Friday, July 26, 2019

24hespress

24hespress


ترك برس - النشرة 27-07-2019

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 09:45 PM PDT

قال رئيس الوزراء الماليزي مهاتير محمد، إن بلاده ترغب في الاستيراد من تركيا، باعتبارها بديلا مفضلًا، كونها دولة ذات إمكانيات كثيرة، وماليزيا حريصة على تطوير التعاون معها.

دعت وزارة التجارة التركية روهصار بكجان، الجمعة، رجال الأعمال الروس إلى الاستثمار على الأراضي التركية.

وقالت بكجان في كلمة خلال الاجتماع الـ 16للجنة الاقتصادية المشتركة بين تركيا وروسيا، إن حجم التبادل التجاري وصل بين البلدين إلى 25.7 مليار دولار العام الماضي.

ناقش خبراء خلال برنامج على قناة الجزيرة القطرية، مستقبل العلاقة بين تركيا والولايات المتحدة، بعد أن قررت أنقرة شراء منظومة صواريخ "أس 400" الروسية، مما أثار غضب الإدارة الأميركية وجعلها ترفض بيع مقاتلات "أف 35" لتركيا.

تواصل تركيا تحطيم الأرقام القياسية في القطاع السياحي خلال عام 2019، لتعلن مؤخراً أنها تستهدف النمو في هذا المجال، بنسبة 10 بالمئة بحلول نهاية العام الجاري.

محمد قدو أفندي أوغلو - خاص ترك برس

ما بين إسقاط الطائرة الروسية من قبل الدفاعات الجوية التركية في حدودها  الجنوبية وبين وصول صواريخ أس 400 المتطورة إلى القاعدة الجوية في أنقرة مسافات وأزمنة وتغييرات وتكتيكات قد تؤثر بصورة مباشرة على الأحداث الجارية في المنطقة وخصوصا ما يخص سوريا حاليا وما يخص المنطقة بصورة عامة وعلى المدى القريب والذي سيشكل تغييرا واضحا في أسلوب التعامل مع الأحداث الاستراتيجية في المنطقة بصورة عامة.

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Asia Times Pick of the Week, July 27th

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 08:04 PM PDT

Welcome to the first edition of Asia Times Weekly. Read our weekly consolidated email with the very best news, commentary and analysis, including regional market news, trade and financial analysis, and Asia Times' famed geopolitical commentary.

Saturday July 27th, 2019

Welcome to this first edition of the Asia Times Weekly.

We will now bring you, at the end of each week, a consolidated email with the very best news, commentary and analysis on Asia and the Middle East, including regional market news, trade and financial analysis, and, of course, Asia Times' famed geopolitical commentary.

This Weekly starts with Hong Kong's looming existential crisis, and continues with the growing 'tech war' between South Korea and Japan, the tensions in the Straits of Hormuz and a Belt and Road Project that looks set to be derailed in the mountains of Nepal.

The edition also includes opinion pieces from Asia Times editors and writers on Iran, Afghanistan and on Asian market movements and more besides.

 Happy reading. 

Beijing and Hong Kong, at the point of no return?

Hong Kong is bracing itself for another weekend of protests including a potentially violent activist versus gangster confrontation. There is growing public mistrust of the administration and a recent poll shows about 55% of the territory's seven million people identify themselves exclusively as 'Hongkongers' while only about 10% consider themselves as just 'Chinese.' Jonathan Manthorpe asks if future historians will say this was the time when the Chinese Communist Party and the citizens of Hong Kong crossed the point of no return? 

Seoul-Tokyo tech war widens

The growing tech dispute between Seoul and Tokyo has seen some South Korean politicians demand Japan be referred to the UN Security Council, a suicide in Seoul and a Korean boycott of Japanese goods. And no fix appears imminent, writes Andrew Salmon

Iran runs rings around Royal Navy

If there was any doubt remaining that Britain has ceased to be a colonial power capable of imposing its will in foreign seas on command, it was evident last weekend, as Iranian naval vessels ran literal rings around the detained British oil tanker, Stena Impero, writes Alison Tahmizian Meuse.

Nepal-China rail plan hits dead end

The Nepal-China rail link was meant to break Kathmandu's reliance on India for trade and transit. But issues with mountains, money and political 'symbolism over substance' means this ambitious Belt and Road Initiative project may now never be built, writes Kosh Raj Koirala

China's arms industry has modernized but still can't sell fighter jets

China, since the turn of the 21st century, has modernised its defense industry to the extent that it is now able to offer an array of armaments that are comparable to their Western counterparts. Yet China's J-10 fighter jet, that is seen by many as the tech equal of the US F-16, has garnered no overseas salesRichard A. Bitzinger asks why. 

Asia Times Editors:
Alison Meuse, Asia Times Beirut

Breaking Iran: All about Saudi, not about nukes

Read here.

Asia Times Editors:
Andrew Salmon, Asia Times Seoul

London falling: Bojo's mojo faces immediate Iran test

Read here.

David Goldman on Asian Markets

Top Asian performers over past six weeks: Singapore, China and Taiwan

Read here.

Pepe Escobar on Afghanistan

How to kill 10 million Afghans and not win

Read here.

Ignoring US, Manila goes with Huawei

Despite warnings from home and abroad, the Philippines is wedding its telecommunications future to China—it's a decision that may give the nation a step-up on regional business rivals but could also jeopardize strategic ties to the US, writes Richard Javad Heydarian.

Russia's big risk in the Sea of Japan

Moscow took a huge risk in the Sea of Japan when an unarmed Russian airborne early warning radar aircraft penetrated South Korea's internationally recognized airspace and Seoul showed it would not be intimidated by Moscow or Beijing. Stephen Bryen asks why Moscow did it.

Indian nuclear scientists are vanishing?

An activist has claimed in a Mumbai court that hundreds of Indian nuclear scientists have died mysteriously in the last 15 years. Pitamber Kaushik writes that conspiracy theorists point the blame at 'everyone', from the CIA and Pakistani Intelligence, in an attetmp to sabotage India's nuclear program.

AT Life: Suneet Varma lights India Couture Week

Suneet Varma showcased his latest collection – entitled Amara, which means 'light within' on Tuesday at India Couture Week in New Dehli. See more of the collection at AT LIFE.

Asia Times publishes fast, accurate and independent news, commentary and analysis in English, Chinese, Korean, Arabic, Bahasa Indonesian and Filipino and is regularly read in more than 30 countries every day. Learn more about Asia Times here
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Asia Times Des Vouex Rd None Sheung Wan, HK Island HK1

WaPo's victory; Mueller and the Information Wars; Trump slaps Fox again; Vice Media to buy Refinery29?; Weekend reads; Remembering John Ferriter

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 07:38 PM PDT

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Congrats on making it through another crazy week! This is Oliver Darcy, filling in for Brian Stelter on this Friday edition of the Reliable Sources newsletter. I want to hear from you, so do get in touch via email or find me on Twitter. Now, to the news...
 

Judge dismisses Sandmann lawsuit against WaPo

This is a very significant ruling in the media law world: 

A federal judge in Kentucky on Friday dismissed a $250 million defamation lawsuit filed on behalf of high school student Nicholas Sandmann against WaPo. Sandmann filed the lawsuit after video of his encounter with Native American elder Nathan Phillips at a March for Life rally in Washington, DC, went viral online. Soon after, additional footage provided more context of the incident, but the first video had already touched off accusations of bigotry. Sandmann at the time strongly denied accusations of bigotry, saying he had actually been trying to "defuse the situation" by "remaining motionless and calm."

The judge who oversaw the case, William O. Bertlesman, said in his dismissal, "The Court accepts Sandmann's statement that, when he was standing motionless in the confrontation with Phillips, his intent was to calm the situation and not to impede or block anyone. However, Phillips did not see it that way. He concluded that he was being 'blocked' and not allowed to 'retreat.' He passed these conclusions on to The Post. They may have been erroneous, but as discussed above, they are opinion protected by the First Amendment. And The Post is not liable for publishing these opinions."

>> You can read WaPo's full story on the dismissal here...
 

WaPo says it's "pleased" with judge's decision


In a statement, a WaPo spokesperson said that the newspaper "From our first story on this incident to our last, we sought to report fairly and accurately the facts that could be established from available evidence, the perspectives of all of the participants, and the comments of the responsible church and school officials. We are pleased that the case has been dismissed."
 

More to come?


Sandmann's parents told WaPo that they plan to appeal the decision. "I believe fighting for justice for my son and family is of vital national importance," Ted Sandmann told the newspaper. "If what was done to Nicholas is not legally actionable, then no one is safe."
 

Other suits are pending


Brian Stelter emails: The family's lawsuits against CNN and NBC are still pending. The court may rule in the coming weeks. Multiple media lawyers have remarked to me that the Post was facing the toughest set of facts with regard to Sandmann coverage, so Friday's ruling may bode well for the other news outlets, but lawyers know not to count any chickens until they hatch.
 

Flashback


Stelter adds: This Daily Beast story is from February, right after the suit against the Post was filed: "Fox News host Sean Hannity confidently declared that attorney Lin Wood is going to 'destroy' big media outlets because the student's lawsuit against The Washington Post is a 'slam dunk.'"

Hannity can go one of two ways now. He can ignore that he was wrong, or he can blast the judge and bemoan the sorry state of the justice system. He's not the only one with this choice. "I seem to remember a lot of MAGA Twitter people claiming that Covington student was going to own the Washington Post by the time his lawsuit was over," Will Sommer tweeted on Friday.

And this gets to a larger point about how lawsuits are covered -- reminding me of something Eriq Gardner said recently. Gardner is THR's all-star legal reporter. "It really bugs me that some journalists do a poor job of following up on stories reporting allegations made in a lawsuit," he wrote, citing a different defamation suit that got lots of press when it was filed, but virtually no attention when it was thrown out.

"Do/should reporters care about fairness? I think so. But I think that needs to extend beyond merely seeking comment when a lawsuit gets filed," he said. These cases deserve, nay, demand followup, so Post readers and Hannity viewers know the outcome...
 


This Sunday on "Reliable Sources"


Brian will be joined by Susan Glasser, along with Amanda Carpenter, Andrew Marantz, Caitlin Dickerson... plus Carla Minet and Luis Valentin Ortiz of Puerto Rico's Center for Investigative Journalism... Tune in Sunday at 11am ET on CNN...
 

FOR THE RECORD, PART ONE

-- Craigslist founder Craig Newmark has donated $5 million to a project led by former Facebook chief security officer Alex Stamos aimed at combatting "misuses on the platform, such as disinformation and election interference..." (Reuters)

-- CNN has opened its school shootings database, listing 10 years of shootings. CNN editor Sam Petulla has more details... (Twitter)

-- Ashley Feinberg used her internet sleuthing skills to find what appears to be Eric Trump's YouTube playlist... (Slate)

-- Lil Nas X turned down an offer to do an "Old Town Road" collaboration with Mayor Pete Buttigieg at a BuzzFeed event earlier this week as the artist did not want to be perceived as endorsing a candidate... (Daily Beast)
 
 

This week in the Information Wars

I've been thinking about the Information Wars a lot this week -- particularly after Robert Mueller testified before Congress. After watching the hours of testimony, it seemed apparent to me that Mueller wasn't all that familiar with the current media landscape. In the age of the Information Wars, everything is weaponized for political purposes, and by not understanding that, Mueller allowed his message -- a very important one -- to be hijacked by those who aimed to discredit it. Read my full story here, or hear me out below...
 

Mueller's testimony: Everything his political opponents could've hoped for


While he didn't provide the Democrats with much more new ammunition to use in their pursuit of impeachment, Mueller offered up plenty of material for Republicans. Video clips of him appearing at times befuddled circulated far and wide on social media. And instead of focusing on Mueller's warning of current Russian interference, or his contradicting the president's assertion that his report exonerated him, Trump's media allies instead spotlighted his demeanor. Mueller fed the right-wing base red meat, allowing his message to be subverted...
 

A larger flaw


The whole episode was representative of a larger flaw in Mueller's approach as special counsel: As an institutionalist, Mueller seemed to have believed that simply conducting a conventional investigation and issuing a report of its findings would allow truth to win out. He disregarded the importance of public perception, seeming to think that the facts he would gather would be enough to compel action.

Meanwhile, Mueller's opponents disregarded convention, openly running a disinformation campaign against him and his team. They worked to frame the public debate and color the special counsel's office as a group of dirty deep-state operatives acting at the best of the Democratic Party. Remember: though it didn't come from the mainstream right, this was the kind of environment in which there was even a hoax sexual assault claim made against him. Mueller never pushed back against that narrative in a meaningful way -- a mistake on his part.

>> Charlie Warzel's point: "It's all about knowing the ecosystem you are operating in and working inside it as opposed to working on a separate plane of existence. We are all part of a big, pulsing political and media ecosystem. To suggest that you can stand aside just means you are ceding your platform to somebody else to weaponize it and interpret it the way they want."
 

Mueller v. Gowdy


A comparison that kept coming to mind: Trey Gowdy's approach as the chair of the House Benghazi Committee vs Mueller's approach as special counsel. While the two aren't exactly the same, it's worth taking into consideration how effective Gowdy was at using the media to generate hype. Gowdy, who is well versed in the art of information warfare, effectively drilled the narrative he put forth in his Benghazi report into the public conscience.

In contrast Mueller has stayed mostly silent, ceding the ground to others to define his report. This approach gave bad-faith actors the upper hand. It is not difficult to project an image onto an empty slate.


Susan Glasser's take on the week that was


Were the "optics" of the Mueller hearings worth the media's attention? "Let's be real," Susan Glasser said, "of course it was."

Glasser, the author of The New Yorker's "Letter from Trump's Washington" column, is Brian Stelter's guest on this week's "Reliable Sources" podcast... They talked about Mueller hearing coverage; the impeachment count; and what to do about Trump's distortion field of lies. She asserted that the complaints about "optics" chatter were a "liberal or left-wing or anti-Trump version of 'blame the messenger, blame the reporters.'" See if you agree or disagree! Hear the full conversation via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or your preferred podcasting app...
 

FOR THE RECORD, PART TWO

-- Newsday has offered voluntary buyouts to some employees, catching staffers by "surprise"... (NY Post)

-- Fox personality Rachel Campos-Duffy irresponsibly suggested Mueller has "early-stage dementia." Harris Faulkner had to quickly note that none of the panelists at the time were doctors... (Mediaite)

-- "A raft of new research shows that watching junky cable and other lowbrow TV is actually making people dumber — literally lowering their IQs..." (NiemanLab)

-- Disturbing report from The Guardian says Apple contractors "regularly hear confidential medical information, drug deals, and recordings of couples having sex, as part of their job providing quality control..." (The Guardian)
 


WSJ: Vice Media in talks to acquire Refinery29


Ben Mullins landed a big Friday evening scoop for the WSJ. Citing sources, Mullins reported that Vice Media is in talks to purchase Refinery29. Mullins reported that the talks are "still ongoing" and that "it is possible an offer may not be made."

That said, if a deal is struck, it would "unite two of the largest venture-backed media companies" in the country, Mullins noted, both of which have "struggled to meet investor expectations" and "have trimmed staff to keep costs under control." Stay tuned...
 


Trump to Fox: Obey

 

Trump made it clear (again) on Friday that he expects total obedience from his favorite network. In a pair of tweets, which came one night after he gave Sean Hannity a lengthy interview, Trump lashed out at Fox for a poll that showed him trailing Joe Biden by 10 points. Trump said the network was "at it again" and "so different" from the "Proud Warriors" they apparently were in 2016. 

The president added there was "NO WAY" he could be behind Biden by double digits. Fox host Julie Banderas called out Trump in a tweet of her own. And Biden's campaign responded, tweeting, "@realDonaldTrump, we know you love the polls. We're glad you saw the latest from Fox: Biden 49%, Trump 39. You're losing by ten. Have a nice day."

>> Of note: Trump's attacks on the Fox poll came only one day after he boasted about a separate part of the Fox poll related to high economic confidence. The headline for Phil Bump's WaPo piece summed it up succinctly: "Sometimes Trump trashes polls. Sometimes he hypes them. Sometimes they're the same poll."

 

The Dobbs effect?


Shortly after lambasting Fox for its poll, Trump trained his eyes on another target: Google and Apple. The president again floated (without evidence) the idea that there "may or may not be National Security concerns with regard to Google and their relationship with China." He promised, "If there is a problem, we will find out about it." Trump then said Apple "will not be given Tariff waiver, or relief," demanding it manufacture its MacBook Pro parts in America. 

Our trusty managing editor Alex Koppelman observed, "In what is surely a coincidence, Lou Dobbs slammed Apple re tariff waivers on his show last night. Also a coincidence, surely: Trump's previous tweet was about Google and China and guess what else Dobbs covered last night?" 🤔


Speaking of Trump tweeting from Fox...


The President tweeted on Friday his "full endorsement" of a forthcoming book by Gianno Caldwell. Stelter noted on Twitter, "This is the president praising a 'wonderful new book' that doesn't come out until November, because he heard about it on Fox."
 
-- The Supreme Court "cleared the way for the Trump administration to use $2.5 billion from the Department of Defense to construct parts of a wall along the southwestern border that the government argues is necessary to protect national security..." 

-- Big news on the immigration front: "The US signed an asylum agreement Friday afternoon with Guatemala that could limit the ability of some Central American migrants to claim asylum in the US..." 

-- Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee said in a court filing that they want Mueller's grand jury material because they need to gather "all the relevant facts" while considering whether to take action -- including impeachment -- against Trump...   

-- Related: More than 100 Democrats have now called for an impeachment inquiry into Trump... 

-- Trump suggested that investigators should "look into the book deal" Obama made after leaving office... (The Hill)
 

Twitter's ad sales jump 18%


Good news for Twitter: The company's sales business was up 18% -- or $841 million -- between April and June, the company said on Friday. The jump comes as "Twitter said its commitment to delivering people more relevant content, reducing spam and stopping abusive behavior before it happens helped boost sales and engagement on its social media platform over the past three months," David Goldman reported for CNN Business.

>> Excellent point from CNN's Seth Fiegerman:  "True: Facebook and Google have tremendous market dominance in online advertising. Also true: Twitter, Snapchat and Amazon earnings show they are growing online ad sales at a healthy rate too..."

 
 

DOJ blesses Sprint's merger with T-Mobile


Brian Fung emails: The big news in tech land today is DOJ's approval of Sprint's merger with T-Mobile. Under a settlement with DOJ, Dish Network is set to become America's new fourth wireless carrier, replacing Sprint. But at around 9 million customers, Dish's new provider is also going to be much smaller than Sprint; made up of prepaid, not postpaid, customers; and largely reliant on T-Mobile's network in its early years.

That raises big questions about whether Dish can provide enough competition against T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon. New York AG Letitia James thinks the answer is no — on Friday, she told reporters she plans to keep fighting in court to block the merger in 13 states and the District of Columbia...
 

FOR THE RECORD, PART THREE

By Marina Di Marzo: 

 -- Adam Serwer writes that "the press has adopted Trump's reality-show standards" in the aftermath of Mueller's testimony... (The Atlantic

 -- Susan McKay writes about her friendship with Lyra McKee, who was killed in a shooting during riots in the Northern Irish city of Londonderry... (New Yorker)
 


Weekend reads


 -- WaPo's must-read with a Manila dateline: "Content moderators at YouTube, Facebook and Twitter see the worst of the web — and suffer silently..."

 -- "Hollywood's Top Power Players Favor Kamala Harris in Early Campaign Donations," THR's Jeremy Barr reports...

-- Four bylines on this NYT story: "How Jeffrey Epstein Used the Billionaire Behind Victoria's Secret for Wealth and Women..."

 -- Michael Barbaro explains why he includes "spontaneous exchanges" with reporters he is interviewing in some episodes of "The Daily." They "allow you to experience Times reporters as real people with quirks, tempers, a sense of humor and, in some cases, a magnificent singing voice..."

-- WaPo's Will E. Young takes you inside Liberty University's "culture of fear" where Jerry Falwell Jr. "silences students and professors who reject his pro-Trump politics..." 
 
 

Susan Zirinsky's drug


In an interview with Joe Pompeo for this VF story, CBS News prez Susan Zirinsky "denied reports that she regrets taking the job," but she did say this: "It's the toughest job I've ever had. It's not that I worried about people not liking me. It was more, would I make the right decisions? It's a big job in a changing environment. It's daunting, and I'm not gonna tell you it's not still daunting. I use fear as a motivator. It's my drug." Read on...
 


Remembering John Ferriter 


This news came as a shock to many in the TV biz on Friday: "John Ferriter, the longtime William Morris Agency talent agent who later worked at Octagon Entertainment before launching the management and production company The Alternative in 2015, has died, a source told The Hollywood Reporter. He was 59.  No details of his death were immediately available."

Ferriter was a force to be reckoned with, particularly in news and unscripted entertainment, representing stars like Piers Morgan, Erin Burnett, Carson Daly, Mario Lopez, Nancy O'Dell, Marie Osmond, Dick Clark, and others at various points over the years. Morgan tweeted Friday that he was "ferociously loyal, kind, charismatic and supremely talented." Read more about Ferriter's life and legacy here and via Deadline's story...
 

Can original movies still sell tickets?


Frank Pallotta emails: The answer to that question is what we're about to find out with Quentin Tarantino's "Once Upon a Time In Hollywood," which opens this weekend. The only original film in the domestic top-ten this year is Jordan Peele's horror flick "Us," so "Once Upon a Time," which stars Hollywood heavyweights Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt, is hoping to be the second to stand out in a sea of franchises.
 
It's off to a good start, making $5.8 million on Thursday night. It's expected to bring in roughly $30 million this weekend. Jeff Bock, senior analyst at Exhibitor Relations, told me that it's vital to the film industry for Tarantino's latest to be a hit. "It's important that a film earmarked for adult audiences can still succeed in this blockbuster climate," Bock said. "If Quentin can't open a well-received adult drama, there's not much hope for anyone else."
 

'Orange is the New Black' final season finds urgency and purpose in ICE plot


Brian Lowry emails: "Orange is the New Black" and "House of Cards" put Netflix on the original programming map in 2013. "Cards" already folded thanks to the controversy surrounding star Kevin Spacey, while "Orange" — having meandered through the past few seasons, after receiving a three-year renewal — comes to its finish with a renewed sense of purpose and urgency, thanks to a timely plot involving ICE and several inmates forced to deal with the immigration system. 

Read Lowry's full review here...
 

FOR THE RECORD, PART FOUR

-- Jay-Z has pulled out of the troubled Woodstock 50 festival... (CNN)

-- A judge has allowed Johnny Depp "to move forward in Virginia in his $50 million defamation case" against Amber Heard... (THR)

-- 50 Cent "has revealed that his next series for Starz will be a drama based on the story of drug-trafficking organization Black Mafia Family..." (Deadline)

-- "Kanye West wants to hawk 'church clothes' to the masses. Is he exploiting religion for profit?" (Daily Beast)
 
 

Fissures start to form in WGA's ongoing battle against the talent agencies


Lowry emails another: Cracks are forming in the united front of the Writers Guild of America against the major talent agencies, with several high-profile writer-producers -- including Shonda Rhimes and Ryan Murphy -- signing a letter urging the guild to pursue a negotiated settlement. While acknowledging the need to seek reforms of agency practices, the group said that they "believe this present situation is best resolved in a negotiating room and not in a courtroom."

>> As the Los Angeles Times noted, the letter signals "mounting frustration" over the lack of progress in the impasse since writers were told to fire their agents, and is likely to figure in upcoming WGA board elections in September 
 
 

More "Handmaids"


"Hulu has renewed its dystopian drama "The Handmaid's Tale" for a fourth season," Whitney Friedlander reports. The renewal is a no-brainer for Hulu.... It was announced during the site's presentation at the TCA Press Tour on Friday...
 
Thank you for reading! Enjoy your weekend, and send me your feedback! Stelter will be back on Sunday...
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Elephants | Hug Elephants Sanctuary | Thailand

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 07:30 PM PDT

Helix Help

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 07:20 PM PDT

Hunt & Co

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 07:17 PM PDT

EL MOUDJAHID : Lettre d'information du 27/07/2019

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 05:26 PM PDT

'Hero' Citizen Shoots Armed Robbers at 7-Eleven

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 04:09 PM PDT

'Hero' Citizen Shoots Armed Robbers at 7-Eleven

Armed civilian prevents violent crime.

Dan Lyman | Newswars.com

WSJ Report: Left Planning Violent Revolution Modeled After Reign of Terror

Infowars.com

Ilhan: White Men More Dangerous Than Jihadi Terrorists

David Knight | Infowars.com

MSNBC Tells Democrats "We Are At War" With "Un-Indicted Criminal Trump"

Kelen McBreen | Infowars.com

Afghan Migrant Who Harassed A$AP Rocky Once Convicted of Knife Assault

Adan Salazar | Infowars.com

"Wax My Balls" Transgender Threatens to Pepper Spray Reporter

Kelen McBreen | Infowars.com

Kaitlin Bennett Discusses the Radicalization of the Left

Kaitlin Bennett | Infowars.com

Mueller And Company Are Above The Law

Jon Bowne | Infowars.com

Rand Paul Offers To Buy 'Ungrateful' Omar A Ticket Back To Somalia

Steve Watson | Infowars.com

Last Night in Sweden: Grenade Attack, Thwarted Bombing, Car Fires

Dan Lyman | Europewars.com

Kaitlin Bennett Demands You Wax Her Ballz

Kaitlin Bennett | Infowars.com

BREAKING NEWS: Supreme Court gives Trump go-ahead on border wall

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 03:33 PM PDT

President Donald Trump scored a major victory at the Supreme Court on Friday, as the justices lifted a lower court order blocking a key part of his plan to expand the border wall with Mexico.

The Justice Department had asked the justices to stay a pair of rulings an Oakland-based federal judge issued in May and June blocking Trump's plan to use about $2.5 billion in military construction funds for wall projects in California, Arizona and New Mexico.

All the Republican-appointed justices voted in favor of allowing Trump to proceed with that aspect of his plan while litigation over the issue continues. All the Democratic-appointed justices dissented, except for Justice Stephen Breyer who said he would have allowed the contracting process to move forward but blocked actual construction.

Trump announced in May that he intended to spend over $8 billion on border wall construction, despite the fact that Congress appropriated only $1.375 billion for that purposes and limited its use to southeast Texas. He also declared a state of emergency in an effort to unlock a portion of the funds.

Read more: https://www.politico.com/story/2019/07/26/trump-border-wall-supreme-court-1437894

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News Alert: Trump says he has deal with Guatemala to decrease migration to U.S., though it could face hurdles in the Central American country

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 02:59 PM PDT

President Trump said he was signing an agreement designating Guatemala as a safe third country for those seeking U.S. asylum — meaning that a migrant traveling through the country on the way to the United States would be directed to first seek protection in Guatemala. The White House did not immediately release details of the agreement.
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
News Alert Jul 26, 5:56 PM
 
 
Trump says he has deal with Guatemala to decrease migration to U.S., though it could face hurdles in the Central American country

President Trump said he was signing an agreement designating Guatemala as a safe third country for those seeking U.S. asylum — meaning that a migrant traveling through the country on the way to the United States would be directed to first seek protection in Guatemala. The White House did not immediately release details of the agreement.

Read more »
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Your welcome wagon to the weekend

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 02:56 PM PDT

TicToc Tonight
Bloomberg

TGIF. Start the weekend in high spirits with these 10 feel-good stories from the past week.

1. 9/11 first responders—and Jon Stewart—can breathe easier.
Congress overwhelmingly passed a bill to secure funding for victims impacted by Ground Zero toxins through 2092.

2. Philadelphia's 'Spider-Man' made a death-defying escape
As a fire sent smoke through his apartment, the man scaled down the side of the 19-story building in under three minutes.  

3. Flyboard's maker will keep skateboarding across the sky
He crashed into the English Channel on his first attempt to cross from France to England—but he's not giving up. 

4. We didn't need more reasons to eat hummus—but we got one!
Legumes harvested for the healthful chickpea dip make their own nitrogen, creating more nutrient-rich and climate change-resistant soil.

5. Mongolians reveled in national pride.
The centuries-old Naadam festival to mark the country's independence features a colorful array of horse racing, archery and wrestling. 

6. Nashville neighbors put the unity in community
As ICE sought to arrest a migrant man and his 12-year-old son, a group formed a human chain for four hours to protect the pair. 

7. Soon, your clothes may come with built-in A/C.
A startup is planning a wearable air conditioning and heating device that fits right inside your shirt.

8. Rome is fighting plastic pollution via commuters.
The Italian capital is among the first in Europe to offer cash rewards toward public transit for recycling bottles.

9. The S&P 500's last all-male board finally added a woman.
For the first time, all 500 companies have at least one female director after Copart appointed Diane Morefield to its board of directors. 

10. The world's luckiest intern made $1.8 million in a day.
While working at NASA in 1976, he paid $217.77 for original footage of the Apollo 11 moonwalk. The tapes sold for 8,000 times that at auction. 

Have a great weekend! Watch your inbox for more good news every week. And send us your positive stories to amach6@bloomberg.net.

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A step towards impeachment

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 02:16 PM PDT

Evening Briefing
Bloomberg

House Democrats on Friday took a significant step toward opening an inquiry into impeaching President Donald Trump as the House Judiciary Committee asked a federal court to force the release of grand jury information from Robert Mueller's investigation. —Josh Petri

Here are today's top stories

The Justice Department approved T-Mobile's acquisition of Sprint, a deal it rejected under the Obama administration. The decision could reshape the wireless industry.

Trump failed to achieve his much-ballyhooed 3% target for economic growth in 2018 after all, updated government data show.

Tensions between Hong Kong and the government in Beijing are increasingly spilling outside China's borders, and there's no end in sight. 

Wanda Vazquez, Puerto Rico's next governor, hasn't even been sworn in yet. She's already under investigation for possible corruption.

The IRS is warning more than 10,000 holders of cryptocurrency that they may be subject to penalties for skirting taxes on their virtual investments.

Is the Knicks' James Dolan the worst owner in professional sports, asks Bloomberg Businessweek. (A reporter was booted from Dolan's band's gig on Long Island in pursuit of answers.)

What's Luke Kawa thinking about? The Bloomberg cross-asset reporter says it's worth reviewing recent primer on the rise of negative-yielding bonds in Businessweek, which makes a number of points that are often lost in discussions on the topic.

What you'll need to know tomorrow

What you'll want to read in Businessweek

Cape Cod Cashes In on Great White Sharks

Shark tourism generates more than $300 million a year in places such as Australia, the Bahamas, and New Zealand. But on Cape Cod, the Massachusetts seaside destination where growing numbers of great whites have taken to summering over the past decade, local business owners are just learning how to profitably balance the relationship between predator and prey.

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Meet the Trump economy, same as the Obama economy

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 01:49 PM PDT

Bloomberg Opinion Today
Bloomberg

Today's Agenda

Trump Sabotages Own Economy

If the U.S. economy ever enjoyed a "Trump bump," then it has been replaced by a "Trump slump."

New GDP numbers released Friday showed the economy grew 2.5% last year – decent, but not the 3% President Donald Trump promised to deliver with his buffet of tax cuts and deregulation. And the economy slowed to a 2.1% annualized rate in the latest quarter – again, not horrible, but off the pace of the past decade and slowed by Trump's ready-fire-aim approach to global trade. Presidents don't really have that much influence on economic growth, notes Justin Fox; but the "economic turnaround of historic proportions" Trump promised is hard to discern from 30,000 feet:

In fact, the inflation-adjusted growth rate over the past year was 2.3% – matching the pace since the recovery began a decade ago, Justin notes. So far, Trump's economy looks a lot like Obama's.

One irony here is that Trump's tax cuts were aimed at spurring business investment, which sort of happened (though to a lesser degree than we first thought, based on today's new numbers). But then Trump's trade wars (which he today threatened to expand to France) made businesses retract their horns, writes Karl Smith. Now the economy could backslide to where it was in the 2016 mini-slump that helped elect Trump in the first place.

The cherry on this bitter sundae for Trump is that the latest GDP numbers were slightly better than markets expected, which may make the Federal Reserve less inclined to obey Trump's frequent demands it aggressively cut interest rates, writes Conor Sen. That could disappoint both markets and Trump. 

Further Economics Reading: Online shopping, rising minimum wages and other factors are stagnating the market for retail jobs, meaning workers will increasingly be higher-paid but cater mainly to the wealthy. – Conor Sen

T-Mobile, Sprint Win, Consumers Lose

For a while it seemed unlikely to happen, but today the Justice Department rubber-stamped the $59 billion merger of T-Mobile US Inc. and Sprint Corp. Antitrust approval suggests this deal won't hurt consumers, but the fact that Verizon Communications Inc. and AT&T Inc. stock both jumped on the news suggests otherwise, writes Tara Lachapelle. Competition between T-Mobile and Sprint had been healthy for the market, Tara writes, while a hypothetical new competitor in Dish Network Corp. is years away from being a factor. The approval smacks of politics too, coming just days after Trump's Justice Department went after Big Tech for possibly hurting consumers. And if you think having just a few carriers is fine, Tara suggests you consider what that's done to the airline industry.

Mueller's Main Message

It got lost in all the back-and-forth about optics and conspiracy theories and what-not, but former special counsel Robert Mueller's central message in congressional hearings this week was a warning that our election system is still basically under attack by Russia and other mischief-makers. This seems like a thing we should do something about, and quickly. You're hearing it more and more. In fact, there are a couple of bills floating around Congress that would address this very issue, notes Bloomberg's editorial board. But for some reason Mitch McConnell is standing in the way.

Low-Rate Opportunities, Risks

As we mentioned, the Fed is about to cut interest rates, and other central bankers around the world will soon join it. That means the global scramble for higher-yielding assets will only intensify. That will increase competition for, say, poor Masayoshi Son (one winner in the T-Mobile-Sprint deal, by the way), who has $108 billion burning a hole in his new Vision Fund 2, notes Tim Culpan. This will push him to scour the planet for investments, meaning we could see unicorns spawning in unlikely spots. One of those could be Indonesia, which is poised to be the biggest Asian unicorn ranch outside of China and India, suggests Andy Mukherjee.

Low interest rates also help keep debtors out of trouble, making all the debt sloshing around the world somewhat less of a worry, writes Satyajit Das. Unfortunately, we're still set up for disaster because private investors are doing so much of the lending now. They aren't as safe as banks and could get caught in liquidity traps when things go south.

Further Emerging-Markets Reading: Western aid to Africa relies on the outdated idea the continent is mostly rural; its dense and booming cities need far more investment and security. – Judd Devermont and Todd Moss 

Telltale Charts

Many states have minimum wages much higher than the national base; and contrary to critics' warnings, these states have been among the nation's biggest job-creators, writes Matthew Winkler.

America's infrastructure construction costs are too darn high, and you can't blame labor, writes Noah Smith.

Further Reading

Surprise: The old Amazon.com Inc. is back, with fast revenue growth but thinner profit margins. – Shira Ovide 

Amazon's third-party seller market needs stricter oversight. – Scott Duke Kominers 

The Liberal Democrats have risen from the dead to challenge Boris Johnson with an unequivocal anti-Brexit message. – Therese Raphael

One year on, Europe's new privacy rules aren't bothering big tech at all, but are hurting small firms. – Leonid Bershidsky 

Jair Bolsonaro's latest targets are Brazil's cutting-edge rainforest-watching scientists. He's picked the wrong fight. – Mac Margolis 

Not all weird weather events can be chalked up to climate change, but this summer's brutal heat waves probably can. – Justin Fox  

ICYMI

Leon Black has a Jeffrey Epstein problem.

Cape Cod has a Great White shark problem.

Plane legroom is about to get much worse.

Kickers

Japan approves first human-animal embryo experiments. What could go wrong?

Here's what it's like to join the Freemasons.

Will millennials get into bowling?

Is James Dolan the worst owner in sports? (Yes.)

Note: Please send Knicks tickets and complaints to Mark Gongloff at mgongloff1@bloomberg.net.

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Sunwing workers allegedly helped operate drug ring at Toronto airport: RCMP

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 01:42 PM PDT

RHOC's Shannon Beador goes public with new boyfriend: 'She's really happy,' source says

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 01:37 PM PDT

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<em>Real Housewives of Orange County</em> star Shannon Beador has found love with fellow USC alum John Janssen
 
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RHOC's Shannon Beador Goes Public with New Boyfriend: 'She's Really Happy,' Source Says
 
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Posted: 26 Jul 2019 01:21 PM PDT

Полезный портал для женщин

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 12:42 PM PDT

The Road Ahead on Iran Policy (Singh | PolicyWatch 3156)

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 12:26 PM PDT

THE ROAD AHEAD ON IRAN POLICY: TOWARD A MULTILATERAL STRATEGY
by Michael Singh

PolicyWatch 3156
July 26, 2019

Iran's recent actions in the region challenge the core interests of many American allies, and rallying those partners around shared objectives would give U.S. policy a better chance of success.

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After two years of steadily rising tensions, Washington and its allies are now contending with dual crises in their policy toward Iran. The first, playing out in full public view, is the crisis in the Persian Gulf. The second, quieter but arguably more serious, is Iran’s slow-motion abrogation of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). In fact, the two crises are one and the same, and demand a comprehensive response from the Trump administration.

SHIFT IN IRANIAN STRATEGY

Until recently, Iran appeared content to wait out the Trump administration and weather the onslaught of economic sanctions comprising Washington’s “maximum pressure” strategy. Likely calculating that a Democratic president, if one were elected in 2020, would bring the United States back into the nuclear deal, Iran surprised observers by largely adhering to the JCPOA’s limits despite the U.S. withdrawal from it last year.

The Trump administration may have seen this as the best of both worlds—U.S. sanctions were being widely if grudgingly honored, resulting in profound economic stagnation in Iran, but the regime was not expanding its nuclear program or otherwise responding. Yet the policy was not having the desired effect—Iran was not returning to the negotiating table. And Tehran’s stance meant that the nuclear agreement remained in place for a future president to return to, and that other states were more focused on preserving the status quo than joining the United States in punishing Iran.

So the United States doubled down on maximum pressure, announcing it would no longer issue waivers permitting other states to purchase Iranian oil. In response, Tehran—apparently sensing that waiting out Trump had become much costlier—decided to change the rules of the game. It reached for what it likely sees as its two best sources of leverage on the West: its nuclear program, and its willingness to court risk in the region, which it calculates exceeds Washington’s.

Iran’s main objective is uncertain. It may be trying to build leverage in advance of possible negotiations, or it may be seeking to scare the United States into dialing back the sanctions so that it can return to waiting out Trump. Regime officials know that Western leaders worry about two outcomes in the Gulf: Iranian development of a nuclear weapon, or a war with Iran. By making either or both outcomes seem more likely, Iran seemingly hopes to compel U.S. and European leaders to reconsider their policies and look for a way out of the escalating crisis. This is probably why it engages in actions that at first glance appear self-defeating, such as targeting Japanese tankers while Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was visiting Tehran, or going after British shipping even though London has spoken out against Washington’s withdrawal from the JCPOA.

What seems clear, however, is that Iran will not relent; it has too much at stake economically to step down unless current circumstances change significantly. The regime’s decision to exceed the limits of the nuclear deal—specifically, the cap on its stockpile of low-enriched uranium—is the latest and most dangerous example of this. The crisis will only accelerate as Iran’s nuclear breakout timeline starts to shrink, or if Tehran comes to believe it can act with impunity in the Gulf.

IMPACT ON U.S. STRATEGY

Responding to Iranian provocations in the Gulf and the wider Middle East has long been a challenge for Washington. Even after Iranian proxies bombed the U.S. embassy and Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983, President Reagan hesitated and ultimately did nothing (though he was also the exception to this trend, presiding over Operation Praying Mantis in 1988). Policymakers typically fear that any action they take could draw the United States into a war with Iran that every president since 1979 has sought to avoid.

Even if the United States does respond forcefully to the present Gulf crisis, it is not clear that Iran will be easily deterred. The logic of deterrence is straightforward—one’s adversary must be made to believe that any challenge will be met with a response so severe as to make the original action prohibitively costly. But with Washington already applying “maximum pressure” in the form of economic sanctions, and with President Trump indicating clearly that he has no interest in military conflict, Iran may feel it has little to lose.

When it comes to violations of the nuclear agreement, U.S. officials—whatever their view on the deal’s potential demise—undoubtedly hope that Iran’s actions will lead to condemnation by other JCPOA signatories and likeminded partners. However, while many states have condemned Iran’s violations thus far, they have deferred any punishment under the JCPOA, much less any efforts to abandon the deal itself or trigger snapback of multilateral sanctions. The risk for the Trump administration is de facto dilution of the JCPOA, in which Iran does not quite abide by its terms but suffers no consequences other than the sanctions Washington has already reimposed. The result could be that President Trump bequeaths to his successor a “JCPOA-minus” or a diminished Iranian breakout time rather than the improved agreement he has pledged to reach.

THE ROAD AHEAD

The instinct of U.S. officials will be to stand fast. Iran’s actions could be seen as signs of desperation—signs that U.S. policy is working. Tehran has reportedly had to cut the budgets of proxies like Hezbollah, and as oil revenues and financial reserves dwindle over time, the regime will face even greater difficulties. From Washington’s perspective, Iran also knows that dashing for a nuclear weapon or directly targeting American interests will bring a devastating response.

Yet allies worry that U.S. officials underestimate the regime’s capacity to hold out, as it previously has in Iraq and elsewhere. They also worry that U.S. and Iranian brinksmanship will inevitably lead to conflict even if neither side desires it, and that such a conflict will only magnify the turbulence in the Middle East and South Asia.

Yet these same allies—both in the region and beyond—largely share Washington’s objectives. All are concerned about the safety of commercial shipping; none wish to see Iran possess a nuclear weapon or treat countries like Syria, Yemen, and Lebanon as forward operating bases for its terrorist and missile forces; and none wish to see a U.S.-Iran war. Many criticize U.S. policy, but they understand that that their aims ultimately clash with Iran’s and converge with Washington’s. Britain’s recent seizure of an Iranian oil tanker bound for Syria is the most vivid demonstration of this realization—London sent the message that it would oppose Iran’s regional activities and enforce European sanctions on Syria despite tensions over the nuclear accord, and despite its avowed disagreement with Washington over JCPOA withdrawal.

Furthermore, Iran is doing a good job of reminding the world why the United States distrusts it. The regime has challenged the free flow of energy, a core concern for most countries. It has not only breached the JCPOA, but also reportedly been found in possession of undeclared nuclear material in a possible violation of its broader obligations under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. Add to this the regime’s ongoing interventions in Iraq, Yemen, and, most ruinously, Syria, as well as the terrorist plots it is accused of hatching on European soil last year, and Tehran has not exactly cut a sympathetic figure.

This highlights an opportunity for the United States. In devising its strategy toward Iran, the Trump administration has seized upon one source of leverage: America’s tremendous financial power. But it has largely neglected another: America’s equally formidable diplomatic power. Iran is geopolitically lonely, but other states—even those dissatisfied with the administration’s policy—still thirst for U.S. leadership and a strategy they can rally behind.

By capitalizing on these converging objectives, Washington can increase the pressure on Iran and deny it opportunities to split the United States from its allies. It can also deflate Tehran’s hopes of simply waiting out President Trump, since a future administration would find it far easier to roll back unilateral U.S. actions than to toss aside a strategy that enjoys multilateral support.

The first step in this strategy is to draw up a range of retaliatory options from which President Trump can choose when Iran next targets U.S. or allied interests. Washington can then preview these plans for allies and seek their advance support should the United States be required to exercise them. To garner such support, the administration should carefully calibrate the retaliatory options to be painful yet reciprocal and non-escalatory. So far, there has effectively been no response to Iran’s provocations; while President Trump is right to wish to avoid war, there are plenty of options on the spectrum between war and inaction.

Second, the United States and its allies should ensure that Iran has no easy targets. The best way to avoid escalation is to frustrate Iranian efforts to mount attacks in the first place. This means taking any additional steps available to harden the region’s critical energy infrastructure, commercial shipping, and allied military and civilian installations. Recent U.S. and European efforts to bolster maritime security patrols in the Gulf are a good start, but these efforts should be combined. When Iran seized a British tanker last week, it was retaliating against the previously mentioned British seizure of an Iranian vessel seeking to circumvent the ban on oil sales to the Assad regime. Given that Washington wants allies to pressure Iran in this manner, it would be wise to back them when Tehran pushes back.

Meanwhile, the United States should increase its reconnaissance and surveillance in the area so that Iran is more likely to get caught red-handed if it strikes again. Many allies are still skeptical of U.S. intelligence because of historical baggage from the Iraq war, so they should be urged to conduct surveillance on their own as well. U.S. officials should also temporarily loosen restrictions on intelligence sharing with states like France and Germany.

Third, the United States should go further than President Trump’s broad offer of meeting with Iran’s leaders by making clear that it is providing an off-ramp from the crisis should Tehran wish to take it. To this end, Washington should not prevent the EU from offering Iran symbolic gestures like starting up the so-called “Special Purpose Vehicle,” as long as this economic mechanism is transparent and restricted to humanitarian trade.

In addition, the United States should propose a multilateral working-level meeting to discuss the crisis, with the twelve U.S. demands enumerated by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and any issues Iran might raise upon being invited as a starting point for discussion. But the offer should come with carrots and sticks built in: the United States should insist, as a precondition for even organizing the meeting, that the EU and others commit to impose sanctions on Iran should it persist in violating the nuclear agreement; in turn, Washington should indicate a willingness to ease pressure if Iran demonstrates a willingness to change course. Even if Tehran declines the invitation, a meeting would prove useful in rallying allies, demonstrating that there is a purpose and plan behind the “maximum pressure” campaign.

To be sure, such an approach does not guarantee that President Trump will get the grand bargain he seeks with Iran, prospects for which remain remote—ultimately, this problem may have to be managed and contained rather than solved, at least until Tehran is prepared to change direction. But he could achieve a different and still worthwhile goal, namely, weakening the regime and its proxies by denying them resources, thereby opening new possibilities to resolve the current regional conflicts on which Iran thrives and to head off new ones. With some wisdom, the president can also avoid a full-blown crisis that might enmesh the United States in yet another Middle Eastern conflict, derailing broader plans to focus America’s energy on strategic competition with great-power rivals.

Michael Singh is the Lane-Swig Senior Fellow and managing director at The Washington Institute.



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Most Social: 3 Ole Miss students posed with guns in front of Emmett Till's memorial. DOJ may investigate

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 10:01 AM PDT

Kappa Alpha fraternity suspended the students after reporters found a photo of them in front of the shot-up memorial of the civil rights icon. ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ 
usatoday.com

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Friday, July 26
In this Instagram photo, three Ole Miss students posed smiling and toting guns in front of this bullet-riddled Emmett Till memorial sign in Tallahatchie County. Their fraternity has suspended them, and federal authorities are examining the incident.
Students posed with gun in front of Emmett Till memorial
Kappa Alpha fraternity suspended the students after reporters found a photo of them in front of the shot-up memorial of the civil rights icon.
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One Crazy Mom - Inspiring Moms to Embrace the Crazy

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 09:51 AM PDT

Globalists Moving to Destroy Economy to Stop Trump Revolution

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 09:18 AM PDT

Tune into the Live Show

Alex Jones here! Tune in Now!

Globalists are upping their anti-humanity agenda by unleashing a strategy to ruin America’s economy in a bid to stop President Trump’s nationalist revolution! Perhaps even more unsettling, mainstream media outlets are now openly admitting the left is planning a violent revolution modeled after the French great terror! Do not miss a second of today’s LIVE BROADCAST!

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مقتل إسرائيليين بإطلاق نار في العاصمة المكسيكية والقبض على امرأة

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 07:58 AM PDT

أكدت الشرطة المكسيكية مقتل إسرائيليين وإصابة آخرين، في حادث إطلاق نار وقع في العاصمة مكسيكو، وذلك...
نسخة على الإنترنت
نسختك الخاصة من أخبار يورونيوز – 07/26/19
نشرتك اليومية من الأخبار المختلفة المتنوعة
مقتل إسرائيليين بإطلاق نار في العاصمة المكسيكية والقبض على امرأة
أكدت الشرطة المكسيكية مقتل إسرائيليين وإصابة آخرين، في حادث إطلاق نار وقع في العاصمة مكسيكو، وذلك أثناء تواجدهما داخل أحد المطاعم الراقية. واعتقلت...   إقرأ أكثر، للمزيد
 
 
 
 
 
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YMAX – Peças Automotivas

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 07:30 AM PDT

The Daily Report

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 06:19 AM PDT

Friday, July 26, 2019

Must-reads from across Asia - directly to your inbox
Hong Kong braces for 'unlawful' anti-triad protest
US, China tilting towards conflict on Taiwan
Crossing the point of no return in Hong Kong
Hong Kong protests reflect region's China anxieties
Wanted bookseller finds safe haven in Taiwan
Northeast Asia unraveling amid US retreat
Taiwan mulls export control on chips for Huawei
Asian week in blockchain, July 20-26
India's top finance bureaucrat quits upon being transferred
GoAir expands its flights to Bangkok
Nuclear Blues
Maternal, child industry fair starts in Shanghai
Huawei gives China a technological edge in Nepal
Marchers to defy ban on Saturday's HK rally
Blasts rock Kabul as US, Afghanistan vow to speed up peace talks
SoftBank unveils investment fund to drive 'AI revolution'
Palestine leader suspends agreements with Israel
Photo depicts stark horror of Syria's deadly war
Nike 'Moon Shoe' sells for record US$437,500
Tip-off from China led to massive ivory seizure
Cambodia's relations with China, US not incompatible
Cambodia's relations with China, US not incompatibleAs a small country with a troubled past, Cambodia cannot afford to disengage with either Beijing or Washington
Deterrence in cyberspace needs wider attention
Deterrence in cyberspace needs wider attentionThough the US and Russia still consider each other adversaries, they have made strides in toning down damaging cyber-wars, and other countries should do the same
Where was the woman on the moon?
Where was the woman on the moon?A half century later, the story of moon landings remains one only about white males
The fall of the economists' empire 
The fall of the economists' empire 'Good economics' has been partly replaced by a commitment to universal human rights as the means to save the world from itself, but the purpose is the same: to lecture everyone else on their shortcomings
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Posted: 26 Jul 2019 05:49 AM PDT

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