Sebastian Gorka ominously says "we're in a war for our culture" because Mr. Ratburn is having a gay wedding pic.twitter.com/Yp9v5uksWW
— Jason Campbell (@JasonSCampbell) May 15, 2019
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
By Elaina Plott @ TheAtlantic.com, May 15
Slow-walking or flat-out disobeying Trump’s fleeting obsessions has become common practice across various sectors of government.
James Brokenshire, who is in charge of fixing the housing crisis, also has two dishwashers @ Daily Mirror, May 14 with photos
A research group at the University of Toronto has untangled look-alike websites and bogus news articles with possible links to Iran
By Scott Shane & Ronen Bergman @ NYTimes.com, May 14
LOS ANGELES — Ali Al-Ahmed is a veteran critic of the Saudi government, so late last year he was not surprised to receive a Twitter message purporting to be from an Egyptian woman living in London who said that she, too, was a Saudi opponent. But Mr. Al-Ahmed, who is based in Washington, was wary of the woman, who identified herself as Mona A. Rahman. “Her picture was too made up, like the picture of a model,” he recalled. Her Arabic was imperfect. And her messages in Arabic included a character that indicated that she was typing on a Farsi-language keyboard.
Then she sent him an article that appeared to be from the website of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard about an unexpected development in Israeli politics. The article was on a site that had the exact logo, coloring and layout of the Harvard site. But the address was “belfercenter.net” — not the real one, “belfercenter.org.” And the article, claiming the Israeli defense minister had been fired for being a Russian agent, was a total fabrication.
Mr. Al-Ahmed had encountered what a new report from Citizen Lab, a research group at the University of Toronto, says is a pro-Iranian influence operation that used elaborate look-alike websites and social media to spread bogus articles online and to attack Iran’s adversaries. The operation had another innovative maneuver: When the invented reports were picked up by mainstream news organizations, the operators quickly took down the fabrications to make it harder to track the fraud. “They deleted their fake stories once they achieved some buzz,” said Gabrielle Lim, a fellow at Citizen Lab and a lead author of the report. “This made it hard for regular users to figure out what was happening, and hid the original source of the disinformation.” [.....]
They love that smell of tribal war in the morning?
After the attack on Easter in Sri Lanka, Islamic State seems to be focusing on India
By Prakash Kotoch @ atimes.com, May 13
During the weekend, Amaq News Agency, the mouthpiece of the terrorist group Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), announced it had established “Wilayah of Hind” – a “province” of its own – in the Kashmir Valley. The announcement also claimed that ISIS had inflicted casualties on Indian soldiers in Amshipora, a town in Shopian district of the state of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K). This came after a militant who had pledged allegiance to ISIS was killed in a clash with Indian security forces.
The loss of territory by ISIS in Iraq and Syria [....]
By Ana Swanson & Keith Bradsher @ NYTimes.com, May 13
The liberal firebrand draws nods and even a few cheers on a trip through rural West Virginia.
By Alex Thompson @ Politico.com, May 11
KERMIT, W. Va. — It was a startling spectacle in the heart of Trump country: At least a dozen supporters of the president — some wearing MAGA stickers — nodding their heads, at times even clapping, for liberal firebrand Elizabeth Warren.
The sighting alone of a Democratic presidential candidate in this town of fewer than 400 people — in a county where more than four in five voters cast their ballot for Trump in 2016 — was unusual. Warren’s team was apprehensive about how she’d be received [....]
Consumer advocates say the proposal appears designed to shield debt collectors from lawsuits rather than help consumers
By Frud Bezhan and Daud Khattak @ RFERL.org, May 11
[....] In the past two years, dozens of prominent reporters have been fired or have left after being threatened; the nation's most popular TV channel has been forced off the air; and leading columnists have complained that stories that are critical of the army and intelligence agencies are being rejected by media outlets.
With the free press gagged, many journalists in Pakistan have turned to social media to get the word out. But even those platforms are under pressure from Pakistani authorities [....]
By RFE/RF's Radio Free Afghanistan, May 11 with video
KABUL -- Afghan officials say prominent former television journalist Mena Mangal has been shot dead in Kabul. Interior Ministry spokesman Nasrat Raimi said Mangal was shot dead in Kabul's 8th district early on May 11 as she was waiting for a car. Witnesses to the shooting near Kabul's Karte Naw market told RFE/RL that two men appeared on a motorcycle and fired four shots into the air to disperse passersby. They then fired two shots that hit Mangal in the chest.
Mangal's relatives confirmed that she had been waiting for a ride to take her to her job as a cultural adviser to the Wolesi Jirga, the lower chamber of Afghanistan's parliament. The gunmen then fled the scene [....]
To label this a guest op-ed strikes me as kind of silly as it runs 28 pages when printed on 8 1/2 x 11 paper.
By Caroline Kelly @ CNN.com, Updated 8:08 PM ET, Thu May 9, 2019
Former FBI Director James Comey spoke at a CNN town hall Thursday night -- two years after being fired by President Donald Trump and in the midst of a constitutional battle over the report on the Russia investigation that he helped launch. CNN's Anderson Cooper moderated the town hall, which kicked off at 8 p.m. ET in Washington, DC. [....]