China has accused the United States of “bullying” and suggested it may take unspecified countermeasures after Washington banned downloads of popular video app TikTok and effectively blocked the use of the Chinese super-app WeChat.

“China urges the US to abandon bullying, cease (its) wrongful actions and earnestly maintain fair and transparent international rules and order,” a statement by the Chinese Ministry of Commerce said on Saturday.

“If the US insists on going its own way, China will take necessary measures to resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese companies.”

The United States made the moves against the two Chinese apps on Friday, citing national security grounds and escalating a fight with Beijing over digital technology.

Under the order, the Tencent-owned WeChat app would lose functionality in the United States from Sunday. TikTok users will be banned from installing updates but could keep accessing the service through 12 November.

US officials described Friday’s measures as essential to national security as President Donald Trump confronts Beijing during a tough re-election campaign.

TikTok users in the United States reacted with a collective shrug to the ban, but many are already planning an exit to other platforms should the clampdown lead to an outright ban.

“Oh my God! Ok! It’s happening! Everybody stay calm!” TikToker Nick Foster told his 577,000 followers, dubbing a video of himself with audio of actor Steve Carell’s character on the series The Office panicking during a fire alarm.

Although young users on the platform, who make up its primary base, did not appear to have paid much attention to the government’s announcement, older users did react.

“Thank you for the fun times,” posted The Buyin King, a 22-year-old investor with 438,000 followers.

Some said that for those who already had the app little would change between Sunday, when the government ban on downloads will go into effect, and 12 November, the cutoff date set by the Trump administration.

The administration has targeted TikTok, owned by Chinese tech giant Bytedance, over national security, escalating a fight with Beijing over the digital technology. The November 12 deadline potentially allows for a tie-up between TikTok and a US company to safeguard data to allay Washington’s security concerns.

“This is posturing,” said Jeff Couret, a consultant with 376,000 TikTok followers. “For Trump it’s a way of showing TikTok that he means business but without hurting them too much.”

However, most of those who have built a following on TikTok were preparing to leave.

For people who make a living from their presence on the social network – such as star Addison Rae, who boasts 60.9 million followers and earned $5m between June 2019 and June 2020, according to Forbes magazine – the financial stakes are high.

For weeks now, many TikTok users have been sharing their Instagram and YouTube accounts on their profiles, preparing their fans for a jump to greener pastures.

Even TikTok’s gold standard, Charli D’Amelio – who, with 87.5 million followers at just 16 years old, is the platform’s most popular creator – has announced a non-exclusive partnership with Triller, a similar platform, where she already has 1.1 million subscribers.

Bryce Hall, Nessa Barrett and Chase Hudson – largely unknown among the over-20-year-olds but with more than 10 million TikTok followers each – have also started Triller accounts.

Trump himself, who never dipped his toe into TikTok’s waters, has made his debut on Triller, where he already has 953,000 followers.

In August, Triller announced it had been downloaded 250m times since it was created, a figure that was disputed by analytics firm Apptopia, which put the number of downloads closer to 52m.

The app is not the only one positioning itself to rise from the ashes of TikTok, which has been downloaded two billion times worldwide and has 100 million users in the US alone.

Also lying in wait are Byte (no relation to TikTok’s parent company ByteDance), which was launched in January, as well as Likee – which Apptopia says was downloaded 7.2m times in the US between February and August – and Dubsmash.

Not to mention Instagram and YouTube, which have extended their tentacles with Reels and YouTube Shorts, respectively, the test versions of which launched opportunely in the past few months.

The winner “will be the one that the loyal TikTok users perceive as being the ‘cool’ place to be”, said James Mourey, a marketing professor at DePaul University.

In the current context, “startups like Byte may have the edge, as we know established brands in teclose their ‘cool factor’ the older they get,” said Mourey, pointing to younger generations’ migration from Facebook to Instagram.

But TikTok was not finished yet, Mourey warned.

A lot can still happen before November 12, “and don’t forget: TikTok is not banned outside of the US, so as long as TikTok continues to be the dominant player globally, it will continue to innovate and maintain a strong customer base,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/sep/19/stay-calm-us-tiktok-users-prepare-for-world-without-newly-banned-app

OTTAWA (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday said border restrictions between Canada and the United States because of the novel coronavirus pandemic would be lifted “pretty soon”, just hours after the two countries confirmed they would remain in place until at least Oct. 21.

“We’re looking at the border with Canada. Canada would like it opened and we want to get back to normal business,” Trump told reporters in Washington. “We’re going to be opening the borders pretty soon.”

There was no immediate explanation from the White House for the discrepancy or what Trump meant by “pretty soon.”

On Twitter, Canada’s Minister for Public Safety Bill Blair confirmed a month-long extension of border restrictions. “We will continue to base our decisions on the best public health advice available to keep Canadians safe.”

Sources in Washington and Ottawa this week said the measures on the border would most likely have to be rolled over until at least the end of November.

The month-long extension announced earlier on Friday, which does not cover trade or travel by air, follows restrictions first imposed in March and rolled over several times as a means to contain the spread of the virus. They were due to expire on Sept. 21.

The United States has similar restrictions on the border with Mexico and these will also now be in effect until Oct. 21, said Chad Wolf, acting secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

“We continue to work with our Canadian and Mexican partners to slow the spread of COVID-19,” he said in a tweet.

The United States is the worst-affected nation in the world. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday reported 6,613,331 cases of the new coronavirus and said the number of deaths had risen by 1,224 to 196,277.

Cases have also started to spike in Canada, where the chief medical officer said on Thursday that authorities could potentially lose the ability to manage the pandemic.

Writing by Steve Scherer and David Ljunggren; additional reporting by Brice Makini in Washington; Editing by Dan Grebler and Grant McCool

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-usa-canada-trump/hours-after-us-canada-border-closure-extended-to-oct-21-trump-says-it-opening-pretty-soon-idUSKBN26932F

A tropical storm warning has been issued for part of Louisiana’s coast as Tropical Storm Beta’s track has shifted a little to the west on its trek toward the Texas coastline in the latest National Hurricane Center update.

The warning issued in the National Hurricane Center’s 10 a.m. advisory Saturday stretches along the Texas-Louisiana coastline from Port Aransas, Texas to Intracoastal City, Louisiana. Inland, the warning area includes Cameron and Vermilion parishes. 

These parishes, particularly Cameron Parish, underwent a significant amount of damage during major Hurricane Laura in late August. 

Beta’s track now explicitly shows landfall on the Texas coast in about 72 hours. It is expected to strengthen into a hurricane by Sunday afternoon before it, forecasters said.  






A previously issued storm surge watch and a tropical storm watch remains in effect for four Louisiana parishes as the storms cone extends widely across the state’s coastline. 

The storm surge watch extends from Port Mansfield, Texas to Cameron, Louisiana — including Sabine Lake and Calcasieu Lake in Louisiana. Peak storm surge is expected to hit between 2-4 feet near Sabine Lake and Calcasieu Lake and 1-3 feet along the Louisiana coastline from Cameron to Morgan City, Louisiana.

A Storm Surge Watch means there is a possibility of life-threatening inundation, from rising water moving inland from the coastline, in the indicated locations during the next 48 hours.






The tropical storm watch stretches from east of Intracoastal City to Morgan City, including Iberia and St. Mary parishes. When under a tropical storm watch, NHC said area residents can anticipate tropical storm conditions within 48 hours. 

In the latest forecast track, Beta’s movement continued its slow down, moving to the northwest at 3 mph with maximum sustained winds of 60 mph. The storm was spotted about 305 miles east-southeast of Corpus Christi, Texas and 245 miles south of Lake Charles, Louisiana. Tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 175 miles from Beta’s center. 

A slow westward motion is expected to begin later Saturday, with a slow northwestward motion forecast to begin late Sunday and continue through late Monday. On the forecast track, the center of Beta will slowly approach the Texas coast into early next week.

The NHC said an increasing risk of heavy rainfall and flooding along the northwest Gulf Coast on Sunday through at least the middle of next week as the storm is forecast to move slowly toward and along or offshore of the coast through that time. 

See the full forecast here. 

Don’t miss a storm update this hurricane season. Sign up for breaking newsletters. Follow our Hurricane Center Facebook page.



Source Article from https://www.nola.com/news/hurricane/article_81f04502-fa78-11ea-bbf9-d33d6476be29.html

President Trump said Democrats and the mainstream media should be celebrating getting a coronavirus vaccine “in record time,” but instead they’re creating a “terrible situation” because of the election.

In an interview set to air Sunday on “Life, Liberty, & Levin,” Trump said he noticed political opponents and members of the media starting to “denigrate” a potential COVID-19 vaccine several weeks ago, after the president began saying the vaccine could be ready by Election Day.

“Instead of saying, ‘Wow, that’s great. It’s going to save a lot of lives and people are going to be protected, and this whole thing will end faster’ … They started denigrating it,” Trump told host Mark Levin.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and running mate Kamala Harris have expressed fears about political pressure by the Trump administration resulting in a vaccine that was rushed into production without proper testing.

BIDEN, HARRIS CONCERNS ABOUT TRUMP INTERFERENCE IN CORONAVIRUS VACCINE NOT SHARED BY TOP HEALTH EXPERTS

“We can’t allow politics to interfere with the vaccine in any way,” Biden said Wednesday. “Americans have had to endure President Trump’s incompetence and dishonesty when it comes to testing and personal protective equipment. We can’t afford to repeat those fiascos when it comes to a vaccine, when it occurs. The stakes are too high.”

“I trust vaccines. I trust scientists. I don’t trust Trump,” the former vice president said.

PFIZER CEO SAYS CORONAVIRUS VACCINE COULD BE DISTRIBUTED TO AMERICANS BEFORE YEAR’S END

Trump said his opponents are trying to downplay the vaccine rollout, “when actually it’s one of the greatest things that anyone’s done, and I’m not saying me — I’m saying anyone. It’s so incredible.”

“The reason they’re doing it is because they think I’ll get credit if we have a vaccine anywhere near the election, but certainly before the election,” Trump said. “But essentially we’re there now anyway, and we’re ready to distribute very rapidly.”

MODERNA EXPECTS CORONAVIRUS VACCINE RESULTS IN NOVEMBER: REPORT

The president told Levin that it usually takes years to develop a vaccine.

“I have totally changed the FDA process,” he said. “Same safety, but the speed is from a different world, and we should have the vaccine approved very soon.”

“It’s a tremendous thing that they’ve done and we’ve all done together. Then we’re ready to distribute it very quickly, and we’ll do our senior citizens first — the most vulnerable, … especially if they have a problem with a heart or they have diabetes or something,” Trump said.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

He praised companies working on the vaccine, including Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer and Moderna, that are in Phase 3 trials, and said Democrats’ criticisms have nothing to do with safety.

“You would think they’d be happy and thrilled and jumping up and down,” Trump said. “Instead … it’s just a terrible situation.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-coronavirus-vaccine-mark-levin-life-liberty

Parit, who was arrested in mid-August and released on bail, faces 18 charges so far, everything from violating cleanliness laws to sedition. He is aware of the consequences of his activism, he said, and doesn’t fear persecution — only sometimes reminiscing of the days he spent poring over archived records of the ancient Lan Na kingdom in northern Thailand, what he describes as a bit of an obsession, and dreaming of his alternate life as a historian.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/tens-of-thousands-rally-against-the-government-in-thailand-inspired-by-student-leaders/2020/09/19/7686fada-f3e8-11ea-8025-5d3489768ac8_story.html

Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the U.S. Supreme Court justice who broke gender barriers, told her granddaughter before she died that her wish was not to have her seat filled until a new president is elected.

“My most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is installed,” Ginsburg told Clara Spera in the days before her death, NPR reported.

Ginsburg died Friday at the age of 87.

Her passing leaves a pivotal vacancy that could dramatically shape the nation’s highest court for years to come. The scramble to fill her seat will be especially tense with less than two months until the presidential election.

Ginsburg was appointed to the Supreme Court in 1993 and repeatedly vowed to remain as long as her health allowed. She championed women’s rights and was revered by many as a feminist icon.

Replacing her will be no small task. In 2016, during President Barack Obama’s final year, a political fight erupted after the death of Justice Antonin Scalia. Senate Republicans staved off Obama’s pick, Merrick Garland, despite fierce opposition from the Democrats.

“The American people should have a voice in the selection of their next Supreme Court justice. Therefore, this vacancy should not be filled until we have a new president,” Sen. Mitch McConnell famously said at the time.

On Friday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer echoed those words. Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski vowed to not vote for a new justice until after the November election, Alaska Public Media reported.

But McConnell indicated Friday that selecting Ginsburg’s replacement will be very different than replacing Scalia. In a statement, he both praised Ginsburg’s legacy and promised to have Trump select her replacement.

“In the last midterm election before Justice Scalia’s death in 2016, Americans elected a Republican Senate majority because we pledged to check and balance the last days of a lame-duck president’s second term,” McConnell’s statement read in part. “President Trump’s nominee will receive a vote on the floor of the United States Senate.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/ruth-bader-ginsburg-s-dying-wish-not-have-donald-trump-n1240507

China has accused the United States of “bullying” and suggested it may take unspecified countermeasures after Washington banned downloads of popular video app TikTok and effectively blocked the use of the Chinese super-app WeChat.

“China urges the US to abandon bullying, cease (its) wrongful actions and earnestly maintain fair and transparent international rules and order,” a statement by the Chinese Ministry of Commerce said on Saturday.

“If the US insists on going its own way, China will take necessary measures to resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese companies.”

The United States made the moves against the two Chinese apps on Friday, citing national security grounds and escalating a fight with Beijing over digital technology.

Under the order, the Tencent-owned WeChat app would lose functionality in the United States from Sunday. TikTok users will be banned from installing updates but could keep accessing the service through 12 November.

US officials described Friday’s measures as essential to national security as President Donald Trump confronts Beijing during a tough re-election campaign.

TikTok users in the United States reacted with a collective shrug to the ban, but many are already planning an exit to other platforms should the clampdown lead to an outright ban.

“Oh my God! Ok! It’s happening! Everybody stay calm!” TikToker Nick Foster told his 577,000 followers, dubbing a video of himself with audio of actor Steve Carell’s character on the series The Office panicking during a fire alarm.

Although young users on the platform, who make up its primary base, did not appear to have paid much attention to the government’s announcement, older users did react.

“Thank you for the fun times,” posted The Buyin King, a 22-year-old investor with 438,000 followers.

Some said that for those who already had the app little would change between Sunday, when the government ban on downloads will go into effect, and 12 November, the cutoff date set by the Trump administration.

The administration has targeted TikTok, owned by Chinese tech giant Bytedance, over national security, escalating a fight with Beijing over the digital technology. The November 12 deadline potentially allows for a tie-up between TikTok and a US company to safeguard data to allay Washington’s security concerns.

“This is posturing,” said Jeff Couret, a consultant with 376,000 TikTok followers. “For Trump it’s a way of showing TikTok that he means business but without hurting them too much.”

However, most of those who have built a following on TikTok were preparing to leave.

For people who make a living from their presence on the social network – such as star Addison Rae, who boasts 60.9 million followers and earned $5m between June 2019 and June 2020, according to Forbes magazine – the financial stakes are high.

For weeks now, many TikTok users have been sharing their Instagram and YouTube accounts on their profiles, preparing their fans for a jump to greener pastures.

Even TikTok’s gold standard, Charli D’Amelio – who, with 87.5 million followers at just 16 years old, is the platform’s most popular creator – has announced a non-exclusive partnership with Triller, a similar platform, where she already has 1.1 million subscribers.

Bryce Hall, Nessa Barrett and Chase Hudson – largely unknown among the over-20-year-olds but with more than 10 million TikTok followers each – have also started Triller accounts.

Trump himself, who never dipped his toe into TikTok’s waters, has made his debut on Triller, where he already has 953,000 followers.

In August, Triller announced it had been downloaded 250m times since it was created, a figure that was disputed by analytics firm Apptopia, which put the number of downloads closer to 52m.

The app is not the only one positioning itself to rise from the ashes of TikTok, which has been downloaded two billion times worldwide and has 100 million users in the US alone.

Also lying in wait are Byte (no relation to TikTok’s parent company ByteDance), which was launched in January, as well as Likee – which Apptopia says was downloaded 7.2m times in the US between February and August – and Dubsmash.

Not to mention Instagram and YouTube, which have extended their tentacles with Reels and YouTube Shorts, respectively, the test versions of which launched opportunely in the past few months.

The winner “will be the one that the loyal TikTok users perceive as being the ‘cool’ place to be”, said James Mourey, a marketing professor at DePaul University.

In the current context, “startups like Byte may have the edge, as we know established brands in teclose their ‘cool factor’ the older they get,” said Mourey, pointing to younger generations’ migration from Facebook to Instagram.

But TikTok was not finished yet, Mourey warned.

A lot can still happen before November 12, “and don’t forget: TikTok is not banned outside of the US, so as long as TikTok continues to be the dominant player globally, it will continue to innovate and maintain a strong customer base,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/sep/19/stay-calm-us-tiktok-users-prepare-for-world-without-newly-banned-app

Jane Fonda urged Democrats to be “as tough as Mitch McConnell” and not allow Republicans to fill the vacant Supreme Court seat left behind by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Fonda spoke on “Real Time with Bill Maher,” after news broke during the taping of the show that Ginsburg had died at 87 after a long battle with cancer.

As a political battle looms over Ginsburg’s replacement, Fonda pleaded that the left must hold the line following the bitter 2016 battle to replace Justice Antonin Scalia after his sudden death.

“I’m still reeling, Bill,” Fonda told host Bill Maher. “I just heard that Ruth Bader Ginsburg died. We have to be as tough as Mitch McConnell and not allow them to do one frickin’ thing until the election results. I mean, we have to rise up and not allow them to do it. If Mitch McConnell can do it, let’s get some — grow some b—s and ovaries.”

SUPREME COURT JUSTICE RUTH BADER GINSBURG DEAD AT 87

McConnell held up then-President Obama’s SCOTUS nomination of Merrick Garland in 2016, citing the “Biden rule” — made by the then-senator in 1992 about not confirming justices during an election year, particularly when the Senate is controlled by the opposing party. In a statement Friday evening, the Senate majority leader announced his intent to proceed with the confirmation process, despite the November election being just weeks away.

During “Real Time”‘s panel discussion, The Dispatch writer-at-large Tim Miller predicted the battle over Ginsburg’s vacant seat would get “really, really ugly” and that McConnell would “jam” the nominee through.

“This is literally the worst-case scenario,” Miller said before predicting President Trump would pick Circuit Court Judge Amy Coney Barrett as his nominee.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

After praising Ginsburg as “awesome,” Maher expressed his concerns over the power Trump still has as president.

“I’ve said it before on this show, power begets powers,” Maher said. “This is why you cannot let a guy like Trump become president — because it’s not just about the presidency.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/jane-fonda-urges-dems-to-be-as-tough-as-mitch-mcconnell-block-rbg-successor

China has accused the United States of “bullying” and suggested it may take unspecified countermeasures after Washington banned downloads of popular video app TikTok and effectively blocked the use of the Chinese super-app WeChat.

“China urges the US to abandon bullying, cease (its) wrongful actions and earnestly maintain fair and transparent international rules and order,” a statement by the Chinese Ministry of Commerce said on Saturday.

“If the US insists on going its own way, China will take necessary measures to resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese companies.”

The United States made the moves against the two Chinese apps on Friday, citing national security grounds and escalating a fight with Beijing over digital technology.

Under the order, the Tencent-owned WeChat app would lose functionality in the United States from Sunday. TikTok users will be banned from installing updates but could keep accessing the service through 12 November.

US officials described Friday’s measures as essential to national security as President Donald Trump confronts Beijing during a tough re-election campaign.

TikTok users in the United States reacted with a collective shrug to the ban, but many are already planning an exit to other platforms should the clampdown lead to an outright ban.

“Oh my God! Ok! It’s happening! Everybody stay calm!” TikToker Nick Foster told his 577,000 followers, dubbing a video of himself with audio of actor Steve Carell’s character on the series The Office panicking during a fire alarm.

Although young users on the platform, who make up its primary base, did not appear to have paid much attention to the government’s announcement, older users did react.

“Thank you for the fun times,” posted The Buyin King, a 22-year-old investor with 438,000 followers.

Some said that for those who already had the app little would change between Sunday, when the government ban on downloads will go into effect, and 12 November, the cutoff date set by the Trump administration.

The administration has targeted TikTok, owned by Chinese tech giant Bytedance, over national security, escalating a fight with Beijing over the digital technology. The November 12 deadline potentially allows for a tie-up between TikTok and a US company to safeguard data to allay Washington’s security concerns.

“This is posturing,” said Jeff Couret, a consultant with 376,000 TikTok followers. “For Trump it’s a way of showing TikTok that he means business but without hurting them too much.”

However, most of those who have built a following on TikTok were preparing to leave.

For people who make a living from their presence on the social network – such as star Addison Rae, who boasts 60.9 million followers and earned $5m between June 2019 and June 2020, according to Forbes magazine – the financial stakes are high.

For weeks now, many TikTok users have been sharing their Instagram and YouTube accounts on their profiles, preparing their fans for a jump to greener pastures.

Even TikTok’s gold standard, Charli D’Amelio – who, with 87.5 million followers at just 16 years old, is the platform’s most popular creator – has announced a non-exclusive partnership with Triller, a similar platform, where she already has 1.1 million subscribers.

Bryce Hall, Nessa Barrett and Chase Hudson – largely unknown among the over-20-year-olds but with more than 10 million TikTok followers each – have also started Triller accounts.

Trump himself, who never dipped his toe into TikTok’s waters, has made his debut on Triller, where he already has 953,000 followers.

In August, Triller announced it had been downloaded 250m times since it was created, a figure that was disputed by analytics firm Apptopia, which put the number of downloads closer to 52m.

The app is not the only one positioning itself to rise from the ashes of TikTok, which has been downloaded two billion times worldwide and has 100 million users in the US alone.

Also lying in wait are Byte (no relation to TikTok’s parent company ByteDance), which was launched in January, as well as Likee – which Apptopia says was downloaded 7.2m times in the US between February and August – and Dubsmash.

Not to mention Instagram and YouTube, which have extended their tentacles with Reels and YouTube Shorts, respectively, the test versions of which launched opportunely in the past few months.

The winner “will be the one that the loyal TikTok users perceive as being the ‘cool’ place to be”, said James Mourey, a marketing professor at DePaul University.

In the current context, “startups like Byte may have the edge, as we know established brands in teclose their ‘cool factor’ the older they get,” said Mourey, pointing to younger generations’ migration from Facebook to Instagram.

But TikTok was not finished yet, Mourey warned.

A lot can still happen before November 12, “and don’t forget: TikTok is not banned outside of the US, so as long as TikTok continues to be the dominant player globally, it will continue to innovate and maintain a strong customer base,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/sep/19/stay-calm-us-tiktok-users-prepare-for-world-without-newly-banned-app

Chat with us in Facebook Messenger. Find out what’s happening in the world as it unfolds.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/19/us/southern-california-earthquake/index.html

The Pentagon slammed the Chinese armed forces for threatening Taiwan with joint military moves as a senior U.S. official conducted a rare visit to the self-ruling island claimed by the mainland government in Beijing.

As local officials greeted Keith Krach, the Under Secretary of State for Economic Growth, Energy and the Environment, at Taipei International Airport late Thursday, People’s Liberation Army brass vowed a show of force to intimidate against such acts they viewed as violations of the four-decade One China Principle that excludes formal ties with Taiwan. Chinese warplanes even crossed the Taiwan Strait to drive home the point.

While the U.S. has no diplomatic relations with Taiwan, it has maintained and recently boosted informal ties that the Pentagon spokesperson John Supple defended in remarks sent to Newsweek.

“We have maintained constructive, unofficial relations with Taiwan for 40 years,” Supple said. “The PLA’s aggressive and destabilizing reactions reflect a continued attempt to alter the status quo and rewrite history.”

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He tied the maneuvers to what he saw as a history of the People’s Republic using sheer force to influence foreign policy in the region.

“This is another example of the PRC increasingly using its military as a tool of coercion with Taiwan and other neighbors,” Supple said. “Taiwan’s security—and its people’s ability to determine their future, free from coercion—remains a vital interest to the United States and is integral to regional security.”

But China has a different view.

Newsweek subscription offers >

Eastern Command Theater spokesperson Air Force Senior Colonel Zhang Chunhui said in a statement that joint naval and air force exercises were intended “to test the level of integration of different forces and weapons systems.”

“Such actions are necessary measures to deal with the current situation in the Taiwan Strait, and will help improve the ability of theater troops to defend national unity and territorial sovereignty,” he added, vowing to defeat any “separatist” forces in Taiwan.

Chinese Ministry Defense spokesperson Senior Colonel Ren Guoqiang also tied the exercises to a perceived U.S.-backed attempt to divide two rival governments that both claim to be the true representatives of China since the end of their civil war in 1949.

“Taiwan is a sacred and inalienable part of China’s territory,” Ren said. “The Taiwan issue is purely China’s internal affairs and does not allow any foreign interference.”

“Recently, the U.S. and the Democratic Progressive Party authorities have stepped up their liaison and frequently caused incidents,” he added. “Whether it is to control China in Taiwan or to hold foreign countries, it is wishful thinking, and it is destined to be a dead end.”

The Chinese Foreign Ministry had issued a warning ahead of Krach’s trip to Taiwan, where he was to attend a memorial for late former Taiwanese President Lee Teng-hui. It’s the second trip for such a high-level official after Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar visited last month in a move that also prompted a Chinese military response.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin warned Krach’s visit would be a “violation” of the current consensus regarding Taiwan’s status and warned China would take “necessary reaction in light of the development of the situation.”

U.S.-China ties have deteriorated rapidly over the course of this year, Washington looking to downgrade Beijing’s international footprint over a long list of alleged abuses involving trade, human rights and geopolitical quarrels. Territorial tensions in Asia have been especially exacerbated as President Donald Trump’s administration portrayed rival Xi Jinping as an aggressor.

Hitting out at Chinese claims to Hong Kong, a disputed border stretch with India, the South China Sea and Taiwan, Assistant Secretary Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs David R. Stilwell called China a “lawless bully” in his testimony to lawmakers on Thursday.

The U.S. official separated Washington’s interactions with Taipei from those it conducts with Beijing.

“Notwithstanding China’s aggressive behavior in the region, our relationship with Taiwan stands on its own and our relationship with Taiwan is not a subset of U.S.-China relations,” Stillwell told the Senate Armed Services Committee. “We have made clear that the United States will continue to advance our engagement with Taiwan.”

Stillwell reaffirmed U.S. commitment to the One China Policy and a peaceful resolution to the feud but also promised to “continue to provide Taiwan defense articles and services to enable Taiwan to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability.”

Wang reiterated his previously stated position on China at Friday’s press conference and scoffed at Washington’s portrayal of Beijing as a threat to an international rules-based order.

He highlighted the examples of the Trump administration’s withdrawal from the World Health Organization, Iran nuclear deal and the Paris Climate Agreement as well as U.S. rejections of World Trade Organization rulings against it and the country having nearly alone, save for Israel, in rejecting a recent United Nations General Assembly resolution favoring a global response against the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The world sees clearly who’s the quitter from international treaties and organizations, who’s the violator of international rules and who’s a threat to international order,” Wang said.

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content: none
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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/us-slams-aggressive-destabilizing-china-military-taiwan-1533025

OTTAWA (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday said border restrictions between Canada and the United States because of the novel coronavirus pandemic would be lifted “pretty soon”, just hours after the two countries confirmed they would remain in place until at least Oct. 21.

“We’re looking at the border with Canada. Canada would like it opened and we want to get back to normal business,” Trump told reporters in Washington. “We’re going to be opening the borders pretty soon.”

There was no immediate explanation from the White House for the discrepancy or what Trump meant by “pretty soon.”

On Twitter, Canada’s Minister for Public Safety Bill Blair confirmed a month-long extension of border restrictions. “We will continue to base our decisions on the best public health advice available to keep Canadians safe.”

Sources in Washington and Ottawa this week said the measures on the border would most likely have to be rolled over until at least the end of November.

The month-long extension announced earlier on Friday, which does not cover trade or travel by air, follows restrictions first imposed in March and rolled over several times as a means to contain the spread of the virus. They were due to expire on Sept. 21.

The United States has similar restrictions on the border with Mexico and these will also now be in effect until Oct. 21, said Chad Wolf, acting secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

“We continue to work with our Canadian and Mexican partners to slow the spread of COVID-19,” he said in a tweet.

The United States is the worst-affected nation in the world. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday reported 6,613,331 cases of the new coronavirus and said the number of deaths had risen by 1,224 to 196,277.

Cases have also started to spike in Canada, where the chief medical officer said on Thursday that authorities could potentially lose the ability to manage the pandemic.

Writing by Steve Scherer and David Ljunggren; additional reporting by Brice Makini in Washington; Editing by Dan Grebler and Grant McCool

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-usa-canada-trump/hours-after-us-canada-border-closure-extended-to-oct-21-trump-says-it-opening-pretty-soon-idUSKBN26932F

Senate Democrats’ campaign arm raised nearly $27 million in August as it looks to beef up its war chest heading into Election Day.

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) announced in a press release Friday it hauled in $26.9 million last month, its best monthly fundraising haul in history. The DSCC also spent almost $26 million last month and headed into September with $41 million in the bank.

The August figures are a marked increase from July, when the DSCC raised $13.1 million and was outraised by the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC), its GOP counterpart. The NRSC has not yet released its August fundraising numbers and had $16.4 million cash on hand at the end of July.

The DSCC said 86 percent of its fundraising last month came from grassroots donations online, over the phone and in the mail, and that it has received more than 2.3 million individual online donations so far this cycle.

“The grassroots community continues to show up for our work to flip the Senate, and this record-shattering report would not have been possible without their support,” said DSCC Chairwoman Catherine Cortez MastoCatherine Marie Cortez MastoVA problems raise worries about mail slowdown, prescriptions Cortez Masto touts mail-in voting in convention speech Vulnerable Senate Democrat urges unity: ‘Not about what side of the aisle we’re on’ MORE. “The momentum behind Democratic Senate candidates will continue to fuel these races through these final crucial weeks and provide critical resources to ensure we reach voters across these battleground states.”

The DSCC has used its expansive war chest to launch new investments in a number of competitive Senate races, including announcing seven-figure drops in South Carolina and Texas. 

The news of the August fundraising haul comes as Democrats and Republicans fight for control of the Senate, which election handicappers say is essentially a toss up.

Democrats must gain a net of three or four seats to gain control of the chamber depending on who wins the White House. The GOP is going on offense in Alabama against Sen. Doug Jones (D), while Democrats are looking to unseat Republican lawmakers in a number of competitive states, including Arizona, Colorado, Maine, North Carolina, Iowa, Montana and Georgia.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/517158-democratic-senate-campaign-arm-raised-nearly-27-million-in-august

President Trump on Friday night warned his crowd in Bemidji, Minnesota, that former Vice President Joe Biden would flood the state with refugees from the world’s most dangerous countries. Mr. Trump made the remarks in a state that has a large population of Somali refugees. 

“One of the most vital issues in this election is the subject of refugees. You know it, perhaps better than almost anybody,” Mr. Trump said before questioning how Minnesota Representative Ilhan Omar won her reelection in August. 

“How the hell did she win the election? How did she win? It’s unbelievable,” he said. “Every family in Minnesota needs to know about Sleepy Joe Biden’s extreme plan to flood your state with an influx of refugees from Somalia, from other places all over the planet.”

Mr. Trump narrowly lost Minnesota in 2016 and polling shows him trailing Biden. The president was in neighboring Wisconsin on Thursday night where he trumpeted his administration’s work on the coronavirus and criticized Biden and his running mate, Senator Kamala Harris. 

The president announced billions in aid to Puerto Rico right before the election, claimed 100 million doses of coronavirus vaccines would be available by the end of the year and said he thinks he knows better than his own experts much of the time. 

“We’ve done more for Puerto Rico than anybody,” Mr. Trump said of an island he once called “one of the most corrupt places on earth.” Mr. Trump for years rejected the idea of additional aid for Puerto Rico. 

Asked why he’s pushing for the aid package now, so close to the election instead of a year ago, the president replied, “because what we’re doing is we’ve been working on it for a long time.” 

Many Puerto Ricans live in Florida, where polls show Mr. Trump is toe-to-toe with Biden. 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/watch-live-trump-rallies-supporters-in-minnesota-09-18-2020-live-stream-today/

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg — here in her chambers during a 2016 interview with NPR’s Nina Totenberg — died on Friday at the age of 87.

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Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg — here in her chambers during a 2016 interview with NPR’s Nina Totenberg — died on Friday at the age of 87.

Ariel Zambelich/NPR

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the demure firebrand who in her 80s became a legal, cultural and feminist icon, died Friday. The Supreme Court announced her death, saying the cause was complications from metastatic cancer of the pancreas.

The court, in a statement, said Ginsburg died at her home in Washington, D.C., surrounded by family. She was 87.

“Our nation has lost a justice of historic stature,” Chief Justice John Roberts said. “We at the Supreme Court have lost a cherished colleague. Today we mourn but with confidence that future generations will remember Ruth Bader Ginsburg as we knew her, a tireless and resolute champion of justice.”

Architect of the legal fight for women’s rights in the 1970s, Ginsburg subsequently served 27 years on the nation’s highest court, becoming its most prominent member. Her death will inevitably set in motion what promises to be a nasty and tumultuous political battle over who will succeed her, and it thrusts the Supreme Court vacancy into the spotlight of the presidential campaign.

Just days before her death, as her strength waned, Ginsburg dictated this statement to her granddaughter Clara Spera: “My most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is installed.”

She knew what was to come. Ginsburg’s death will have profound consequences for the court and the country. Inside the court, not only is the leader of the liberal wing gone, but with the court about to open a new term, the chief justice no longer holds the controlling vote in closely contested cases.

Though Roberts has a consistently conservative record in most cases, he has split from fellow conservatives in a few important ones this year, casting his vote with liberals, for instance, to protect at least temporarily the so-called DREAMers from deportation by the Trump administration, to uphold a major abortion precedent and to uphold bans on large church gatherings during the coronavirus pandemic. But with Ginsburg gone, there is no clear court majority for those outcomes.

Upcoming political battle

Indeed, a week after the upcoming presidential election, the court is for the third time scheduled to hear a challenge brought by Republicans to the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare. In 2012, the high court upheld the law in a 5-4 ruling, with Roberts casting the deciding vote and writing the opinion for the majority. But this time the outcome may well be different.

That’s because Ginsburg’s death gives Republicans the chance to tighten their grip on the court with another appointment by President Trump so conservatives would have 6-3 majority. And that would mean that even a defection on the right would leave conservatives with enough votes to prevail in the Obamacare case and many others.

At the center of the battle to achieve that will be Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. In 2016, he took a step unprecedented in modern times: He refused for nearly a year to allow any consideration of President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee.

Back then, McConnell’s justification was the upcoming presidential election, which he said would allow voters a chance to weigh in on what kind of justice they wanted. But now, with the tables turned, McConnell has made clear he will not follow the same course. Instead he will try immediately to push through a Trump nominee so as to ensure a conservative justice to fill Ginsburg’s liberal shoes, even if Trump were to lose his reelection bid. Asked what he would do in circumstances such as these, McConnell said: “Oh, we’d fill it.”

So what happens in the coming weeks will be bare-knuckle politics, writ large, on the stage of a presidential election. It will be a fight Ginsburg had hoped to avoid, telling Justice John Paul Stevens shortly before his death that she hoped to serve as long as he did — until age 90.

“My dream is that I will stay on the court as long as he did,” she said in an interview in 2019.

“Tough as nails”

She didn’t quite make it. But Ruth Bader Ginsburg was nonetheless a historic figure. She changed the way the world is for American women. For more than a decade, until her first judicial appointment in 1980, she led the fight in the courts for gender equality. When she began her legal crusade, women were treated, by law, differently from men. Hundreds of state and federal laws restricted what women could do, barring them from jobs, rights and even from jury service. By the time she donned judicial robes, however, Ginsburg had worked a revolution.

That was never more evident than in 1996 when, as a relatively new Supreme Court justice, Ginsburg wrote the court’s 7-1 opinion declaring that the Virginia Military Institute could no longer remain an all-male institution. True, Ginsburg said, most women — indeed most men — would not want to meet the rigorous demands of VMI. But the state, she said, could not exclude women who could meet those demands.

“Reliance on overbroad generalizations … estimates about the way most men or most women are, will not suffice to deny opportunity to women whose talent and capacity place them outside the average description,” Ginsburg wrote.

She was an unlikely pioneer, a diminutive and shy woman, whose soft voice and large glasses hid an intellect and attitude that, as one colleague put it, was “tough as nails.”

By the time she was in her 80s, she had become something of a rock star to women of all ages. She was the subject of a hit documentary, a biopic, an operetta, merchandise galore featuring her “Notorious RBG” moniker, a Time magazine cover and regular Saturday Night Live sketches.

On one occasion in 2016, Ginsburg got herself into trouble and later publicly apologized for disparaging remarks she made about then-presidential candidate Trump.

But for the most part Ginsburg enjoyed her fame and maintained a sense of humor about herself.

Asked about the fact that she had apparently fallen asleep during the 2015 State of the Union address, Ginsburg did not take the Fifth, admitting that although she had vowed not to drink at dinner with the other justices before the speech, the wine had just been too good to resist. The result, she said, was that she was perhaps not an entirely “sober judge” and kept nodding off.

The road to law

Born in Brooklyn, N.Y., Ruth Bader went to public schools, where she excelled as a student — and as a baton twirler. By all accounts, it was her mother who was the driving force in her young life, but Celia Bader died of cancer the day before the future justice would graduate from high school.

Then 17, Ruth Bader went on to Cornell University on a full scholarship, where she met Martin (aka “Marty”) Ginsburg. “What made Marty so overwhelmingly attractive to me was that he cared that I had a brain,” she said.

After her graduation, they were married and went off to Fort Sill, Okla., for his military service. There Mrs. Ginsburg, despite scoring high on the civil service exam, could only get a job as a typist, and when she became pregnant, she lost even that job.

Two years later, the couple returned to the East Coast to attend Harvard Law School. She was one of only nine women in a class of more than 500 and found the dean asking her why she was taking up a place that “should go to a man.”

At Harvard, she was the academic star, not her husband. The couple were busy juggling schedules and their toddler when Marty Ginsburg was diagnosed with testicular cancer. Surgeries and aggressive radiation followed.

“So that left Ruth with a 3-year-old child, a fairly sick husband, the law review, classes to attend and feeding me,” said Marty Ginsburg in a 1993 interview with NPR.

The experience also taught the future justice that sleep was a luxury. During the year of her husband’s illness, he was only able to eat late at night; after that he would dictate his senior class paper to her. At about 2 a.m., he would go back to sleep, Ruth Bader Ginsburg recalled in an NPR interview. “Then I’d take out the books and start reading what I needed to be prepared for classes the next day.”

Marty Ginsburg survived, graduated and got a job in New York; his wife, a year behind him in school, transferred to Columbia, where she graduated at the top of her law school class. Despite her academic achievements, the doors to law firms were closed to women, and though recommended for a Supreme Court clerkship, she wasn’t even interviewed.

It was bad enough that she was a woman, she recalled later, but she was also a mother, and male judges worried she would be diverted by her “familial obligations.”

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in her chambers in Washington, D.C., during a September 2016 interview with NPR’s Nina Totenberg.

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Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in her chambers in Washington, D.C., during a September 2016 interview with NPR’s Nina Totenberg.

Ariel Zambelich/NPR

A mentor, law professor Gerald Gunther, finally got her a clerkship in New York by promising Judge Edmund Palmieri that if she couldn’t do the work, he would provide someone who could. That was “the carrot,” Ginsburg would say later. “The stick” was that Gunther, who regularly fed his best students to Palmieri, told the judge that if he didn’t take Ginsburg, Gunther would never send him a clerk again. The Ginsburg clerkship apparently was a success; Palmieri kept her not for the usual one year, but two, from 1959-61.

Ginsburg’s next path is rarely talked about, mainly because it doesn’t fit the narrative. She learned Swedish so she could work with Anders Bruzelius, a Swedish civil procedure scholar. Through the Columbia University School of Law Project on International Procedure, Ginsburg and Bruzelius co-authored a book.

In 1963, Ginsburg finally landed a teaching job at Rutgers Law School, where she at one point hid her second pregnancy by wearing her mother-in-law’s clothes. The ruse worked; her contract was renewed before her baby was born.

While at Rutgers, she began her work fighting gender discrimination.

The “mother brief”

Her first big case was a challenge to a law that barred a Colorado man named Charles Moritz from taking a tax deduction for the care of his 89-year-old mother. The IRS said the deduction, by statute, could only be claimed by women, or widowed or divorced men. But Moritz had never married.

The tax court concluded that the Internal Revenue Code was immune to constitutional challenge, a notion that tax lawyer Marty Ginsburg viewed as “preposterous.” The two Ginsburgs took on the case — he from the tax perspective, she from the constitutional perspective.

According to Marty Ginsburg, for his wife, this was the “mother brief.” She had to think through all the issues and how to fix the inequity. The solution was to ask the court not to invalidate the statute but to apply it equally to both sexes. She won in the lower courts.

“Amazingly,” he recalled in a 1993 NPR interview, the government petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court, stating that the decision “cast a cloud of unconstitutionality” over literally hundreds of federal statutes, and it attached a list of those statutes, which it compiled with Defense Department computers.

Those laws, Marty Ginsburg added, “were the statutes that my wife then litigated … to overturn over the next decade.”

In 1971, she would write her first Supreme Court brief in the case of Reed v. Reed. Ruth Bader Ginsburg represented Sally Reed, who thought she should be the executor of her son’s estate instead of her ex-husband.

The constitutional issue was whether a state could automatically prefer men over women as executors of estates. The answer from the all-male Supreme Court: no.

It was the first time the court had struck down a state law because it discriminated based on gender.

And that was just the beginning.

Ginsburg (left) joins the only three other women to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court — Sandra Day O’Connor, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan — in a celebration of O’Connor, the first woman justice, at the Newseum in Washington in 2012.

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Ginsburg (left) joins the only three other women to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court — Sandra Day O’Connor, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan — in a celebration of O’Connor, the first woman justice, at the Newseum in Washington in 2012.

Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

By then Ginsburg was earning quite a reputation. She would become the first female tenured professor at Columbia Law School, and she would found the Women’s Rights Project at the American Civil Liberties Union.

As the chief architect of the battle for women’s legal rights, Ginsburg devised a strategy that was characteristically cautious, precise and single-mindedly aimed at one goal: winning.

Knowing that she had to persuade male, establishment-oriented judges, she often picked male plaintiffs, and she liked Social Security cases because they illustrated how discrimination against women can harm men. For example, in Weinberger v. Wiesenfeld, she represented a man whose wife, the principal breadwinner, died in childbirth. The husband sought survivor’s benefits to care for his child, but under the then-existing Social Security law, only widows, not widowers, were entitled to such benefits.

“This absolute exclusion, based on gender per se, operates to the disadvantage of female workers, their surviving spouses, and their children,” Ginsburg told the justices at oral argument. The Supreme Court would ultimately agree, as it did in five of the six cases she argued.

Over the ensuing years, Ginsburg would file dozens of briefs seeking to persuade the courts that the 14th Amendment guarantee of equal protection applies not just to racial and ethnic minorities, but to women as well.

In an interview with NPR, she explained the legal theory that she eventually sold to the Supreme Court.

“The words of the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause — ‘nor shall any state deny to any person the equal protection of the laws.’ Well that word, ‘any person,’ covers women as well as men. And the Supreme Court woke up to that reality in 1971,” Ginsburg said.

During these pioneering years, Ginsburg would often work through the night as she had during law school. But by this time, she had two children, and she later liked to tell a story about the lesson she learned when her son, in grade school, seemed to have a proclivity for getting into trouble.

The scrapes were hardly major, and Ginsburg grew exasperated by demands from school administrators that she come in to discuss her son’s alleged misbehavior. Finally, there came a day when she had had enough. “I had stayed up all night the night before, and I said to the principal, ‘This child has two parents. Please alternate calls.’ “

After that, she found, the calls were few and far between. It seemed, she said, that most infractions were not worth calling a busy husband about.

The Supreme Court’s second woman

In 1980, President Jimmy Carter named Ginsburg to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Over the next 13 years, she would amass a record as something of a centrist liberal, and in 1993, President Bill Clinton nominated her to the Supreme Court, the second woman appointed to the position.

She was not first on his list. For months, Clinton flirted with other potential nominees, and some women’s rights activists withheld their active support because they were worried about Ginsburg’s views on abortion. She had been publicly critical of the legal reasoning in Roe v. Wade.

But in the background, Marty Ginsburg was lobbying hard for his wife. And finally Ruth Ginsburg was invited for a meeting with the president. As one White House official put it afterward, Clinton “fell for her — hook, line and sinker.” So did the Senate. She was confirmed by a 96-3 vote.

Once on the court, Ginsburg was an example of a woman who defied stereotypes. Though she looked tiny and frail, she rode horses well into her 70s and even went parasailing. At home, it was her husband who was the chef, indeed a master chef, while the justice cheerfully acknowledged she was an awful cook.

Though a liberal, she and the court’s conservative icon, Antonin Scalia, who died in 2016, were the closest of friends. Indeed, an opera called Scalia/Ginsburg is based on their legal disagreements, and their affection for each other.

Ginsburg speaks at a memorial service for Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington in March 2016.

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Over the years, as Ginsburg’s place on the court grew in seniority, so did her role. In 2006, as the court veered right after the retirement of Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, Ginsburg dissented more often and more assertively, her most passionate dissents coming in women’s rights cases.

Dissenting in Ledbetter v. Goodyear in 2007, she called on Congress to pass legislation that would override a court decision that drastically limited back pay available for victims of employment discrimination. The resulting legislation was the first bill passed in 2009 after Obama took office.

In 2014, she dissented fiercely from the court’s decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, a decision that allowed some for-profit companies to refuse, on religious grounds, to comply with a federal mandate to cover birth control in health care plans. Such an exemption, she said, would “deny legions of women who do not hold their employers’ beliefs, access to contraceptive coverage.”

Where, she asked, “is the stopping point?” Suppose it offends an employer’s religious belief “to pay the minimum wage” or “to accord women equal pay?”

And in 2013, when the court struck down a key provision of the Voting Rights Act, contending that times had changed and the law was no longer needed, Ginsburg dissented. She said that throwing out the provision “when it has worked and is continuing to work … is like throwing away your umbrella in a rainstorm because you are not getting wet.”

She viewed her dissents as a chance to persuade a future court.

“Some of my favorite opinions are dissenting opinions,” Ginsburg told NPR. “I will not live to see what becomes of them, but I remain hopeful.”

And yet, Ginsburg still managed some unexpected victories by winning over one or two of the conservative justices in important cases. In 2015, for example, she authored the court’s decision upholding independent redistricting commissions established by voter referenda as a way of removing some of the partisanship in drawing legislative district lines.

Ginsburg always kept a backbreaking schedule of public appearances both at home and abroad, even after five bouts with cancer: colon cancer in 1999, pancreatic cancer 10 years later, lung cancer in 2018, and then pancreatic cancer again in 2019 and liver lesions in 2020. During that time, she endured chemotherapy, radiation, and in the last years of her life, terrible pain from shingles that never went away completely. All who knew her admired her grit. In 2009, three weeks after major cancer surgery, she surprised everyone when she showed up for the State of the Union address.

Shortly after that, she was back on the bench; it was her husband, Marty, who told her she could do it, even when she thought she could not, she told NPR.

A year later her psychological toughness was on full display when her beloved husband of 56 years was mortally ill. As she packed up his things at the hospital before taking him home to die, she found a note he had written to her. “My Dearest Ruth,” it began, “You are the only person I have ever loved,” setting aside children and family. “I have admired and loved you almost since the day we first met at Cornell. … The time has come for me to … take leave of life because the loss of quality simply overwhelms. I hope you will support where I come out, but I understand you may not. I will not love you a jot less.”

Shortly after that, Marty Ginsburg died at home. The next day, his wife, the justice, was on the bench, reading an important opinion she had authored for the court. She was there, she said, because “Marty would have wanted it.”

Years later, she would read the letter aloud in an NPR interview, and at the end, choke down the tears.

In the years after Marty’s death, she would persevere without him, maintaining a jam-packed schedule when she was not on the bench or working on opinions.

Some liberals criticicized her for not retiring while Obama was president, but she was at the top of her game, enjoyed her work enormously and feared that Republicans might not confirm a successor. She was an avid consumer of opera, literature and modern art. But in the end, it was her work, she said, that sustained her.

“I do think that I was born under a very bright star,” she said in an NPR interview. “Because if you think about my life, I get out of law school. I have top grades. No law firm in the city of New York will hire me. I end up teaching; it gave me time to devote to the movement for evening out the rights of women and men.”

And it was that legal crusade for women’s rights that ultimately led to her appointment to the U.S. Supreme Court.

To the end of her tenure, she remained a special kind of feminist, both decorous and dogged.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/09/18/100306972/justice-ruth-bader-ginsburg-champion-of-gender-equality-dies-at-87

A shift in tone: Trump previously gave ByteDance an ultimatum: sell TikTok to an American company or be banished from the U.S. market. His remarks Friday signal openness to a compromise, which could bode well for TikTok and its 100 million users in the U.S.

“We’re not going to do anything to jeopardize security, at the same time, it’s an amazing company. Very, very popular,” he said. “So, we can do a combination of both. I’d be very happy doing that.”

Earlier Friday, the Commerce Department issued orders that ban TikTok from U.S. mobile app stores starting Sunday night. But much more onerous restrictions would not go into effect until Nov. 12, giving the administration and the company more time to strike a deal — perhaps even after the U.S. election.

What’s next: Trump offered no timeline for approving the deal but added it could come together “very, very fast.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/09/18/trump-tiktok-security-issues-us-417830

“It’s time to take the country back, folks,” Mr. Biden said, as his speech drew to a close. “It’s going to start here, today, with voting in Minnesota.”

He then put his mask on and walked away from the lectern.

Mr. Trump, on Twitter, urged supporters in Virginia to vote as polls opened Friday. The president did not mention early voting in Minnesota, where he was planning to speak, or in South Dakota and Wyoming, states he is widely expected to win.

“Voting starts in Virginia TODAY, and we are going to WIN,” he wrote about a state in which his campaign has not bought a single television advertisement this election cycle, according to Advertising Analytics. “I’ll be having a Big Rally in Virginia, to be announced soon!”

Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota appeared at an event Friday morning to promote early voting with Senator Amy Klobuchar and other top Minnesota Democrats in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Park.

Mr. Walz said most of Minnesota’s early voting would take place by mail. He said he had received his own ballot but had not yet returned it.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/18/us/politics/early-voting-begins.html

The list of Donald Trump whistleblowers continues to grow, as Vice President Mike Pence’s former Homeland Security advisor says “the president is going to do something detrimental to keeping Americans safe.”

Olivia Troye, who was the lead staffer on Pence’s coronavirus task force, corroborated with recent reports that Trump lied to the American public about the seriousness of the outbreak. In the latest Republican Voters Against Trump (RVAT) ad, Troye said the Trump administration knew as early as February that the virus would reach pandemic proportions.

“The virus was very unpredictable at the beginning. There were a lot of unknowns. But towards the middle of February, we knew it wasn’t a matter of if COVID would become a big pandemic here in the United States: it was a matter of when,” she said.

“But the president didn’t want to hear that, because his biggest concern was that we were in an election year and how is this going to affect what he considered to be his record of success,” she added. “It was shocking to see the president saying that the virus was a hoax, saying that everything’s okay when we know it’s not.”

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According to Bob Woodward’s latest book, Rage, Trump admitted to downplaying the global health crisis in his daily briefings. The president told Woodward he wanted “to play it down” but that the COVID-19 was “deadly stuff.”

In the new ad, Troye alleges that during a White House coronavirus task force meeting, the president suggested that the virus was a good thing because he doesn’t like shaking hands with “disgusting people.” The former White House member said Trump was referring to his supporters, who have been known to attend his crowded in-person rallies without face masks.

In a statement sent to Newsweek, White House spokesperson Judd Deere said Troye did not attend private meetings with Trump.

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Troye also announced her endorsement of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden while noting that she has voted Republican her entire life.

“I am voting for Joe Biden because I truly believe we are at a time of constitutional crisis,” she said. “At this point, it’s country over party.”

A number of prominent Republican officials have criticized Trump and come out in support of Biden ahead of the election.

“Never before have so many high-ranking staffers of an incumbent president opposed his reelection and endorsed his opponent,” the strategic director of RVAT, Sarah Longwell, said in a press release.

“Even people who believed in the president have been shocked and horrified by who he is as a politician, a leader, and a person,” she added.

The White House said that Troye had not brought up her concerns to anyone else on the team during her time there.

“Ms. Troye directly reported to me, and never once during her detail did she ever express any concern regarding the Administration’s response to the Coronavirus to anyone in her chain of command,” National Security Advisor to the Vice President Keith Kellogg told Newsweek in a statement.

Newsweek reached out to RVAT for comment on the White House’s allegations that Troye did not work with Trump personally, but did not hear back before publication.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/former-pence-aide-endorses-biden-says-trump-will-detrimental-american-safety-1532742