• White Lotus' Mike Whites dad ghostwrote for the religious right, then turned against it
    www.pride.com
    For all its biting satire, chaotic sex, and dead bodies, HBOs The White Lotus has always felt, somehow, like a love letter to queer viewers. Maybe its the gay characters, maybe its the men in speedos or maybe its creator Mike Whites ... dad?In a recent episode of The Dishcast with Andrew Sullivan, White revealed a personal chapter that could rival any plot twist from his Emmy-winning series: his father, James Melville Mel White, was once a ghostwriter for the religious right, penning books like Pat Robertsons Americas Dates With Destiny and Billy Grahams Approaching Hoofbeats: The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse while secretly battling his identity as a closeted gay man. "He wanted to be the next Billy Graham, Mike says. For decades, Mel was a respected pastor, professor, and Christian filmmaker. He wrote bestsellers for televangelist giants like Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, and Billy Graham all while enduring exorcisms, conversion therapy, and even electric shock treatments in a desperate attempt to pray the gay away. It was probably the worst time in my life, Mike said, recalling the moment he realized his father was struggling with his sexuality. It was not on his agenda to be gay. It was a very long, drawn-out process.Behind the scenes, Mel was unraveling. But in public, he was flying private and pulling six-figure book deals $125,000 for five months of ghostwriting, to be exact. It was lucrative and he couldnt have been an out, gay man and remained associated with these people, Mike said. So he stayed closeted until my sister and I got through college.Once his kids graduated, Mel left the church and never looked back. He came out, fell in love with his husband, Gary Nixon, and pivoted to queer activism with the same passion he once used to sell Gods word on TV. In 1998, the couple co-founded Soulforce, a group rooted in nonviolent resistance to confront religious-based LGBTQ+ oppression. The two also went on to compete together as a father/son duo on both The Amazing Race 14 and The Amazing Race: Unfinished Business.See on InstagramMy dad would go around the country to religious colleges with gay students and have them bear witness to the harm that was being caused, Mike said. His gay activism was specifically targeted toward trying to convince the religious right and those that he had worked for prior.Its a legacy not lost on Mike. At the 2022 Emmys, he thanked Mel during his acceptance speech, calling him out as struggling, but clearly with deep love. And when you look closely at The White Lotus its tenderness, its queerness, its tragic comedy you start to see the story of a father and son who both learned, in very different ways, that living your truth might just be the most radical act of all.
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  • Jacob Elordi Stars in On Swift Horses, A Queer Love Story of Hope, Self-Discovery, and Embracing Desire
    gayety.co
    Sony Pictures Classics upcoming film On Swift Horses is set to make waves in the queer cinema world. Starring Daisy Edgar-Jones, Jacob Elordi, Will Poulter, Diego Calva, Sasha Calle, and Kat Cunning, the 1950s-set film explores the challenges and complexities of queer relationships during a time of societal repression. With its tender portrayal of forbidden love and personal discoverySource
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  • Fantasy baseball buzz: Braves' Profar to miss 80 games, lineup moves to make
    www.espn.com
    All of the important fantasy spin and actionable takeaways resulting from the latest baseball news.
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  • Browns' Haslam: 'Big swing-and-miss' on Watson
    www.espn.com
    Browns co-owner Jimmy Haslam said the team "took a big swing-and-miss" in acquiring QB Deshaun Watson and signing him to a $230 million deal that was fully guaranteed.
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  • Judge pauses Trump administration plans to end temporary legal protections for Venezuelans
    apnews.com
    Venezuelan migrants deported from the United States peer through windows of an Eastern Airlines plane upon arriving at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Maiquetia, Venezuela, Sunday, March 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Cristian Hernandez)2025-03-31T22:14:46Z SAN FRANCISCO (AP) A federal judge on Monday paused plans by the Trump administration to end temporary legal protections for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans, a week before they were scheduled to expire.The order by U.S. District Judge Edward Chen in San Francisco is a relief for 350,000 Venezuelans whose Temporary Protected Status was scheduled to expire April 7. The lawsuit was filed by lawyers for the National TPS Alliance and TPS holders across the country. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has also announced the end of TPS for an estimated 250,000 additional Venezuelans in September.Chen said in his ruling that the action by Noem threatens to: inflict irreparable harm on hundreds of thousands of persons whose lives, families, and livelihoods will be severely disrupted, cost the United States billions in economic activity, and injure public health and safety in communities throughout the United States. He said the government had failed to identify any real countervailing harm in continuing TPS for Venezuelan beneficiaries and said plaintiffs will likely succeed in showing that Noems actions are unauthorized by law, arbitrary and capricious, and motivated by unconstitutional animus. Chen, who was appointed to the bench by President Barack Obama, a Democrat, said his order applies nationally. He gave the government one week to file notice of an appeal and the plaintiffs one week to file to pause for 500,000 Haitians whose TPS protections are set to expire in August. Alejandro Mayorkas, the previous secretary, had extended protections for all three cohorts into 2026. The Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Congress created TPS, as the law is known, in 1990 to prevent deportations to countries suffering from natural disasters or civil strife, giving people authorization to live and work in the U.S. in increments of up to 18 months if the Homeland Security secretary deems conditions in their home countries are unsafe for return. The reversals are a major about-face from immigration policies under former President Joe Biden, a Democrat, and come as Republican President Donald Trump and his top aides have ratcheted up attacks on judges who rule against them, with immigration being at the forefront of many disagreements. At a hearing last Monday, lawyers for TPS holders said that Noem has no authority to cancel the protections and that her actions were motivated in part by racism. They asked the judge to pause Noems orders, citing the irreparable harm to TPS holders struggling with fear of deportation and potential separation from family members. Government lawyers for Noem said that Congress gave the secretary clear and broad authority to make determinations related to the TPS program and that the decisions were not subject to judicial review. Plaintiffs have no right to thwart the secretarys orders from being carried out, they said. But Chen found the governments arguments unpersuasive and found that numerous derogatory and false comments by Noem and by Trump against Venezuelans as criminals show that racial animus was a motivator in ending protections. Acting on the basis of a negative group stereotype and generalizing such stereotype to the entire group is the classic example of racism, he wrote.Biden sharply expanded use of TPS and other temporary forms of protection in a strategy to create and expand legal pathways to live in the United States while suspending asylum for those who enter illegally.Trump has questioned the the impartiality of a federal judge who blocked his plans to deport Venezuelan immigrants to El Salvador, levelling his criticism only hours before his administration asked an appeals court to lift the judges order.The administration has also said it was revoking temporary protections for more than 530,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans who have come to the U.S. since October 2022 through another legal avenue called humanitarian parole, which Biden used more than any other president. Their two-year work permits will expire April 24.
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  • Kelly Clarkson Celebrates Trans Day of Visibility with Transa Compilation Album Featuring Sam Smith, Hunter Schafer, and More
    gayety.co
    Singer and talk show host Kelly Clarkson marked Trans Day of Visibility on March 31 by promoting the release of Transa, a compilation album that celebrates the transgender community and its contributions to music and culture. The album, released on November 22, is a project of the non-profit Red Hot Organization, which aims to promote diversity and equal access to healthcare through pop culture.Source
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  • Why Carrie Coons Fictional Trans Child in The White Lotus Was Cut from the Series
    gayety.co
    Carrie Coon, the acclaimed actress known for her roles in The Leftovers and The Gilded Age, has shared new details about her character, Laurie, in The White Lotus Season 3. In a recent interview with Harpers Bazaar, Coon revealed that Lauries character was originally written to have a nonbinary or transgender child, a storyline that was eventually scrapped by creator Mike White.Source
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  • Transfer rumors, news: Arsenal eyeing summer move for Leroy San
    www.espn.com
    Transfer Talk has the latest news, gossip and rumors.
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  • NFL shortens time needed for Thursday night flex
    www.espn.com
    NFL owners on Monday approved flexing Sunday games to Thursday night with 21 days' notice. Previously, 28 days' notice was needed.
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  • LGBTQ+ celebrities advocate for transgender equality: 'Don't listen to these hateful losers'
    www.pride.com
    Trans people aren't going anywhere.Queer joy was on full display last week at the 36th Annual GLAAD Media Awards in Los Angeles.Stars from every corner of the entertainment industry celebrated accomplishments for the LGBTQ+ community in the past year, but also made it a point to speak up against all of the discrimination currently happening in the United States.With Transgender Day of Visibility happening during such a crucial time in American history, many celebrities are standing up for trans siblings in the community. Scroll below to see all of their empowering messages.JoJo SiwaSee on Instagram"You're a legend and if you're ever doubting that, your bravery should verify that for you."James CharlesSee on Instagram"With as many people who are causing problems, there are that many more of us that are willing to fight and be there by their side loud and proud."Bobby BerkSee on Instagram"Administrations are four years. We are forever." Monet X ChangeSee on Instagram"Baby, you are so loved beyond measure. Don't let anyone look you dead in your eyes or behind the screen of a keyboard and tell you that you're not, because you are."Crystal MethydSee on Instagram"Don't listen to these hateful losers. They're all ugly!"PlasmaSee on Instagram"As drag artists, we owe everything to the trans community specifically trans women of community and you're not going anywhere. We will fight for you as long as we have breath in our lungs."ValentinaSee on Instagram"Get out the house. Be you. Be more you than ever. Let them have it!"Laganja EstranjaSee on Instagram"There's a lot of pressure to get surgery if you're trans and that's just not true for some people. Take your time. Take a deep breath and make sure you're surrounding yourself with people who genuinely love you."Johnny SibillySee on Instagram"You have family in us. You are beautiful. You are magical and to know trans people is to love trans people."Zeke SmithSee on Instagram"We have gone through hard things before. We will go through hard times in the future, but you matter and we love you. There's so many people who are ready to make your lives wonderful."Brooke EdenSee on Instagram"Every single day that you are living and living out loud and living your best life and thriving is the day that you're beating them.
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  • Transgender Drag Race Star Laganja Estranja Says Her Parents Turned to GLAAD At a Very Young Age
    gayety.co
    Drag icon Laganja Estranja has been candid about her journey as a transgender woman, sharing her personal story and the hurdles she faced growing up. As a prominent figure in the drag community, the RuPauls Drag Race star has found success in various facets of entertainment, but her journey to self-acceptance was not without its struggles. Speaking to Gayety at the GLAAD awardsSource
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  • Dodgers 1B Freeman out following shower 'mishap'
    www.espn.com
    Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman was out of the lineup Monday night against the Atlanta Braves after slipping in the shower and hurting his surgically repaired right ankle, an incident that manager Dave Roberts labeled "a little mishap."
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  • Sources: Tucker to sign 2-year deal with Knicks
    www.espn.com
    After signing P.J. Tucker to two 10-day contracts, the New York Knicks plan to sign the forward to a two-year deal, sources told ESPN
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  • South Koreas Constitutional Court will rule Friday on whether to dismiss impeached President Yoon
    apnews.com
    A protester wearing a mask of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol attends a march during a rally calling for Yoon to step down in Seoul, South Korea, Saturday, March 29, 2025. The banner reads "Dismiss Yoon Suk Yeol." (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)2025-04-01T01:49:11Z SEOUL, South Korea (AP) South Koreas Constitutional Court will rule Friday on whether to dismiss impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol.The opposition-controlled National Assembly in December voted to impeach Yoon over his short-lived martial law decree that plunged South Korea into political turmoil.The Constitutional Court has since been deliberating whether to uphold Yoons impeachment and formally remove him from office or reinstate his presidential powers.The Constitutional Court announced Tuesday it would issue the ruling Friday.
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  • Bitcoin investor buys an entire SpaceX flight for the ultimate polar adventure
    apnews.com
    In this image provided by SpaceX shows from left: Eric Philips, a polar guide from Australia; Rabea Rogge, a robotics researcher from Germany; Norwegian filmmaker Jannicke Mikkelsen and Chun Wang, a Chinese-born bitcoin investor who is paying for the whole spaceflight and now lives in Malta. (SpaceX via AP)2025-04-01T01:48:24Z CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) A bitcoin investor who bought a SpaceX flight for himself and three polar explorers blasted off Monday night on the first rocket ride to carry people over the north and south poles.Chun Wang, a Chinese-born entrepreneur, hurtled into orbit from NASAs Kennedy Space Center. SpaceXs Falcon rocket steered southward over the Atlantic, putting the space tourists on a path never flown before in 64 years of human spaceflight.Wang wont say how much he paid Elon Musks SpaceX for the 3 -day ultimate polar adventure. The first leg of their flight from Florida to the South Pole was expected to take barely a half-hour. From the targeted altitude of some 270 miles (430 kilometers), their fully automated capsule will circle the globe in roughly 1 hours including 46 minutes to fly from pole to pole.Wang has already visited the polar regions in person and wants to view them from space. The trip is also about pushing boundaries, sharing knowledge, he said ahead of the flight. Now a citizen of Malta, he took along three guests: Norwegian filmmaker Jannicke Mikkelsen, German robotics researcher Rabea Rogge and Australian polar guide Eric Philips. Mikkelsen, the first Norwegian bound for space, has flown over the poles before, but at a much lower altitude. She was part of the 2019 record-breaking mission that circumnavigated the world via the poles in a Gulfstream jet to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrins moon landing. The crew plans two dozen experiments including taking the first human X-rays in space and brought along more cameras than usual to document their journey called Fram2 after the Norwegian polar research ship from more than a century ago. Until now, no space traveler had ventured beyond 65 degrees north and south latitude, just shy of the Arctic and Antarctic circles. The first woman in space, the Soviet Unions Valentina Tereshkova, set that mark in 1963. Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space, and other pioneering cosmonauts came almost as close, as did NASA shuttle astronauts in 1990. A polar orbit is ideal for climate and Earth-mapping satellites as well as spy satellites. Thats because a spacecraft can observe the entire world each day, circling Earth from pole to pole as it rotates below.Geir Klover, director of the Fram Museum in Oslo, Norway, where the original polar ship is on display, hopes the trip will draw more attention to climate change and the melting polar caps. He lent the crew a tiny piece of the ships wooden deck that bears the signature of Oscar Wisting, who with Roald Amundsen in the early 1900s became the first to reach both poles.Wang pitched the idea of a polar flight to SpaceX in 2023, two years after U.S. tech entrepreneur Jared Isaacman made the first of two chartered flights with Musks company. Isaacman is now in the running for NASAs top job.SpaceXs Kiko Dontchev said late last week that the company is continually refining its training so normal people without traditional aerospace backgrounds can hop in a capsule ... and be calm about it. Wang and his crew view the polar flight like camping in the wild and embrace the challenge. Spaceflight is becoming increasingly routine and, honestly, Im happy to see that, Wang said via X last week.Wang said hes been counting up his flights since his first one in 2002, flying on planes, helicopters and hot air balloons in his quest to visit every country. So far, hes visited more than half. He arranged it so that liftoff would mark his 1,000th flight. ___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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  • 8 Groundbreaking and Heartwarming Moments from Trans and Non-Binary People Who Shaped the Past Year
    gayety.co
    Trans Day of Visibility, observed annually on March 31, provides an opportunity for the LGBTQ+ community to celebrate and honor trans and non-binary people worldwide. In a year marked by challenges, including anti-LGBTQ+ legislation in the U.S. and shifts in gender-affirming care policies in the UK, it is crucial to acknowledge both the struggles and the triumphs of the trans community.Source
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  • Chinese military launches large-scale drills around Taiwan in warning against islands independence
    apnews.com
    This photograph released by Taiwan Ministry of National Defense taken from a Taiwan Air Force P-3C Orion anti-submarine aircraft, shows a Chinese Cloud Shadow WZ-10 drone near Taiwan, Monday, March 17, 2025. (Taiwan Ministry of National Defense via AP)2025-04-01T02:42:44Z TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) The Chinese military launched large-scale drills in the waters around Taiwan on Tuesday, as it warned the self-ruled island against seeking independence.The joint exercises involve navy, air ground and rocket forces, according to Shi Yi, a spokesperson for the Peoples Liberation Armys Eastern Theater Command. The drills are meant to be a severe warning and forceful containment against Taiwan independence, Shi said in a statement.China considers Taiwan a part of its territory, to be brought under its control by force if necessary, while most Taiwanese favor their de facto independence and democratic status.Taiwans Ministry of National Defence said it had tracked 19 Chinese navy vessels in the waters surrounding the island in a 24-hour period from 6 a.m. Monday until 6 a.m. Tuesday. The drills come just two weeks after a large-scale exercise in mid-March, when Beijing sent a large number of drones and ships toward the island. Beijing sends warplanes and navy vessels toward the island on a daily basis, seeking to wear down Taiwanese defenses and morale, although the vast majority of the islands 23 million people reject its claim of sovereignty over Taiwan. Faced with the rising threat from China, Taiwan has ordered new missiles, aircraft and other armaments from the U.S., while revitalizing its own defense industry.Taiwan and China split amid civil war 76 years ago, but tensions have risen in recent years as communication between the two governments has stopped.
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  • Madison Booker helps Texas reach its first womens Final Four since 2003 with 58-47 win over TCU
    apnews.com
    Texas forward Madison Booker (35) shoots against TCU guard Donovyn Hunter (4) during the first half in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, March 31, 2025. in Birmingham, Ala. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)2025-04-01T01:17:56Z Follow APs full coverage of March Madness. Get the AP Top 25 womens college basketball poll delivered straight to your inbox with AP Top 25 Poll Alerts. Sign up here. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) Madison Booker scored 18 points and No. 1 seed Texas used its stifling defense to reach the Final Four of the womens NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2003, beating well-traveled point guard Hailey Van Lith and second-seeded TCU 58-47 on Monday night.The Longhorns (35-3) will face defending champion South Carolina on Friday night in Tampa, Florida, for a spot in the national title game.Texas and won a regional final for the first time in four tries under coach Vic Schaefer, who previously made two Final Four trips with Mississippi State. The Longhorns 35 wins are one more than its only national title-winning squad had in 1986 under Jody Conradt, who was in the stands Monday night and led Texas to its three previous Final Fours.Van Lith scored 17 points in her collegiate finale for TCU (34-4), but Texas neutralized the Horned Frogs star center, Sedona Prince, who had four points and nine rebounds before fouling out with 6:32 left in the game. TCU had never made it past the second round of March Madness, but Van Lith helped the Horned Frogs make program history while taking her third school to the Elite Eight. Booker, Texas offensive dynamo, scored 14 points in the second half. Rori Harmon added 13 points, 11 in the first half.Nothing came easy for the Horned Frogs high-scoring trio of Van Lith, Prince and Madison Conner. Van Lith shot 3 of 15 from the field but made 10 of 11 free throws. The 6-foot-7 Prince attempted only four shots, and Conner scored nine points.___AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-womens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness. Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. ALANIS THAMES Thames is an Associated Press sports writer based in Miami. She previously covered sports for the New York Times.
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  • Midori Mont Reflects on Winning Miss International Queen USA and the Power of Trans Visibility
    gayety.co
    Midori Monts journey to becoming Miss International Queen USA was nothing short of captivating. From perfecting her glam look to the emotional moment when her name was called, Monts rise to the crown is a story of resilience, passion, and community. As she prepares for the Miss International Queen competition in Thailand, her message of visibility and self-empowerment continues to resonateSource
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  • Carbon monoxide probed in Gardner son's death
    www.espn.com
    The death of Miller Gardner, the son of former Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner, is being investigated as related to possible carbon monoxide poisoning.
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  • Pels shut down Zion, McCollum for rest of season
    www.espn.com
    The New Orleans Pelicans are shutting down Zion Williamson (back) and CJ McCollum (foot) for the rest of the season.
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  • Texas wins to set up SEC Final Four clash vs. S.C.
    www.espn.com
    No. 1 seed Texas wore down No. 2 TCU 58-47 in the Elite Eight on Monday night and now heads to the women's Final Four for the first time since 2003.
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  • With torpedo bat, De La Cruz has 7 RBIs for Reds
    www.espn.com
    Using a torpedo bat, Elly De La Cruz had a single, double and two home runs with seven RBIs, as the Cincinnati Reds routed the Texas Rangers 14-3 on Monday night, and after the win, manager Terry Francona said "I think it's more the player than the bat."
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  • A Senate vote to reverse Trumps tariffs on Canada is testing Republican support
    apnews.com
    Sunlight shines through the flags of Canada and the United States, held together by a protester outside on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Feb. 1, 2025.(Justin Tang/The Canadian Press via AP, File)2025-04-01T04:04:07Z WASHINGTON (AP) With President Donald Trumps so-called Liberation Day of tariff implementation fast approaching, Senate Democrats are putting Republican support for some of those plans to the test by forcing a vote to nullify the emergency declaration that underpins the tariffs on Canada.Republicans have watched with some unease as the presidents attempts to remake global trade have sent the stock market downward, but they have so far stood by Trumps on-again-off-again threats to levy taxes on imported goods. Even as the resolution from Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia offered them a potential off-ramp to the tariffs levied on Canadian imports, Republican leaders were trying to keep senators in line by focusing on fentanyl that comes into the U.S. over its northern border. It was yet another example of how Trump is not only reorienting global economics, but upending his partys longtime support for ideas like free trade. I really relish giving my Republican colleagues the chance to not just say theyre concerned, but actually take an action to stop these tariffs, Kaine told The Associated Press in an interview last week. Kaines resolution would end the emergency declaration that Trump signed in February to implement tariffs on Canada as punishment for not doing enough to halt the flow of illegal drugs into the U.S. If the Senate passes the resolution, it would still need to be taken up by the Republican-controlled House. A small fraction of the fentanyl that comes into the U.S. enters from Canada. Customs and Border Protection seized 43 pounds of fentanyl at the northern border during the 2024 fiscal year, and since January, authorities have seized less than 1.5 pounds, according to federal data. Meanwhile, at the southern border, authorities seized over 21,000 pounds last year.Kaine warned that tariffs on Canadian goods would ripple through the economy, making it more expensive to build homes and military ships. Were going to pay more for our food products. Were going to pay more for building supplies, he said. So people are already complaining about grocery prices and housing costing too much. So you raise the cost of building supplies and products. Its a big deal.Still, Trump has claimed that the amount of fentanyl coming from Canada is massive and pledged to follow through by executing tariffs Wednesday.There will never have been a transformation of a Country like the transformation that is happening, for all to see, in the United States of America, the president said on social media Monday.Republican leaders in the Senate have signaled they arent exactly fans of tariffs, but argued that Trump is using them as a negotiating tool.I am supportive of using tariffs in a way to accomplish a specific objective, in this case ending drug traffic, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., told reporters last month. He said this week that his advice remains the same.While Trumps close allies in the Senate were standing steadfastly by the idea of remaking the U.S. economy through tariffs, others have begun openly voicing their dissatisfaction with trade wars that could disrupt industries and raise prices on autos, groceries, housing and other goods. Im keeping a close eye on all these tariffs because oftentimes the first folks that are hurt in a trade war are your farmers and ranchers, said Sen. Steve Daines, a Montana Republican.Sen. John Kennedy, a Louisiana Republican, said he would prefer to see the U.S. and its trading partners move to remove all tariffs on each other, but he conceded that Trumps tariff threats had injected uncertainty into global markets.Were in uncharted waters, Kennedy told reporters. Nobody knows what the impact of these tariffs is going to be. STEPHEN GROVES Groves covers Congress for The Associated Press. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Israel strikes building in southern Beirut, killing at least 3 people
    apnews.com
    A damaged apartment is seen after being hit by an Israeli targeted strike in Dahiyeh, in the southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, early Tuesday, April 1, 2025. The IDF reported that it conducted a strike on a southern Beirut suburb, aiming at a Hezbollah operative, marking the second such attack since the November ceasefire.(AP Photo/Hussein Malla)2025-04-01T01:38:55Z BEIRUT (AP) The Israeli military struck a building in Beiruts southern suburbs early Tuesday, killing at least three people, in an attack it said said it targeted a member of the Hezbollah militant group.The airstrike came without warning days after Israel launched an attack on the Lebanese capital, Beirut, on Friday for the first time since a ceasefire ended fighting between Israeli forces and the Hezbollah militant group in November. The Israeli military had warned residents in the crowded suburbs before the attack after two projectiles were launched from southern Lebanon, which Hezbollah denied firing.At least seven other people were wounded in the airstrike, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry.The Israeli military said in a statement the latest strike targeted a Hezbollah member who had been helping the Palestinian Hamas group in the Gaza Strip in attacks against Israel. It said the airstrike was under the direction of the Shin Bet, Israels domestic intelligence agency. Hezbollah did not comment on the strike. There was no immediate word on casualties.Photos and videos widely shared on local and social media showed the top three floors of an apartment building damaged following the strike. Piles of debris covered cars below the building. Jets were heard in parts of the Lebanese capital before the strike near the Hay Madi neighborhood. During Israels last war with Hezbollah, Israeli drones and jets regularly pounded the southern suburbs, where Hezbollah has wide influence and support. Israel sees the area as a militant stronghold and accuses the group of storing weapons there. We were at home. It was Eid al-Fitr, said Hussein Nour El-Din, a resident in the neighborhood, referring to the Islamic holiday that marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan. We didnt know where it happened, but once the smoke cleared we saw it was the building facing us. The leader of Lebanons Hezbollah group, Sheikh Naim Kassem, warned Saturday that if Israels attacks on Lebanon continued and if Lebanons government does not act to stop them, the group would eventually resort to other alternatives.Under the U.S.-brokered ceasefire that ended the 14-month Israel-Hezbollah war, Israeli forces were supposed to withdraw from all Lebanese territory by late January, while Hezbollah had to end its armed presence south of the Litani River along the border with Israel.Israel has launched daily strikes in southern and eastern Lebanon since the U.S.-brokered ceasefire went into effect, saying it targets Hezbollah officials and infrastructure. The Lebanese military has gradually deployed in the countrys southern region, and Beirut has urged the international community to pressure Israel to stop attacks and withdraw its forces still present on five hilltops in Lebanese territory. KAREEM CHEHAYEB Chehayeb is an Associated Press reporter in Beirut. twitter instagram mailto
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  • Braves' Profar gets 80-game ban for PED violation
    www.espn.com
    Atlanta Braves outfielder Jurickson Profar was suspended for 80 games by Major League Baseball on Monday after a positive test for the performance-enhancing drug chorionic gonadotropin.
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  • Sources: Red Sox LHP Crochet gets $170M deal
    www.espn.com
    Left-hander Garrett Crochet and the Red Sox are in agreement on a six-year, $170 million contract extension, sources told ESPN, keeping the 25-year-old ace with the organization that traded for him this winter to lead its rotation.
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  • A 17-year-old from the West Bank becomes the first Palestinian teenager to die in an Israeli prison
    apnews.com
    Khalid Ahmad holds a poster of his 17-year-old son, Waleed, who died in an Israeli prison, that reads in Arabic, "The hero prisoner Martyr, mercy and eternity for our righteous Martyrs," in the West Bank town of Silwad, northeast of Ramallah Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)2025-04-01T04:10:37Z JERUSALEM (AP) A 17-year-old from the West Bank who was held in an Israeli prison for six months without being charged died after collapsing in unclear circumstances, becoming the first Palestinian teen to die in Israeli detention, officials said.Walid Ahmad was a healthy high schooler before his arrest in September for allegedly throwing stones at soldiers, his family said. Rights groups have documented widespread abuse in Israeli detention facilities holding thousands of Palestinians who were rounded up after Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, attack ignited the war in the Gaza Strip.Prison authorities deny any systematic abuse and say they investigate accusations of wrongdoing by prison staff. But the Israeli ministry overseeing prisons acknowledges conditions inside detention facilities have been reduced to the minimum level allowed under Israeli law. Israels prison service did not respond to questions about the cause of death. It said only that a 17-year-old from the West Bank had died in Megiddo Prison, a facility that has previously been accused of abusing Palestinian inmates, with his medical condition being kept confidential. It said it investigates all deaths in detention. Khalid Ahmad, Walids father, said his son was a lively teen who enjoyed playing soccer before he was taken from his home in the occupied West Bank during a pre-dawn arrest raid.Six months later, after several brief court appearances during which no trial date was set, Walid collapsed on March 23 in a prison yard and struck his head, dying soon after, Palestinians officials said, citing eyewitness accounts from other prisoners. The family believes Walid contracted amoebic dysentery from the poor conditions in the prison, an infection that causes diarrhea, vomiting and dizziness and can be fatal if left untreated.Walid is the 63rd Palestinian prisoner from the West Bank or Gaza to die in Israeli custody since the start of the war, according to the Western-backed Palestinian Authority, which administers parts of the West Bank. Palestinian prisoner rights groups say that is about one-fifth of the roughly 300 Palestinians who have died in Israeli custody since the 1967 Mideast war, when Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem. The Palestinians want all three territories for their future state. The Palestinian Authority says Israel is holding the bodies of 72 Palestinian prisoners who died in Israeli jails, including 61 who died since the beginning of the war. Conditions in Israeli prisons have worsened since the start of the war, former detainees told The Associated Press. They described beatings, severe overcrowding, insufficient medical care, scabies outbreaks and poor sanitary conditions.Israels National Security Ministry, which oversees the prison service and is run by ultranationalist Cabinet Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, has boasted of reducing the conditions of Palestinian detainees to the minimum required by law. It says the policy is aimed at deterring attacks. Dont worry about meIsrael has rounded up thousands of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, saying it suspects them of militancy. Many have been held for months without charge or trial in what is known as administrative detention, which Israel justifies as a necessary security measure. Others are arrested on suspicion of aggression toward soldiers but have their trials continuously delayed, as the military and Israels security services gather evidence. Walid sat through at least four court appearances over videoconference, his father said, but each time the judge delayed, eventually setting an April 21 trial date. Each session was about three minutes, Walids father said. In a February session, four months after Walid was detained, his father noticed that his son appeared to be in poor health.His body was weakened due to malnutrition in the prisons in general, the elder Ahmad said. He said Walid told him he had gotten scabies a contagious skin rash caused by mites that causes intense itching but had been cured. Dont worry about me, his father remembers him saying.Khalid Ahmad later visited his sons friend, a former soccer teammate who had been held with Walid in the same prison. The friend told him Walid had lost weight but that he was OK.Four days later, the family heard that a 17-year-old had died in the prison. An hour and half later, they got the news that it was Walid.We felt the same way as all the parents of the prisoners and all the families and mothers of the prisoners, said Khalid Ahmad. We can only say Indeed, we belong to Allah, and indeed to him we shall return. Cause of death is unknownWalids lawyer, Firas al-Jabrini, said Israeli authorities denied his requests to visit his client in prison. But he says three prisoners held alongside Walid told him that he was suffering from dysentery, saying it was widespread among young Palestinians held at the facility.They said Walid suffered from severe diarrhea, vomiting, headaches and dizziness, the lawyer said. He said they suspected the disease was spreading because of dirty water, as well as cheese and yogurt that prison guards brought in the morning and that sat out all day while detainees were fasting for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.Megiddo, in northern Israel, is the harshest prison for minors, al-Jabrini said. He said he was told that rooms designed for six prisoners often held 16, with some sleeping on the floor. Many complained of scabies and eczema.Thaer Shriteh, spokesperson for the Palestinian Authoritys detainee commission, said Walid collapsed and hit his head on a metal rod, losing consciousness. The prison administration did not respond to the prisoners requests for urgent care to save his life, he said, citing witnesses who spoke to the commission.The lawyer and the Palestinian official both said an autopsy is needed to determine the cause of death. Israel has agreed to perform one but a date has not been set.The danger in this matter is that the Israeli occupation authorities have not yet taken any action to stop this (disease) and have not provided any treatment in general to save the prisoners in Megiddo prison, Shriteh said.___Follow APs war coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war JULIA FRANKEL Frankel is an Associated Press reporter in Jerusalem. twitter mailto
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  • Cubs' Kelly 1st MLB player to hit for March cycle
    www.espn.com
    In a convincing 18-3 victory over the Athletics Monday night, Chicago Cubs catcher Carson Kelly hit for the cycle, becoming the first player to do so in the month of March, and just the 17th catcher with a cycle in MLB history, according to ESPN Research.
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    After her team's exit in the Sweet 16 on Saturday, Notre Dame guard Olivia Miles has decided to forgo the WNBA draft, despite being projected as the No. 2 overall selection, and enter the transfer portal, sources told ESPN's Shams Charania on Monday.
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  • I bought their dream: How a US companys huge land deal in Senegal went bust
    apnews.com
    Herders and farmers from left, Adama Sow, Oumar Ba and Daka Sow walk outside Niti Yone, northern Senegal, Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Jack Thompson)2025-04-01T05:13:21Z DAKAR, Senegal (AP) Rusting pipes in a barren field and unpaid workers are what remain after a U.S. company promised to turn a huge piece of land in Senegal about twice the size of Paris into an agricultural project and create thousands of jobs.In interviews with company officials and residents, The Associated Press explored one of the growing number of foreign investment projects targeting Africa, home to about 60% of the worlds remaining uncultivated arable land. Many, like this one, fail, often far from public notice.Internal company documents seen by the AP show how the Senegalese-government-endorsed plans for exporting animal feed to wealthy Gulf nations fell apart.At first glance, the landscape of stark acacia trees on the edge of the Sahara Desert doesnt hold much agricultural promise. But in an age of climate change, foreign investors are looking at this and other African landscapes. The continent has seen a third of the worlds large-scale land acquisitions between 2000 and 2020, mostly for agriculture, according to researchers from the International Institute of Social Studies in the Netherlands. But 23% of those deals have failed after sometimes ambitious plans to feed the world.In 2021, the Senegalese village of Niti Yone welcomed investors Frank Timis and Gora Seck from a U.S.-registered company, African Agriculture. Over cups of sweet green tea, the visitors promised to employ hundreds of locals and, one day, thousands. Timis, originally from Romania, was the majority stakeholder. His companies have mined for gold, minerals and fossil fuels across West Africa.Seck, a Senegalese mining investor, chaired an Italian company whose biofuel plans for the land parcel had failed. It sold the 50-year lease for 20,000 hectares to Timis for $7.9 million. Seck came on as president of African Agricultures Senegalese subsidiary and holds 4.8% of its shares. Now the company wanted the communitys approval.The land was next to Senegals largest freshwater lake, for which the company obtained water rights. African Agriculture planned to grow alfalfa and export it to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Both traditionally buy alfalfa from the U.S., but land in alfalfa production there has dropped by 38% in the last 20 years, largely due to drought caused by climate change, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.The proposal divided the community of subsistence farmers. Herders that raised livestock on the land for generations opposed it. Others, like Doudou Ndiaye Mboup, thought it could help ease Senegals unemployment crisis.I bought their dream. I saw thousands of young Africans with jobs and prosperity, said Mboup, who was later employed as an electrician and now leads a union of employees. Despite the formation of an opposition group called the Ndiael Collective, African Agriculture moved ahead, hiring about 70 of the communitys 10,000 residents.After planting a 300-hectare pilot plot of alfalfa, the company announced in November 2022 it would go public to raise funds. African Agriculture valued the company at $450 million. The Oakland Institute, an environmental think tank in the U.S., questioned that amount and called the deal bad for food security as well as greenhouse gas emissions.The company went public in December 2023, with shares trading at $8 on the NASDAQ exchange. It raised $22.6 million during the offering but had to pay $19 million to the listed but inactive company it had merged with.That payment signaled trouble to investors. It showed that the other company, 0X Capital Venture Acquisition Corp. II, didnt want to hold its 98% of stock. And it highlighted the way African Agriculture had used the merger to bypass the vetting process needed for listing.One year later, shares in African Agriculture were worth almost nothing.Now, security guards patrol the lands barbed-wire perimeter, blocking herders and farmers from using it. The company has been delisted.Mboup said he and others havent been paid for six months. The workers took the company to employment court in Senegal to claim about $180,000 in unpaid wages. In February, they burned tires outside the companys office. Mboup later said an agreement was reached for back wages to be paid in June. I took out loans to build a house and now I cant pay it back, said Mboup, who had been making $200 a month, just above average for Senegal. Ive sold my motorbike and sheep to feed my children and send them to school, but many are not so lucky.Timis didnt respond to questions. Seck told the AP he was no longer affiliated with African Agriculture. Current CEO Mike Rhodes said he had been advised to not comment.Herders and farmers are furious and have urged Senegals government to let them use the land. But that rarely happens. In a study of 63 such foreign deals, the International Institute of Social Studies found only 11% of land was returned to the community. In most cases, the land is offered to other investors. We want to work with the government to rectify this situation. If not, we will fight, warned Bayal Sow, the areas deputy mayor.The Senegalese minister of agriculture, food sovereignty and herding, Mabouba Diagne, did not respond to questions. The African Agriculture deal occurred under the previous administration.The failed project has undermined community trust, said herder Adama Sow, 74: Before we lived in peace, but now theres conflict for those of us who supported them.Meanwhile, African Agricultures former CEO has moved on to a bigger land deal elsewhere on the continent with experts raising questions again.In August, South African Alan Kessler announced his new company, African Food Security, partnering with a Cameroonian, Baba Danpullo. It has announced a project roughly 30 times the size of the Senegal one, with 635,000 hectares in Congo and Cameroon.The new company seeks $875 million in investment. The companys investor prospectus, obtained by the AP, says it planned to register in Abu Dhabi.In an interview with the AP in January, Kessler blamed the failure of the Senegal project on the way African Agricultures public offering was structured. He said there were no plans for a public offering this time.He claimed his new companys project would double corn production in these countries, and described African Food Security as the most incredibly important development company on the planet. He said they have started to grow corn on 200 hectares in Cameroon.Experts who looked over the prospectus raised concerns about its claims, including an unusually high projection for corn yields. Kessler rejected those concerns.When he was CEO of African Agriculture, Kessler also made lofty claims about food production, job creation, exports and investment returns that did not pan out, said Rene Vellv, co-founder of GRAIN, a Spain-based nonprofit for land rights.Hype without proof was a key strategy for African Agriculture, said its former chief operating officer, Javier Orellana, who said he is owed 165,000 euros in unpaid salary after leaving the company in 2023.He told the AP he had been suspicious of the companys $450 million valuation.I know the agriculture industry well and ($450 million) didnt add up, Orellana said, adding he stayed on because the company gave him what he called a very attractive offer.In the end, a share in African Agriculture is now worth less than a penny.We are looking forward to going back to Senegal, Kessler said. We were appreciated there. Weve been welcomed back there. ___For more on Africa and development: https://apnews.com/hub/africa-pulse___The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Gates Foundation. The 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.
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  • Isco on Antony: We need to crowdfund for him
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    Real Betis midfielder Isco has joked that crowdfunding will be needed to keep Manchester United's loanee Antony at the club for at least next season.
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  • City hopeful injury won't end Haaland's season
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    Erling Haaland is set for a spell on the sideline with an ankle injury picked up against Bournemouth on Sunday, but Manchester City remain hopeful the striker will be able to play again this season and take part in the FIFA Club World Cup this summer.
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  • Wrexham revenue up 155% amid promotion push
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    Wrexham reported record financial results for their first year back in the EFL in the latest chapter of the club's success story.
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  • Davidson out of USWNT squad with knee injury
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    Defender Tierna Davidson will miss the United States women's national team's upcoming pair of games against Brazil due to a knee injury, U.S. Soccer announced on Monday.
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  • Women's team sale pads 128.4m Chelsea profit
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    Chelsea recorded a pre-tax profit before taxation of 128.4 million pounds ($165.83 million) for the year ending in June despite a fall in revenue thanks to the repositioning of their women's team, the Premier League club said on Monday.
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  • Arsenal and Spurs to play first NLD overseas
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    Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal will face off in Hong Kong in July for what will be the first north London derby to take place outside of the UK.
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  • China has already taken steps to reduce retractions of papers from its hospitals
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 01 April 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01007-0China has already taken steps to reduce retractions of papers from its hospitals
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  • Action needed to mitigate effects of slashing USAID
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 01 April 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01005-2Action needed to mitigate effects of slashing USAID
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  • Sporting KC, Vermes part ways after 16 years
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    Sporting Kansas City have have parted ways with manager Peter Vermes the Major League Soccer club announced on Monday.
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  • UConn returns to Final Four behind Bueckers' 31
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    Behind 31 points and six assists, Paige Bueckers lifted No. 2 seed UConn to a 78-64 win over No. 1 seed USC in the Spokane 4 regional final, clinching the team's 16th Final Four appearance in 17 years and 24th overall.
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  • Myanmar earthquake death toll surpasses 2,700 as hope fades for finding more survivors
    apnews.com
    Myanmar's rescuers work through rubble of a collapsed building following Friday's earthquake in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo)2025-04-01T06:46:24Z BANGKOK (AP) The death toll from the devastating 7.7 magnitude earthquake that hit Myanmar has surpassed 2,700, with thousands more injured, Myanmar media reported Tuesday.The head of Myanmars military government, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, told a forum in the capital, Naypyitaw, that 2,719 people have now been found dead, with 4,521 others injured and 441 missing, the Western News online portal reported.With many areas hit by Fridays earthquake still not reached by rescue crews, those numbers are still expected to rise.THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. APs earlier story follows below.BANGKOK (AP) Rescue workers saved a 63-year-old woman from the rubble of a building in Myanmars capital on Tuesday, but hope was fading of finding many more survivors of the violent earthquake that killed at least 2,000 people, compounding a humanitarian crisis caused by a civil war. The fire department in Naypyitaw said the woman was successfully pulled from the rubble 91 hours after being buried when the building collapsed in the 7.7 magnitude earthquake that occurred at midday Friday. Experts say the likelihood of finding survivors drops dramatically after 72 hours. Death toll numbers forecast to increaseThe earthquakes epicenter was near the countrys second-largest city, Mandalay, and the military-run government has reported 2,065 people killed so far, more than 3,900 injured and 270 missing. Those figures are widely expected to rise, but the earthquake hit a wide swath of the country, leaving many areas without power, telephone or cell connections and damaging roads and bridges, leaving the full extent of the devastation hard to assess.Most of the reports so far have come from Mandalay and Naypyitaw.The needs are massive, and they are rising by the hour, said Julia Rees, UNICEFs deputy representative for Myanmar. The window for lifesaving response is closing. Across the affected areas, families are facing acute shortages of clean water, food, and medical supplies.Myanmars fire department said that 403 people have been rescued in Mandalay and 259 bodies have been found so far. In one incident alone, 50 Buddhist monks who were taking a religious exam in a monastery were killed when the building collapsed and 150 more are thought to be buried in the rubble. Structural damage is extensiveThe World Health Organization said that more than 10,000 buildings overall are known to have collapsed or been severely damaged in central and northwest Myanmar.The earthquake also rocked neighboring Thailand, causing a high-rise building under construction to collapse and burying many workers. Two bodies were pulled from the rubble on Monday but dozens were still missing. Overall, there were 20 people killed and 34 injured in Bangkok, primarily at the construction site. In Myanmar, search and rescue efforts across the affected area paused briefly at midday on Tuesday as people stood for a minute in silent tribute to the dead. Relief efforts moving at a sluggish paceForeign aid workers have been arriving slowly to help in the rescue efforts, but progress was still slow with a lack of heavy machinery in many places.In one site in Naypyitaw on Tuesday, workers formed a human chain, passing chunks of brick and concrete out hand-by-hand from the ruins of a collapsed building. The Myanmar military governments official Global New Light of Myanmar reported Tuesday that a team of Chinese rescuers saved four people the day before from the ruins of the Sky Villa, a large apartment complex that collapsed during the quake. They included a 5-year-old and a pregnant woman who had been trapped for more than 60 hours. The same publication also reported two teenagers were able to crawl out of the rubble of the same building to where rescue crews were working, using their cellphone flashlights to help guide them. The rescue workers were then able to use details from what they told them to locate their grandmother and sibling.International rescue teams from several countries are on the scene, including from Russia, China, India, the United Arab Emirates and several Southeast Asian countries. The U.S. Embassy said an American team had been sent but hadnt yet arrived. Aid pledges pouring in as officials warn of disease outbreak riskMeantime, multiple countries have pledged millions in aid to assist Myanmar and humanitarian aid organizations with the monumental task ahead.Even before the earthquake, more than 3 million people had been displaced from their homes by Myanmars brutal civil war, and nearly 20 million were in need, according to the U.N. Many were already lacking in basic medical care and standard vaccinations, and the destruction of water and sanitation infrastructure by the earthquake raises the risk of disease outbreaks, warned the U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.The displacement of thousands into overcrowded shelters, coupled with the destruction of water and sanitation infrastructure, has significantly heightened the risk of communicable disease outbreaks, OCHA said in its latest report. Vulnerability to respiratory infections, skin diseases, vector-borne illnesses such as dengue fever, and vaccine-preventable diseases like measles is escalating, it added. The onset of monsoon season also a worryShelter is also a major problem, especially with the monsoon season looming. Since the earthquake, many people have been sleeping outside, either because homes were destroyed or out of fear of aftershocks.Civil war complicates disaster reliefMyanmars military seized power in 2021 from the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, sparking what has turned into significant armed resistance and a brutal civil war.Government forces have lost control of much of Myanmar, and many places were dangerous or impossible for aid groups to reach even before the quake.Military attacks and those from some anti-military groups have not stopped in the aftermath of the earthquake, though the shadow opposition National Unity Government has called a unilateral ceasefire for its forces.The NUG, established by elected lawmakers who were ousted in 2021, called for the international community to ensure humanitarian aid is delivered directly to the earthquake victims, urging vigilance against any attempts by the military junta to divert or obstruct humanitarian assistance.We are in a race against time to save lives, the NUG said in a statement. Any obstruction to these efforts will have devastating consequences, not only due to the impact of the earthquake but also because of the juntas continued brutality, which actively hinders the delivery of lifesaving assistance.It wasnt immediately clear whether the military has been impeding humanitarian aid. In the past, it initially refused to allow in foreign rescue teams or many emergency supplies after Cyclone Nargis in 2008, which resulted in well more than 100,000 deaths. Even once it did allow foreign assistance, it was with severe restrictions.In this case, however, the head of Myanmars military government, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, pointedly said on the day of the earthquake that the country would accept outside help. Tom Andrews, a monitor on rights in Myanmar commissioned by the U.N.-backed Human Rights Council, said on X that to facilitate aid, military attacks must stop.The focus in Myanmar must be on saving lives, not taking them, he said.___Grant Peck in Bangkok and Jamey Keaten in Geneva contributed to this story. DAVID RISING Rising covers regional Asia-Pacific stories for The Associated Press. He has worked around the world, including covering the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Ukraine, and was based for nearly 20 years in Berlin before moving to Bangkok. twitter mailto
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  • Middle East latest: Israel hits southern Beirut with airstrike, killing at least 3 people
    apnews.com
    FILE -Vice Adm. Eli Sharvit arrives on board the Israeli Navy Ship Atzmaut in the Mediterranean Sea, Sept. 1, 2021. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit, File)2025-04-01T07:27:50Z The Israeli military struck a building in Beiruts southern suburbs early Tuesday, killing at least three people, in an attack it said targeted a member of the Hezbollah militant group.The airstrike came without warning days after Israel launched an attack on the Lebanese capital, Beirut, on Friday for the first time since a ceasefire ended fighting between Israeli forces and the Hezbollah militant group in November. At least seven other people were wounded in Tuesdays airstrike, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry.The Israeli military said in a statement the latest strike targeted a Hezbollah member who had been helping the Palestinian Hamas group in the Gaza Strip in attacks against Israel.___Heres the latest: Netanyahu withdraws his nomination to lead internal security agencyIsraeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has withdrawn his nomination of a former navy commander to lead the countrys internal security agency after a flurry of criticism.Netanyahus office said in a statement early Tuesday after meeting with Vice Adm. Eli Sharvit that he intends to examine other candidates, without elaborating.The nomination announced on Monday had provoked widespread criticism from allies and opponents.Critics of Netanyahu are already up in arms over his move to fire Ronen Bar, the current head of the Shin Bet domestic security agency, viewing it as part of a broader assault on state institutions at a time when Netanyahu is on trial for alleged corruption and his aides are being investigated over links to the Gulf Arab nation of Qatar. Israels Supreme Court froze Bars dismissal pending further hearings but cleared the way for Netanyahu to interview candidates for the job.The nomination of Sharvit angered some of Netanyahus allies after Israeli media reported that he had taken part in protests against Netanyahus plans to overhaul the judiciary in 2023.The move also brought an unexpected rebuke from Sen. Lindsey Graham, a top ally of President Donald Trump, who tweeted an excerpt of an op-ed Sharvit had written for an Israeli technology news website in January 2024 criticizing Trumps climate policies. Graham called the nomination beyond problematic. Israeli military says it intercepted a projective fired from GazaThe Israeli military says it intercepted a projectile fired from the Gaza Strip early Tuesday that set off sirens in nearby communities.Palestinian militants have fired a small number of rockets, without causing any casualties or damage, since Israel ended its ceasefire with Hamas last month.Israel has launched waves of airstrikes and limited ground operations, killing hundreds of Palestinians.Hamas ignited the war with its Oct. 7, 2023, attack into Israel, in which militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251, most of whom have since been released in ceasefires or other deals. Hamas is still holding 59 hostages, 24 of whom are believed to be alive.Israels offensive has killed over 50,000 Palestinians, according to Gazas Health Ministry, which does not say how many were combatants or civilians.
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  • Sex Columnist Dan Savage on Non-Monogamy Today and the White Lotus Incest Storyline
    www.unclosetedmedia.com
    Subscribe nowSex, love and romance have historically been viewed through the lens of monogamy, with any hook-up outside of your primary relationship seen as the ultimate sin. But in recent years, these norms have started eroding: According to a 2023 survey, 34% of Americans describe their ideal relationship as not entirely monogamous.In addition, the youngest generation of adultsGen Zare having less sex and fewer one-night stands than their millennial counterparts. This is all occurring at a time when more people than ever are identifying as something other than straight and when pop culture is pushing the envelope on sexual storylines, including plotlines of sibling incest on White Lotus and Monsters.To make sense of all of this, we called up legendary sex columnist and LGBTQ activist Dan Savagewho coined the term monogamishto get his take on all things sex in America in 2025.Watch the full interview above or read the transcript here:Spencer Macnuaghton: Hi, everyone. I am here with Dan Savage, American sex columnist, journalist, LGBTQ activist, and the host of the very popular podcast Savage Lovecast. Dan, thank you so much for chatting with me and Uncloseted Media today.Dan Savage: Thank you for having me.Photo courtesy of Dan Savage.S.M.: Well, I want to get started right away with a question I'm super personally curious about. You kind of coined the term monogamish. How would you describe the state of monogamy in America in 2025? Where are we at with it? Obviously, it's evolved.D.S.: More people are, I think, moving toward what gay men have always done. For gay male couples, monogamy's always been an opt-in. It's been an active choice and not a default setting. It was something that was discussed and chosen by the couple. And it could be unchosen; it could be renegotiated. But now you see more straight people thinking about monogamy and choosing it if it's right for them in the same way that monogamy as a choice had been right for other gay couples. Those being choices a couple makes together. That choice can be renegotiated over the life of a relationship. And what works for you in the first few years, the first 5 years, the first 10 or 20 years, may not be what works for you 20 years in as a couple. You may choose something else along the way.Gay people who were in open relationships tended to be out about it because you couldn't be gay without being out about something that was hard to talk about. And that might upset some people. And then everything else about your sexuality after you come out as gay just feels less scary. You know, these things that for straight people often feel like mountains, for gay people feel like molehills.But as more gay people came out, and more straight people got to know gay people, what straight people saw was that our relationships [and] our sex lives were organized differently and more actively chosen, that we didn't just default to settings around sex roles, gender roles, gendered expectations, housework, child-rearing straight people began to look at gay couples, look at gay relationships, look at the gay people that they knew and modeled their relationships a little more closely after ours.A lot of the gay men that I know who say they're in monogamous relationships, when I drill down with them, I think, Oh, no, that's monogamish. That's monogamous with some squish. And it was a word I coined early in my relationship with my husband, Terry. We've been together 30 years. We were monogamous for the first four. And then we were non-monogamous. And when we started being honest about being not monogamous, 26 years ago and we were new parents and we were honest about it. Straight people, friends and even other gay people would make an assumption about the amount of sex we were having with other people and whether we were even having sex with each other anymore. And at that stage in our relationship when either of us were having sex, it was usually with each other and very rarely with a very special guest star. And we were more monogamous than not. And that's when I came up with monogamish to describe these relationships that exist as the primary commitment that, you know, it's mostly just the two of these people who have sex with each other. And then every once in a while, there's some allowance for outside sexual contact by mutual agreement, but it's very minimal.S.M.: In your years of looking at this, talking to people about the idea of monogamy, are there any hard and fast rules for people watching this who might be considering it where youre like, These are the things Ive noticed work in non-monogamous relationships? Because people have really strong opinions on whether or not non-monogamy can even work.D.S.: Which is insane when you consider the divorce rate, when you consider serial monogamy. It's not like non-monogamy is chaos and monogamy is stability and nobody in a monogamous relationship has ever been dumped, divorced, or cheated on.What makes a relationship work, monogamous or non-monogamous, is honesty, communication, accommodation, and some allowance for human failure. I'm always saying to people in monogamous relationships that if you're with somebody for 50 years and they cheated on you twice, they were really good at monogamy. It's insane to define [romantic relationships as just monogamous], and the only definition of success is flawless, perfect execution over five decades. That's a standard we apply to no other human endeavor. People fall down. And if you want your monogamous relationship to be resilient and survive an infidelity, which is common in monogamous relationships, you need to have a framing of your monogamous relationship where it could survive that.I'm always saying to people that if you define cheating as unforgivable, and then you define everything as cheating, then your relationships are not gonna survive for very long. When it comes to stability in a long-term committed relationship, you want to have a very narrow definition of cheating. You don't want lots of things to count so that you don't wind up feeling like you have to break up over and over again. Because, [for example], your partner liked somebody's photograph on Instagram, which I keep seeing held up as evidence of an infidelity, which is just insane.Subscribe for LGBTQ-focused journalism. S.M.: And I remember, it was about 10 years ago, it was one of my first journalistic articles, it was a big deal for me, I wrote an article in The Guardian and the headline was How Gay Men are Making Open Relationships Work, and the research then at least showed that it's gay men who were doing this, not as much same-sex couples that are women. Is that still the case today? And how do you explain that?D.S.: You can't have this conversation without tiptoeing into generalizations about four billion people on the one hand and four billion people on the other. But there are differences between male and female sexuality, and you see those play out in the differences between gay male sex cultures and relationship cultures and lesbian sex cultures and relationship cultures.The relationships most likely to be monogamous are lesbian relationships. The relationships less likely to be monogamous are opposite-sex relationships or straight relationships. The least likely to be monogamous are gay male relationships. Paradoxically, the people who are least likely to divorce are gay male couples; more likely are straight couples, and most likely are lesbian couples.So non-monogamy correlates and may have a causal relationship with relationship stability, and not what everyone assumes it's gonna correlate strongly with, which is relationship instability. I cant remember the name of the sex researcher, I quote her in one of my books, but she said, Every monogamous relationship is a disaster waiting to happen.S.M.: Do you believe that?D.S.: Kinda. Yeah, especially if that couple is unrealistic about what cheating is and means. When Terry and I became parents, we were monogamous. And one of the things we had to talk about was, before I was comfortable doing the adoption of our son was, What happens if one of us cheats? And Terry's attitude was, If you cheat on me, it's over. And my response was, Then we shouldn't do this. Not because I'm gonna cheat on you, not because I plan on it, but that could happen. And so if our default, if that should happen, is the relationship ends, we're adopting a child into a home that has a very shaky foundation. I get uncomfortable saying this because I know tons of insanely horny women who like casual sex and sex is external for them in a way that it can be for men, but men tend to have higher sex drives than women do. Sex is potentially much more consequential for women, for assigned female at birth persons, because the risk of pregnancy, the risk of STI transmissions are higher and the potential consequences are greater, and then you have to factor into that the risk of male violence and males being stronger than females and how much bigger a threat that is for women which all ups the opportunity costs of impulsive sexuality or casual sex for women.S.M.: How about straight people getting in the mix on non-monogamy? Because I have a lot of straight friends who are doing the 2.1 kids, the monogamous relationship, buying the home, that kind of thing, which I kind of almost equate to being old school now in 2025. So what's changing now when it comes to straight people and being a little bit more open-minded when it comes to non-monogamy?D.S.: The straight lifestyle was marriage, monogamy, children. And that was straight to the extent that gay people were excluded from that. But also straight people were under incredible pressure to marry and have children whether they wanted to or not, especially women for all of recorded human history. What you see now is lots of straight couples now leading the quote-unquote gay lifestyle of multiple partners, not settling down. And I think this is fascinating.S.M.: A lot of couples might be thinking right now, Hey, I want to explore opening up my relationship. I don't know how to broach the subject. What's your advice to couples who might be thinking, I kind of want to have the conversation, but I'm too afraid to do it?D.S.: Early in the relationship, you should have the conversation. It's hard 15 years in to retroactively have the conversation about your expectations, especially if you just defaulted to the assumption that love means monogamy and monogamy means love. I think people should say at the start, like, We're monogamous. We're choosing monogamy. We can talk about this down the road if we need to, right? Life is long, and what matters to you very much at the start might not matter to you at all 20 years in. But how do you have that conversation? You just risk it. But you can't un-have that conversation. If your partner feels betrayed because you would even want to have sex with somebody else ever under any circumstance, you can't un-make that. We're told this lie that if you're in love, you're not going to want to fuck other people. And so not only should a monogamous commitment come easy, we shouldn't even have to make it if that's how it actually worked. The monogamous commitment comes into force and matters when there is desire to fuck other people, the impulse, the temptation. That's when you have to honor the monogamous commitment. That's when it's will, thats when its meaningfulit's a sacrifice. And monogamous people would be more satisfied in their relationships if they could recognize the sacrifice and honor it and take the win that it is. I know a lot of people identify as monogamish who don't have sex with other people. They just use that to describe that they are monogamous but they recognize that, of course, there is desire for other people, crushes on other people, attractions to other people. And if you can allow for that, you're going to make your relationship much more stable.S.M.: I want to pivot to Gen Z a little bit. Studies indicate that Gen Z is engaging in sexual activities less frequently than previous generations. One survey found that about 40% of young adults had no sexual partners in the prior year. Why do you think that is? I find it interesting because I think if Gen Z's becoming more queer and more liberal, wouldn't you expect them to have more sex?D.S.: It is odd. So much has changed. We're isolated now and endlessly entertained now and diverted now in ways we didn't used to be. If you wanted to meet people, you used to have to leave the house. And that process of leaving the house, interacting with people, going places, doing things, gave you the skillset that you needed to negotiate the kind of interpersonal human relationships and connections that could be sexual, that could lead to romantic connections. And with social media's ability to make us think were creating those connections without having to do the work of meeting people and being face-to-face has undermined that skillset. It's also, you know, we live in a culture and at a time where the consequences of putting a foot wrong erotically or sexually in a charged environment can be high, especially for young menand rightly so. Subscribe nowThere's also the tsunami of porn and the ability to get a lot of your sexual needs met, again, without having to leave the house. If I wanted to look at porn when I was 16 years old, I had to go shoplift it. I had to leave the house, and now you don't. And there are people who get their sexual needs met virtually now and derive so much satisfaction from the virtual meeting of their sexual needs that they don't feel particularly motivated to get out there in "meet space" and try to find somebody in that imperfect world. You know, our fantasies are always perfect. Our sexual fantasies, our erotic fantasies, our masturbatory fantasiesthey're always perfect, but they used to be limited to what we could imagine or picture, like the little bit of porn we could get our hands on. And now, with the Internet, they can be fully realized two-dimensionally. And for some people, real-life sex and negotiating real-life sex is not as attractive and is not as satisfying as the perfect two-dimensional virtual sex that they can get online.S.M.: This is a trickier question. I don't know if you've been watching White Lotus.D.S: I have.S.M.: So, you know, White Lotus, obviously season three, Patrick Schwarzenegger and Sam Nivola, they play brothers and there is an incest storyline. And they officially hooked up in the last episode, the brothers. And it was [the shows] highest-rated episode ever with 4.2 million viewers. It broke the internet. Everyone's talking about it. There was also an incest storyline in Ryan Murphy's Netflix series about the Menendez brothers, and I found it really interesting that these are two very conventionally attractive men who are engaging in incest storylines that are breaking the queer internet over an issue that's really taboo and really problematic. So I'm curious what you think about all that as this has almost become mainstreamed and in a way glamorized by Hollywood.Photo: White Lotus season 3D.S.: Incest is the number one search category on Pornhub. There's stepbrother, stepsister porn, stepmother pornhuge genres. What does it tell us that there is this desire for the representation of this kind of transgression? When you drill down on people with incest fetishes, as opposed to actual sexual abuse within families, that kind of incestuous criminal behavior, what you find are people who are like, I have no interest in sleeping with my actual parents or my actual siblings, but there's something sexy about the fantasy of that transgression, about that taboo. When we watched the Menendez brothers, we knew that that was almost like a fantasy projection. And we're watching White Lotus, and it's that too, where Schwarzenegger and the other actor are not actual brothers, but we're seeing represented something that's shockingly transgressive if they were brothers, if they were siblings, which they're not.S.M.: When you think about Mike White and Ryan Murphy, the two most famous gay male executive producers on earth right now, both going for incest storylines among two really attractive men, is there anything irresponsible about that?D.S.: Is there anything irresponsible about it? I dont think that hm. Mike White and Ryan Murphy may be reflecting a trend; they didnt create this trend. There is something about that taboo that appeals to people. And I don't have that. I watched that, and I was repulsed. I could not do what Lachlan does with Saxon in that moment, but there's some part of me that's like, Okay, but it's hot because they're not brothers, and that actor, those actors are like twunk and twink. I can see why it's hot to put them together and create this narrative where they're doing something terrible that's gonna have knock-on effects dramatically and play out in ways that are obviously, I think, gonna be consequential.S.M.: And I guess...D.S.: I don't think a lot of people went homeI don't think a lot of people watched that episode of White Lotus and then jacked their brothers off. I don't think that there is that cause and effect.S.M.: You have two consenting male brothers who want to hook up. Should we see that as a taboo in society?D.S.: I think we should.S.M.: Why?D.S.: I am very pro the-incest-taboo. You know, one of the things you sometimes get thrown in your face when you're arguing for gay rights is like, Hey, if love is love and if two consenting adults And then you'll have the incest fetishists turn on you or show up anonymously in your comments or mentions and say, Okay, so if a dad and a daughter, both over 18, consent, is that okay? And I think there are some taboos I'm comfortable with, because if we were to frame incest as not transgressive, that opens a door to the exploitation within families by sexually damaged people. That opens a door to abuse, and I feel like we need to not blur that line to the extent that we can.S.M.: So I want to hit you with the politics now. There's a ton of transphobia in American society. There's a ton of anti-LGBTQ sentiment right now in American society, and that's led by Donald Trump, thats led by far-right politicians. And I find it interesting because when you look at studies like a 2021 study found that Republican participants showed more rape-supportive attitudes, especially when the perpetrator was a Republican or when the victim was a Democrat. You have a lot of puritanical beliefs, like Mike Johnson watching his son's porn consumption being his accountability coach, and I'm curious if there's any link between far-right sentiment that has to do with this puritanical vibe and the kind of connections to either kink and more extreme sexual desires or, more troublingly, sexual assault, rape culture, that sort of thing. Is there any connection there?D.S.: I think there's a connection around misogyny and sexism and sex roles and gendered expectations, not just around sexual activity and mate selection, but also around expression and this desire, this backlash, and a desire to turn the clock backnot just on LGBT people and other sexual minorities, but on women. I think there's a huge movement, a very troubling movement, to essentially re-enslave women. I think it's bigger than just picking on gay people. I think it's bigger than the attacks on trans people. What is that about besides the kind of biological essentialist idea of what a man should be or a woman should be and how you should be imprisoned by that? And I sound a little bit like the stoned kid in a dorm room right now, but I'm just trying to see the bigger things at work here. They always start with attacking queer people and trans people. The fascist impulse, right-wing authoritarianism, always comes coupled with anti-queer, anti-gay, anti-trans bigotry and policies that are themselves welded to anti-woman and deeply misogynistic attitudes and policies. Homophobia is misogyny's little brother. There's never misogyny without homophobia and homophobia without misogyny.Subscribe for accountability journalism.S.M.: Are there specific things, obviously Roe v. Wade was overturned, but are there specific laws, policies, rights, and freedoms that you're concerned about for women specifically?D.S.: The GOP's agenda for American women are husbands you can't divorce, pregnancies you can't prevent or terminate, and politicians you can't vote out of office. They want to end no-fault divorce, which will trap women in marriages they can't get out of. They've ended Roe v. Wade, and they're coming for birth control. Fringe voices on the right are saying that the amendment to the U.S. Constitution; giving women the franchise, giving women the vote, needs to be repealed, and that if women couldn't vote, we wouldn't see any Democratic elected officials. We'd never have a Democratic president ever again, and it's true. And they're going to go after that. And now, I feel like I'm the only one paying attention to all these calls to strip women of the right to vote, which we've now seen with Trump's executive order on voting, and the bill making its way through Congress where, if there's a discrepancy between your legal name and the name on your birth certificate, it's going to be harder or if not impossible for you to vote. Well, the majority of people whose adult name isn't reflected by their birth certificatenot trans peopleit's married women who took their husbands' names. This is where we're headed.S.M.: Dan Savage, you are so endlessly interesting. I could talk to you for so long, but we're grateful for your time today. Thank you so much for coming on to speak with me and Uncloseted Media today.D.S.: Thank you for having me. It was really fun.If objective, nonpartisan, rigorous, LGBTQ-focused journalism is important to you, please consider making a tax-deductible donation through our fiscal sponsor, Resource Impact, by clicking this button:Donate to Uncloseted Media
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    apnews.com
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