Friday, September 13, 2019

24hespress

24hespress


Croatia Records

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 06:32 PM PDT

None

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 05:56 PM PDT

Blue Angel Publishing - Oracle Cards, Books, Music, Art - Illuminating Hearts and Minds

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 04:53 PM PDT

Nature as a spectator sport? 

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 04:22 PM PDT

TicToc Tonight
Bloomberg

TGIF, TicToc readers! (Psst: Have you taken our survey yet?) Kick-off the weekend in high spirits with these 10 feel-good stories from the past week.

1. The northern white rhino was saved from extinction. 
Scientists successfully created two embryos of the world's rarest rhino, in what could signal a seismic shift for the endangered species's survival.  

2. 'SNL' hit a new diversity milestone.
For the upcoming 45th season, "Saturday Night Live" will add its first Asian cast member, Bowen Yang, who joined last year as a writer. 

3. Kit Kat ditched plastic packaging.  
Nestlé's Japanese confectionery branch will instead use origami paper to wrap mini versions of the world-famous chocolate bars. 

4. The world's most shocking eel was found in the Amazon.
Scientists discovered a new species that can generate an electric charge of up to 860 volts, more powerful than any living creature on Earth. 

5. Meghan Markle debuted her charity clothing line.
The Duchess of Sussex teamed up with Smart Works, which helps underprivileged women find jobs, for her Smart Set capsule collection.

6. Astronauts mixed concrete in space.
The first-time feat was accomplished in microgravity and represents a huge step forward for future habitats on the moon and Mars. 

7. Toyota is working on the most energy-efficient car yet.
The auto giant is testing a sun-powered Prius, covered in ultra-thin solar panels, that it hopes will one day require no plugging in.

8. Even in the streaming era, art house cinemas are surging. 
By featuring increasingly rare vintage and fringe films, indie theaters everywhere are proving superhero flicks aren't the only box-office gold. 

9. New York Fashion Week embraced body positivity. 
Along with the newest trends for Spring 2020, designers made a show of size-inclusive collections and models with disabilities on the runway.  

10. A forest is growing in the middle of an Austrian soccer pitch.
Swiss artist Klaus Littmann installed around 300 trees in the Wörthersee Football Stadium to call attention to climate change and deforestation.

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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Fikra Newsletter: Extrajudicial killings in Iran, Al-Hawl Camp, Kurdish in Turkish Democracy, Syrian Safe Zone

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 04:19 PM PDT

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Ahwazi activist, Rahim Ahmed and lawyer, Aaron Meyer describe the uptick in extra-judicial killings of Ahwazi Arabs in Iran by IRGC forces, and how these deaths are part of a larger reality of extortion and lack of legal recourse faced by Ahwazi Arab citizens in Iran.

Syrian-Kurdish journalist, Himbervan Kose, argues that the al-Hawl camp for Syrian and Iraqi extremists in northeast Syria currently also serves as a major hub of extremists and their families. This issue must remain in the spotlight due to the danger that this camp poses as an incubator for the next round of jihadist activity.

Looking at northeast Syria's current status in regional politics, Syrian-Kurdish analyst, John Saleh, argues that despite the recently announced deployments of U.S. troops back to northeast Syria, the safe zone there, if fully implemented as it currently stands without strong involvement by the United States, will likely escalate conflict between Turkey and the Syrian Kurds.

Looking at the role of Kurds inside Turkey itself, Kurdish journalist, Jiwan Soz, examines the role that Kurdish citizens are likely to play in Turkish democracy in light of the recent dismissal of three HDP mayors. Soz examines through the lens of the Istanbul municipal elections, the developing relations between Kurdish voters and the CHP.


As always, we welcome your feedback and participation. Please write to us at editor@fikraforum.org.

Warm regards,

David Pollock
Director, Fikra Forum

 

يصف الناشط الأحوازي رحيم حميد والمحامي آرون ماير ارتفاع عمليات القتل خارج نطاق القضاء التي تمارس ضد عرب الأحواز في إيران على أيدي قوات الحرس الثوري الإيراني، وكيف تشكل حالات القتل هذه جزءًا من واقع أكبر يتمثل في الابتزاز وعدم اللجوء للقانون من جانب المواطنين العرب الأحوازيين في إيران.

يرى الصحفي السوري الكردي هيمبرفان كوسه أن معسكر الحول للمتطرفن السوريين والعراقيين في شمال شرق سوريا يعمل حاليًا كحاضنة رئيسية للمتطرفين وعائلاتهم. ومن ثم، يجب التعامل معه كقضية هامة ووضعه في دائرة الضوء، وذلك بسبب الخطر الذي يمثله هذا المعسكر كحاضنة للجولة التالية من النشاط الجهادي.

بالنظر إلى الوضع الحالي في شمال شرق سوريا في السياسة الإقليمية ، يرى المحلل السوري الكردي جون صالح إنه على الرغم من الإعلان عن نشر القوات الأمريكية في الآونة الأخيرة في شمال شرق سوريا ، فان تنفيذ فكرة المنطقة الآمنة هناك بشكل كامل دون تدخل قوي من جانب الولايات المتحدة ، من المحتمل أن يساهم في تصعيد الصراع بين تركيا والأكراد السوريين.

بالنظر إلى دور الأكراد داخل تركيا نفسها، يتناول الصحفي الكردي جوان سوز الدور الذي من المحتمل أن يلعبه المواطنون الأكراد في الديمقراطية التركية وذلك في ضوء الإقالات الأخيرة التي طالت ثلاثة من رؤساء البلديات من المنتمين لحزب الشعب الديمقراطي. كما يبحث سوز في تطور العلاقات بين الناخبين الأكراد وحزب الشعب الجمهوري ، وذلك في ضوء الانتخابات البلدية في إسطنبول.

وكما هو الحال دائماً، نشجع مشاركاتكم في هذه النقاشات المستمرة. يرجى الكتابة لنا على البريد الألكتروني editor@fikraforum.org.

تحيات حارة،

ديفيد بولوك
مدير، منتدى فكرة

 

 

Extrajudicial Killing of Ahwazis in Iran Continues Despite UN Condemnation
Rahim Hamid and Aaron Meyer
  موجة إعدام الأحوازيين بدون محاكمة مستمرة في إيران رغم إدانة الأمم المتحدة لها
  رحيم حميد و آرون ماير

Al-Hawl Camp: A Potential Incubator of the Next Generation of Extremism
Himbervan Kose
  مخيّم الهول: حواضن محتملة للإرهاب والتطرف
هيمبرفان كوسه

The Turkish 'Safe Zone' and Erdogan's Territorial Ambitions
John Saleh
  "المنطقة الآمنة" التركية وطموحات أردوغان المتعلقة بالأراضي
جان صالح

Kurdish Voters Will Continue to Exercise their Vote in Turkey
Jiwan Soz
  الناخبون الأكراد سيتسمرون في ممارسة تصويتهم في تركيا
جوان سوز


Alex Jones Warns Beto: Keep Your Filthy Hands Off Our 2nd Amendment!

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 04:15 PM PDT

Alex Jones Warns Beto: Keep Your Filthy Hands Off Our 2nd Amendment!

Come and take it!

Infowars.com

Incoming: Live Roundtable Discussion Between Alex Jones & Callers Saturday at 2pm Central

Infowars.com

Portland Soccer Team Crushed After Fans Boo Trump During Military Ceremony

Dan Lyman | Newswars.com

The Tyranny Behind Free Healthcare

Infowars.com

Insane Footage! Drunk Whites Assaulted & Robbed By Young Black Gang Members

Kelen McBreen | Infowars.com

Dems Praise Beto's Bizarre Handling of El Paso Shooting

Infowars.com

AOC Labels GOP Ad Slamming Socialism ‘Racist’

Adan Salazar | Infowars.com

The Impeachment And Gun Confiscation Fantasy Must End

Jon Bowne | Infowars.com

Migrant Crisis: Hundreds More Land on Greek Islands

Dan Lyman | Europewars.com

Beto Campaign Selling Gun Confiscation Shirts

Infowars.com

Gallup Poll: 83% Say Mental Health To Blame For Mass Shootings

Steve Watson | Infowars.com

Free Hax pro

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 04:04 PM PDT

RCMP staffer charged with violating national security

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 02:17 PM PDT

Trump must face the music

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 02:16 PM PDT

Evening Briefing
Bloomberg

Ten Democratic presidential candidates gathered in Houston on Thursday night for an almost three-hour debate. Former Vice President Joseph Biden appeared to escape unscathed, fending off attacks about his record on immigration and his age. Healthcare was the dominant issue of the evening, taking up 21% of the discussion time. Here's everything the candidates discussed. —Josh Petri

Here are today's top stories

House Republicans are also gearing up for the 2020 election. Their strategy: Pledge to reduce the massive debt they helped grow.

WeWork is pressing ahead with plans for a public listing, announcing a series of governance changes aimed at shoring up a sagging valuation.

Zantac, a stomach drug taken by millions, could be tainted with the same cancer-causing agent that sparked a worldwide recall of blood-pressure pills.

President Donald Trump must face a lawsuit accusing him of illegally profiting from the presidency, a federal appeals court ruled.

China told its biggest state-run firms to take control of Hong Kong companies, Reuters reported, a move that would extend the mainland's reach in a city rocked by democracy protests.

Toyota is taking the best solar panels money can buy, combining them with super-efficient batteries and decades of experience manufacturing automobiles and trying to make a car that will run forever.

What's Lorcan Roche Kelly thinking? The Bloomberg cross-asset editor says there was a rule of thumb for assessing the effectiveness of the European Central Bank during the old days of the European sovereign-debt crisis. The more opposition in the so-called core euro-area countries to the monetary policy, the more likely it was to be effective. By that measure, the reaction to yesterday's ECB announcements suggests that open-ended quantitative easing, a rate cut and other measures to help banks could be exactly what the region's economy needs.

What you'll need to know tomorrow

What you'll want to read in Bloomberg Pursuits

America's Billionaire Playgrounds Require Land

Massive purchases of open space by moneyed buyers are shifting the traditional ownership model of ranches and small farms, most of which have historically been family-owned. They're also creating new pockets of wealth as asset-rich, cash-poor farmers sell out.

Like Bloomberg's Evening Briefing? Subscribe to Bloomberg.com. You'll get our unmatched global news coverage and two premium daily newsletters, The Bloomberg Open and The Bloomberg Close, and much, much more. See our limited-time introductory offer.

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Maybe negative interest rates are the problem

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 02:02 PM PDT

Bloomberg Opinion Today
Bloomberg

Today's Agenda

Sometimes Negative Is Negative

Too much of a good thing is usually a bad thing, which is a dumb thing annoying people say when they're trying to get you to not eat so many peanut M&Ms. Just let me eat my M&Ms, gosh! They probably have a point though, annoyingly, for M&Ms and also for other stuff, including super-low interest rates.

Financial markets are always hungry for low rates. But now they've got about $17 trillion of global debt with negative interest rates, and the European Central Bank just cut its target rate even deeper into the red, yet markets are suddenly feeling a little queasy, notes Robert Burgess. Maybe they realize negative rates alone can't stop the recession that seems to be coming, writes John Authers.

Or maybe they're waking up to the idea that negative rates may actually hurt economies, as Satyajit Das proposes. They're certainly no good for banks, which make money by lending it and collecting interest on it, rather than paying people to borrow it. Unhappy banks make for unhappy credit markets, which make for unhappy economies. And this can be contagious, with one country's negative rates forcing others to follow suit. 

What can be done? Elisa Martinuzzi writes Mario Draghi is right that banks need to cut costs and improve technology. Tyler Cowen suggests the problem is a lack of skilled labor, which lowers productivity and investment returns, driving growth and rates lower. But large-scale solutions to that problem can come only from government action, which gets at the bigger problem here: Central banks keep being asked to do the heavy lifting, while politicians sit around eating peanut M&Ms.

Further Interest-Rate Reading:

Debate and No Switch

For the dozens of you who watched, last night's marathon Democratic presidential debate had a few highlights. Front-runner Joe Biden encouraged parents to get back into vinyl. Julian Castro was kind of mean to him. Andrew Yang said he'd placed five golden tickets at random in chocolate bars around the world. Other stuff happened. What didn't happen was a long-awaited showdown between Biden and his fastest-rising challenger, Senator Elizabeth Warren, notes Jonathan Bernstein. So the debate didn't change the race; at most, maybe Castro or some other second-tier candidate will get a small lift from it.  

Further Politics Reading: Farm troubles helped bring down Hoover and Carter. Now they threaten Trump. – Stephen Mihm 

Apple's Not-So-Killer Netflix Killer

Apple Inc. got some decent press this week for its new TV+ streaming service being cheaper than Netflix, at $4.99 a month and free for the first year after you buy a new Apple device. Then the headlines turned darker, when Goldman Sachs cut its price target on Apple shares, saying such a low price would hurt profits. But then Apple was all like, nah, this won't hurt us at all, and Apple shares bounced. Tara Lachapelle pinpoints one reason why TV+ won't dent Apple's wallet — because there's just not much to it. As opposed to Netflix and an armada of new competing services, Apple lacks a huge library of content — just nine original shows. And Tara suspects Apple has no plans to change that by dumping a bunch of cash on, say, buying a studio. TV+ looks like a hollow brand-builder for the foreseeable future.

AT&T Inc., on the other hand, had no qualms about pouring buckets of money on J.J. Abrams to lock up his content, with terms so generous they "look like a rookie move," or desperation, Tara Lachapelle writes in a second column. 

It's Time to Pay College Athletes

Besides college sports, is there any other industry in the modern, developed world to which people can dedicate their every waking moment and risk their physical health, making millions for their employer, but it's against the rules for them to get paid a dime for it? I can't think of another one, and the end may finally be near for this business model in college sports too, writes Joe Nocera. California has just passed a law letting players reap some reward when their teams profit from their names or images. It's not a full paycheck, but it's a start toward fairness. Tim Tebow disagrees, but Joe notes the political and professional tide is turning against him.

Telltale Charts

Even with its modest governance changes, The We Co. is still WeWork, for better or (mostly) worse, writes Shira Ovide

Further Reading

Trump's plan for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is a return to the bad old days when private shareholders reaped the upside and taxpayers were on the hook for the downside. – Bloomberg's editorial board

Manufacturing CEOs are increasingly nervous. – Brooke Sutherland

Boris Johnson's Brexit bungling may have put his opponents right where he wants them. – Therese Raphael 

Europe's voters want the bloc to be more of a geopolitical superpower. – Leonid Bershidsky 

The West should keep Georgia from sliding into authoritarianism and Russian sway. – Eli Lake 

Benjamin Netanyahu's promise to annex West Bank settlements could help him win the election. – Zev Chafets 

ICYMI

The FDA is looking into possible carcinogens in Zantac and other drugs.

One in four New York luxury apartments is unsold.

Why I pick up hitchhikers in Caracas.

Kickers

This year's Ig Nobel winners include studies of cubed wombat poop and left-testicle warmth. (h/t Scott Kominers)

World War I data suggests working longer hours is counterproductive. (h/t Mike Smedley)

How to lose weight while barely moving.

When the culture war comes for the kids.

Note: Please send heartburn remedies and complaints to Mark Gongloff at mgongloff1@bloomberg.net.

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Felicity Huffman and William H. Macy tear up in court as she's sentenced to 14 days in jail for college admissions scam

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 01:43 PM PDT

If you are having trouble viewing this email click here
PeoplePeople Daily
9/13/19
 
Felicity Huffman pleaded guilty in May, admitting to accusations she paid to have her daughter's SAT scores falsified
 
BREAKING NEWS
Felicity Huffman Sentenced to 14 Days Behind Bars in College Admissions Scam
 
Felicity Huffman pleaded guilty in May, admitting to accusations she paid to have her daughter's SAT scores falsified
 
 
<p>From Hollywood to New York and everywhere in between, see what your favorite stars are up to</p>
 
STAR TRACKS
Rihanna Kicks Off Her Diamond Ball in N.Y.C., Plus SJP & Matthew, Jennifer Garner & More
 
From Hollywood to New York and everywhere in between, see what your favorite stars are up to
 
 
 
Jamie Otis also shared that she has "drastically changed [her] lifestyle" over the past two months, which "seems to be working" in terms of fertility
 
CELEBRITY PREGNANCIES
Jamie Otis Celebrates Having 'Viable Pregnancy' at Five Weeks Along After Previous Miscarriages
 
Jamie Otis also shared that she has "drastically changed [her] lifestyle" over the past two months, which "seems to be working" in terms of fertility
 
 
 
Eddie Money died on Friday, less than a month after he announced that he had been diagnosed with stage 4 esophageal cancer
 
RIP
'Take Me Home Tonight' Singer Eddie Money Dies at 70, Weeks After Announcing Esophageal Cancer Diagnosis
 
Eddie Money died on Friday, less than a month after he announced that he had been diagnosed with stage 4 esophageal cancer
 
 
<p class="dek margin-16-tb padded-mobile"><em>Inside Out</em>, Demi Moore's memoir, comes out later this month</p>  <div class="author scale-12 padded margin-24-tb clearfix"></div>
 
JAW-DROPPING REVELATIONS
Demi Moore Claims Ashton Kutcher Cheated on Her and More Bombshells from Her Memoir: Report
 
Inside Out, Demi Moore's memoir, comes out later this month
 
 
Brooke Skylar Richardson was acquitted of murder, but was convicted of abuse of a corpse
 
CRIME NEWS
Ohio Cheerleader Sentenced to Probation After Judge Says She Showed 'Grotesque Disregard for Life'
 
Brooke Skylar Richardson was acquitted of murder, but was convicted of abuse of a corpse
 
 
"I hope you can see me like I see myself now," the British singer wrote in an emotional Instagram post
 
LGBTQ ISSUES
Sam Smith Changes Pronouns to 'They/Them': 'I've Decided to Embrace Myself for Who I Am'
 
"I hope you can see me like I see myself now," the British singer wrote in an emotional Instagram post
 
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UNITAR International University - Home

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 01:15 PM PDT

Tunisians to Elect a New President (Feuer | PolicyWatch 3178)

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 01:00 PM PDT

TUNISIANS TO ELECT A NEW PRESIDENT
by Sarah Feuer

PolicyWatch 3178
September 13, 2019

With no clear front-runner emerging and public disillusionment mounting, the struggling Arab democracy is transitioning from a period of consensus to uncertainty.

READ THIS ITEM ON OUR WEBSITE


On September 15, Tunisians will vote in the country’s second presidential election since 2011, when a local uprising overthrew longtime autocrat Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali and sparked a wave of revolts across the region. Eight years on, Tunisia is the only “Arab Spring” state to remain on the path of full democracy, a distinction that continues to elicit praise from outside observers. Inside Tunisia, however, the past five years have been marked by disillusionment with unmet economic expectations and widespread frustration with the government’s perceived inability to address them. Both sentiments are coloring the current election cycle, sidelining the contentious Islamist/secularist debates that infused the 2014 elections.

NUTS AND BOLTS

Originally scheduled for November, the current round of voting was moved up following the July 25 death of President Beji Caid Essebsi, so that his successor could take office within the constitutionally mandated ninety-day period. Under normal circumstances, Essebsi would have completed his five-year term, and voters would have chosen a new parliament before proceeding to the presidential election. Now, however, they will be choosing their head of state—who also serves as commander-in-chief and sets defense, foreign, and national security policy—before the parliamentary elections scheduled for October 6. If no candidate receives a majority of votes on September 15, a runoff will be held between the top two candidates.

Among Tunisia’s population of 11.8 million, a remarkable 85 percent of eligible citizens are registered to vote. (By comparison, only 75 percent of eligible Americans are registered.) In the 2014 elections, turnout was around 63 percent for both round one and the ensuing runoff between Essebsi and human rights activist Moncef Marzouki. Yet the 2018 local elections garnered a much lower rate of 35 percent, prompting concerns about declining interest and faith in the electoral process. Still, the registration period for the current cycle saw 1.5 million citizens sign up, and polling by the International Republican Institute earlier this year suggested turnout will exceed 50 percent. Whatever the case, voting will once again be monitored by domestic and international observers, so it should proceed freely and fairly.

NOTEWORTHY CONTENDERS

An eye-popping twenty-six presidential candidates will appear on the ballot, including two women. Remarkably, an openly gay man was in the initial mix despite the fact that homosexuality remains a crime in Tunisia, but his candidacy was ultimately rejected for reasons that remain unclear. Three televised debates have been held, a first for Tunisia and a novelty in the Arab world. No obvious front-runner has emerged, but four candidates appear to be leading:

Youssef Chahed. A forty-three-year-old agronomist who has served as prime minister since 2016, Chahed was forced out of Essebsi’s secularist party Nidaa Tounes (Call of Tunisia) last year. The move was prompted by his intense disagreements with the president over their division of power, and his objections to how Essebsi’s son, Hafedh, was maneuvering to control the party. Chahed recently formed a new party, Tahya Tounes (Long Live Tunisia), whose campaign has emphasized the needs of young people. Yet he may face difficulty convincing the wider populace that he should occupy Carthage Palace. While his anti-corruption policies were widely praised, the austerity measures he oversaw after the IMF loaned Tunisia $2.8 billion in 2016 did not endear him to the masses, who have been contending with entrenched income disparities, an inflation rate twice as high as pre-2011 levels, and unemployment hovering at 15 percent nationally and 35 percent among youths.

Abdelfattah Mourou. A lawyer by training, Mourou cofounded the Ennahda (Renaissance) Party, Tunisia’s main Islamist movement, and now serves as its vice president. He was elected to parliament in 2014 and thereafter became deputy speaker. The seventy-one-year-old’s candidacy marks a significant development for Ennahda, which previously shied away from fielding presidential contenders for fear of provoking the kind of backlash that decimated its original parent group, the Muslim Brotherhood, in Egypt and other countries. By contrast, Ennahda has preferred to govern in coalition with secular parties like Nidaa Tounes and downplay its Islamist orientation, thereby solidifying its dominance in parliament. In 2016, the party even declared it would be curtailing its religious activities and devoting itself entirely to politics, replacing the label “political Islam” with “Muslim democracy.”

When Ennahda announced this summer that it would field a presidential candidate and put leader Rached Ghannouchi in the running for parliament, it seemed confident that the strategy of restraint had sufficiently cemented the party’s place in Tunisia’s political landscape. Although that calculation may still be a gamble, Mourou’s past willingness to criticize the party and his reportedly positive relationships with legislators across the political spectrum make him a relatively safe choice.

Nabil Karoui. The founder of Nessma TV, one of Tunisia’s leading stations, Karoui is currently sitting in jail on charges of money laundering and tax evasion. The fifty-six-year-old has become a well-known figure in recent years thanks to his frequent media appearances and philanthropic work. A former member of Essebsi’s faction, he founded the party Qalb Tounes (Heart of Tunisia) and has campaigned around broadly populist themes, advocating on behalf of the poor and decrying the lack of government services. He was polling above 20 percent when he was arrested in late August, prompting accusations that his rivals were looking to eliminate him from the field (the allegations against him first surfaced in 2017 following an investigation by prominent local anti-corruption NGO “I Watch”). Tunisian law allows individuals accused of criminal activity to run for office as long as they are not convicted, so while Karoui was unable to attend the debates, his name remains on the ballot.

Abdelkarim Zbidi. A doctor by training, the sixty-four-year-old Zbidi is widely viewed as a technocrat seemingly untainted by his longtime affiliation with the Ben Ali regime. He served until recently as defense minister, then resigned to run for president, maintaining his longtime status as an independent while highlighting his experience in the security realm. Tunisia has seen considerable improvements in its counterterrorism capabilities since a string of high-casualty attacks in 2015 and an attempted Islamic State insurgency a year later. Yet this summer’s spate of suicide bombings was a reminder that the country remains fragile, so Zbidi’s association with the extremely popular armed forces may serve him well.

BEYOND THE VOTE

The tenor of Tunisia’s election season suggests that its democracy may be transitioning from a period of relative consensus to something far less certain. Essebsi’s passing evoked eulogies of the grand bargain he reportedly struck with Ghannouchi in 2013, an arrangement rightly credited with saving the country from the social unrest and political turmoil plaguing its regional peers. Yet the limitations of this secular/Islamist consensus were evident long before Essebsi’s death, breeding political paralysis and undermining deeper economic reforms.

Indeed, the election has underscored the price of Tunisia’s post-2013 political stability: namely, growing discontent among an electorate keen to see democracy deliver not only individual freedoms, but basic economic dividends as well. Whoever wins the vote may feel liberated from the years of stagnant elite consensus, but the new president will also face an increasingly restless public, profound fiscal challenges, and a tenuous security situation.

This predicament highlights the necessity of continued American assistance, especially in the economic and counterterrorism realms. The country still needs help with insulating itself from Libya’s civil war to the east, Algeria’s political implosion to the west, and the prospect that thousands of Tunisian foreign fighters who joined the Islamic State may be returning home. The government has managed these local threats admirably while avoiding thorny entanglements further afield, such as Iran’s hegemonic ambitions and the Saudi-Qatar rift. Washington has a keen interest in ensuring that Tunisia remains not only a democratic success story, but also a strategic ally in an unpredictable neighborhood.

Sarah Feuer is an associate fellow with The Washington Institute.



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Felicity Huffman setnenced to 14 days in prison for college admissions scam

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 12:53 PM PDT

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PeoplePeople Breaking News
9/13/19
 
Felicity Huffman pleaded guilty in May, admitting to accusations she payed to have her daughter's SAT scores falsified
 
JUST IN
Felicity Huffman Sentenced to 14 Days in Jail in College Admissions Scam
 
Felicity Huffman pleaded guilty in May, admitting to accusations she payed to have her daughter's SAT scores falsified
 
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Gulf Interview - Latest Jobs In Gulf

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 11:11 AM PDT

NEWS ALERT: Bannon thrives behind the scenes: 'Other than the president, he is the head of the MAGA movement'

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 10:08 AM PDT

NEWS ALERT: Bannon thrives behind the scenes: 'Other than the president, he is the head of the MAGA movement'
Steve Bannon has always cultivated an aura of mystery, so it is no surprise that his current doings are an enigma to many.
  NEWS ALERT  
Friday, September 13, 2019 12:56 PM EDT
 
NEWS ALERT

Bannon thrives behind the scenes: 'Other than the president, he is the head of the MAGA movement'

Steve Bannon has always cultivated an aura of mystery, so it is no surprise that his current doings are an enigma to many.

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Most Social: Kamala Harris calls Trump a 'small dude' and other moments from the Democratic debate

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 10:01 AM PDT

The third debate was full of fireworks. Here are some of the top moments from the three hours onstage in Houston. ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ 
usatoday.com

Most Social
 
Friday, September 13
Left to right: Democratic presidential hopefuls Senator of New Jersey Cory Booker, Mayor of South Bend, Indiana, Pete Buttigieg, Senator of Vermont Bernie Sanders, Former Vice President Joe Biden, Senator of Massachusetts Elizabeth Warren, Senator of California Kamala Harris, Tech entrepreneur Andrew Yang, Former Representative of Texas Beto O'Rourke and Former housing secretary Julian Castro stand onstage ahead of the third Democratic primary debate of the 2020   presidential campaign season hosted by ABC News in partnership with Univision at Texas Southern University in Houston, Texas on Sept. 12, 2019.
These are the top moments from the Dems debate
The third debate was full of fireworks. Here are some of the top moments from the three hours onstage in Houston.
Prosecutors recommend ex-FBI chief McCabe be charged
Andrew McCabe hints at 'inappropriate relationship
Democratic debate: Who were the winners and losers
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Grading the Democratic debaters, from A to F
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Felicity Huffman will be sentenced in college scandal
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'Just a problem kid': Antonio Brown's troubled past
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5 things we learned from Houston Dems debate
Democratic presidential candidates former Vice Pre
10 clever things you never knew your iPad could do
The best Black Friday 2018 iPad deals
22-year-old cold case solved thanks to Google Earth
This undated photo provided by the National Missin
Taco Bell tosses out woman buying dinner for the...
FILE - This Friday, May 23, 2014, file photo shows
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Democrats Openly Declare War on America, Pledge to Confiscate 90% of Guns

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 09:30 AM PDT

Tune into the Live Show

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The liberal candidates during last night’s debates revealed their ultimate agenda to the nation: disarming Americans! Make no mistake, Democrats coming after your guns has nothing to do with your well-being! Joining today’s LIVE BROADCAST in-studio is constitutional lawyer Robert Barnes providing expert analysis on what patriots should expect during the coming assault on our constitutional rights.

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NEWS ALERT: Justice Department mulled using fentanyl in federal executions: Report

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 08:42 AM PDT

NEWS ALERT: Justice Department mulled using fentanyl in federal executions: Report
The Department of Justice last year considered using the deadly opioid fentanyl for use in executing death row prisoners, according to a report Friday.
  NEWS ALERT  
Friday, September 13, 2019 11:27 AM EDT
 
NEWS ALERT

Justice Department mulled using fentanyl in federal executions: Report

The Department of Justice last year considered using the deadly opioid fentanyl for use in executing death row prisoners, according to a report Friday.

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إلقاء القبض على شخصين للاشتباه بتخطيطهم لأعمال تخريبية في مطار هيثرو

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 07:59 AM PDT

الشرطة البريطانية تلقي القبض على شخصين في مطار هيثرو للاشتباه بتخطيطهم لأعمال تخريبية...
نسخة على الإنترنت
نسختك الخاصة من أخبار يورونيوز – 09/13/19
نشرتك اليومية من الأخبار المختلفة المتنوعة
إلقاء القبض على شخصين للاشتباه بتخطيطهم لأعمال تخريبية في مطار هيثرو
الشرطة البريطانية تلقي القبض على شخصين في مطار هيثرو للاشتباه بتخطيطهم لأعمال تخريبية...   إقرأ أكثر، للمزيد
 
 
 
 
 
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Abbas vs. Annexation, Iraqi Air Defense, Libya Embargo, and More

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 07:45 AM PDT

POLICY NOTE 67
Ali Mamouri and Mehdi Khalaji
September 2019
The latest essay in the "Sudden Succession" series examines how Iran and other players may diminish the transnational reach of the next Shia "marja."
POLICYWATCH 3177
Michael Knights and Farzin Nadimi
September 12, 2019
Baghdad is under pressure to stop reported Israeli strikes, but procuring Russian or Iranian defense equipment may just complicate relations with Washington.
POLICY ALERT
Ghaith al-Omari
September 11, 2019
Abbas will likely use it to rally the Arab League and UN against the U.S. peace plan, and his success will depend on Washington's reaction.
OP-ED
Aaron Y. Zelin and Katherine Bauer
CTC Sentinel, September 2019
The country is fast becoming a regional leader in meeting global CTF norms by developing robust toolkits and working with foreign governments.
OP-ED
Neri Zilber
Daily Beast, September 10, 2019
Publicizing IDF operations, pledging West Bank annexations, and castigating the press may gain him some votes, but at what cost to Israel?
POLICY ALERT
Simon Henderson
September 10, 2019
Riyadh's hopes of raising money through a partial Aramco sell-off depend on the price of oil, which failed to rise sufficiently under the previous minister.
OP-ED
Jay Solomon
Tablet, September 9, 2019
Whenever nuclear weapons technology appears in the hands of Israel's enemies, Pyongyang is usually involved.
OP-ED
Ben Fishman
The Hill, September 9, 2019
Without a concerted international effort to ground UAVs and halt the flow of weapons, the UN will have little leverage to restart the political transition.
POLICYWATCH 3175
David Pollock
September 6, 2019
A recent survey suggests an immediate opening for Washington to promote certain reforms, but real reconciliation still looks like a distant dream.
FIKRA FORUM
David Pollock and Tamar Hermann
September 5, 2019
If the past is prologue and the poll numbers prove prescient, Jewish religious parties may give the right a decisive advantage in coalition formation.
VIDEO
Soner Cagaptay
Summer 2019
The decision to purchase the S-400 missile system and risk rupture with NATO is a monumental departure from Turkey's centuries of contention with Russia.
OP-ED
Dennis Ross and David Makovsky
Jewish Telegraphic Agency, September 4, 2019
Whoever wins the election may need to make a courageous decision about separating from the Palestinians before that option disappears forever.
media
syria
Soner Cagaptay was quoted in a New York Times report on the planned U.S. troop deployment to northeast Syria.
iran
Dana Stroul was cited in a Foreign Policy article on the prospects for replacing rather than reentering the 2015 nuclear agreement with Tehran.
iraq
Bilal Wahab was quoted in an Al-Monitor article on the apparent surge of Islamic State activity in Iraqi Kurdistan.
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ФГБОУ ВО Ивановская ГСХА

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 06:30 AM PDT

FREE LTO Exam Reviewer • LTO Exam • 2019 Updated

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 05:32 AM PDT

The Daily Report

Posted: 13 Sep 2019 05:28 AM PDT

Friday, September 13, 2019

Must-reads from across Asia - directly to your inbox
Chinese pressure may drive ExxonMobil from Vietnam
Asian economies may gain most from 'Bolton effect'
Suicide bombs new terror norm in the Philippines
Huawei calls the US intel community's bluff
AmCham survey shows HK losing its corporate edge
India's ex-PM warns of protracted slowdown
Sister of Saudi crown prince convicted in Paris
Fossil fuels on the defensive over climate change
Japan's new environment chief: Scrap N-power
Canadian PM vows tax on foreign property speculators
HK police denied medics entry into subway
Afghan election back in spotlight
Houston debate features sound bites on trade war
Dark clouds hover behind Xi's big parade
Storming of Area 51 cancelled, now a Vegas concert
Dinosaur killer more powerful than 10 billion WWII nukes
Blood drones may one day be ready for combat
Thai navy inks deal for LPD warship from China
Where do China's newly rich invest their money?
Let's take China fintech to the world, says bank exec
'One country, two systems' is dead: former US envoy
The Bolton ouster: the view from Taiwan
The Bolton ouster: the view from TaiwanTrump's abrupt dismissal of his hawkish national security adviser shocked Taipei, as Bolton had been seen as a steadying hand on the US president's erratic approach to China
The decline of Arab unity
The decline of Arab unityMembers of the League of Arab States and the Gulf Cooperation Council are divided on their approaches to Iran, Israel, Islamism and other issues
A brief review of PTI's 13 months in power
A brief review of PTI's 13 months in powerFailing grades dominate the report card of Imran Khan's government, from a worsening economy to misdirected foreign policy
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