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The Republican pariah Liz Cheney has repeatedly refused to admit a link between Donald Trump’s lies about voter fraud and restrictive voting laws being introduced in Republican states, telling an interviewer on Sunday night she will “never understand the resistance to voter ID”.

“There’s a big difference between that and a president of the United States who loses an election after he tried to steal the election and refuses to concede,” said the Wyoming representative ejected from party leadership for opposing the former president.

Laws tightening regulations on voter ID, voting by mail and even giving water to those waiting on line to vote have been passed or are close to passage in states from Georgia to Texas and beyond.

Because of their disproportionate impact on minority voters – many of whom vote Democratic – Democrats including Joe Biden have compared such laws to Jim Crow segregation in southern states from the civil war to the civil rights era.

Most in a Republican party under Trump’s grip reject such claims. Cheney has ranged herself against Trump but when pressured by Axios on HBO interviewer Jonathan Swan, she stayed in lockstep with her party.

To Cheney’s remark about resistance to voter ID laws, Swan countered: “Even the Republican lieutenant governor of Georgia, Jeff Duncan, said … when this bill was started that the momentum was when Rudy Giuliani was testifying that the Georgia election was a sham.”

Giuliani, Trump’s personal lawyer, pursued the electoral fraud lie through an array of cases in states won by Biden, the vast majority thrown out of court.

“Four hundred-some voting bills have been introduced,” Swan said, “90% by Republicans, supported by the Republican National Committee. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that after the election, this has happened.”

Cheney said: “I think everybody should want a situation and a system where people who want to vote and ought to have the right to vote, vote, and people that don’t shouldn’t. And again I come back to things like voter ID.”

Actual instances of voter fraud or attempted voter fraud are few and far between. Some involve Trump voters. Nonetheless, state Republican parties have pursued strict laws while in Arizona the GOP has gone so far as to conduct a highly controversial recount in the most populous county.

“But what problems are [these laws] solving?” Swan asked. “What are all these states doing?”

“Well,” said Cheney, “each state is different.”

Swan asked what the problem was in Georgia, or Texas, or Florida.

“I think you’ve got to look at each individual state law,” Cheney said.

Swan said: “But you can’t divorce them from the context. Come on.”

Cheney said: “But I think what we can all agree on is that what is happening right now is really dangerous.”

Swan said: “I can agree with that.”

Cheney switched back to her preferred subject – Trump’s refusal to concede defeat, which led to the deadly attack on the Capitol by his supporters on 6 January, over which more than 400 people have been charged, while Republicans in Congress oppose a 9/11-style investigation.

“I think about 2000,” said the daughter of Dick Cheney, who became vice-president to George W Bush after a tight election that year.

“I think about sitting on the inaugural platform in January of 2001 watching Al Gore. We’d won. I’m sure he didn’t think he had lost. We had fought this politically very, very intense battle. And he conceded. He did the right thing for this nation.

“And that is one of the big differences between that and what we’re dealing with now and the danger of Donald Trump today.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/may/24/liz-cheney-donald-trump-republican-voting-laws-axios-jonathan-swan

Diébédo Francis Kéré appears on a Zoom screen in a loose white Oxford shirt and an enormous, slightly flabbergasted smile.

“Can you imagine?” the newest Pritzker Architecture Prize laureate exclaims. “I was born in Burkina Faso, in this little village where there was no school. And my father wanted me to learn how to read and write very simply because then I could then translate or read him his letters.”

Diébédo Francis Kéré, this year’s Pritzker Architecture Prize winner.

Lars Borges/The Pritzker Architecture Prize


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Lars Borges/The Pritzker Architecture Prize

Diébédo Francis Kéré, this year’s Pritzker Architecture Prize winner.

Lars Borges/The Pritzker Architecture Prize

Kéré spoke to NPR from Porto-Novo, the capital of Benin, where Kéré Architecture is currently working a new parliamentary building inspired by the palaver tree. It is, he says, a West African symbol of consensus building, and he hopes the building will reflect a commitment both to tradition and democratic process. “Literally speaking, it is a tree under which people come together to make decisions, to celebrate,” Kéré explains. “You know, you get to think together and everyone can be part of the debate or the discussion.”

The first Black winner of the Pritzker Architecture Prize had already received numerous accolades in his field, including the Aga Khan Award and the Thomas Jefferson medal, but Kéré was as surprised as anyone else to be selected for the field’s most famous prize. Many architects and critics had openly supposed that 2022 would be Sir David Adjaye’s year. The most prominent Black “starchitect” is best known for designing such notable buildings as the Nobel Peace Center in Oslo, Norway, and the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. Kéré, who is based in Berlin but centers much of his practice in Africa, has been – until now — far lesser known, with signature buildings that include primary schools and a health care clinic.

Benga Riverside School in Mozambique

Jaime Herraiz Martinez/The Pritzker Architecture Prize


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Jaime Herraiz Martinez/The Pritzker Architecture Prize

“Francis Kéré is pioneering architecture — sustainable to the earth and its inhabitants — in lands of extreme scarcity,” said committee chair, Tom Pritzker, in a statement. “He is equally architect and servant, improving upon the lives and experiences of countless citizens in a region of the world that is at times forgotten. Through buildings that demonstrate beauty, modesty, boldness and invention, and by the integrity of his architecture and geste, Kéré gracefully upholds the mission of this Prize.”

Burkina Institute of Technology

Jaime Herraiz/The Pritzker Architecture Prize


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Jaime Herraiz/The Pritzker Architecture Prize

Burkina Institute of Technology

Jaime Herraiz/The Pritzker Architecture Prize

Kéré says his architectural practice was inspired by his own experience attending school with around 100 other children in a region where temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit. “You will sit and it’s very hot inside,” he told NPR. “And there was no light, while outside, the sunlight was abundant and in my head, I think, the idea one day grew [that] as an adult, I should make it better. I was thinking about space, about room, about how I can feel better.”

The Centre for Health and Social Welfare in Laongo, Burkina Faso

The Pritzker Architecture Prize


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The Pritzker Architecture Prize

In his designs for Gando Primary School and Naaba Belem Goumma Secondary School in Burkina Faso, Kéré drew on traditional building materials such as local clay mixed with concrete, and emphasized shade and shadows with well-ventilated spaces that reduce the need for air conditioning. He wanted the buildings to evoke the sense of an oasis. “I am creating a huge canopy for many, many children, to be happy and learn how to read and write,” he says.

Lycée Schorge in Palogo, Burkina Faso

The Pritzker Architecture Prize


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The Pritzker Architecture Prize

When he was twenty, in 1985, Kéré earned a vocational scholarship to study carpentry in Berlin. But while immersed in the practicality of roofing and furniture making, he also attended night school and was admitted to Technische Universität Berlin, from which he graduated in 2004 with an advanced degree in architecture. He was still a student when he designed and built the innovative Gando Primary School. The recognition it earned helped Kéré establish his own practice in Berlin.

The 2017 Serpentine Pavilion, built in London’s Kensington Gardens

Iwan Baan/The Pritzker Architecture Prize


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Iwan Baan/The Pritzker Architecture Prize

“He knows, from within, that architecture is not about the object but the objective; not the product, but the process,” says the 2022 Jury Citation, in part. “Francis Kéré’s entire body of work shows us the power of materiality rooted in place. His buildings, for and with communities, are directly of those communities – in their making, their materials, their programs and their unique characters.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/03/15/1085457169/pritzker-architecture-prize-2022-diebedo-francis-kere


The lawsuit was brought by 18 Republican-led states and is supported by the Trump administration. | Jonathan Bachman/AP Photo

Health Care

Health insurance for 20 million people and protections for pre-existing conditions are on the line.

07/09/2019 05:02 PM EDT

Updated 07/09/2019 06:34 PM EDT


NEW ORLEANS — A panel of federal appeals judges aggressively questioned whether Obamacare can survive during Tuesday afternoon oral arguments in a case that could upend the 2010 health care law.

Two Republican appointees on the three-judge panel frequently interrupted attorneys to question whether the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate is unconstitutional and if not whether the entire law could stand without it. The ACA’s future appeared murky after two hours of oral arguments at the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, but it’s not clear if the judges were ready to uphold a federal judge’s earlier decision invalidating the law.

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The lawsuit, which is supported by the Trump administration, puts at risk coverage for 20 million people covered by the ACA, as well as the law’s popular protections for insurance protections. The closely watched case is expected to eventually move to the Supreme Court, which has saved the law twice already, and could ultimately decide Obamacare’s fate next year in the height of the 2020 campaign.

This latest legal threat to Obamacare was filed by a group of red states in February 2018, months after Republican-led efforts to repeal the law collapsed in Congress. They argue that Congress’ decision to scrap the individual mandate penalty in its 2017 tax cut rendered the law unconstitutional because the Supreme Court previously upheld the mandate as a valid exercise of taxing power. Congress lowered the penalty for not purchasing health coverage to $0, but the mandate remains on the books.

In December, U.S. District Court Judge Reed O’Connor sided with the Republican-led states, shocking legal experts. The lawsuit was once seen as a long-shot, but it’s received serious consideration by Republican-appointed judges.

Appellate Judge Jennifer Elrod, a George W. Bush appointee, on Tuesday posited that lawmakers — who failed to agree on an Obamacare replacement plan two years ago — deliberately eliminated the mandate penalty because they knew the rest of the law would have to fall. She said perhaps lawmakers thought, “Aha, this is the silver bullet that’s going to undo Obamacare.”

Attorneys for the 20 Democratic-led states that are defending the law, as well as the Democratic-controlled House, countered that Congress clearly intended for the rest of the law to survive when it eliminated the mandate penalty.

“All the court has to do is look at the text,” said Samuel Siegel, the attorney representing the Democratic-led states.

The three-judge appellate panel is expected to rule in the coming months. They could back the lower court ruling invalidating all of Obamacare or overturn it entirely. The judges may also determine that the elimination of the individual mandate penalty only renders certain parts of the ACA unconstitutional, such as its protections for individuals with preexisting medical conditions. That was the Trump administration’s original stance on the lawsuit before recently embracing the lower court ruling against the entire ACA.

Judge Kurt Engelhardt, a Trump appointee, pointed out that Congress could settle the dispute over the health law’s future by immediately stripping out the individual mandate entirely, eliminating the basis for the lawsuit. He also questioned why the Republican-controlled Senate hasn’t weighed in on the lawsuit.

“They’re sort of the 800-pound gorilla who’s not in the room,” Engelhardt said.

But in Washington, Senate Republicans were not eager to talk about the case, and several are betting privately that the ACA will survive. Some expressed concern a court decision throwing out the entire law could create chaos in the health care system if it took effect immediately.

“If the appellate court upholds the lower court’s decision, then I hope they’re able to provide a transition,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.). “If the court decides it’s not [constitutional], then we have our work cut out for us.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Tuesday said Congress would act “quickly, on a bipartisan basis” to restore preexisting condition protections if the courts struck them, but there’s no guarantee that they would. Republicans have supported less robust protections than those provided by the ACA, and Democrats aren’t likely to accept anything less.

Democrats, who saw their promises to defend coverage and pre-existing conditions as winning campaign messages in 2018, are eager to again press that case in 2020.

“The stakes cannot be higher,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. “Millions of Americans will suffer if Republicans succeed. Shame on them.”

Still, what happens next in the courts isn’t clear. During the Tuesday hearing, theRepublican-appointed judges raised numerous questions about whether any party had any legal standing to challenge the ACA’s constitutionality in the first place or to appeal the federal judge’s earlier ruling against the ACA.

The standing issue emerged as a recent wild card in the legal proceedings — the appeals panel two weeks ago first raised questions about whether anyone could challenge the decision after the Trump administration in March shifted its legal strategy to fully side with the Republican-led states.

The judges could toss the entire lawsuit if they determined the red states who brought the case haven’t suffered any harm from the removal of the individual mandate penalty. Attorneys for those states argued that even without a tax penalty, the mandate causes harm by forcing them to spend money on government health care coverage for more people.

“The ACA causes classic pocketbook injury to the states,” said Kyle Hawkins, the attorney representing the Republican-led states.

Meanwhile, the judges seemed confused by the Trump administration’s legal position. The Department of Justice supports the lower court ruling against the entire ACA, but at the same time it has argued that some provisions of the law — which the DOJ hasn’t specified — should remain.

DOJ attorney August Flentje argued that it’s too soon to determine exactly which provisions can remain even if it’s struck down.

“A lot of this stuff will need to be sorted out,” Flentje said. “It’s complicated.”

The lone Democratic appointee on the three-judge panel was silent throughout the hearing. The judges gave no indication on when they might rule on the case.

The ACA has remained in effect since a federal judge found it unconstitutional last December, and the Trump administration has said it will enforce the law while the legal battle continues.

Alice Miranda Ollstein and Adam Cancryn contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/07/09/obamacare-lawsuit-1404171

  • On Wednesday, Dr. Anthony Fauci discussed his playbook for preparing the US for future waves of COVID-19 infections, which could come after lockdowns lift.
  • Fauci said the US should develop its capacity for widespread testing, contact tracing, and case isolation — “the things that were not in place in January.”
  • Antibody testing could help experts understand how many people may be immune to the virus and how many people are still vulnerable.
  • Even if things go back to normal, Fauci said, we can’t “ever let it get out of hand again.”
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Though the US could pass the peak of its coronavirus outbreak in the next week, it won’t be the end of the battle.

In a livestreamed interview on Wednesday, Dr. Anthony Fauci said he and the rest of the White House coronavirus task force were still trying to figure out what to do after April 30, when federal stay-at-home guidelines are set to expire.

Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, spoke with Howard Bauchner, the editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association. He said he had been in the West Wing “until the wee hours” the night before as the coronavirus task force discussed a major question: “What are the kind of things you have to have in place to safely and carefully march towards some sort of normality?”

That normality will be hard to come by without risking more death and overwhelmed hospitals, since experts warn of that new infections could surge after lockdowns lift. There’s also a chance the virus could make a resurgence in fall weather.

In the interview, Fauci laid out a playbook to prepare for new waves of COVID-19.

‘The things that were not in place in January’

Healthcare workers at a COVID-19 drive-thru testing site at Henry Ford West Bloomfield Hospital on March 25.


Carlos Osorio/AP



For the next few months and into the fall, Fauci wants the US to get more prepared than it was when the new coronavirus arrived.

“The keys are to make sure that we have in place the things that were not in place in January, that we have the capability of mobilizing identification — testing — identification, isolation, contact tracing,” Fauci said. “There will be cases. We’ve got to be able to act on them in a very deliberate way that doesn’t allow us to get into the situation we find ourselves right now.”

That’s the tack South Korea took at the beginning of its outbreak. Health officials quickly started testing tens of thousands of people a day and opened COVID-19 drive-thru testing facilities. The government also implemented a robust — though privacy-invasive — contact-tracing program: After tests there reveal a positive case, officials use interviews, GPS phone tracking, credit-card records, and video surveillance to trace that person’s travel history, according to The Washington Post.

In the US, on the other hand, government agencies have been criticized for rolling out testing and isolation policies too slowly. Errors and delays in producing the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s coronavirus test led to dangerous shortages, and decisions about lockdowns have been left to states in piecemeal fashion.

A man crossing a nearly empty 5th Avenue in midtown Manhattan in New York City on March 25.


REUTERS/Mike Segar



Many experts have said the slow response contributed to the virus’ rapid spread.

“This is such a rapidly moving infection that losing a few days is bad, and losing a couple of weeks is terrible,” Ashish Jha, the director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, told Bloomberg. “Losing two months is close to disastrous, and that’s what we did.”

Testing in the US is now ramping up, but it’s too late to contain the outbreak by testing and contact tracing alone. More than 14,700 people have died nationwide.

“Ultimately the answer is going to be a vaccine,” Fauci said.

It could take at least 18 months, however, to develop, test, and distribute a vaccine. That means other interventions are needed during that time.

Antibody testing

A lab technician working on a neutralizing antibody test on the MERS coronavirus at a laboratory at the International Vaccine Institute in Seoul, South Korea — part of an attempt to learn more about the coronavirus on March 11.

Ed Jones/AFP via Getty Images


People who have been infected develop antibodies that can probably fight off the virus if it they encounter it again. This would most likely make them immune, though it’s unclear how long that protection lasts.

“Clearly one of the things is to get a feel for what the penetrance of infection was and who out there has been infected, recovered, and is now not vulnerable,” Fauci said.

Fauci said immunity should last at least through September for people who were infected in February. People who are immune, then, could go back to work earlier than others.

“Those are the people, when you put them back to particularly critical infrastructure jobs, that you worry less about them driving an outbreak,” Fauci said.

To identify those people, a handful of companies are developing blood tests that detect COVID-19 antibodies — though Fauci said the US needed to validate any such tests.

“There has been some unfortunate international experience,” he said.

He was most likely referring to the UK, where the government ordered millions of antibody test kits only to find out that none of them worked.

‘Don’t ever let it get out of hand again’

A healthcare worker wheeling a patient into the Wyckoff Heights Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York, on Monday.

REUTERS/Brendan Mcdermid


“If we get back to some form of normality, we’ve got to be careful we don’t ever let it get out of hand again,” Fauci said during the Wednesday interview. “Do not send a sick child to school. Do not send a sick worker into the workplace. Don’t anybody ever shake hands again. I mean it sounds crazy, but that’s the way it’s really got to be, until we get to a point where we know that the population is protected.”

Even after a vaccine is widely available, Fauci said, the pandemic should prompt the country to rethink its local public-health systems and better prepare for the next infectious disease outbreak.

“We have a habit of when we get over a challenge, we say let’s move on to the current problem,” Fauci said. “We should never be in a position of getting hit like this and have to scramble to respond again.”

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/fauci-vision-be-prepared-new-waves-of-coronavirus-2020-4

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/01/15/politics/steve-king-kevin-mccarthy-white-supremacist/index.html

    WASHINGTON (AP) — To understand how Donald Trump’s desperation and lies became a potent danger to democracy, consider the ginger mints.

    Mints featured in one of the absurdist but toxic episodes fleshed out in the Jan. 6 hearings, which now pause even as the Justice Department presses ahead on a parallel criminal investigation that it calls the most important in its history.

    Here’s how one conspiracy theory, in a dark sea of them, was born:

    A mother-daughter team at a Georgia elections center shared the treat during a long election night. Someone videotaped them and chose to believe the mint mother gave to daughter was a USB port. Trump’s lawyer spread the accusation that the video caught the women using the device to try to corrupt the election against the president.

    Frantic to stay in power, grasping at anything, Trump ran with the lie. He attacked the mother by name, branded her a “professional vote scammer,” and soon vigilantes showed up at a family home intending to execute a “citizens’ arrest,” the committee was told. For the love of mints.

    The episode fed into a web of fabricated stories, melting under scrutiny like snowflakes in a Georgia summer. The hearings illustrated how those stories fueled the anger of Trump’s supporters across the U.S. and especially those who stormed the Capitol, many armed and out for blood.

    Long before the committee called its first witness, scenes of the rampage had been burned into the public consciousness. What new information could possibly come from it? Plenty, it turned out. And as the inquiry continues, with more hearings planned in September, still more evidence is being gathered.

    With seven Democrats working with two Republicans on the outs with their party, the committee did what Trump’s two impeachment trials couldn’t — establish a coherent story out of the chaos instead of two partisan ones clawing at each other.

    “American carnage,” Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland , lead manager of the second Trump impeachment and a committee member on this inquiry, said of the latter’s bottom line. “That’s Donald Trump’s true legacy.” Not the carnage Trump spoke of in his inaugural address.

    In a methodical, even mannerly process rarely seen from Congress, the panel exposed behind-the-scenes machinations laying bare the lengths Trump and his enablers went to keep him in power and the extent to which his inner circle knew his case about a stolen election was bogus. Some told him that to his face; others humored him.

    At every turn the hearings made clear Trump was willing to see the legislative branch of government and democratic processes in state after state consumed in the bonfire of his vanities.

    He was told the rioters were out to find his vice president, Mike Pence, at the Capitol and hang him. Trump’s chief of staff related to another aide the president’s thoughts on the matter, that Pence “deserves it,” according to testimony.

    Trump was told many of his supporters that day bore arms. He didn’t “effing care.”

    “They’re not here to hurt ME,” he said, according to testimony. “Take the effing mags away. Let my people in, they can march to the Capitol from here. Let the people in, take the effing mags away.” It is unlikely he said “effing.”

    He wanted the magnetometers, or metal detectors, removed from security lines so loyalists in town for his rally could pack the space, underscoring a Trump obsession with crowd size that was evident from the first day of his presidency.

    The committee pinpointed a range of renegade if not criminal options that were floated in the White House, which taken together resembled a tin-pot coup in the country Ronald Reagan called democracy’s “shining city upon a hill.”

    A city, Reagan imagined, “built on rocks stronger than oceans, windswept, God-blessed, and teeming with people of all kinds living in harmony and peace.”

    That bedrock convulsed as Trump and his allies contemplated an executive order to seize voting machines and other steps that democracies don’t take.

    “The idea that the federal government could come in and seize election machines, no,” Pat Cipollone, the White House counsel, said as he recounted a White House meeting that devolved into a screaming match. “That — that’s — I don’t understand why we even have to tell you why that’s a bad idea for the country.”

    Trump leaned on Republican-led states to find more votes for him — 11,780 in Georgia would do it, he said. State Republicans were pressed to appoint fake electors. He hectored Pence to do what he didn’t have the power — or the will — to do, when called upon to certify the election.

    When all else failed, Trump told his supporters to “fight like hell’ and encouraged them to march down to the Capitol, saying he’d be joining them.

    Saying no to the boss is never easy. Saying no to the U.S. president you work for is another thing altogether.

    But Trump’s plotting was foiled by Republicans in the states that mattered, conservative aides, bureaucrats and loyalists-to-a-point who ultimately said no, no, no.

    When Trump demanded to be taken to the Capitol on Jan. 6, the committee was told, his Secret Service detail said no.

    When Trump pressed his vice president to derail the certification of Joe Biden’s election, four years of supplication and admiring glances by Pence came to an end. He said no.

    The Republican election official in Georgia said no to cooking the results to deliver Trump the state, never losing his cool on the phone with the president. The Republican House speaker in Arizona, pressed to appoint fake electors, invoked his oath and said no way.

    Two Justice Department leaders in succession said no to him. When he moved to appoint a compliant third, Justice Department officials told him in the Oval Office that if he did so, they would quit en masse and the new man would be left “leading a graveyard.”

    All of that left the president with an inept cadre, mostly of outsiders, to tell him what he wanted to hear. One sells pillows.

    Even Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani, perhaps the most loyal of loyalists and a man who voiced plenty of delusional statements on behalf of his client, acknowledged at one point that there was nothing more to Trump’s accusations of a rigged election than speculation.

    “We’ve got lots of theories,” he told Rusty Bowers, Arizona House speaker. “We just don’t have the evidence.”

    Yet the comment — as related to the committee by Bowers — was made in the context of pressing him to appoint fake electors anyway, which Bowers refused to do. And it was Giuliani who stoked the USB conspiracy theory that prompted the FBI to direct the mother into hiding and made her daughter fearful of being out in public.

    The Constitution demands that presidents “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” Failure to do so can be a crime.

    With the summer hearings over, attention now shifts to the Justice Department, where Attorney General Merrick Garland has vowed to hold wrongdoers “at any level” accountable, whether present at the Capitol or not, and said as recently as this week that “no person is above the law.”

    He’s made no public statements as to whether the department might pursue a criminal case against Trump, noting that the agency does not conduct its investigations in public. Yet he said he regards this one as the “most important” and sweeping it’s ever undertaken.

    Some legal experts have said the hearings identified a range of potential crimes for which the ex-president might conceivably be prosecuted. Corruptly obstructing an official proceeding. Conspiracy to defraud the U.S. Inciting a riot. Even seditious conspiracy.

    But these crimes are easier to casually talk about than to prove beyond a reasonable doubt, especially against a former president and one who might run again.

    As the hearings unfolded, Democrats were surprised to find themselves standing in admiration, if not awe, for the deeply conservative Rep. Liz Cheney, the poker-faced Republican on the committee who, despite her measured words, made clear her icy disdain for Trump and the many Republicans in Congress who appear to remain in thrall to him.

    She did not countenance the Trump defenders who argued he was manipulated by outside “crazies.”

    “President Trump is a 76-year-old man,” she said. “He is not an impressionable child. Just like everyone else in our country, he is responsible for his own actions and his own choices.”

    Facing a Trump-backed primary opponent in August, her congressional seat in deep-red Wyoming in danger, she framed the stakes for fellow Republican lawmakers at the first hearing: “I say this to my Republican colleagues who are defending the indefensible: There will come a day when Donald Trump is gone, but your dishonor will remain.”

    Democrats and liberals nationwide as well as many Republicans are pouring money into her race, which she well could lose.

    From the first hearing, June 9, watched by an estimated 20 million people, to the eighth on Thursday night, the committee told a seamless story stitched from the testimony of sober and evocative witnesses.

    The panel introduced to the nation the harassed and haunted election workers from Georgia, a young White House aide who saw and knew a lot, little-known Justice officials who proved to be a bulwark against Trump’s scheming, and more.

    ___

    LADY RUBY

    Her name is Ruby Freeman, but everyone in the Georgia community where she’s spent her whole life knows her as Lady Ruby, the words on the T-shirt she wore on Election Day.

    She hasn’t worn that shirt since, says she never will. Her explanation for why not, broadcast to America, did more than make for captivating television. It put a human face on the impact of the pressure-and-smear campaigns wielded by the president and his allies.

    For weeks, the country heard from lawyers at the highest echelons of government and campaign aides and White House workers present in the room with Trump for some of his more untethered moments.

    Lady Ruby, and her daughter, Wandrea “Shaye” Moss, were none of those.

    They were election workers in Fulton County, Georgia’s most populated, where Shaye Moss said she took particular pleasure in distributing absentee ballots to the elderly and disabled and helping residents navigate the voter registration page.

    When Giuliani publicized the sham video about a USB handover and Trump jumped on it, the women’s lives took a sharp turn.

    One day, Shaye Moss told the committee she got a call from her grandmother. She was “screaming at the top of her lungs” that strangers had shown at her door trying to force their way in to find her mother and her.

    Since then, she said: “I don’t want anyone knowing my name. I don’t want to go anywhere with my mom because she might yell my name out over the grocery aisle or something. I don’t go to the grocery store at all. I haven’t been anywhere at all.

    “I’ve gained about 60 pounds,” she said. “I second guess everything that I do. It’s affected my life in a — in a major way. In every way. All because of lies.” She spit out that last word.

    Lady Ruby was in the committee room as her daughter spoke and at one point gently held her hand.

    “Now I won’t even introduce myself by my name anymore,” Lady Ruby said in her earlier videotaped testimony. “I’m worried about who’s listening. I get nervous when I have to give my name for food orders. … I’ve lost my name, and I’ve lost my reputation.”

    ___

    CASSIDY HUTCHINSON

    In 1973, the nation was riveted by a young White House lawyer, John Dean , a participant in the Watergate scandal who delivered hours of harmful testimony about the Nixon White House during congressional hearings while fielding the most memorable question of all: “What did the president know and when did he know it?”

    The Jan. 6 hearings delivered another witness whose words will be long remembered even if they may not be as impactful as Dean’s were in the proceedings that helped force a sitting president out of office.

    She was Cassidy Hutchinson, the mid-20s White House staffer and aide to chief of staff Mark Meadows whose age and anonymity were belied by the lasting damage of her fly-on-the-wall testimony June 28. She described witnessing a president unbound.

    In her composed account, the president was prone to fits of rage, heaving a porcelain plate of food against a White House wall when he learned his attorney general had publicly contradicted his claims of vast voter fraud. (She grabbed a towel to help the valet clean up dripping ketchup.)

    In her telling, the president was aware on the morning of Jan. 6 that loyalists in Washington were armed but was so determined to have their support at a rally that he demanded security be eased.

    It was she who heard from her boss, Meadows, that Trump had brushed off the mob’s threat to hang Pence from the makeshift gallows the insurrectionists had erected outside the Capitol — that Trump thought the vice president deserved that fate.

    It was she who was told by the White House counsel, Cipollone, that it was imperative to stay away from the Capitol despite Trump’s desire to go.

    “Keep in touch with me,” Hutchinson quoted Cipollone as telling her. “We’re going to get charged with every crime imaginable if we make that movement happen.”

    She had once recalled in an interview published on her college website being “brought to tears” when she learned she’d been selected for a White House internship.

    Years later, though, she’d recall her disgust on Jan. 6 upon seeing a tweet from Trump saying Pence didn’t have the courage to do what needed to be done — reject electors from the battleground states and help overturn the results.

    “As an American, I was disgusted,” she testified. “It was unpatriotic. It was un-American. We were watching the Capitol building get defaced over a lie.”

    Fiona Hill, a leading witness in Trump’s first impeachment because of her insights as the president’s Russia adviser, said Hutchinson took all sorts of risks to step up and tell what she knew, so early in her career. Despite her junior position in the White House, she exercised the power of listening to the senior people around her, and so will shape history.

    She understood, Hill told The Associated Press, that “the most powerful thing you can do is tell the truth. She will certainly be defined by that. It’s an extraordinarily brave act for her.”

    ___

    SUNDAY NIGHT MASSACRE?

    The hearings laid bare how the Justice Department — if not democracy itself — was brought to the brink not only by Trump’s outside pressure but also by an accomplice from within.

    Jeffrey Clark was a little-known lawyer who joined the department only in 2018, as its chief environmental enforcement official, and by 2020 was leading its civil division.

    He was a prime cheerleader for Trump’s voter fraud claims and the president weighed making him acting attorney general, a position where he could have done real damage. Clark had been stealthily advancing plans to challenge the election results without telling his higher-ups.

    Three senior Justice officials testified to the committee, among them the acting attorney general at the time, Jeffrey Rosen. The men described in granular detail how they presented a united front against Trump’s badgering.

    “Just say that the election was corrupt + leave the rest to me and the R. Congressmen,” according to handwritten notes from Rosen’s deputy, Richard Donoghue, that conveyed what the president told the two men and that were shown at the hearing. “R.” was short for Republican.

    It all culminated in an Oval Office meeting on the Sunday evening three days before the Capitol attack, when the question hanging over the session was whether Trump would fire Rosen and elevate Clark. The plan had already progressed to a point that White House call logs cited by the committee were, by that afternoon, referring to Clark as the acting attorney general.

    The meeting opened, Rosen testified, with Trump telling the group, “One thing we know is you, Rosen, you aren’t going to do anything” to overturn the election.

    You’re right, Mr. President, Rosen said he replied.

    As the meeting continued, Trump was told the Justice officials in the room — except Clark — would resign if Rosen were fired. Potentially hundreds of federal prosecutors would walk out the door, too.

    Such a crisis would eclipse the Saturday Night Massacre of 1973, when the attorney general and his deputy both resigned rather than execute Richard Nixon’s order to fire the Watergate prosecutor.

    Trump backed down. Rosen would keep his job. But Trump had one last question for him: What happens to Clark now? Are you going to fire him?

    No, Rosen said, he didn’t have the authority to — only Trump did. And that wasn’t going to happen.

    “Alright,” Rosen said. “Well, then we should all go back to work.”

    ___

    187 MINUTES

    The last scheduled hearing, in prime time like the first, examined 187 minutes from the time Trump left a rally stage sending his supporters to the Capitol to the time he ultimately appeared in a Rose Garden video to tell the insurrectionists “go home, we love you, you’re very special.”

    Until then he had watched the melee on Fox News, tweeted his displeasure with Pence and resisted the entreaties of his horrified aides and even family members to say something to tamp down the violence. He even spent time calling senators asking them to block the certification of Biden’s election, the committee said.

    The hearing crystallized the degree to which the insurrectionists on their smartphones were tuned into any words from Trump as they assaulted the complex.

    Secret Service radio transmissions described to the committee revealed agents at the Capitol trying to get Pence to safety and passing goodbye messages to their own families. The mob came within 40 feet or 12 meters of Pence.

    The panel made a detailed case that Trump had been derelict in his duties. He did not summon the military or Homeland Security or the FBI. Outtakes from a video Trump recorded Jan. 7 showed him resisting parts of the script prepared for him.

    “I don’t want to say the election is over,” he said. He still doesn’t.

    ___

    The hearings produced enough words for a classic novel of scheming and corruption, longer than George Orwell’s dystopian “1984,” far longer than Niccolò Machiavelli’s 16th century power study, “The Prince,” and in the ballpark of “The Bonfire of the Vanities,” Tom Wolfe’s take on greed and deception from the 1980s era of Trump the New York developer and man about town.

    In that period, Reagan spoke often of America the shining city, a notion handed down from the Puritans, but perhaps most poignantly in his farewell address in 1989. “How stands the city?” he asked rhetorically.

    These days, intact but endangered, the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol found. Intact because enough of the president’s men and women, public servants and state officials said an emphatic, effing, no.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Amanda Seitz contributed to this report.

    ___

    For a timeline of the findings of the Jan. 6 committee, visit the AP’s YouTube channel.

    Follow AP’s coverage of the Jan. 6 committee hearings at https://apnews.com/hub/capitol-siege.

    Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/Jan-6-hearings-Trump-capitol-10351fe6d555eaee7554379ceed8bb24

    Smash-and-grab looters targeted stores across the country ahead of Thanksgiving and over Black Friday weekend, robbing stores of thousands of dollars in merchandise and even leaving one California security guard dead as he tried to protect a news crew that was reporting on the crimes. 

    “We tried to stop them,” Home Depot employee Luis Romo told FOX 11 of a “flash mob” targeting the store in Lakewood, California, on Black Friday. “We closed the front entrance and they put their sledgehammers up and whoever got in the way, they were going to hurt them.”

    The group of eight robbers stole hammers, crowbars and other tools, swiping about $400 worth of merchandise. Such tools have been used in other smash-and-grab robberies in the state, including in a Nordstrom in Walnut Creek, California, last week. 

    LA THIEVES ATTACK SECURITY GUARD IN CALIFORNIA’S LATEST SMASH-AND-GRAB

    The robbers reportedly fled in cars waiting in the parking lot. Police stopped a car with no plates later that night and detained four individuals who may be tied to the robbery. 

    A group of five suspects stole about $25,000 in expensive purses from a Nordstrom store in the Westfield Topanga mall in Los Angeles on the eve of Thanksgiving. While a large group also entered a Bottega Veneta in the Beverly Grove section of Los Angeles on Friday and used a chemical agent against one person who tried to stop them as they stole high-end merchandise. 

    By late Friday evening, the Los Angeles Police Department was on a citywide tactical alert. The alert has since been lifted. 

    NEWSOM TELLS CALIFORNIA MAYORS TO ‘STEP UP’ AFTER MOB OF LOOTERS MAKE SIX-FIGURE NORDSTROM HEIST

    A Los Angeles Police Officer Badge.
    (iStock)

    In Monterey, a group of about four people stole an estimated $30,000 worth of sunglasses from a Sunglass Hut. In San Francisco, thieves between the ages of 14 and 18 took more than $20,000 from an Apple store in broad daylight on Wednesday. 

    The crimes have also poured into other areas in the country, including in Chicago where police say thieves threw a cinderblock through a Canada Goose store between midnight and 6 a.m. on Thanksgiving and took merchandise. Three other smash-and-grabs unfolded in the city, where thieves targeted a Foot Locker, a North Face store and a cell phone store. 

    DOZENS OF SAN FRANCISCO AREA STORES, PHARMACIES HIT BY SMASH-AND-GRAB LOOTERS: ‘HURTS US ALL’

    It is unclear if the robberies are connected or how much merchandise was stolen. Chicago police are investigating. 

    In suburban Minneapolis, a large group of at least 30 people targeted a Best Buy in Burnsville, while a group of 10-12 people, including juveniles, targeted another Best Buy in Maplewood. No one has been arrested in connection to the incidents as of Saturday and there are no estimates on how much merchandise was stolen. 

    “Across the board, retailers are getting more concerned with this growing trend. … It is definitely a tough problem to solve, given the organized nature and number of people involved in many of the incidents,” Chris Walton, a former Target executive who co-leads retail blog and podcast Omni Talk, said of the incidents, according to Star Tribune

    The most tragic incident unfolded in California, when an Oakland security guard was fatally shot during an armed robbery while protecting a news crew covering a previous smash-and-grab theft.

    SAN FRANCISCO GUARD, A FORMER COP, SHOT AND KILLED PROTECTING NEWS CREW COVERING A SMASH-AND-GRAB

    This undated photo provided by the Town of Colma Police Department, in California, shows former Officer Kevin Nishita. Nishita, a retired police officer and armed guard who provided security for many reporters in the region, was shot in the abdomen during an attempted robbery of KRON-TV’s camera equipment in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Nov. 24, 2021. The news crew was covering a recent smash-and-grab robbery of a clothing store. Parts of California have been struck by a rash of organized retail thefts in which bands of thieves break into high-end stores and snatch merchandise. (Brandon Vaccaro/Colma Police Department via AP) A security guard protecting a San Francisco television news crew was shot Wednesday during an attempted armed robbery, authorities said.  (KTVU)

    “It is with the deepest sadness that I let you know security guard Kevin Nishita has passed away,” said Mark Neerman, vice president of news and news director at KPIX. “He died protecting one of our own, a colleague reporting on the very violence that took his life. I know you join me in sending condolences to his family and in sending thanks to Kevin for standing up for us all.”

    He was shot in the abdomen during an attempted robbery of KRON-TV’s camera equipment on Wednesday and later died from his injuries.

    3 SUSPECTS IN CUSTODY AFTER SMASH-AND-GRAB ROBBERY AT NORDSTROM STORE AT THE GROVE, LAPD SAYS

    Nishita was a San Jose police officer from 2001-2012 and was working as an armed guard for Star Protection Agency at the time of his death. He leaves behind his wife, two children and three grandchildren. A reward of $32,500 is being offered for information that leads to an arrest in the killing. 

    Smash-and-grab robberies have plagued California in the last week, with most of the incidents occurring in stores near San Francisco and Los Angeles. 

    In Walnut Creek, which is located about 25 miles from SF, roughly 80 looters stormed a Nordstrom and took somewhere between $100,000 to $200,000 in merchandise, according to police. 

    Mobs of thieves ransacked at least two dozen San Francisco area businesses over last weekend. 

    “At least two dozen businesses were impacted,” Oakland Police Chief LeRonne Armstrong told CBS SF. “Roving caravans of vehicles, targeting cannabis operations, retail shops, pharmacies, throughout the city of Oakland.”

    The crimes also extended to San Jose, about 50 miles from San Francisco, where at least four people stole $40,000 from a Lululemon in an incident described by police as “organized robbery.”

    Gov. Gavin Newsom has called on California mayors to “step up” and hold the mobs of shoplifters to “account” following the repeated crimes. 

    Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks at a news conference after receiving a Moderna COVID-19 vaccine booster shot at Asian Health Services in Oakland, Calif., Wednesday, Oct. 27, 2021. Also pictured are Assemblymember Mia Bonta, third from bottom right, Supervisor Wilma Chan and Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf, right. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu) 

    “I’m not the mayor of California, but I was a mayor, and I know when things like this happen, mayors have to step up,” Newsom said Monday at a vaccine clinic in the Mission District of San Francisco. “That’s not an indictment. That’s not a cheap shot.”

    “These people need to be held to account,” Newsom added. “We need to investigate these crimes. We need to break up these crime rings. We need to make an example out of these folks.”

    In San Francisco, Mayor London Breed announced that the city will limit car access ahead of holiday shopping season to the city’s popular shopping district, Union Square, in response to the mobs of thieves.

    SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 17: San Francisco Mayor London Breed speaks during a news conference outside of Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital with essential workers to mark the one year anniversary of the COVID-19 lockdown on March 17, 2021 in San Francisco, California. San Francisco has some of the lowest number of coronavirus cases and death rates in the country with only 422 deaths in a city with a population near 900,000. 
    (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

    Some police and retailers pointed to California’s Proposition 47 for the increase in crimes, which reduced shoplifting charges regarding the theft of $950 or less from felonies to misdemeanors. 

    In 2018, state legislators passed a temporary law in response to complaints surrounding the law, which established a new crime of organized retail theft. A California Highway Patrol task force was also created to help assist areas with high instances of such crimes. The law expired at the start of this year, however, The San Francisco Chronicle reported.

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    “I think what happens now is there’s no accountability for it anymore, and the liability for the stores if they try to apprehend these guys. They just stand by and watch,” Steve Reed, a retired police officer and the former head of security at Arden Fair Mall in Sacramento, told ABC 10

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/smash-and-grab-thieves-attack-stores-around-the-country-california-security-guard-shot-dead-as-crime-rages

    At least three explosions were reported Sunday inside the heavily-fortified Green Zone — which houses the U.S. Embassy, Balad Air Base and Iraqi government buildings — in the second attack of its kind after the U.S.-led airstrike that killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani.

    A total of six Katyusha rockets — three inside the Green Zone and three in the nearby Jadriya area — hit Baghdad, according to a statement by Iraq’s military, as Reuters reported.

    No injuries were reported immediately but alert sirens waited on the west bank of the Tigris river.

    MORE THAN 70 ANTI-WAR PROTESTS TAKE PLACE ACROSS US AFTER SOLEIMANI KILLING

    On Saturday, at least one rocket fell on a parade ground in the Green Zone, causing no damage or casualties, Military.com reported.

    In addition, several rockets fell at the gates of Balad Air Base, which the U.S. and Iraqi militaries have used jointly.

    Although no one immediately took responsibility for the attacks, Iraqi Shia militia Kataib Hezbollah hinted at more retaliatory attacks to avenge Soleimani’s death. Local media reports stated that Hezbollah warned civilians to stay at least one kilometer away from U.S. bases and facilities housing American troops in Iraq starting Sunday evening, according to RT.

    One blast allegedly blocked the road leading to the American diplomatic mission in the Iraqi capital. Five people were also injured as mortar shells ricocheted into the neighboring Jadriya region, where Baghdad University is located.

    Tensions in the Middle East escalated after the U.S. launched three rockets Thursday that killed Soleimani, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ elite Quds Force as well as Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the deputy commander of Iran-backed militias known as the Popular Mobilization Forces, and five other people.

    Mourners at a funeral ceremony for Gen. Qassem Soleimani in the southwestern city of Ahvaz, Iran, on Sunday. (Morteza Jaberian/Mehr News Agency via AP)

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    Throngs of mourners carried the flag-draped casket of Soleimani off a plane in Ahvaz in southwestern Iran earlier Sunday as his body was returned to his country.

    Iran has declared three days of public mourning and throngs of revelers, including acting Iraqi Prime Minister Adil Abdul-Mahdi, marched in a procession to honor the two Shiite militia leaders.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/baghdad-green-zone-explosions-2nd-day

    “In order to prevent a total, statewide blackout, which could take several days if not one or two weeks to restore, the system is having to be very surgical on taking people off the system to reduce that demand on that limited supply,” Turner said. “Otherwise, it could be considerably worse and this situation could be prolonged.”

    The weather station at Bush Intercontinental Airport recorded an air temperature of 17 degrees Monday morning, the lowest reading since 1989.

    Video: Houston Chronicle Photo Staff

    Centerpoint said residents without power should not expect service to be restored before Tuesday at the earliest, leaving families to choose between bad options: Hunker down with layers of blankets or traverse icy roads to the homes of friends and relatives with electricity.

    Michele Whitebread in Spring Branch said she is not eager to drive several miles to her parents’ home, but plans to do so with her husband and five children Monday afternoon, after losing power at 5 a.m. Staying put and bundling up would have been an option, she said, if not for her youngest daughter, Maggie, who has born just four weeks ago.

    “My parents have power and we don’t,” Whitebread said. “The house can’t get too much colder with the newborn.”

    A failing fire alarm woke Jared Berry at his northwest Harris County home around 2 a.m. when it lost power. His wife’s humidifier was out, too.

    Hours later, after donning thermal underwear, he used a meat thermometer to see how cold his home was. The device stopped at 58 degrees.

    “We were able to boil water and make a cup of coffee in our French press,” Berry said.

    Running water was not available for Jamie Rangel at his west Houston apartment, along Interstate 10 and near Silbur Road. His power went out around the same time, too.

    “It’s just me. I have a lot of bottled water to drink,” Rangel said, expressing a lack of worry.

    He plans to subside off of cold sandwiches until the power comes back.

    Ryan Sullivan spent his morning huddled in a comforter as the temperature continuously dropped inside his Spring Branch-area home. He wishes he had planned better.

    “Honestly — we didn’t prepare well for this. I should have bought some groceries that I could cook without a stovetop,” Sullivan said. “I wasn’t thinking about losing power for the rest of the day.”

    As the indoor temperature reached 45 degrees, he contemplated using a novelty burner for s’mores to cook food for his girlfriend and roommate.

    Arwen Mallet’s two kids have been going in and out to play in the snow. The joy is waning, she explained.

    “I’m trying to discourage them from going outside because it’s too hard to warm them up afterward,” Mallet said.

    Her family’s home lost power around 3 a.m. near Memorial City Mall, just north of Interstate 10.

    Source Article from https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/We-didn-t-prepare-for-this-700-000-in-15952157.php

    Image copyright
    EPA

    Image caption

    En 2004, Hadid ganó el premio Pritzker, el más importante de la arquitectura.

    La arquitecta iraquí Zaha Hadid, cuyos diseños incluyen el Centro Acuático Olímpico de Londres, murió este jueves en Miami a la edad de 65 años.

    Hadid murió de un ataque cardiaco en un hospital donde era tratada por una bronquitis.

    Este año Hadid se convirtió en la primera mujer en recibir la Medalla de Oro del Instituto Real de Arquitectos Británicos en reconocimiento a su trabajo.

    “Ahora vemos más mujeres arquitectas establecidas”, indicó cuando recibió el premio del cual se sentía orgullosa.

    Image copyright
    Getty

    Image caption

    Hadid decía estar convencida de que los edificios deben alimentar el alma.

    Eso no significa que es fácil. Algunas veces los desafíos son inmensos. En los años recientes ha habido un cambio tremendo y continuaremos este progreso”.

    Hadid, quien también poseía la nacionalidad británica, era considerada una de las arquitectas más destacadas del siglo XXI.

    Decía estar convencida de que los edificios deben alimentar el alma.

    “Las ideas fuertes nunca fallan”, dijo en 2004.

    Internacional

    Sus diseños han sido comisionados en varias partes del mundo.

    Image copyright
    PA

    Image caption

    El Centro Acuático Olímpico de Londres, que abrió sus puertas en las Olimpiadas de 2012, fue diseñado por Hadid.

    Entre los países en que se pueden encontrar están: China, Alemania, Qatar y Azerbaiyán.

    Sus creaciones incluyen: la Serpentine Gallery en Londres, el Museo Riverside en Glasgow y el Opera House de Cantón, China.

    Image copyright
    Reuters

    Image caption

    Hadid cuando recibió la Excelentísima Orden del Imperio Británico en 2012.

    El editor de Arte de la BBC, Will Gompertz, describió su estilo como una mezcla reconocible de curvas sensuales y modernismo geométrico.

    Su estilo también ha sido catalogado como “neofuturista” y se caracteriza por poderosas formas curvas y estructuras alongadas.

    Una diva de la arquitectura

    Fue la primera mujer en recibir el famoso premio Pritzker (considerado el Nobel de la Arquitectura) en 2004 y en 2008 la revista Forbes la incluyó en su lista de las mujeres más poderosas del mundo.

    Image copyright
    AFP

    Image caption

    Zaha Hadid frente a una de sus creaciones, la Serpentine Sackler Gallery en Londres.

    En una entrevista realizada por la BBC en 2004, la periodista Caroline Frost describió a Hadid como una diva de la arquitectura: “su personalidad tiene la fuerza de cualquiera de sus diseños“, dijo entonces.

    Nacida en Bagdad y educada por monjas francesas, Hadid llegó a Inglaterra cuando tenía 20 años. Pero antes pasó por Beirut, donde estudió matemáticas.

    Bajo el auspicio del ambicioso arquitecto holandés Rem Koolhaas, Hadid consiguió crear dibujos con lenguaje propio.

    Cuando se graduó en 1977, Koolhaas la describió como “un planeta en su propia e inimitable órbita“.

    Image copyright
    PA

    Image caption

    Esta es la parte externa del Centro Acuático Olímpico de Londres.

    Hadid diseñó uno de los principales estadios donde se celebrará el Mundial de Fútbol de Qatar 2022, cuyos organizadores han sido acusados de no respetar los derechos humanos de los empleados que trabajan en las construcciones destinadas al evento.

    El año pasado, el gobierno de Japón dejó a un lado su propuesta de diseñar un estadio de apariencia futurista para las Olimpiadas de Tokio 2020 y optó por un diseño menos ambicioso y menos costoso.

    Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2016/03/160331_arquitecta_iraqui_zaha_hadid_mr

    Neither of those agencies identified the officer as they shared their findings. The USCP in a press release Monday noted, “This officer and the officer’s family have been the subject of numerous credible and specific threats.”

    Byrd shot Babbitt, a 35-year-old Air Force veteran, in the Capitol on Jan. 6 as she attempted to climb through an opening in a barricaded door where a glass panel had broken out, the Justice Department’s investigation found.

    Babbitt was part of a group of pro-Trump rioters who had gathered in a hallway outside the Speaker’s lobby, which leads to the House chamber. A joint session of Congress was forced to evacuate the House and Senate chambers as a mob of hundreds of people invaded the building, temporarily derailing efforts to confirm President Joe Biden‘s Electoral College victory.

    Byrd, who was inside the lobby as Babbitt tried to crawl through the door, drew his service pistol and shot her once in the left shoulder, causing her to fall backward onto the floor, the DOJ found. She was transported to Washington Hospital Center, where she died, according to the agency.

    “She was posing a threat to the United States House of Representatives,” Byrd told NBC.

    Asked what he could see when he fired his weapon, Byrd said, “You’re taught to aim for center mass. The subject [Babbitt] was sideways, and I could not see her full motion of her hands or anything.”

    “Her movement caused the discharge to fall where it did,” he said.

    A lawyer for Babbitt’s family, Terrell Roberts, has maintained that Byrd “ambushed” Babbitt and shot her with “no warning.” Roberts did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on Byrd’s interview.

    Babbitt has become a martyr on the far right, with many demanding that the name of the officer who shot her be disclosed. Babbitt’s family, which has vowed to file a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against the police department and Byrd, has raised thousands from online donations.

    Former President Donald Trump claimed Babbitt was “murdered at the hands of someone who should never have pulled the trigger of his gun.”

    Byrd, who is Black, said he has lived in hiding for months since Jan. 6 but has nevertheless been the target of threats from those who speculated that he was Babbitt’s shooter.

    “They talked about killing me, cutting off my head,” Byrd said. “There were some racist attacks, as well.”

    “It’s all disheartening, because I know I was doing my job,” he said.

    Byrd said he “of course” has concerns about coming forward, calling the move “frightening.” But “I believe I showed the utmost courage on January 6 and it’s time for me to do that now,” he said.

    Byrd in the interview also addressed a prior incident that put his name in headlines, when in 2019 he left his Glock 22 in a bathroom in the Capitol.

    That was “a terrible mistake,” he told NBC’s Holt. “I owned up to it … I was penalized for it, and I moved on.”

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/26/capitol-cop-who-shot-pro-trump-rioter-ashli-babbitt-comes-forward.html

    CLOSE

    The search of the word impeach skyrocketed in the Merriam Webster dictionary. Veuer’s Natasha Abellard has the story.
    Buzz60

    Earlier this week, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said his chamber would have “no choice” but to hold a trial on whether to remove President Donald Trump from office if the House votes to impeach.

    But in a new campaign ad on Facebook, the Kentucky Republican claims that any impeachment attempt will fail as long as he remains in charge of the Senate.

    “Nancy Pelosi’s in the clutches of a left wing mob. They finally convinced her to impeach the president,” McConnell says directly to the camera in a 17-second video. “All of you know your Constitution. The way that impeachment stops is a Senate majority with me as majority leader.

    “But I need your help,” he adds, standing in front of a picture of an elephant. “Please contribute before the deadline.”

    The McConnell campaign, according to Facebook’s “Ad Library,” started running the digital ad last week, a few days after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced an impeachment inquiry over whether Trump improperly pressured Ukraine’s president to investigate political rival and possible 2020 opponent Joe Biden.

    Pelosi: Trump impeachment probe ‘a very sad time for our country’

    Photos: The Trump impeachment inquiry in pictures

    The ad features the same video, but McConnell’s team has paired the video with different captions that all are mostly focused on the topic of impeachment.

    “Your conservative Senate Majority is the ONLY thing stopping Nancy Pelosi from impeaching President Trump. Donate & help us keep it!” one caption reads.

    McConnell campaign manager Kevin Golden told The Courier Journal the impeachment inquiry is energizing the Senate leader’s supporters.

    “Few issues energize conservative voters like liberal overreach,” Golden said in a statement. “And the Democrats latest outrageous attempt to impeach President Trump has activated our base to new heights.”

    Another caption from Team Mitch goes after Pelosi’s fellow California Democrat, Rep. Adam Schiff, who chairs the House Intelligence Committee.

    “BREAKING: Adam Schiff LIED. His office secretly coordinated with the source of this laughable impeachment inquiry,” the caption reads. “Help me stop it.”

    That caption appears to reference the New York Times reporting this week that Schiff received an early account of the whistleblower’s complaint regarding Trump’s phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

    Impeachment inquiry: House Democrats subpoena White House for Ukraine documents

    More: Trump tears into Mitt Romney who said requests for Ukraine, China to investigate Biden were ‘appalling’

    The complaint from the anonymous whistleblower, reportedly a CIA officer, led to the White House releasing a summary of the July phone call between Trump and Zelensky.

    According to the call’s summary, Trump told Zelensky to reopen an investigation into a Ukrainian energy company connected to Biden’s son, Hunter.

    McConnell reportedly told the White House to release the transcript of the phone call, something that McConnell and his spokespeople have not commented on.

    On Thursday, Trump added further fuel to the fire by telling reporters that China should also investigate the Bidens.

    The president also claimed Thursday that McConnell put out a statement referring to the president’s phone call with the president of Ukraine as “the most innocent phone call (transcript) that I’ve read.”

    McConnell’s office has not responded to questions about Trump’s assertion, though the Senate leader dismissed criticism of the call last week and said it is “laughable to think this is anywhere close to an impeachable offense.”

    On the Senate floor, McConnell has defended his record of standing up for Ukraine, especially against the Russian government.

    Democrats and some Republican critics of Trump have said the president’s requests to Ukraine and China are a blatant attempt to have a foreign power interfere with next year’s election. 

    Trump has denied any wrongdoing.

    It would take a simple majority of the House (218 votes) to submit articles of impeachment to the Senate.

    A trial would then be held in the Senate, where it would take at least two-thirds (or 67 votes) of the chamber to convict Trump and remove him from office. 

    The chief justice of the Supreme Court presides over the trial. But as majority leader, McConnell would have some power in setting up ground rules for a trial, including timing.

    “So I would have no choice but to take it up,” McConnell told CNBC on Monday, referring to the impeachment trial. “How long you’re on it is a whole different matter.”

    The new campaign ad from McConnell shows the Senate leader sees the impeachment matter as a chance to raise funds for his 2020 reelection campaign.

    Amy McGrath, a former Marine Corps pilot and one of several Democrats in Kentucky vying to unseat McConnell in 2020, endorsed the impeachment inquiry last week.

    McGrath has also urged McConnell to show “patriotic courage” and get to the truth of the allegations in the whistleblower complaint.

    The “deadline” mentioned by McConnell in the new video refers to this past Monday, Sept. 30.

    ‘Over the top’: McConnell still mad about #MoscowMitch, calls attention to 2020 election

    That was the third-quarter cutoff for donations to Senate, House and presidential candidates.

    Candidates now have until Oct. 15 to file reports with the Federal Election Commission that reveal their fundraising and spending totals.

    According to Facebook’s Ad Library, McConnell’s campaign spent a little over $63,000 on digital ads between Sept. 27 and Oct. 3.

    That represents about 44% of the roughly $143,500 that Facebook data shows Team Mitch spent from May 2018 to Oct. 3, a decent-sized sum in a brief amount of time.

    According to the most recent FEC data, McConnell had a sizable war chest for his 2020 reelection bid, with nearly $7.9 million in cash on hand.

    Follow Billy Kobin on Twitter: @Billy_Kobin

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2019/10/05/mitch-mcconnell-campaign-ad-says-trump-impeachment-fail/3881997002/

    Por: Ana Angulo Benavides


    aangulo@hoy.com.ec


    Defensora del Lector


    Como escribía un lector hace varios días, las noticias sobre accidentes de tránsito son “el pan de cada día” en el Ecuador. Prácticamente no hay semana que no se reporte al menos un suceso de esta naturaleza que ocurre ya sea en las calles de las ciudades o en las reconstruidas carreteras del país.


    Lamentablemente los accidentes se han convertido en un hecho tan cotidiano que la mayoría de medios, incluido HOY, los registran como notas secundarias y se olvidan de los casos hasta volver a informar sobre el siguiente, desde luego con los datos de rigor: número de heridos y de fallecidos, el lugar donde se produce, las posibles causas, las placas de los vehículos involucrados, la actuación de los organismos de socorro y algún otro dato adicional. Pero en raras ocasiones estas noticias tienen seguimiento.


    Al igual que en los casos de crímenes violentos, daría la impresión que los seguimientos en este tipo de informaciones depende del número de fallecidos o de su “importancia”. El domingo anterior, en la página de Actualidad se publicó la nota “Pujilí: 4 muertos en un accidente de tránsito”, la cual daba cuenta del volcamiento de un bus que habría rodado unos 400 metros en el sector de Guangaje (Cotopaxi), con un saldo de cuatro fallecidos y 29 heridos.


    El texto incluía la versión de testigos, datos sobre el traslado de los heridos y el número de víctimas mortales, entre otros proporcionados por el ECU-911 de Quito, y una reacción del presidente Rafael Correa quien indicó que las autoridades investigaban las causas para sancionar a los responsables del fatal accidente.


    Ahí acabó todo. Al día siguiente no se volvió a saber del suceso. No se informó sobre el estado de los heridos, no hubo ninguna noticia del conductor, no se supo si el bus había sido remolcado, no se indicó el nombre de la cooperativa, peor aún si tenía vigente la matrícula o el SOAT. Nada. El caso recibió un tratamiento similar a tantos otros que involucran directamente a personas que pierden seres queridos o pasajeros que quedan lesionados de por vida.


    A propósito de una balacera ocurrida hace dos semanas al norte de Quito en la que falleció un policía, un supuesto asaltante y el empleado de un restaurante, un lector escribió que los medios (así, en general) resaltaban la muerte del uniformado pero que las referencias sobre el trabajador eran mínimas. Probablemente esto se debe a que las instancias oficiales influyen de mejor forma para lograr que se reproduzca su información y a una reportería deficiente que solo vio de pasada el otro lado de la noticia, en este caso específico las otras víctimas y las consecuencias para sus familiares.


    No porque los accidentes y crímenes sucedan a diario, podemos verlos como hechos corrientes. Hace falta darles seguimiento, alguna vez llegar a “las últimas consecuencias”.


     

    Source Article from http://www.hoy.com.ec/noticias-ecuador/pan-de-cada-dia-604098.html