Sunday, December 22, 2019

UK's Johnson says he will keep pressing U.S. over fatal crash

UK's Johnson says he will keep pressing U.S. over fatal crashBritish Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Saturday he would carry on trying to help the family of 19-year-old Briton Harry Dunn, killed in a road collision with a U.S. diplomat's wife who then left the country. "The law should take its course and we will obviously be following that case with keen interest and continuing to make representations on behalf of Harry Dunn's family in the U.S. at every level," Johnson said. British prosecutors said on Friday they would charge Anne Sacoolas with causing death by dangerous driving and seek her extradition over the crash in August in which Dunn was killed while riding his motorbike.




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Egypt frees ex-general arrested after challenging president

Egypt frees ex-general arrested after challenging presidentThe Egyptian military on Sunday released one of the country's former chiefs-of-staff, nearly two years after his arrest following an announcement that he would challenge President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi in the 2018 presidential vote, military officials and his lawyer said. A military court had sentenced Sami Annan earlier this year to nine years' imprisonment.




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A 6-year-old girl found a disturbing hand-written note in a Christmas card that claimed foreign prisoners were being forced to work in China

A 6-year-old girl found a disturbing hand-written note in a Christmas card that claimed foreign prisoners were being forced to work in ChinaThe UK-based grocery chain Tesco is investigating a Chinese factory after the girl from London found the note in a pack of charity Christmas cards.




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Remembering the Poor on Christmas


By BY CHARLES M. BLOW from NYT Opinion https://ift.tt/2MlFZDf

In Hong Kong, a Vast Citizens’ Network Keeps Watch on the Police


By BY K.K. REBECCA LAI from NYT World https://ift.tt/371OgnI

Make Laws, Not Money


By BY THE EDITORIAL BOARD from NYT Opinion https://ift.tt/35SuoTK

When the Monkey Chants Are for You: A Soccer Star’s View of Racist Abuse


By BY RORY SMITH from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/34PYAxk

What About Centrist Bias?


By BY DAVID LEONHARDT from NYT Opinion https://ift.tt/2SoQ1Y5

That Christianity Today Editorial Won’t Change Anything


By BY SARAH POSNER from NYT Opinion https://ift.tt/2rlcUAv

6 Pedestrians in 3 Days: A Deadly Spate of Crashes in N.Y.C.


By BY CHRISTINA GOLDBAUM from NYT New York https://ift.tt/360zYDq

Breaking Ranks, a Rival Takes on Israel’s Netanyahu From Within


By BY ISABEL KERSHNER from NYT World https://ift.tt/2PPSqsZ

The billionaire owner of the glitzy wine cave that Pete Buttigieg fundraised at says 'it's just not fair' to be seen as a symbol of excess

The billionaire owner of the glitzy wine cave that Pete Buttigieg fundraised at says 'it's just not fair' to be seen as a symbol of excessElizabeth Warren says 'billionaires in wine caves should not pick the next president.' The owner of the wine cave finds that sentiment unfair.




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American Airlines begins offering non-binary gender options during booking process

American Airlines begins offering non-binary gender options during booking processAmerican Airlines has quietly rolled out non-binary gender options during the booking process, where people can designate "U" or "X" for their gender.




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Evangelical Leaders Close Ranks With Trump After Scathing Editorial

Evangelical Leaders Close Ranks With Trump After Scathing EditorialThe publication is small, reaching just a fraction of the evangelical movement.But when Christianity Today called for President Donald Trump's removal in a blistering editorial on Thursday, it met the full force and fury of the president and his most prominent allies in the Christian conservative world. If the response seemed disproportionate, it vividly reflected the fact that white evangelicals are the cornerstone of Trump's political base and their leaders are among his most visible and influential supporters.In the background, however, is a more nuanced reality that Christianity Today's editorial hints at: a number of conservative Christians remain deeply uncomfortable with an alliance with the president.Trump, after being impeached this week, is extremely sensitive to any signs of a fracture in his political coalition and has repeatedly insisted that the Republican Party and its voters are unanimously behind him. And on Friday he lashed out on two separate occasions at Christianity Today, seeking to brand it as a "far left magazine" that was doing the Democratic Party's bidding."I guess the magazine, 'Christianity Today,' is looking for Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, or those of the socialist/communist bent, to guard their religion," Trump wrote on Twitter. "How about Sleepy Joe? The fact is, no President has ever done what I have done for Evangelicals, or religion itself!"Evidently leaving little to chance, Trump's reelection campaign announced Friday evening that he would go to Miami on Jan. 3 to start an "Evangelicals for Trump" coalition.The response from his leading Christian supporters was laced with animosity that mimicked Trump's signature style, and reflected the extent to which they have moved into lock step with him, even in rhetoric.Ralph Reed, founder of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, said on Twitter that he was "sad" to see the publication "echo the arguments of The Squad & the Resistance & deepen its irrelevance among Christians."Franklin Graham, whose father, the Rev. Billy Graham, founded Christianity Today, said in a Facebook post that the editorial was a "totally partisan attack" and said that the elder Graham had voted for the president in 2016, a little more than a year before he died.Graham went on to tally numerous accomplishments that he said Trump had achieved, and to ask "Why would Christianity Today choose to take the side of the Democrat left whose only goal is to discredit and smear the name of a sitting president?"The power of the evangelicals as a voting bloc is in their sheer size, and in their symbiotic relationship with the president. "Because they are a third of the Republican base, Trump needs white evangelical Protestants to get elected," said Robert P. Jones, chief executive of the Public Religion Research Institute. "And because white evangelicals see themselves as a shrinking minority, in both racial and religious terms, they need Trump."For the past several years, conservative American politics, and white evangelical Christianity along with it, has realigned steadily and solidly around Trump and his coalition. Much like the "Never Trump" voices within the Republican Party, evangelical detractors have receded into the background.Their absence from the national conversation was partly why the editorial was so jolting. And for the Christians who felt the same way, the piece was a catharsis.Peter Wehner, a conservative columnist and author who writes about religion and who worked as a speechwriter for former President George W. Bush, said that Trump's most outspoken defenders had created a misleading impression that evangelical Christians universally embraced the president."They speak as if they define the movement," he said. "And a lot of people who aren't familiar with evangelical Christianity see this and say, 'Well, they must be representing all Christians.'""That's the significance of what Christianity Today did," Wehner added. "They stood up and they said: 'No, that's not right. We can't continue with this charade, this moral freak show anymore.'"The editorial is also a reminder that the evangelical movement is not monolithic and includes people who may appreciate some of the president's actions, like the appointment of conservative judges, but are repelled by his inflammatory rhetoric on issues like race and immigration and his denigration of political opponents.That sentiment was clearly expressed in the Christianity Today editorial by Mark Galli, the magazine's editor-in-chief, who wrote that Trump "has dumbed down the idea of morality in his administration.""His Twitter feed alone -- with its habitual string of mischaracterizations, lies, and slanders -- is a near perfect example of a human being who is morally lost and confused," Galli wrote.Galli also expressed a view on impeachment that echoed the Democrats, saying: "The president of the United States attempted to use his political power to coerce a foreign leader to harass and discredit one of the president's political opponents. That is not only a violation of the Constitution; more importantly, it is profoundly immoral."Christianity Today, based in the Chicago suburbs, has about 80,000 print subscribers and publishes news and commentary to appeal to evangelical audiences, in the tradition of Billy Graham.No leaders in the evangelical movement said they could see any clear signs of an organized resistance to Trump rising from the editorial. And even dissenters like Wehner acknowledge they are vastly outnumbered.According to a recent poll from the Public Religion Research Institute, 77% of white evangelical Protestants approve of the job Trump is doing in office, including half who strongly approve. And nearly all -- 98% -- of Republican white evangelical Protestants said they opposed Trump's impeachment, the institute found.In 2016, 81% of them voted for Trump over Hillary Clinton, most likely helping him carry states like Florida and Michigan, which allowed him to win the Electoral College despite losing the popular vote. The Trump campaign is putting an intense focus on turning them out to vote next year, with groups like Reed's Faith and Freedom Coalition pledging to raise millions of dollars and deploy tens of thousands of volunteers on his behalf.Many young evangelicals, however, are more socially liberal on issues like same-sex marriage and troubled by Trump administration policies like separating migrant families at the border and denying climate change.Galli appeared to reach out to future generations of evangelicals when he wrote, "If we don't reverse course now, will anyone take anything we say about justice and righteousness with any seriousness for decades to come?"The reaction to the editorial, while perhaps not signaling the beginning of a wave of defections among white evangelicals, could be another sign that the middle is disappearing in American Christianity, just as it is in politics. It was also a reminder that the upcoming presidential election would be a test not only of Trump's political strength, but also of the future of the faith that abetted his rise.Evangelicals who are troubled by the president's conduct said they feared that he had done long-term damage to their cause, and that the lack of pushback had only hurt them more, especially with young people. Peggy Wehmeyer, a journalist based in Dallas who writes often about her faith, said she heard a lot of "Thank God Mark Galli said this," among her friends."The word evangelical has been sullied in a serious way," she added. "I don't like to call myself that anymore."Wehmeyer said what she and other evangelicals found so resonant about the piece was the way it drew out the competing emotions that many of them felt."What has really troubled me from the beginning," she said, "is why can't people say on the one hand, 'We love what he's done on religious liberty, abortion and the economy?' But on the other hand say that 'As Christians whose allegiance is to Jesus Christ, his behavior is despicable'?"What the editorial seemed to say, she added, was "You can support this man's policies, but if the witness of this church is going to survive, you must speak out against sin."Recent events may have helped push tensions to a head. A Republican congressman said on the House floor this week that Jesus had received fairer treatment before his crucifixion than Trump did during his impeachment. Rick Perry, the former Texas governor, said in an interview with Fox News that he had told Trump that he was the "chosen one."Rick Tyler, a strategist who has served as a liaison between Republican politicians and the evangelical community, said that Trump's rise had left the evangelical faith with a leadership vacuum."I don't know who represents the evangelical community anymore," he said. "In the old days, Ralph Reed and Jerry Falwell had a stick to swing. They had real power."Now, he said, "Trump has their power."This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2019 The New York Times Company




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Carnival cruise ships collide in Mexico, injuring 6

Carnival cruise ships collide in Mexico, injuring 6The slow-moving collision was caught on video by many onlookers.




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New Zealanders hand in 50,000 guns after assault weapon ban

New Zealanders hand in 50,000 guns after assault weapon banNew Zealand authorities said Saturday their country will be a safer place after owners handed in more than 50,000 guns during a buyback program following a ban on assault weapons. The government banned the most lethal types of semi-automatic weapons less than a month after a lone gunman in March killed 51 worshippers at two Christchurch mosques. Provisional figures indicate 33,000 people handed in 51,000 guns, and another 5,000 guns as part of a parallel amnesty in which owners could hand over any type of firearm without any questions being asked but without getting compensated.




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175 children abused by Mexican branch of Catholic Church: report

175 children abused by Mexican branch of Catholic Church: reportAt least 175 children were sexually assaulted by priests belonging to an ultra-conservative Mexican branch of the Roman Catholic Church, according to an internal report published Saturday. The founder of the Legionaries of Christ, Marcial Maciel, abused as many as 60 children, with a total of 33 priests or deacons acknowledged to have committed sexual assaults against minors since 1941, the document says. "The vast majority of the victims were adolescent boys between 11 and 16 years old," the statement said, published on ceroabusos.org, which is supported by the Legionaries of Christ.




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Southern Venezuela military facility raided, one soldier dead: officials

Southern Venezuela military facility raided, one soldier dead: officialsAssailants raided a military facility in southern Venezuela early on Sunday morning, stealing weapons and killing one soldier, authorities said. Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino said police and the military had detained some suspects and recovered all the stolen weapons. Venezuela, whose economy has collapsed under socialist President Nicolas Maduro, is in the midst of a deep political crisis.




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Fox News Contributor: Rudy Giuliani Is ‘Transparently Corrupt’

Fox News Contributor: Rudy Giuliani Is ‘Transparently Corrupt’Liberal Fox News contributor Jessica Tarlov didn’t hold back on Sunday when discussing Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, describing the former New York City mayor as “transparently corrupt” in response to his confession that he led the effort to oust for U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch.Earlier this month, in an interview with The New Yorker, Giuliani—who is a key figure at the heart of President Donald Trump’s impeachment—said he saw Yovanovitch as an obstacle to his dirt-digging operation on former Vice President Joe Biden. “I believed that I needed Yovanovitch out of the way,” Giuliani boasted. “She was going to make the investigations difficult for everybody.”During a later appearance on Fox News’ The Ingraham Angle, Giuliani doubled down on his claim. Having just returned from another Ukrainian trip to gather more info on Biden, Giuliani told Fox host Laura Ingraham that he “forced” Yovanovitch out “because she’s corrupt.”On Sunday’s broadcast of Fox News’ MediaBuzz, host Howard Kurtz asked Fox News contributor and loyal Trump defender Mollie Hemingway if Giuliani’s admission shows that the media was right that the Trump attorney was instrumental if forcing Yovanovitch out.“I feel like he said stuff like this before. It definitely matches some of the testimony that we heard about his opposition to this ambassador,” she said. “But really it just gets back to the main issue, does the president have the right to handle foreign policy, to have people in positions as he wants them or not.”Tarlov, meanwhile, noted that Giuliani regularly goes on TV and “confesses to the things he’s been accused of,” prompting Kurtz to assert that this shows Giuliani is just being “transparent.”“He’s transparently corrupt, yes,” Tarlov retorted. “And the president’s personal lawyer has no business doing this.”“It is important that it was a central plank of the Intel Committee hearings where Adam Schiff was overseeing and the conversations we’re having about Marie Yovanovitch about there being a formal foreign policy channel and then a backchannel that Rudy Giuliani was running, which is wholly inappropriate,” she added. “He’s not a government employee, he is a personal fixer for the president.”Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.




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Syrian state media says Israel is firing missiles into Syria

Syrian state media says Israel is firing missiles into SyriaSyrian air defenses opened fire Sunday night on missiles fired from inside Israel, state media reported. Syrian state TV gave no further details but residents of Damascus said explosions could be heard near the capital. State TV said one of the Israeli missiles was shot down near the Damascus suburb of Aqraba.




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Death toll from New Zealand volcano eruption rises to 19

Death toll from New Zealand volcano eruption rises to 19The death toll from a volcanic eruption in New Zealand has risen to 19 after police said Monday another person died at an Auckland hospital overnight. There were 47 people visiting the tourist destination of White Island when the volcano erupted Dec. 9, killing 13 people initially and leaving more than two dozen others hospitalized with severe burns. The latest victim is the sixth person to die in hospitals in New Zealand and Australia in the two weeks since the eruption.




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Iran's Rouhani welcomes Japan opt-out of U.S.-led naval mission in Gulf

Iran's Rouhani welcomes Japan opt-out of U.S.-led naval mission in GulfIranian President Hassan Rouhani on Saturday welcomed Japan's decision not to join a U.S.-led naval mission in the Gulf and said he had discussions on ways of "breaking" U.S. sanctions on a trip to Tokyo. Friction between Tehran and Washington has increased since last year when U.S. President Donald Trump pulled the United States out of Iran's 2015 nuclear deal with six nations and re-imposed sanctions on the country, crippling its economy. Washington proposed the naval mission after several attacks in May and June on international merchant vessels, including Saudi tankers, in Gulf waters which the United States blamed on Iran.




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What If Trump Ordered a Naval Blockade of North Korea?

What If Trump Ordered a Naval Blockade of North Korea?Could this be one way to respond to Kim's supposed 'Christmas gift'?




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Guardian identified for small child found wandering Sunday morning by Fort Myers police

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