samedi 31 octobre 2020

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Yahoo! News - Latest News & Headlines


Terror attacks in France over Mohammad cartoons spark debate on secularism, Islamophobia

Posted: 31 Oct 2020 02:04 PM PDT

Terror attacks in France over Mohammad cartoons spark debate on secularism, IslamophobiaRecent attacks in France, linked to depictions of the Prophet Mohammad, have reignited tensions over the limits of free expression and secularism.


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Thai protest leaders, in hospital, face possible new charges

Posted: 31 Oct 2020 11:03 AM PDT

Thai protest leaders, in hospital, face possible new chargesThree Thai pro-democracy protest leaders -- all in hospital after chaotic scenes that erupted when they were released from prison -- were facing possible new charges late Saturday.


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Illinois judge allows extradition of Kyle Rittenhouse to Wisconsin

Posted: 30 Oct 2020 07:55 PM PDT

Illinois judge allows extradition of Kyle Rittenhouse to WisconsinAn Illinois judge on Friday ordered a 17-year-old accused of killing two demonstrators in Kenosha, Wisconsin, to be extradited across the border to stand trial on homicide charges, saying it wasn't his role to vet a case brought by Wisconsin protestors and approved by a Wisconsin judge.


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vendredi 30 octobre 2020

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COVID-19 means US Air Force bombers flying around the world are operating in a 'degraded' environment

Posted: 30 Oct 2020 01:58 PM PDT

COVID-19 means US Air Force bombers flying around the world are operating in a 'degraded' environmentThe ongoing pandemic "means that we can't always stick to the same timelines, the same procedures," Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Middents told Insider.


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Hurricane Zeta Knocks Out the South, Causing Pre-Election Panic

Posted: 30 Oct 2020 11:00 AM PDT

Hurricane Zeta Knocks Out the South, Causing Pre-Election PanicAt least six people have died and at least 2 million are without power after Hurricane Zeta barraged the South on Thursday evening, knocking out some early voting sites and sending state officials scrambling to pick up the pieces in time for Election Day.Zeta moved quickly after making landfall on the Louisiana coast as a Category 2 storm on Wednesday afternoon. It hit at least seven states, some of which were still recovering from earlier storms, and weakened to a post-tropical cyclone with "strong, damaging wind gusts" upwards of 50 mph by the following afternoon, according to the National Hurricane Center. It left behind knocked down trees, flooded streets, and power outages.By Thursday evening, officials stated Zeta moved out over the western Atlantic ocean, marking the end of the 27th storm during this year's hurricane season set to end in one month."Damage was extensive in some places. New Orleans sustained a direct hit from Zeta," New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell tweeted Friday morning. "Now it takes Teamwork."> Remember covid is still here as we CleanUpNOLA • Damage was extensive in some places. NewOrleans sustained a direct hit from ZETA • Now it takes Teamwork ↔️??????Repost mtathleticacademy • Our team don't play! ???????????????????????????????????? Hurricane clean up party! MotivationTeam pic.twitter.com/WcgaEcdMtY> > — Mayor LaToya Cantrell (@mayorcantrell) October 30, 2020Among the six killed were three people in Georgia who died after trees fell on their homes. A similar tragedy happened to one person in Alabama, while a man in Mississippi drowned in a Marina after videotaping the storm. In New Orleans, a 55-year-old was electrocuted by low-power lines.Cantrell begged people to leave it up to public safety officials to manage the damage. "We do not want to lose another life. It is unnecessary," she said.State officials across the South were scrambling to assess the damage and restore power to more than 2 million homes and voting sites before Election Day.As of Friday morning, about 326,531 customers in Louisiana were still without electricity, according to Entergy Louisiana. In New Orleans, which was hit directly by the storm's eye and 110 mph winds, officials estimated that 80 percent of residents were without power and might not see relief for at least three days."That eyewall came through here last night. It came in bright as day," Paul Noble, a retired East Baton Rouge Parish sheriff's deputy, told The Advocate. "It was rocking. It was sliding stuff off the stove."Another resident told the outlet that during Hurricane Katrina, a benchmark for storms in the area, utility poles "laid down" amidst the massive flooding. "Here, they snapped," Travis Latapie, a local shrimper, said.> Trailer pieces just blew across hwy 23 in Plaquemines Parish. pic.twitter.com/44D7n4RScq> > — Adam Ney (@sayneykid) October 28, 2020And the outage numbers surged in other impacted states—more than 500,00 people in Georgia, 400,000 in Alabama, 360,000 across the Carolinas, 55,000 in Virginia, and about 180,000 in Mississippi were still without power Friday.But despite the mass outrages, state officials are still determined to have the lights on for Election Day. During a press briefing Thursday night, Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards stressed that local voting officials and electricity companies are working diligently to determine if power will be restored to precincts by Tuesday—and are creating alternative sites in case."If you haven't voted early and you were planning on voting on Election Day we need you paying attention and we'll get you that information as soon as we can," Edwards said Thursday night.> One last bit about Mailman John—one of the first things he and his supervisor did after this happened was secure and protect the mail in his truck. Because there were ballots inside, and democracy is really, really important. Thanks, John. Thanks, @USPS https://t.co/gdFA7KxZZU pic.twitter.com/vhO2vRsuAS> > — James D. Hogan (@jamesdhogan) October 29, 2020In Georgia, several advanced voting locations were knocked offline on Thursday, calling into question how the final two days of early voting will pan out for the red state. According to The New York Times, 15 counties opened polling sites late because of the storm, while others relied on generators.In Douglas County, all six early voting locations lost power, while four in Cobb County were closed—creating wait times of upwards of 90 minutes on Thursday. As of Wednesday, more than 2.3 million Georgians had voted in-person and more than 1.1 million absentee ballots had been returned, officials said."The Elections and Voter Registration Department of Douglas County is feverishly working to reopen them," Douglas County county spokesman Rick Martin said Thursday, stressing that officials had to ensure election workers could safely reach reopened sites.Politico also reported that officials in three countries in Florida's Panhandle limited early voting hours this week in anticipation of the storm. Those counties—Escambia, Okaloosa, and Santa Rosa—are Republican strongholds."It's an abundance of caution for us," Okaloosa Supervisor of Elections Paul Lux told Politico. "Hurricane Sally just in September weakened a bunch of trees and power lines, so we need to be careful, but I do think we will get back up and running quickly."But despite the setbacks, locals are also determined to ensure a successful Election Day. In Statesville, a small North Carolina town about an hour outside of Charlotte, one mail carrier barely escaped injury after a tree smashed his truck."One last bit about Mailman John—one of the first things he and his supervisor did after this happened was secure and protect the mail in his truck. Because there were ballots inside, and democracy is really, really important," resident James Hogan said in a Twitter post, adding that the mailman was leaning out of his truck delivering mail when the tree fell.Earlier this week, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey declared a state of emergency and upwards of 3,300 evacuees in Louisiana were put in hotels and shelters.The storm has also posed a problem for emergency responders trying to reach Grand Isle, a remote barrier island whose levees were breached by Zeta in three places. It's believed to be one of the hardest hit areas of the storm.A spokesperson for Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards told The Daily Beast the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority is now on the island of 1,400 residents to assess the damage along with the Army Corps of Engineers. Some were forced to helicopter in.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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Who is leading key Senate races less than a week from election? Here’s what polls show

Posted: 29 Oct 2020 05:04 PM PDT

Who is leading key Senate races less than a week from election? Here's what polls showWith five days to go, here's how candidates stack up in key U.S. Senate races.


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jeudi 29 octobre 2020

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Yahoo! News - Latest News & Headlines


Lev Parnas associate David Correia pleads guilty to fraud and lying

Posted: 29 Oct 2020 11:07 AM PDT

Lev Parnas associate David Correia pleads guilty to fraud and lyingCorreia and Parnas faced charges of campaign finance fraud and of duping investors in a company called "Fraud Guarantee" out of more than $2 million.


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Suspected Islamists kill 18, torch church in east Congo

Posted: 29 Oct 2020 05:08 AM PDT

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mercredi 28 octobre 2020

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Yahoo! News - Latest News & Headlines


Mother’s body decayed for years in home she shared with her adult children, TN cops say

Posted: 28 Oct 2020 02:15 PM PDT

Mother's body decayed for years in home she shared with her adult children, TN cops sayPolice found her skeleton buried under a pile of clothes on a bed


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'A big concern': After we couldn't find students or faculty at college, agency scrambled to crack down

Posted: 28 Oct 2020 08:21 AM PDT

'A big concern': After we couldn't find students or faculty at college, agency scrambled to crack downAfter USA TODAY investigation, the watchdog agency sent a visitor to the college. No one was there. Everyone had gotten sick, the college's dean said.


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Philadelphia rocked by fresh unrest after police shooting

Posted: 28 Oct 2020 02:25 AM PDT

Philadelphia rocked by fresh unrest after police shootingPolice reinforcements are deployed with the National Guard during a second night of protests.


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mardi 27 octobre 2020

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Disney World extends hours around the holidays after earlier cutback

Posted: 27 Oct 2020 11:29 AM PDT

Disney World extends hours around the holidays after earlier cutbackIn September, Disney World scaled back hours amid the coronavirus pandemic. Now it's extending its hours for Halloween weekend and beyond.


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Viral photo sparks concerns about Indonesia's 'Jurassic Park'

Posted: 27 Oct 2020 05:27 AM PDT

Viral photo sparks concerns about Indonesia's 'Jurassic Park'The viral image has raised questions about the conservation impact on the animal native to Indonesia.


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'Rescued from this evil': 179 arrested, 45 missing children recovered in Ohio's 'Operation Autumn Hope'

Posted: 26 Oct 2020 11:27 PM PDT

'Rescued from this evil': 179 arrested, 45 missing children recovered in Ohio's 'Operation Autumn Hope'An operation involving more than 50 law enforcement offices and other agencies led to 179 arrests and the recovery of 45 missing children in Ohio.


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lundi 26 octobre 2020

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As Trump says news about COVID should be illegal, WH chief of staff says goal is to 'defeat' virus, not 'control' it

Posted: 26 Oct 2020 08:35 AM PDT

As Trump says news about COVID should be illegal, WH chief of staff says goal is to 'defeat' virus, not 'control' itWhile President Trump's chief of staff on Monday attempted to clarify the assertion that the United States is "not going to control" the coronavirus crisis, the president himself complained that the media is too focused on the pandemic.


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Attack Drones Dominating Tanks as Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict Showcases the Future of War

Posted: 26 Oct 2020 02:37 AM PDT

Attack Drones Dominating Tanks as Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict Showcases the Future of WarSTEPANAKERT, Nagorno-Karabakh—Stretched on a gurney, a soldier lies wrapped in gauze. Fifty percent of his body is burned, even inside his throat and lungs, says one of the paramedics in the back of the ambulance, which is making a seven-hour drive from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia's capital Yerevan. War broke out almost one month ago between Azerbaijan and Armenia over a disputed border territory. The ambulance snuck out of Stepanakert in between air raid sirens, as Azerbaijani shelling of the city picked up again after a six-day break. Only the soldier's burned lips, a small part of the nose and his burnt eyelashes are showing. His hopes of survival are tied to a beeping respirator and the two paramedics constantly injecting him with morphine and saline solutions.Reporters have been kept away from soldiers and the direct impact of the war in recent days, but plans scrambled by the reinvigorated shelling of Stepanakert lead to The Daily Beast suddenly finding ourselves in the back of this ambulance, being given an accidental glimpse at the human consequences of the war.Kamikaze drones purchased from Israel have been used to devastating effect by Azerbaijan. These small craft also known as loitering munitions are able to surveil targets including tanks, artillery installations or troops before blowing themselves up. Larger Turkish drones are also flying high above the disputed region and launching missile strikes.While the soldier in the ambulance has been unable to tell medics how he was so badly wounded, his head injuries and extensive burns are consistent with what they have seen with drone strikes, one doctor at the hospital in Stepanakert told The Daily Beast."He was damaged on the front line," says one of the paramedics in the ambulance, "We see many of these injuries. We need help here. We need to stop the war. It is terrible what is happening."Before leaving the war zone and entering the relative safety of Armenia, there is a problem with the respirator. A female paramedic starts pumping air into the wounded soldiers' lungs manually. As they are about to lose the soldier, the ambulance comes to a full stop, while the driver is trying to get the motorized system running again. Shelling can be heard in the distance.The mountains cause the sound to echo, making it hard to tell whether the shelling is close or far, but that does not hide the discomfort of the crew forced to pull over in the midst of another bombing. A Bloody War In the MakingThe war in Nagorno-Karabakh, which was almost entirely controlled by the self-proclaimed Republic of Artsakh, broke out on Sept. 27. Artsakh is a small mountainous pocket in the Caucasus which is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan but has been claiming independence for almost 30 years. The population is almost entirely ethnic Armenian and the breakaway state is supported by Armenia. The republic declared independence after the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which lasted from the late 1980s to 1994, claiming 30,000 lives.Since then, the dispute over the region has continued. The two sides fought a four-day war in 2016, but the current battles are the worst fighting the region has seen since the devastating war in the '90s. Armenia says it has lost around 900 servicemen, while Azerbaijan does not declare its death toll. However, according to Russian President Vladimir Putin, nearly 5,000 people have already died, and there are several reports about the huge loss of military hardware such as tanks on both sides despite two ceasefires negotiated in Moscow with Russia as the main mediator.The ceasefires have already been broken and the crisis is of global significance. Nagorno-Karabakh is located next to regional superpowers such as Turkey, which support Azerbaijan militarily and politically in the conflict. At the same time, Russia has a defensive pact with Armenia, making the situation tense. The Republic of Artsakh is also located next to Iran, a major player in the region."We must be attentive that the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan does not become a regional war," Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said, according to BBC.The war is also attracting increased attention in Washington, D.C. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had leaders from both Azerbaijan and Armenia over for seemingly fruitless talks, while Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA), among others, has called for an immediate ceasefire."Azerbaijan's aggressive actions, fully supported by Turkey in Nagorno-Karabakh and against Armenia, must stop," said Markey. "Since Azerbaijan continues its attempts to resolve this conflict through the illegal use of military force, the international community will be left with no choice but to move to recognize the independence of the Republic of Artsakh." He Is About to DieBack in the ambulance, the soldier is fighting for his life. Occasionally he seems to regain consciousness for just long enough to gasp with pain. Before the ambulance took off towards the Armenian capital Yerevan, the stream of ambulances carrying wounded soldiers with empty stares and missing limbs from Stepanakert had been temporarily forced to stop. The air raid sirens started screaming over Stepanakert for the first time in several days, as Azerbaijani forces struck the city with what was reportedly both airplanes and artillery. Doctors, nurses and patients ran to the basement in one of the city's hospitals while explosions were heard nearby, shaking the bunker.One doctor in the bunker, who did not want to give his name due to restrictions on speaking to the media, told The Daily Beast that around 1,000 soldiers and 300 to 400 civilians had been declared dead at three hospitals in Artsakh, to his knowledge. These numbers point to far more casualties than the 900 officially reported by the Ministry of Defense in Artsakh, especially as some soldiers' bodies are never retrieved from the front line."We see many soldiers with burn and head injuries," says the doctor pointing to a room in the bunker where a soldier with severe brain injury is undergoing surgery. "The Turkish drones used by Azerbaijan are often giving the soldiers brain damage."He is referring to the Azerbaijani use of Turkish-made Bayraktar TB2 drones, which are penetrating the Artsakh defenses, despite assistance from Armenia. "We Cannot Shoot it Down"Open source analysis gathered by Forbes magazine has tracked the destruction by drones of around 200 tanks, infantry fighting vehicles, and armored personnel carriers, plus 300 soft-skinned military vehicles as well as radars, short-range air defense systems, and missile launch vehicles.The Armenians have no such drone army with which to strike back at Azerbaijaini targets.In an interview with The Daily Beast, Suren Sarumyan, a spokesman for the Artsakh Defense Ministry, claimed that the Republic of Artsakh has been able to shoot down several drones but he accepted that the unmanned aerial assault vehicles were taking a toll."Drones do make an impact on the front line, but our soldiers are among the strongest in the world because they stand firm and fight hard," said Sarumyan, "The secret to that is that our soldiers defend their home, and it is very difficult to defeat them, even with all the world's drones."While the military claims they can shoot down drones such as the Bayraktar TB2, Vladimir Vartanyan, a military analyst who is part of the press department of the Republic of Artsakh, disagrees."We can see them on our radar, but [the Turkish drones] fly too high for us to shoot them down," he said. He explained that much of the Artsakh defenses are remnants from 1991 to 1994 and badly in need of an upgrade "We use everything that we have now because this is total war," he said. "In my opinion, we need to buy some Russian systems, which have experience in shooting down these drones in Syria."With Azerbaijan reported to be making large territorial gains in the southern part of Nagorno-Karabakh, Vartanyan said: "It is essential that we start to shoot them down very quickly."Azerbaijan has previously confirmed that it is using Turkish drones in the war, according to Middle East Eye.Ian Williams, an expert in missile defense and missile proliferation at the International Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told The Daily Beast that what we see right now in Nagorno-Karabakh is the evolution of warfare."We have for a long time declared tanks to be dead without it happening. However, the Armenian tanks have not done well in the current crisis," said Williams. "Drones are relatively cheap for countries that would not normally be able to afford air support. The current crisis shows us what kind of damage they can do to an opponent without drones." He Might Not Make itA paramedic holds the soldier's head as the ambulance makes its way up and down through the mountains. The respirator is working again, and the sound of it pumping air into the soldier's lungs resumes. On the way to Yerevan, one of the paramedics gets the news that a friend has died near the front line. An atmosphere of grief descends on the ambulance as reports continue to come in of air attacks in several cities in the Republic of Artsakh.As Yerevan approaches, the soldier starts to move his arms involuntarily while his chest spasms. The situation is eased by another morphine shot, but the paramedic shakes his head when asked whether the soldier will be safe once he reaches the hospital in Armenia's capital."The injuries might just be too much," he says.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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South Korea pharma Celltrion's COVID test gets U.S. emergency use authorisation

Posted: 25 Oct 2020 08:36 PM PDT

South Korea pharma Celltrion's COVID test gets U.S. emergency use authorisationSouth Korea's Celltrion Inc <068270.KS> said on Monday it has received emergency use authorisation (EUA) from the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) for its rapid COVID-19 testing kit Sampinute, which boosted shares of the company and its affiliates. Celltrion said Sampinute delivers coronavirus test results within 10 minutes, with a sensitivity of around 94%. The authorisation came three months after requesting approval in late July and the product has already been launched in the United States in August, according to the company statement.


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dimanche 25 octobre 2020

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Kamala Harris brings energy to Biden's restrained campaign

Posted: 25 Oct 2020 05:37 AM PDT

Kamala Harris brings energy to Biden's restrained campaignAs she speaks to cheering crowds, drops in to neighborhood coffee shops or pays "surprise" visits to college students, 56-year-old Kamala Harris has brought a jolt of youthful energy to the low-key presidential campaign of her 77-year-old running mate, Democrat Joe Biden.


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Samsung Electronics chairman Lee Kun-hee dies at 78

Posted: 24 Oct 2020 11:39 PM PDT

Samsung Electronics chairman Lee Kun-hee dies at 78Samsung Electronics chairman Lee Kun-hee, who transformed the South Korean firm into a global tech titan, died at the age of 78 on Sunday, the company said.


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Looters raid Nigeria food warehouse as unrest spreads

Posted: 24 Oct 2020 05:42 PM PDT

Looters raid Nigeria food warehouse as unrest spreadsSeveral thousand people ransacked and looted a government food warehouse in central Nigeria on Saturday in the latest in two weeks of unrest sweeping over Africa's most populous country.


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samedi 24 octobre 2020

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Yahoo! News - Latest News & Headlines


Minneapolis Residents Sue City Over Alleged Police Department Rollbacks

Posted: 24 Oct 2020 02:46 AM PDT

Minneapolis Residents Sue City Over Alleged Police Department RollbacksThe lawsuit counters the widespread calls to defund police departments and take officers off the streets


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Mexico will not follow FDA in approving Gilead's COVID-19 drug

Posted: 23 Oct 2020 08:49 PM PDT

Mexico will not follow FDA in approving Gilead's COVID-19 drugMexico will not necessarily follow the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in approving Gilead Science Inc's antiviral drug remdesivir for use in COVID-19 patients, a top Mexican health official said on Friday. Mexico's health regulator Cofepris has already twice denied approval for the drug with a "non-favorable" opinion, deputy health minister Hugo Lopez-Gatell told his regular nightly news conference.


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‘Shy’ Trump voters will power his win, says pollster who called 2016 race

Posted: 23 Oct 2020 02:52 PM PDT

'Shy' Trump voters will power his win, says pollster who called 2016 raceThanks to the hidden support from voters who are embarrassed to admit they will vote for Donald Trump, the president will be narrowly reelected on Nov. 3, says one of the few pollsters who correctly predicted his 2016 victory.


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vendredi 23 octobre 2020

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Student’s ‘Homosexuality is a sin’ shirt didn’t violate dress code, Tennessee suit says

Posted: 22 Oct 2020 11:55 PM PDT

Student's 'Homosexuality is a sin' shirt didn't violate dress code, Tennessee suit saysThe 15-year-old student said she was told to change after wearing a shirt that said "Homosexuality is a sin" to a classroom where "a pro-homosexual symbol" was on display, according to court filings.


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University of Utah admits error in Lauren McCluskey’s death and agrees to pay $13.5m settlement

Posted: 22 Oct 2020 05:57 PM PDT

University of Utah admits error in Lauren McCluskey's death and agrees to pay $13.5m settlementLauren McCluskey had reported harassment to police more than 20 times


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jeudi 22 octobre 2020

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China and Germany heading for superpower status as U.S. influence wanes, says Putin

Posted: 22 Oct 2020 12:02 PM PDT

China and Germany heading for superpower status as U.S. influence wanes, says PutinThe era when the United States and Russia decided the world's most important questions is in the past, President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday, saying China and Germany were now heading for superpower status. Addressing a meeting of the Valdai Discussion Club, Putin suggested that the role of the United States had waned, along with that of Britain and France, while Beijing and Berlin - in terms of political and economic weight -- were heading for superpower status. If Washington was not prepared to discuss global problems with Moscow, Russia stood ready to have that discussion with other nations, said Putin, who was speaking via video link.


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New Columbia Study Blames the White House for at Least 130,000 ‘Avoidable’ COVID Deaths

Posted: 21 Oct 2020 09:03 PM PDT

New Columbia Study Blames the White House for at Least 130,000 'Avoidable' COVID DeathsA new report from Columbia University on COVID-19 deaths estimates that hundreds of thousands of Americans died because the United States' response to the pandemic was an "abject failure," particularly the actions of President Donald Trump. With an adequate response, the United States could have avoided tens of thousands of deaths and an incalculable amount of suffering, the researchers said.Dr. Irwin Redlener, the lead author on the study and the founding director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness, laid the blame at the feet of the White House in an interview with The Daily Beast: "We believe that this was a monumental, lethal screwup by an administration that didn't want to deal with reality."In the report, titled "130,000–210,000 Avoidable COVID-19 Deaths—and Counting—in the U.S.", researchers at Columbia's NCDP studied "the staggering and disproportionate nature of COVID-19 fatalities in the United States."The researchers compared the coronavirus response of the U.S. to that of six other countries— South Korea, Japan, Australia, Germany, Canada, and France—and found that the American government's response to the pandemic rated unfavorably against them all. The U.S. has suffered a COVID-19 fatality rate more than double that of Canada and 50 times that of Japan. Extrapolating from the deaths per 100,000 people in each country, the researchers estimated how the U.S. might have fared had it followed the example of a more robust response. The answer: always better than it did in reality."If the U.S. had followed Canadian policies and protocols, there might have only been 85,192 U.S. deaths—making more than 132,500 American deaths 'avoidable.' If the U.S. response had mirrored that of Germany, the U.S. may have only had 38,457 deaths—leaving 179,260 avoidable deaths," the researchers wrote.The researchers chose the half dozen countries that have achieved some level of success in responding to the pandemic."We should model ourselves on the best. We should be the best," Redlener said. "We have the resources, the economy, the scientific expertise to do this the right way. We're facing a lethal pandemic, and we had very misguided leadership that chose to berate the purveyors of masks and social distancing. The president himself became a superspreader. He has blood on his hands."Researchers cite several well-known but catastrophic factors that plagued the U.S. response: insufficient testing, delayed lockdowns, a lack of a unified federal response, and a failure to mandate non-medical interventions like masks and social distancing. American leaders, the researchers wrote, have shown a "failure to model best practices," especially wearing masks during public appearances. Though research publications rarely venture into politics, both Scientific American and the New England Journal of Medicine have published editorials excoriating the Trump administration for its handling of the pandemic in the past month."There continues to be confusion, mismanagement, and dishonesty, and we're reaping the consequences of misconduct in office. Usually academic publications are not so overtly political, but this incredibly anti-science administration has caused an enormous tragedy in America. The fact that these deaths could have been avoided is a stunning realization," Redlener said.More than 220,000 people in the United States have died of the coronavirus this year, and over 8.3 million have tested positive, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. Public health experts estimate that millions more have contracted the virus but not received an official diagnosis because of a lack of adequate testing. The actual death toll from the virus also may be much higher than recorded.Public health officials across the country are warning that the upcoming winter may be an especially brutal period as coronavirus infections rise to a third peak and flu season arrives. Adding to that gloomy forecast, the Columbia researchers wrote that the federal government's "continued mismanagement" of the pandemic shows few indications of improvement: "The abject failures of U.S. government policies and crisis messaging persist."The end, according to Redlener, is nowhere in sight."Americans have a bad case of pandemic fatigue. We want to get back to some semblance of normalcy, but we never did what we had to do to achieve that state," he said. "We've delayed the return of normalcy and fallen into this web of dishonesty and opposing science that was concocted by 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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U.S. likely to have enough COVID-19 vaccines for all vulnerable Americans by year end - official

Posted: 21 Oct 2020 03:05 PM PDT

U.S. likely to have enough COVID-19 vaccines for all vulnerable Americans by year end - officialThe U.S. government is "cautiously optimistic" that one or two vaccines, likely from Pfizer Inc or Moderna Inc, will be available by the end of the year and can begin to be distributed to Americans, officials said during a news conference. Azar said he expects all seniors, healthcare workers, and first responders will be able to receive a vaccine as soon as January, with the rest of the American public able to get a vaccine by April.


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