in McKinleys day, Merry said.McKinley champions the Tariff Act of 1890McKinley grew up in Canton, in northeast Ohio, son of an iron foundries owner who was especially sensitive to overseas competition. He won a seat in Congress representing a steel-producing district and so promoted tariffs that one humor magazine used a cartoon on its cover to unflatteringly dub him the Napoleon of Protectionism. As chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, McKinley championed the Tariff Act of 1890, which set the then-highest import tax in U.S. history, raising taxes to 49.5% on 1,500-plus items everything from glass to tin plates to cayenne pepper. The results were quickly poor for the economy and for Republicans. It led to an increase in prices, a kind of inflation, even before the bill took effect, Merry said. The argument was, it was carte blanche for retailers and industrialists who basically jacked up their prices unnecessarily. Americans dealt Republicans landslide congressional defeats during the 1890 midterms, voting scores of incumbents out of office including McKinley. The tariff fallout also helped Grover Cleveland win the White House for Democrats in 1892, after he lost his reelection the previous cycle.McKinley rebounded, though. He was elected Ohio governor and eventually won the presidency in 1896 on a campaign slogan Trump has repeated: I am a tariff man standing on a tariff platform. His campaign also got boosts from big donations by major industrialists like Rockefeller, who were strongly opposed to McKinleys populist Democratic opponent, William Jennings Bryan.Just as in McKinleys time, todays business titans have worked to ingratiate themselves to Trump. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg was among the technology leaders who traveled to Trumps Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, where Elon Musk, the worlds richest man, was already a fixture, before Inauguration Day. Meta, Google and Microsoft joined other major firms donating $1 million to Trumps inaugural committee, while Amazon Prime Video is set to distribute a documentary about first lady Melania Trump. Some business interests are hoping Trump will usher in a new era of antitrust, in which the government does less to block highly profitable corporate consolidation. What was the great tariff commission? Ignoring some of the political problems tariffs created for Republicans in his favored era, Trump instead has focused on repeating how import taxes after the Civil War helped the U.S. pay off debts it incurred during the fighting and eventually achieve government budget surpluses. From 1866 to 1893, the U.S. ran nearly three straight decades of budget surpluses, fueled largely by tariffs and high domestic taxes on things like alcohol and tobacco, as well as the sale of federal lands. Paying down debt helped lower interest rates. Trump has even begun trumpeting what he calls the great tariff commission of 1887, which the president says was tasked with helping the government spend all those surpluses. Irwin said there was a tariff commission, but it was actually convened five years earlier in 1882. It also recommended reducing tariffs, which Congress didnt do.Its hard to say it was a political success. Its hard to say it was an economic success, Irwin said. Because we spent a lot of the 1890s with double digit unemployment.Thats because federal budget surpluses eventually began to effectively decrease the U.S. money supply and cause deflation. Meanwhile, higher tariffs increased the cost of living for many Americans, which, coupled with a financial crisis in Great Britain, helped trigger the Panic of 1893. That resulted in railroad bankruptcies, a stock market crash and a crushing recession in which unemployment reached 25% nationally. Then-President Clevelands lack of solutions was a key factor in voters turning on him and the Democrats and toward McKinley three years later. McKinley also differed with Trump on key issuesTrump has used his opening weeks back in office to champion U.S. expansionism in ways unseen in the modern era. Hes refused to rule out U.S. military forces seizing back control of the Panama Canal and suggested buying Greenland from Denmark, making Canada the 51st state and even working with Israel to put American developers in charge of turning the Gaza Strip into a seaside Riviera.There are echoes of McKinley there, because, as president, he moved to expand the reach of the U.S. The Philippines, Guam and Puerto Rico became American territories as part of the treaty that ended the Spanish-American War in December 1898.But the comparison is not so easy. McKinley was also skeptical of U.S. expansionism, even writing himself a note at the start of the war and carrying it as a reminder, Merry said. While we are conducting war, and until its conclusion, we must keep all we get, the note said. When the war is over, we must keep what we want.Shortly after winning reelection in 1900, meanwhile, McKinley began rethinking tariffs, as a stronger and still-growing U.S. manufacturing base made him more appreciative of foreign markets. McKinley began to see that, if we were going to be able to sell our goods overseas as we were going to need to do because we would have more goods than wed have a market for we were going to have to accept goods as well, Merry said. He said that McKinley gave a speech in Buffalo, New York, outlining this concept of reciprocity, which was: Im prepared to bring down tariffs. Even me. Even William McKinley. That was his first big initiative after being reelected, Merry said. In that speech on Sept. 5, 1901, McKinley said, A policy of goodwill and friendly trade relations will prevent reprisals. Reciprocity treaties are in harmony with the spirit of the times. Measures of retaliation are not.Trump is now promising that similar, reciprocal tariffs will take effect next month. But actually successfully pulling that off will be another difference from McKinley, who never got the chance. The day after his Buffalo speech, McKinley was shot by anarchist Leon Czolgosz. He died on Sept. 14, 1901. WILL WEISSERT Weissert covers national politics and the White House for The Associated Press. He is based in Washington. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Photographers Are on a Mission to Fix Wikipedia's Famously Bad Celebrity Portraits
    www.404media.co
    Wikipedia is one of the most valuable repositories of information ever created by humanity. Having your own Wikipedia page has become a kind of status symbolproof that someone is important enough to enter the historical record. But, ironically, having your face in a Wikipedia page is often not flattering at all.In fact, Wikipedia portraits, often included in Wikipedia articles about celebrities, are so famously bad that theres an Instagram page dedicated to them. Take the Wikipedia portraits of American actor Jay Olcutt Sanders performing an ancient Greek play in 2009, or English footballer Kyle Bartley with what looks to be a referees finger in his mouth.Lots of portraits on Wikipedia are also many years old. Comedian Joe Pescis Wikipedia photo, for example, is from 2009. Jeanne Tripplehorn, who starred in Criminal Minds and also won an Emmy for her portrayal of Jackie Kennedy, has a Wikipedia photo from 1992.This portrait problem stems from Wikipedias mission to provide free reliable information. All media on the site must be openly licensed, so that anyone can use it free of charge. That, in turn, means that most photos of notable people on the site are of notably poor quality.No professional photographers ever have their photos on Wikipedia, because they want to make money from the photos, said Jay Dixit, a writing professor and amateur Wikipedia photographer. Its actually the norm that most celebrities have poor photos on Wikipedia, if they have photos at all. Its just some civilian at an airport being like, Oh my god, its Pete Davidson, click with an iPhone.Dixit is part of a team of volunteer photographers, called WikiPortraits, thats trying to fix that problem.Its been in the back of our minds for quite a while now, said Kevin Payravi, one of WikiPortraits cofounders. Last year, finally, we decided to make this a reality, and we got a couple of credentials for Sundance 2024 [a major film festival]. We sent a couple photographers there, we set up a portrait studio, and that was our first organized effort here in the U.S. to take good quality photos of people for Wikipedia.Since last January, WikiPortraits photographers have covered around 10 global festivals and award ceremonies, and taken nearly 5,000 freely-licensed photos of celebrity attendees. And the celebrity attendees are often quite excited about it. Dixit, for example, found Jeremy Strong of Succession at a New York showing of the new The Apprentice and asked to take a new headshot of him for Wikipedia.His publicist said no, Dixit said. But Jeremy said, Wait, youre from Wikipedia? For the love of God, please take down that photo. Youd be doing me a service. So he stood and posed, and I got a shot of him. Strongs old photo was from 2014.WikiPortraits photos are currently used on Wikipedia articles in over 120 languages, and theyre viewed up to 80 million times per month from those pages alone. In January, for example, Payravi said that over 1,500 WikiPortraits photos were used on articles that collectively received 140 million views. Many WikiPortraits photos have also been used by a variety of news outlets around the world, including CNN Brasil, Times of Israel, and multiple non-English-language smaller news organizations.Its become sort of a mini photo agency that is accessible for organizations that cant afford Getty [Images], said Jennifer 8. Lee, another WikiPortraits cofounder, referring to one of the biggest stock and news photo agencies in the world. WikiPortraits photographers both run temporary photo studios at events for celebrities to come have their photos taken, and roam red carpets to snap candids.Our priority is, of course, Wikipedia, Payravi said. Well often check to see existing coverage on Wikipedia. If were at a film festival, and we see people who have a Wikipedia article, but dont have a photo, thats going to become our priority.Sriya Sarkar, a videographer by trade who has covered three festivals for WikiPortraits, said that taking photos of underrepresented people was also a major goal.Kevin and Jenny are constantly trying to find ways to address the diversity blind spots that are in Wikipedia and helping to correct that, Sarkar said. We need more high quality portraits of notable figures in the public domain, and of course, most people of color who are notable figures in the public domain are not represented in Wikipedia. Its not just about photos. The diversity angle is a really important reason why this project is being done.But not being an official news or photo agency means WikiPortraits sometimes faces problems getting media credentials to cover events.The Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing, for example, last year featured a Native American woman who builds robots that teach Indigenous languages. Lee thought she would be a good candidate for a new Wikipedia page, and applied to the conference to take her photo, but was rejected on the basis of the conference only accepting editorial media.I dont think Wikimedia is traditional press, but I do consider it media, Lee said. I was like, Are you kidding me?Other events were often more willing to grant some form of press credentials.Wikipedia itself is a very big brand name, Payravi said. Oftentimes when we apply for credentials, they ask us, Whats your circulation? They ask that because theyre expecting a news publication or a magazineand then we say several billion, so theyre often pretty willing to credential us.Funding poses another main challenge. Photographers must already own a professional-quality camera, and usually have to cover the cost of getting to events and at least part of their lodging. Although WikiPortraits sometimes receives rapid grants from the Wikimedia Foundation and private donors to cover costs, Payravi said he still likes to run a tight ship.But over 30 people have taken on the job, and for some of them, its deeply personal. Sarkar grew up hearing about the Jaipur Literature Festival, and this past January got enough funding from the Wikimedia Foundation to make the trip and cover it for WikiPortraits.I got to take photos, yes, but I also got to hear from diplomats and thought leaders and culture makers from my culture, Sarkar said. That meant a lot to meto be able to bring these people to an audience that may not be able to reach them, even if its just through a photo. Wikipedia has a lot of space to expand and really diversify their database, and I think by taking photos and going to these events, its helpful for both the Wikipedia community and obviously all the millions of people who use them.In 2024, WikiPortraits focused largely on film festivals. Payravi said this year he wanted to cover a wider variety of events. That includes events like the Jaipur Literature Festival and CES Las Vegas, a major tech conference, that WikiPortraits photographers had covered in January.This is cheesy, but a pictures worth a thousand words, Payravi said. The picture you see that comes up first in Google results is Wikipediathats the thing people are going to see first and recognize you as. I think its very important for people to have a good photo of themselves for their online presence. And its a really fun way for an amateur photographer like me to both give back and also get to see my photographs used and showcased. I hope its also good for the people were photographing.
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  • Young people who aspired to government service dismayed by Trump ending the federal fellows program
    apnews.com
    Sydney Smith, who lost her job due to DOGE cuts, stands in front of the Sydney Yates building that houses the Forest Service on Thursday, March. 6, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/John McDonnell)2025-03-10T12:02:33Z WASHINGTON (AP) A young economist who had uprooted her life for civil service. A fierce housing advocate terminated just before buying her first home. A semifinalist whose dreams were dashed before they materialized.For decades, the Presidential Management Fellows program was seen as a building block for the civil service with the expectation that the few who earned the position would one day become leaders in the federal workforce. Now the road ahead is uncertain. Hundreds of the fellows have been terminated or placed on administrative leave amid a nationwide slashing of the federal workforce.One of President Donald Trumps executive orders ended the program, which was created in 1978 to entice highly qualified workers with advanced degrees to join the federal government.Trumps Republican administration had ordered agencies to lay off nearly all probationary employees, potentially affecting hundreds of thousands of workers in one fell swoop. That included recent classes of the fellows program, which has a two-year probationary period. Fellows had persevered through an intense selection process that included multiple tests and evaluations as well as a blind interview. The agency website said about 10% of applicants are accepted, although that number has been recently as low as just 3%. Charles Conyers, an Office of Personnel Management retiree who was a fellow in the class of 2003, said he was saddened and puzzled about the administration eliminating a program that brought to the government some of the brightest minds in America. He said losing their skills and ending a program that attracted and groomed exceptional future leaders was tragic. While many fellows affected by the job cuts were reluctant to speak on the record, several did. As a group, they said they loved their jobs and see federal civil service as a way to serve their country. All would welcome, if given a chance, the opportunity to get back to work and use their expertise. An incredible brain drainJenn Kauffman, who has a background in public health and labor studies, was a semifinalist for the fellows program this year and had been waiting to hear if she would be accepted. As layoffs were announced, she began to worry if it would continue.I worked really hard and wanted that satisfaction to see it through, she said.On Feb. 19, during the week finalists would have been named, the Trump administration announced an executive order cutting the program.Kauffman, 45, said she was crushed by the decision and worries that the mass layoffs and dissolution of the fellows program will forever change public service.Its so easy to decimate something but so much harder to rebuild, she said. And I worry that the incredibly talented people who may have been my cohort or colleagues are going to go elsewhere, and there will be an incredible brain drain. Its such a loss for the American people. At the Forest Service, a perfect fitSydney Smith, 28, said many of the fellows were shocked at being let go because they came in to the government with ideas on how to make it more efficient.Smith studied chemistry as an undergraduate student at Willamette University in Oregon before going on to study accounting at George Washington University. She heard about the presidential fellows program but was skeptical she would get in because of the low acceptance rate.After she made it as a finalist in 2023, she started working for the U.S. Forest Service as an accountant. Shes a backpacker who loves the outdoors and is passionate about making public lands accessible. It was a perfect fit.Now Smiths goal is to finish the CPA exams, something she was doing to make herself even more qualified for federal service.Im hopeful that in the future that there will be room for me in the government, she said. I dont know what that would look like, but I am hopeful that it still exists. A high school dream derailedMcKenzie Hartman, 26, was an economist for the IRS research division in Ogden, Utah, when she received an email Feb. 19 that she should return to the office with all her equipment.The next day, a manager collected her equipment and walked her out. On the way home, Hartman took a wrong turn because her mind was elsewhere.It felt surreal, she said. I had planned on working for the federal government since high school.Hartman lost access to her offices video conferencing software and couldnt join her colleagues for her own goodbye gathering. She had to call in instead. Her termination letter came the following weekend.Its crazy to get a letter terminating you for performance when everyone around you is saying incredible things about your performance, Hartman said.Since then, she has been applying for jobs and embarked on a road trip with her partner through several national parks, where shes seen protests against the Trump administrations cuts.For a lot of us, there is a question on whether well return to federal service, she said. Many of us would like to, and this was what we wanted for our careers, but its demoralizing. A surprise, gut-wrenching terminationBianca Nelson, 31, had been working for the Department of Housing and Urban Development in the unit she calls the front door of HUD. She never planned to leave. On Feb. 14, she got an email that she was terminated, effective immediately.Nelson and her partner were planning to buy their first home that month their dream apartment. Now, theyve had to lean on savings to keep them afloat. She called it gut-wrenching.She had to forward the termination email to her boss, who had not been told she or others would be fired. Days later, she picked up her belongings, including a bell given to her at a New York City Housing Authority groundbreaking ceremony a memento representing her love for her work.Since then, she has spent her days organizing paperwork for unemployment and insurance, taking networking calls, volunteering with her union, organizing a resource fair for other fired federal workers in her area and volunteering with housing advocacy organizations.Ending the program, she said, is closing a pipeline to future leaders.Worrying about those who need helpMadeleine Parkers fellowship began in September 2023, one month after she finished her doctorate degree in city and regional planning from the University of California, Berkeley.Parker, 32, chose to work in housing because of its importance in offering families stability. She said she had hoped to continue working for the federal government.Its been hard to step back from that, she said.She is trying to strategize on what comes next while worrying about the people who need the help. Theres the personal impact of my own job, but I have this immense concern about the impacts on the people we serve, from the programs I worked on and that my colleagues worked on, from affordable housing development to disaster recovery, she said.We made a differenceJuliane Alfen, 25, left her workplace at the U.S. Agency for International Development in tears, exiting to cheers from supporters who protested the abrupt way one of the worlds preeminent aid organizations had been decimated.A 2023 fellow, her goal was to build a life and career around federal service.Alfen learned of the fellowship through her graduate school program in international affairs at the University of California, San Diego. The day she learned shed made it to finalist, she said, I literally screamed and called my mom on the phone. There had been more than 10,000 initial applicants.Now, when she looks at her LinkedIn account, everyone is job hunting. She said she would love the opportunity to return to USAID, though the prospects for that are uncertain given the Trump administrations gutting of the agency through his adviser Elon Musks Department of Government Efficiency and halting its humanitarian work.I feel, Alfen said, like we made a difference.___Fernando reported from Chicago.
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  • Columbia Protestor Arrested by ICE Moved to Louisiana Detention Facility
    www.404media.co
    Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University protester who was detained by ICE on Saturday, has been moved to a detention facility in Louisiana, according to ICEs detainee locator system. Khalil was a key part of Columbia students protests last year against Israels indiscriminate bombardment of Gaza in response to the October 7 attacks. He is a green card holding legal permanent resident of the U.S. and has not been charged with a crime.The news follows Khalils attorney initially being told he was being detained in a New Jersey facility, but after his wife went to visit him, found that Khalil was not there, according to the Associated Press.The locator system says Khalil is being held in the Jena/LaSalle Detention Facility. It is owned and operated by the Geo Group, a long-time ICE contractor. Previous research found the Jena/LaSalle Detention Facility received the largest number of sexual and physical abuse complaints filed to ICEs oversight body.Image: Screenshot of the ICE detainee locator system.ICE confirmed Khalils arrest in a post to X on Sunday, writing in support of President Trumps executive orders prohibiting anti-Semitism, and in coordination with the Department of State, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Arrested Mahmoud Khalil, a former Columbia University graduate student. Khalil led activities aligned to Hamas, a designated terrorist organization. ICE did not explain or provide evidence for how Khalil was aligned to Hamas.Secretary of State Marco Rubio also posted to X saying we will be revoking the visas and/or green cards of Hamas supporters in America so they can be deported.Do you know anything else about Khalil's case? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at +44 20 8133 5190. Otherwise, send me an email at joseph@404media.co.Khalils attorney Amy Greer said she spoke on the phone with one of the ICE agents during Khalils arrest on Saturday, the Associated Press reported. The ICE agent said they were acting on State Department orders to revoke Khalils student visa. When Greer said that Khalil is a legal permanent resident with a green card, the ICE agent said they were revoking that instead, the Associated Press added.Last Spring protestors at Columbia set up a tent encampment on university grounds to protest the mass killing of Palestinians by Israel, often with the aid of U.S. weapons. Those protests ended when a large police presence entered the university and forcibly removed the protesters. Khalil acted as a negotiator for students as they bargained with the university to end the tent encampment, the Associated Press added.On Friday a group of government agencies said they had cancelled $400 million in federal grants and contracts with Columbia University over what they described as the universitys continued inaction in the face of persistent harassment of Jewish students.
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  • More than 30 nations will participate in Paris planning talks on a security force for Ukraine
    apnews.com
    Ukrainians hold Ukrainian and European flag as the Eiffel Tower is illuminated with the colors of Ukraine to mark the third anniversary of Russia's invasion of the country, in Paris, Monday, Feb. 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena, file)2025-03-10T13:27:06Z PARIS (AP) Military officials from more than 30 nations will take part in Paris talks on the creation of an international security force for Ukraine, a French military official said Monday.Such an international force would aim to dissuade Russia from launching another offensive after any ceasefire in Ukraine comes into effect. The long list of participants in Tuesdays discussions will also include Asian and Oceania nations that will join remotely, the French official said. The international makeup of the meeting offers an indication of how broadly France and Britain which are working together on plans for the force are casting their net as they aim to build what the French official described as a coalition of nations able and willing to be part of an effort to safeguard Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire.The French military official spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to discuss the blueprint for the force that is shrouded in secrecy and the Paris talks that will consider it. The force being envisaged by France and Britain would aim to reassure Ukraine and deter another large-scale Russian offensive after any ceasefire, the official said. It could include heavy weaponry and weapons stockpiles that could be rushed within hours or days to aid in Ukraines defense in the event of a Russian attack that shatters any truce, the official said. The French-British blueprint will be presented to military officials from more than 30 nations in the first part of Tuesdays talks, the official said. The talks second part will include more precise and concrete discussions where the participants will be invited to say whether and how their militaries might be able to contribute, the official said.Its not, This is what we need, the official said. Its more, What are you bringing to the pot?The official stressed, however, that the ultimate decision on whether nations take part in the force would be taken at a political level, by government leaders. Chiefs of staff or, in Canadas case, their representative from nearly all of the 32 nations of the NATO military alliance will attend the Paris discussions. Three NATO nations will be absent. They are Croatia and Montenegro, which were invited but didnt respond, and the United States, the official said.The official said the United States wasnt invited because European nations want to demonstrate that they can take responsibility for a large part of the post-ceasefire security framework for Ukraine.Also attending will be the chiefs of staff of Ireland and Cyprus and a representative from Austria all nations that are not NATO members but are in the European Union.Australia and New Zealand, which are Commonwealth nations, as well as Japan and South Korea, will listen into the talks remotely, the official said. Ukraine will be represented by a military official who is also a member of the countrys security and defense council.
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  • Supreme Court will take up state bans on conversion therapy for LGBTQ+ children, in a Colorado case
    apnews.com
    The Supreme Court is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington, Dec. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)2025-03-10T13:37:41Z WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court agreed Monday in a case from Colorado to decide whether state and local governments can enforce laws banning conversion therapy for LGBTQ+ children.The conservative-led court is taking up the case amid actions by President Donald Trump targeting transgender people, including a ban on military service and an end to federal funding for gender-affirming care for transgender minors.The justices also have heard arguments in a Tennessee case over whether state bans on treating transgender minors violate the Constitution. But they have yet to issue a decision.Colorado is among roughly half the states that prohibit the practice of trying to change a persons sexual orientation or gender identity through counseling.The issue is whether the law violates the speech rights of counselors. Defenders of such laws argue that they regulate the conduct of professionals who are licensed by the state. The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver upheld the state law. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta has struck down local local bans in Florida.In 2023, the court had turned away a similar challenge, despite a split among federal appeals courts that had weighed state bans and come to differing decisions. At the time, three justices, Samuel Alito, Brett Kavanaugh and Clarence Thomas, said they would have taken on the issue. It takes four justices to grant review. The nine-member court does not typically reveal how justices vote at this stage of a case so its unclear who might have provided the fourth vote. The case will be argued in the courts new term, which begins in October. The appeal on behalf of Kaley Chiles, a counselor in Colorado Springs, was filed by Alliance Defending Freedom, the conservative legal organization that has appeared frequently at the court in recent years in cases involving high-profile social issues. One of those cases was a 5-4 decision in 2018 in which the justices ruled that California could not force state-licensed anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers to provide information about abortion.Chiles lawyers leaned heavily on that decision in asking the court to take up her case. They wrote that Chiles doesnt seek to cure clients of same-sex attractions or to change clients sexual orientation.In arguing for the court to reject the appeal, lawyers for Colorado wrote that lawmakers acted to regulate professional conduct, based on overwhelming evidence that efforts to change a childs sexual orientation or gender identity are unsafe and ineffective.___Follow the APs coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court at https://apnews.com/hub/us-supreme-court.
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  • Media Myths vs. Reality: What Black Queer Women Want in Relationship Representation
    glaad.org
    In 1997, The Watermelon Woman, the first feature film directed by a Black lesbian, Cheryl Dunye, took an authentic and unapologetic approach to storytelling in a way that was groundbreaking and unprecedented in media. Positive queer representation in film during the 1990s was rare, making the presence of multiple dynamic Black queer characters at the [...]The post Media Myths vs. Reality: What Black Queer Women Want in Relationship Representation first appeared on GLAAD.
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  • Stock market today: Wall Streets sell-off gets worse as worries build about the economy
    apnews.com
    An NYSE sign is displayed on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)2025-03-10T05:27:08Z NEW YORK (AP) Wall Streets sell-off is worsening Monday as worries about the economy and President Donald Trumps tariffs send U.S. stocks further from their record set just last month.The S&P 500 was down 1.4% in early trading, coming off its worst week since September. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 430 points, or 1%, as of 9:35 a.m. Eastern time, and the Nasdaq composite was 2.1% lower. The main measure of the U.S. stock market is on track for a seventh swing of more than 1%, up or down, in the last eight days following a scary stretch dominated by worries that Trumps on -and- off -again tariffs will either hurt the economy directly or create enough uncertainty to drive U.S. companies and consumers into an economy-harming paralysis. The S&P 500 is down 7.4% from its all-time high set on Feb. 19.The economy has already given some signals of weakening, mostly through surveys showing increased pessimism. And a widely followed collection of real-time indicators compiled by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta suggests the U.S. economy may already be shrinking. Asked over the weekend whether he was expecting a recession in 2025, Trump told Fox News Channel: I hate to predict things like that. There is a period of transition because what were doing is very big. Were bringing wealth back to America. Thats a big thing. He then added, It takes a little time. It takes a little time. Also this weekend, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on NBCs Meet the Press that 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum imports will take effect Wednesday. The U.S. job market is still showing stable hiring, to be sure, and the economy ended last year running at a solid rate. But economists are marking down their forecasts for how the economy will perform this year. At Goldman Sachs, for example, David Mericle cut his estimate for U.S. economic growth to 1.7% from 2.2% for the end of 2025 over the year before, largely because tariffs look like theyll be bigger than he was previously forecasting. He sees a one-in-five chance of a recession over the next year. The worries hitting Wall Street have so far been hurting some of its biggest stars the most. Big Tech stocks and companies that rode the artificial-intelligence frenzy in recent years have slumped sharply. Nvidia fell another 2.6% Monday to bring its loss for the year so far to 18.3%. Its a steep drop-off from its nearly 820% surge over 2023 and 2024.Apple fell 3.2% and was the heaviest weight on the S&P 500 after the iPhone maker confirmed it was delaying the AI update to its Siri personal assistant until 2026. Its not just Big Tech. Investors are sending prices sharply lower for all kinds of investments whose momentum had earlier seemed nearly impossible to stop at times, such as bitcoin. The cryptocurrencys value has dropped back toward $83,000 from more than $106,000 in December. Instead, investors have been herding into U.S. Treasury bonds as they look for something safer to own with all the uncertainty. That has sent prices for Treasurys sharply higher, which in turn has sent down their yields. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell again to 4.24% from 4.32% late Friday. Its been falling sharply since January, when it was approaching 4.80%, as worries about the economy have grown.On Wall Street, Redfin jumped 77% after Rocket said it would buy the digital real estate brokerage in an all-stock deal valuing it at $1.75 billion. Rockets stock sank 9.7%. In stock markets abroad, European indexes also fell following a mixed session in Asia. Indexes fell 1.8% in Hong Kong and 0.2% in Shanghai after China said consumer prices fell in February for the first time in 13 months. Its the latest signal of weakness for the worlds second-largest economy, as persistent weak demand was compounded by the early timing of the Lunar New Year holiday.___AP Business Writers Matt Ott and Elaine Kurtenbach contributed.
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  • Secretary of State Rubio says purge of USAID programs complete, with 83% of agencys programs gone
    apnews.com
    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio visits the Abrahamic Family House in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Feb. 19, 2025. (Evelyn Hockstein/Pool Photo via AP, File)2025-03-10T12:22:54Z Follow live updates on President Donald Trump and his new administration. WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Monday the Trump administration had finished its six-week purge of programs of the six-decade-old U.S. Agency for International Development, and said he would move the 18% of aid and development programs that survived under the State Department.Rubio made the announcement in a post on X. It marked one of his relatively few public comments on what has been a historic shift away from U.S. foreign aid and development, executed by Trump political appointees at State and Elon Musks Department of Government Efficiency teams.Rubio in the post thanked DOGE and our hardworking staff who worked very long hours to achieve this overdue and historic reform in foreign aid.President Donald Trump on Jan. 20 issued an executive order directing a freeze of foreign assistance funding and a review of all of the tens of billions of dollars of U.S. aid and development work abroad. Trump charged that much of foreign assistance was wasteful and advanced a liberal agenda. Rubios social media post Monday said that review was now officially ending, with some 5,200 of USAIDs 6,200 programs eliminated. Those programs spent tens of billions of dollars in ways that did not serve, (and in some cases even harmed), the core national interests of the United States, Rubio wrote.In consultation with Congress, we intend for the remaining 18% of programs we are keeping ... to be administered more effectively under the State Department, he said. Democratic lawmakers and others call the shutdown of congressionally-funded programs illegal, saying such a move requires Congress approval. The Trump administration has given almost no details on which aid and development efforts abroad it spared as it mass-emailed contract terminations to aid groups and other USAID partners by the thousands within days earlier this month. The rapid pace, and the steps skipped in ending contracts, left USAID supporters challenging whether any actual program-by-program reviews had taken place. Aid groups say even some life-saving programs that Rubio and others had promised to spare got the termination notices, such as emergency nutritional support for starving children and drinking water serving sprawling camps for families uprooted by war in Sudan. Republicans broadly have made clear they want foreign assistance that would promote a far narrower interpretation of U.S. national interests going forward.The State Department in one of multiple lawsuits it is battling over its rapid shutdown of USAID had said earlier this month it was killing more than 90% of USAID programs. Rubio gave no explanation for why his number was lower.The dismantling of USAID that followed Trumps order upended decades of policy that humanitarian and development aid abroad advanced U.S. national security by stabilizing regions and economies, strengthening alliances and building goodwill. In the weeks after Trumps order, one of his appointees and transition team members, Pete Marocco, and Musk pulled USAID staff around the world off the job through forced leaves and firings, shut down USAID payments overnight and terminated aid and development contracts by the thousands. Contractors and staffers running efforts ranging from epidemic control to famine prevention to job and democracy training stopped work. Aid groups and other USAID partners laid off tens of thousands of their workers in the U.S. and abroad.Lawsuits say the sudden shutdown of USAID has stiffed aid groups and businesses that had contracts with it of billions of dollars.The shutdown has left many USAID staffers and contractors and their families still overseas, many of them awaiting U.S.-paid back payments and travel expenses back home. ELLEN KNICKMEYER Knickmeyer covers foreign policy and national security for The Associated Press. She is based in Washington, D.C. twitter
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  • Fuel tanker and cargo ship collide and catch fire in North Sea off Britain, crew rescued
    apnews.com
    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio visits the Abrahamic Family House in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Feb. 19, 2025. (Evelyn Hockstein/Pool Photo via AP, File)2025-03-10T12:15:42Z LONDON (AP) A cargo ship hit a tanker carrying jet fuel for the American military off the coast of eastern England Monday, setting both vessels on fire and sending fuel pouring into the North Sea. The collision triggered a major rescue operation by lifeboats, coast guard aircraft and commercial vessels. All 37 crew members aboard the two vessels were safe and accounted for, with one hospitalized, local lawmaker Graham Stuart said.Stuart said he was concerned about the potential ecological impact of the spill.The U.S.-flagged chemical and oil products tanker MV Stena Immaculate was at anchor near the port of Grimsby on Monday morning after sailing from Greece, according to ship-tracking site VesselFinder. The cargo vessel, Portugal-flagged container ship Solong, was sailing from Grangemouth in Scotland to Rotterdam in the Netherlands. U.S.-based maritime management firm Crowley, which operates the Stena Immaculate, said the tanker sustained a ruptured cargo tank containing Jet-A1 fuel, when the container ship struck it, triggering a fire and multiple explosions onboard, with fuel released into the sea. It said all 23 of the mariners on the tanker were safe and accounted for.The Stena Immaculate was operating as part of the U.S. governments Tanker Security Program, a group of commercial vessels that can be contracted to carry fuel for the military when needed. Britains Maritime and Coastguard Agency said the alarm was raised at 9:48 a.m. (0948 GMT). Humber Coast Guard made a radio broadcast asking vessels with firefighting equipment and those who could help with search and rescue to head to the scene off the coast near Hull, about 155 miles (250 kilometers) north of London.The RNLI lifeboat agency said there were reports that a number of people had abandoned the vessels following a collision and there were fires on both ships. It said three lifeboats were working on search and rescue at the scene alongside a coast guard rescue helicopter and a coast guard plane. Video footage aired by British broadcasters and apparently filmed from a nearby vessel showed thick black smoke pouring from both ships.Martyn Boyers, chief executive of the Port of Grimsby East, said he had been told there was a massive fireball.Boyers said casualties were brought in on a Windcat 33 high-speed vessel and a harbor pilot boat.Its too far out for us to see about 10 miles but we have seen the vessels bringing them in, he said. They must have sent a mayday out. Luckily there was a crew transfer vessel out there already. Since then, there has been a flotilla of ambulances to pick up anyone they can find.U.K. Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said she was being kept up to date on the developing situationI want to thank all emergency service workers involved for their continued efforts in responding to the incident, she said.Greenpeace U.K. said it was too early to assess the extent of any environmental damage from the collision, which took place in a busy fishing ground and close to major seabird colonies. Scientists said the environmental impact might be less severe than with a spill of heavier crude oil.Mark Sephton, Professor of Organic Geochemistry at Imperial College London, said jet fuel biodegrades more quickly than crude oil, and warmer temperarures also speeds biodegration.In the end, it all depends on the rate of introduction of fuel and the rate of destruction by bacteria, he said. Lets hope the latter wins out. JILL LAWLESS Lawless is an Associated Press reporter covering U.K. politics and more. She is based in London. twitter mailto
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  • Arrietty dishes on that roast sabotage shocker: 'Oh, it felt great'
    www.pride.com
    This weeks episode of Drag Race featured one of the most shocking turns in the shows herstory when Arrietty and Jewels Sparkles instantly transformed from besties to rivals in the lead-up to the roast. From day one, these two Latina queens have been thick as thieves, getting ready side by side, throwing shade and just being the tightest of season 17 sisters. So it came as a huge shock when it all fell apart over the queens order in the roast challenge. Jewels, fresh off her win in front of the Betsey Johnson challenge, earned the privilege of choosing the roast order. While some of her choices were controversial and rubbed the queens the wrong way (Lexi Love was pressed over being put behind Suzie Toot, despite getting her desired last place slot), it was her choice to place herself behind Arrietty that caused the most controversy. For Arrietty, that choice signified that Jewels believed Arrietty would fail at the challenge and, on top of that, Jewels would ride that failure to greater success. It was a betrayal that Arrietty then returned in kind by stealing two of Jewels jokes, leaving the queen stumbling and eventually falling into the bottom where the two faced off in a bittersweet, if epic, lip sync for your life. Ultimately, Jewels triumphed and Arrietty sashayed away, but not before throwing a bit more shad and mustache-twirling villainy on her way out the door. Honestly, it was pretty iconic. While many queens might consider engaging in a little sabotage, few would actually go through with it. It was shocking, but, if were honest, pretty stellar TV.PRIDE sat down with Arrietty to discuss this moment, and if the passage of time and watching it all play out has changed her perspective (it didnt) or softened her stance (it hasnt). We also discuss some of her best looks, getting the dreaded switch it up critique from Michelle Visage, and where things stand with Jewels today. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Arrietty (@arrietty_theelf)PRIDE: When you look back on your time on Drag Race, How do you feel about it?ARRIETTY: I feel great. Yeah, I do, honestly. Its been a learning experience, and Ive taken so much out of what I did horrible on and am trying to better myself.When you say it was a learning experience, what is the biggest lesson you came away from it with?I need to get my comedic timing down. I need some comedy chops because I obviously do not have them.Not everybodys a comedian and thats okay! Especially because you have such amazing talent. What was the look that when you look back youre most proud of?Its either the first design challenge or the lionfish because I feel like I just felt so regal and like so gorg Its hard to choose because each one is like a different version of myself. So honestly, I love them all. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Arrietty (@arrietty_theelf)You also have such an original and stamped mug, but you got the dreaded Michelle Visage critique of needing to switch it up. What do you think of that criticism more generally and did you ultimately find it helpful? I knew that comment was gonna come at any given time. Thats why I switched it up for the first design challenge, because I [hoped] if I showed versatility, then maybe it just wouldnt come later on. But that didnt happen, which is fine. Im a makeup artist, so I know how to change it up. Its one of my favorite things to do so its not like it was difficult for me. I do get showing versatility, but I was gonna change my makeup either way, for every look, thats just what I do for the majority of my looks, not one is the same as the next. That comment could have been saved for maybe like Jewels [Sparkle] or someone else, someone that doesnt switch their makeup. That critique doesnt really come up with queens who do a more traditional style of beauty makeup. Right. Im like, what happened to, like, Kori [Kings] blue eye that she does every runway. Why dont you say anything about that? View this post on Instagram A post shared by Arrietty (@arrietty_theelf)Okay, so lets talk about this episode. It was very dramatic. We watched you and Jewels, who have really been like sisters from the minute you walked into the Werk Room, struggling in your relationship. Im curious how you feel watching it back.It puts everything into perspective with friends in a competition setting, of course. I understand what she did, and I retaliated because of that. I love Jewels. I do. Thats my girl. But yeah, Its a lot.Did seeing both sides change your perspective about what happened with the placements in the roast? Oh no, I still feel the same. Oh no, no, no, no, trust and believe. No, I told her how I felt before she even chose the placement. So [Jewels] decided to put me before her, it just felt sly. So then I was like, you know what? If youre gonna play the game, Im gonna play the game. Lets have fun. One thing I did learn this episode is that you do not cross Arrietty. I think a lot of people would think about taking the jokes, but few people would actually follow through. Was there ever a moment that you considered not doing it? And when you saw her start to struggle, how did you feel? Oh, it felt great. No, because if youre gonna do that to me and not feel any kind of remorse or whatever, especially to like someone thats your friend in the competition, then at that point its... whats the saying? [All is fair in love and war]. So no, it was amazing.The funny thing is, when I took the joke, I said it to her face. Of course, its not gonna be on camera, but I said, Hey, Im taking that joke from you. Straight to her face. And I live, I live. So, she knew I was taking it, but she, like, laughed it off. She didnt actually think I was gonna take it. But I told her, I said, hey, Im taking that joke. And I did.Seeing her get all like, riled up and...stumbling on her words, because I took two of her jokes, it was amazing, because I was like, you know what? This is the game, and Im playing it. Were having fun. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Arrietty (@arrietty_theelf)Oh, my goodness. Well, you know what, we do love a queen who stands on business.Oh, and if theres one thing, I will stand on business.We did get to see that you two did makeup in Untucked. Where does that relationship stand now?Were good. We are perfectly okay, we are sisters at the end of the day. We knew what we signed up for. So theres no hard feelings. Oh, thats great. But are you ready for the rest of the world to have a lot of opinions about what happened?Ive had the rest of the world have opinions about me even before the show. [Since] the reveal. [But] I am perfectly okay in my skin. I know who I am, and Im okay. If they dont understand, I dont give a fuck. I dont give a fuck and I never have. Thats something that I am always gonna ride and die with. Thats the hill Im gonna die on. Im an individual too. Im a person. I have my own feelings. I have my own everything. And so do you. Im gonna live in my world, and you can live in yours.
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  • 7 times Rene Rapp and Towa Bird were adorable relationship goals
    www.pride.com
    Lesbian musicians Rene Rapp and Towa Bird have only been dating for a year, but theyve already become an iconic celesbian couple!The lovebirds began dating after Bird opened for Rapp during her Snow Hard Feelings, a fact that the Sex Lives of College Girls star alluded to in a Hollywood Reporter interview before they made their love public. Ive only recently started referring to myself as a lesbian, and Ive only recently been in a relationship where Im like, Yeah, Im a lesbian for sure, she said. [...] Im watching all these movies and parts of gay culture, specifically lesbian culture, and Im like, I love this. Its also been the most rewarding, validating, scary and exciting experience ever.Not only does the couple bring great masc and femme representation to the table, but they are also adorable together. From performing together with enough torching hot chemistry to start a forest fire to sweet kisses and pet names, they truly are relationship goals.Hard Launching their relationship@peopleThe hard launch weve been waiting for?! #ReneeRapp stepped out at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party with tourmate (and rumored girlfriend) #TowaBird #Oscars #ootn #snowhardfeelingstour #filmtok #movietokRene Rapp and Towa Bird hard launched their relationship at the Vanity Fair Oscars afterparty in March 2024. The cute pair had already toured together, but it wasnt until they took pictures with Birds arm wrapped around Rapps waist on the red carpet that their romance became official. The fact that Rapp is wearing a slinky white gown and Bird is sporting an embroidered and studded denim suit made them an instantly iconic lesbian couple.Calling Towa Bird Baby@entertainmenttonightWhen you're this iconic, you don't need media training. Rene Rapp hard launched her relationsjip with Towa Bird at the Vanity Fair Oscars Party, so you know they had to celebrate with a few shots. #oscars #reneerappAfter hard launching their relationship, Rapp was asked to take a shot while being interviewed on the red carpet by Entertainment Tonight, but first she calls Bird over using a sweet pet name. Baby, come take a shot. Baby? Swoon!Kissing on stage at 'All Things Go' music festivalSee on InstagramAt the All Things Go festival in 2024, the cute couple performed Rapps song Tummy Hurts, with Rapp singing while Bird played the guitar and mouthed the words. During the performance, Bird gets down on her knees while still shredding and kneels in front of her girlfriend, who then joins her, and the two kiss when the song ends. While this wasnt a hot and heavy make-out sesh, seeing two lesbians kiss on stage in front of thousands of people still feels revolutionary!Singing the 'L Word' theme song together@reneerappIconic lesbian couple singing the iconic lesbian show? That might just be the most sapphic thing weve ever seen. Plus, singing along in the car with your girl is relationship goals. Performing in front of giant scissors@emily.loremMothers #reneerapp #reneerappcoachella #towabird #coachella #coachella2024 #reneerapplive #youngexwives @rene @Towa Bird @youngexwivesCoachella 2024 was one for the history books. Not only did queer megastar Chappell Roan make her Coachella debut, performing Red Wine Super Nova and Good Luck, Babe! in front of thousands, but Rapp and Bird also performed together in front of the dyk-iest stage decor ever. After being introduced by The L Word creator Ilene Chaiken and stars Leisha Hailey, Kate Moennig, and Jennifer Beals, the couple performed in front of a giant pair of interlocking scissors.That time they dressed in suits together (@) Recently, Rapp posted a photo on Instagram of the pair posed together while they were both wearing pinstripe suits and Bird had a pipe between her lips and fake facial hair painted on. Theyre too cute and definitely lesbian boyfriend material!Towa Bird motorboating Rene Rappok not really (@) In 2024, the two walked the Vanity Fair Oscars party red carpet together, but this time around Rapp FaceTimed her at the end of the night and had her photo taken with her cell phone with Bird still on the screen betwixt her cleavage. May a love like this find us all!
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  • Leader of student protests at Columbia facing deportation after arrest by immigration officials
    apnews.com
    Pro-Palestinian demonstrator Mahmoud Khalil, second from left, debates with a pro-Israel demonstrator during a protest at Columbia University, Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, File)2025-03-10T16:24:14Z NEW YORK (AP) A prominent Palestinian activist who helped lead protests at Columbia University is facing deportation following his arrest by federal immigration agents over the weekend.Mahmoud Khalil, who graduated from the university in December, was arrested Saturday by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed the arrest, saying it was a result of President Donald Trumps executive orders prohibiting antisemitism. He has not been formally charged with a crime. Student negotiator Mahmoud Khalil is on the Columbia University campus in New York at a pro-Palestinian protest encampment on April 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey, file) Student negotiator Mahmoud Khalil is on the Columbia University campus in New York at a pro-Palestinian protest encampment on April 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey, file) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Khalils lawyer, Amy Greer, said the agents who took him into custody at his university-owned home near Columbia initially claimed to be acting on a State Department order to revoke his student visa. But when Greer informed them that Khalil was a permanent resident with a green card, they said they would revoke that documentation instead. The Council on American-Islamic Relations, a national Muslim civil rights advocacy group, said Monday that it is working with Khalils lawyer and called for his immediate release. Khalil is a lawful permanent resident of our nation who has not been charged with or convicted of a single crime, the Washington-based group said in a statement. The Department of Homeland Securitys lawless decision to arrest him solely because of his peaceful anti-genocide activism represents a blatant attack on the First Amendments guarantee of free speech, immigration laws, and the very humanity of Palestinians. Federal immigration authorities also visited a second international student at Columbia over the weekend and attempted to take her into custody but were prevented from entering the apartment, according to a union representing the student. The woman has not been identified, and its not clear what grounds ICE had for the visit.According to the Student Workers of Columbia, a graduate student union representing the woman, three ICE agents visited her university-owned residence Friday night and attempted to enter without a warrant.The agents were rightfully turned away at the door, the student union said.Over the weekend, the university circulated guidance to students about its policies for allowing federal authorities on campus. The guidance states that in general, ICE agents must have a judicial warrant or subpoena to access non-public areas, including housing.Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a message posted Sunday on X that the administration will be revoking the visas and/or green cards of Hamas supporters in America so they can be deported.Khalils arrest is the first publicly known deportation effort under Trumps promised crackdown on students protesting the war in Gaza. Members of the Columbia University Apartheid Divest group, including Sueda Polat, second from left, and Mahmoud Khalil, center, are surrounded by members of the media outside the Columbia University campus, Tuesday, April 30, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File) Members of the Columbia University Apartheid Divest group, including Sueda Polat, second from left, and Mahmoud Khalil, center, are surrounded by members of the media outside the Columbia University campus, Tuesday, April 30, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More The Republican president has argued that protesters forfeited their rights to remain in the country by supporting the Palestinian group Hamas that controls Gaza. Hamas has been designated a terrorist organization.Khalil and other student leaders of Columbia University Apartheid Divest have rejected claims of antisemitism, saying they are part of a broader anti-war movement that also counts Jewish students and groups among its members. But the divestment group, at times, has also voiced support for leaders of Hamas and Hezbollah, another Islamist organization designated by the U.S. as a terrorist group.Khalil is currently being held in an immigration detention center in Louisiana after initially being sent to a facility in New Jersey, according to ICEs online detainee database, which lists his birthplace as Syria.Its unclear when he will have a hearing in immigration court, which is typically the first step in the deportation process. Spokespersons for ICE and DHS did not immediately respond to emails seeking comment Monday.Columbia University declined to comment on Khalils arrest over the weekend. University spokespersons did not immediately respond Monday.A protest was scheduled for later Monday in front of ICEs offices in Manhattan.Khalil was one of the most visible activists in last years protests, serving as a negotiator for students who erected a tent encampment on campus. Pro-Israel activists in recent weeks have called on the Trump administration to begin deportation proceedings against him. Mahmoud Khalil, center right, listens as members of the student protest negotiation team speak during a press conference near the pro-Palestinian demonstration encampment at the Columbia University, Friday, April 26, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, File) Mahmoud Khalil, center right, listens as members of the student protest negotiation team speak during a press conference near the pro-Palestinian demonstration encampment at the Columbia University, Friday, April 26, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, File) Share Share Copy Link copied Email Facebook X Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest Flipboard Print Read More Khalil was also among those being investigated by a new Columbia office that has already brought disciplinary charges against dozens of students for their pro-Palestinian activism, according to records shared with The Associated Press.Khalil received a masters degree from Columbias school of international affairs last semester. His wife, who is an American citizen, is eight months pregnant.Meanwhile, the Trump administration last week pulled $400 million in federal funding from Columbia because of what it claimed was the Ivy League schools failure to reign in antisemitism on campus. JAKE OFFENHARTZ Offenhartz is a general assignment reporter in the New York City bureau of The Associated Press. twitter mailto CEDAR ATTANASIO Attanasio covers New York City for The Associated Press with a focus on immigration and the ocean. He uses remote sensing to support the APs global coverage. twitter instagram facebook mailto PHILIP MARCELO Marcelo is a general assignment reporter in the NYC bureau. He previously wrote for AP Fact Check and before that was based in Boston, where he focused on race and immigration. twitter mailto
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  • Study says climate change will even make Earths orbit a mess
    apnews.com
    In this satellite image provided by CSU/CIRA & NOAA taken 1:10 GMT on Feb. 25, 2025, shows three cyclones, from left, Alfred, Seru and Rae east of Australia in the South Pacific. (CSU/CIRA & NOAA via AP, File)2025-03-10T16:00:30Z Climate change is already causing all sorts of problems on Earth, but soon it will be making a mess in orbit around the planet too, a new study finds.MIT researchers calculated that as global warming caused by burning of coal, oil, gas continues it may reduce the available space for satellites in low Earth orbit by anywhere from one-third to 82% by the end of the century, depending on how much carbon pollution is spewed. Thats because space will become more littered with debris as climate change lessens natures way of cleaning it up.Part of the greenhouse effect that warms the air near Earths surface also cools the upper parts of the atmosphere where space starts and satellites zip around in low orbit, That cooling also makes the upper atmosphere less dense, which reduces the drag on the millions of pieces of human-made debris and satellites. That drag pulls space junk down to Earth, burning up on the way. But a cooler and less dense upper atmosphere means less space cleaning itself. That means that space gets more crowded, according to a study in Mondays journal Nature Sustainability. We rely on the atmosphere to clean up our debris. Theres no other way to remove debris, said study lead author Will Parker, an astrodynamics researcher at MIT. Its trash. Its garbage. And there are millions of pieces of it.Circling Earth are millions of pieces of debris about one-ninth of an inch (3 millimeters) and larger the width of two stacked pennies and those collide with the energy of a bullet. There are tens of thousands of plum-sized pieces of space junk that hit with the power of a crashing bus, according to The Aerospace Corporation, which monitors orbital debris. That junk includes results of old space crashes and parts of rockets with most of it too small to be tracked. There are 11,905 satellites circling Earth 7,356 in low orbit according to the tracking website Orbiting Now. Satellites are critical for communications, navigation, weather forecasting and monitoring environmental and national security issues. There used to be this this mantra that space is big. And so we can we can sort of not necessarily be good stewards of the environment because the environment is basically unlimited, Parker said. But a 2009 crash of two satellites created thousands of pieces of space junk. Also NASA measurements are showing measurable the reduction of drag, so scientists now realize that that the climate change component is really important, Parker said.The density at 250 miles (400 kilometers) above Earth is decreasing by about 2% a decade and is likely to get intensify as society pumps more greenhouse gas into the atmosphere, said Ingrid Cnossen, a space weather scientist at the British Antarctic Survey who was not part of the research. Cnossen said in an email that the new study makes perfect sense and is why scientists have to be aware of climate changes orbital effects so that appropriate measures can be taken to ensure its long-term sustainability. ___Follow Seth Borenstein on X at @borenbears___Read more of APs climate coverage at http://www.apnews.com/climate-and-environment___The Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find APs standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org. SETH BORENSTEIN Borenstein is an Associated Press science writer, covering climate change, disasters, physics and other science topics. He is based in Washington, D.C. twitter mailto
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  • Pedro Pascal & Oscar Isaac's cuddling pic is a masterclass in non-toxic masculinity
    www.pride.com
    Two of our favorite daddies, Pedro Pascal and Oscar Isaac, have reminded the internet that affectionate male friendships not only exist, but thrive. The longtime besties, who met in 2005 while performing in an off-Broadway play, have never shied away from embracing each other in ways that challenge the constraints of traditional masculinity. Their latest viral moment? A candid photo of the duo sharing a warm, intimate cuddle in front of a scenic backdrop, posted by Pascal in honor of Isaacs 46th birthday.See on InstagramIn the photo, captured by Isaacs wife, filmmaker Elvira Lind, Isaac cradles Pascal, his head resting on his friends, while their hands clasp over Pascals shoulder. Its a tender, unguarded moment between two men who have built a bond spanning nearly two decades. And, as expected, the internet erupted in praise, with fans celebrating the duo for normalizing physical closeness and emotional vulnerability between men. (@) Their friendship, forged in the trenches of Hollywoods stereotypical casting of Latino actors, has been filled with mutual support, humor, and a deep respect for each others craft.As their prospective careers skyrocketed, their friendship remained rock solid. Pascal has even been lovingly referred to as Isaacs sweet girlfriend and space sister in interviews. (@) In an era where male friendships are often depicted through a lens of stoicism or competition, Pascal and Isaac offer a refreshing alternative. They arent just actors at the top of their game, but proof that men showing love for one another should be as natural as breathing. And honestly? We love to see it.Check out some other reactions and reflections to the sweet new photo and their overall relationship below. (@) "oscar isaac and pedro pascal." (@) "show me two pretty best friends" (@) "okay now time to resurface this iconic oscar isaac & pedro pascal fancam" (@) "me when oscar isaac and pedro pascal" (@) "Oh to have Oscar Isaac hold me exactly like this" (@) "Pedro Pascal says Oscar Isaac is the daddiest 'Alright fine he can have it.'" (@) (@) "oscar isaac & pedro pascal" (@) "I haven't seen a single pedro pascal work since game of thrones and idk oscar isaac but I love them" (@) "Pedro and Oscar are actually so cute u cant possibly fathom how they are real people like someone be the scar Isaac Hernndez Estrada to my Jos Pedro Balmaceda Pascal (@) "Need someone who loves me the way Oscar Isaac loves Pedro Pascal" (@) "Pedro Pascal and Oscar Isaac whenever they meet up" (@) "Pedro Pascal just dropped a pic with Oscar Isaac for his b-day, and the internet is MELTING..!" (@) "its been hours since that Pedro Pascal/Oscar Isaac selfie how are we" (@) "This is officially my new favorite picture of Pedro Pascal and Oscar Isaac together" (@) "Brokeback mountain remake but with Oscar Isaac and Pedro pascal"
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  • LA district attorney says he wont support resentencing the Menendez brothers because they lied
    apnews.com
    Lyle, left, and Erik Menendez appear in court for a preliminary hearing held in Beverly Hills, Calif., April 12, 1991. (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian, File)2025-03-10T17:46:41Z LOS ANGELES (AP) The district attorney of Los Angeles County said Monday that he does not support the resentencing of Lyle and Erik Menendez because the brothers have repeatedly lied about why they killed their parents at their Beverly Hills home in 1989.District Attorney Nathan Hochman told reporters his decision hinged on whether the brothers had exhibited insight and complete responsibility into lies told during their trial, including their original claim that they did not kill their parents. He said their repeated argument that they killed their parents in self-defense does not match the facts of the case that showed premeditated steps to plan the killings and make it look like a gang hit.They have lied to everyone for the last 30 years, Hochman said.Hochman compared the Menendez case to that of Sirhan Sirhan, who shot and killed U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. He noted that, like the Menendez brothers, Sirhan had many letters of support and was determined to be a low-risk inmate. However, Gov. Gavin Newsom blocked his parole in 2022, saying he still poses an unreasonable threat to the public. Hochman called it an instructive case because the Menendez brothers also fell short of taking full responsibility for their crimes. The countys top prosecutor said he would support resentencing in the future if the brothers finally come clean with the court, with the public, with the DAs office, with their own family members and acknowledge all these lies. A resentencing hearing has been scheduled for later in March and Hochman said the court may move forward with it.Hochman, who took office in December, said last month that he opposed a new trial for the Menendez brothers. The siblings were convicted in 1996 and sentenced to life in prison without parole. In October, then-District Attorney George Gascn recommended the brothers be resentenced to 50 years to life, which would make them immediately eligible for parole. Hochman called his predecessors recommendation a desperate political move. The brothers, who are now in their 50s, were found guilty in the murders of their entertainment executive father Jose Menendez and mother Kitty Menendez.They began their bid for freedom in recent years after new evidence of their fathers sexual abuse emerged, and they have the support of most of their extended family. Family members didnt immediately comment Monday after Hochmans news conference. Newsom last month ordered the state parole board to investigate whether the brothers would pose a risk to the public if they are released. The brothers have another pathway to freedom. They have also submitted a clemency plea to Newsom, who has said he would not make a decision until Hochman reviewed the case.Hochman rejected arguments by a relative of the brothers that he is biased against them. Tamara Goodall, a cousin of the siblings, has asked that he be removed from the case.I will follow the facts and the law wherever they take us, Hochman said.
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  • Syrias government signs a breakthrough deal with Kurdish-led authorities in the northeast
    apnews.com
    Smoke rises from a factory hit during clashes by Syrian security forces and gunmen loyal to former President Bashar Assad in the outskirts of Latakia, Syria, Friday, March 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Albam)2025-03-10T12:02:58Z DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) Syrias central government has reached a deal with the Kurdish-led authority that controls the countrys northeast, including a ceasefire and the merging of the main U.S.-backed force there into the Syrian army.The deal was signed Monday by interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa and Mazloum Abdi, the commander of the U.S.-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces.The deal marks a major breakthrough that would bring most of Syria under the control of the government led by the group that led the ousting of President Bashar Assad in December.The deal to be implemented by the end of the year would bring all border crossings with Iraq and Turkey in the northeast, airports and oil fields under the control of the central government.Syrias Kurds will gain their rights including teaching and using their language, which were banned for decades under Assad. THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. APs earlier story follows below.Syrias interim government on Monday announced the end of a days-long military operation against insurgents loyal to ousted president Bashar Assad and his family in the worst fighting since the end of the 13-year civil war in December. The Defense Ministrys announcement comes after a surprise attack by gunmen from the Alawite community on a police patrol near the port city of Lattakia Thursday spiraled into widespread clashes across Syrias coastal region, during which monitoring groups said hundreds of civilians were killed. Syrias new interim Islamist rulers are struggling to exert their authority across the country and reach political settlements with other minority communities, notably the Kurds of the northeast and the Druze in southern Syria.To the remaining remnants of the defeated regime and its fleeing officers, our message is clear and explicit, said Defense Ministry spokesperson Col. Hassan Abdel-Ghani. If you return, we will also return, and you will find before you men who do not know how to retreat and who will not have mercy on those whose hands are stained with the blood of the innocent. Abdel-Ghani said that security forces will continue searching for sleeper cells and remnants of the insurgency of former government loyalists. Though the governments counter-offensive was able to largely contain the insurgency, footage surfaced of what appeared to be retaliatory attacks targeting the broader minority Alawite community, an offshoot of Shia Islam whose adherents live mainly in Syrias western coastal region. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, said 1,130 people were killed in the clashes, including 830 civilians. The Associated Press could not independently verify these numbers.The interim government is made up of members of Sunni Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, which led a lightning insurgency in December that overthrew Bashar Assad, ending over half a century of his familys dictatorial rule. The Assad family are Alawites.Interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaa said the retaliatory attacks against Alawite civilians and mistreatment of prisoners were isolated incidents, and vowed to crack down on the perpetrators as he formed a committee to investigate the incident. Abdel-Ghani says the security forces will allow the committee the full opportunity to uncover the circumstances of the events, verify the facts, and rectify wrongdoings. Still, the footage of houses in several neighborhoods set on fire and bloodied bodies laid on the streets alarmed Western governments, who have been urged by Al-Sharaa to lift economic sanctions on Syria. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in a statement issued Sunday urged Syrian authorities to hold the perpetrators of these massacres accountable. Rubio said the U.S. stands with Syrias religious and ethnic minorities, including its Christian, Druze, Alawite, and Kurdish communities.Thousands of Syrians from the coastal area fled to neighboring Lebanon, mostly through unofficial crossings. The UN refugee agency said in a statement that according to local authorities, 6,078 people have arrived in about a dozen villages in northern Lebanons Akkar province fleeing the fighting, while arrivals in other parts of the country were still being verified. Lebanon is hosting more than 755,000 registered Syrian refugees, with hundreds of thousands more believed to be unregistered. Since the fall of Assad, the flow had begun to reverse, with the UN reporting that nearly 260,000 Syrian refugees have returned home since November, about half of them coming from Lebanon.
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  • U.S. Supreme Court to review challenge to Colorados conversion therapy ban
    newsisout.com
    On Monday morning, the U.S. Supreme Court announced it would consider the constitutionality of Chiles v. Salazar, which would challenge Colorados 2019 ban on conversion therapy for minors.Conversion therapy refers to practices or treatments aimed at changing an individuals sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression. Major medical and mental health organizations like the American Psychological Association cite that conversion therapy uses psychosocially harmful techniques.The Minor Conversion Therapy Law prohibits licensed psychiatrists and other mental health professionals from engaging in conversion therapy with patients under 18 years old. Professionals who violate the law are subject to disciplinary action by their licensing board.The law is being challenged by Kaley Chiles, a Christian-based counselor who argued in her legal brief that many of her clients seek her counsel precisely because they believe that their faith and their relationship with God establishes the foundation upon which to understand their identity and desires.Chiles also claims that the law prohibits counseling conversations with minors that might encourage them to change their sexual orientation or gender identity, including efforts to change behaviors or gender expressions, while allowing discussions that provide [a]cceptance, support, and understanding for identity exploration and development, including [a]ssistance to a person undergoing gender transition.The Supreme Courts decision to hear the case follows a ruling by the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that upheld the lower courts ruling.In 2023, the Supreme Court opted not to hear a similar case out of Washington, letting the lower courts ruling stand.Conversion therapy is currently banned in 23 states and the District of Columbia.The post U.S. Supreme Court to review challenge to Colorados conversion therapy ban appeared first on News Is Out.
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  • Elon Musks Trans Daughter Responds to Fathers Controversial Comments About Her Transition
    gayety.co
    Elon Musks relationship with his children has been the subject of public scrutiny for years, and recently, his trans daughter, Vivian Jenna Wilson, has spoken out in response to his controversial remarks about her transition. Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, is believed to have fathered 14 children. Among them, only four are known to be female, including Wilson, who transitioned from male toSource
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  • Doctors declare Pope Francis no longer in imminent danger due to pneumonia, but remains hospitalized
    apnews.com
    A Vatican Swiss guard stands prior to a mass for the world of volunteers led by delegate of Pope Francis Cardinal Michael Czerny in St. Peter's Square at The Vatican, Sunday, March 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)2025-03-10T08:12:22Z ROME (AP) Doctors said Monday Pope Francis is no longer in imminent danger of death as a result of pneumonia that has kept him hospitalized for nearly a month, but have decided to keep him hospitalized for several more days to receive treatment.In a late update, the doctors said the 88-year-old pope remains stable and has consolidated improvements in recent days, as determined by blood tests and positive responses to drug treatments.The Vatican said the doctors had lifted their previous guarded prognosis, meaning they determined he was no longer in imminent danger as a result of the original respiratory infection he arrived with on Feb. 14. But their caution remained. However, in view of the complexity of the clinical picture and the important infectious picture presented on admission, it will be necessary to continue medical drug therapy in a hospital setting for additional days, according to the Vatican statement. In a sign of his improved health, Francis followed the Vaticans weeklong spiritual retreat via videoconference on Monday in both the morning and afternoon sessions.As he did on Sunday, Francis participated in the retreat remotely from the Rome hospital where he is being treated. He could see and hear the Rev. Roberto Pasolini, preacher of the papal household, but the priests, bishops and cardinals gathered for the retreat in the Vatican auditorium could not see or hear him. Pasolini is delivering a series of meditations this week on The hope of eternal life, a theme that was chosen well before Francis was admitted to Romes Gemelli hospital on Feb. 14 with a complex lung infection. The retreat, an annual gathering that kicks off the Catholic Churchs solemn Lenten season leading to Easter, continues through the week. The Vatican has said Francis would participate in spiritual communion with the rest of the hierarchy, from afar. Francis also resumed his physical and respiratory therapy at the Gemelli hospital, and rested and prayed inbetween. Francis has been using a nasal tube for supplemental oxygen to help him breathe during the day and a noninvasive mechanical ventilation mask at night, therapy that he was continuing Monday.The 88-year-old pope, who has chronic lung disease and had part of one lung removed as a young man, had what was just a bad case of bronchitis when he was hospitalized last month. The infection progressed into a complex respiratory tract infection and double pneumonia that has sidelined Francis for the longest period of his 12-year papacy and raised questions about the future.Francis was still keeping his eye on things. The Vatican said he had been informed about the floods in his native Argentina and expressed his closeness to the affected population. In addition, a Vatican cardinal close to Francis spoke out Monday to refute some negative media reports that have circulated in his absence. The Vatican development office released a letter written by Cardinal Michael Czerny to one of Francis close friends, the Argentine social justice activist Juan Grabois. Grabois had travelled to Rome to pray for Francis at Gemelli hospital, and some Italian media reported last month that he had tried to forcibly get into Francis 10th floor hospital suite, a claim he denied. In the March 6 letter, Czerny told Grabois that Francis knew of your presence in Rome and your daily vigils of prayer and spiritual solidarity at Gemelli Polyclinic and Im sure this gave him a true comfort and support.Additionally, I know that you join me in strongly repudiating the unfounded versions that have circulated in some media about alleged inappropriate behavior in the hospital, Czerny wrote. The Vatican is always abuzz with rumor but has gone into overdrive with speculation about Francis health and talk of conclaves, even though Francis is very much alive and in charge. The fact that Czerny felt it necessary to defend one of Francis friends suggested that the rumor and maneuvering in Francis absence had crossed a line.On Thursday, the Vatican will mark the 12th anniversary of Francis election, the first with the pope out of sight but still in charge. Francis was elected the 266th pope, the first Jesuit pope and first from Latin America on March 13, 2013, following the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI. ___Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APs collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
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  • Ontario slaps 25% tax increase on electricity exports to US in response to Trumps trade war
    apnews.com
    Ontario Premier Doug Ford holds a news conference regarding the new tariffs that the United States has placed on Canada, at Queen's Park in Toronto on Tuesday, March 4, 2025. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press via AP)2025-03-10T15:25:52Z Follow live updates on President Donald Trump and his new administration. TORONTO (AP) Ontarios premier, the leader of Canadas most populous province, announced that effective Monday it is charging 25% more for electricity to 1.5 million Americans in response to U.S. President Donald Trumps trade war. Ontario provides electricity to Minnesota, New York and Michigan.I will not hesitate to increase this charge. If the United State escalates, I will not hesitate to shut the electricity off completely, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said at a news conference in Toronto. Believe me when I say I do not want to do this. I feel terrible for the American people who didnt start this trade war. Its one person who is responsible, its President Trump.Ford said Ontarios tariff would remain in place despite the one-month reprieve from Trump, noting a one-month pause means nothing but more uncertainty. Quebec is also considering taking similar measures with electricity exports to the U.S. Fords office said the new market rules require any generator selling electricity to the U.S. to add a 25% surcharge. Ontarios government expects it to generate revenue of $300,000 Canadian dollars ($208,000) to CA$400,000 ($277,000) per day, which will be used to support Ontario workers, families and businesses.The new surcharge is in addition to the federal governments initial CA$30 billion ($21 billion) worth of retaliatory tariffs have been applied on items like American orange juice, peanut butter, coffee, appliances, footwear, cosmetics, motorcycles and certain pulp and paper products. Trade war intensifies Trump launched a new trade war last week by imposing tariffs against Washingtons three biggest trading partners, drawing immediate retaliation from Mexico, Canada and China and sending financial markets into a tailspin.Trump later said he has postponed 25% tariffs on many goods from Canada and Mexico for a month, amid widespread fears of a broader trade war.Ford estimated it will add about CA$100 ($69) a month to the bills of each American affected.It needs to end. Until these tariffs are off the table, until the threat of tariffs is gone for good, Ontario will not relent, Ford said.Ford said Trump changes his mind every day, but if he continues to attack Canada he will do everything it takes to maximize the pain. Republicans, at least the ones I speak to, do not agree with President Trump but they are too scared to go out there and say it publicly, Ford said. Its a shame but we need to end this.Trump has urged U.S. automakers to move auto production from Canada and Mexico to the U.S. Last week Trump granted a one-month exemption to 25% tariffs on vehicles and auto parts traded through the North American trade agreement USMCA after speaking with leaders of automakers Ford, General Motors and Stellantis. Ontario is the auto sector hub of Canada. Premier Ford also noted Trump is threatening Canada with steel, aluminum and diary tariffs. I will do whatever it takes to maximum the pain against Americans, Ford said. Stephen Lecce, Ontarios minister of energy and electrification, said the U.S. needs Canadas power and it could impact other states as well as the three states often resale Ontarios electricity. It is regrettable we are here, Lecce said. Ford calls for export taxes on Canadian oil Trumps trade war and his talk of making Canada the 51st U.S. state have infuriated Canadians, who are booing the American anthem at NHL and NBA games. Some are canceling trips south of the border, and many are avoiding buying American goods when they can.Fords Progressive Conservative government just won reelection by standing up for Canada against Trump. Ford said the Canadian province of Alberta should agree to put an export tax on oil. Alberta provides 4.3 million barrels of oil a day to the U.S. You want to talk about a Trump card. That will instantly change the game, Ford said. I know the Americans. If all of a sudden their gas prices go up a dollar a gallon they will lose their minds.Despite Trumps claim that the U.S doesnt need Canada, nearly a quarter of the oil America consumes per day comes from Canada. About 60% of U.S. crude oil imports are from Canada, and 85% of U.S. electricity imports as well. Canada is also the largest foreign supplier of steel, aluminum and uranium to the U.S. and has 34 critical minerals and metals that the Pentagon is eager for and investing for national security. Nearly CA$3.6 billion ($2.7 billion) worth of goods and services cross the border each day. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • MAGAs are losing it after 'Love Is Blind' contestants ditch their conservative men
    www.pride.com
    The latest season of Love Is Blind has kickstarted a conservative meltdown after two different contestants rejected their matches based on divisive political (and human) issues.The popular Netflix reality show gives singles the opportunity to speak without seeing one another, eventually getting to the point of proposing marriage. Things escalate from there, as they spend time with each other face-to-face, meet each others families, and ultimately walk down the aisle and decide if theyre really ready to say "I do."The eighth season only saw one of five couples actually tie the knot. Of the other four engagements, two failed because the women involved realized the men they had fallen for didnt hold the same values and said as much on the show."I love you so much, but Ive always wanted a partner to be on the same wavelength," Sara Carton told Ben Mezzenga in a clip thats gone viral following the March 9 finale. "And so, today, I cant."After leaving the wedding venue, Carton spoke further with her mom and sister, explaining that Mezzenga seemed uninterested in issues that were important to her."I remember I asked him about Black Lives Matter. And Im no expert, but when I asked him about it, he was like, I guess Ive never really thought too much about it," she recalled. "How did it not make you think about something?"She also shared that he claimed he "didnt know" what his churchs views on LGBTQ+ people were. When she watched a sermon online herself and discovered the views were "traditional," he didnt "really have much to say about it." "I want someone to think about that stuff," she admitted. View on ThreadsA second clip making the rounds on social media featured contestant Virginia Miller expressing similar concerns about the man she had left at the altar, Devin Buckley, during the reunion episode."Devin told me a lot about his core values something he did not want to talk about on camera," she told hosts Nick and Vanessa Lachey. "I will be really clear about mine. I 100% support the LGBTQ community. I also believe that women should have the decision to choose if they want to have an abortion or not. I also believe that different religions should be valued." View on ThreadsWanting a partner who shares your values is a pretty basic tenet of relationships. One would think thats something all people would understand and agree with, regardless of what those values are. After all, some religions even expressly command followers to marry someone who shares their beliefs.But the realization that holding regressive views comes with consequences in the world of dating often seems to send conservatives spiraling. View on Threads"My jaw was on the fucking floor reading these thread responses." (@) "Love is Blind Sara Carton making a political statement instead of trying to find her person. This guy missed a bullet with her." (@) "Imagine ruining your own wedding because of identity politics" (@) "'Ive always wanted a partner to be a liberal and youre not so I cant'" (@) "Sara from Love is Blind S8 is infected with the woke mind virus, destined to be a childless cat lady. Her fake empathy and controlling attitude is repellent to good men. Ben dodged a bullet."But to many people, seeing things play out the way they did was refreshing and watching the online temper tantrums about it was hilarious. (@) "lmao conservatives getting mad at love is blind because they realize theyre unfuckable and unmarriable" (@) "love this diva. like beyond her views, I honestly view it as a red flag when a man doesnt think outside himself nor cares to question the political climate" View on Threads"Me ugly crying because I thought my girl was gonna say yes to a dusty Trumper that had her pay for every single meal the entire time." View on Threads"WORDS heres the thing: neutrality is a privilege. And in 2025, if youre more uncomfortable with taking a stand than with injustice itself, youve already chosen a side. If your beliefs are shaky when challenged, they were never beliefs, they were just convenience. And these women saw through it in real time. No more emotional labor. No more I dont think about politics. No more pretending neutrality is harmless." (@) "a man who has 'no opinion' on the biggest political issues of our time i know what you are"
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  • Donald Trump is reviving the fortunes of governments and leaders that talk tough against him
    apnews.com
    Canada Liberal Leader Mark Carney talks to media as he leaves a caucus meeting in Ottawa, Monday, March 10, 2025. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press via AP)2025-03-10T20:33:53Z TORONTO (AP) Canadas governing Liberal Party appeared poised for a historic election defeat this year. Then Donald Trump declared economic war and threatened to annex the entire country as a 51st state. Now the Canadian Liberals and their new prime minister could come out on top.Then theres Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, facing a groundswell of visible support at home for her approach to Trumps tariff threats. Theres Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who visited the White House last month and was knocked on his heels, then went back to Europe to receive what many offered as a heros welcome. Even Emmanuel Macrons comeback in French polls might be linked, some say, to his taking a more robust approach with the new U.S. president during recent weeks.Saying the United States will always do whats best for the United States first, Trump has shaken up decades of international order. In weeks, he has sent leaders of other nations scrambling to shore up their own economies, partnerships and defenses against a Russia threat and solidify their own polls at home, too. Trump is like a flaming freight train that is igniting everything in its path, said Kory Teneycke, a conservative Canadian campaign director. Its not just a big thing. Its almost the only thing that is moving the electorate right now. Everyone, it seems, is responding to Trump. But nearly two months after his blizzard of executive orders, threats and trade wars, some leaders are steadying their messages with defiance and plans not that they will necessarily change the Trump administrations approach to it all. Scrambling and dread in EuropeFor great swaths of the European continent, Trumps reversal of three years of support for Ukraine after Russias invasion was received as an existential matter. Trumps false claim that Zelenskyy started the war and the American presidents thrashing of Zelenskyy in the Oval Office Feb. 28 undermined 80 years of cooperation with Europe on the understanding that the U.S. would help protect those nations from the Russian threat after World War II. Trump also limited Ukraines access to intelligence and weaponry. The confrontation laid bare the limits of a full-court press by Americas allies aimed at reshaping Trumps determination to end Russias invasion even if the terms are not to Ukraines liking. And a lot of Europe didnt like it much. Leaders immediately backed up the Ukrainian president on social media. Visual confirmation came the next day, when British Prime Minister Keir Starmer enveloped Zelenskyy in a hug in front of 10 Downing Street for all to see. It was a visual hint at what one historian suggests could happen: Oddly enough, NATO might become kind of a anti-Trump alliance, said Robert Bothwell, a professor of Canadian history and international relations at the University of Toronto. Hes doing a good job of creating that.That could happen reasonably quickly; some European leaders are already understanding that Trump is setting them adrift to face Russia alone. For years, Trump had complained that NATO allies werent contributing enough to Europes defense. Macron, too, had pushed for a stronger, more sovereign Europe since his own election in 2017, and has since insisted that the EU step up and start acting as a strategic world power. And within moments of his Feb. 23 election as Germanys likely next chancellor, Friedrich Merz, declared that his absolute priority will be for Europe to really achieve independence from the U.S. Germany, Europes biggest economy, is expected under its likely coalition government to loosen restrictions on borrowing money for defense spending. Meanwhile last week, the EUs 27 member nations signed off on a plan to loosen budget restrictions so that willing EU countries can increase their military spending. But for all that, Europes leaders were sidelined from talks in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Tuesday to end the war. Canadas conservatives struggleCanadas federal Conservatives and their leader Pierre Poilievre were heading for a massive victory in Canadas federal election this year until, Teneycke says, Trumps near-daily trade and annexation threats derailed them. Its the kiss of death to have JD Vance say something nice about you or have Elon Musk tweet out support for you. Every time Musk says something nice about Pierre Poilievre he goes down a point or two, he said. Stop helping. You are not helping.Teneycke was the campaign director for Doug Fords recent Progressive Conservative party win in the Canadian province of Ontario. Fords government just won big by having Ford stand up strong for Canada against Trump. Trumps trade war and his talk of making Canada the 51st U.S. state have infuriated Canadians, who are booing the American anthem at NHL and NBA games. Some are canceling trips south of the border, and many are avoiding buying American goods when they can. The surge in Canadian nationalism has bolstered the Liberal Partys chances federally in a parliamentary election expected within days or weeks, and Liberal showings have been improving in opinion polls. The change in the polls is dramatic. In mid-January a poll by Nanos, the Liberals trailed the opposition Conservatives and Poilievre 47% to 20%. This week the latest poll has the Liberals within 2 points. And that was before the party chose former central banker Mark Carney to replace Justin Trudeau. They are coming right back from the dead, Bothwell said. I am amazed. And it is all Trump.Bothwell says Trumps appeal is merely to American nationalism what he calls a type of it that is offensive to all foreigners. He says Canadians are rallying around the flag as if its wartime. If somebody comes up and kicks sand in your face and then spits in your eye, you dont like it, Bothwell said. Its a response to provocation. And a very serious provocation.Mexico has a less confrontational approachIn Mexico, a jubilant Sheinbaum celebrated with fellow citizens at a huge rally Sunday after many American tariffs were delayed, Although she appears strong now, it is not clear whether the 62-year-old presidents political support would weaken if the Mexican economy deteriorates because of tensions with the United States. The president will overcome everything, said Mariana Rivera, a 40-year-old social activist who held up a massive Mexican flag as high as her arms allowed.While her predecessor and populist ally managed an amicable relationship with Trump in his last term, some questioned if Sheinbaum would be able to strike up the same dynamic. But with approval above 80% and a steady peso, even Sheinbaums critics have admitted that the leader has been able to navigate the chaotic waters with expertise.Shes a leader that has chosen a very rational, reasonable strategy, a strategy that focuses on cooperation at the same time that Trudeau has come at with very conflictive language, said Palmira Tapia, a political analyst in Mexico.Sheinbaum has repeatedly said she would manage relations with Trump with a cool head, especially when it comes to Trumps promise of 25% tariffs, something economic forecasters said would sink Mexicos economy into a recession.To appease Trump, Sheinbaum has directed 10,000 troops to the U.S.-Mexico border, stepped up crackdowns on fentanyl and sent 29 cartel bosses to face justice in the U.S. While Canada and China immediately responded to last weeks tariffs by reciprocating, Sheinbaum bided her time. After Trump said he would delay the tariffs, she turned a planned march into a festival. Where will the ripples end? Trump is already so unpopular in Canada that hockey great Wayne Gretzky, a friend of Trumps who has not spoken up for Canada, has become a pariah in his home country.This is Wayne Gretzky the best-known and best-regarded Canadian in my life time. Since the early 80s this guy has been Canadian like a beaver and maple syrup, Teneycke said. Hes absolutely iconic, and he would be booed if he took center ice at any NHL game in Canada right now over the Trump thing. Its flabbergasting.___Rob Gillies oversees coverage of Canada for The Associated Press. AP journalists Laurie Kellman in London and Megan Janetsky in Mexico City contributed.
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  • An office known for enforcing special education is now focused on Trumps political priorities
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump waves to the media as he walks on South Lawn of the White House, in Washington, Sunday, March 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)2025-03-10T20:20:22Z WASHINGTON (AP) The Education Departments Office for Civil Rights is known best for enforcing the right to disability services across Americas schools. But under President Donald Trump, its taking a frontline role in his political battles.Trump appointees have halted thousands of pending cases while they open new investigations aligned with the presidents campaign promises. Career staffers have been sidelined and pressured to quit, and those who remain are being ordered to refocus priorities on antisemitism, transgender issues and anti-DEI complaints.A memo Friday from the civil rights offices chief announced antisemitism cases are now the top priority, taking aim at colleges where pro-Palestinian protests brought accusations of anti-Jewish bias. That followed a decision to cut $400 million in federal money going to Columbia University, where on Saturday immigration officials arrested a Palestinian activist who was involved in leading student protests. Hanging in the balance are the types of cases the office traditionally has focused on students with disabilities who need services they arent getting, or students facing harassment tied to their skin color. Its normal for new presidential administrations to pause civil rights cases while they get acclimated, but this transition brought a longer and more rigid freeze than others. Trump officials lifted the freeze for disability cases on Feb. 20, and last week, new Education Secretary Linda McMahon said all cases could resume as normal. During Trumps first month in office, the Office for Civil Rights resolved about 50 cases, according to a staffer who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution. By comparison, the office resolved more than 3,000 complaints in the same window of Trumps first term, and almost 500 under former President Joe Biden.Even the most urgent cases, which are traditionally granted exceptions, sat idle during the freeze. Staff lawyers were told not to respond to outside calls or emails, leaving families in the dark. Another staff member at the civil rights office described desperate emails from parents whose schools refused to make accommodations for their childrens disabilities. We were just ignoring their emails, said the person, who also spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. Tylisa Guyton of Taylor, Michigan, filed a complaint with the Office for Civil Rights on Jan. 20 over her 16-year-old sons repeated suspensions from a suburban Detroit school district, alleging a white administrator was targeting him and a group of other Black children. The teen has been out of school since Dec. 4. Even as investigations resume, she has heard nothing from the civil rights agency.Hes still asking every day, When can I go back to school? Guyton said of her son. The memo Friday told staffers antisemitism would be an investigative and enforcement priority. It added the memo should not be interpreted as deprioritizing any other form of OCR enforcement activity. But staffers said thats the most likely outcome as dwindling ranks of employees face heavier caseloads tied to the presidents agenda. On Monday, the Education Department sent a letter to 60 colleges warning they could lose federal money if they fail to make campuses safe for Jewish students. The list includes Harvard, Cornell and many others where pro-Palestinian protests led to accusations of anti-Jewish bias.Politics usually play into the offices priorities to some degree, and Republicans similarly accused Biden officials of going too far when they opened cases into COVID-19 mask bans or in support of transgender students. But several longtime staffers said this is the first time theyve seen cases tied to political agendas edge out their everyday work.Trump has called for a total shutdown of the Education Department, calling it a con job infiltrated by leftists. At her Senate hearing, McMahon said the civil rights office might be better served if it moves to the Justice Department. Some cases are moving forward, but others appear to be stalled, Marcie Lipsitt, said a special education advocate in Michigan.Ive said to everyone, Youre going to have to fight harder for accountability because there will be no accountability at the U.S. Department of Ed, if there is a U.S. Department of Ed, she said. At the same time, Trumps officials have continued to open their own directed investigations proactive inquiries that depart from the offices typical work responding to complaints. The office has opened more than a dozen such investigations, many aimed at pressuring universities to stop allowing transgender athletes or to take a harder stance against pro-Palestinian protesters.It adds up to more work for fewer employees at the office of about 500 workers. Staffers say field offices across the country were hit after dozens of department workers were put on leave in response to Trumps orders against diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. Many others took buyouts pushed by the Trump administration, leaving some field offices without administrators in key leadership jobs. Minor changes to the offices policies could also carry outsize impact. Complaints to the office cant move forward unless the filer signs a consent form allowing their name to be disclosed during the investigation. For years, the office sent reminders if the form was not submitted parents often didnt know it was required. But an updated case manual from the Trump administration drops the reminders.Staffers say it means more cases will be dismissed on a technicality.Some special education advocates have begun filing more cases with state agencies, said Brandi Tanner, an Atlanta-based psychologist and special education advocate. In conversations at a recent conference in California, disability advocates expressed uncertainty and anxiety, Tanner said.Its kind of like, were very scared about what else is going to continue to come down the pike, she said. Are students going to lose their rights?___Hollingsworth reported from Mission, Kansas.___The Associated Press education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find APs standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org. COLLIN BINKLEY Binkley covers the U.S. Education Department and federal education policy for The Associated Press, along with a wide range of issues from K-12 through higher education. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Transgender Daughter of Naomi Watts and Liev Schreiber Makes Paris Fashion Week Debut
    gayety.co
    Kai Schreiber, the transgender daughter of Hollywood stars Naomi Watts and Liev Schreiber, made her catwalk debut this past weekend at Paris Fashion Week, marking a major milestone in her modeling career. At just 16 years old, Kai walked for Maison Valentinos womenswear fall/winter 2025 show on Sunday, March 9. Dressed in a striking snake-print knit mini dress, the young model wore a brown-andSource
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  • Supreme Court to Decide Whether States Can Ban Conversion Therapy for LGBTQ+ Minors
    gayety.co
    The U.S. Supreme Court announced Monday it will review a case from Colorado to determine whether state and local governments have the authority to enforce laws that ban conversion therapy for LGBTQ+ minors. The case comes as the conservative-led court takes on a range of cases involving LGBTQ+ rights, including those related to transgender issues. This review follows several actions by formerSource
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  • For Trump the peace negotiator, might makes right. History offers different lessons
    apnews.com
    Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and U.S. President Donald Trump give a joint news conference at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland, July 16, 2018. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)2025-03-10T18:38:48Z As President Donald Trump seeks to end wars in the Middle East and Ukraine, his approach to both seems to boil down to giving the stronger party what it wants and pushing the weaker to accept it.His defenders view it as hardnosed realpolitik a recognition that the strong eventually prevail, so better to cut ones losses in the interest of a certain kind of peace. You dont have the cards right now, Trump told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in their White House blowup. Vice President JD Vance, right, speaks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, left, as President Donald Trump listens in the Oval Office at the White House, Feb. 28, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/ Mystyslav Chernov, File) Vice President JD Vance, right, speaks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, left, as President Donald Trump listens in the Oval Office at the White House, Feb. 28, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/ Mystyslav Chernov, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Hes transactional, said Aaron David Miller, a former veteran U.S. diplomat now at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Trump is looking for quick wins deals, I would argue not anything remotely related to the incredibly difficult work of conflict resolution.But the eventual outcome of conflicts is not always determined by military power alone see Americas 20-year war in Afghanistan, where the worlds strongest military failed to defeat a tenacious insurgency. And the mercurial Trump has a way of complicating any unified theory of his actions: In recent days, he has threatened new sanctions against Russia and his administration unnerved some Israelis by negotiating directly with Hamas., which the U.S. and Israel view as a terrorist group. FILE U.S. President Donald Trump, right, meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G20 Summit in Hamburg, Germany, July 7, 2017. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File) FILE U.S. President Donald Trump, right, meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G20 Summit in Hamburg, Germany, July 7, 2017. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Peace through strength?Trump has offered Russian President Vladimir Putin nearly everything he wants before peace negotiations even begin, by ruling out NATO membership for Ukraine, and suspending military aid and intelligence sharing that Ukraine relies on as it fends off Russian attacks.At the same time, he has pressed Zelenskyy to share Ukraines mineral wealth with the U.S. without formal security guarantees in return.In the Middle East, Trump has lavished support on Israel, restoring military aid that had been paused by the Biden administration and embracing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus goals of returning all the hostages and eradicating Hamas which could be mutually exclusive. Trump has yet to make clear whether his long-term vision for peace includes a two-state solution -- long a pillar of U.S. policy in the Middle East. President Donald Trump greets Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he arrives at the West Wing of the White House, Feb. 4, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) President Donald Trump greets Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he arrives at the West Wing of the White House, Feb. 4, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More For Hamas, which started the war with its Oct. 7, 2023, attack, Trump has publicly offered only threats and ultimatums. But the administration recently held direct talks with the group rather than going through mediators. Alon Pinkas, a former senior Israeli diplomat, said Trumps actions suggest he doesnt see Netanyahu as a power player like Putin or Chinese President Xi Jinping, but more as a local warlord.Hes part of my empire. Hes not a decisionmaker, Pinkas said, describing Trumps approach to the Israeli leader. From left, European Council President Antonio Costa, Ukraines President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen arrive for an EU Summit at the European Council building in Brussels, Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Havana, File) From left, European Council President Antonio Costa, Ukraines President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen arrive for an EU Summit at the European Council building in Brussels, Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Havana, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More In both conflicts, the weaker party has remained defiantZelenskyy has reached out to Ukraines European allies, who have pledged to beef up their own defenses, and he has vowed to fight on even as he seeks to repair ties with Washington.Hamas has dismissed Trumps threats and says dozens of remaining hostages will only be returned in exchange for an end to the war. A fragile truce negotiated by the Biden administration and the Trump team is in limbo, with Israel threatening to resume the fighting.Diana Buttu, a Palestinian analyst who advised peace negotiators in the 2000s, says Trumps strategy is unlikely to succeed.Hamas, which has already survived a 15-month Israeli onslaught, doesnt give two hoots about him, she said. They dont see that hes got any leverage over them. People take part in a protest in Tel Aviv, Israel, Saturday, March 8, 2025, demanding the immediate release of hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit, File) People take part in a protest in Tel Aviv, Israel, Saturday, March 8, 2025, demanding the immediate release of hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The strong do as they wish but not alwaysThe limits of military power have been debated for millennia.Thucydides fifth century B.C. history of the war between Athens and Sparta includes a famous debate over the use of military power known as the Melian Dialogue.Athens lands a fleet at the island of Melos and makes the city-state an offer it cant refuse. Join the empire, pay tribute and you wont be obliterated. The Athenians famously advise the Melians to try to get what it is possible for you to get, considering that the strong do what they have the power to do and the weak accept what they have to accept.The Melians refuse, appealing to fair play and just dealing. They warn the Athenians that such belligerence could drive other small states into the arms of Sparta. Athens lays siege to Melos, and after months of fighting sacks it, putting the men to death and sending the women and children into slavery. Its a grim parable and perhaps a cautionary tale for Canada, Greenland and Panama.In more recent conflicts, however, military might has only gone so far. Hamas has survived five wars against the most powerful military in the Middle East, the last sparked by a surprise attack that caught Israels vaunted security agencies unaware.Ukraine held off the Russian invasion after many thought it would be quickly overrun. The Biden administration had even suggested Zelenskyy flee, an offer he famously declined.Even in Melos, the outcome was not so clear-cut. Twelve years after Athens seemingly proved that might makes right, it lost the war to Sparta. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, left, U.S. President Jimmy Carter, center, and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin clasp hands on the north lawn of the White House after signing the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel, March 26, 1979, in Washington. (AP Photo/ Bob Daugherty, File) Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, left, U.S. President Jimmy Carter, center, and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin clasp hands on the north lawn of the White House after signing the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel, March 26, 1979, in Washington. (AP Photo/ Bob Daugherty, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A more even-handed approachThe United States most successful diplomatic forays have tended to involve a more even-handed approach. It helps if the warring parties are in what political scientists refer to as a mutually hurting stalemate.Then-President Jimmy Carter secured the landmark Camp David peace agreement after twisting the arms of Israelis and Egyptians alike just five years after they fought the last of several wars. The Good Friday Agreement that ended decades of violence in northern Ireland came after both Britain and Irish republicans concluded that outright victory was impossible.Trumps supporters boast that he thinks outside the box in the Middle East, but for decades, the U.S. has built its approach around ironclad support for Israel and its peace efforts have repeatedly failed.The Abraham Accords brokered by Trump in his first term in which Israel forged ties with four Arab countries sidelined the Palestinians. Hamas said its Oct. 7 attack was partly driven by the sense that the Palestinian cause had been forgotten. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, U.S. President Donald Trump, Bahrain Foreign Minister Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa and United Arab Emirates Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan pose for a photo on the Blue Room Balcony after signing the Abraham Accords at the White House in Washington, Sept. 15, 2020. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, U.S. President Donald Trump, Bahrain Foreign Minister Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa and United Arab Emirates Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan pose for a photo on the Blue Room Balcony after signing the Abraham Accords at the White House in Washington, Sept. 15, 2020. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Buttu recalls meeting with American diplomats from previous administrations who told Palestinians essentially the same thing Trump told Zelenskyy.At a meeting in November 2000 about a major settlement under construction in east Jerusalem, the Americans turned to us and said, Theres just no way, youre just going to have to accept defeat and move on... Youre going to have to lick your wounds, Buttu said.The peace process collapsed around that time as a Palestinian uprising erupted. Twenty-five years later, the conflict is deadlier than ever and no less intractable.They told the Israelis that might is right, Buttu said. It encourages them to be even mightier.___Follow APs war coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Jason Isaacs said, 'No robe, no problem!' and 'The White Lotus' fans are in shambles
    www.pride.com
    We knew Jason Isaacs had a dark side to him when he served us all the charisma, uniqueness, nerve, and talent we needed as Lucius Malfoy in the Harry Potter movie series, but we did not know he was hiding Nagini the snake under his robes the whole time.Thanks to the most recent episode of the third season of The White Lotus, we got to see the whole package upfront, and whether its a prosthetic or not, we are here for this fantasy. (@) *Minor spoilers ahead*For those of you who havent kept up with this season of the show, Isaacs plays Timothy Ratliff, father of Piper (Sarah Catherine Hook), Lochlan (Sam Nivola), and one of our newest favorite crushes, Saxon (Patrick Schwarzenegger.)Timothy spent the first three episodes really going through it with some shady work business back home, and the fourth episode saw him stealing some Lorazepam from his wife, Victoria (Parker Posey). Under the influence, he leans back in the chair without realizing his robe opened up and exposed himself to well, everybody. Isaacs joins Schwarzenegger in the lineup of actors who bared it all in this season, a move he joked about with with Entertainment Weekly, saying, It is now in my contract for every show I do, so well see. Itll get easier, hopefully. Although fans online have lost their minds over the scene, brief as it was, Isaacs also said it was just the start of an even darker downward spiral for his character.You havent seen other things that are coming, but I just remember thinking, I better dig deep and produce something here, he said. Theres a lot of parts you can go through and tell a very dramatic story without your character going through anything extreme. But theres some big, old acting coming up.We can hardly wait.Scroll through for some of our favorite reactions. (@) Okkk Jason Isaacs!!!! I knew Mike White would love the gays for this!! (I know its a prosthetic!) (@) "This scene makes way more sense now #WhiteLotus #JasonIsaacs" (@) "jason isaacs in next weeks episode of white lotus" (@) "Jason Isaacs peen #WhiteLotus" (@) "To Jason Isaacs on the White Lotus" (@) "Jason Isaacs pole on my tv" (@) "THERES ABSOLUTELY NO WAY I JUST SAW JASON ISAACS COCK. OH MYGOD I WAITED MY WHOLE LIFE FOR THIS DAY #thewhitelotus" (@) "that jason isaacs scene in the new white lotus episode #TheWhiteLotus" (@) "Jason Isaacs in #WhiteLotus season 3" (@) "Jason Isaacs sensing some people were bored with his storyline:" (@) "jason isaacs" (@) "Jason Isaacs. #TheWhiteLotus" (@) "me watching that jason isaacs reveal on the white lotus" (@) "Thanks to White Lotus and its time-honored tradition of flashing junk at least once a season, I now know that Jason Isaacs isn't circumcised" (@) "jason isaacs full frontal made me spill my soup I wasnt ready #WhiteLotus" (@) "Jason Isaacs in the #TheWhiteLotus is so....." (@) "Not Jason Isaacs show his Snake on #TheWhiteLotus @StreamOnMax the True #Slytherin well #HarryPotter fan know." (@) "jason isaacs hog" (@) "Jason isaacs prosthetic looking fat af" (@) "opened twt at work and the first thing at the top of my tl was a gif of Jason Isaacs WEINER HELP" (@) "i haven't seen anyone talk about Jason Isaacs' balls. what the hell happened to us as a nation" (@) "Jason Isaacs in ep 4 of White Lotus is EVERYTHING" (@) "As someone whos had the hots for Jason Isaacs ever since I saw him in 1997s Event Horizon, I am a happy man after last night."
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  • Adult stars King Dwarf & Joel Someone spill on their steamy open relationship
    www.pride.com
    Now this is couple goals!King Dwarf and Joel Someone are the two of the hottest stars in the adult entertainment industry and they're enjoying all of their success right by each other's sides.The two started dating right before the 2023 GayVN Awards and they're revealing the secret to maintaining an open relationship as sex workers."[It requires] lots of communication and trust. To a certain degree, you have to be really forward with what your career is. Once you do that, it opens up everything," Someone tells PRIDE."I got my claws in him. He's not going anywhere. It's something learning from my parents, 40 years of marriage. You go through the good times and bad. If you survive the bad times, it's real," King Dwarf adds. See on Instagram The adorable couple is stronger than ever, which helps each of them create some of the hottest content online... even with other adult entertainers."My favorite type of scene is with someone who you can tell is really into it, like someone who is really willing to fall in love in a 20 minute span," Someone says."If you know me, I love public. I love being a little dirty sl-t cruising," King Dwarf adds.Follow King Dwarf on Instagram here and Joel Someone on Instagram here. To see the full interview with the boyfriends at the 2025 GayVN Awards, check out the video at the top of the page.
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  • Jools Lebron Claims Beauty Brand Exploited Her, Reveals She Was Unpaid for Work
    gayety.co
    Jools Lebron, the influencer behind one of 2024s most viral trends, is speaking out about an experience she claims where she wasnt compensated for her work with a beauty brand. In the debut episode of her new podcast Very Demure, Lebron, a transgender influencer who popularized the demure trend on TikTok, revealed that a well-known beauty brand took advantage of her. The demure trendSource
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  • Disney didnt copy Moana from a mans story of a surfer boy, a jury says
    apnews.com
    This image released by Disney shows the character Moana, voiced by Auli'i Cravalho, in a scene from "Moana 2." (Disney via AP)2025-03-10T12:44:40Z LOS ANGELES (AP) A jury on Monday quickly rejected a mans claim that Disneys Moana was stolen from his story of a young surfer in Hawaii.The Los Angeles federal jury deliberated for only about 2 hours before deciding that the creators of Moana never had access to writer and animator Buck Woodalls outlines and script for Bucky the Surfer Boy.With that question settled, the jury of six women and two men didnt even have to consider the similarities between Bucky and Disneys 2016 hit animated film about a questing Polynesian princess.Woodall had shared his work with the stepsister of his brothers wife, who worked for a different company on the Disney lot, but the woman testified during the two-week trial that she never showed it to anyone at Disney.Obviously were disappointed, Woodalls attorney Gustavo Lage said outside court. Were going to review our options and think about the best path forward. In closing arguments earlier Monday, Woodalls attorney said that a long chain of circumstantial evidence and similarities so numerous they cant be coincidences make it clear that his story Bucky the Surfer Boy was the basis for the hit 2016 animated film.There was no Moana without Bucky, Lage said during closing arguments in a Los Angeles courtroom.Defense lawyer Moez Kaba said that the evidence shows overwhelmingly that Moana was clearly the creation and crowning achievement of the 40-year career of John Musker and Ron Clements, the writers and directors behind 1989s The Little Mermaid, 1992s Aladdin, 1997s Hercules and 2009s The Princess and the Frog. They had no idea about Bucky, Kaba said in his closing. They had never seen it, never heard of it.Musker and Disney attorneys declined comment outside the courtroom. Moana earned nearly $700 million in global box office.A judge previously ruled that Woodalls 2020 lawsuit came too late for him to claim a piece of those receipts, and that a lawsuit he filed earlier this year over Moana 2 which earned more than $1 billion must be decided separately. That suit remains active, though the jurys decision does not bode well for it. The relatively young jury of six women and two men watched Moana in its entirety in the courtroom. They are considering a 2004 story outline that Woodall, a New Mexico writer and animator, created for Bucky in 2003, along with a 2008 update and a 2011 script. In the latter versions of the story, the title character, vacationing in Hawaii with his parents, befriends a group of Native Hawaiian youth and goes on a quest that includes time travel to the ancient islands and interactions with demigods to save a sacred site from a developer.Jurors would have had to decide whether the two works had substantial similarity, a question that much of the trial addressed, but their instructions told them to stop if they answered no to the access question. Around 2004, Woodall gave the Bucky outline to the stepsister of his brothers wife. That woman, Jenny Marchick, worked for Mandeville Films, a company that had a contract with Disney to create live-action films and was located on the Disney lot. He sent her follow-up materials through the years. He testified that he was stunned when he saw Moana in 2016 and saw so many of his ideas. Marchick was cast as the mastermind of the theft in his original lawsuit before she was dropped as a defendant. She testified that she had not shown Bucky to anyone at Disney. And messages shared by the defense showed she eventually ignored Woodalls queries to her and told her stepsister that shed told Woodall there was nothing she could do for him.Disney attorney Kaba argued there was no evidence Marchick ever worked on Moana or received any credit or compensation for it. He emphasized to jurors that Woodall had to prove the Bucky materials got to the creators of Moana and not merely someone with connections to the corporation.Lage, Woodalls attorneys, outlined the similarities of the two works in his closing. Both include Polynesian demigods as major characters, with the figures of Maui, Te Fiti and a fiery volcano goddess in Moana clearly counterparts of the divine characters in Bucky.Both include shape-shifting characters who turn into, among other things, insects and sharks.Both include the main characters interacting with animals who act as spirit helpers.And Lage said Moana struggling to learn to sail in her quest echoes Buckys struggle to learn to surf for his.How many coincidences are too many? the lawyer asked. When does a coincidence stop being a coincidence?Kaba said many of these elements, including Polynesian lore and basic staples of literature, are not copyrightable.Many others, including shapeshifting characters, appear throughout films including The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, and Hercules, which made Musker and Clements essential to the Disney renaissance of the 1990s and made Disney a global powerhouse. Many others, including animal guides, go back to Disney movies as early as 1940s Pinocchio and appear in all of Musker and Clements previous films.Kaba said Musker and Clements developed Moana the same way they did the other films, through their own inspiration, research, travel and creativity.The lawyer said thousands of pages of development documents show every step of Musker and Clements creation, whose spark came from the paintings of Paul Gaugin and the writings of Herman MelvilleYou can see every single fingerprint, Kaba said. You can see the entire genetic makeup of Moana.And none of the extensive Disney documentation makes any mention of Bucky, the lawyer argued.This is Ron and Johns story, Kaba said. No matter what they tell you, this is not Buck Woodalls story. ANDREW DALTON Dalton covers entertainment for The Associated Press, with an emphasis on crime, courts and obituaries. He has worked for the AP for 20 years and is based in Los Angeles. mailto
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  • NFLs free agency period arrives and a slew of stars cash in as teams fortify or retool rosters
    apnews.com
    Philadelphia Eagles defensive tackle Milton Williams (93) celebrates after recovering a fumble by Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the second half of the NFL Super Bowl 59 football game, Sunday, Feb. 9, 2025, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)2025-03-10T19:31:35Z The NFL champion Philadelphia Eagles are losing two of their defensive disruptors who tormented Patrick Mahomes in the Super Bowl. Defensive tackle Milton Williams agreed to a deal with New England worth $26 million annually and edge rusher Josh Sweat is heading to the Arizona Cardinals on a four-year, $76.4 million contract, people with knowledge of the terms told The Associated Press.Williams and Sweat combined for 4 1/2 sacks, four quarterback hits, four tackles for loss, a forced fumble and a fumble recovery in the Eagles 40-22 rout of the Kansas City Chiefs in the Super Bowl.The NFLs 52-hour legal tampering period arrived Monday with a slew of stars getting big contracts following a weekend flurry that featured league MVP Josh Allens record-setting $330 million extension and Myles Garrett set to become the highest-paid non-quarterback ever. The QB carousel kept churning Monday with the Seattle Seahawks grabbing Sam Darnold (three years, $101.5 million) following his bounce-back season in Minnesota and Justin Fields landing with the New York Jets ($40 million over two years) to replace Aaron Rodgers. The terms of the deals are all according to people familiar with the negotiations who spoke to The AP on the condition of anonymity because teams generally dont announce contract terms and the deals cant be signed until Wednesday.Among the other headliners were Carolina Panthers star Jaycee Horn, who became the highest-paid cornerback in the NFL with a four-year, $100 million deal that includes $70 million in guaranteed money. The Panthers also agreed to terms with Las Vegas Raiders safety Trevon Moehrig on a three-year, $51 million contract. Along with Williams, who was considered the top free agent available this year, the New England Patriots also agreed to contracts with linebacker Robert Spillane, cornerback Carlton Davis and offensive tackle Morgan Moses.The Washington Commanders made two big splashes, agreeing to terms with defensive tackle Javon Kinlaw (three years, $45 million) and acquiring standout offensive tackle Laremy Tunsil in a trade with the Houston Texans. Highest PaidAllens deal includes $250 million guaranteed. Thats an NFL record regardless of position. Meanwhile, Garrett is staying in Cleveland after the Browns gave him a record four-year contract extension that makes the four-time All-Pro edge rusher the highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL history.Garretts deal includes $122.8 million guaranteed, an average annual salary of $40 million with a total value of $204.8 million. Garrett, the 2023 AP Defensive Player of the Year, had asked for a trade last month but the Browns were adamant about keeping the 29-year-old star in Cleveland. Quarterback CarouselDarnold went 14-2 in Minnesota before ending the season with back-to-back duds that contributed to the decision by the Vikings to let Darnold hit the open market and turn the team over to J.J. McCarthy, who was drafted 10th overall last year.Aside from Darnold, who is heading to his fourth team in four seasons and his fifth franchise overall, two other veteran QBs are among the most intriguing names on the market: Russell Wilson and Aaron Rodgers.Rodgers isnt technically a free agent, but the Jets said theyre going to release him this week following a disappointing two-year stint in the Meadowlands.A torn Achilles tendon ended Rodgers 2023 season after a handful of snaps and he went 5-12 last year, coming nowhere near the 9-7 mark another former Packers great, Brett Favre, posted with the Jets in 2008 before a rebound season in Minnesota.Rodgers hopes to land somewhere so he can have a similar bounce-back at age 41, and so does Wilson, who lost his last five starts for Pittsburgh last season.Since leaving Seattle for Denver in 2022, Wilson is 17-25.Seattles move for Darnold came three days after the Seahawks agreed to a deal to send Geno Smith to the Las Vegas Raiders for a third-round draft pick. The Seahawks are undergoing major changes on offense, having also agreed to trade star receiver D.K. Metcalf to Pittsburgh for a second-round pick and have cut receiver Tyler Lockett. Among backup QBs staying put are Jarrett Stidham, who agreed to a two-year, $12 million deal to serve as Bo Nixs No. 2 in Denver, and Jimmy Garoppolo is staying with the Rams to back up Matthew Stafford.Denver also bolstered its stellar defense, agreeing to keep run-stuffer D.J. Jones (three years, $39 million) and to sign former 49ers safety Talanoa Hufanga (three years, $45 million).Well-traveledTwo-time Pro Bowl edge rusher Haason Reddick is on the move again, this time to Tampa Bay, where hell make $14 million in 2025 with $12 million guaranteed.Before a holdout ruined his 2024 season with the Jets, Reddick had 27 sacks in two seasons in Philadelphia. He also had double-digit sacks for Arizona in 2020 and Carolina in 2021. The Buccaneers are his fifth team in nine seasons.The Bucs also agreed to re-sign Chris Godwin, who is returning from a gruesome ankle injury, for $66 million ($44 million guaranteed) over three years. The 29-year-old had 50 catches for 576 yards in just seven games last season. ___AP Pro Football Writer Rob Maaddi contributed. ___AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/NFL ARNIE MELENDREZ STAPLETON Melendrez Stapleton is a pro football writer for The Associated Press. He is based in Denver. twitter mailto
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  • Chappell Roan shares a cheeky wardrobe malfunction from Paris Fashion Week
    www.pride.com
    Chappell Roan is brushing it off after a cheeky wardrobe malfunction during Paris Fashion Week.Posting a round up of pictures from the various events she attended, Roan acknowledged that getting invited to the iconic yearly celebration was "a dream come true.""thank you @ludovicdesaintsernin + @viviennewestwood @alexandermcqueen for having me," she added.But scrolling through to the fifth picture in the carousel provided a little more of a look into the "Pink Pony Club" singers experience than one might have expected. There, shes seen looking back over her shoulder while a rip right up the back of her dress exposes her thong. (@) "this dress didnt break, it evolved," one person commented on X."This is not a malfunction, this is a masterpiece in the making," another agreed.The mishap appears to have occurred after the Ludovic de Saint Sernin show although it certainly didnt get in the way of Roan having a great time. (@) And fortunately, the designer seems to be taking it in stride as well."I love you SO much, cant believe I didnt get to give you a hug backstage, we need a redo!!!" the official Instagram commented on her post. "You looked INCREDIBLE."In an amusing turn of events, Ice Spice who was seated next to Roan at the Vivienne Westwood show actually experienced a similar wardrobe malfunction during Fashion Week."mine ripped in the same spot," she wrote, sharing Roans picture to her Instagram Stories. View on ThreadsWell... we're not exactly mad about any of it!
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  • Emilia Prez Star Karla Sofa Gascn Apologizes for Past Controversy Amid Oscars Scandal
    gayety.co
    Karla Sofa Gascn, the star of Emilia Prez, has issued a heartfelt apology following a wave of controversy during this years Oscars season. The actress, who made history as the first openly transgender actor nominated for an Academy Award, found herself at the center of a scandal after past social media posts resurfaced. The posts, which included hateful and bigoted remarksSource
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  • How Jonathan Van Ness Believes Their Standup Helps Remove Stigma of Living with HIV
    gayety.co
    Jonathan Van Ness, known for their infectious personality on Queer Eye and their popular podcast Getting Curious, is taking their comedy to the stage at the Lil Rhody Laugh Riot festival in Providence, Rhode Island, on March 29. Ahead of their performance, Van Ness shared insights into their approach to stand-up comedy, the importance of LGBTQ+ representation, and how they use humor to navigateSource
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  • Fans Lose It After Seeing This Photo of Pedro Pascal and Oscar Isaac Hugging
    gayety.co
    A picture of Pedro Pascal and Oscar Isaac embracing has set the internet ablaze with excitement, leaving fans delighted by the show of affection and celebrating their deep friendship. The heartwarming photo, which was shared on Pascals Instagram Story on Sunday, March 9, captured the two actors in a warm hug. While the image was shared without a caption, Pascal credited the photo to IsaacsSource
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  • Senate confirms Lori Chavez-DeRemer as Trumps labor secretary
    apnews.com
    Lori Chavez-DeRemer attends a hearing of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee on her nomination for Secretary of Labor, Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)2025-03-10T19:11:22Z The Senate voted Monday to confirm Lori Chavez-DeRemer as U.S. labor secretary, a Cabinet position that puts her in charge of enforcing federally mandated worker rights and protections at a time when the White House is trying to eliminate thousands of government employees. Chavez-DeRemer will oversee the Department of Labor, one of several executive departments named in lawsuits challenging the authority of billionaire Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency to order layoffs and access sensitive government data.The Labor Department had nearly 16,000 full-time employees and a proposed budget of $13.9 billion for fiscal year 2025. Some of its vast responsibilities include reporting the U.S. unemployment rate, regulating workplace health and safety standards, investigating minimum wage, child labor and overtime pay disputes, and applying laws on union organizing and unlawful terminations. Several prominent labor unions, including the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, endorsed Chavez-DeRemers nomination. The former Republican congresswoman from Oregon is the daughter of a Teamster, and during her one term in the House earned a reputation as pro-labor. The Senate voted to confirm Chavez-DeRemer 67-32, with 17 Democrats voting yes and three Republicans voting no. The Senate has now confirmed all but one of Trumps picks for his Cabinet. Its Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions had voted 14-9 in favor of her nomination last week, with all Republicans except Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky giving Chavez-DeRemer their support. Three Democrats on the committee Sens. John Hickenlooper of Colorado, Tim Kaine of Virginia and Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire voted with the majority. During her confirmation hearing before the committee, several Republican senators grilled Chavez-DeRemer about her decision to co-sponsor legislation that would have made it easier for workers to unionize and penalized employers who stood in the way of organizing efforts. She declined to explicitly state whether she still backed the Protecting the Right to Organize Act, also known as the PRO Act. Chavez-DeRemer explained she had signed on as a co-sponsor because she wanted a seat at the table to discuss important labor issues. Under further questioning, she walked back some of her support of the bill, saying that she supported state right to work laws, which allow employees to refuse to join a union in their workplace. The PRO Act did not come up for a vote during her time in Congress, but the legislation was reintroduced in the House and Senate last week. As we speak, Donald Trump and his billionaire buddies are stealing the American dream away from working families, rigging every lever of society in favor of the billionaire class, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement. Thats why we need the PRO Act, to empower hardworking Americans to bargain for better wages, benefits, and safer working conditions. During her time in Congress Chavez-DeRemer also co-sponsored legislation which sought to protect public-sector workers from having their Social Security benefits docked because of government pension benefits. That bill also stalled because it didnt have enough Republican support. Chavez-DeRemer walked a fine line during her confirmation hearing, attempting to appeal to both Democrats and Republicans. On the subject of whether the federal minimum wage was overdue for an increase, she said she recognized it hadnt been raised from $7.25 an hour since 2009 but that she would not want to shock the economy.Some Democratic senators and workers rights advocates have questioned how much independence Chavez-DeRemer would have as President Donald Trumps labor secretary and where her allegiance would lie in an administration that has fired thousands of federal employees. CATHY BUSSEWITZ Bussewitz is a national business reporter for The Associated Press. She writes about the workplace, job issues and wellness. twitter mailto
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