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RadioRob

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  1. Published by Reuters By James Oliphant WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The match-ups for several high-profile U.S. congressional and gubernatorial races in November’s midterm elections began to take shape in Pennsylvania and North Carolina on Tuesday. Here are three takeaways from the primary elections: ABORTION ON THE BALLOT Abortion rights will be a central issue in the open race for Pennsylvania’s governorship. Democrat Josh Shapiro, the state’s attorney general, ran unopposed in the Democratic primary in his bid to replace Democratic Governor Tom Wolf and has vowed to protect abortion rights against a Republican-controlled General Assembly that has proposed a series of anti-abortion bills. State Senator Doug Mastriano, who emerged the winner on Tuesday from a crowded Republican primary, has proposed a so-called heartbeat bill that would ban abortions after six weeks. He recently called abortion genocide and would not allow exceptions for rape, incest or the health of the mother. Shapiro quickly blasted Mastriano on Twitter as “the most extreme gubernatorial candidate in the country.” The state legislature has introduced a bill that would prevent the state Supreme Court from declaring abortion a right in the wake of a possible ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court that overturns the nationwide protections of its 1973 Roe v. Wade decision. That would send the issue of legalization back to the individual states. Joseph Foster, chairman of the Democratic Party in Montgomery County, the state’s largest suburban county, said Democrats will spend considerable time reminding voters ahead of November’s elections that the only thing standing in the way of strict abortion laws is a Democrat in the governor’s mansion. “If a Republican wins a governor seat, we are in deep trouble,” Foster said. FETTERMAN FOLLOWS THROUGH John Fetterman, the idiosyncratic, hoodie-wearing lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania, defeated U.S. Democratic Senate primary rival Conor Lamb in convincing fashion despite a health scare that took Fetterman off the campaign trail for the race’s final weekend. Now the road gets even tougher. No matter who wins the Republican U.S. Senate primary, expect a flurry of ads this summer labeling Fetterman a “socialist” and a “radical” in the mold of former presidential candidate Bernie Sanders. Fetterman supported Sanders’ 2016 presidential bid but has since sought to broaden his appeal, said Mike Mikus, a Democratic strategist in Pittsburgh. Analysts said Fetterman won on Tuesday with a populist persona that attracted both moderates and progressives, avoiding the kind of ideological mud-slinging that has plagued other Democratic primaries this year. He has made a particular effort to reach out to working-class voters in counties that Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump won by 35 percentage points or more in the 2020 election. With vote counting still under way, Fetterman’s most commanding leads were in rural counties where in many cases he led Lamb, a moderate congressman, by more than 50 points. That rural appeal may allow him to siphon some votes away from his Republican opponent in those counties. But ultimately, Fetterman will have to win the way Democrats usually win in the state, by playing to suburban voters in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, said Jacob Rubashkin, an elections analyst in Washington. Fetterman first has to reassure voters about his health after suffering a stroke last week. His campaign said a procedure on Monday to implant a pacemaker was successful and that Fetterman was on track for a “full recovery.” BIDEN’S BACKYARD President Joe Biden quickly congratulated Fetterman, his fellow Democrat, on Twitter after his primary win. The role Biden takes in the coming campaign will bear some watching. The president, born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, considers the state a second home, especially the Philadelphia region. Biden narrowly won the state in 2020 over Trump, after Trump won it four years earlier in a race against Hillary Clinton. But Biden’s popularity in the state has waned, as it has in much of the country. A poll conducted by Franklin & Marshall College earlier this month found that only one in three voters in the state approved of Biden’s job performance, including just 61% of Democrats. Fetterman was more popular among Democrats at 67%. Fetterman calls himself a “different kind of Democrat” and favors policies more in line with the progressive Sanders than the moderate Biden. Would an appearance by Biden on the trail clash with Fetterman’s anti-establishment image and do more harm than good? Or would Biden help Fetterman bring in the swing voters, Black voters and women he will need to prevail in the general election? That will be one drama hanging over the race in the next several months. (Reporting by James Oliphant; Additional reporting by Jarrett Renshaw in Newtown, Pennsylvania and Jason Lange in Washington; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Howard Goller) View the full article
  2. Published by Reuters WASHINGTON (Reuters) – First-term U.S. congressman Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina, an ally of former President Donald Trump who has drawn the ire of fellow Republicans over controversial remarks and a nude video, conceded to party primary challenger Chuck Edwards in his House of Representatives race, local news outlet WRAL and CNN reported on Tuesday. Edwards, a North Carolina state senator, will now face a Democratic opponent in the Nov. 8 general election in North Carolina’s 11th congressional district. Cawthorn, endorsed by Trump despite a series of controversies, is at age 26 the youngest member of Congress. (Writing by Makini Brice; Editing by Will Dunham and Ross Colvin) View the full article
  3. Published by BANG Showbiz English Miley Cyrus and Dolly Parton communicate with each other using fax. The 29-year-old pop singer and her godmother starred together in a Super Bowl commercial about 5G phones earlier this year – but the advert didn’t truly reflect Dolly’s real-life approach. During an appearance on ‘Late Night with Seth Meyers’, Miley shared: “It was amazing because, you know, she was doing it for the phones, yet every time I coordinate and kind of communicate with Dolly, it’s still through fax. “So I don’t know what she’s talking about. She’s rarely on the phone.” Seth, 48, joked that the Super Bowl commercial was an example of “false advertising”. The ‘Wrecking Ball’ hitmake then tried to clarify what she meant. She said: “Well, we do use the phone, but she does a fax, and then someone scans the fax, and then they put it into a text message, and then that gets sent to me, and it’s always signed.” Miley has also been encouraged by the country music icon to improve her own communication skills. She explained: “I’ve started to try and make my own letters because there’s something so amazing just about a connection. It’s just not casual. You know that she took the time to get out, I guess, her typewriter.” Meanwhile, Dolly previously praised Miley for starring in ‘Hannah Montana’. The singer – who also made guest appearances on the Disney show – shared: “When Hannah Montana came on the air, and little Miley Cyrus, my little goddaughter, was the star of it, I was so proud of her. “I thought she was sensational. I thought, ‘What a great little comedienne she is. And what a great little actress. And of course, she’s a great singer.” View the full article
  4. Published by AFP Software 'bots' posing as people can spread misinformation and foment division while making social media audiences seem larger than they really are. San Francisco (AFP) – Elon Musk’s pausing of his bid to buy Twitter due to questions over “bots” has put the artificially-operated accounts at the heart of the proposed deal’s latest controversy. The software is so commonplace and can be such a problem that tech giants such as Meta, Google and Twitter have teams devoted to banishing bots and cybersecurity firms sell defenses against them. Here’s a closer look at bots: Human or software? At a basic level, “bots” are software programs that interact with online platforms, or their users, pretending to be real people, said Tamer Hassan, co-founder and chief of cybersecurity firm HUMAN. Malicious bots have become sophisticated and are among this decade’s top cyber threats, said Hassan, whose firm specializes in distinguishing people from software online. The term bots at Twitter is often used to describe fake accounts, powered by some version of artificial intelligence, that can fire off posts and even react to what is posted by others, said independent analyst Rob Enderle. Tickets and turmoil Bots are used in more than three quarters of security and fraud incidents that happen online, from spreading socially divisive posts to snapping up hot concert tickets and hacking, Hassan told AFP. “The question is, what would you do if you could look like a million humans?” Hassan asked rhetorically. “Across all social media platforms, bots can be used to spread content to influence people’s opinions, garner reactions and can even result in cybercrime.” Bots can be used on social media to widely spread false news, direct users to misinformation, steer people to specious websites and make bogus posts seem popular using shares or “likes.” Bots on social media can also sucker people into financial scams, Hassan added. “Social media platforms have had bots for a long time,” analyst Enderle said. “Bots have been connected to attempts to influence the US election and shape opinions about Russia’s war on Ukraine.” The deal with Twitter Twitter makes its money from ads, and marketers pay for reaching people, not software. “Advertising to bots isn’t going to have a good close rate because bots don’t buy products,” Enderle noted. If advertisers are paying Twitter fees based on how many people see ads, and those numbers are inflated due to bots in the online audience, they are being overcharged, Enderle added. If Twitter has way more bots than it is letting on, its revenue could plunge when those accounts are exposed and closed. Twitter chief executive Parag Agrawal has said that fewer than five percent of accounts active on any given day at Twitter are bots, but that analysis cannot be replicated externally due to the need to keep user data private. Musk posted that the real number of bots may be four times higher and has said he would make getting rid of them a priority if he owned the platform. Twitter has rules about automated actions by accounts, including barring software from posting about hot topics, firing off spam, attempting to influence online conversations, and operating across multiple accounts. Bots are a known social media problem, and having Musk make it a sticking point this late in the acquisition process appears to likely be “a vehicle to escape the purchase or get a lower price,” Enderle said. View the full article
  5. Published by Reuters By Gabriella Borter (Reuters) -A Michigan judge on Tuesday granted a temporary injunction to block the enforcement of a state abortion ban, which might have taken effect if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns the Roe v. Wade precedent that legalized abortion nationwide. A Michigan Court of Claims judge in Lansing sided with women’s healthcare provider Planned Parenthood in its lawsuit against the state seeking to stop the potential enforcement of the ban, which was enacted in 1931 and rendered unconstitutional in 1973. The U.S. Supreme Court appears ready to overhaul the constitutional right to abortion. On May 2, the news outlet Politico published a leaked draft opinion by Justice Samuel Alito, which showed the court’s conservative majority intended to overturn the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that established the right to abortion nationally. The court’s final decision is expected in June. Nine states, including Michigan, have abortion bans on the books that were enacted before the Roe v. Wade ruling, and which could potentially be enforced anew if Roe is overturned. “Forced pregnancy, and the concomitant compulsion to endure the medical and psychological risks accompanying it, contravene the right to make autonomous medical decisions,” Court of Claims Judge Elizabeth Gleicher wrote in her opinion. Michigan’s 1931 law criminalizes all abortions except in cases to save the pregnant woman’s life. Planned Parenthood and Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, filed lawsuits last month to prevent the law from taking effect. “Today’s ruling means all Michiganders will continue to be able to access the health care they deserve and to be able to decide for themselves their own futures,” Sarah Wallett, chief medical officer of Planned Parenthood of Michigan, said in a statement. Whitmer praised the judge’s decision on Tuesday, and said in a statement that the injunction “will help ensure that Michigan remains a place where women have freedom and control over their own bodies.” Whitmer added that she is still pressing the state Supreme Court to recognize the right to abortion under the state constitution to further protect abortion access, a campaign she began last month. A representative for Right to Life of Michigan, an anti-abortion group, called the judge’s ruling “egregious for many reasons” in a statement on Tuesday. John Bursch, senior counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom, said the judge had no jurisdiction to rule in the case as the defendant – state Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat – was not defending the pre-Roe law. “Government officials have a duty to uphold the law and protect their citizens, including unborn children” Bursch said, adding that Right to Life of Michigan was considering next steps. (Reporting by Gabriella Borter; editing by Jonathan Oatis) View the full article
  6. While others may be pulling out of stocks, I'm actually upping what I'm putting in the market. Might as well pickup a few bargains. It may take a little bit, but I'm not looking at needing it for quite a while.
  7. Published by Reuters By Maria Caspani (Reuters) – South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster this week signed a bill banning transgender athletes from playing school sports that match their gender identity, joining a number of Republican-led states that have enacted similar laws this year. The “Save Women’s Sports Act” first cleared the state’s House of Representatives last month after the Republican majority outlasted an estimated 1,000 amendments to the bill put forward by Democrats seeking to stall it. It passed the Republican-controlled Senate earlier this month. The measure signed into law by McMaster on Monday bars transgender girls and women from female sports teams in public elementary schools, middle schools, high schools and colleges, as well as private school teams that compete against public schools. The law was amended in the Senate to prohibit transgender boys and young men from competing on male school sports teams, “unless no team designated for females in that sport is offered at the school in which the student is enrolled.” Supporters of the law – and others like it – say it is necessary to ensure a level playing field in women’s sports. Opponents and LGBTQ advocates say the laws are cruel and unnecessary, because they address a problem that does not really exist given the small number of transgender athletes in school sports. “Transgender youth are not a threat to fairness in sports, and this law now needlessly stigmatizes young people who are simply trying to navigate their adolescence, make friends, and build skills like teamwork and leadership, winning and losing,” Ivy Hill, community health program director of Campaign for Southern Equality, said in a statement. As transgender rights have been pushed to the forefront of the U.S. culture wars, at least half a dozen states this year have passed or enacted legislation preventing transgender students from playing on school sports teams matching their gender identity. Louisiana and Alaska lawmakers are currently considering or advancing similar bills. (Reporting by Maria Caspani; Editing by Leslie Adler) View the full article
  8. Published by AFP Andy Warhol’s “Self Portrait” during a press preview on May 6, 2022 for the Macklowe Collection at Sotheby's in New York New York (AFP) – The famed Macklowe collection, subject of a bitter divorce battle between a New York property developer and his ex-wife, became the most expensive art collection ever sold at auction Monday. Sotheby’s sold its second offering of works from the collection for $246.1 million, bringing the total value of the group of paintings to $922.2 million, a spokesman told AFP. That exceeds the $835.1 million that the Rockefeller collection sold for in 2018, then the highest total ever made by a single private collection at auction. Among the highlights of Monday evening’s sale were Mark Rothko’s “Untitled,” which fetched $48 million and Gerhard Richter’s “Seestück””, which went for $30.2 million. Andy Warhol’s “Self Portrait” sold for $18.7 million while Willem de Kooning’s “Untitled” went for $17.8 million. Sotheby’s won the rights to sell the Macklowe works back in September. It sold 35 of the pieces in November for $676.1 million before selling the remaining 30 on Monday. Sotheby’s had described the paintings as the “most significant collection of modern and contemporary art to ever appear on the market.” During divorce proceedings, Harry Macklowe and his ex-wife Linda had been unable to agree on how much the vast collection was worth. A New York judge ruled in 2018 that the they should sell all 65 works and split the profits. View the full article
  9. Published by BANG Showbiz English Neil Patrick Harris has apologised for a resurfaced joke about Amy Winehouse. The 48-year-old actor has responded after backlash over a photo taken at a Halloween party he and his husband David Burtka threw in 2011 which included a meat platter labelled “The Corpse of Amy Winehouse”. The platter – which had ingredients including “beef ribs, pulled pork, chicken sausage in a spicy BBQ sauce – was made up to resemble the late ‘Rehab singer’, who had died three months earlier. On Monday (16.05.22), Neil said in a statement: “A photo recently resurfaced from a Halloween-themed party my husband and I hosted 11 years ago. “It was regrettable then, and it remains regrettable now. “Amy Winehouse was a once-in-a-generation talent, and I’m sorry for any hurt this image caused.” Last year, ‘The Big Bang Theory’ star Mayim Bialik revealed Neil stopped talking to her after she refused to give him a standing ovation following a performance of ‘Rent’. Explaining she isn’t a fan of musicals, she said: “I went to see ‘Rent’. I was friends with Neil Patrick Harris… this is a terrible story. I went to see Rent… I was a teenager and I did not… it wasn’t my thing. “But when your friend is in the play… and then everyone is clapping at the end and you say to your boyfriend next to you, ‘I don’t want to stand for this,’ and you look up and Neil Patrick Harris is looking right at you, it’s a bad day… “Neil was fantastic, he’s amazing, but I just wasn’t into the, ‘Let’s give a standing ovation,’ it wasn’t my thing, but that’s not a thing you say out loud, because Neil was reading my lips.” Mayim admitted she went backstage after the show and the ‘How I Met Your Mother’ star confronted her. She added: “We were friends at the time… at the time… and he said, I kid you not, ‘Why did you say you weren’t gonna stand up?’ “I did not have a good answer… “We didn’t speak for a long time. He says that he forgave me and he sent me flowers when he heard I was still carrying this terrible guilt. “I mean, I feel terrible. It just wasn’t my thing.” Neil responded on Twitter, and quipped: “Mayim Bialik and I have been friends for over 30 years. Her aversion to musical theater isn’t going to change that…” View the full article
  10. Published by DPA After a decade of prototypes and trial runs of hydrogen trains in cities across Europe and Asia, Deutsche Bahn's new hydrogen-powered train is among Europe's first passenger hydrogen trains to be in regular use alongside older diesel counterparts. Siemens/dpa German state-owned Deutsche Bahn rail has launched a new hydrogen-powered train designed to replace smoky, old diesel trains on commuter and regional transport routes. Hydrogen trains have a particularly climate-friendly drive technology since they operate emission-free with green hydrogen and emit only water vapour. After a decade of prototypes and trial runs of hydrogen trains in cities across Europe and Asia, Deutsche Bahn’s hydrogen-powered train is among Europe’s first passenger hydrogen trains to be in regular use alongside older diesel counterparts. “For Deutsche Bahn, hydrogen trains are an important component on our way to achieving climate neutrality,” said DB’s Daniela Gerd tom Markotten. For the pilot project, the hydrogen will be produced in the southern city of Tübingen by DB using green electricity taken directly from the overhead power line. The two-car Mireo Plus H train has an operating range of up to 800 kilometres and is as powerful as an electric multiple-unit counterpart. Top speed is given as 160 kilometres per hour. A three-car version has a range of up to 1,000 kilometres. Each train can save up to 45,000 tons of CO2 over its service life of 30 years compared to corresponding travel with cars. The rail project is being funded as part of Germany’s National Innovation Program for Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technology with €13.74 million by the Federal Ministry for Digital and Transport. “Only with a strong rail system and alternative types of drives will we be able to make a significant contribution to the fight against climate change,” said Michael Peter, CEO of Siemens Mobility which has teamed up with DB rail for the project. The Mireo train is refuelled with hydrogen in an innovative procedure that, for the first time, takes no longer than tanking a regular diesel unit. After completing a test phase, the train will enter passenger service between Tübingen, Horb and Pforzheim in 2024. Approximately 120,000 kilometres of scheduled rail service are planned. View the full article
  11. Published by Reuters By David Morgan WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The antic-ridden career of Republican U.S. Representative Madison Cawthorn comes down to the wire in North Carolina on Tuesday, as voters choose whether the keep the conservative firebrand in office after a string of self-inflicted controversies. A nude video, claims of being invited to a cocaine-fueled Washington orgy by leaders he respected, two attempts to carry a gun onto an airplane and calling Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy a “thug” in the midst of a Russian invasion have turned key colleagues against the 26-year-old, who is Congress’s youngest member. “The establishment Republicans in North Carolina are embarrassed by Madison Cawthorn,” said Chris Cooper, a political science professor at Western Carolina University, which is located in the 11th congressional district that Cawthorn represents. He faces a challenge for his party’s nomination from state Senator Chuck Edwards, who has gained ground in polls, along with support from the Republican super PAC Results for NC. Cawthorn’s staff did not respond to repeated requests for comment. “I just see a lack of judgment,” said Republican U.S. Senator Thom Tillis, who says Cawthorn has not demonstrated a serious interest in serving a legislator even when the state has been hit by flooding. “It just makes me wonder how focused he is on serving the people of his district, versus focused on increasing his political stature. I have no patience for anybody who’s got a focus on the latter,” Tillis said. Cawthorn was seen as a rising star of the Republican Party after the political newcomer defeated a Trump-endorsed candidate in 2020. This time, Cawthorn has the endorsement of Donald Trump, who pleaded on his behalf on the day before Tuesday’s primary. “When Madison was first elected to Congress, he did a great job. Recently, he made some foolish mistakes, which I don’t believe he’ll make again … let’s give Madison a second chance,” the former president said in a post on the Truth Social media platform. Cawthorn has seen his lead in opinion polls collapse over the past two months, amid a barrage of attacks from two super PACs with backing from Republicans and Democrats. In the closing days of the primary race, Results for NC Inc, which has supported Tillis, ran a 30-second ad accusing Cawthorn of being a reckless playboy out to slash spending on Social Security and Medicare. Tillis has endorsed Edwards, a 61-year-old legislator and local businessman who is touting an “America First” agenda that is likely to appeal to Trump voters in the district. Cawthorn and Edwards are among eight candidates seeking the party nomination to square off against a Democratic candidate in the Nov. 8 election for the U.S. House of Representatives. Political analysts say Cawthorn continues to enjoy strong backing among hard core Trump supporters and could still emerge the victor. (Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Scott Malone and Bill Berkrot) View the full article
  12. Published by Radar Online Mega The family of Payton Gendron, the main suspect in the mass shooting that took place in a Buffalo supermarket over the weekend, spoke out after Gendron’s arrest to blame his fear and paranoia over Covid-19 for what led him to allegedly commit the shooting that left 10 Black people dead and many more seriously injured. In a surprising interview with The Post on Monday, Gendron’s relatives revealed that they believe the 18-year-old “snapped” and committed the atrocity in Buffalo on Saturday after isolating himself from the world during the Covid-19 pandemic and spending too much time inside visiting white supremacist websites. Mega “I have no idea how he could have gotten caught up in this. I blame it on Covid,’’ Sandra Komoroff, a cousin of Gendron’s mother, told the outlet. “He was very paranoid about getting Covid, extremely paranoid, to the point that — his friends were saying — he would wear the hazmat suit.” “And then he got Covid just a few weeks ago…He went to family functions with a respirator mask on. He totally wasn’t going to get Covid — and then he got Covid,” she continued. “They were vaxxed to the max. I don’t know if it was a bad case, I just know he caught it.” “That’s the only way to say it. And when you’re home all day on the Internet, you’re missing out on human contact,” Sandra added. “There’s a lot of emotions and a lot of body language you’re not getting [compared to] when you see their face.” Making Payton’s relatives’ interview with The Post even more chilling is the fact that Dave Komoroff, Sandra’s husband, suggested that the 18-year-old shooting suspect’s positive Covid diagnosis affected Gendron’s “lizard brain” and caused him to get overly-aggressive and carry out the shooting at Tops Friendly Market on Saturday. Mega “In theory, [Covid-19] could have affected what they call the lizard brain — the part of the brain that controls aggression,” Dave suggested. “I can’t say it’s impossible, but maybe that would happen one out of so many millions of times.” The shooting suspect’s relatives also revealed in the newly released interview that they had no idea Gendron was a white supremacist, nor that he had written a 180-page white supremacist manifesto promoting racist ideology and outlining specific plans for a massacre, but they also blame such a change in their young relative on the websites he visited while isolating from the pandemic. “I don’t know where he went online — the dark Web, or wherever — but apparently he got into some nasty stuff,” Dave said. “He’s smart enough to get into dangerous stuff online, which maybe the average person wouldn’t know how to get into. “I mean, I’m trying to figure it out myself.” Mega As Radar reported, Gendron was taken into police custody on Saturday shortly after using a rifle to open fire into the parking lot and inside the store of a Tops Friendly Market in Buffalo, New York. 10 people were confirmed dead and at least three more confirmed injured in the shooting that took place in a predominantly Black community, and the manifesto detailing the suspected shooter’s plan for the slaughter was found shortly after he was taken into custody. View the full article
  13. Published by AFP Senate hopeful Kathy Barnette, pictured at a Republican leadership forum in Newtown, Pennsylvania on May 11 2022, has closed the gap on frontrunner Mehmet Oz, who has the endorsement of former President Donald Trump Washington (AFP) – Pennsylvania picks its candidates Tuesday for the crucial US midterm elections in a contest that has gripped the political establishment — with a Democratic frontrunner suffering an 11th-hour stroke and a far-right Republican outsider surging into contention. It is the most consequential day so far of the primary season, with hopefuls in North Carolina, Oregon, Kentucky and Idaho vying to be their party’s representative in November’s congressional and state ballots. All eyes are on Pennsylvania’s Republican Senate contest, however, which looked for months like a toss-up between hedge fund tycoon David McCormick and TV surgeon Mehmet Oz, who has former president Donald Trump’s endorsement. But the race has been rocked in the final days by a come-from-behind surge from a long-shot insurgent Kathy Barnette, who has drawn practically level with her big-spending rivals. Barnette had been so far behind that the early frontrunners spent little time digging into her background until recent days, when a series of anti-Islam and homophobic statements were uncovered. Oz, who would be the first Muslim Republican senator if elected, zeroed in on a 2015 social media post in which Barnette said that “pedophilia is a cornerstone of Islam.” She has falsely denied posting the slur and told Fox News on Sunday that some of her inflammatory posts were aimed at starting a conversation, rather than “full thoughts.” She is also facing questions over her appearance at the “Stop the Steal” rally that turned into the 2021 US Capitol riot, and spreading Trump’s false claims of election fraud. ‘Full recovery’ The ex-president’s support for Oz will serve as a new test of his sway over Republicans, after a clean sweep of successful endorsements in the first three state primaries but failure of a high-profile candidate in Nebraska a week ago. A Fox News poll released this week showed Barnette with support from 19 percent of respondents, McCormick with 20 percent and Oz with 22 percent. The anti-abortion Barnette has seen her popularity swell among conservatives after speaking powerfully about her mother being raped at age 11 and giving birth to her at just 12. But Republican leaders worry that she will prove unable to expand her appeal beyond the Republican base, costing the party an eminently winnable Senate seat in November. Donna Patterson, head of political science at Delaware State University, told AFP Barnette’s “unprecedented rise” would likely shut out McCormick, leaving Oz as her main rival. “Frankly, things have shifted so quickly in the past 10 days that it is difficult to predict a winner,” she added. Trump said in a statement last week however that Barnette would “never be able to win the general election against the radical left Democrats.” In the race for Pennsylvania governor, Trump has the party fretting all over again after he endorsed far-right candidate Doug Mastriano, a state senator who has a narrow polling lead but is considered by many to be too out of the mainstream to win in the midterms. The Pennsylvania primary took another turn, this time on the Democratic side, as Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman, the overwhelming favorite for the party’s Senate primary, suffered a stroke on Friday. The tattooed, six-foot-nine-inch (2.05-meter) liberal said he had suffered no cognitive damage and was expected to make a “full recovery” but he remains hospitalized. According to the most recent Franklin and Marshall University poll, Fetterman leads Marine veteran and moderate US congressman Conor Lamb by nearly 40 percentage points. View the full article
  14. Published by Reuters (Reuters) -Russia’s parliament will consider banning the exchange of Russian prisoners of war for captured members of Ukraine’s Azov Regiment, the speaker said on Tuesday, after the last Ukrainian defenders of Mariupol’s Azovstal steel works surrendered to Russian forces. The Azov Regiment, a one-time nationalist militia now integrated into Ukraine’s National Guard, became the face of resistance against Russian troops in the city, which saw some of the fiercest fighting in what Moscow terms its “special military operation” in Ukraine. But Moscow has depicted it as a main perpetrator of the alleged radical anti-Russian nationalism or even Nazism from which it says it needs to protect Ukraine’s Russian-speakers. Vyacheslav Volodin, speaker of the State Duma, said its members were “Nazi criminals” who should not be included in prisoner exchanges. “They are war criminals and we must do everything to bring them to justice,” he said. The Duma website said he had asked the defence and security committees to prepare an instruction to that effect. The regiment denies being fascist, racist or neo-Nazi, and Ukraine says it has been reformed away from its radical nationalist origins. Kyiv also denies that Russian speakers have been persecuted in Ukraine, and says the allegation that it has a fascist agenda of violating human rights, repeated daily on Russian media, is a baseless pretext for Russian aggression. Moscow said over 250 Ukrainian fighters in the steelworks had surrendered, and that 51 would be treated for serious injuries. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said President Vladimir Putin had guaranteed that all would be treated “in accordance with international standards”. Russia and Ukraine have already conducted several prisoner exchanges. Ukrainian Deputy Defence Minister Hanna Malyar said that “an exchange procedure will take place” for the soldiers’ return. But Leonid Slutsky, one of Moscow’s negotiators in talks with Ukraine and chairman of the Duma’s international affairs committee, called the evacuated Azov fighters “animals in human form” and said they should receive the death penalty. “They do not deserve to live after the monstrous crimes against humanity that they have committed and that are committed continuously against our prisoners,” he told the assembly. (Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Alison Williams) View the full article
  15. Published by BANG Showbiz English Andy Cohen is excited about trying different hairstyles on his daughter. The ‘Watch What Happens Live’ host welcomed baby Lucy into the world via surrogate last month and he admitted one of the things he’s most looking forward to about having a girl is getting creative with her locks. He told ‘Entertainment Tonight’: “It’s exciting! I’m already looking at her trying to think of how I want to do her hair. I have a lot of ideas that I’m workshopping. “I already know how to braid. “[And] I’ve got the greatest up-close view of hairdos every night on ‘Watch What Happens Live’! I talk to the hair and make-up people every night at my show.” Andy is also dad to three-year-old Ben, and though the little boy is smitten with his baby sister, he needs to keep an eye on their interactions. He said: “Maybe he loves her so much he wants to hit her? So I’m monitoring the situation closely.” The 53-year-old star announced Lucy’s birth on Instagram on 29 April. Alongside a picture of himself cradling the newborn, he wrote on the photo-sharing platform: “HERE’S LUCY!!!!! Meet my daughter, Lucy Eve Cohen! She’s 8 pounds 13 oz and was born at 5:13 pm in New York City!!!” The ‘Real Housewives’ producer went on to thank his “rock star” surrogate and noted that Benjamin “can’t wait” to meet his younger sister. He added: “Her big brother can’t wait to meet her! Thank you to my rock star surrogate (ALL surrogates are rockstars, by the way) and everyone who helped make this miracle happen. I’m so happy!”(sic) Back in 2018, Andy – who is currently single and broke up from Broadway star John Hill in 2020 after three years of dating – previously spoke how much he longed for a family prior to the birth of his son. At the time, he said: “Family means everything to me and having one of my own is something I’ve wanted in my heart for my entire life and though it has taken me longer than most to get there, I cannot wait for what I envision will be the most rewarding chapter yet.” View the full article
  16. Published by Reuters By Natalia Zinets MARIUPOL, Ukraine (Reuters) -More than 250 Ukrainian fighters surrendered to Russian forces at the Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol and Kyiv said on Tuesday it had ordered its full garrison to evacuate, bringing an apparent end to the bloodiest battle in Europe for decades. Reuters saw buses leave the steelworks overnight and five of them arrive in the Russian-held town of Novoazovsk, where Moscow said the wounded would be treated. In one, marked with the Latin letter ‘Z’ that symbolises Russia’s assault, wounded men were stacked on stretchers three bunks high. One man was wheeled out, his head tightly wrapped in thick bandages. While both sides spoke of a deal under which all Ukrainian troops would abandon the huge steelworks, important details were not yet public, including how many fighters still remained inside, and whether any form of prisoner swap had been agreed. Ukraine’s Deputy Defence Minister Hanna Malyar told a briefing that Kyiv would not disclose how many fighters were inside the plant until all were safe. The Kremlin said President Vladimir Putin had personally guaranteed the prisoners would be treated according to international standards. “The ‘Mariupol’ garrison has fulfilled its combat mission,” the General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces said in a statement. “The supreme military command ordered the commanders of the units stationed at Azovstal to save the lives of the personnel.” In a television address, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said: “Ukraine needs Ukrainian heroes alive.” Russian defence ministry video showed fighters leaving the plant in daylight, some carried on stretchers, others with hands up to be searched by Russian troops. Russia said at least 256 Ukrainian fighters had “laid down their arms and surrendered”, including 51 severely wounded. Ukraine said 264 soldiers, including 53 wounded, had left. RUINS The surrender appears to mark the end of the battle of Mariupol, where Ukraine believes tens of thousands of people were killed under months of Russian bombardment and siege. The city now lies in ruins. Its complete capture is Russia’s biggest victory of the war, giving Moscow total control of the coast of the Sea of Azov and an unbroken stretch of eastern and southern Ukraine. But it comes as Russia’s campaign has faltered elsewhere, with troops retreating from the outskirts of Kharkiv in the northeast at the fastest pace since they were driven from the north and outskirts of Kyiv at the end of March. Authorities on both sides gave few clues about the ultimate fate of Mariupol’s last defenders. Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said Kyiv aimed to arrange a prisoner swap for the wounded once their condition stabilises, but neither side disclosed terms for any specific deal. Natalia, wife of a sailor among those holed up in the plant, told Reuters she hoped “there will be an honest exchange”. But she was still worried: “What Russia is doing now is inhumane.” VICTORY Mariupol is the biggest city Russia has captured since its Feb. 24 invasion, giving Moscow a clear-cut victory for the first time in months. In a statement on Monday, the Azov Regiment, the main Ukrainian unit that had held out in the steelworks, said it had achieved its objective over 82 days of resistance by making it possible to defend the rest of the country. The regiment, now part of Ukraine’s territorial defence forces, originated as a far-right militia, and Moscow has portrayed defeating its fighters as central to its stated objective of “de-Nazifying” Ukraine. Russia blames them for mistreating Russian speakers, one of its war justifications, which Kyiv and its Western backers call a bogus pretext. High-profile Russian lawmakers spoke out against any prisoner swap. Vyacheslav Volodin, speaker of the State Duma, Russia’s lower house, said: “Nazi criminals should not be exchanged.” Lawmaker Leonid Slutsky, one of Russia’s negotiators in talks with Ukraine, called the evacuated combatants “animals in human form” and said they should be executed. The United Nations and Red Cross say thousands of Ukrainian civilians died under Russia’s siege of the port of 400,000 people, with the true toll uncounted but certain to be Europe’s worst since the 1990s wars in Chechnya and the Balkans. For months, Mariupol’s residents were driven into cellars under perpetual bombardment, with no access to food, fresh water or heat, and bodies littering the streets. Two strikes – on a maternity ward and a theatre where hundreds of people were sheltering – became worldwide emblems of Russia’s tactic of devastating population centres. Thousands of civilians are believed to have been buried in mass graves or makeshift pits in gardens, and Ukraine says Moscow forcibly deported thousands of residents to Russia. Moscow denies targeting civilians or deporting them. UKRAINE ADVANCES Elsewhere, Ukrainian forces have been advancing at their fastest pace for more than a month, driving Russian forces out of the area around Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second largest city. Ukraine says its forces had reached the Russian border, 40 km north of Kharkiv. They have also pushed at least as far as the Siverskiy Donets river 40 km to the east, where they could threaten supply lines to Russia’s main advance in the Donbas. Russia is still pressing that advance, despite taking heavy losses. Finland and Sweden have announced plans to join NATO, bringing about the very expansion of the Western alliance Putin invoked as one of the main justifications for his “special military operation”. U.S. President Joe Biden was due to host the Swedish and Finnish leaders at the White House on Thursday. After weeks in which Russia threatened unspecified retaliation, Putin said on Monday Russia had “no problems” with either country, and their NATO membership would be an issue only if the alliance deployed additional troops or weapons. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday there would be “probably not much difference” if Finland and Sweden joined NATO, since they had already participate in alliance drills. (Reporting by Natalia Zinets in Kyiv and a Reuters journalist in Mariupol; Additional reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Peter Graff; Editing by Stephen Coates, Nick Macfie and Angus MacSwan) View the full article
  17. Published by Reuters By Joey Roulette and Steve Gorman WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Two top U.S. defense intelligence officials said on Tuesday the Pentagon is committed to determining the origins of what the government calls “unidentified aerial phenomena” in the first public congressional hearing in more than 50 years concerning phenomena commonly known as UFOs. The two officials, Ronald Moultrie and Scott Bray, appeared before a U.S. House of Representatives intelligence subcommittee 11 months after a report documenting more than 140 cases of unidentified aerial phenomena, or UAPs, that U.S. military pilots have reported observing since 2004. Bray, deputy director of naval intelligence, acknowledged that there have been some sightings that U.S. officials “can’t explain.” Some of those involved instances in which there was too little data to create a reasonable explanation, Bray said. But Bray added: “There are a small handful of cases in which we have more data that our analysis simply hasn’t been able to fully pull together a picture of what happened.” These, Bray said, have involved unexpected “flight characteristics” or “signature management.” “When it comes to material that we have, we have no material, we have detected no emanations, within the UAB task force that would suggest it is anything non-terrestrial in origin,” Bray added. The term UFO, for unidentified flying object, has long been widely associated with the notion of extraterrestrial spacecraft. “We know that our service members have encountered unidentified aerial phenomena, and because UAP pose potential flight safety and general security risks, we are committed to a focused effort to determine their origins,” Moultrie, who oversees a newly formed Pentagon-based UAP investigation team as U.S. defense undersecretary for intelligence and security, told the hearing. Bray presented the panel with two UAP video clips. One showed flashing triangle-shaped objects in the night sky later determined to be visual artifacts of light passing through night-vision goggles. The other showed a shiny, spherical object zipping past the cockpit window of a military aircraft. “I do not have an explanation for what this specific object is,” Bray said of the second object. Moultrie and Bray also said the Pentagon was determined to remove the stigma long associated with sightings of unexplained flying objects by encouraging pilots to come forward when they observe such phenomena. The notion of alien spacecraft received no mention in last June’s UAP presentation. The focus, instead, was on possible implications for U.S. national security and aviation safety, as it was in Tuesday’s hearing. The report did, however, include some UAPs previously revealed in Pentagon-released video footage of enigmatic airborne objects exhibiting speed and maneuverability exceeding known aviation technology and lacking any visible means of propulsion or flight-control surfaces. That report was nine-page “preliminary assessment” compiled by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and a Navy-led task force the Pentagon formed in 2020. ‘THEY ARE REAL’ Subcommittee chairman Andre Carson said it was important for the Pentagon to take the issue of UAPs seriously. “UAPs are unexplained, it’s true. But they are real,” Carson said, raising concerns that Pentagon officials have in the past focused on cases that are relatively easy to explain while “avoiding the ones that cannot be explained.” Carson asked Moultrie, “Can we get some kinds of assurances that your analysts will follow the facts where they lead and assess all hypotheses?” “Absolutely,” Moultrie responded. “So, we’re open to all hypotheses. We’re open to any conclusions that we may encounter.” “We want to know what’s out there as much as you want to know what’s out there,” Moultrie said, acknowledging that he grew up as a science-fiction enthusiast. Moultrie and Bray were scheduled to testify behind closed doors following the public hearing. The Navy task force behind last year’s report was replaced in November by a Pentagon agency named the Airborne Object Identification and Management Synchronization Group. Last year’s report said the UAP sightings probably lack a single explanation. Further data and analysis were needed to determine whether they represent some exotic aerial system developed by a secret U.S. government or commercial entity, or by a foreign power such as China or Russia, according to the report. Defense and intelligence analysts have likewise yet to rule out an extraterrestrial origin for any UAP case, senior U.S. officials told reporters ahead of the report’s release last year, though the paper itself avoided any explicit reference to such possibilities. The report and Tuesday’s hearing marked a turning point for the U.S. government after decades spent deflecting, debunking and discrediting observations of unidentified flying objects and “flying saucers” dating back to the 1940s. There had been no open congressional hearing on the subject since the U.S. Air Force terminated an inconclusive UFO program code-named Project Blue Book in 1969. (Reporting by Joey Roulette in Washington; Writing and additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Will Dunham) View the full article
  18. Published by BANG Showbiz English Google is facing legal action over using 1.6 million people NHS data “without their knowledge or consent”. The internet giant is being sued after unlawfully using data given to the corporation’s artificial intelligence arm Deep Mind in 2015 from the Royal Free NHS Trust to use in testing a smartphone app, Streams. The case is being brought against Google by Andrew Primsall in a High Court representative action and claims that Google and Deep Mind “obtained and used a substantial number of confidential medical records without patients’ knowledge or consent,” according to Sky News. In a statement, the claimant said: “I hope that this case can achieve a fair outcome and closure for the many patients whose confidential records were – without the patients’ knowledge – obtained and used by these large tech companies.” His lawyer Ben Lasserson, a partner at the firm Mishcon de Reya believes the suit is “particularly important”. He said: “It should provide some much-needed clarity as to the proper parameters in which technology companies can be allowed to access and make use of private health information.” The data – which included people who had merely been to A E in the last five years – was used to test the app, which seeks to monitor acute kidney injuries and was given on a discount. This come after Sky News reported that the NHS trust – who is not involved in this legal matter – shared patient data on a “inappropriate legal basis,” based from a leaked letter written by the top data protection officer in the nationalised health care provider, which was found to be illegal. In 2021, the Supreme Court stopped a similar claim from proceeding against Google – which alleged that they secretly monitored more than a million iPhone users – due to lack of evidence that anyone “suffered any material damage or distress”. View the full article
  19. Published by Reuters By Jeff Mason BUFFALO, N.Y. (Reuters) -President Joe Biden laid flowers at a makeshift memorial for victims of Buffalo’s mass shooting on Tuesday and met families of the mostly Black victims killed by a white gunman, as he addresses the United States’ latest burst of race-related violence. Biden, joined by his wife, Jill, and a variety of New York political leaders stopped at the memorial set up under a tree to pay their respects near the supermarket where gunfire rang out. Authorities say Payton Gendron, 18, carried out an act of “racially motivated violent extremism” when he opened fire with a semi-automatic rifle on Saturday at the Tops Friendly Market in a predominantly African-American neighborhood of Buffalo, New York. He struck 13 people with gunfire, killing 10. After visiting the supermarket, the Bidens went behind closed doors at the Delavan Grider Community Center and met the families of the victims. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters aboard the Air Force One flight to Buffalo that Biden would comfort families of the victims and meet with members of law enforcement and first responders to express gratitude for their bravery. He will make remarks at a local community center at 1 p.m. EDT. “The president will call this despicable act for what it is – terrorism motivated by a hateful and perverse ideology that tears at the soul of our nation,” she said. “He will call on all Americans to give hate no safe harbor and to reject the lies of racial animus that radicalize and divide us, that led to the act of racist violence we saw on Saturday that took the lives of 10 Americans,” Jean-Pierre said. She said Biden will call on Congress to keep “weapons of war off our streets” and keep guns out of the hands of criminals. He will “call on Americans to seek a more perfect union and embrace the diversity that has made us the world’s strongest and most dynamic nation in the history of the world,” she said. The scene in Buffalo was an all-too-familiar one for Biden, who once again took up the role of consoler-in-chief. Biden told Americans he ran for president to restore the soul of America, following predecessor Donald Trump’s failure to denounce a deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, and took office weeks after a deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol that included racially motivated groups. But the Buffalo trip will also showcase how little Biden has achieved on stamping out a rise in white supremacist groups or curbing gun violence, with many Republican lawmakers blocking efforts to advance gun control measures and the country suffering a rash of mass shootings in recent months. Biden has asked Congress to require new background checks for gun buyers and ban military-style “assault” weapons and large-capacity ammunition magazines. But Democrats who largely support gun safety measures don’t have enough votes to pass them. A White House National Security Council spokesperson on Monday said the Biden administration was implementing a “government-wide national strategy to counter domestic terrorism, which President Biden directed his national security team to develop on his first full day in office, recognizing that has evolved into the most urgent terrorism threat the United States faces today.” A top FBI official told Congress in November that the bureau was conducting around 2,700 investigations related to domestic violent extremism, and the Department of Justice said in January it was creating a new unit to counter domestic terrorism. Police on Sunday confirmed that they were investigating Gendron’s online postings, which included a 180-page manifesto he was believed to have written outlining the “Great Replacement Theory,” a conspiracy theory that white people were being replaced by minorities in the United States and elsewhere. (Reporting by Jeff Mason, Alexandra Alper and Trevor Hunnicutt; Writing by Steve Holland; Editing by Heather Timmons, Bradley Perrett and Mark Porter) View the full article
  20. Published by Reuters UK (Reuters) – Britain’s Prince William offered praise and support to Jake Daniels after the Blackpool forward came out as gay, saying he hoped the groundbreaking decision would serve as an inspiration. Daniels, 17, announced on Monday that he is gay, becoming the first active male professional soccer player in Britain to do so since the late Justin Fashanu in 1990. “What Jake has done takes courage and will hopefully help break down barriers that have no place in our society,” William wrote on Twitter on Tuesday. “I hope his decision to speak openly gives others the confidence to do the same …… Read More View the full article
  21. Published by Reuters By Jody Godoy (Reuters) – A state court judge found California’s law requiring publicly held companies to include women on their boards unconstitutional, dealing another blow to the state’s push to diversify corporate leadership. Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Maureen Duffy-Lewis issued the decision on Friday in favor of three California taxpayers who sought to block enforcement of the law, according to a copy of the ruling. Conservative legal group Judicial Watch represented the plaintiffs in the case and another challenge that recently struck down a California law mandating board diversity based on race and sexual orientation. “The radical Left’s unprecedented attacks on anti-discrimination law has suffered another stinging defeat,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton said in a statement. A spokesperson for the California secretary of state said the office is reviewing the judgment. Three taxpayers challenged the law in 2019, saying it amounted to sex discrimination in violation of the state’s constitution. California’s secretary of state had defended the law at trial, arguing that the state has a compelling interest in gender diversity on boards and that the law was tailored to address a historic lack of women on boards. Duffy-Lewis ruled that the law violated the equal protection clause of California’s constitution. The secretary of state had failed to show the law was narrowly tailored or that it was meant to remedy “specific, purposeful, intentional and unlawful discrimination,” she wrote. Passed in 2018, the statute required publicly held companies based in California to have up to three women directors, and allowed the secretary of state to issue fines of up to $300,000 per violation. No fines have been levied. The bill’s author, former California state Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson, said she believes the state will appeal the verdict and prevail. Judicial Watch recently won another taxpayer challenge to a similar California law requiring boards to include directors who self-identify as a member of an “underrepresented community,” which includes Asian, Black, Latino, Native American, and Pacific Islander individuals, as well as those who are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender. Jennifer Rubin, an attorney who counsels corporations on social and governance issues, said that the secretary of state faces a high bar in appealing the rulings. “The prudent course of action is for the legislature to go back and try to craft these laws in a way that is going to withstand scrutiny,” Rubin said. Lawmakers could try an annual disclosure report similar to the one instituted by stock exchange operator Nasdaq Inc, she said. The rule requires listed companies to include diverse members on their boards or explain why they have not. (Reporting by Jody Godoy in Santa Ana, California; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Jonathan Oatis and Aurora Ellis) View the full article
  22. Published by uInterview.com A new horror film from Blumhouse is already generating positive buzz off reactions to its title alone, which is extremely impressive in our current media-saturated landscape. They/Them, pronounced “They slash Them,” is being co-produced by Blumhouse and will be released on Peacock on August 5. The film is the directorial debut of John Logan, a screenwriter whose credits include Gladiator, Skyfall and The Aviator. It stars Kevin Bacon as the owner of a “conversion camp” for LGBTQ teens, Anna Chlumksy as a new employee of the camp, and Carrie Preston as the camp’s therapist and wife of Bacon’s c… Read More View the full article
  23. Published by Reuters By Gabriella Borter and Costas Pitas WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Thousands of abortion rights supporters rallied across the United States on Saturday, angered by the prospect that the Supreme Court may soon overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationwide a half century ago. The protests kicked off what organizers predict will be a “summer of rage” ignited by the May 2 disclosure of a draft opinion showing the court’s conservative majority ready to reverse the 1973 ruling that established a woman’s constitutional right to terminate her pregnancy. The court’s final ruling, which could return the power to ban abortion to state legislatures, is expected in June. About half of the 50 states are poised to ban or severely restrict abortion almost immediately should Roe be struck down. “If you can’t choose whether you want to have a baby, if that’s not a fundamental right, then I don’t know what is,” said Brita Van Rossum, 62, a landscape designer who traveled from suburban Philadelphia to join the abortion-rights rally in the nation’s capital, her first ever. Protesters marching under the slogan “Bans Off Our Bodies” took to the streets from New York and Atlanta to Chicago and Los Angeles in a show of outrage that Democrats hope will help galvanize support for their party and blunt projected Republican gains in the November elections. The day’s largest demonstration unfolded in Washington, where a crowd that organizers estimated at 20,000 people massed at the Washington Monument and braved a light drizzle to march along the National Mall past the U.S. Capitol to the Supreme Court itself. The rally erupted in shouts of “Shame” and “Bans off our bodies” as the marchers neared the marbled columns of the courthouse. Surrounded by police was a group of a few dozen counter-demonstrators holding signs that read: “End abortion violence” and “Women’s rights begin in the womb.” The encounter between the two sides grew tense at times. Abortion rights protesters shouted, “Go home!,” and one man whacked a counter-demonstrator in the head with his poster after profanities were exchanged. As the-anti abortion protesters left, they waved at the crowd, and a few called out, “Bye, Roe v. Wade!” The rally appeared to remain otherwise peaceful, though at least one counter-protester was seen being escorted away by a security guard in Washington earlier in the day. ‘WOMEN AS OBJECTS’ The mood was likewise energetic, and sometimes contentious, in New York City as thousands of abortion rights supporters crossed the Brooklyn Bridge into Manhattan, where they were confronted by a half dozen anti-abortion activists. Police officers arrived to maintain space between the two groups as they traded taunts and vulgarities. The crowd thinned out in early afternoon as rain fell over the city. Elizabeth Holtzman, an 80-year-old former congresswoman who represented New York from 1973 to 1981, said that the leaked Supreme Court draft opinion “treats women as objects, as less than full human beings.” Malcolm DeCesare, a 34-year-old critical care nurse who attended a Los Angeles rally under sunny skies, said abolishing the right to a legal abortion could put lives at risk as women seek unsafe alternatives. Celebrity women’s rights attorney Gloria Allred told the crowd about her own “back alley abortion” as a young woman when she became pregnant from a rape at gunpoint before Roe. “I almost died,” she recounted. “I was left in a bathtub in a pool of my own blood, hemorrhaging.” U.S. Representative Sean Casten and his 15-year-old daughter, Audrey, were among several thousand abortion rights supporters who gathered at a park in Chicago. Casten, whose district includes Chicago’s western suburbs, told Reuters it was “horrible” that the Supreme Court’s conservative majority would consider taking away the right to an abortion and “condemn women to this lesser status.” At an abortion rights protest in Atlanta, more than 400 people had assembled in a small park in front of the state capitol, while about a dozen counter-protesters stood on a nearby sidewalk. Holding a sign that read, “Stop Child Sacrifice,” 23-year-old Bria Marshall, a recent public health graduate from Kennesaw State University, acknowledged her group’s smaller turnout. “Jesus had just a small group, but his message was more powerful,” Marshall said. While the Supreme Court leak thrust abortion back to the forefront of U.S. politics, it was unclear how the issue will play out in the coming elections. Voters will be weighing a host of priorities such as inflation and may be skeptical of Democrats’ ability to protect abortion access after legislation that would enshrine abortion rights in federal law failed. Many of those marching on Saturday expressed fear that rolling back abortion rights would lead to an erosion of civil liberties generally. “This is just an affront to everything I believe that we’re supposed to be about,” Los Angeles musician Joel Altshuler, 73, said. “If a woman has no control over what is going to happen to her own body, then we’re back in 1850 not 1950. (Reporting by Gabriella Borter in Washington; Additional reporting by Eric Cox in Chicago, Maria Caspani in New York, Costas Pitas in Los Angeles and Rich McKay in Atlanta; Writing by Ted Hesson and Steve Gorman; Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Cynthia Osterman, Mark Porter and Grant McCool) View the full article
  24. Published by BANG Showbiz English Queen Elizabeth’s Platinum Jubilee will be celebrated with a six-minute fly past of more than 70 aircraft. Planes from the Royal Navy, the Army and the Royal Air Force (RAF) will soar over Buckingham Palace on June 2, the Ministry of Defence (MOD) has confirmed. The Queen is expected to watch the spectacle, which will take place on the first day of the jubilee weekend, from the palace balcony with other members of the royal family. The 96-year-old monarch has limited appearances at the Trooping the Colour event to working royals only and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and Prince Andrew will not be present on the balcony. Prince Charles, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Princess Anne are among the royals who will be joining the Queen for the historic occasion. UK Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said: “I’m proud that the Armed Forces are leading the nation in celebration with such a spectacular display. “Throughout the Platinum Jubilee celebrations we will all enjoy the expertise, skill and talent of our Armed Forces as we celebrate Her Majesty’s 70 years on the throne.” Prince Harry reportedly told the monarch that he wasn’t “keen” for himself and Meghan to appear on the balcony following their decision to step down as senior royals two years ago, although they will travel to the UK from California for the celebrations. The couple’s biographer Omid Scobie wrote in a column for Yahoo!: “As is often the case, the reality is much less severe when you hear that Prince Harry had already spoken with his grandmother about the possibility of not attending Trooping the Colour long before last week’s announcements. “I’m told by a source that the Duke of Sussex had actually expressed some time ago that he and Meghan were very keen to be a part of the Jubilee engagements, including the National Service of Thanksgiving at St Paul’s Cathedral, but less so for the formal balcony moment, which was felt on both sides to be more appropriate for their lives prior to stepping back.” View the full article
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