Saturday, 22 May 2021

How Joe Biden Became the Stay-Out-of-It President

President Joe Biden wanted to feel for himself the jolting torque delivered by the Ford F-150 Lightning electric motor. On May 18, as Biden’s staff back in Washington frantically worked behind the scenes to push Israel and Hamas to nail down a ceasefire, the self-described “car guy” had kept his scheduled trip to Dearborn, Michigan to see Ford’s electric truck plant and highlight the green technologies and manufacturing jobs that are part of his economic recovery effort.

Just as Biden was about to jam the accelerator, a reporter on the test track interrupted him. “Mr. President, can I ask you a quick question on Israel before you drive away since it’s so important?” Biden shut it down. “No, you can’t. Not unless you step in front of the car as I step on it. I’m only teasing,” he said, shooting a smile at the gaggle of press from under his aviator glasses. “Ok here we go, ready?” Biden hit the pedal and sped away.

That moment in Michigan was emblematic of how Biden handled the first big foreign policy crisis of his presidency—and one that exposed internal divisions within his own party. While the White House touted how he and his staff conducted over 80 phone calls with officials in the region behind the scenes, Biden kept his public remarks and appearances focused on the two things upon which he has staked the success of his first term: reining in the pandemic and jumpstarting the economy.

As the violence in Israel and Gaza escalated over 11 days, Biden left the public remarks about the conflict largely to others in the Administration who described its efforts as “quiet” and “intense” diplomacy. When he stepped off Air Force One in Detroit on his way to the Ford plant, Rep. Rashida Tlaib—the first Palestinian-American to serve in Congress—talked to him for several minutes, out of earshot of reporters, about Israel’s retaliatory barrages in Gaza and her concerns for the safety of Palestinians, including her grandmother in the West Bank. Later, speaking at the car factory, Biden said he admired Tlaib’s “intellect,” “passion” and “concern for so many other people.” But he didn’t take the moment to weigh in on how or when the conflict should end.

The only time Biden delivered stand-alone remarks on the violence was two days later, on May 20, after Israel and Hamas reached a ceasefire that both his Administration and Egypt had helped facilitate. In a three-minute speech, Biden said he had spoken with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu six times and President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority more than once in the previous 11 days. He reiterated the U.S.’ belief that Israel has a right to self-defense, and pledged to work with the Palestinian Authority to help the citizens of Gaza, where over 200 Palestinians died and parts of which were decimated after 11 days of bombing. He did not respond to shouted questions from reporters afterwards.

It’s a strategy that has become a hallmark of Biden’s nascent administration. He employed similar methods in March, when calls for imminent action on gun control reform reached a crescendo in the wake of two shooting sprees in Atlanta, Georgia and Boulder, Colorado that killed over 18 people. That same month, Biden delegated his administration’s response to the influx of unaccompanied minors on the border to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Vice President Kamala Harris, and didn’t visit the border himself. In April, he declined to weigh in on the trial of Derek Chauvin until the jury was sequestered, although he asked for a police reform bill to get to his desk by May 25.

Biden is keeping his public focus on the thing he and his advisers believe the American public cares about most: recovering from the pandemic and creating jobs. The trip to Michigan and Biden’s exchange with Tlaib was “probably the closest events came to taking it off course,” a senior administration official says. When White House press secretary Jen Psaki took questions aboard Air Force One en route to Michigan, she was peppered about Israel and Gaza, as she was every day this week. But on the ground, Biden, the official says, “still actually stayed focused. He still got to drive the electric Ford and basically delivered the core economic message.”

The contrast with the previous occupant of the Oval Office is stark. President Donald Trump daily sent the news cycle, and the work of entire agencies, in new directions with his tweets, even when his staff had carefully planned events to highlight a policy win. Biden’s discipline has baffled long-time Joe watchers, who note that as Vice President and Senator, Biden also earned a reputation for being undisciplined and veering off script.

But as President he’s taken a different tack. He’s used his daily intelligence briefings as his moment to give direction to his foreign policy team and check on their progress, says the official, including Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, both former close aides during his years as Vice President. As the conflict escalated, he relied on them to tell him when he was needed on a call to push things along with Netanyahu, Abbas, or Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.

Ben LaBolt, a Democratic strategist and former spokesperson for Barack Obama who is close to the White House, recalls that early on in the Obama Administration, the President’s public remarks focused on a wide array of issues, ultimately obscuring his actions on economic recovery. This time, he said, Biden’s aides, many of of whom are Obama veterans, are “starting from that premise that the focus of the message should be on taming the pandemic and reviving the economy.” Even as other things come up that he needs to address, “it will always come back to that,” LaBolt says.

This strategy may be tested when it comes to the conflict in Israel and Palestine. Finding a solution to this decades-old conflict was never a centerpiece of the Biden Administration agenda, and few expect that to change now. “There certainly is a recognition that the circumstances are not right [to broker a peace agreement]” says Mark Mellman, a Democratic pollster and president of the pro-Israel advocacy group Democratic Majority for Israel. “One can argue that they haven’t been right for a long time because it hasn’t happened but they haven’t even been ripe enough to get to the stage others got to in the past.”

Still, the past week-and-a-half of violence has also exposed a simmering internal rift within the Democratic party over aid to Israel. Some of the party’s most prominent progressive members, like Tlaib, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Bernie Sanders, have been increasingly vocal about challenging the billions of dollars in assistance the U.S. provides to Israel, and moved this week to block a $735 million arms sale. And they’ve shown no indications they will lessen that discourse, even if the ceasefire holds. After video emerged of Israeli security forces firing tear gas outside Al Aqsa mosque police, Tlaib immediately started tweeting. “Is this what a ceasefire looks like?” she wrote. “The Israeli apartheid government has no shame.”



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May gales help Britain set record for wind power generation - The Guardian

  1. May gales help Britain set record for wind power generation  The Guardian
  2. Wind of change grips National Grid in America  The Times
  3. Why National Grid is a dividend stock I like  Motley Fool UK
  4. Blustery weather blows Britain to new wind power record  Reuters
  5. Time to turbocharge offshore wind, says National Grid boss  Telegraph.co.uk
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Jürgen Klopp on Ozan Kabak, fighting back and sticking together - Liverpool FC

  1. Jürgen Klopp on Ozan Kabak, fighting back and sticking together  Liverpool FC
  2. Jurgen Klopp makes Gini Wijnaldum claim and confirms another Liverpool goodbye  Liverpool Echo
  3. Ozan Kabak: 'These five months have been very good for me...of course I want to stay at Liverpool'  The Times
  4. Jürgen Klopp's pre-match press conference | Crystal Palace  Liverpool FC
  5. Jurgen Klopp faces Diogo Jota conundrum as Liverpool farewell beckons  Liverpool Echo
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‘Die Jew.’ Jewish family visiting South Florida harassed while walking in Bal Harbour



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Coronavirus: Spain to lift restrictions for UK and Japanese travellers

UK tourists will be free to enter the country without a negative Covid-19 PCR test from Monday.

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'We offered a $300 bonus to get staff for our restaurant'

Restaurants in the United States are struggling to fill jobs as lockdown restrictions ease.

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Modern day ‘Bonnie and Clyde’ accused of multiple murders in two states



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Infected Blood Inquiry: People affected by contaminated blood scandal will get payouts if inquiry calls for it, Hancock says - Sky News

  1. Infected Blood Inquiry: People affected by contaminated blood scandal will get payouts if inquiry calls for it, Hancock says  Sky News
  2. Infected blood scandal: Hancock pledges payouts if advised by inquiry  The Guardian
  3. Matt Hancock: Payments to victims of infected blood scandal should continue throughout life  The Telegraph
  4. Victims of contaminated blood scandal will get pay outs  Eastern Daily Press
  5. Government will make infected blood payouts if inquiry recommends it – Hancock  Evening Standard
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Diver spots elusive ‘vampire fish’ for first time in decades in California river



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Trump SUED for Saying ‘China Virus’, ‘Kung Flu’ While He Was in Office



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ABL Space Systems joining smallsat launch market with growing number of contracts - NASASpaceFlight.com - NASASpaceflight.com

ABL Space Systems joining smallsat launch market with growing number of contracts - NASASpaceFlight.com  NASASpaceflight.com

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'They Question My Ethnicity, My Patriotism': Elaine Chao Slams Democrats for 'Double Standard' on Racism



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Man dies after being hit by car as he crossed the road - Liverpool Echo

Man dies after being hit by car as he crossed the road  Liverpool Echo

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Vitamin B12 deficiency: Do you hear this sound? The lesser-known sign indicating low level - Express

Vitamin B12 deficiency: Do you hear this sound? The lesser-known sign indicating low level  Express

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19-year-old drowns trying to swim across cove at popular Georgia lake, officials say



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The 44 Percent: Black joy, Overtown and Paul Mooney



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‘I am a female Black athletic director.’ Nina King’s faith in Duke helps her reach goal.



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Friday, 21 May 2021

Gaza Conflict Stokes ‘Identity Crisis’ for Young American Jews


By Elizabeth Dias and Ruth Graham from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/3fw7gR4

Top Trump Executive Under Criminal Investigation Over Taxes


By Ben Protess, William K. Rashbaum and Danny Hakim from NYT New York https://ift.tt/3hKKSGt

Rail reform: What does the shake-up mean for you?



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Taskmaster series 12 announces official lineup - digitalspy.com

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  2. The Taskmaster Series 12 Contestant Line-Up Looks Like an Instant Classic  Den of Geek
  3. ‘Taskmaster’ officially announces series 12 line-up of contestants  NME
  4. Taskmaster series 11 crowns winning contestant  digitalspy.com
  5. Who's in Taskmaster series 12 : News 2021  Chortle
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Only about one in 28 unemployed people actually turned down jobs to stay on expanded unemployment, Fed study says



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The Biden administration wants to help immigrants become citizens. Here’s the latest.



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Duke of Cambridge: The BBC fuelled my mother’s paranoia



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Shelters From Reynosa to Tijuana Are at Capacity and Scrambling for Resources as the U.S. Continues to Expel Migrants

It’s bustling and noisy inside Iglesia Embajadores de Jesus (Ambassadors of Jesus Church) on a Saturday in late April. Nestled in the remote hills of Tijuana, migrants who are mostly from Central America have been able to find shelter here, sleeping on gray and blue mats laid out on the floor where church service usually takes place. Dozens of small children stay close to their parents. Some of them play outdoors with construction rubble. Many people are missing their shoelaces.

This is one of the more resourced shelters, says Erika Pinheiro, policy and litigation director at Al Otro Lado, a legal and humanitarian aid organization who hosts seminars at the shelter to explain U.S. immigration policy. While there are several shelters throughout Tijuana with nicer amenities, there are even more with less than Embajadores. Some are just concrete walls with tents pitched inside. At Embajadores, they have electricity and running water.

Along the nearly 2,000-mile stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border, shelters like this are at capacity and scrambling for resources. In Ciudad Juárez, across the border from El Paso, Texas, the San Juan Apóstol shelter for vulnerable and pregnant migrant women now has hundreds of people on a waitlist. In Reynosa, across the border form McAllen, Texas, a makeshift encampment has formed in downtown and grown to about 700 people because shelters have run out of room. As a result, a nonprofit that provides education for migrant children stranded in Mexico called The Sidewalk School has started to house 26 families and two single adult men in apartments. Many organizations and local church leaders in Mexican border cities have partnered to shelter whomever they can, sometimes with aid from American organizations like Al Otro Lado.

“People don’t understand these are U.S. asylum seekers,” Felicia Rangel-Sompanaro, co-founder of The Sidewalk School says. “These people belong to us, and we’re doing this to them.”

It’s a situation several years in the making, mostly the result of a Trump-era rule that has stayed in place under the Biden Administration called Title 42, which states all unauthorized immigrants will be immediately “expelled” from the U.S., mostly to Mexico, in order to prevent the spread of COVID-19. It has been compounded by more than two months of the Biden Administration flying expelled migrants to other parts of U.S.-Mexico border, and years of Trump’s Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), also known as “Remain in Mexico,” which was implemented in 2019.

People ‘don’t even know what country they’re in’

Most migrants are attempting to enter the U.S. through Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, but the bordering state of Tamaulipas has for months been restricting who it will take back. On March 8, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) began flying migrants to San Diego and El Paso, and then expelling them from there. Many of the migrants are not told they will be expelled, according to Pinheiro, other aid workers, and some of the migrants who spoke to TIME. Some are led to believe they’ll be flown to another state to be able to make their claim for asylum, but are instead released in Mexico. “It’s cruel,” Pinheiro says. “They’re telling people they’re going to be paroled into the United States, and then they dump them off in Mexico. We’ve met people at [Embajadores] that don’t even know what country they’re in.”

Over the course of nine weeks, over 110 of these types of flights took place, potentially expelling thousands of people, according to Witness at the Border, a coalition of volunteers who analyze flight data to track deportations, data that is not made available by the government. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) did not provide data requested by TIME, but a spokesperson for the agency said needs are assessed daily. “Flights were discontinued based on those operational needs,” DHS says. “The government, however, reserves the right to restart the lateral flights if it deems the circumstances warrant.”

The last of these lateral flights took place on May 7, according to Tom Cartwright, one of the coalition’s members, the result of negotiations between the Biden Administration and the ACLU, which has an ongoing lawsuit against the Administration for the use of Title 42. Overall, since January, the U.S. government has conducted more than 515,600 expulsions. In April, CBP told reporters that 28% of individual adult expulsions that took place in March affected people who had already been expelled once before, meaning many people have tried more than once to enter into the U.S. Under Title 42, most people are expelled without being permitted to make a claim for asylum, an international right.

When migrants are taken into CBP custody, their shoelaces, belts and other possessions are confiscated. When they are expelled, CBP does not return the shoelaces, making migrants easily identifiable on the streets of Mexican border cities notorious for crime. Nonprofit advocacy and research organization Human Rights First has documented nearly 500 instances of attacks and kidnappings of asylum seekers and migrants in Mexico since the start of the Biden Administration. During the course of a weekend in April, the co-founders of The Sidewalk School, Rangel-Samponaro and Victor Cavazos, handed out dozens of shoelaces to migrants living at Embajadores.

However, not all of the people living in migrant shelters in northern Mexico are there because of Title 42. Since the start of the Biden Administration about 8,300 asylum seekers have been processed into the U.S. as of the end of April 2021 after waiting in Mexico under MPP according to Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) at Syracuse University. About 18,000 people are still waiting in Mexico to be processed into the U.S. since the Biden Administration ended MPP in January, according to TRAC.

“MPP is over, but Title 42 basically creates the same issue,” says Karina Breceda, shelter coordinator at San Juan Apóstol in Juárez. In the two years that MPP was in place, makeshift tent encampments formed in Mexican border cities, the largest of which was in Matamoros, across the border from Brownsville, Texas. Though Title 42 has been in place since March 2020, unauthorized migration or attempts to seek asylum largely tapered off for much of 2020, which some immigration experts believe was because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Towards the end of 2020, CBP began to see apprehensions at the border rise again, and then increase at a rapid rate when the Biden Administration began. With Title 42 still in place, thousands of migrants began living on the streets of the Mexican cities to which they were expelled, filling up shelters and forming tent encampments in Reynosa and again in Juárez and Tijuana.

MEXICO-US-MIGRATION
Guillermo Arias—AFP/Getty ImagesAerial view of an improvised migrants and asylum seekers camp outside El Chaparral crossing port as they wait for U.S. authorities to allow them to start their migration process in Tijuana on May 9, 2021.

COVID-19 complications

Many of the systems put in place to take care of migrants stranded in northern Mexico couldn’t keep up with the rapid rate of expulsions, both Breceda and Pinheiro say. For example, in Juárez in 2020, organizations banded together to quarantine migrants at a local hotel for two weeks before they could be placed in a shelter in order to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Organizations in Tijuana had established a similar system. But with the rapid rate of expulsions, it became impossible to quarantine all migrants, and some shelter coordinators began taking in people even if they hadn’t quarantined or taken a COVID-19 test. Embajadores is one such shelter. The pastor who runs Embajadores is the type of man who won’t turn anyone away, Pinheiro says.

San Juan Apóstol, on the other hand, is currently limiting capacity to try to allow for social distancing. Though the shelter can house up to 40 people, it is currently housing 12. “Our current capacity doesn’t reflect the needs of the city,” Breceda says.

Mexico’s is vaccinating its population against COVID-19 at a rate much slower than the U.S. According to data by Johns Hopkins University 8.35% of the population has been fully vaccinated. By comparison, the U.S.’s fully vaccinated population is 38.2%. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Mexico ranks at Level 4, the highest a country can rank, for very high risk of COVID-19.

As shelter coordinators contend with Title 42 expulsions and the aftermath of MPP, they are also seeing new arrivals who are hoping to make a claim for asylum in the U.S., mostly from Central America. While walking through Embajadores, one man, Daniel, a 30-year-old father from Honduras, approached to ask a few questions about what he and his family should do next. (TIME agreed not to share Daniel’s last name because of how frequently migrants are targeted in border cities.) He, his wife and three young kids had just arrived at the shelter the day before after taking a bus for three days.

“Life is really hard in my country,” he says. “I want to claim asylum for my kids, and a better life for them.” Daniel says he hadn’t yet attempted to cross the border because he was hoping to speak to an American lawyer or nonprofit first. Up until our conversation he had never heard of Title 42 and shook his head when asked if he kept up with news from the White House. He adds that he heard of MPP in passing though.

“I still have hope,” Daniel says. “I think we can figure this out.” In the meantime, he says he’s grateful his family has a roof over their heads and a place to sleep.



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No 10 plays down reports of cabinet rift over post-Brexit Australia trade deal - The Guardian

  1. No 10 plays down reports of cabinet rift over post-Brexit Australia trade deal  The Guardian
  2. Australia trade deal: Ministers discuss British farmers' concerns  BBC News
  3. UK-Australia trade deal: What are the arguments for and against?  BBC News
  4. The post-Brexit Australia deal and the farming problem is a headache the government doesn't need | Andrew Grice  The Independent
  5. The Brexit vision of free trade may hinge on securing a deal with Australia  Telegraph.co.uk
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"NOBODY MADE HIM SIGN! !" Simon Jordan SLAMS Harry Kane for his comments about leaving Spurs! - talkSPORT

  1. "NOBODY MADE HIM SIGN! !" Simon Jordan SLAMS Harry Kane for his comments about leaving Spurs!  talkSPORT
  2. Harry Kane says he wants to reach level of Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi and reiterates desire to win trophies  Sky Sports
  3. Harry Kane discusses his future with Gary Neville | The Overlap  The Overlap
  4. Harry Kane claims Spurs could be wise to sell and he will decide own future  The Guardian
  5. Manchester United news and transfers LIVE Harry Kane to Man Utd and Danny Ings latest  Manchester Evening News
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Lisa Ling and Jada Pinkett Smith Discuss 'Real Animosity' Between Asian and Black Americans



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John Oliver called out by 10-year-old Israeli girl over 'war crime' comments made on 'Last Week Tonight'



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Manchester United and Aston Villa transfer 'pretty much done' - Birmingham Live

  1. Manchester United and Aston Villa transfer 'pretty much done'  Birmingham Live
  2. What Dier did to Reguilon after own goal and what really happened with Spurs' post-match mess  Football.London
  3. Opinion: Player Ratings – Tottenham Hotspur 1-2 Aston Villa  The Spurs Web
  4. Dean Smith claims that Aston Villa 25-year-old was “outstanding” on Wednesday  TBR - The Boot Room - Football News
  5. ‘He’s telling Jack Grealish to get up’: Sky pundit says Tottenham player wasn’t happy with Aston Villa man  HITC - Football, Gaming, Movies, TV, Music
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I worked at Disney World for 2 years. Here are 10 things I wish tourists would stop wasting money on.



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England's seven worst Covid hotspots all report rise in infections - see full list - Mirror Online

  1. England's seven worst Covid hotspots all report rise in infections - see full list  Mirror Online
  2. Covid now 18th leading cause of death in Wales  BBC News
  3. Latest weekly Covid-19 rates for local authority areas in England  Yahoo News UK
  4. Covid-19 UK: Map shows how virus fizzled out last month - so how many people died in YOUR area?  Daily Mail
  5. Covid vaccine is working! Map shows deaths plummeting - check how many in your area  Express
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He was wanted in the rape of 2 kids in Washington state. Cops found him on a boat in Florida



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The Legend of Zelda's Forgotten Sister Game - Nintendo Life

  1. The Legend of Zelda's Forgotten Sister Game  Nintendo Life
  2. Skyward Sword HD: The Zelda & Loftwing Amiibo Is Too Powerful  CBR - Comic Book Resources
  3. Make no mistake, Nintendo’s Zelda: Skyward Sword amiibo unlock is a dirty play  VG247
  4. Zelda & Loftwing Is The Only amiibo Compatible With Skyward Sword HD  Nintendo Life
  5. Zelda: Skyward Sword for Switch fixes a big problem — if you buy this overpriced amiibo  Tom's Guide
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WhatsApp chat migration to different phone number in the works - Geo News

  1. WhatsApp chat migration to different phone number in the works  Geo News
  2. How to Permanently Archive WhatsApp Conversations  Lifehacker
  3. WhatsApp chat history migration coming for users switching phone numbers  The News International
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Bring Tesla to Teesside, Ben Houchen tells Elon Musk - Telegraph.co.uk

  1. Bring Tesla to Teesside, Ben Houchen tells Elon Musk  Telegraph.co.uk
  2. Teesside's message to Elon Musk as Tesla billionaire reported to be eyeing UK gigafactory sites  Teesside Live
  3. Tesla on Teesside - fresh rumours sparked for factory to be built in Tees Valley  The Northern Echo
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Vaccine passports set for use at mass events in England - Financial Times

  1. Vaccine passports set for use at mass events in England  Financial Times
  2. COVID-19: Vaccine rollout extended for second time this week as 34 and 35 -year-olds in England can get the jab  Sky News
  3. Covid ‘booster’ trial will give third vaccine dose to UK volunteers  The Guardian
  4. NHS vaccination 'passport' app – what it is and how to get it  Surrey Live
  5. Brighton in world-first trial to find best Covid-19 booster  The Argus
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ICE to End the Use of Georgia Facility at Center of Hysterectomy Allegations



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Scientists find source of mysterious ‘fast radio bursts’ being sent to Earth - The Independent

  1. Scientists find source of mysterious ‘fast radio bursts’ being sent to Earth  The Independent
  2. Hubble Tracks Origins Of Energy Blasts  NASA Goddard
  3. Hubble tracks down fast radio bursts to galaxies' spiral arms  Phys.org
  4. Mysterious fast radio bursts traced to spiral galaxy arms  CNN
  5. Hubble Tracks Down Fast Radio Bursts to Galaxies' Spiral Arms  NASA
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How to live longer: How far you should walk every day to avoid an early death - Express

How to live longer: How far you should walk every day to avoid an early death  Express

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Thursday, 20 May 2021

Capitol Police distances itself from an unofficial statement from officers expressing 'profound disappointment' in GOP leaders' refusal to support January 6 commission



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A man bought a home right across the street from a homophobic church and painted it the colors of the Pride flag



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World's largest iceberg breaks off in Antarctica



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Anger at double standard as white man filmed driving away from police stop



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Great British Railways: Franchises scrapped and changes to season tickets as part of major revamp to UK's train network - Sky News

  1. Great British Railways: Franchises scrapped and changes to season tickets as part of major revamp to UK's train network  Sky News
  2. Rail services to come under unified state control  BBC News
  3. It's farewell to West Midlands Railway, CrossCountry and Avanti, as Boris announces rail changes  Birmingham Live
  4. Rail shake-up sees Greater Anglia replaced by GB Railways  Eastern Daily Press
  5. UK railways to be simplified but still substantially privatised  The Guardian
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Rail services to come under unified state control

A new public body, Great British Railways, will lead the biggest rail shake-up since privatisation.

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West Ham one step from Europe as Michail Antonio seals win at West Brom - The Guardian

  1. West Ham one step from Europe as Michail Antonio seals win at West Brom  The Guardian
  2. West Brom fans on their return to The Hawthorns for defeat to West Ham  Express & Star
  3. West Bromwich Albion 1-3 West Ham: Late goals give Hammers victory  BBC News
  4. West Ham United leapfrog Tottenham with gritty win at West Brom to edge closer to Europa League spot...  talkSPORT.com
  5. Sam Allardyce wants returning fans to fire up West Brom  expressandstar.com
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A renowned skydiving pro had retired — but then came a freak mid-air collision in Florida



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Police smash vile global paedophile gang which 'may have links to Madeleine McCann' - Mirror.co.uk

Police smash vile global paedophile gang which 'may have links to Madeleine McCann'  Mirror.co.uk

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Anthony Joshua to Tyson Fury: 'You've let boxing down. You lied to the fans' - BBC Sport

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My Father Fled Fascism in Spain—and Taught Me How Lies Can Destroy a Democracy

The truth can’t destroy a democracy but lies can. At age thirteen my father was awoken by machine gun fire in the streets of Madrid. It was 1936, and a coalition of progressive groups had just swept the national elections, infuriating the Spanish right-wing. Soldiers in the Montana barracks, under Colonel Francisco Serra, begun trading fire with pro-government civilians that had massed in the surrounding streets. Holed up with the insurrectionists were civilian fascists called Falangists as well as a general who falsely claimed the national election had been stolen. (“The rebellion? We planned it the day we lost the election,” another fascist leader later admitted to the American consul in Madrid.) Once that lie was accepted, everything else in Spain—life, death, truth, reality itself—seemed to be up for grabs.

Even longtime democracies like America are vulnerable to fascist takeovers because fascists tend to threaten civil war when they lose elections, and democracies will do almost anything to avoid civil war. Fascists rely on a tight coterie of corrupt loyalists to take over the government and impose control. Fascists promote a mythology of both victimhood and invincibility to justify their excesses. Fascists demonize their enemies, arrest or kill their critics, glorify their supporters and often use religious figures to legitimize their power. Groups such as Al Qaeda and the Islamic State are just as fascistic as dictators like Josef Stalin, Adolf Hitler and Augusto Pinochet. Despite the fascist obsession with power and control, such regimes rarely last long. “Dictators look good until their last five minutes,” Czech president Tomas Masyrk observed during the build-up to World War Two.

The rise of fascism in Spain followed a classic trajectory that can serve as a blueprint for how to destroy a democracy. After the liberal victory in 1936, an army officer named Francisco Franco declared himself to be the only person who could save the country from dishonor and ruin. He announced a “national campaign in defense of Western Civilization and against Communist barbarism”—a broad array of enemies that included Jews and Freemasons. In a dizzying inversion, Francoist courts found that it was the liberal government, not the insurrectionists, who had betrayed Spain, and that supporting the government was illegal. The penalty for such treason, of course, was death.

Miguel Chapiro Junger in Truro, Mass., circa 1972.
Ellen JungerMiguel Chapiro Junger in Truro, Mass., circa 1972.

My father’s name was Miguel Chapiro Junger. His mother was an Austrian socialite from Salzburg and his father was a left-wing journalist of Jewish ancestry. (Though Franco was rumored to be Jewish, his willingness to do business with Hitler apparently put him beyond recrimination by his fellow fascists.) It was widely assumed that if Germany won the war, they would invade Spain and round up all the Jews. Shortly after the attack on the Montana barracks, my father’s family tied a horsehair mattress to the roof of their car to protect themselves from shrapnel and fled to France.

Whenever I asked my father why they left Spain, he simply said, “Because of the fascists.” He always spat out the word as if he didn’t want it in his mouth any longer than necessary. According to him, fascists don’t want freedom, they want power. They don’t want knowledge, they want faith. They don’t want loyalty, they want obedience. They are the exact opposite of everything that is good and noble about America, which was the country that eventually took my father in and gave him a home, a family and a career.

Things unraveled quickly after my father escaped. A lighting offensive by fascist rebels in the south failed to reach Madrid in time, and the Montana barracks was overrun by troops loyal to the elected government. Most of the insurrectionists were lined up and machine gunned, though one group of right-wing officers managed to retreat to a back room and ceremonially shoot themselves while seated around a table. But almost everywhere else, Franco’s forces proved hard to stop. Combat troops stationed in Morocco were airlifted back to the mainland in transport planes provided by Hitler and Mussolini, and they quickly routed loyalist troops and rural militias armed with shotguns and farm implements.

Republican troops standing in the recently seized Montana Barracks in Madrid, on July 19, 1936.
ullstein bild/Getty ImagesRepublican troops standing in the recently seized Montana Barracks in Madrid, on July 19, 1936.

And in an odd historical twist, special units of Rif tribesmen from Morocco were unleashed on Andalucia and told to rape, plunder and kill as much as they pleased. Almost 500 years after the expulsion of the Moors from Spain, Franco managed to arrange for a reconquista of his own country by an estimated 60,000 Moroccan irregulars who were so feared, civilians sometimes committed suicide rather than face them.

Regular Spanish units that joined Franco’s army were little better. Traumatized by a decades-long war in Morocco—they once lost 8,000 men in a single battle—combat veterans saw themselves as the last bastion of Spanish honor, which made them feel entitled to decide what kind of country Spain would become. In their eyes, the leftwing Popular Front could be slaughtered with impunity because they had rejected both the Catholic church and the feudal hierarchy that had long dominated Spain. In fact, the Popular Front had won the election handily, and their platform was consistent with broad economic reforms that were sweeping the world after a global depression. Among other things they sought the emancipation of women and the right to civil divorce; land reform; wage increases; and the separation of Church and State.

“Because the election results represented an unequivocal statement of the popular will, they were taken by many on the right as proving the futility of legalism,” writes historian Paul Preston. “The destruction of the republic by armed violence was justified by the claim that it was illegitimate, based on electoral falsification, and that its political leaders were thieving parasites who had brought only anarchy and crime.”

General Francisco Franco swearing allegiance to Spain in Oct. 1936.
Mondadori/Getty ImagesGeneral Francisco Franco swearing allegiance to Spain in Oct. 1936.

But Franco’s coalition was unstoppable. It was comprised of some of the most powerful sectors of society and enjoyed the loyalty of most of the army and police. Industrialists and large landowners were terrified of economic reforms and allied themselves with Franco because they thought—correctly—that he would keep Spain in its semi-feudal state. (Wealthy people saw themselves as so far above the law, in fact, that during the first days of the insurrection, a landowner outside Salamanca lined up the workers of his estate and shot six of them just to make sure they knew their place.) The Catholic Church was also deeply threatened by the secular goals of the Popular Front and offered a kind of blanket dispensation for the use of violence in exchange for maintaining their moral monopoly over society. And regular frontline soldiers were so contemptuous of civilians that many rejected the very idea of an elected government. “Those who don’t wear uniforms should wear skirts,” they were fond of declaring.

Once your opponent has been classified as not just wrong but evil, a kind of moral inversion occurs where the worse you act, the more noble you are. An American journalist in Badajoz named Jay Allen saw 1,800 men herded into a bullring and machinegunned at dawn. South of Madrid, twenty pregnant women were taken from a maternity ward, driven to a cemetery and shot. In Toledo, an American journalist named John Whitaker watched a pair of belt-fed machine guns dispatch 600 men in minutes. He also saw two teenage girls pushed into a schoolhouse where 40 Moroccan troops awaited them. “Oh, they’ll not live more than four hours,” the commander assured Whitaker as the troops began ululating in excitement.

Nationalist troops advance through the debris of houses wrecked in air raids in Madrid, on April 2, 1937.
Hulton Archive/Getty ImagesNationalist troops advance through the debris of houses wrecked in air raids in Madrid, on April 2, 1937.

Rather than make the clergy rethink its commitment to the fascist cause, the carnage just seemed to confirm their view that civilization itself was under threat. If it weren’t, why were so many people dying? In Navarre, a Capuchin monk delivered a mass confession to a crowd of men standing in their own grave. In the Sierra Guadarrama, a Jesuit priest personally led an infantry charge while waving a crucifix. In Murchante, a deputy parish priest carried a pistol so that he could dispatch the wounded at mass executions. The wife of a falangist officer in Talavera had a similar predilection, though she also shouted “Viva Franco” as she fired.

If local priests had any reservations about the bloodlust they had sanctified, higher authorities provided guidance. German bishops issued a collective pastoral applauding Hitler’s support of Franco, and the Vatican sent an Apostolic Delegate to Spain that was soon reciprocated with a fascist ambassador to the Holy See. Once the purity of the fascist endeavor was established, a kind death cult seemed to take hold. Fascist infantry charged machineguns screaming, “Viva la muerte”— Long live death! People gathered every morning in towns across Spain to enjoy the executions and see if the condemned would cry or beg or soil themselves. A union card could get you killed, or a misidentification, or nothing at all. Some Falangists liked to kill people on their saint’s day, regardless of their politics, just to inspire terror and obedience.

There were massacres on the government side, to be sure, but they were stopped within months and did not represent government policy. Almost one percent of the Spanish population was executed for their political beliefs during the civil war and afterward. Throughout this horror, my father was safely ensconced in Paris, learning French and making his way through the French school system. The German Army invaded the Netherlands on May 10, 1940 and was standing on French soil within days. My father escaped Paris a few days before the German army entered the city and relocated to Biarritz, where he saw advance units of the German army patrolling the streets. When a German officer standing at the front of a tank column asked how to get to the city center, my father pointed the wrong way and said in German, “That direction.”

Cadets from the Francoist army swearing allegiance in the Alcazar in Toledo, Spain, after it was destroyed by bombing, in 1937.
De Agostini/Getty ImagesCadets from the Francoist army swearing allegiance in the Alcazar in Toledo, Spain, after it was destroyed by bombing, in 1937.

By then the Spanish civil war was over, and Franco had won. In order to escape the Nazis, my father’s family had to exchange their old Republican passports for new Nationalist ones, which they managed to do at the Spanish consulate in Bayonne. By the time they drove across the border into Spain, the German swastika had already replaced the French tricolore. Eventually my father, now aged 18, boarded a Portuguese freighter named the Sao Tome bound for Baltimore with a hold full of cork. Several weeks later, the Sao Tome steamed into Chesapeake Bay and my father stepped shore onto American soil.

My father had come to America because he knew fascism never would. He tried to join the U.S. Navy but was turned down because of his asthma; instead, he did technical work on jet engines and submarine propellors. Much later he would work on the Apollo space program. The U.S. is not always on the right side of history—we supported Franco and ignored Hitler for far too long—but eventually, we sent hundreds of thousands of men overseas to defeat fascism. After the war my father never went home; he married an American woman and spent the rest of his life in this country.

The first time that fascistically minded people tried to attack the U.S. Capitol, on September 11, a few brave souls forced their own plane down into a Pennsylvania field. The second time, on January 6, more brave souls stood firm in the building’s marble hallways and saved our government yet again. We are blessed with an abundance of courage in this country, it seems. Over and over, people risk their lives for the rights of others. That may be the ultimate reason my father never left.

May that always be true.



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