Feed us-news-the-guardian US news | The Guardian

Favorite IconUS news | The Guardian

Link https://www.theguardian.com/us-news
Feed http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/rss
Copyright Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. 2024
Updated 2024-11-27 19:00
Marjorie Taylor Greene floats Senate run but hopes to be Trump’s vice-president
Republican extremist says I haven't made up my mind' on running for Georgia seat because Is it possible that I'll be VP?'The rightwing extremist Republican congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene has not made up her mind about running for Senate in Georgia - in part because she hopes to be Donald Trump's vice-president.I haven't made up my mind whether I will do that or not," Greene told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, about a rumoured challenge to the current governor, Brian Kemp, in a Georgia Senate primary in 2026. Continue reading...
Trump and 18 co-defendants to be booked in Georgia jail
Ex-president and co-defendants, including Giuliani, can turn themselves in at any time', sheriff's office saysDonald Trump and the 18 co-defendants charged with racketeering and crimes for conspiring to subvert the 2020 presidential election in a criminal enterprise" are set to be booked at a jail in Fulton county, Georgia, the local sheriff's office said on Tuesday.The grand jury has issued arrest warrants for all 19 defendants, said Fani Willis, the district attorney, during a news conference after she delivered a sweeping 41-count indictment late Monday night. Defendants have until 25 August to surrender voluntarily, after which they can expect to be arrested. Continue reading...
Why is Trump desperate to move the Georgia trial to federal court?
Ex-president faces years of prison if convicted in Fulton county, but if case is moved to federal court it might result in dismissal of chargesAfter news broke on Monday night of Donald Trump's indictment in Fulton county, Georgia, attention quickly turned to the possible spectacle of a trial unfolding on television as a former president attempts to rebut charges of racketeering and conspiracy over his efforts to overturn the results of an election.But before the district attorney Fani Willis can have the opportunity to make her case against Trump with the cameras rolling, she must first clear a key procedural hurdle to keep the case in Fulton county. Trump's legal team is expected to rely on a little known legal statute to argue the case should be moved to federal court, and that jurisdictional question could delay a trial for months. The stakes of that procedural fight will be high, as a conviction in Fulton county would leave Trump facing years of prison time with no clear pathway to a pardon. Continue reading...
Revealed: WHO aspartame safety panel linked to alleged Coca-Cola front group
Guideline on Diet Coke ingredient by consultants tied to industry is obvious conflict of interest' and not credible', report saysIn May, the World Health Organization issued an alarming report that declared widely used non-sugar sweeteners like aspartame are likely ineffective for weight loss, and long term consumption may increase the risk of diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and mortality in adults.A few months later, WHO declared aspartame, a key ingredient in Diet Coke, to be a possible carcinogen", then quickly issued a third report that seemed to contradict its previous findings - people could continue consuming the product at levels determined to be safe decades ago, before new science cited by WHO raised health concerns. Continue reading...
US mother accuses GE and Bayer of causing son’s cancer
Crystal Czerno says GE knowingly contaminated nine-year-old son's school playground with PCB waste while downplaying harmA Massachusetts mother has filed a lawsuit blaming widespread PCB pollution by General Electric (GE), Monsanto and its German owner Bayer, and several other companies for causing her nine-year-old son to develop leukemia and suffer repeated debilitating medical treatments.Crystal Czerno alleges, among other things, that GE knowingly contaminated her son Carter's elementary school playground with PCB waste while downplaying the harm it could cause. The school is located in the town of Pittsfield, just north of a GE facility that made electrical transformers containing PCBs for more than 40 years. PCB-laden soil from the GE site was spread over the school grounds. Continue reading...
San Diego ramps up arrests of unhoused people: ‘Harder to survive’
Amid a spiraling homelessness crisis, a new law went into effect to ticket those sleeping outside. But there are few beds and cases go nowhereMorning, it's police! Collect all your stuff!"At 7.30am on a recent Friday, two policemen shouted commands into tents along a downtown sidewalk in downtown San Diego. One barefoot man startled awake and remarked that someone had stolen his shoes. Next to him, Moses Miramontes, 47, was frantically tying up his tent and belongings. Continue reading...
Maui wildfires expose rift over island’s tourism: ‘We’re more vulnerable than anyone admits’
The industry generates 80% of Maui county's economic activity - but it risks devastating the island's natural resourcesThe fire that leveled the Hawaii town of Lahaina didn't discriminate. It seared through vacation rentals and historic landmarks alike, scorched a 150-year-old banyan tree and touristic Tiki bars, reducing nearly everything to gray rubble.And the destruction has laid bare seething tensions about the dominance of tourism on the island. Continue reading...
Sunscreen socialism: AOC divides the left with call for better skincare options
Ocasio-Cortez's video with a brand CEO angered some who saw it as consumerist, while others backed her on health groundsThe burning debate on the American left this week: is sunscreen socialist?It was sparked last Thursday when Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez spoke out about the poor quality of sun creams in the US compared to elsewhere. I was in South Korea earlier this year and it is so clear how far advanced the rest of the world is on sunscreen, and we deserve better in the US," the congresswoman said in a social media video filmed with Charlotte Palermino, a skincare brand CEO. Continue reading...
Up at 4.45am, head home at 11pm: life as an NBA player trying to break through
Jason Preston could barely get a game in high school, and now he is a member of the LA Clippers. Staying there requires incredible amounts of hard workIt's the peak of the summer. But Jason Preston, the young point guard for the Los Angeles Clippers, wakes up at 4.45am. At a time when other 24-year-olds are sleeping in - or still out on the town - Preston is stretching. Then he has some breakfast - nothing decadent - a meal to carry him through his upcoming morning workout. It doesn't end there, though. Preston has a full day ahead, then it's early to bed all over again. Such is the life of a young player trying to make an impact in the NBA.I don't even necessarily look at it like I have to get up so early," Preston tells the Guardian. It's a good feeling. As if I'm a step ahead of everybody. I like waking up and it still being dark outside." Continue reading...
If there is a lesson from the NI police data breach it is not to forget the cruelty of the Troubles | Martin Kettle
The leak could undermine security in Northern Ireland - restoring power sharing is a political necessity at this momentHalf of the people who live in these islands have no adult memory at all of the Northern Ireland troubles. Too many of those who can remember them have allowed the bombings, shootings, riots and violence to slip from their minds in the 25 years that have passed since a peace treaty was signed in 1998. But last week's data leak by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) ought to be a wake-up call for the forgetful, and a lightbulb moment for the unaware.Nine days ago, in response to a freedom of information request whose provenance remains unclear, someone in the PSNI mistakenly put the names, initials, ranks, place of work and departments of all of its 10,000 officers and staff online for about three hours before they were removed. Especially in a profession where police and their families were, and sometimes still are, regular targets, it was a spectacular security breach, even in these more peaceful times.Martin Kettle is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...
US promises ‘new era’ as Biden prepares to host first summit with Japan and South Korea
US president aiming to take advantage of recent thaw in ties under president Yoon Suk Yeol and prime minister Fumio KishidaThe US has promised to usher in a new era" in relations with its most important allies in Asia, as the region struggles to address the threat posed by an increasingly assertive China and a nuclear-armed North Korea.Joe Biden is expected to take advantage of a recent thaw in ties between Japan and South Korea - home to tens of thousands of US troops - to announce new collaborations on missile defence and technology, when he meets the countries' leaders on Friday. Continue reading...
Mar-a-Lago worker’s lawyer has conflicts of interest in documents case, prosecutors say
Attorney for Carlos De Oliveira also represents witnesses who could testify against him, according to special counsel's officeSpecial counsel prosecutors asked on Wednesday for a hearing to inform the Mar-a-Lago club's maintenance chief, charged with helping Donald Trump to obstruct the government's attempt to retrieve the classified documents at the property, that his lawyer might be hamstrung at trial due to potential conflicts of interest.The issue, according to prosecutors, is that De Oliveira's lawyer, John Irving, represents three other witnesses who provided incriminating evidence against Carlos De Oliveira and could be called to testify against him at trial. Continue reading...
Teens much more likely to believe online conspiracy claims than adults – US study
Study shows that 60% of teens between ages 13-17 agreed with four or more conspiracy statements compared with 49% of adultsTeenagers are significantly more likely to believe online conspiracy theories than older generations, a new study has shown, underscoring the broad impacts of gen Z's relationship with social media.Findings from Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), a non-profit that fights misinformation, showed that 60% of 13-17-year-old Americans surveyed agreed with four or more harmful conspiracy statements - compared with just 49% of adults. For teens who spend four or more hours a day on any single social media platform, the figure was as high as 69%. Continue reading...
Joe and Jill Biden to visit fire-ravaged Hawaii as death toll hits 110
President has faced criticism for not speaking about wildfire disaster earlier and using the wrong name when referring to MauiJoe and Jill Biden will travel to Hawaii next week to witness the impact of wildfires that devastated the town of Lahaina, the White House said on Wednesday, as the death toll from disaster rose to 110.Announcing the visit, which will take place on Monday, the White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, said: In Maui, the president and first lady will be welcomed by state and local leaders to see first-hand the impacts of the wildfires and the devastating loss of life and land that has occurred on the island, as well as discuss the next steps in the recovery effort. Continue reading...
Kansas newspaper raided by police to have seized items returned
Police raid on office of Marion County Record drew widespread condemnation by press freedom advocatesAuthorities have announced the controversial search warrant of a local Kansas newspaper office has been withdrawn.The Marion county attorney Joel Ensey announced that following a review of the search warrants made last Friday at multiple locations in Marion county, he has come to the conclusion that insufficient evidence exists to establish a legally sufficient nexus between this alleged crime and the places searched and the items seized". Continue reading...
Vlatko Andonovski resigns as USWNT coach after early World Cup exit
Trump prosecutor Fani Willis faces racist abuse after indicting ex-US president
Georgia prosecutor subjected to flurry of threats after Trump makes thinly veiled reference to N-word after latest chargesFani Willis, the Fulton county district attorney in Georgia who is prosecuting Donald Trump and 18 other allies over efforts to overturn the 2020 election, is facing a flurry of racist online abuse after the former president attacked his opponents using the word riggers", a thinly veiled play on the N-word.Hours after Willis had released the indictments on Monday night, Trump went on his social media platform Truth Social calling for all charges to be dropped and predicting he would exonerated. He did not mention Willis by name, but accused prosecutors of pursuing the wrong criminal targets. Continue reading...
US appeals court upholds restrictions on abortion pill access
Ruling prevents mifepristone being prescribed by non-doctors or shipped by mail but does not order drug off marketA US appeals court ruled on Wednesday to limit access to the abortion pill mifepristone, returning to regulations that were in place in several years ago, but will not be taking the medication off the market.The US court of appeals for the fifth circuit decided that the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) previous regulations for mifepristone were unlawful, Reuters reported. The FDA had ruled that the abortion pill could be taken at a later stage in pregnancy (70 days into pregnancy versus 49 days), shipped via mail, and could be prescribed from medical professionals who are not doctors. Continue reading...
Biden says landmark climate bill is winning against special interests – as it happened
This blog is now closed. You can read our latest report on the climate crisis here and find out key things to know about the climate bill hereThe US is the world's second largest emitter of greenhouse gases and the Inflation Reduction Act is widely forecast to slash these emissions, by as much as 48% by 2035, from 2005 levels, according to one analysis.These forecasts have a relatively wide range of estimates due to uncertainties such as economic growth but even in the most optimistic scenario the US will require further measures if it is to get to net zero emissions by 2050, as scientists have said is imperative if the world is to avoid catastrophic climate impacts. Continue reading...
Democrat calls McCarthy ‘pathetic and shameful’ for protecting Santos after aide charged
Daniel Goldman says fabulist congressman paid someone to impersonate Republican House speaker's chief of staffA senior Democrat called Kevin McCarthy pathetic and shameful" on Wednesday, for continuing to protect George Santos even as a staffer to the fabulist Republican congressman faced charges for impersonating the House speaker's own chief of staff.Daniel Goldman of New York said: According to a federal indictment, George Santos paid someone to impersonate Kevin McCarthy's chief of staff to raise money, yet McCarthy continues to protect Santos. Continue reading...
Trump is undermining the entire US judicial system with another big lie | Robert Reich
Trump's second big lie is almost as dangerous to the future of American democracy as was his firstNot content with trying to destroy America's trust in the US election system with his big lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him, Donald Trump is now trying to destroy America's trust in the US judicial system with another big lie.The second big lie is that judges, prosecutors, witnesses and juries are corruptly prosecuting Trump as a means of keeping him from being re-elected.Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author of Saving Capitalism: For the Many, Not the Few and The Common Good. His new book, The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It, is out now. He is a Guardian US columnist. His newsletter is at robertreich.substack.com Continue reading...
Venus Williams, Caroline Wozniacki are given wild cards into the US Open
US senator warns top Saudi over refusal to testify on PGA golf deal
Richard Blumenthal to consider other legal methods' to compel Yasir al-Rumayyan to speak to Senate oversight committeeA senior US lawmaker has challenged a Saudi Arabian official's refusal to voluntarily testify before a Senate committee investigating the kingdom's controversial golf deal with the PGA Tour, saying officials should be prepared to be subject to American laws and oversight if they invest in the US.Richard Blumenthal, a Democratic senator from Connecticut who serves as chairman of the Senate's permanent subcommittee on investigations, also said he would consider other legal methods" to force Yasir al-Rumayyan, the governor of the Public Investment Fund (PIF), to testify if he continued to refuse. Continue reading...
Giuliani championed organised crime act Rico. Now he’s charged under it
Former New York City mayor was known for wielding anti-racketeering law he is charged under in Georgia against mobstersRudy Giuliani has dined out for years on his aggressive use of Rico, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, which he wielded with dramatic effect against New York mobsters in the 1980s.For his pains, he was granted an award by the Italian government. Later, as New York City mayor, he turned his use of the anti-racketeering law into a vote-getter, presenting himself as the hero of Rico. Continue reading...
Target sees drop in sales after rightwing backlash to Pride merchandise
Sales fell 5.4% over the last three months, a higher decline than expectations, according to second-quarter earnings reportThe rightwing backlash to the retail giant Target's Pride Month merchandise contributed to a sharp drop in sales over the last three months, the company announced on Wednesday. Target is reviewing how it will market its Pride Month merchandise next year.Over the last three months, sales at the retailer fell 5.4%, a higher decline than Wall Street expectations, according to the company's second-quarter earnings report. The company decreased its profit outlook for the year and said it expects further declines for the rest of the year. Continue reading...
University of Chicago to pay $13.5m to settle ‘price-fixing cartel’ financial aid lawsuit
Top-ranked university is one of 17 elite colleges that are accused of restricting financial aid packages for students, lawsuit claimsThe University of Chicago has agreed to pay $13.5m to students after settling a claim that it conspired with other universities to intentionally limit financial aid offers for students.The top-ranked university is one of 17 elite colleges that were accused of restricting financial aid packages for students, according to a federal lawsuit filed last year, Insider reported. Continue reading...
Florida museum chief tried to make millions from exhibition of fake Basquiat art, lawsuit claims
Aaron De Groft hoped to pocket commissions from auction of the works at show he arranged that was revealed to be a scamTrustees of a Florida art gallery are suing its former director, claiming he conspired to cash in on the exhibition and sale of fake paintings purportedly by the neo-expressionist Jean-Michel Basquiat.Aaron De Groft hoped to pocket tens of millions of dollars in commissions from auction of the works after legitimizing" them during a 2022 show he arranged at the Orlando Museum of Art (OMA), according to the lawsuit filed in central Florida on Monday and reported by the New York Times. Continue reading...
‘There’s a lot to get through’: Hawaii crews comb ruins of Lahaina for missing fire victims
At least 106 people have died - a figure set to rise significantly as workers carry out the painstaking work of identifying remainsThe destruction in Lahaina stretches as far as the eye can see - homes burned down to their foundations, blackened cars, and piles of twisted metal from the fire that burned all the way to the sea. It is in these ruins that search teams will determine the true toll of the disaster.The wildfires that ravaged Maui last week exploded rapidly, moving at roughly a mile a minute, and giving residents little time to escape as flames consumed the historic town of Lahaina. At least 106 people died - a figure expected to rise significantly in the coming days as crews scour the rubble. A huge operation is under way to find remains and identify them, and officials have asked for patience. Continue reading...
The Blind Side’s white savior tale was always built on shaky ground
The main figures in the Oscar-winning movie are embroiled in an ugly legal dispute. But the story never sat comfortably with many observersIn late 2009 I was sent to Baltimore for a Sports Illustrated feature story on Michael Oher, a rare household name among NFL offensive linemen. Oher was a few months into his rookie year and on the brink of a critical showdown against the Indianapolis Colts.In the book version of The Blind Side, which places Oher within the NFL's evolution into a passing league, he is set on a collision course with the sport's top quarterback cruncher - Indy's Dwight Freeney. And after devouring the Michael Lewis book, his Moneyball for football geeks, I was keen to dig into this and more with Oher. By this point he was over the book and unhappy with the much-hyped film that sprang from it and was due to premiere that same weekend. The Ravens PR team cautioned that Oher would turn me away faster than a corner blitzer if I asked too many questions about The Blind Side. Just how touchy a subject it was for him has become that much clearer in the wake of a feud that contains personal wounds, cultural rifts and career consequences that run deep. Continue reading...
Mansplainers! Stop boring your fellow adults. Try dadsplaining instead | Joel Snape
One of my life's great joys has been mining the depths of my knowledge for my children. Just one proviso: don't try to explain every event in We Didn't Start The FireWhere does the urge to mansplain come from? Hold on, please don't rush straight to the comments to tell me; I've got my own theory. I think it's about one part male privilege to five parts something more primal: a vestigial survival urge that we learn at school.In the world of the small, awkward boy, knowing stuff is currency: grownups are impressed when you can explain the workings of a trimaran; other youths show grudging respect if you can display an in-depth knowledge of Warhammer 40k lore. This feeling never entirely leaves us, so we go out into the world stepping on endless metaphorical rakes as we mistake polite lack of interest for rapt attention. Some of us grow out of this, have it gently bullied out of us by romantic partners or learn to sense when it's not wanted. Others never quite kick the habit and spend their lives missing stifled yawns or lecturing astrophysicists about their own fields of expertise. Continue reading...
What to know about the 30 unindicted co-conspirators in Georgia election investigation
Fani Willis did not charge these individuals, but that doesn't mean they can never face penalties for their involvement in election fraud plotThe Georgia district attorney Fani Willis delivered an extensive 41-count indictment against former president Donald Trump and 18 others over their plot to subvert the 2020 US presidential election, unsealed late on Monday night. While each defendant faces a different list of charges, all 19 have been charged with racketeering in violation of Georgia's powerful Rico (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) Act, which carries a sentence of five to 20 years.The racketeering charge also lists 30 unindicted co-conspirators", as participants in the criminal enterprise in Fulton county, Georgia, and elsewhere". Continue reading...
Brooklyn’s limited-edition Jay-Z library cards spark surge in membership
Cards depicting albums by Brooklyn-born rapper are part of initiative to celebrate 50th anniversary of hip-hopForget new lines of sneakers or T-shirts: the most sought-after merchandise this month can be found in public libraries in Brooklyn.In collaboration with Roc Nation, an entertainment company founded by Jay-Z, the Brooklyn Public Library is celebrating the 50th anniversary of hip-hop by issuing limited-edition library cards featuring the rapper, who was born in the New York borough. Continue reading...
The latest criminal indictment of Donald Trump | First Thing
The Republican governor of Georgia refutes the former president's claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen, and more. Plus: the slow recovery process after Hawaii's wildfiresGood morning.The fallout continues from the latest criminal indictment of Donald Trump, this time in Georgia on state racketeering and conspiracy charges over efforts to reverse his defeat in the 2020 presidential election.Chris Christie, the Republican former governor of New Jersey, immediately endorsed Kemp's statement. This is a strong leader telling the truth. Others should try it," said Christie, who is challenging Trump for the party's 2024 presidential nomination.Polls now put Christie as second to Trump's 40-point lead in New Hampshire as Ron DeSantis fades in the race.What exactly is the Georgia racketeering Rico" law that prosecutors used to charge Trump and his cohorts? The basic premise of the Rico charge is that the unlawful enterprise was built and established and maintained for the singular unlawful purpose to overthrow the election and deny Georgians their right to vote," said Anthony Michael Kreis, a Georgia State University law professor.Thirty unnamed, unindicted co-conspirators are mentioned in the racketeering charge. While Georgia prosecutors charged Trump alongside 18 of his closest confidantes, the racketeering charge also detailed the involvement of 30 unnamed co-conspirators.Who are the main characters in Trump's Georgia case? Here's a detailed breakdown of Trump's 18 co-defendants, who include the lawyers Rudy Giuliani and John Eastman, and Mark Meadows, Trump's former White House chief of staff.Maui county has released the first names of people killed in last week's wildfires, as search and rescue efforts continue to recover the bodies of the victims.One survivors recounted her harrowing escape from the Maui blaze by jumping into the ocean alongside infants, elderly people and burn victims. Continue reading...
Trump Rico case ‘a nuclear bomb where a bullet’ would do, Republican says
Wide-ranging Georgia election subversion indictment is inappropriate, claims House judiciary panel member Ken BuckThe indictment of Donald Trump and 18 allies for election subversion in Georgia is a nuclear bomb where a bullet would have been appropriate", a Republican member of the House judiciary committee said.It is a Rico charge primarily," Ken Buck of Colorado told MSNBC, referring to racketeering law under which Trump and others are charged. Continue reading...
Trump’s free-speech defense in January 6 case is danger to democracy, experts say
Ex-president and allies portray drive to stay in power as free speech matter, but ex-DoJ officials say his actions went beyondDonald Trump's dubious defense that he was exercising his free-speech rights in response to a four-count federal criminal indictment charging him with pushing illegal schemes to overturn his 2020 election loss is prompting ex-Department of Justice officials and scholars to criticize such claims as bogus and as threats to the rule of law.Despite special counsel Jack Smith's detailed 45-page, four-count indictment of Trump for promoting several illegal schemes including organizing slates of fake electors in seven states to thwart Joe Biden's victory, Trump and some top Republican allies have repeatedly portrayed his multi-pronged drive to stay in power as a free speech matter. Continue reading...
‘Laboratories of success’: why HBCUs are the best models for race-blind admissions
Post-affirmative action, Black schools show why cultivating diverse campuses should extend beyond the application processEver since Cheyney University opened in 1837, historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) have provided educational access to students who were once barred from attending white institutions. By the 1890s, to support newly freed Black Americans following the civil war, more than 200 HBCUs had opened. And by the 1950s, more than 90% of Black undergraduates in the country were attending Black schools.Once the US supreme court ended state-mandated segregation with its 1954 decision in Brown v Board of Education, followed by the introduction of affirmative action policies designed to rectify segregation's effects, the number of Black students at predominantly white colleges grew significantly. Still, HBCUs remained a touchstone for Black students. So it might be surprising to learn that some experts argue that in light of the supreme court striking down affirmative action earlier this summer, HBCUs could be models for race-blind admissions. Continue reading...
Florida’s attacks on academic freedom just got even worse | Moira Donegan
Ron DeSantis has put the rightwing activist Christopher Rufo in charge of reforming' a liberal arts college and remaking it in a rightwing moldRon DeSantis's presidential campaign is flailing: the Florida governor, once considered a formidable contestant for the Republican nomination, is polling at a pathetic 14.8% among the Republican contenders. His camp is struggling to raise money, and the candidate's public appearances have revealed him to be interpersonally unpleasant - coming off stiff, judgmental and creepy.At the Iowa state fair last week, DeSantis was caught on video telling a little girl, who was clutching a fairground treat, that's probably a lot of sugar". The governor, a man so joyless that he scolded a child for eating candy, was later the subject of a taunting banner flown over one of his events: Be Likable, Ron!"Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist Continue reading...
From Sound of Freedom to Ron DeSantis: how QAnon’s crazy conspiracy theories went mainstream
The movement itself may have grown quieter - but its ideas have percolated into public discourse, freed from their ridiculous premiseIt is the nature of conspiracy theories to turn tragedy into grist, to transform grief and human suffering into an abstract game. The latest horrifying example came out of news late July that Barack Obama's chef Tafari Campbell had drowned in the waters off Martha's Vineyard. What was a terrible accident and a tragic loss for Campbell's family and friends was almost immediately seized upon by the paranoid corners of the internet as proof that somehow Barack and Michelle Obama had been involved in an assassination.It was not the first time that conspiracists have seized on a senseless death as proof of a deeper plot: the 1993 suicide of Vince Foster, lawyer in the Clinton White House, and the murder of the DNC staffer Seth Rich during the 2016 presidential campaign were both used as proof of a Clinton body count" by the right wing, a playbook that was immediately resurrected as news of Campbell's death broke. The difference was that those earlier conspiracy theories were focused almost entirely on the Clintons, while the current iteration is far more diffuse and its targets far more wide-reaching. Continue reading...
Charred debris, toxic water, remote towns: Lahaina’s recovery will be a ‘slow process’
Roughly 2,700 buildings were destroyed and at least 101 people lost their lives in the devastating fires that swept through MauiA long road to recovery lies ahead of Lahaina, the vibrant and historic town tucked along the western coast of Maui that now stands in smoldering ruins.Roughly 2,700 buildings were destroyed by the wind-whipped flames and at least 101 people have lost their lives. Search and rescue efforts to recover the bodies of the victims, as well as relief efforts to support the thousands of displaced survivors, are at the center of focus. But tons of charred debris will need to be removed from the island before communities can begin to heal. Continue reading...
How do men really bond? For me, it’s been 25 years of kicking a ball – then sharing the stuff of life | Graham Snowdon
Every week, we play football for an hour and then retire to the pub to talk tactics, kids, marriage and work. It's so much more than sportIt's the middle of summer, which means a new football season. The glory game hardly sleeps these days: we're in the midst of the Women's World Cup and there is the constant spectre of the Saudi power grab on men's elite football. As a fan, I'll still embrace this hypothetical moment of renewal. But the big kick-off for me will come in early September with the return of the Thursday night football game that, for the last 25 years, I've played in almost every week.I first got involved with it in 1998, when I was invited along by friends in the time-honoured way. Most of my Thursday evenings since then, amid changes of jobs and circumstance, have been defined by a routine of ferreting around the house for contact lenses, grabbing whatever bits of kit I can find and shoving a towel into a tatty old orange bag. At about 8.20pm, summoned by the beep of a horn outside the house, I'll squeeze into the back of a car that was patently not designed for four portly middle-aged men.Graham Snowdon is the acting editor of Guardian Weekly Continue reading...
Tipping culture in the US is out of control – we’re even asked to tip self-checkouts | Arwa Mahdawi
There are prompts to add around 20% for simply buying a pint of milk at the local shop or picking up a coffee. How can we stop this madness?The US may be a bitterly divided country, but I think I've found a topic which pretty much everyone can unite behind: tipping culture is out of control. The US norm of tipping at least 20% on a meal, and at (the very, very) least $1 a drink at a bar, has always confused European tourists. In recent years, however, tipping prompts have become so ubiquitous, have spread to so many new areas of commerce, that even Americans are confused about when and where a tip is appropriate.There is now almost no payment transaction in the US that doesn't involve a prompt for a tip. If you go to get a coffee or pick up a takeout order, for example, an electronic screen will almost certainly get swivelled in your direction, asking if you want to add a 20%, 25% or 30% tip. More confusingly, however, if you go to the local convenience store to buy a pint of milk or a pack of crisps, chances are you'll still see that tip screen pointed at you. You're even prompted to leave a tip at some self-checkouts.Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...
Cravont Charleston: can a sprinter without a shoe sponsor become world champion?
The 25-year-old was a shock winner in the 100m at July's US championships. Now he's aiming for more glory in Budapest against the world's bestHe thought he had finished fourth. Premature cheers of Coleman!" and Lyles!" echoed around Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon last month. But Cravont Charleston, the 25-year-old without a shoe sponsor, ultimately pipped former world champions Christian Coleman and Noah Lyles to secure the 100m title in 9.95 seconds in his US championships debut.I always knew I could win," Charleston quipped. [My coach Allen] Johnson said to me, I told you so.'" Continue reading...
Russia is committing grave acts of ecocide in Ukraine – and the results will harm the whole world | Andriy Yermak and Margot Wallström
By the war's end, it will be too late to prevent the worst consequences of these terrible crimes. Global leaders must act now
First Hawaii fire victims named, amid questions over whether power line decision fueled blazes
So far 106 fatalities have been identified but number of dead is expected to rise as teams search devastated neighborhoodsMaui county has released the first names of people killed in the Hawaii wildfire that all but incinerated the historic town of Lahaina a week ago, while raising the death toll to 106. Meanwhile, local power utility Hawaii Electric Company has faced criticism for not shutting off power in an area at high risk for fire.The county named two victims, Lahaina residents Robert Dyckman, 74, and Buddy Jantoc, 79, adding in a statement that a further three victims had been identified. Those names will be released once the county has identified their next of kin. Continue reading...
Lionel Messi scores ninth goal in six games as Miami reach Leagues Cup final
Janet Yellen inadvertently ate hallucinogenic mushrooms in China – and started a trend
I was not aware that these mushrooms had hallucinogenic properties. I learned that later,' the US Treasury secretary told CNNUS treasury secretary Janet Yellen has started a craze in China for a magic mushroom-based dish called Jian shou qing, or see hand blue", after she was spotted eating the fungi, known for being hallucinogenic, while on a visit to Beijing in July.I went with this large group of people and the person who'd arranged our dinner did the ordering. There was a delicious mushroom dish I was not aware that these mushrooms had hallucinogenic properties. I learned that later," she told CNN. Continue reading...
Tuohy family say they are victims of $15m ‘shakedown’ over Blind Side allegations
North Korea claims US soldier who crossed over ‘disillusioned by society’
Travis King entered the country while on tour of a border village on 18 July, becoming the first American detained in nearly five yearsNorth Korea has claimed that an American soldier who bolted across the heavily armed border from the South wants to seek refuge from inhuman maltreatment and racial discrimination" in the US military.In its first public acknowledgment that Private 2nd class Travis King entered the North while on a tour of a Korean border village on 18 July, the regime said the 23-year-old had voiced disillusionment" with US society. Continue reading...
Trump co-defendant Mark Meadows files to move Fulton county election case to federal court – as it happened
This live blog has closed. Read our analysis of the Georgia indictment hereAfter Joe Biden won the presidential race, Donald Trump and his associates immediately went to work challenging the legitimacy of the election results, as special counsel Jack Smith outlined in his own indictment filed earlier this month.After dozens of his election lawsuits failed, Trump then attempted to pressure state leaders to overturn Biden's wins in key battleground states.This indictment should serve as a warning to future anti-voter politicians that the will and voices of Georgia voters cannot be silenced, and there is no place for election-denying conspiracy theorists in our democracy. Continue reading...
Denver officer fatally shot man thought to be holding knife – but it was a marker pen
Brandon Cole, 36, died after an officer fired at him twice after receiving a domestic violence complaint from a neighborA Denver police officer fatally shot a man who was holding a marker pen, which the officer mistakenly believed was a knife, officials said on Monday.Newly released body-camera footage of the killing of Brandon Cole, 36, on 5 August shows an officer firing two shots at the man who was on the sidewalk. A young child and a woman were standing close behind the man as the officer fired at him and he fell to the ground. Continue reading...
...293294295296297298299300301302...