Saturday, 10 July 2021

Santa Claus, Ice Cream, Gender-Reveal Parties: a Wrongful Death Suit Filed by Families of Sandy Hook Victims Has Taken a Strange Turn

For years, families who lost loved ones in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting have been counting on their landmark lawsuit against the gunmaker Remington to make some sense of their grief.

In Remington’s internal emails, social media analytics, advertising plans and more, they hoped to find answers to whether marketing strategies by the nation’s oldest gun manufacturer influenced Adam Lanza to use a Bushmaster rifle to kill 20 children and six faculty members at the school in Newtown, Conn. on Dec. 14, 2012.

Instead, as the historic jury trial’s slated September start date approaches, Remington has turned over tens of thousands of “random pictures” and cartoons—including images of Santa Claus and a bowl of ice cream—in what lawyers for the families say is an affront to the discovery process and legal system.
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“It’s so depressing that this is what it’s come to,” says Josh Koskoff, the attorney representing nine families of victims in a long-running wrongful death suit against Remington over its marketing practices.

There are 18,459 more images such as these in Remington’s document production. But these cartoons are not all. There are also another 15,825image files of people go-karting,1 riding dirt bikes,2 and socializing,3 another 1,521 video files of gender reveal parties and the ice bucket challenge,4 not to mention multiple duplicate copies of Remington catalogues.
Connecticut Superior CourtSome of the more than 18,000 images included in material provided by gunmaker Remington to plaintiffs’ lawyers in a wrongful death suit arising from the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.

<strong>“It’s so depressing that this is what it’s come to.”</strong>In addition to more than 18,000 cartoons, Remington also included more than 15,000 other pictures and videos, including advertisements for its branded coffee mugs, hundreds of photos of animals being killed, and footage of people go-karting and reveling at gender-reveal parties. The files lacked proper context or additional information, the lawyers say, so it was impossible to decipher whether the images and videos were relevant to the case.

Koskoff says the document dump is Remington’s most recent delay tactic—the company filed for bankruptcy protection last year, stalling the case—and a sign that it is not taking the discovery process seriously.

“If everybody in every case just sends a bunch of Santa Clauses to serious requests for information,” he says, “the whole system would collapse.”

A legal source familiar with the case, who was not authorized to speak about the pending litigation, tells TIME the cartoons and images were not an attempt to insult the plaintiffs or obstruct the discovery process. The plaintiffs asked Remington to produce all content on the company’s social media pages, including embedded images and videos they could not initially view, according to the source. Those tens of thousands of images and videos were downloaded by Remington’s defense team and provided upon that request, the source says, adding that they were posted by third-parties on the social media pages.

Some examples of the included 1,521 video files of gender reveal parties and ice bucket challenges.
Connecticut Superior CourtSome examples of the included 1,521 video files of gender reveal parties and ice bucket challenges.

Even so, critics of the gun industry and scholars who have been closely eyeing the case say Remington would have a good reason to want to stall. The trove of requested documents could give the public a rare glimpse into how a major gunmaker, which is usually shielded from lawsuits by federal law, markets its products.

“There’s certainly a fair likelihood that it could indeed be damaging politically and perhaps even to the legal case they’re trying to make,” says Robert Spitzer, a gun policy expert and chairman of the political science department at the State University of New York at Cortland.

Regardless of whether the families prevail in court, Spitzer says the process could force Remington to provide documents that could yield incriminating internal memos—similar to the way a major civil settlement in 1998 forced the tobacco industry to disclose millions of pages of internal communications that revealed deceptive marketing practices.

Spitzer says it’s entirely possible that a defendant could “throw in everything, plus the kitchen sink,” during the discovery process, just to burden those tasked with scouring through the tens of thousands of documents. “They want to make life as miserable as they can,” Spitzer says.

Firearms Training Unit Detective Barbara J. Mattson of the Connecticut State Police holds up a Bushmaster AR-15 rifle, the same make and model of gun used by Adam Lanza in the Sandy Hook School shooting, for a demonstration during a hearing of a legislative subcommittee reviewing gun laws, at the Legislative Office Building in Hartford, Conn., Monday, Jan. 28, 2013. The parents of children killed in the Newtown school shooting called for better enforcement of gun laws Monday at the legislative hearing.
Jessica Hill/APFirearms Training Unit Detective Barbara J. Mattson of the Connecticut State Police holds up a Bushmaster AR-15 rifle, the make and model of gun used in the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting, for a demonstration during a hearing of a legislative subcommittee reviewing gun laws, in Hartford, Conn., on Jan. 28, 2013.

On July 2, Koskoff filed a motion urging the Connecticut Supreme Court to intervene. Cartoons aside, he says the documents more importantly show what Remington still has not handed over. In the last seven years of litigation, the attorney says Remington has produced some 46,000 documents—of which there are only 2,350 email communications.

“I know that Remington’s goal here is to delay things as long as possible,” Koskoff says. “Our goal is to make sure that doesn’t happen.”



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France to pull more than 2,000 troops from Africa's Sahel



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Biden's administration just canceled $55.6 million in student debt for people who went to 3 for-profit colleges



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Broken machine leads SC man to use cash — and the change buys him lucky lottery ticket



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Centuries-old Hawaii petroglyphs damaged by vandals firing paintballs at cliff



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The Latest: Judge: attackers say planned to arrest Moïse



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A historic canoe was discovered on a wild SC river. How did it get there?



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Taliban say they now control 85% of Afghanistan's territory



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Suspect arrested in deadly shooting of 3 men found at Georgia golf course, authorities say



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Marked increase in Covid infections across UK - BBC News

  1. Marked increase in Covid infections across UK  BBC News
  2. England's R number increases as Covid infections climb rapidly  ITV News
  3. Coronavirus R rate rises to as high as 1.5 in England as cases continue to surge  The Mirror
  4. Covid infections soar as 1 in 160 people in England now testing positive  Herts Live
  5. England's Covid R rate may now be 1.5 - the highest since October  Daily Mail
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Psychiatry Is Still Stuck in Freud’s Era. Big Data Can Revolutionize How We Care for Patients

I have a problem. I am a psychiatrist in the 21st century and yet I still evaluate patients the way Freud did a century ago: I sit with a patient and, by carefully observing how and what they say, I expect them to tell me what’s wrong.

The problem isn’t that I speak with and listen to my patients. Every doctor of every speciality does that. Rather, my problem is that I never measure the data I think are most important to my treatment of psychiatric diseases.

Consider how I evaluate a patient for psychosis in the emergency room. When I speak with them, I want to know what their life is like—what’s their day like? What’s on their mind? How social are they? How’s their sleep? These data depend on my patient’s ability to remember, accurately report, make sense of, and tell me about their experience—and further, my treatments depend on my own ability to listen to and make sense of what I’m hearing.
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While we speak, I look for things like rapid or disorganized speech, somewhat incongruent facial expressions, or even recurrent ideas that might help me guage their mind’s function. I ask a series of finely-honed questions to poke and prod at their mind, creating a trove of essential clinical data. But my problem is that the only tool I use to gather and understand these data is my own brain. In other words, I leave the vast majority of that data unrecorded, unanalyzed and untapped. This is a problem. Consider what I’d do if this patient has chest pain.

Chest pain is a vague symptom that can be present in anything from heartburn to a panic attack to a heart attack. I would of course, ask them about their chest pain—when did it start? have they had it before? But I would dig deeper than conversation.

Heart rate is important in chest pain. I could put my fingers on their wrist and count out their heartbeats per minute, but I wouldn’t do that—I’d use a calibrated machine. I might carefully ascultate the lub-dub of their heart valves closing, but I would without question measure the flow of electricity through their heart each millisecond with an electrocardiogram. If I wasn’t reassured by these measurements, I’d probably draw some blood to check for protein SOS signals from their heart and call cardiology. Because I take chest pain seriously, in a few short minutes, I’d gather a host of measurements and would know whether their chest pain was caused by a heart attack.

Before decades of public-private partnerships developed the tools I use to evaluate chest pain, clinicians accepted that some data—in this case the essential data that defines the clinical problem of a heart attack—are invisible without technology and essential to provide good clinical care. Yet as a psychiatrist, I continue to ask questions without measuring the data I think are important to define my clinical problems like psychosis, even though the technology exists.

You probably have the most sophisticated behavioral measurement device ever created in your hand. The smartphone boasts a suite of technologies that might dramatically advance my ability to assess and treat my patients. Right now, our smartphones collect data that measure things I already believe are clinically important: what’s on our mind, how social we are, even how we sleep.

In addition to asking “what’s on your mind?” I might—with my patient’s consent and support, of course—analyze their online search history or social media profile, looking for subtle changes in the way they express themselves, changes that, studies have shown, might define an opportunity for us to work more closely together to improve their mental health. I could ask, but also measure.

Right now, I don’t use technology because, frankly, it’s not necessary. I diagnose and bill based on conversations, not measurements. Psychiatric diagnoses—organized before the advent of technology—are without exception based on patterns of symptoms and signs, or what a patient tells me and what I observe. Though psychiatry has tried to better define the diagnosis of, say, schizophrenia, this has backfired. The more we fiddle with our existing framework, the more muddled it becomes: I recently calculated that the latest diagnostic criteria (DSM-5) for schizophrenia describes ~7.6 trillion different patterns of symptoms and signs.

Notwithstanding these barriers, psychiatry has never been working more quickly or more effectively towards the goal of better defining the clinical problems we treat. The National Institute of Mental Health recently announced the Accelerating Medicines Partnership for Schizophrenia (AMP SCZ), an investment of over $82.5 million over five years and one of the largest private-public partnerships in the organization’s history.

For one of the first times at this scale, a band of psychiatrists and researchers from academic hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, and tech companies will combine traditional clinical conversation with measures of brain function, cutting-edge data from smartphones, personal measurement devices and audio-visual recordings.

For example, recording and analyzing a conversation might help clinicians detect subtle changes in the way people string ideas together or refer to themselves. Without technology, these changes would remain invisible even to a skilled clinician, yet studies have shown that they predict the onset of a psychosis episode in at risk patients. Such patients—previously in a grey zone—might have access to more and better treatments, thereby leading to better outcomes.

Of course, none of these technologies will replace the empathic charm and human touch of a skilled clinician. Some clinical data are necessarily bespoke, artfully gathered by a skilled clinician; but not all data are like this. Modern medicine has brought chest pain from heart attacks from routinely fatal to often survivable and even preventable. Progress in evaluating chest pain required decades of fastigious measurement and, crucially, novel treatments to pair with those measurements.

Though technology isn’t a magic bullet, history has shown that the more we harness technology, the better we can define our clinical problems and treat our patients.



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Meet Eric Adams: The rat-hating, gun-toting former Republican in line to be New York City’s next mayor



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Ricky Gervais suggests The Office would not get made now due to cancel culture and political correctness - Sky News

  1. Ricky Gervais suggests The Office would not get made now due to cancel culture and political correctness  Sky News
  2. Ricky Gervais: 'The Office would be cancelled now'  BBC News
  3. The Office at 20: Here's why David Brent will never be cancelled  Metro.co.uk
  4. "Ah F***. We're in Real Trouble": An Oral History of 'The Office', 20 Years On  esquire.com
  5. The Office at 20: How my life became one long David Brent impression  iNews
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White man sentenced in attack on Black teen at Michigan park



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Eddy Merckx: I won't lose any sleep if Cavendish beats my Tour de France record - Cyclingnews.com

  1. Eddy Merckx: I won't lose any sleep if Cavendish beats my Tour de France record  Cyclingnews.com
  2. Tour de France 2021: Mark Cavendish wins stage 13 to tie Merckx’s record – live!  The Guardian
  3. Tour de France 2021 Stage 12 Highlights | Mark Cavendish Vs The Breakaway  GCN Racing
  4. Simon Yates abandons Tour de France after crash on stage 13 descent  Cyclingnews.com
  5. Nils Politt pushes hard to take first Grand Tour stage win in Nîmes  The Guardian
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Coronavirus infection rates, cases and deaths for all parts of Wales on Friday, July 9 - Wales Online

  1. Coronavirus infection rates, cases and deaths for all parts of Wales on Friday, July 9  Wales Online
  2. Wales' Covid case rate as details on lifting remaining rules expected next week  ITV News
  3. Virus cases continue to climb across North Wales – with first death reported nationally in three days  LeaderLive
  4. North Wales Covid latest as one new death confirmed and cases rise in every area  North Wales Live
  5. Thousands of Flintshire & Wrexham adults are fully vaccinated against COVID, figures show  LeaderLive
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Family of teen rescued alive from Surfside condo collapse sues. His mom died in tragedy



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Friday, 9 July 2021

Intense heat wave arrives: Expect dangerous temperatures for days



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Congressional Democrats’ Ex-Staffers Are Lobbying Against Biden’s Tax Hikes on Corporations and the Rich

Inside Congress, Democratic lawmakers are working to make sure President Joe Biden’s proposed tax hikes on corporations and the wealthiest Americans are codified into law.

Outside Congress, some of the most powerful lawmakers’ former staff members are working to make sure they aren’t.

Former staffers to nearly two dozen Democratic lawmakers in Congress—including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi—are now working as lobbyists for some of the most prominent groups opposing Democrats’ proposed tax increases on corporations and wealthy Americans, according to an analysis of federal disclosure documents.
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This is how Washington works. After stints on Capitol Hill, congressional staffers on both sides of the aisle frequently leverage their contacts and experience into lucrative lobbying jobs. But the dynamic underscores the uphill battle Democrats face in tackling one of the party’s core policy proposals—altering a tax code that benefits the rich—even as they control the White House and Congress and the tax hikes remain popular with their constituents, according to a Morning Consult/Politico poll from April.

Democrats have already compromised, leaving the tax increases out of the bipartisan infrastructure agreement in an effort to gain Republican support for the deal. Now Biden and Democratic leaders say they will instead include some form of the tax hikes in a subsequent reconciliation bill, which they can pass along party lines. But their razor-thin majority in Congress means every Democratic vote counts. If these lobbyists manage to convince even one of their former bosses not to vote for the increases, Biden’s policy is doomed.

“If you are a corporation and you are trying to stop these tax hikes, you know all you have to do is pick off a couple of Democrats in the Senate and stop them to put the brakes on it,” says Chuck Collins, a senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies and the author of The Wealth Hoarders: How Billionaires Pay Millions to Hide Trillions.

One Republican lobbyist familiar with these strategies, requesting anonymity to speak candidly, said Democrats unified control of government has presented these former staffers with a lucrative opportunity, even if it requires them to buck their party’s policies. “Being a recent former Democratic staffer at any level is a really valuable commodity right now,” says the lobbyist. “If you want to see any piece of these tax hikes go down, you’re only aiming at Democrats. How do you get at those marginal Democrats? You need people with ties to those guys.”

Biden has proposed two types of tax hikes to help offset the cost of his policy proposals: increased rates for corporations, and increased rates for the wealthiest Americans. Former Democratic Hill staffers are lobbying against both.

Business Roundtable, a nonprofit that represents over 230 CEOs of the country’s largest companies, including Amazon’s Andy Jassy and Goldman Sachs’ David Solomon, has said Biden’s proposed corporate tax increases would make the United States uncompetitive as a place to do business and make U.S. companies uncompetitive globally.” The group spent nearly $4.3 million on lobbying in the first four months of 2021, including $3.8 million on direct lobbying and over $450,000 paid to nearly a dozen outside lobbying firms. The lobbying was for a range of issues, from education and immigration policy to infrastructure and tax reform.

Lobbyists working for Business Roundtable specifically on tax related issues include a handful of former Democratic staffers, along with Republicans. Matthew Spikes, Business Roundtable’s Senior Director of Government Relations, is a former aide to Maryland Senator Ben Cardin, who chairs the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Committee. Arsha Siddiqui, one of three lobbyists at Akin Gump who lobbied on issues related to tax proposals in American Jobs Plan on behalf of Business Roundtable, was Pelosi’s senior policy adviser and counsel from 2003 to 2009. (The other two Akin Gump lobbyists working on this issue are former aides to Republicans: Ohio Sen. Rob Portman and former Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch). And one of the five lobbyists at PriceWaterHouse Coopers advocating for Business Roundtable on tax policy is Todd Metcalf, who was formerly Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden’s chief tax counsel. (Metcalf is working alongside Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s former Deputy Chief of Staff.)

In May, Business Roundtable hired Resolution Public affairs, the government relations firm started by Heather McHugh, Schumer’s former legislative director and the former policy director for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. The firm was hired to lobby on infrastructure, including the corporate tax rate, and the two lobbyists listed by name on the disclosure form are McHugh and Lea Fisher Sulkala, who was formerly chief of staff for California Congresswoman Linda Sanchez.

Akin Gump and Resolution Public Affairs did not respond to requests for comment. PriceWaterHouseCoopers declined to comment on client-related work. A representative from Business Roundtable said they had retained several of these outside firms for many years, and their work centers on a wide range of issues.

Groups lobbying on behalf of industries like private equity and hedge funds, meanwhile, are taking aim at some of Biden’s proposals to raise taxes on the wealthiest Americans, including by closing the the carried interest loophole. This provision of the tax code allows executives in these fields to have their income from carried interests taxed at a capital gains rate of 20% instead of the income tax rate of 37%. Carmencita Whonder, a former Schumer staffer, is now a lobbyist at Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck. Federal disclosure documents show she has lobbied this year for “issues related to the taxation of private equity investments” on behalf of Apollo Global Management, a private equity firm Brownstein has represented for decades. A representative from Brownstein did not respond to request for comment.

The American Investment Council (AIC), a trade group representing the private equity industry, spent more than $830,000 in the first three months of 2021 lobbying Congress and the White House, in part on this issue. The AIC’s in-house lobbyists working on tax policy include former aides to Reps. Karen Bass of California and Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey. In February, AIC hired Ogilvy Government Relations for lobbying on “legislation affecting the regulation of private equity including tax related issues,” according to federal disclosure documents. Those lobbyists include former aides to Pelosi and New Jersey Sen. Robert Menendez. Other external lobbyists working on behalf of AIC include Democratic fundraiser Steve Elmendorf and a former aide to Delaware Sen. Tom Carper.

None of the external lobbyists responded to requests for comment. When asked about using Democratic lobbyists to advocate against Democratic tax proposals, an AIC spokesperson said, “We are working to ensure members of Congress on both sides of the aisle understand how new tax increases will discourage investment in small businesses, renewable energy, and other important priorities.”

As proposals and frameworks give way to legislative text this summer, it will become clear if these lobbying efforts have paid off. Right now, there is broad consensus within the Democratic Party that the corporate tax rate needs to increase—although there is disagreement about by how much—and that the carried interest loophole needs to be closed. West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, a moderate Democrat who consequently holds outsized sway in the reconciliation process, was one of the co-sponsors of a bill introduced last spring to close it.

Still, the vast resources being put into opposing these policies has tax reform advocates on edge. “You’ve got corporate America against us,” says Frank Clemente, Executive Director of progressive group Americans for Tax Fairness. “This is a David versus Goliath fight.”



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Angelina Jolie: We Need to Understand the Human Cost of Burkina Faso’s Refugee Crisis

Burkina Faso is gripped by a war we seldom hear about, even though Western nations had a hand in its creation. Until the NATO bombing campaign in Libya in 2011, the West African nation had enjoyed decades of peace and, though it faced challenges including endemic poverty, was considered a beacon of stability in the Sahel region.

After the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi’s government, militants and weapons flooded southwest across the Sahara and into Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso. By 2015, those guns had been turned by extremist groups upon villagers, cattle herders and children in rural Burkina Faso. More than 1.2 million Burkinabe people have fled their homes because of the intensifying violence. Camps for refugees from neighboring Mali have also been brutally attacked.

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In the days before I arrived, militants attacked a village in the north of Burkina Faso and executed at least 138 people. Separately, a convoy of the U.N. Refugee Agency and partners came under fire traveling to a refugee camp I was due to visit. It was my first experience with the insecurity experienced daily by the Burkinabe people. Most of the families I met had moved several times, with nowhere truly safe for them.

A striking number of the outwardly calm men I met told me that they lived in a constant state of terror. Many of the displaced had seen male relatives murdered for refusing to join the armed groups.

I was visiting Burkina Faso with the U.N. Refugee Agency, to mark June 20—World Refugee Day—with displaced people. I’ve taken a trip like this nearly every year for the past two decades, but this journey felt different. I had to keep moving, spending only a short while in each location, because of the high risk from terrorist groups. I traveled by road from the capital Ouagadougou to Kaya, a city that is home to some 110,000 displaced people. The next day we flew—the road judged unsafe because of roadside bombs—to Dori, and then made the 10-minute drive to Goudoubo refugee camp in the remote, isolated and arid north of the country, close to the border with Mali.

It is a measure of their grace that not a single person I met in Burkina Faso called out the role Western intervention in Libya played in fueling the instability that plagues their country. In Goudoubo camp, I met 16-year-old Ag Mossa, a poet and refugee from Mali. He asked me if my children were in school, and when I said yes, he congratulated them. Schools are a prime target of militants in the Sahel, and millions of children across the region are missing out on their education as a result. Ag Mossa gave me one of his poems. “These little verses are a cry from the heart,” he wrote. “Oh for a roof for a small child from the Sahel, and help for him not to suffer fear.”

Humanitarian aid is no substitute for a livelihood, and the funding trickling into the country doesn’t come close to matching the scale of the suffering. The U.N. appeal for Burkina Faso is less than a quarter funded. This means that UNHCR and partners have only been able to provide shelter—a basic plastic tent with a wood frame—to 1 in 10 displaced people in the country.

As my visit progressed, a feeling of dread took hold of me. It felt like I was glimpsing the future. I’ve made more than 60 visits to refugees globally in the past 20 years. I’ve watched as political solutions to conflicts have dried up for an ever growing population of forcibly displaced people and their children—born displaced or stateless, passing their entire childhoods in limbo.

Wars no longer seem to end; they simply shift, just as al-Qaeda and the Islamic State have shifted their operations from Afghanistan and the Middle East to the Sahel and Sub-Saharan Africa. Meanwhile, the number of forcibly displaced people has doubled globally in a decade, to more than 80 million people. Looking back on those lost decades, it is as if everything was leading us to the kind of conflict now seen in Burkina Faso, combining the reality of a protracted war, fueled by terrorism.

These threats are made worse by the devastating effects of man-made climate change. African nations have generated only a tiny fraction of the emissions heating our planet. Yet in Burkina Faso, arable land and their natural water supplies are drying up at a terrifying rate, making it next to impossible for families that have farmed the earth for generations to feed their children. One Malian refugee, who had fled to Burkina Faso with his family and their livestock, described how their cows died one by one from the lack of grazing and water.

We had decades to try to prevent conflicts from breaking out or to find peace agreements to enable refugees to return to their home countries. We now face the prospect that climate-change effects will mean there is no home for displaced people to return to.

Governments in wealthy industrialized nations act as if refugees can be treated as someone else’s problem if they simply fortify their borders or pay developing nations to continue to host millions of displaced people. They make shiny new humanitarian announcements to distract voters, and themselves, from decades of unkept promises. The hypocrisy makes it harder to hold to account governments that commit mass atrocities against their own people, causing them to flee.

At which point will we be concerned enough to recognize that the model is broken as well as immoral? When 100 million people are displaced? Or 200 million, which we could reach within the next 20 years?

As citizens, we need to shift our thinking. We’re learning to understand the human cost of the minerals mined in conflict zones to meet our demand for smartphones and the environmental cost of manufacturing our clothes. Our foreign policies—the promises we break, the allies we indulge, the exceptions we make, and the atrocities we overlook—also carry a vast human cost. That price is being paid by millions of children like Ag Mossa.



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Lloyds fined for nine million misleading insurance letters

The bank claimed in the letters that insurance renewal quotes being offered were a "competitive price".

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Surfside death toll jumps to 60 one day after shift from search-and-rescue to recovery



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Tokyo Olympic Games: Spectators barred as state of emergency announced



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Fauci tells unvaccinated to ‘get over’ politics of COVID vaccines as variants spread



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Russia to launch new International Space Station module



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Surfside tower collapse: 'Zero' hope of finding survivors



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All the details on one of bourbon’s most anticipated annual releases



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Fast-food workers are leveraging the labor shortage to demand higher pay on the anniversary of the last federal minimum wage increase 12 years ago



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Jordan, Israel agree to water deal, more West Bank trade



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Kansas state trooper praises Broncos’ Drew Lock, whose windshield was shattered on I-70



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Missing 12-foot python found in crawl space of shopping mall



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Euro 2020 final: How can you get a ticket for Sunday's historic game at Wembley? - Sky News

  1. Euro 2020 final: How can you get a ticket for Sunday's historic game at Wembley?  Sky News
  2. Win or lose on Sunday, England have given us something to be proud of  The Guardian
  3. England's Euro 2020 final against Italy on Sunday night will cause a massive spike in Covid  Daily Mail
  4. Government 'considers' extra bank holiday if England win Euro 2020  Birmingham Live
  5. Italy’s Marco Verratti feels Euro 2020 final will be won and lost in the mind  The Guardian
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Rudy Giuliani’s D.C. law license suspended



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Hunter who shot and killed teen watching sunset is going to prison, PA official says



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Mystery unfolds as odd ‘treasure’ is unearthed during Michigan home renovation



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Haiti president Jovenel Moïse's body was 'riddled with 12 bullets and an eye had been gouged out' - Daily Mail

  1. Haiti president Jovenel Moïse's body was 'riddled with 12 bullets and an eye had been gouged out'  Daily Mail
  2. Haiti: Four 'mercenaries' who assassinated president Jovenel Moise killed in gun battle, police say  Sky News
  3. Haiti: four dead after police gunfight with suspected killers of president Jovenel Moïse  The Guardian
  4. Moïse's assassination is a tragic reminder of Haiti's unraveling democracy  CNN
  5. Opinion | Haiti needs swift and muscular international intervention  The Washington Post
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Easyjet warns travel rules may just benefit rich



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Nintendo Switch OLED Model - Price, Release Date, Specs, Battery Life And Where It Leaves 'Switch Pro' - Nintendo Life

  1. Nintendo Switch OLED Model - Price, Release Date, Specs, Battery Life And Where It Leaves 'Switch Pro'  Nintendo Life
  2. Spec analysis: Switch OLED model - new display, old tech  Eurogamer.net
  3. Nintendo Switch OLED has some decent upgrades, but lacks the bigger picture in a next-gen world  Gamesradar
  4. Another Nintendo Console Has Gotten An Upgrade, But It's From 18 Years Ago  Nintendo Life
  5. Ys IX: Monstrum Nox - Launch Trailer - Nintendo Switch  Nintendo
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Trump got distracted by the word 'nuclear' during a bizarre press conference about his latest lawsuit



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GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert calls Biden's door-to-door vaccinators 'needle Nazis'



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Thursday, 8 July 2021

Texas woman kidnapped 4-year-old, talked about selling her 2 children, sheriff says



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Fatal crash splits car in half early Wednesday on US 40 Highway in Kansas City



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Lorry drivers able to work longer hours to address shortage

Grant Shapps says the move will ease a driver shortage, but the industry calls it a sticking plaster.

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'One rule for him and his chums': Tan Dhesi attacks Boris Johnson over hypocrisy - Guardian News

  1. 'One rule for him and his chums': Tan Dhesi attacks Boris Johnson over hypocrisy  Guardian News
  2. Boris Johnson says he’s ‘deeply sorry’ after grieving Labour MP’s blistering Commons attack on Government ‘...  The Sun
  3. Labour MP Who Lost Family Members During Covid Blasts 'Hypocritical' Ministers  HuffPost UK
  4. MP hammers Boris Johnson over ‘disgraceful’ defence of Cummings  The Guardian
  5. Johnson ‘deeply sorry’ for pandemic suffering following blast from Labour MP  Evening Standard
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Microsoft fixes critical PrintNightmare bug

A patch has been issued for a serious flaw in Windows, exploited by hackers.

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Trump to sue Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, Twitter's Jack Dorsey



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Eleven charged after anti-mask protesters take over school district board meeting



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Attica Scott to challenge John Yarmuth for Louisville congressional seat in 2022



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Tropical Storm Elsa threatens NC, SC coasts with winds and rain. Here’s the forecast



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President Moise’s shocking assassination means U.S. must reconsider its Haiti policy | Editorial



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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene refers to Nazi-era 'brown shirts' in opposing vaccination push



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Russian fighter jets 'buzz' American spy plane in the Black Sea - Daily Mail

  1. Russian fighter jets 'buzz' American spy plane in the Black Sea  Daily Mail
  2. Chaos above Black Sea: Russian jets intercept 'US spy plane' - warned away from border  Daily Express
  3. U.S. Navy Defends 'Essential' Black Sea Drills as Russia Threatens Violent Response  Newsweek
  4. Russian warplanes have been practicing bombing ships in Black Sea  Business Insider
  5. View Full coverage on Google News


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Right to repair movement gains power in US and Europe

Lawmakers and advocates want to give consumers more choice when it comes to fixing devices.

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Ever Given released from Suez canal after compensation agreed - The Guardian

  1. Ever Given released from Suez canal after compensation agreed  The Guardian
  2. Suez Canal: Ever Given ship finally released after compensation deal struck between Egyptian authorities and Japanese owners  Sky News
  3. Container ship that blocked Suez Canal finally resumes its journey after £400million settlement  Daily Mail
  4. Suez Canal releases hulking vessel after settlement deal  The Independent
  5. The Ever Given is finally leaving the Suez Canal  CNN International
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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City of London bosses’ pay could be linked to staff diversity - The Guardian

City of London bosses’ pay could be linked to staff diversity  The Guardian

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Nine people are missing in the ocean off the Keys, and the Coast Guard is searching



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British and Irish Lions: Two players isolating after positive coronavirus test in management team - Sky Sports

  1. British and Irish Lions: Two players isolating after positive coronavirus test in management team  Sky Sports
  2. British and Irish Lions 2021: Sam Warburton says Test selection is 'wide open'  BBC Sport
  3. Covid case in British and Irish Lions camp as match thrown into doubt hours before kick-off  Wales Online
  4. Lions tour in turmoil as Bulls match called off and Covid hits Springboks  The Guardian
  5. Five members of Lions touring party isolating after positive Covid test  The Telegraph
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Jodie Foster steps out for Day Two at Cannes Film Festival after kissing her wife Alexandra Hedison - Daily Mail

  1. Jodie Foster steps out for Day Two at Cannes Film Festival after kissing her wife Alexandra Hedison  Daily Mail
  2. All The Best-Dressed Stars On The Red Carpet At Cannes Film Festival 2021  British Vogue
  3. The 9 actresses who master French chic now  Telegraph.co.uk
  4. Cannes Film Festival 2021: Stars arrive at Annette opening night premiere  Daily Mail
  5. Bella Hadid steals show in daringly low-cut gown as she leads celebs at Cannes 2021  Daily Star
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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With hours to go before Florida landfall, Tropical Storm Elsa loses hurricane status



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Miami condo death toll rises to 46 as families of missing brace for ‘tragic loss’ - The Guardian

  1. Miami condo death toll rises to 46 as families of missing brace for ‘tragic loss’  The Guardian
  2. Rescuers fear they won't find any more survivors after apartment block's collapse in Miami  Sky News
  3. 8 more dead pulled from rubble of collapsed Florida condo  The Independent
  4. 10 More Victims Found in Surfside Condo Rubble, Bringing Death Toll to 46  NBC 6 South Florida
  5. ‘Significant concerns’ over Florida condo near collapsed Miami building  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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The England squad is built on immigration – yet our xenophobic government dares to cheer it on - New Statesman

  1. The England squad is built on immigration – yet our xenophobic government dares to cheer it on  New Statesman
  2. Euro 2020: Getting in the mood for tonight's match? Here are 18 classic football songs  Sky News
  3. With Gareth Southgate in charge, we three hijabis can be proud of the Three Lions  The Guardian
  4. ‘National mood’ impact of England’s Euro 2020 victories hard to measure  Financial Times
  5. Prince William, Boris Johnson and Emma Raducanu lead battlecry as England prepare for semi final  Daily Mail
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Love Island security kick out YouTube prankster who filmed himself breaking into the villa - Daily Mail

  1. Love Island security kick out YouTube prankster who filmed himself breaking into the villa  Daily Mail
  2. Love Island 2021: Security breach investigated as YouTuber breaks in  Metro.co.uk
  3. View Full coverage on Google News


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Trump reportedly told John Kelly that Hitler 'did a lot of good things'



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Wednesday, 7 July 2021

Danyal Hussein guilty of stabbing sisters in Wembley park in 'pact with devil' - The Telegraph

  1. Danyal Hussein guilty of stabbing sisters in Wembley park in 'pact with devil'  The Telegraph
  2. Danyal Hussein found guilty of murdering two sisters in London park  The Guardian
  3. Bibaa and Nicole: The life after death of two sisters  BBC News
  4. Teen who killed sisters in park as part of sacrifice to the devil found guilty of murder  Daily Star
  5. Teenager, 19, murdered two sisters in London park after pact with demon to win the lottery  Daily Mail
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Scots hospital reaches full capacity due to rising covid cases as 'code black' alert issued - Daily Record

  1. Scots hospital reaches full capacity due to rising covid cases as 'code black' alert issued  Daily Record
  2. NHS hospital declares rare 'code black' alert as Covid surges and staff isolate  The Mirror
  3. Covid Scotland: Raigmore hospital at 'code black' as NHS Highland struggles with rising cases  The Scotsman
  4. Covid Scotland: Raigmore hospital in 'code black' crisis | HeraldScotland  HeraldScotland
  5. Raigmore Hospital 'at capacity' as Covid-19 surge adds to 'unprecedented' demands  RossShire Journal
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Damien Hirst on painting cherry blossom: ‘It’s taken me until I’m 55 to please my mum’ - The Guardian

Damien Hirst on painting cherry blossom: ‘It’s taken me until I’m 55 to please my mum’  The Guardian

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'Down's syndrome abortion law doesn't respect my life' - BBC News

  1. 'Down's syndrome abortion law doesn't respect my life'  BBC News
  2. Woman with Down’s syndrome takes Sajid Javid to court over abortion law  The Guardian
  3. 'It makes me feel like I shouldn't be here': Woman with Down's syndrome leads abortion law legal challenge  Sky News
  4. Women sue Government over 'discriminatory' abortion law for babies with Down's syndrome  The Mirror
  5. Woman with Down's syndrome fights law allowing abortions up to birth  Metro.co.uk
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Nintendo Switch (OLED Model) - Official Announcement Trailer - IGN

  1. Nintendo Switch (OLED Model) - Official Announcement Trailer  IGN
  2. After Months Of 'Switch Pro' Rumours, Nintendo Officially Unveils The Nintendo Switch OLED Model  Nintendo Life
  3. Nintendo reveals upgraded OLED Switch, due October  Eurogamer.net
  4. Latest Switch System Update Allows Game Patching When Your Storage Is Full  PCMag
  5. Finally, Nintendo Officially Unveils The Switch OLED Model, The 'Switch Pro' We've Been Expecting  Nintendo Life
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Six months after Jan. 6, Capitol Police says it's working "around the clock" to change agency



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Vauxhall UK plant safe with electric vehicle plan



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'She's gonna do her, I'm gonna do me': Gold medal hammer thrower who honored anthem reacts to peer's protest



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Euro 2020: Pubs to stay open later for final on Sunday

Premises will be able to stay open until 11.15pm, in case the game goes to extra time and penalties.

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Gavin Williamson scraps Covid bubbles in schools from 19 July - The Guardian

  1. Gavin Williamson scraps Covid bubbles in schools from 19 July  The Guardian
  2. Sajid Javid addresses parliament on Covid regulations – watch live  Guardian News
  3. Covid: Bubbles scrapped in England's schools from 19 July  BBC News
  4. School bubbles set to be dropped in lockdown lifting  The Independent
  5. COVID-19: School bubbles to end in England, Gavin Williamson says  sky.com
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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South Africa's ex-leader Zuma urges court to stop his arrest



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Audio editor Audacity denies spyware accusation



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State pension predicted to rise by 8% - BBC News

  1. State pension predicted to rise by 8%  BBC News
  2. Pandemic, climate change and rising debts pose fiscal risks to UK, warns watchdog – business live  The Guardian
  3. Rishi Sunak must find extra £10bn a year to meet Covid legacy costs, says OBR  The Times
  4. UK faces new debt surge in climate push, early action best - OBR  Reuters UK
  5. U.K. Faces Three Catastrophic Risks to Public Finances, Watchdog Says  BloombergQuint
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Nikole Hannah-Jones chooses Howard over UNC-Chapel Hill



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Kensington’s StudioCaddy is a home for all your Apple devices - The Verge

  1. Kensington’s StudioCaddy is a home for all your Apple devices  The Verge
  2. iPhone 13 rumored to have bigger wireless MagSafe charger that could refuel AirPods at the same time  Daily Mail
  3. All members of the iPhone 14 family to sport 120Hz LTPO OLED panels - comments  GSMArena.com
  4. iPhone 13: 5 long-overdue features rumored for Apple's flagship that I can't wait to see  T3
  5. Exciting new iPhone 13 feature could be great news for your AirPods  Creative Bloq
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Stockwell Six: Convictions of three black men from 1970s overturned by Court of Appeal - Sky News

  1. Stockwell Six: Convictions of three black men from 1970s overturned by Court of Appeal  Sky News
  2. Stockwell Six: Three men have 1972 convictions quashed by Court of Appeal  BBC News
  3. Three of 'Stockwell Six' cleared after 50 years of trying to rob corrupt policeman  The Times
  4. Stockwell Six: Man went through 50 years of 'trauma' with father dying believing his son was guilty of 1970s crime  Sky News
  5. Three members of 'Stockwell Six' jailed for attempting to rob corrupt cop have convictions quashed  Daily Mail
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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British Airways data-breach compensation claim settled

Thousands of people are to receive compensation over a 2018 data breach at British Airways.

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SEO Improvement in 2025

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