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Residents in parts of the Midwest are trying to pick up after their homes and belongings were damaged by flood waters. (March 21)
AP, AP

Spring flooding has already been disastrous, and it’s likely to get worse, federal forecasters announced Thursday. Floods could reach “unprecedented” and “potentially historic” levels.

Almost the entire eastern two-thirds of the nation should see flooding this spring, National Weather Service deputy director Mary Erickson said at a news conference on Thursday. Some 25 states are forecast to see “moderate” to “major” flooding, the weather service said.

The Midwest floods are “a preview of what we expect throughout the rest of the spring,” she said. “The flooding this year could be worse than what we have seen in previous years … even worse than the historic floods we saw in 1993 and 2011,” Erickson added.

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The deadly, destructive flooding that began last week from Minnesota to Missouri has killed at least four people, caused more than $1.5 billion in estimated losses and damages and destroyed more than 2,000 homes. 

Scientists said this month’s flooding was caused by rapid snow melt combined with heavy spring rain and late-season snowfall in areas where the ground was already saturated. Much of the precipitation fell during the “bomb cyclone” that whipped the region last week. 

“This is shaping up to be a potentially unprecedented flood season, with more than 200 million people at risk for flooding in their communities,” said Ed Clark, director of NOAA’s National Water Center in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

Catastrophe: Before and after satellite images show destruction in Nebraska and Iowa after Midwest floods

The water that’s now soaking the Upper Midwest will eventually make its way down the Mississippi toward the Gulf Coast, where flooding will worsen in May. 

“The extensive flooding we’ve seen in the past two weeks will continue through May and become more dire and may be exacerbated in the coming weeks as the water flows downstream,” Clark said.

Forecasters say the biggest risks include all three Mississippi River basins, plus the basins of the Red River of the North, the Great Lakes, the eastern Missouri River, the lower Ohio River, the lower Cumberland River and the Tennessee River.

Global warming: The waters are rising, the floods are coming. What are we doing to save ourselves?

Record-breaking: Historic, deadly Midwest floods are worst ‘anybody has ever experienced’ in some areas

It’s still too early to determine if human-caused climate change played what, if any, role in the flooding. However, scientists said the conditions are consistent with what they expect from global warming. 

“You can think of climate change as steroids for these rain events,” Texas A&M University climate scientist Andrew Dessler said.

As for the spring weather forecast, meteorologists said the East Coast and Northwest should see warmer-than-average temperatures from May through June. However, the central and northern Plains should stay unusually cool. 

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Officials say recent flooding in parts of Nebraska has caused nearly $1.4 billion in estimated losses and damage. (March 20)
AP, AP

For rainfall, nearly the entire nation east of the Rockies should see a soggier spring than usual, with the Southeast and the central Rockies seeing the wettest conditions. The only unusually dry spot will be the Pacific Northwest.

Federal meteorologists do not issue forecasts for severe weather, which includes tornadoes, high winds and large hail. 

Contributing: The Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/03/21/weather-spring-flood-forecast-historic-floods-200-million-us/3233517002/

In that sense, the trickle has long since become a flood. The cast of characters has grown, and grown familiar — Flynn, Manafort, Cohen, Papadopoulos; the pattern of lying to investigators and Congress has become routine; the president’s shifting stories have become the norm. News coverage has become background noise, like a sea that periodically surges and retreats.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/03/21/us/mueller-investigation-photos.html

“At this point we would either leave with no deal, or put forward an alternative plan,” she said, adding that this would mean participating in European elections, something she described as “wrong.”

But it is possible that Parliament could vote to keep closer ties to the bloc — a so-called soft Brexit — and Mrs. May did not completely exclude that option, by saying she would work with lawmakers if they reject her deal.

Mrs. May refused to exclude the possibility of leaving the bloc without a deal.

But the growing sense of alarm over a “no deal” Brexit is real. And even if the deadline has been pushed back from March 29, it has not been pushed back very far.

”Our country is facing a national emergency,” the main British business and trade union groupings, the Confederation of British Industry and the Trades Union Congress, said in a rare joint statement.

“Decisions of recent days have caused the risk of no deal to soar,” the statement said. “Firms and communities across the U.K. are not ready for this outcome. The shock to our economy would be felt by generations to come.”

In Brussels on Thursday, European officials also were host to talks with Jeremy Corbyn, the leader of the opposition Labour Party, which wants closer ties to the European Union than do Mrs. May’s Conservatives and could play a critical role in the way things unfold in London.

If Mrs. May, against the odds, does succeed in Parliament next week, then matters move relatively smoothly, with a modest delay to Brexit to allow for enacting legislation to put her plan in place. But the prime minister’s angry denunciation of lawmakers in a national address Wednesday evening is unlikely to make it any easier to win over opposition legislators.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/21/world/europe/brexit-extension-eu-uk.html

The increasingly stark contrast between the parties on Israel came into view on Thursday as leading 2020 Democrats, under pressure from the Left, announced they were skipping the annual American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s policy conference, while President Trump affirmed on Twitter that the United States should recognize Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights.

On Wednesday, citing a poll of members, the liberal activist group MoveOn called on 2020 Democratic presidential candidates to skip the AIPAC conference. By Thursday, campaigns of Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., Kamala Harris, D-Calif., Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg said the candidates wouldn’t be there.

Also on Thursday, Trump tweeted, “After 52 years it is time for the United States to fully recognize Israel’s Sovereignty over the Golan Heights, which is of critical strategic and security importance to the State of Israel and Regional Stability!” Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, has been pushing this idea from the Senate. The Golan Heights is a strategically important area in northern Israel that Israel captured from Syria in the Six Day War of 1967, and if ceded, could benefit Iranians in any attack on Israel.

The dueling news stories reflect the fact that, even though for decades Israel was viewed as a bipartisan issue, more recently the parties have been moving in significantly different directions. While Republicans have become staunchly pro-Israel, fueled in part by the passion of Zionist evangelicals but also the broader conservative identification with Israel, the Democratic Party has been pushed by its liberal base to pursue a more critical, even at times, hostile, stance toward Israel. A Pew survey found that 79 percent of Republicans said the sympathized more with Israel than the Palestinians, compared with just 27 percent of Democrats. The contrast was more severe when viewed by ideology, with 81 percent of conservative Republicans favoring Israel, and nearly twice as many liberal Democrats sympathizing with Palestinians (35 percent) as compared with Israelis (19 percent).

Over the past decade or so, many Democratic leaders tried to sweep these differences under the rug, and in this, they were aided by AIPAC. Even as Republicans were becoming more unequivocally supportive of Israel, AIPAC existed in part to promote the idea that it was still one of the few areas in which both parties would agree.

AIPAC conferences came to feature Congressional leadership from both parties, and the leading candidates tended to make appearances there. I remember covering the AIPAC conference in 2007 when Democratic candidates including Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama took out rooms in the conference center to hold small events for the attendees after all of the major speeches were over. Increasingly, however, AIPAC had become a cursory stop that would allow Democrats, such as Obama, to demonstrate that they checked a box of being supportive of Israel even as they pursued anti-Israel policies.

As the Democratic Party is more and more reflective of its base on other issues, it makes sense that eventually its candidates would start to dispense with the charade and simply skip AIPAC. The 2020 Democrats already rallied around Rep. Ilhan Omar after she repeatedly advanced anti-Semitic comments, so it would have been jarring had they gone to AIPAC and claimed to support an unbreakable bond between the U.S. and Israel.

At the same time, by recognizing the Golan as Israeli territory after having already moved the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, Trump is making U.S. policy more reflective of where the conservative base of the party is on Israel.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/highlighting-contrast-2020-democrats-ditch-aipac-as-trump-affirms-israeli-sovereignty-over-golan-heights

President Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, have been using private email accounts and the messaging service WhatsApp to conduct official government business, the chairman of the House Oversight and Reform Committee said in a Thursday letter to the White House.

The use of private email and apps by two presidential advisers could violate the Presidential Records Act. It also would amount to the same activity that Republicans, led by Trump, campaigned on in 2016 as evidence of Hillary Clinton’s alleged criminality.

In his letter to the White House, Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., the chair of the committee, requested documents and information relating to the Trump White House’s use of nongovernmental channels.

Ivanka Trump, Cummings wrote, “continues to receive emails relating to official business on her personal email account” and “she does not forward emails received through her personal account unless she responds to the email, even if the subject matter of the email relates to her official duties.”

That, Cummings said, violates the Presidential Records Act.

Kushner’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, assured Cummings that his client took screenshots on WhatsApp of all government business conducted on the platform, including the times he has used it to communicate with foreign leaders. When asked whether he had used the app — which is prohibited by the White House — to discuss classified information, Cummings said Lowell replied, “That’s above my pay grade.”

Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, left, and Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, listen during a joint press conference with Trump and Saad Hariri, Lebanon’s prime minister, not pictured, in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, July 25, 2017. Trump said he’s disappointed with Attorney General Jeff Sessions for recusing himself from investigations of Russian interference in the 2016 election, and that ‘time will tell’ if the nation’s top law enforcement officer remains in his job. Photographer: Zach Gibson/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, left, talks to Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, before a ceremony in the Rose Garden of the White House to pardon the National Thanksgiving Turkey, Drumstick, in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2017. This years pardoned turkeys, Wishbone and Drumstick, will join last years turkeys at Virginia Techs Gobblers Rest exhibit, where students and veterinarians care for the turkeys, and the public can visit and learn about the universitys teaching, research, and outreach programs in animal and poultry sciences and veterinary medicine. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, left, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, walk on the South Lawn of the White House to board Marine One before departing to Camp David in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Friday, June 1, 2018. Trump said he will meet Kim Jong Un on June 12 in Singapore, after he sat down with a senior adviser to the North Korean leader in the White House to continue the groundwork for the historic meeting. Photographer: Yuri Gripas/Bloomberg via Getty Images

FILE: Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, right, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, board Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Friday, May 19, 2017. New Yorks banking regulator has asked Deutsche Bank AG and a pair of local lenders to provide information about their relationships with Jared Kushner, his family and the Kushner Cos., according to people familiar with the matter. Kushners financial and business ties have been of consistent interest for potential conflicts given his broad portfolio as senior adviser to his father-in-law, President Donald Trump. Our editors select the best archive images on Kushner and his family. Photographer: T.J. Kirkpatrick/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, arrive for a ‘Be Best’ initiative event in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Monday, May 7, 2018. Melania announced a campaign Monday to raise awareness of children’s issues including social media use and opioid abuse, making a rare solo public appearance in the Rose Garden of the White House to formally launch her official work. Photographer: Yuri Gripas/Bloomberg via Getty Images

WASHINGTON, DC – DECEMBER 05: (AFP- OUT) Former Vice President Joe Biden, fourth from left, and his wife Jill Biden, second from left, speak with Ivanka Trump, the daughter of President Donald Trump, third from left, and her husband, President Donald Trump’s White House Senior Adviser Jared Kushner, third from right, as former Vice President Al Gore, second from right, speak to former President Jimmy Carter, right, and former first lady Rosalynn Carter, bottom center, before a State Funeral for former President George H.W. Bush at the National Cathedral, December 5, 2018 in Washington, DC. President Bush will be buried at his final resting place at the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas. A WWII combat veteran, Bush served as a member of Congress from Texas, ambassador to the United Nations, director of the CIA, vice president and 41st president of the United States. (Photo by Andrew Harnik-Pool/Getty Images)




Cummings noted that the revelations about Kushner and Trump’s communications had come to light in 2017, but that “new information that raises additional security and federal records concerns” has since been obtained.

Previous attempts by the committee to obtain information on the use of private email have been rebuffed by the White House, setting up the latest battle between the Democratic-controlled body and the president.

“The White House’s failure to provide documents and information is obstructing the committee’s investigation into allegations of violations of federal records laws by White House officials,” Cummings said in his letter.

“If you continue to withhold these documents from the Committee,” Cummings added, “we will be forced to consider alternative means to obtain compliance,” a not-so-veiled allusion to a possible subpoena.

In the final month of the 2016 presidential race, Donald Trump accused Clinton of “willful and deliberate criminal conduct” in her use of private email while serving as secretary of state.

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The Florida man who mailed homemade bombs to leading Democrats and other critics of President Trump broke down in court on Thursday while pleading guilty to charges that may send him to prison for life.

“MAGA bomber” Cesar Sayoc, 57, claimed he never intended for the devices — which he packed with explosive powder from fireworks, fertilizer, pool chemicals and broken glass — to actually blow up and hurt anyone.

None of the crude pipe bombs detonated, but Sayoc admitted in Manhattan federal court that “I was aware of the risk” they would.

“In October 2018, I made devices that were designed to look like bombs and sent them in the US Mail,” he said softly, while reading from a prepared statement.

“I sent 16 devices to people around the country.”

Sayoc also listed his targets as financier George Soros, Hillary Clinton, former CIA Director Jonn Brennan, actor Robert DeNiro, former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, ex-President Barack Obama, Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), former Attorney General Eric Holder, Sen. Cory Booker (D-New Jersey), Sen. Kamala Harris (D-California), hedge-fund billionaire Tom Steyer and CNN.

“I also put pictures of the recipients with a red Xs over their faces inside the package,” the muscle-bound former stripper added.

Near the end of his statement, Sayoc’s voice choked up with emotion as his body shook and he scrunched up his face, apparently holding back tears.

“I am extremely sorry,” he said in a voice barely above a whisper.

He then pleaded guilty to 65 counts of use of a weapon of mass destruction, interstate transportation of an explosive device, conveying a threat through interstate commerce, illegal mailing of an explosive device and carrying an explosive during the commission of a felony.

Sayoc’s plea agreement says both the prosecution and defense agree that sentencing guidelines call for life in prison, plus 120 years, and a fine of up to $500,000.

But the deal lets either side argue for more or less time in the slammer at Sayoc’s scheduled Sept. 12 sentencing.

Sayoc was busted Oct. 26 outside an AutoZone store in Plantation, Fla., following the FBI’s discovery of his fingerprint on the package he sent to Waters.

The arrest came just four days after the first of his bombs was discovered at Soros’ Westchester County estate, and law-enforcement sources have told The Post that Sayoc had a target list with hundreds of more names on it.

At the time, Sayoc was living in a white van with its windows covered with pro-Trump images and messages, and others attacking the president’s critics — including ones that showed red crosshairs over Obama and Clinton.

The dashboard was also covered with baseball caps featuring American flag motifs and Trump’s signature “Make America Great Again” slogan.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/03/21/maga-bomber-cesar-sayoc-breaks-down-as-he-pleads-guilty-faces-life-in-prison/

Venezuelan intelligence agents have “kidnapped” a top aide to interim leader Juan Guaidó following a middle-of-the-night raid at gunpoint, where agents allegedly planted firearms and a grenade to justify the arrest.

The detention of Guaido’s chief of staff, Roberto Marrero, came shortly after the Venezuelan authorities entered and searched the homes of Marrero and opposition lawmaker Sergio Vergara on Thursday. Vergara said he was woken up by heavy banging at his door and agents pointing weapons at him.

Both officials accompanied the interim leader on a recent Latin American tour to galvanize opposition to the socialist Nicolas Maduro regime and shore up support for Guaido as the legitimate leader of the country.

CITIGROUP TO SELL MORE THAN $1B IN VENEZUELAN GOLD IN BLOW TO MADURO REGIME, REPORTS SAY

Guaido accused the regime of kidnapping and urged it to release his aide, whose location remains unknown, the BBC reported.

The opposition leader said Venezuelan intelligence agents planted “two rifles and a grenade” at his aide’s home during the raid. “We don’t know where he is. He should be freed immediately,” Guaido tweeted.

The Trump administration, meanwhile, condemned the raids and threatened Maduro’s regime with consequences.

“The United States condemns raids by Maduro’s security services and detention of Roberto Marrero, Chief of Staff to Interim President @jguaido,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo wrote in a tweet. “We call for his immediate release. We will hold accountable those involved.”

VENEZUELA IN CHAOS AFTER MASSIVE POWER OUTAGE, MADURO’S REGIME BLAMES MARCO RUBIO

Vergara was reportedly also briefly detained following the raids. According to the BBC, he said over 40 heavily armed officers from the intelligence agency raided the properties.

Most Western governments, including the U.S., are backing Guaidó and recognize his legitimacy. Venezuelan prosecutors say Guaidó is being investigated for alleged links to violence as well as for any connection to the nation’s worst power outages that plunged the country into darkness for extensive time periods.

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Venezuelan government officials directly blamed the U.S. — including Florida Senator Marco Rubio — for the outages. More reliable sources peg the blackouts as being caused due to crumbling infrastructure.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/venezuelan-intel-agents-arrest-top-aide-of-opposition-leader-after-night-raid-and-planting-firearms-granade

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Thursday tried to explain her lack of office hours by saying she’s still taking “baby steps” — but said constituents who can’t work with her sporadic schedule should follow her on Twitter.

Almost four months after her inauguration, the freshman congresswoman only recently opened a Queens office and still doesn’t have one in the Bronx.

Instead, on Thursday, she appeared at the Westchester Square Library for just two hours during the workday, where she met with 17 locals.

“Right now we’re just taking these baby steps and adapting according to community feedback,” the 29-year-old told The Post when asked why her brief availability was in the middle of the day.

“We don’t want to be too concrete, we adapt to the feedback of the community, so if we hear that folks want more evening hours we’re happy to do that.”

Asked what people with jobs should do in the meantime, she suggested: “You can give us a call, you can email us, you can add us on social media.”

Ocasio-Cortez added that she’s “constantly” attending community events, noting that she’d be at Bronx Community Board 9 that night.

But when asked for a schedule of future events she’d be attending so her constituents could find her, the self-described Democratic socialist claimed she wasn’t “allowed.”

“Due to safety reasons I’m not allowed to, so Capitol Police, uh, yeah, it’s intense, so, Capitol Police recommend that we don’t give specific details about where we will be and when too far in advance,” she said.

The Capitol Police said it wouldn’t comment on its “consultations” with “Member offices on security-related matters,” but a Democratic House aide said the cops “have nothing to do with the decision to have a public schedule or not.”

“The police don’t tell us what to do. The police did not send out a memo that we advise you not to send out a public schedule,” said the aide.

“You still have to provide the information publicly so your constituents can come.”

In a Time cover story published Thursday, Ocasio-Cortez’s staffers said they’d been trained on how to screen visitors because of the mounting number of death threats targeting the freshman lawmaker.

The rattled aides said they now worry whenever they hear a knock on the door of her office on Capitol Hill.

With Bob Fredericks

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/03/21/ocasio-cortez-taking-baby-steps-toward-finding-time-for-her-constituents/

As my colleague Anna Giaritelli notes, gun control activists are calling for U.S. adoption of New Zealand’s new gun regulations, as ordered by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern following last week’s terrorist attack.

One problem: these calls reflect either a basic lack of understanding on U.S. constitutional law, or a failure to actually read the New Zealand regulations.

I have read those regulations, and I am convinced that Ardern’s new regulations would be patently unconstitutional were any federal, state, or local government to enact them in America.

Section 3. of the Order (effectively clarifying legislation for New Zealand’s 1983 Arms Act) rules that most semi-automatic firearms are now to be regarded as “military-style weapons.” The order declares that illegal firearms will now include:

Five cartridges means five rounds. And “a semi-automatic firearm that is capable of being used in combination with a detachable magazine,” means the vast majority of handguns relied upon by Americans to protect their families and homes.

This is the key issue. Such a ban in America would explicitly conflict with the Supreme Court’s ruling in the most relevant Second Amendment case, District of Colombia v. Heller. And don’t take my word for it — read Antonin Scalia’s rationale for why most semi-automatic handguns used to defend American homes are constitutionally protected: “There are many reasons that a citizen may prefer a handgun for home defense: It is easier to store in a location that is readily accessible in an emergency; it cannot easily be redirected or wrestled away by an attacker; it is easier to use for those without the upper-body strength to lift and aim a long gun; it can be pointed at a burglar with one hand while the other hand dials the police. Whatever the reason, handguns are the most popular weapon chosen by Americans for self-defense in the home, and a complete prohibition of their use is invalid.”

This, the Supreme Court concluded, means that when it comes to comparing the First Amendment to the Second Amendment: “The Second Amendment is no different. Like the First, it is the very product of an interest-balancing by the people… And whatever else it leaves to future evaluation, it surely elevates above all other interests the right of law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home.”

Yes, the Supreme Court has declined to overrule state regulations banning firearm magazines with capacities of more than ten rounds. But Heller’s finding of a basic right to self-defense via semi-automatic handguns would proscribe a six round or more magazine capacity limit as unconstitutional. After all, that limit would effectively ban possession of any handgun. Indeed, that is why state magazine capacity bans are focused on a ten round limit: restrictions at a lower-round number such as five rounds would effectively ban handguns and thus invite the Supreme Court to overrule them.

There’s another point that stands out from Heller: its imperative that individuals be able to defend their homes effectively. Considering that trained police officers in firearms incidents miss their targets more often than they hit them, a magazine capacity limit of five rounds would degrade the right of self defense to a level of impotency.

This is not ultimately a question of opinion.

We all have our views on the Second Amendment and gun rights. Yet, when it comes to judging New Zealand’s legislation as applied to U.S. constitutional rights, the law stands clear. In the American Left’s salutation of this legislation, we’re seeing another example of gun control conversations driven by a lack of understanding and European-style emotional response.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/why-new-zealands-new-gun-controls-would-be-unconstitutional-in-america

President Trump has recognized Israeli sovereignty over areas of the Golan Heights it currently controls. In doing so, Trump effectively formalizes something that everyone already knew. Namely, that the Golan Heights, which Israel seized following a 1967 Syrian-Egyptian-Jordanian effort to annihilate it, were unlikely to be Syrian again for a very long time.

If you lament that, you have one person to blame: Syrian dictator Bashar Assad. Trump hinted at as much in his Thursday announcement, clarifying the “critical strategic and security importance” that the Golan provides to Israeli security.

Assad allowed Iran to turn southwestern Syria into one big missile launchpad. And considering that Iranian Revolutionary Guard missiles are targeted at Israeli cities which are less than 100 kilometers from Syrian territory, such as Haifa, Israel would be stupid to cede the Golan.

Trump’s action here recognizes the Golan’s tactical utility for Israeli security. The tactical utility of high ground positions has long been clear in military tactics, and in Jewish history, and the roughly 70 percent of the Golan Heights that Israel controls brings great defensive power. This focuses on preventing Syrian and Iranian aggression, supporting Israeli actions beyond its territory, and providing early warning of enemy missile and air forces.

At the margin of action, Trump’s decision is a no-brainer. The Iranian regime is ideologically invested in Israel’s annihilation and increasingly predisposed to take risks to that end. Although Israel can mitigate that threat by using force, Israeli loss of the Golan would effectively give Iran an elevated position from which to fire deep into Israel.

Moreover, if Assad had wanted to get the Golan Heights back, he should have thought more carefully about allowing Israel’s mortal enemy to use Syria as a playground.

On a concluding side note, Trump has earned another chit here for his peace deal. When the time comes, he must be prepared to use it.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/trump-recognizes-the-high-ground-reality-in-the-golan-heights

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(CNN)House Oversight Chairman Elijah Cummings said Thursday his committee has obtained new information that several senior White House officials have used personal email and messaging accounts to conduct government business, asserting that President Donald Trump’s son-in-law communicated with foreign leaders through a private messaging application that appears to lack adequate safeguards.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/21/politics/elijah-cummings-jared-kushner-personal-account/index.html

    An “emotionally exhausted” Meghan McCain again defended her father against President Trump Thursday on “The View,” saying she doesn’t “expect decency” from his family.

    “I don’t like coming here every day and having to do this, as all of you know. It’s extremely emotionally exhausting,” she said at the top of the show.

    “I don’t expect decency from the Trump family,” she added.

    During an official White House event at a tank manufacturing plant in Ohio on Wednesday, Trump spent nearly five minutes bashing the late Sen. John McCain because he didn’t receive credit for his funeral arrangements.

    “I gave him the kind of funeral that he wanted, which as president I had to approve.” Trump said. “I don’t care about this. I didn’t get a thank you. That’s OK.”

    The crowd of Ohio tank factory workers, many of whom are veterans, reportedly responded to the president’s criticism of McCain with silence. The longtime senator and former prisoner of war died seven months ago.

    (Getty Images) President Donald Trump waits to welcome Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro to the White House, March 19, 2019. Meghan McCain on “The View.”

    Meghan McCain reminded everybody that she has six brothers and sisters, two of whom are currently serving their country in the military. For the first time, Bridget McCain spoke out about Trump’s attacks to her father.

    “Anyone that knows anything about political history can probably surmise why she’s chosen to lead a very private life,” McCain said about her sister’s tweets to Trump. “But she felt inclined to say and tweet this.”

    “Everyone doesn’t have to agree with my dad or like him, but I do ask you to be decent and respectful,” Bridget McCain tweeted. “Even if you were invited to my dad’s funeral, you would have only wanted to be there for the credit and not for any condolences.”

    The co-hosts questioned why more lawmakers weren’t coming out in defense of John McCain and holding the president accountable for his comments.

    “If people in Congress and the Senate can’t step up, it’s ok we are; the show is,” McCain said Thursday morning. “There’s a lot of power in the show. There’s a lot of power in what we do every day as women on this show and I’m very – I’m eternally grateful to all the support.”

    Co-host Ana Navarro called Republicans “spineless” for not speaking out, and said lawmakers feared the president.

    “They’re afraid of this man, because they think he is like Lord Voldemort and if they mention his name, he will come down and strike them dead politically,” she said.

    Navarro added that John McCain’s years in the military and in public service warranted a dignified funeral.

    “John McCain didn’t get the funeral that he wanted. He got the funeral that he deserved,” Navarro said. “He got the funeral that he earned through more than 60 years of service and sacrifice and pain for this country – something that Donald Trump would know nothing about.”

    The president condemned McCain over the weekend for being “last in his class” and again on Tuesday, saying he was “never a fan” and that he “never will be” after McCain voted against repealing Obamacare.

    Since Trump’s initial remarks, McCain family’s received attacks from all sides. Cindy McCain, the late senator’s widow, received a threatening message from a stranger.

    She later shared it on Twitter.

    Meghan McCain responded to Trump on “The View” Wednesday morning, too.

    (ABC News) Meghan McCain talks about the latest comments by President Donald Trump about her father, Sen. John McCain, on ABC’s “The View,” March 21, 2019.

    “Attacking someone who isn’t here is a bizarre low,” she said. “My dad’s not here but I’m sure as hell here.”

    Over the weekend and throughout the week, McCain has actively shared support given to her late father. On Thursday, she thanked Andy Cohen for denouncing Trump’s criticisms on his show “Watch What Happens Live.”

    On Thursday’s show, Navarro said every time the president criticizes John McCain, “we need to call it out.”

    “It might be exhausting. We cannot get exhausted,” she said. “We cannot get tired of being outraged by what this man is doing to the presidency of the United States.”

    Every episode of ABC’s award-winning talk show “The View” is now available as a podcast! Listen and subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, TuneIn, Spotify, Stitcher or the ABC News app.

    Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/meghan-mccain-shes-emotionally-exhausted-address-trumps-comments/story?id=61835677

    President Trump on Thursday signed an executive order to promote free speech on college campuses by threatening colleges with the loss of federal research funding if they do not protect those rights.

    “We’re here to take historic action to defend American students and American values,” Trump said, surrounded by conservative student activists at the signing ceremony. “They’ve been under siege.”

    “Under the guise of speech codes, safe spaces and trigger warnings, these universities have tried to restrict free thought, impose total conformity and shut down the voices of great young Americans like those here today,” he said.

    TRUMP, ON CPAC STAGE WITH BERKELEY ASSAULT VICTIM, PROMISES EXECUTIVE ORDER ON CAMPUS FREE SPEECH

    A senior administration official said the order directs 12 grant-making agencies to use their authority in coordination with the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to ensure institutions that receive federal research or education grants promote free speech and free inquiry. White House officials have said it will apply to more than $35 billion in grants.

    Public universities seeking funding would have to certify they comply with the First Amendment, which already applies to them. Private universities, which have more flexibility in limiting speech, would need to commit to their own institutional rules.

    “Even as universities have received billions and billions of dollars from taxpayers, many have become increasingly hostile to free speech and the First Amendment,” Trump said.

    Trump had announced that such an order was forthcoming at the Conservative Political Action Conference last month, where he said the directive would require colleges and universities to support free speech in exchange for federal research dollars.

    He brought on stage Hayden Williams, a conservative activist who was attacked while working a recruitment table on campus at the University of California-Berkeley. The video quickly went viral, with conservatives citing it as further evidence of the stifling and sometimes-violent atmosphere that conservatives face on campus.

    OPINION: TRUMP ORDER PROTECTING CAMPUS FREE SPEECH IS RIGHT RESPONSE TO BERKELEY ASSAULT

    “He took a punch for all of us,” Trump said of Williams. “And we could never allow that to happen. And here is, in closing with Hayden, here’s the good news. He’s going to be a wealthy young man.”

    “If they want our dollars, and we give it to them by the billions, they’ve got to allow people like Hayden and many other great young people and old people to speak,” Trump said. “Free speech. If they don’t, it will be costly. That will be signed soon.”

    Talk show host Dennis Prager, who appears in an upcoming documentary called “No Safe Spaces,” said Thursday: “It’s tragic that in the one country that was founded on liberty–the country that enshrined freedom of speech in its foundational document–this executive order has become necessary. But, thanks to the left, it has. If President Trump can put a stop to the intolerance of non-leftist viewpoints on college campuses and help steer the country in the right direction, there just might be hope.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Conservative commentators such as Ann Coulter and Ben Shapiro have faced hostile atmospheres when trying to speak at universities — particularly Berkeley, where Coulter was forced to pull out of speaking and Shapiro faced protests that required police in full riot gear and intense security measures.

    White House officials declined to provide specific examples about how universities could lose funding and said implementation details will be finalized in coming months.

    Fox News’ Kellianne Jones, Robert Gearty and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-signs-executive-order-to-promote-free-speech-on-college-campuses

    If any single candidate in the 2020 presidential race can galvanize the Obama base and swing the disaffected center and Never Trump coalition of the Republican Party, it’s former Vice President Joe Biden. For all his gaffes and faux pas, Uncle Joe is uniquely positioned to burst back into the scene and on the center of the debate stage.

    Yet Biden may be throwing a wrench into not just this strategy but his candidacy as a whole if the rumors that he’s actively courting Stacey Abrams to announce not just his presidential bid, but the failed gubernatorial candidate from Georgia as his running mate at the same time. Axios reports that despite opposition from his advisers, Biden specifically requested a meeting with Abrams to seriously consider bringing her onto the ticket from the start.

    To recap, Abrams’ resume includes a few years as a tax attorney, another as deputy city attorney for Atlanta, a decade in the Georgia General Assembly, and an anonymous career as a romance writer.

    That’s it. That’s her entire career.

    She hasn’t spent a single day in national politics and couldn’t even win her own gubernatorial election. Not that she’ll concede she lost fair and square, of course. She still maintains that, despite Republican Brian Kemp beating her by 1.4 percent of the vote, the election was stolen from her.

    Announcing Abrams as his running mate from the start would render Biden’s campaign dead on arrival for a laundry list of reasons, but first and foremost because it would end any possible alliance he could forge with Obama-to-Trump country. While Abrams campaigned effectively for a red state, she’s made a decisive leftward pivot since ending her campaign.

    To the Right, choosing Abrams would look like a declarative shot against the most tepid of 2016 Trump voters. To the Left, it would look like straight tokenism, selecting an unqualified running mate just to make the ticket less white and male. To the entire country, it would serve as the sole reminder of Biden’s greatest liability: he is very, very, very old.

    Biden will be 78 on Election Day. That would make him the same age as Ronald Reagan on his last day in office, the oldest anyone has ever been while serving as president.

    To beat dozens of young, angry candidates and, most importantly, the shamelessness and brash bravado of President Trump, Biden must lean into his reputations as a fighter and a stalwart of institutional power. He has to have the same, terrifying game face on that both horrified and beat Paul Ryan in the 2012 vice presidential debate. He certainly can’t look like a man too old to run without a backup option, nor can he look like one who knows it. He cannot make the same mistake as the late Sen. John McCain and put a charismatic but untested neophyte a heartbeat away from the presidency out of sheer insecurity.

    As the Washington Examiner‘s Philip Klein has correctly noted, Biden’s best day of his campaign will almost certainly be his first day. In the aftermath of his son’s death and in the midst of Trump-era chaos, Biden’s been able to position himself as an elder statesman and above the fray of degraded politics. The moment he announces, he’ll receive fire from all sides, ranging from virulent socialists and (rightly) from the Trump campaign, which reportedly fears him more than any other contender.

    Biden will have to build a coalition, but he’ll have to do it in earnest and refuse the temptation to pander. He has to look as much the strongman as Trump, a fighter who won’t take an attack lying down, but not one who’ll desecrate himself by going too deep into the gutter as Harris and the likes already seem keen to. Eventually Biden will be inclined to choose a progressive who hasn’t alienated the center with nasty rhetoric — perhaps South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg or even Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, but he can’t go too far if he hopes to take back the Rust Belt from Trump.

    Biden is the obvious heir apparent to the Resistance. He has to bolster himself with strength, not let himself fall through the center of simply sitting on too many chairs. Selecting Abrams as his running mate from the outset would almost certainly stretch him too thin and too frail.

    It’s Biden’s nomination to lose. All he has to do is make his first move from a position of power.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/sore-loser-stacey-abrams-for-vp-dont-do-it-joe-biden

    MSNBC host Joe Scarborough on Wednesday compared likely 2020 Democratic candidate Pete Buttigieg to former President Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaPence lobbies anti-Trump donors to support reelection: report The Hill’s 12:30 Report: Trump attacks on McCain rattle GOP senators Obama reveals his March Madness bracket MORE.

    Scarborough tweeted that he and his co-host and wife, Mika Brzezinski, have been “overwhelmed” by the response from viewers to Buttigieg’s appearance on “Morning Joe.”

    “Mika and I have been overwhelmed by the reaction [Pete Buttigieg] got after being on the show,” Scarborough tweeted. “The only other time in twelve years that we heard from as many people about a guest was after [Barack Obama] appeared on Morning Joe.”

    The 37-year-old mayor of South Bend, Indiana, has not yet officially entered the race, but has quickly earned national attention since announcing his exploratory committee.

    Buttigieg, a Navy veteran and the only openly gay candidate currently running for president, has been lauded as the “first millennial president.” He is also the only serving mayor running for president.

    In his Wednesday morning appearance on MSNBC, Buttigieg pushed the importance of “generational change” in politics.

    Last week, he announced that his campaign surpassed 65,000 individual donations, the threshold set by the Democratic National Committee to participate in the first Democratic primary debate.

    Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/435036-scarborough-compares-buttigieg-to-obama

    Joseph Azam says he left his senior post at News Corp. in late 2017 over the coverage of Muslims, immigrants and race by Fox News and other Murdoch news outlets.

    Sasithon Pooviriyakul


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    Sasithon Pooviriyakul

    Joseph Azam says he left his senior post at News Corp. in late 2017 over the coverage of Muslims, immigrants and race by Fox News and other Murdoch news outlets.

    Sasithon Pooviriyakul

    In recent days, Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News Channel and some of its corporate siblings have faced renewed and withering criticism for the way they depict Muslims and immigrants. Calls for boycotts of shows and pressure campaigns on advertisers ensued.

    Last weekend, a Muslim news producer said she quit Fox’s corporate cousin, Sky News Australia, over its coverage of Muslims following the massacre at two New Zealand mosques. Her post went viral.

    Now, add the voice of one of Murdoch’s former senior executives, who says he left his job in late 2017 over the coverage of Muslims, immigrants and race by Fox News and other Murdoch news outlets.

    “Scaring people. Demonizing immigrants. Creating, like, a fervor — or an anxiety about what was happening in our country,” former News Corp. Senior Vice President Joseph Azam tells NPR in his first public comments on his former employer.

    “It fundamentally bothered me on a lot of days and I think I probably wasn’t the only one,” he says.

    Azam was also group chief compliance officer for News Corp.’s corporate headquarters, The Wall Street Journal, the New York Post and the HarperCollins book publishing house, among other properties. He worked for News Corp. from 2015 until late 2017, leaving, he says, without any nondisclosure agreement. While News Corp. is technically separate from the corporate parent of Fox News, they are both controlled by Murdoch and his family.

    In separate interviews, a longtime friend of Azam’s and Azam’s wife said he relayed his concerns to them about News Corp. and Fox News at the time. Both women said that was his reason for deciding to leave the company.

    For Azam, his decision to leave News Corp. was a matter of personal pride as well as principle: Born in Kabul, Azam came to the United States as a toddler, part of a family of immigrants and war refugees seeking haven from the conflict caused by the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan nearly four decades ago.

    And Azam says the rhetoric coming from some of his corporate colleagues sickened him: Muslims derided as threats or less than human; immigrants depicted as invaders, dirty or criminal; African-Americans presented as menacing; Jewish figures characterized as playing roles in insidious conspiracies.

    Azam says he saw it throughout the Murdoch media empire — especially on the popular opinion shows of Fox News, including Jeanine Pirro, Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity, and Fox Business Network’s Lou Dobbs.

    Azam’s public remarks to NPR arrive after a slew of controversies for Fox News.

    Fox News star Tucker Carlson has been on the defensive over seemingly racist anti-Iraqi remarks he made years ago.

    Rich Polk/Getty Images for Politicon


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    Rich Polk/Getty Images for Politicon

    Fox News star Tucker Carlson has been on the defensive over seemingly racist anti-Iraqi remarks he made years ago.

    Rich Polk/Getty Images for Politicon

    In recent days, the network has found itself forced to condemn recent anti-Muslim commentary by Pirro, an opinion host with close ties to President Trump. Fox News said her views “do not reflect those of the network and we have addressed the matter with her directly.”

    Prime-time Fox News star Tucker Carlson has been on the defensive over seemingly racist anti-Iraqi remarks he made years ago uncovered by the liberal watchdog group Media Matters (in 2008, Carlson called Iraqis “semi-literate primitive monkeys” on a shock-jock radio show). Carlson’s critics say those remarks dovetail with his more recent anti-immigrant commentaries on Fox. (Carlson was not made available by Fox to talk for this story.)

    Indeed Azam himself brings up an interaction with Carlson from two years ago. In June 2017, Carlson sent out this tweet from his personal account: “#Tucker: Why does America benefit from having tons of people from failing countries come here?”

    Azam shot back: “If you come upstairs to where all the executives who run your company sit and find me I can tell you, Tucker. #Afghanistan.”

    Azam says he took down his 2017 tweet reply after his boss told him not to attack other figures in the Murdoch empire.

    Twitter/Screenshot courtesy of Joseph Azam


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    Twitter/Screenshot courtesy of Joseph Azam

    Azam says he took down his 2017 tweet reply after his boss told him not to attack other figures in the Murdoch empire.

    Twitter/Screenshot courtesy of Joseph Azam

    Azam’s boss, News Corp. General Counsel and Executive Vice President David Pitofsky, took him aside and counseled him not to attack other figures in the larger Murdoch empire, as Azam recalls it, and he took down the tweet. (Pitofsky declined to comment through a corporate spokesman.)

    Carlson is the focus of intense scrutiny from Media Matters as well as Muslim advocacy organizations. The Council on American-Islamic Relations, for example, has called for advertisers to boycott Fox News unless Carlson and Pirro are both dropped.

    Azam, now 37, in many ways is an embodiment of the American dream, an example of the drive and thrift that is often praised, at least in the abstract, by Fox hosts and commentators.

    After coming to the U.S., Azam grew up largely in Queens, N.Y., and then Southern California, at one point selling shoes at his father’s small store in Manhattan.

    He went to New York University and got his law degree from the University of California, Hastings College of Law in San Francisco.

    “My office at News Corp. looked over a corner near Rockefeller Center where my dad used to sell newspapers,” Azam says.

    In recent days, Fox News has found itself forced to condemn recent anti-Muslim commentary by Jeanine Pirro, an opinion host with close ties to President Trump.

    Mike Theiler/AFP/Getty Images


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    Mike Theiler/AFP/Getty Images

    In recent days, Fox News has found itself forced to condemn recent anti-Muslim commentary by Jeanine Pirro, an opinion host with close ties to President Trump.

    Mike Theiler/AFP/Getty Images

    He says he loved working with his legal colleagues and many of the journalists. Yet at times he seethed in navigating News Corp., which is in the same building as Fox News in Midtown Manhattan. During an elevator ride shared with Pirro, Azam says, the host watched a monitor tuned to a Fox News report on a terrorist strike by Islamic extremists. Good fodder for the show, Pirro remarked, according to Azam. (Pirro was not made available for comment by Fox News for this story.)

    “My issue with this isn’t as an American Muslim. It’s not as a refugee. It’s not as an immigrant. It’s as an American,” Azam tells NPR. “I live here. I have kids here. And it worries me that, you know, what’s being put out into the universe could actually create a lot of risk for them.”

    Azam wrote about his experience as a refugee and an immigrant in a recent collection of essays edited by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author Viet Nguyen. Azam says he was inspired to speak more directly now regarding his qualms about Fox and its corporate siblings by two incidents: the mass shootings of Muslims in New Zealand and the murder of an Afghan-American in Indiana last month. Authorities accuse a man of shooting Mustafa Ayoubi after yelling anti-Muslim slurs.

    Former Sky News Australia producer Rashna Farrukh also cited the New Zealand killings this week in quitting the cable network, which is owned by News Corp.

    “As a young Muslim woman, I had many crises of conscience working here, but the events of Friday snapped me out of the endless cycle of justifying my job to myself,” Farrukh wrote on the website of the ABC, Australia’s public broadcasting network. “I compromised my values and beliefs to stand idly by as I watched commentators and pundits instil[l] more and more fear into their viewers. I stood on the other side of the studio doors while they slammed every minority group in the country — mine included — increasing polarisation and paranoia among their viewers.”

    Since the departure of the late Roger Ailes as the network’s chairman, Fox News executives have at times sought to rein in more extreme commentary, barring a guest, for example, who spun a conspiracy theory around the Jewish philanthropist and investor George Soros.

    However, Azam says if anything, the rhetoric has gotten harsher since Trump came to power. Told of the nature of Azam’s critique, executives at Fox News and News Corp. declined to comment.

    The opinion pages of The Wall Street Journal, Azam argues, often sounded similar themes surfaced against immigration in a more high-brow fashion.

    “It was very eloquent, mostly. … It was policy backed, at a certain level,” Azam says. “In a very subtle and eloquent way, it was kind of like the stuff that would happen in the [New York Post], dressed up in a tuxedo.”

    As an example, Azam pointed to an opinion piece in the Journal by two leaders of a right-wing, populist Swedish political party claiming violence rose along with greater immigration there — though subsequent news coverage elsewhere seemingly debunked it. Under former Journal Editor Gerard Baker, Azam says, even the news coverage of the Trump administration’s initial Muslim ban “seemed to be aimed at shaping the narrative for the White House, to move away from talking about the fact that religion was being targeted.” Some journalists agreed, as NPR and other outlets reported at the time.

    Fox just publicly distanced itself from Pirro for questioning a Muslim congresswoman’s loyalty to the U.S. because the lawmaker wears hijab. Pirro was off the air last weekend. And the network won’t explicitly say whether it has suspended her. Trump has tweeted in support of both Pirro and Carlson. Azam says the network’s silence is telling, arguing that Fox is seeking to retain Pirro’s fans — and the president’s support.

    “I think that the wink-and-a-nod thing is very problematic because that is exactly how racists operate at the highest level, right? That is exactly how anti-Semites operate. That is exactly how Islamophobia operates at the highest level.”

    News Corp. is technically separate from the Murdoch family’s television and entertainment holdings, newly called Fox Corp. after a massive sale of assets to the Walt Disney Co. Yet Azam lays the responsibility at Rupert Murdoch’s feet, saying the punditry echoes what the media mogul himself appears to believe and promote. Azam notes, for example, a 2015 tweet in which the media chief wrote that most Muslims may be peaceful but until they destroy this “jihadist cancer” they must all be held responsible.

    Murdoch no longer tweets. But the controversies continue.

    “I grew up in New York City. I don’t think I’m very sensitive,” Azam says. “I’ve had guns pointed at me at my work. I’ve investigated corruption throughout Africa and the Middle East and in places where, you know, my life was in danger doing that. So I think I’m pretty thick-skinned when it comes to pretty much anything.

    “This stuff went beyond sort of being thick-skinned,” he says.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/03/21/705441083/former-murdoch-executive-says-he-quit-over-foxs-anti-muslim-rhetoric

    Lion Air, which has amassed 15 major safety lapses in its 20-year history, including two fatal crashes, has a history of trying to use quick cash to make problems go away, according to government investigators, air safety regulators and people involved in previous accidents.

    One former Indonesian transportation safety investigator said that a Lion Air employee once tried to hand over a black garbage bag full of cash when the investigator was probing the fatal crash of a Lion Air flight that overshot the runway in bad weather in 2004. When the investigator declined the bag of cash, Edward Sirait, now president director of the Lion Air Group, asked why the payment had been refused, the investigator said.

    Such payments from Lion Air were common because transportation safety officials were poorly paid, former investigators said. A former high-level Lion Air employee confirmed that when he worked at the company, clandestine payments to government investigators, even for restaurants and prostitutes, were routine.

    Mr. Sirait did not respond to a request for comment on the account of the plastic bag full of cash.

    In an interview last year after the Flight 610 crash, he did not express condolences for the loss of life. He declined to discuss the unfolding investigation or maintenance logs detailing how the plane had recorded various data problems in the days preceding the crash.

    “I am not an engineer,” he said. “There are so many documents that I don’t know.”

    Vinni Wulandari, the sister of Mr. Harvino, the co-pilot, said that since her family sued Boeing, Lion Air has refused to pay out his pension and has not honored a verbal agreement to fund his children’s education. The company no longer is willing to meet with her, she said.

    “They’ve blocked my number,” Ms. Vinni said of Lion Air’s senior management. “It’s awful how the company treats us. We are victims, too.”

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/21/world/asia/lion-air-crash-families-lawsuits.html

    New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern on Thursday announced the country was immediately banning “military-style semi-automatic weapons” after last week’s attack that killed 50 people at two mosques.

    Speaking to reporters, the prime minister said the weapons would be banned in addition to “all assault rifles,” among other firearms. Ardern said that legislation is currently being drafted and she expects the law to take effect by April 11.

    NEW ZEALAND PRIME MINISTER VOWS NEVER TO MENTION MOSQUE GUNMAN’S NAME

    “We will ban all high-capacity magazines. We will ban all parts with the ability to convert semiautomatic, or any other type of firearm, into a military-style semi-automatic weapon,” the prime minister said. “In short, every semi-automatic weapon used in the terrorist attack on Friday will be banned in this country.”

    New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern speaks during a press conference following the March 15 mosque shooting, in Christchurch, New Zealand. (Kyodo News via AP)

    Ardern said the government is working on a large-scale buyback plan for citizens possessing the weapons affected by the ban. The plan will allow the guns to be surrendered to police and “eventually destroyed.” Once the buyback is complete, she said, owners would receive “fair and reasonable compensation,” but did not elaborate.

    Those who still possess banned guns after a “reasonable period for returns” has passed will be found breaking the law, Ardern said. Penalties will include fines of up to $4,000 and/or three years in prison, with the draft legislation proposing stiffer measures.

    YOUNGEST NEW ZEALAND MOSQUE ATTACK VICTIM, 3, MOURNED AS COMMUNITY REMEMBERS ENERGETIC TODDLER

    Ardern also said she and the Cabinet would work through legal exemptions to the ban, such as for farmers needing to cull their herds but said any exemptions would be “tightly regulated.”

    “We do have guns in New Zealand that are used for legitimate purposes by responsible owners every single day and that includes our rural community that manage pests, use for animal welfare and also for recreation,” Ardern said.

    Ardern said she believes the vast majority of these owners will support the ban because it’s about “national interest” and “safety.”

    The ban comes six days after a gunman opened fire at two mosques in Christchurch. The massacre left 50 people dead and dozens of others injured.

    Ardern said the man suspected of the attack bought his weapons legally with a standard gun license and modified their capacity by using 30-round magazines, “essentially turning them into military-style semi-automatic weapons.”

    The 28-year-old suspect bought the weapons “through a simple online purchase,” she said, and “took a significant number of lives using primarily two guns.”

    Mourners arrive for a burial service of a victim from the March 15 mosque shootings at the Memorial Park Cemetery in Christchurch, New Zealand on Thursday. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)

    The alleged shooter, whom Fox News is not naming, has been charged with one count of murder in the attacks, which became New Zealand’s deadliest mass shooting in modern history. He is expected to face additional charges at his next court appearance April 5.

    CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Ardern’s announcement came as more of the dead were being buried. At least six funerals were held Thursday. Preparations were underway for a massive prayer service to be held Friday, with nearly 4,000 people expected to attend.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/new-zealand-prime-minister-announces-ban-on-military-style-semi-automatic-weapons-after-mosque-attack

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    Reuters

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    The Golan Heights has a political and strategic significance which belies its size

    President Donald Trump says it is time the US recognises Israel’s sovereignty over the occupied Golan Heights, which it captured from Syria in 1967.

    In a tweet, Mr Trump declared that the plateau was of “critical strategic and security importance to the State of Israel and regional stability”.

    Israel applied its administration and law to the Golan in 1981, but other governments did not recognise the act.

    Syria has consistently sought to regain sovereignty over the region.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has warned about the military “entrenchment” of his country’s arch-enemy Iran in the Syria conflict, tweeted his thanks to Mr Trump on Thursday.

    “At a time when Iran seeks to use Syria as a platform to destroy Israel, President Trump boldly recognizes Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights,” he wrote.

    There was no immediate response from the Syrian government.

    Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-47657843

    An “emotionally exhausted” Meghan McCain again defended her father against President Trump Thursday on “The View,” saying she doesn’t “expect decency” from his family.

    “I don’t like coming here every day and having to do this, as all of you know. It’s extremely emotionally exhausting,” she said at the top of the show.

    “I don’t expect decency from the Trump family,” she added.

    During an official White House event at a tank manufacturing plant in Ohio on Wednesday, Trump spent nearly five minutes bashing the late Sen. John McCain because he didn’t receive credit for his funeral arrangements.

    “I gave him the kind of funeral that he wanted, which as president I had to approve.” Trump said. “I don’t care about this. I didn’t get a thank you. That’s OK.”

    The crowd of Ohio tank factory workers, many of whom are veterans, reportedly responded to the president’s criticism of McCain with silence. The longtime senator and former prisoner of war died seven months ago.

    (Getty Images) President Donald Trump waits to welcome Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro to the White House, March 19, 2019. Meghan McCain on “The View.”

    Meghan McCain reminded everybody that she has six brothers and sisters, two of whom are currently serving their country in the military. For the first time, Bridget McCain spoke out about Trump’s attacks to her father.

    “Anyone that knows anything about political history can probably surmise why she’s chosen to lead a very private life,” McCain said about her sister’s tweets to Trump. “But she felt inclined to say and tweet this.”

    “Everyone doesn’t have to agree with my dad or like him, but I do ask you to be decent and respectful,” Bridget McCain tweeted. “Even if you were invited to my dad’s funeral, you would have only wanted to be there for the credit and not for any condolences.”

    The co-hosts questioned why more lawmakers weren’t coming out in defense of John McCain and holding the president accountable for his comments.

    “If people in Congress and the Senate can’t step up, it’s ok we are; the show is,” McCain said Thursday morning. “There’s a lot of power in the show. There’s a lot of power in what we do every day as women on this show and I’m very – I’m eternally grateful to all the support.”

    Co-host Ana Navarro called Republicans “spineless” for not speaking out, and said lawmakers feared the president.

    “They’re afraid of this man, because they think he is like Lord Voldemort and if they mention his name, he will come down and strike them dead politically,” she said.

    Navarro added that John McCain’s years in the military and in public service warranted a dignified funeral.

    “John McCain didn’t get the funeral that he wanted. He got the funeral that he deserved,” Navarro said. “He got the funeral that he earned through more than 60 years of service and sacrifice and pain for this country – something that Donald Trump would know nothing about.”

    The president condemned McCain over the weekend for being “last in his class” and again on Tuesday, saying he was “never a fan” and that he “never will be” after McCain voted against repealing Obamacare.

    Since Trump’s initial remarks, McCain family’s received attacks from all sides. Cindy McCain, the late senator’s widow, received a threatening message from a stranger.

    She later shared it on Twitter.

    Meghan McCain responded to Trump on “The View” Wednesday morning, too.

    (ABC News) Meghan McCain talks about the latest comments by President Donald Trump about her father, Sen. John McCain, on ABC’s “The View,” March 21, 2019.

    “Attacking someone who isn’t here is a bizarre low,” she said. “My dad’s not here but I’m sure as hell here.”

    Over the weekend and throughout the week, McCain has actively shared support given to her late father. On Thursday, she thanked Andy Cohen for denouncing Trump’s criticisms on his show “Watch What Happens Live.”

    On Thursday’s show, Navarro said every time the president criticizes John McCain, “we need to call it out.”

    “It might be exhausting. We cannot get exhausted,” she said. “We cannot get tired of being outraged by what this man is doing to the presidency of the United States.”

    Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/meghan-mccain-shes-emotionally-exhausted-address-trumps-comments/story?id=61835677

    BAGHOUZ, Syria — The caliphate has crumbled, and the final offensive is over. While the official announcement hasn’t yet been made – Fox News has been told that this village, the last ISIS stronghold, is liberated.

    It’s the first time since we’ve been here in Syria for five days that the bombs have stopped dropping and the gunfire has disappeared. We have witnessed the end of the caliphate – the brutal empire that once ruled over 8 million people – is gone.

    Troops here are now bringing down the black flags of ISIS. The flags no longer fly over the town, instilling fear.

    TRUMP DISPLAYS SYRIA MAP DETAILING ISIS TERRITORY LOSS, VOWS TERROR NETWORK ‘WILL BE GONE BY TONIGHT’

    The last five days, Fox News has witnessed the last major offensive up close -– with U.S.-backed SDF forces attacking ISIS from three sides, pushing the fighters back, house to house, then tent to tent, against the Euphrates River.

    Inside Baghouz, it’s easy to see how they hid for so long – not just in tunnels but trenches and hundreds of cubby holes covered by tarpaulins, which blend in perfectly to the dirt.

    In the end, the majority surrendered. In fact, since the start of the year about 60,000 have dripped into the desert, and most are now held in camps.

    There is a major concern about what to do with the camps though. The SDF has asked for U.S. support in setting up a tribunal here to prosecute them.

    This final corner of the caliphate was in the far eastern desert of Syria– it was where ISIS first captured territory, and it is where they finally lost.

    A clearing operation is now underway in the town– and an announcement is expected soon.

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    None of the main surviving ISIS leaders have been caught inside Baghouz. Instead, they left their men to fight alone. It’s thought they prepared ahead for the insurgency.

    The scale of the devastation here is incredible. And everyone acknowledges that without U.S. support, it would have taken far longer.

    LAST ISIS ENCLAVE A SCENE OF ‘DEVASTATION:’ FOX NEWS VISITS ONLY REMAINING VILLAGE RULED BY TERROR GROUP

    For four-and-a-half years, ISIS held this territory, ruling over it with an iron fist. It was the terrorist group’s heartland – and they were so dug in that the only way to push them back was to flatten whole villages. The devastation here goes on for miles – and craters like this are a reminder of the critical role played by U.S. airpower. Military jets still fly overhead.

    SDF fighters are all so grateful to the U.S., not just for their help in the battle, but now for its decision to leave troops here when it’s done. Reports now suggest the figure may be around 1,000 staying.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/isis-has-officially-crumbled-and-last-stronghold-liberated-fox-news-has-learned