Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted July 29, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted July 29, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Monday Briefing – The New York Times Tensions rise between ******* and Lebanon Western diplomats have scrambled to prevent a surge of fighting along the *******-Lebanon border after a rocket from Lebanon ******* at least 12 children and teenagers on Saturday at a soccer field in a Druse ***** town in the occupied Golan Heights. ******* blamed Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed Lebanese group that has been attacking ******* in solidarity with ******, for the *******. Hezbollah has denied responsibility. It was the deadliest ******** on ********-controlled territory since ******* and Hezbollah began exchanging missile and rocket ***** in October, and ******* retaliated early yesterday with strikes across Lebanon. The ******** response was short of a major escalation, but fears remained that the fallout from the rocket launch would lead to all-out war. For now, ******** officials say that they are still open to a diplomatic resolution. A spokesman for *******’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement yesterday that a full-scale war could still be averted through the enforcement of a never-implemented U.N. resolution from 2006 that would create a demilitarized zone in southern Lebanon. Democrats and Republicans amp up their attacks At a rally in Minnesota on Saturday night, Donald Trump made it clear that he has jettisoned the appeal for national unity he’d made after surviving an ************** attempt two weeks ago. “I haven’t changed,” he said. “Maybe I’ve gotten worse.” He later called Kamala Harris, the presumptive Democratic nominee, “evil,” “unhinged” and “*****.” Here’s the latest from the presidential race. Trump’s remarks came as Democrats adopted a line of ******* pioneered by Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota: Trump and Senator JD Vance, his vice-presidential pick, are “weird people.” Pete Buttigieg, the secretary of transportation, said Trump was getting “older and stranger,” while Senator Chuck Schumer, the majority leader, called Vance “weird” and “erratic.” Separately, the Harris campaign announced that it had raised $200 million in the week since President Biden dropped out of the race. Two-thirds of that sum came from first-time donors, according to the campaign. But a spokesman warned that the race would be “very close,” and Harris herself said that Democrats were the “underdogs.” Harris’s running mate: The vice president is considering several men who, like her, served as state attorneys general. Culture: If elected, Harris would be the first ****** ********* president, a milestone for a complex identity. At the Olympics in Paris On the second day of the Olympic Games, the ********* gymnast Simone Biles made a stunning return with a dazzling beam routine — even after an early injury scare, which her coach Cecile Landi characterized as “just a little pain in her calf.” See the best pictures from the day, the latest news and the results so far. Later, in men’s basketball, Team USA dismantled Serbia, 110-84. It was the perfect start to the U.S.’s bid for a fifth consecutive gold medal. The U.S. women’s soccer team beat Germany, 4-1, to guarantee a spot in the quarterfinals. In the closing hours of the day, eyes turned to the swimming pool. Adam Peaty of Britain was denied a third consecutive gold in the 100-meter breaststroke by Nicolò Martinenghi of Italy, while Léon Marchand of France set a new Olympic record in the 400-meter individual medley. Ariarne Titmus of Australia also won gold in the 400-meter freestyle. Opening ceremony controversy: Was a performance featuring drag queens supposed to parody “The Last Supper”? Japan has an extreme service culture — historically, the customer is always right. But there is a growing sense among company officials, labor unions and even the government that customers have finally gone too far. “The mind-set has changed,” one member of Parliament said. “Now fewer business operators think the customer is a ****.” Lives lived: The prolific Irish writer Edna O’Brien, who wrote dozens of novels and short-story collections over almost 60 years, ***** on Saturday at 93. ‘I don’t need my name on the side of a building’ Melinda French Gates shocked the philanthropic world in May when she left the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which has given away $80 billion since 2000. She also entered the political fray, saying she would focus her resources on supporting women’s rights, including ********* rights. French Gates told The Times that she hadn’t realized that, as a woman, she might bring a unique insight and perspective into the world until around 2010, when she looked back on the years of conversations she’d had with women during field visits when men weren’t around. “I realized, if they’re willing to have these courageous conversations with me, I need to bring that deeply into the work,” she said. But convincing the men she worked with took time. Read more in our interview. That’s it for today’s briefing. See you tomorrow. — Natasha Reach Natasha and the team at *****@*****.tld. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #Monday #Briefing #York #Times This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/80249-monday-briefing-%E2%80%93-the-new-york-times/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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