Trump picks campaign aide Karoline Leavitt for White House press secretary
Trump picks campaign aide Karoline Leavitt for White House press secretary
By Steve Holland
WEST PALM BEACH, Florida (Reuters) – President-elect Donald Trump reached into his inner circle on Friday and chose his transition spokesperson, Karoline Leavitt, as his White House press secretary, putting a 27-year-old firebrand in position to aggressively defend him.
Leavitt has endeared herself to Trump by her ardent defense of him in news interviews and her take-no-prisoners style, Trump advisers said.
The job of the White House press secretary typically is to help inform the ********* people about presidential activities without betraying the confidence of the boss.
“I have the utmost confidence she will excel at the podium, and help deliver our message to the ********* People as we, Make America Great Again,” Trump said in a statement.
The challenge for Leavitt will be to impart reliable information and gain credibility with reporters – while maintaining strong loyalty to Trump.
Leavitt will be the youngest person to ever hold the title of White House press secretary. Ron Ziegler was the previous youngest press secretary at age 29 when President Richard Nixon gave him the position in 1969.
A New Hampshire native, Leavitt was an assistant press secretary during the latter part of Trump’s first term from 2017 to 2021.
When Trump was defeated by Democrat Joe Biden in 2020, Leavitt became communications director for *********** U.S. Representative Elise Stefanik, who has been tapped by Trump as his U.S. ambassador to the ******* Nations.
Leavitt ran for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives from New Hampshire in 2022, winning the *********** primary. She lost the general election to Democrat Chris Pappas, but the experience appeared to give her valuable experience at public speaking.
She joined Trump’s 2024 campaign and has been the chief spokesperson for the president-elect’s transition team.
Biden has had two press secretaries over four years: Jen Psaki and Karine Jean-Pierre.
Trump, a close observer of those who defend him and whether they are tough enough, had four press secretaries during his 2017-2021 term: Sean Spicer, Sarah Sanders, Stephanie Grisham and Kayleigh McEnany.Spicer ran afoul of the White House press corps at his first appearance in January 2017 with the false claim that the crowd gathered in Washington for Trump’s inauguration was “the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration, *******, both in person and around the globe.”
Photographic proof showed otherwise and the uproar continued for days. Spicer eventually lost Trump’s confidence and the president switched to Sanders, who got praise from him for her parrying with the press corps. She is now the *********** governor of Arkansas.
After Sanders left, Trump turned to Grisham, who never held a briefing, which she said was at Trump’s direction. She eventually went back to work for Trump’s wife, then-first lady Melania Trump. Grisham resigned after the events of Jan. 6, 2021, and is now a sharp Trump critic.
Trump’s last chief spokesperson at the White House was McEnany, who sparred with reporters during the pandemic year of 2020 and is now an on-air personality at Fox News.
(Reporting by Steve Holland; editing by Ross Colvin and Jonathan Oatis)
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How Metaphor: ReFantazio's Worldbuilding Extends Beyond Its Main Party
How Metaphor: ReFantazio's Worldbuilding Extends Beyond Its Main Party
Beyond the scope of its main party and followers, Metaphor: ReFantazio manages to build on its side characters in a way that strengthens its world.
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U.S. received Iran’s written assurance it was not actively trying to ************ Trump
U.S. received Iran’s written assurance it was not actively trying to ************ Trump
The U.S. received written assurance from Iran before the presidential election that its leadership was not actively trying to ************ President-elect Donald Trump, CBS News confirmed, according to a source with direct knowledge of the correspondence. The message arrived after the White House in September affirmed that ******** a former U.S. president or former U.S. official would be seen by the Biden administration as an act of war.
“We consider this a national and homeland security matter of the highest priority, and we strongly condemn Iran for these brazen threats,” National Security Council spokesman Sean Savett said in a statement in September.
Iran said in its message, which was conveyed by a third party, that it understood this premise. The Wall Street Journal first reported Iran’s message to the U.S.
The Justice Department is currently prosecuting at least two individuals alleged to have been part of *******-for-hire plots to ***** Trump while he was still a candidate. One operative working for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps told federal investigators that he was tasked in September with “surveilling, and, ultimately, assassinating” Trump, according to court records unsealed last week.
Prosecutors said Farhad Shakeri, who is believed to be residing in Iran, told investigators in a phone interview that unnamed IRGC officials pushed him to plan an ******* against Trump to take place in October. If the plan could not come together in time, the Iranian officials directed Shakeri to delay the plot until after the election because the official “assessed that [Trump] would lose the election,” the charging documents said.
In early August, a Pakistani national with alleged ties to Iran was arrested and charged with plotting a *******-for-hire scheme targeting U.S. government officials and politicians, according to charging documents unsealed Tuesday.
A U.S. official pointed out that Iran did not task its most effective proxy force, Hezbollah, with carrying out these plots. This official described Iran’s approach to date as “nice if it works. If it doesn’t, then it’s not a problem.”
In response to inquiries suggesting that “Iran told U.S. it wouldn’t try to ***** Trump”, the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran said it would not comment on official messages between two countries.
The mission said in a statement, “The Islamic Republic of Iran has long declared its commitment to pursuing Martyr Soleimani’s ************** through legal and judicial avenues, while adhering fully to the recognized principles of international law.”
Trump has raised the ire of Iranians for a few reasons. He exited the international Iran nuclear agreement, which had lifted some sanctions in exchange for restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program. He also directed the 2020 airstrike that ******* top Iranian commander Gen. Qasem Soleimani. Since then, some Trump administration officials and military officials received threats from the regime, among them, Robert O’Brien, who was national security adviser during the strike. His predecessor in the job, John Bolton, who was part of the maximum pressure campaign that exerted sanctions pressure on Tehran, has also received threats.
In 2022, the U.S. intelligence community assessed that Iran would threaten Americans — both directly and via proxy attacks — and was committed to developing networks inside the U.S. Two persistent threat assessments submitted to Congress by the State Department in January 2022 cited a “serious and credible threat” to the lives of former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and former Trump administration Iran envoy Brian *****. The non-public assessments showed that throughout 2021 and again in 2022, the State Department determined that round-the-clock, U.S.-taxpayer-funded diplomatic security details were needed to protect both men. That continues today.
Multiple former officials have spoken to CBS about duty-to-warn notices that they have recently received from the FBI and other agencies regarding the ongoing threat from Iran and Iranian-hired actors, implying the U.S. is taking the threat seriously and not taking the Iranian regime’s assurances at face value.
Robert Legare
contributed to this report.
The Standoff with Iran
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Margaret Brennan
Margaret Brennan is the moderator of CBS News’ “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan.” Based in Washington, D.C., Brennan is also the Network’s chief foreign affairs correspondent and a contributing correspondent to 60 Minutes.
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‘Pray’ for Davina and ‘£280 hike to bills’
‘Pray’ for Davina and ‘£280 hike to bills’
BBC
The i Weekend writes people should expect a £280 hike to household bills in a “new ***** to cost of living”. It reports council tax, energy bills, water, broadband and train travel will add £278 to the costs of a typical household next year. The paper also warns inflation is expected to climb on Wednesday.
Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson has written in the Daily Mail warning against the scourge of “thought police” in the *** under Sir Keir Starmer, comparing it to the “******* Union at its worst”. It comes amid a row over non-****** hate incidents thrust into the spotlight after columnist Allison Pearson revealed police knocked on her door over a tweet from a year ago. Elsewhere, Davina McCall is pictured as the paper reports the presenter is out of surgery after undergoing an operation to remove a brain tumour.
The new ************* leader is pictured on the front of the Daily Telegraph, as Kemi Badenoch calls for hate ****** laws to be reviewed to protect free speech. She told the paper it was “absolutely wrong” for the police to visit any journalist’s home because of an opinion they expressed.
“Say prayer for me”, headlines the Daily Mirror as it splashes on Davina McCall’s request before going into surgery. The 57-year-old brain tumour was benign, but the cyst was removed over ***** it could cause problems if left to grow. The star’s partner said after the operation: “Davina is out of surgery and according to the surgeon it was textbook.”
The Sun also headlines on the McCall’s “emotional pleas to fans” to pray for her as she went into her operation. It writes the mum of three underwent the six hour operation after being diagnosed purely by chance. Meanwhile, Rebecca Vardy is pictured as it reveals she will be sharing her thoughts on I’m A Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here in a column for the paper. The show this year stars her Wagatha Christie libel court case nemesis Coleen Rooney.
The Times reports a senior economic adviser for Donald Trump has urged the *** to align itself with US on trade rather pursing closer ties with EU. Stephen Moore, who is helping the president-elect prepare for government, said the US would be “less interested” in a free trade deal with the *** if it moved into closer alignment with the EU. The paper also highlights an interview with Cora Corre, granddaughter of the late Vivienne Westwood, who details her decision to quit her role at the fashion designer’s label.
The Guardian says addiction to junk food is costing the *** £268bn a year according to the first ever research into the issue. The Food Farming and Countryside Commission report warns the cost is becoming unpayable. The paper notes the figure outstrips the budget for the whole NHS.
The FT Weekend reports two of Elon Musk’s private companies are set to secure multi-billion dollar jumps in valuation as “investors race to back” the world’s richest man’s business interests. The FT reports artificial intelligence start-up xAI has raised $5bn and a planned share ***** for rocket builder Space X could see it valued at more than $250bn. The broadsheet pictures a smiling Musk alongside Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago, following his backing of the president-elect.
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NYT Mini Crossword today: puzzle answers for Friday, November 15
NYT Mini Crossword today: puzzle answers for Friday, November 15
The New York Times has introduced the next title coming to its Games catalog following Wordle’s continued success — and it’s all about math. Digits has players adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing numbers. You can play its beta for free online right now. In Digits, players are presented with a target number that they need to match. Players are given six numbers and have the ability to add, subtract, multiply, or divide them to get as close to the target as they can. Not every number needs to be used, though, so this game should put your math skills to the test as you combine numbers and try to make the right equations to get as close to the target number as possible.
Players will get a five-star rating if they match the target number exactly, a three-star rating if they get within 10 of the target, and a one-star rating if they can get within 25 of the target number. Currently, players are also able to access five different puzzles with increasingly larger numbers as well. I solved today’s puzzle and found it to be an enjoyable number-based game that should appeal to inquisitive minds that like puzzle games such as Threes or other The New York Times titles like Wordle and Spelling Bee. In an article unveiling Digits and detailing The New York Time Games team’s process to game development, The Times says the team will use this free beta to fix bugs and assess if it’s worth moving into a more active development phase “where the game is coded and the designs are finalized.” So play Digits while you can, as The New York Times may move on from the project if it doesn’t get the response it is hoping for. Digits’ beta is available to play for free now on The New York Times Games’ website
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Inside Egypt’s Grand New Museum
Inside Egypt’s Grand New Museum
Dawn Gibson-Fawcett on a major addition
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A cheap tablet hampered by outdated software
A cheap tablet hampered by outdated software
The latest Amazon ***** HD 8, updated last month and starting at $100, is a modest refresh, offering more RAM, a nominally upgraded camera and some new AI features. The general sales pitch, however, ******** the same: You get a just-competent tablet for the essentials at a dirt-cheap (and often-discounted) price, and in exchange, Amazon gets to plant another appliance for its own apps and services in your home. Nothing about this update drastically changes that agreement, but after using the tablet for the past month (and after using older ***** tablets for years prior), it may be time to demand more from Amazon’s end of the bargain.
Amazon
The ***** HD 8 ******** a decent value for a casual media consumption tablet, particularly when it’s on *****, but its iffy display and ad-heavy software make it less appealing at full price.
*****
Cheap, and frequently discounted
Lightweight and comfortable to hold
Improved performance over prior generation
Good battery life
Has a microSD slot and headphone jack
*****
***** OS is ad-heavy and Amazon-centric to the point of hostility
Limited app selection
Display needs a refresh
Poor cameras
Still only powerful enough for light gaming and media consumption
$55 at Kohl’s
It’s definitely a cheap tablet
Physically, the new ***** HD 8 is nearly identical to the last one. It is, without a doubt, A Budget Tablet — it’s nowhere near premium, but it doesn’t feel distractingly cheap either. At just under eight inches tall and 0.37 inches thick, it’s small enough for most kids to operate without much struggle and most adults to carry with one hand. If you care more about your tablet’s travel-friendliness than its virtues as a miniature TV, this size should be fine. The whole thing is lightweight at 0.74 pounds, so it’s not an anchor in your bag. Its textured plastic frame is somewhat slippery but altogether sturdy, with no creaking or flexing. Its gently rounded edges dig comfortably into your palms. There are fairly thick bezels around the display, but I’ve never minded those on a tablet — they give your thumbs a natural place to rest.
The display won’t win any awards. It’s the same LCD panel Amazon has trotted out in previous generations, with the same 1,280 x 800 resolution. If you’ve used any iPad, or even many midrange Android tablets, in the last decade, everything about it will be an obvious downgrade. The meager pixel density (189 ppi) makes images and text visibly less sharp. Colors are more muted, too. It doesn’t get bright enough to be totally usable in direct sunlight; you can read it comfortably on the couch, but don’t expect it to work as well by the pool. It’s also a smudge and fingerprint magnet.
The back of the Amazon ***** HD 8 is composed of a sturdy, if mildly slippery, textured plastic. (Jeff Dunn for Engadget)
Again, though, the ***** HD 8 is competing in a different weight class than even an older iPad. The fact that the screen is relatively small makes the lower resolution at least tolerable. You can watch Netflix or read Kindle books and not think “man, this sucks” the whole time, especially if you bought the thing for well under $100.
There are other hardware compromises. The speakers aren’t all that loud and struggle to fully separate different parts of songs. They’re entirely on the left edge when you hold the tablet vertically, which always sounds odd. There’s an old USB-C 2.0 port for charging and a glacially slow 5W power adapter in the box. Amazon says it’ll take about five hours to fully charge the tablet with that; you can cut the wait in half if you bring your own 15W charger, though that’s still not fast. There’s no water resistance rating, so you’ll need to be careful if you ever want to read in the tub. Both the five-megapixel rear camera and 2MP front camera are brutal, washing out colors and blurring fine details even in good lighting. (As always, please report anyone using their tablet as a camera to the nearest authorities.)
It’s not all bad. While the ***** HD 8 only comes with 32GB or 64GB of storage built in — of which only 25GB or 54GB is usable, respectively — you can add up to 1TB of additional space with a microSD card. The 13-inch iPad Pro, which starts at $1,299, does not let you do that (I’m just saying!). The ***** HD 8 also has a headphone jack, which helps offset the mediocre speaker performance a little bit, plus there’s Bluetooth for wireless headphones. And one benefit of the shoddy display resolution is that it makes the ***** HD 8 less power-hungry: Amazon rates the tablet’s battery life at up to 13 hours. I got much more than that in our (relatively forgiving) battery test, but closer to 10 or 11 hours with more strenuous use. Either way, it’s good. Most people can safely expect it to survive a day of basic streaming and web browsing.
The ***** HD 8’s rear camera has technically jumped from 2MP to 5MP and now supports 1080p video recording, but it still doesn’t take photos you’d want to share. (Jeff Dunn for Engadget)
The new ***** HD 8 runs on a 2 GHz six-core processor (the MediaTek MT8169A). The base model includes 32GB of storage and 3GB of RAM, while a $130 variant with twice the storage bumps the memory up to 4GB. I tested the former. The previous generation only came with 2GB of RAM — the pricier “***** HD 8 Plus” had 3GB — so this is a welcome upgrade.
That said, it’s not a huge boost. With the entry-level model, the gist is the same as it’s been with past ***** HD tablets: You can get by with simple video streaming, web browsing, reading and gaming, but there’ll be hitches and occasional crashes along the way, and it’ll never be powerful enough for serious work or reliable multitasking. The modern web is just too ad-heavy and grossly inefficient for a low-end chip like this, so you’ll inevitably have to deal with some choppiness when loading media-heavy sites like ESPN or The New York Times. Apps take just a bit longer to open than they would on a pricier tablet, and it’s not uncommon to get some lag when you jump back to the home screen.
Still, for the money, it’s all workable. It doesn’t take forever to open a Peacock stream or load an article on Engadget. The Mali-G52 GPU can even handle a decent level of gaming — casual card and match-three games run fine, and even more involved fare like PUBG Mobile and Diablo Immortal are totally playable, albeit with severely low-res textures. On the Geekbench 5 benchmark, the ***** HD 8 earned a single-core score of 193 and a multi-core score of 907. That is lightyears away from impressive, but given that the last-gen version struggled to even complete the tests without crashing, it’s still a step up.
One benefit of buying a cheap tablet: You usually get a headphone jack. (Jeff Dunn for Engadget)
Ultimately, it’s about managing expectations. You don’t buy a $100 tablet demanding a workhorse. When discounts bring that tablet’s price below $60, “not constantly annoying” becomes a compliment. If you can afford the model with 4GB of RAM, that should hold up better over time. Then again, a device like this makes the most sense when it’s as cheap as possible.
The ad-pocalypse that is ***** OS
The ***** HD 8 still runs on Amazon’s ***** OS, a fork of Android 11 that uses a custom app store and is designed to put Amazon’s own apps and services in the spotlight. (For the record, stock Android is up to version 15.) The generous read is that many of those apps are popular, so having them all front and center can be convenient. If you often stream movies on Prime Video, use Amazon Music with a Prime subscription or own a bunch of Kindle ebooks or Audible audiobooks, all of it is right there. You can set up different user profiles — also not available on an iPad — including child accounts that present a curated selection of ****-friendly websites and videos. A fairly robust set of parental controls let you monitor your child’s screen time within that. You can also call on Alexa and thus control various smart home devices hands-free, though Amazon has dropped support for the “Show Mode” that turned the tablet into a pseudo smart display.
You can install Alexa and all of those Amazon services on any tablet, though. Most of ***** OS’ actual changes *****, and they have for years now. The app store plays a big part in that. It covers many of the big streaming and social media players — Netflix, Hulu, TikTok, X, Max, Spotify, Disney+, etc. — but still omits all Google apps, Reddit, Apple Music, Apple TV+, Slack, tons of games and any browser besides Amazon’s ultra-basic Silk, among many others. The lack of Google ******** the biggest *******; Amazon’s stock email and calendar apps are far less robust than Gmail and Google Calendar, while the bootleg YouTube “app” is just a web shortcut.
Left to right: one of ***** OS’ lockscreen ads, a snapshot of the less-than-useful “For You” page and an example of the AI-powered “Wallpaper Creator” tool. (Jeff Dunn for Engadget)
It’s true that you can install the Google Play Store and download most of what’s missing with a hacky workaround, but that’s not the experience Amazon is selling (and not one most people will opt to do). I can’t praise an OS that works best when you go behind its back. And as with many Android tablets, many of the apps that are supported look like blown-up phone apps more than experiences designed with a larger screen in mind.
Because this is a tech product launching in 2024, the ***** HD 8 also comes with a few AI-centric features, including an automated wallpaper creator, a writing assist tool and webpage summaries in the Silk Browser. All of these perform reasonably fast, but It’s hard to call them game-changers: The writing assist makes copy sound overly stilted, while the webpage summaries strip down most articles of their nuances (I beg you, just read the post.) The DALL-E-style wallpaper generator is neater, offering different styles and responding well to natural language requests, but I can’t get excited over AI art when there’s so much of the real thing out there.
More egregious are the ads. Oh, so many ads. Upon activating the tablet for the first time, I was greeted with a full-screen promo for BetMGM — because what budget-conscious tablet buyer isn’t looking to gamble their savings away — and have since been bombarded with lockscreen ads to buy Toshiba hard drives, State Farm insurance and SteelSeries gaming keyboards. Thankfully, you can remove these for an extra $15, either upfront or after purchase.
You can technically install the Google Play Store and get around some of ***** OS’ app limitations, but it’ll require a bit of legwork. (Jeff Dunn for Engadget)
But the spirit of nickel-and-diming you goes beyond that. The first app you see is “Shop Amazon.” The home screen itself is split into two sections: For You and Home. The former is a page filled with content suggestions, a significant chunk of which are either sponsored apps, links to movies on Prime Video and songs on Amazon Music or calls to subscribe to Amazon services like Kids+, Luna and Audible. Some of these are free; many others are paid. At one point, I **** you not, it presented me with an ad to buy a different ***** tablet.
The Home tab does have a traditional app grid, but above it is a “Discover” row that takes up the top 40 percent of the screen and delivers a similar range of not-so-personalized suggestions. As I write this, it includes a link to the Prime Video series Fallout, the sponsored app “Vita Mahjong for Seniors,” the Max app, links to two different thriller books from the author Frieda McFadden and a few other things I’ve shown zero interest in over my time using Amazon services.
It’s a jumbled, undignified mess. There’s a distinct lack of care to ***** OS, a pervading sense that it doesn’t so much have your best interest at heart it wants to needle cash-strapped customers into pumping more revenue into the Amazon machine. This just isn’t the case with iPadOS or even stock Android. Actually pay attention to what ***** OS is doing, and it becomes difficult to see ***** tablets as anything but subsidized ad platforms Amazon can seed in homes on the cheap. If you want a product that treats you with a little more respect, you have to pay for it.
The ***** HD 8 resting on top of a 13-inch iPad Air. (Jeff Dunn for Engadget)
Wrap-up
I get it, some of us just need to save some cash. And Amazon, fairly or not (i.e., not), can significantly undercut most other decent budget tablets on price. If cost is your number-one concern, you only want a tablet for casual media consumption and you can live with the unfiltered Amazon-ness of ***** OS, there’s still value to be had here. Little about the ***** HD 8 is good, but much of it is fine for the price, and when that price is as bananas-cheap as $55 with deals, that’s probably enough. So it goes. Just make sure the slate is on ***** before you take the plunge. Otherwise, I’d consider the 10.1-inch ***** HD 10, which has the same software annoyances but a sharper, roomier display, more CPU power and a touch more battery life. Either way, here’s hoping ***** OS becomes less user-hostile one day.
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Fellow National Guardsman told superiors Hegseth might be “insider threat” before Biden inauguration
Fellow National Guardsman told superiors Hegseth might be “insider threat” before Biden inauguration
A man who in 2021 was a member of the same National Guard unit as Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to be defense secretary, confirmed he sent a letter to his superiors warning that a tattoo Hegseth bears indicated that he was a potential “insider threat” ahead of President Biden’s inauguration.
The Associated Press reported that 12 U.S. National Guard members were removed from helping to secure Mr. Biden’s 2021 inauguration after vetting by the U.S. military and FBI. They were found to have made extremist statements in posts or text messages or had ties with right-wing militia groups. In an interview with podcaster Shawn Ryan, Hegseth said he was one of the National Guard members removed from securing the inauguration.
“I was deemed an extremist because of a tattoo by my National Guard unit in Washington, D.C., and my orders were revoked to guard the Biden inauguration… a Jerusalem cross tattoo which is just a ********** symbol,” he told Ryan.
But that’s not the tattoo that his fellow guardsman, DeRicko Gaither, pointed out to his superiors. He told CBS News, “When I looked at the pictures – in one he had the tattoo of the Jerusalem Cross, which I didn’t think was a problem.”
“The next photo he had on his inner bicep he had a bicep that said ‘Deux Vult,'” Gaither said. “I looked it up, and that tattoo had ties to extremist groups. So, I sent to my leadership. I included the photo attachment and the Army policy about tattoos. I said I just want you to know what’s going on. I received a response saying Pete had been removed from the mission.”
He said in his letter, which CBS News obtained, “White-Supremacist use of #Deus Vult and a return to medieval Catholicism, is to invoke the myth of a white ********** (i.e. *********) medieval past that wishes to ignore the actual demographics and theological state of Catholicism today.”
He added, “Deus Vult has enjoyed popularity with members of the alt-right because of its perceived representation of the clash of civilizations between the ********** west and the Islamic world.”
Citing a military statute that bans extremist tattoos, Gaither said the Deus Vult tattoo “falls along the line of Insider Threat.” The Associated Press and Reuters first reported on Gaither’s warning letter to the National Guard.
“Deus Vult” is the ********** motto that refers to divine providence. It originated as the rallying cry of the Crusaders. But experts in domestic violent extremism say the ****** phrase has also been co-opted by some members of the far right in recent years.
For example, Mauricio Martinez Garcia, the gunman behind the 2023 mass ********* in Allen, Texas, had a “Deus Vult” tattoo, according to the Anti-Defamation League, in addition to neo-***** tattoos. The group also says the phrase is “commonly used as an anti-******* symbol.”
The Trump transition team has not responded to a request for comment. Vice President-elect JD Vance said on X of the AP’s story, “They’re attacking Pete Hegseth for having a ********** motto tattooed on his arm. This is disgusting anti-********** bigotry.” Hegseth reshared Vance’s post and commented, “They can target me — I don’t give a ***** — but this type of targeting of Christians, conservatives, patriots and everyday Americans will stop on DAY ONE at DJT’s DoD.”
The National Guard declined to comment on whether Hegseth had been removed from the detail or why, and issued a statement that just said, “Maj. Peter Hegseth joined the D.C. Army National Guard on June 6, 2019, and remained a member of the DCNG until March 31, 2021. He was in an M-Day, traditional drilling service member, status and available for duty if required during the presidential inauguration of 2021.”
Olivia Rinaldi
contributed to this report.
Eleanor Watson
Eleanor Watson is a CBS News multi-platform reporter and producer covering the Pentagon.
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Giuliani turns over Mercedes, watches to Georgia poll workers he defamed
Giuliani turns over Mercedes, watches to Georgia poll workers he defamed
After months of legal wrangling, Rudy Giuliani on Friday turned over his luxury sports car, several watches, a ring and financial assets to two Georgia election workers he defamed in the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election, his lawyer wrote Friday.
A federal jury ordered Giuliani last year to pay Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss nearly $150 million for defaming them with false accusations that the mother and daughter committed election ****** while the two were counting ballots in Georgia’s Fulton County on Election Day in 2020.
PHOTO: Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani leaves the New York Federal Courthouse on Nov. 7, 2024, in New York. (Alex Kent/Getty Images)
The attorneys for both sides waged a back in forth in court for months over the delivery of those assets and, last week, attorneys representing Freeman and Moss said Giuliani’s apartment was virtually empty when their receivership entered the property.
MORE: Judge threatens Giuliani with contempt if he doesn’t turn over property to poll workers he defamed
The poll workers’ representatives accused Giuliani of “secreting away” his property.
The former New York City mayor was given a Nov. 14 deadline to turn over the shares in his Upper East Side co-op apartment, valuable sports memorabilia, a blue Mercedes-Benz convertible that once belonged to Lauren Bacall, and luxury watches — including one that belonged to Giuliani’s grandfather.
PHOTO: In this May 16, 2024, file photo, Wandrea ‘Shay’ Moss and Ruby Freeman attend the 2024 PEN America Spring Literary Gala at the ********* Museum of Natural History in New York. (Bryan Bedder/Getty Images PEN America, FILE)
Joseph Cammarata, Giuliani’s attorney, said in a four-page letter to U.S. Judge Lewis Liman, that “watches and a ring were delivered via FedEx” to an address in Atlanta on Friday morning, and that “the Mercedes Benz automobile was delivered as requested” to an address in Florida.
Giuliani’s bank was “advised to turn over all non-exempt funds” to the plaintiffs, as well, according to the filing.
Liman issued a warning that he would file a motion of contempt if Giuliani didn’t comply with the order to transfer the assets to Freeman and Moss.
Earlier on Friday, Ted Goodman, a spokesman for Giuliani, posted a video on X with several watches arrayed on a table.
“This right here, folks, this is the accumulation of 60 years of hard work,” Goodman said.
Despite giving up those assets, Cammarata argued that his client should not give up other assets.
He wrote a lengthy list of items they deemed “exempt,” including some jewelry of lower value, a refrigerator, a radio receiver and other household furniture. He also said a Joe DiMaggio jersey was part of the “overbroad” turnover list and will ****** to keep it.
The attorney argued that the court “should never have allowed the turnover” of the Mercedes Benz, arguing that the car should be appraised and returned to Giuliani if the value does not exceed $5,500.
MORE: Attorney says Giuliani ‘secreted away’ his property from poll workers who won $148M judgment
Cammarata also requested that the court reschedule a trial in this matter currently scheduled for Jan. 16, 2025, until after the inauguration, as Giuliani “plans to be present” at events in Washington that week.
PHOTO:Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani arrives at the court to explain to a federal judge why he hasn’t surrendered his valuables as part of a $148 million defamation judgment, in New York, on Nov. 7, 2024. (Yuki Iwamura/AP)
Representatives for Freeman and Moss didn’t immediately comment on the delivery of the assets.
Giuliani turns over Mercedes, watches to Georgia poll workers he defamed originally appeared on abcnews.go.com
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****** Ops 6 Season 1 Battle Pass Includes Emote Referencing Viral RayGun Olympics Dance
****** Ops 6 Season 1 Battle Pass Includes Emote Referencing Viral RayGun Olympics Dance
Call of Duty: ****** Ops 6’s Season 1 update just arrived, and the multiplayer shooter’s new battle pass contains all manner of items to unlock and collect. One of them is a new emote called “Move Set” that appears to reference the viral breaker Raygun from the Paris 2024 Olympics this past summer.
The Move Set emote can be unlocked on Page 14 of the Season 1 battle pass. Check out the comparison video below from the account Detonated to see how the in-game emote compares to the real thing. Before this, NFL player Camryn Bynum paid homage to Raygun’s moves with his own interception celebration.
Raygun, whose real name is Rachael Louis Gunn, is an *********** lecturer and professional breaker who competed at the Paris Olympic Games and scored zero total points. The 37-year-old’s performances went viral, and afterwards, she was bullied and criticized.
Raygun was one of the most talked-about athletes from the Olympics, but after the Games, many expected her to parlay her fame into a new career path. However, she returned to her university teaching job and turned down offers to be on reality TV shows.
Raygun called the hate she received from her Olympic breaking performance “pretty devastating.” The *********** breaking team defended RayGun and condemned the global online harassment campaign against her.
The Season 1 battle pass for Call of Duty includes a host of items, including a new operator, more weapons, additional skins, double XP tokens, and more. Check out the gallery below to see what’s new in Season 1.
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Why the CofE and big institutions still fail to protect children
Why the CofE and big institutions still fail to protect children
BBC
Warning: This story contains details some may find distressing.
“Prolific, brutal and horrific” – these words sum up four decades of ****** meted out by John Smyth and affecting scores of boys in the *** and *******.
It was the description chosen by the independent review commissioned by the ******* of England to investigate how Smyth was able to groom and ****** children at ********** camps and in schools for so long.
Almost as shocking is the *******’s repeated lack of curiosity and inaction when people tried to warn about what he was doing, also described in the report. Smyth’s position within the ******* gave him a veneer of trustworthiness that opened doors for him to ******.
One survivor, Mark Stibbe, told BBC Newsnight how he was groomed and beaten relentlessly by Smyth after joining his school’s ********** Forum in 1977. On the shelf in front of him during the ****** were ****** nappies used to stem blood, alongside a leather-bound ******.
It is a horrifying account of the power of an abuser in a trusted role and the damage that is done when opportunities to stop them are brushed aside. But ****** is not limited to the *******.
“Most ******* ****** happens in domestic and family settings,” says Tom Squire, head of clinical engagement at The Lucy Faithful Foundation, which works with people who have ********* abused children or ***** they may ******. “But some abusers gravitate to places where they know they will have an opportunity to have contact with children – places like churches, sports organisations and schools.”
From Scouts to gymnastics: rooting out ******
In the *** and abroad, there have been major controversies in football, swimming and gymnastics clubs, where allegations of physical, ******* and emotional ****** have been made against coaches by young athletes. One of of the most famous cases was that of Larry Nassar, a former doctor to the elite athletes of USA Gymnastics who was convicted of ******* ******** in 2017. A judge handed him a 175 year jail sentence after hearing testimonies from more than 150 women and ******.
Separately, an independent review into British gymnastics found that physical and emotional ****** were “systemic”. The review, which focused on the ******* from 2008 to 2020, came after several gymnasts spoke out about bullying – with allegations of athletes being punished for needing the *******. British Gymnastics said it wholeheartedly apologised.
Last year, several swimmers told the BBC they had suffered bullying, emotional ****** and body-shaming. A review commissioned by Swim England found that a toxic environment in swimming clubs had enabled abusive training practices and bullying to exist for years. The governing body has apologised.
Then there are scandals that have emerged involving boarding schools and children’s homes – the closed environments making children easy prey.
In 2018, an inquiry into Ampleforth College, a Roman ********* boarding school in Yorkshire, found it had been the scene of decades of ******* ******, with a report finding it “prioritised monks and their own reputations over the protection of children”.
Nine serious allegations of ****** were also recorded at the school as recently as between 2014 and 2016. The school says it has since put rigorous safeguarding measures in place.
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Lord Charles Spencer said he was physically and ********* abused at Maidwell Hall school in the 1970s
But similar reports elsewhere date back decades. Earlier this year, Earl Spencer, brother of Diana, the late Princess of Wales, wrote about his experiences of ****** at Maidwell Hall School in Northamptonshire in the 1970s.
Hundreds of allegations have been made against the Scouts too, with most dating back to the 1960s to 1990s. In all more than £6 million has been paid in compensation over the last decade, with some 166 cases settled in that time.
Other large institutions such as the BBC and the NHS have held major inquiries into the ****** carried out over decades by the television and radio personality, Jimmy Savile. He ***** before his ******* were made public. All these organisations promised change and overhauled their safeguarding policies in the wake of the scandals.
Part of the reason we are hearing about these scandals is because people are more willing to speak up and campaign. Investigations then follow.
Even so, many big institutions remain slow to react – the question that ******** is why?
Poor treatment of victims
Jane Chevous, a writer and campaigner, was ********* abused by two ******* of England priests over a ten-year *******. It began when she was a young ****** and only stopped when she moved away. She went on to have a mental breakdown. This was not only because of the ******, she says, but also the result of a lack of the support from the ******* that she trusted.
Her religion added a layer of complexity to what happened, she explains. She was groomed by someone who she believed was doing ****’s work. “You are told this is ****’s calling and this is what he wants,” she says.
In 2001, ten years after the ****** ended, she reported it to two bishops. “It was absolutely terrifying. I found it hard to hold any hope that I would be believed.”
One bishop suggested she meet her abuser to try to sort it out “because that is the ********** thing to do”. The other, she says, told her to go to the police because he couldn’t do anything. Afterwards her mental health deteriorated.
In 2019, she reported it again. This time there was a police investigation, during which time one of her alleged abusers *****. She says the police concluded there was not enough evidence to take the case further. She is among a number of survivors who have asked the ******* to review their cases.
In the wake of the report into the ****** by John Smyth, the ******* has said that it and its associated organisations must implement “robust safeguarding procedures …that are governed independently.” It also said “there is never a place for covering up ******.”
Jane has since co-founded a support and research group called Survivors Voices, set up to ensure that survivors are listened to. She says that in many institutions there may be people trying to do the right thing, but too often there is a ******** to listen to and protect vulnerable people.
She has also been appointed to the ******* of England National Safeguarding Panel. “The ******* has struggled to choose survivors,” she says, “instead it has chosen to protect the institution.”
This, she argues, is similar to other areas. “You are sacrificed for the good of the wider community.”
Cases “swept under the carpet”
Joanna Nicolas, an independent social worker, has her own take on this. She has spent more than 30 years in child protection and ****** safeguarding, and believes that people’s readiness to forgive or explain away what happened is one of the main reasons that ****** “gets swept under the carpet”.
Over the years she has worked with schools, churches, financial organisations, Parliament, as well as theatres, including the Old Vic. She is also called in to assess people in positions of trust in schools and churches when an allegation of historic ****** – whether ******* or emotional – has been made, including cases where there hasn’t been enough evidence to lead to police charges.
“People will often say to me ‘he is such a good egg’ and they will want to give me character references,” she explains.
Getty Images
John Smyth
Part of her role is to weigh up whether or not the person accused is safe to continue in their role.
“You have to be ******-and-white about child ******,” she continues. “I say to the alleged perpetrator, ‘It doesn’t matter if you have done 50 brilliant things, if you have abused a child’.
“You always go in with an open mind,” she adds. “And in emotional ****** cases, sometimes a teacher, for instance, is not aware of the power they have.”
Understanding and unpicking power structures is key to combatting ******* ****** and the secrecy that allows it to thrive, argues Tom Squire. “That means swimming against that power dynamic.”
If concerns aren’t acted on with “diligence and robustness,” that could, in his view, “potentially be interpreted by abusers as a bit of a green light”.
Unpicking power structures
Overall, he believes that child protection has improved over the years but there is no room for complacency. “We need to open our eyes and our ears to what children and young people are telling us and to be curious.”
Joanna Nicolas agrees there have been improvements, pointing to boarding schools, which she believes have generally created more open cultures to keep pupils safe. But she also observes that many organisations have a long way to go – in tackling bullying and emotional ****** too.
One priority is ensuring that staff feel safer and able to report bad behaviour. “If you are in a big arts organisation or theatre and you have a visiting star who is being vile to young people, is anyone going to stop them?” she says.
“They are the person with the power who brings in the money.”
Speaking about this conundrum, she recalls “a lightbulb moment” at a financial company she worked with. One of the bosses had told her about a senior staff member who brought in lots of money, but was described as “handsy”. “Rather than addressing it, young female employees were warned away from him,” she recalls.
Only when a senior leader at the company found himself again telling young staff to avoid the man, did he suddenly think, “What am I saying? What am I doing?”
They decided things had to stop. The man left and the company culture began changing.
A bureaucracy problem
“Culture is incredibly important,” says ********** McMullen, director of professional services at the NSPCC. One of the difficulties for large organisations, he has found, is that “they have their own social structures or social norms which can have an impact when they need to take action”.
Contrary to the idea that a large company will have greater resources to tackle ******, he says that its bureaucracy can sometimes get in the way, slowing down decision-making and making it ******* to know who is accountable. But change starts at the top.
“The senior leadership team sets the right culture,” says Mr McMullen. “If staff don’t feel supported then they may hesitate to make a safeguarding referral.”
That hesitation can also mean children aren’t listened to. “It is so easy to blame the child,” says 19-year-old Poppy.
She was 11 when she found the words to tell her mother that she had been abused by her grandfather. Her parents believed her and eventually her grandfather was convicted and jailed.
She has spoken out about what happened in the hope that this would remove some of the stigma that prevents children asking for help. But many ****** survivors she has spoken to told her they weren’t believed.
“When you tell someone, you need to feel believed. It changes everything,” she says today. “[But] I’m the exception. And the impact on people who aren’t believed is huge.”
Reporting ******: the law
Along with her mother Miranda, Poppy has been working with the NSPCC on a campaign to change the law so there is a mandatory duty for those working or volunteering with children to report it if they are told that a child is being abused.
At present there is no such law. It was one of the recommendations made in the final report of the Independent Inquiry into Child ******* ******, which was published in October 2022.
In his evidence to the inquiry, Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who resigned over the ******* response to the Smyth report, said he was “convinced that we need to move to mandatory reporting”.
It is argued that this removes any doubt about what to do if a concern is raised about the safety of a child.
Miranda understands how reporting ****** can “turn lives upside down” and why people may find it easier to ignore what they are being told. But she insists: “we’ve got to stop kidding ourselves and pretending ****** doesn’t happen.”
For Poppy there is a straightforward calculation: “If we are not reporting ****** as a society, we are actively supporting it.
“It causes damage down the generations and if we don’t stop it now, it will keep going.”
BBC InDepth is the new home on the website and app for the best analysis and expertise from our top journalists. Under a distinctive new brand, we’ll bring you fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions, and deep reporting on the biggest issues to help you make sense of a complex world. And we’ll be showcasing thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too. We’re starting small but thinking big, and we want to know what you think – you can send us your feedback by clicking on the button below.
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Treyarch Accidentally Reverts ****** Ops 6 ******** Rifles' Damage & Range to Launch State W/ S1 Patch
Treyarch Accidentally Reverts ****** Ops 6 ******** Rifles' Damage & Range to Launch State W/ S1 Patch
Instead of applying the Season 1 changes to ******** Rifles in ****** Ops 6, Treyarch accidentally reverts the guns to their launch state.
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APEC: Anthony Albanese weighs in after China praises him as a role model, talks up US relationship
APEC: Anthony Albanese weighs in after China praises him as a role model, talks up US relationship
Anthony Albanese has shrugged off praise from Beijing over his opposition to Donald Trump’s planned ******** tariffs, saying he was not picking sides but standing up for Australia’s national interest.
Amid concerns the US-China strategic competition will escalate to a trade-war under Mr Trump, the Prime Minister stressed the importance of free and fair trade at Friday’s APEC summit, which ******** President Xi Jinping missed despite being in Peru.
Mr Xi, who will meet with outgoing US President Joe Biden on Saturday, has held a series of meetings attempting to shore up support, ahead of a likely US-China trade war if Mr Trump follows through on his proposed tariff agenda.
Mr Albanese had criticised Mr Trump’s proposed 60 per cent tax on ******** imports and up to 20 per cent on other goods, including those from Australia, and vowed to use Canberra’s middle power to try and mitigate a US-China trade war.
It prompted China, through its media mouthpiece China Daily, to praise Mr Albanese for being a role model for other Western leaders.
In an editorial, Mr Albanese was lauded for showing “strategic autonomy” and not simply gluing itself to the US’ foreign policy, with Beijing celebrating the fact Australia had been able to improve its trading relationship with China at the same time.
Asked about it, Mr Albanese, who hopes to meet Mr Xi at next week’s G20 summit in Brazil, said: “I don’t subscribe to the China Daily.”
“But I make the point that the improvement in trade between Australia and China is about *********** jobs … We’re a trading nation, and China is our major trading partner,” he said.
“And I am pleased that there’s an increase in our exports to China. We’ve done that without compromising any of Australia’s values, by being clear about what our views are, and we’ve continued to do that, and I look forward to continuing to pursue Australia’s national interests because that’s my job.”
At the same time, Mr Albanese emphasised, it was in Australia’s national interest to “support and continue to engage with our allies in the ******* States”.
“Our relationship with the ******* States is very different from our relationship with China, who have a different political system and different values,” he said.
“We will point that out where it’s appropriate, but we will also try to cooperate where we can… and I must say it’s in Australia’s national interest to support and engage with the ******* States.”
Mr Albanese and Mr Biden shared a friendly handshake and could be seen laughing together as they briefly spoke on Friday.
The PM would not elaborate on what the pair had discussed, but said the exchange had been “friendly”.
“He was upbeat, he was pleased to be here at APEC, he is, of course, continuing to work in the interests of the ******* States, and will be attending the G20 meeting as well,” he said.
Mr Albanese said he was not reading anything into Mr Xi’s absence from the first day of the leaders summit, saying that was ultimately a matter for the ******** president.
During his engagements with other APEC leaders on Friday, Mr Albanese said there had been discussions about the challenge “but also the opportunity” of dealing with climate change.
It’s expected to be discussed further on APEC’s final day, and again with the world’s biggest economies at the next summit.
The summits coincide with COP29 in Azerbaijan, where the ******* Kingdom has announced its ambitious 2035 emissions reduction target of 81 per cent.
Asked if Australia voters could still expect to know Labor’s 2035 targets before the next election, due by May, Mr Albanese would not commit.
He said his focus was instead on delivering the 2030 targets.
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NYT Crossword: answers for Friday, November 15
NYT Crossword: answers for Friday, November 15
The New York Times crossword puzzle can be tough! If you’re stuck, we’re here to help with a list of today’s clues and answers.
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T-Mobile hacked in massive ******** breach of telecom networks, WSJ reports
T-Mobile hacked in massive ******** breach of telecom networks, WSJ reports
(Reuters) -T-Mobile’s network was among the systems hacked in a damaging ******** cyber-espionage operation that gained entry into multiple U.S. and international telecommunications companies, The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday citing people familiar with the matter.
Hackers linked to a ******** intelligence agency were able to breach T-Mobile as part of a monthslong campaign to spy on the cellphone communications of high-value intelligence targets, the Journal added, without saying when the ******* took place.
“T-Mobile is closely monitoring this industry-wide *******,” a company spokesperson told Reuters in an email.
“At this time, T-Mobile systems and data have not been impacted in any significant way, and we have no evidence of impacts to customer information.”
It was unclear what information, if any, was taken about T-Mobile customers’ calls and communications records, according to the WSJ report.
On Wednesday, The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the U.S. cyber watchdog agency CISA said China-linked hackers have intercepted surveillance data intended for ********* law enforcement agencies after breaking into an unspecified number of telecom companies.
Earlier in October, the Journal reported that ******** hackers accessed the networks of U.S. broadband providers, including Verizon Communications, AT&T and Lumen Technologies, and obtained information from systems the federal government uses for court-authorized wiretapping.
Beijing has previously denied claims by the U.S. government and others that it has used hackers to break into foreign computer systems.
(Reporting by Urvi Dugar, Kanjyik Ghosh and Surbhi Misra; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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The best Christmas gifts in 2024 that everyone on your holiday list will love
The best Christmas gifts in 2024 that everyone on your holiday list will love
This time of year has a lot of merry and bright things to be excited about, but it can be stressful if you’re stumped on what to get your mom, dad, best friend, coworker or kids’ teacher as a holiday gift. Whether you enjoy or dread buying gifts for people, it’s safe to say we all want to give our loved ones things they will enjoy and appreciate. But there’s a lot of noise, junk and bad deals disguised as good deals to sift through as we get closer and closer to the holidays.
Allow us at Engadget to help you through it. Here, you’ll find all of our holiday gift guides collected in one place, so you can more easily find the best Christmas gifts you need this year. Are you looking for white elephant gift ideas? Are you struggling to come up with a good gift for the father figure in your life? Are you just looking for a good board game to pick up for your own family? We’ve got you covered with gift ideas for all of those scenarios and more. We’ll update this post as more of our gift guides hit the internet, so check back for even more gift ideas throughout the season.
Table of contents
Best white elephant gift ideas
According to legend, the King of Siam would give a white elephant to courtiers who had upset them. The recipient had no choice but to simply thank the king for such an opulent gift, knowing that they likely could not afford the upkeep for such an animal. It would inevitably lead them to financial ruin. This story is almost certainly untrue, but it has led to a modern holiday staple: the white elephant gift exchange. These gift ideas will not only get you a few chuckles, but will also make your recipient feel (slightly) burdened.
Read more: The best white elephant gift ideas
Best board game gifts
We could all use more time away from screens of all types and sizes, and board games are a fun way to do that and bond with friends and family. You can find plenty of unique sets out there now, from word puzzles to whodunnits to calming playthroughs that showcase the beauty of the little things in life. From games with giant monsters to those with haunted mansions, we’re sure at least one of our suggestions will be a hit with you and your loved ones.
Read more: The best board games to gift this season
Best gifts under $50
We wouldn’t blame you if you try to do all of your tech shopping around the holidays. That’s when you can typically get the best sales, both on relatively affordable gear and (more importantly) on big-ticket items. But it would be wrong to think that only the most expensive tech is worth gifting. Since we at Engadget test a plethora of gadgets every year, we know that there are some hidden (and not so hidden) tech gems at lower price ranges — you just have to know where to find them.
Read more: The best gifts under $50 that make great stocking stuffers
Best gifts for gamers
This year may not go down as one of the best years in gaming like 2023 did, but that doesn’t mean there weren’t a lot of great new releases. Between titles like Astro **** and Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth, there were plenty of games to keep even the most dedicated of gamers busy in 2024. And if you’re shopping for one, especially as a non-gamer, it can be tricky to navigate what’s worth buying. We’ve got you covered with these recommendations.
Read more: The best gifts for gamers
Best retro gaming gifts
A million new video games seem to come out every week, but for some of us, nothing beats the classics. If you know someone who is way into retro gaming but don’t feel like hunting through eBay and local shops for gear to add to their collection, we’re here to help. We’ve rounded up a few of our favorite gift ideas for the nostalgic gamer in your life, from video upscalers for old consoles to retro-themed books and artwork.
Read more: The best retro gaming gifts for the holidays
Best gifts for coffee lovers
When it comes to making a great cup at home, coffee nerds are constantly learning and love to try new things. Whether the person you’re shopping for is a newly indoctrinated pour over lover or obsessive over every brewing parameter, we’ve compiled a list of the best gear for coffee geeks that you can get this holiday season.
Read more: The best gifts for coffee lovers
Best cooking gifts
There are few things more rewarding than making good food for your friends and family. But after a while, it’s easy to get bored with the same tried and true recipes. And what better way to inject some fun into your favorite home chef’s routine than with a brand-new kitchen gadget? To help you find the right gift for the cook in your life, we’ve put together a list of our favorite kitchen gadgets across a wide range of prices and categories.
Read more: The best cooking gifts
Best tech toys for kids
We’re all having a bit of a budget crunch this year, but the good news is that when it’s time to bestow presents on the young ones (or young at heart), you don’t have to break the bank. Our list of our favorite tech, science and design toys is stacked with items under $100, with plenty of reuse packed in so the fun can extend far beyond the holiday season.
Read more: The best tech toys for kids
Best gadgets for your pets
In Engadget’s Slack rooms, our pets are high on the list of stuff we chat about — just behind work-adjacent tech stuff, insane current events, video games and food. We’ve bought plenty of high- and low-tech stuff to keep our furry friends fed, occupied, safe and happy and we’ve put together the best of what we tried here. Perhaps you’re shopping for your own very good boy or girl, or maybe you have a dutiful **** parent on your list — either way, the gadgets gathered here will make great gifts, according to the enthusiastic tail wags (or aloof meows) of our own fur *******.
Read more: The best gadgets for your pets
Best travel gifts
Since the dawn of humanity, we have traveled. We’ve come a long way from on-foot journeys laden with animal hide satchels. But the goal of good travel gear is the same: Get you and your necessities to a destination in the highest level of comfort available. If you know someone who is always catching a flight, rides the train to work or is bravely embarking on a cruise, some new tech may just help them out.
Read more: The best travel gifts
Best gifts for remote workers
There’s a pretty good chance you know at least one person who works remotely in some fashion. While the WFH life has its perks — nobody likes a long commute — it comes with its own set of challenges, from lacking pro-level equipment to dealing with household disturbances. If you’re looking to give a gift to someone who spends much of their time in their home office, we’ve rounded up a few techy gift ideas that should make their days a little more delightful, or at least easier to manage.
Read more: The 19 best gift ideas for the remote worker in your life
Best gifts for book lovers
There are few things better in life than getting lost in a good book — as any book lover will tell you. We have a few heavy readers on staff at Engadget and we all have opinions on the gadgets and subscriptions we think make the experience of reading even better. We’ve got gift ideas for those who prefer e-reading, as well as for the print-faithful — and of course, some book recommendations, too.
Read more: The best gifts for book lovers
Best gifts for moms
We don’t speak for all moms, but a brief and unscientific survey has confirmed one gift most moms will love across the board: Time. Unspoken for, unstructured, zero-obligation time. While we couldn’t find extra hours on ***** anywhere online, we did find some gadgets and gizmos that help save time and others that make precious down time more enjoyable.
Read more: The 13 best gifts for moms
Best gifts for dads
Many Dads aren’t known for being forthright about what exactly they want for the holidays. (No, “peace and quiet” is not an acceptable answer in this case.) If you’re shopping for a father who likes gadgets but you aren’t sure what to get, let us help jog your brain with these gift ideas.
Read more: The 15 best gifts for dads
Check out the rest of our gift ideas here.
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Record numbers of customers on social tariffs
Record numbers of customers on social tariffs
BBC
Morgan Davies and Ellie Bryan got their water bills cut after a no-fault eviction left them struggling
The number of households seeking help with water bills in England and Wales rose by more than 250,000 last year, according to figures seen by the BBC, but support varies widely depending on where people live.
Water companies spent almost £259m on “social tariffs” last year – discounted bills to help low-income households – but they each have different criteria and offer different levels of discount.
Those on Welsh Water social tariffs got an average bill reduction of £287, while Southern Water customers got an average of £110 off in 2023-24.
The Consumer Council for Water (CCW) is calling on firms to have a single scheme so that everyone gets the same level of help wherever they live.
The number of households on social tariffs has risen by a fifth since last year to a record 1.6 million. Spending on them rose by a quarter, according to CCW data.
It said the increase was down to companies doing more to promote their support schemes, data sharing between the government and councils helping to identify customers in need, and the cost of living leading to more households seeking help.
But there are concerns that support is not the same across the country and that people could be missing out on help simply because of where they live.
Each company’s social tariff scheme differs based on things like household income, benefits received, individual water bills and how much people have in savings.
‘Help is out there if you look’Ellie Bryan and Morgan Davies
Morgan and Ellie say a social tariff has helped them manage debt to afford things for their children
When Morgan Davies and Ellie Bryan from Liverpool found themselves facing a no-fault eviction, the costs of moving saw them fall behind on their bills.
“We’re still paying off some of the bills from the old house. Our water bill was between £300 and £400 in debt from the other house, combined with this house, we just got behind on all the payments,” says Ellie, 31.
Morgan, 25, adds: “We were over £4,000 in debt. We had to do so many payment plans and it was getting to the point where we had to get a payment plan for another payment plan.”
The couple, who both work as supermarket shift leaders, got advice from Money Wellness and a letter from water company ******* Utilities pointed them towards a social tariff.
Their bill went from about £39 a month to about £25.
“I’d say don’t be embarrassed about admitting you’re behind on some payments. You just need to ask for help,” says Ellie.
“If you’re struggling with debts, call the company because nine out of 10 times they have a solution for you. There is help out there if you look.”
But who gets that help and to what extent varies depending on which water company people are with. And unlike with electricity and gas, people cannot simply switch to a competitor.
Data from the CCW suggests that among the 10 biggest water and sewerage firms, the average bill reduction in 2023-24 ranged from £287 for people supplied by Welsh Water (Dŵr Cymru) down to £110 for customers of Southern Water.
The CCW’s data is not calculated as a percentage of individual bills, which differ significantly owing to regional variations and usage levels for those on a meter.
It also does not separate out support for customers who get water and sewerage from different companies.
Across England and Wales, the average bill was about £445 in 2023-24, rising to £473 for 2024-25.
Southern Water told the BBC it has some of the lowest bills in the country and said it knows there are households struggling with the cost of living.
“This is why we’ve kept our minimum discount for those in need at 45%, rising to 90% if necessary.
“We’re planning to more than quadruple the value of our Hardship Fund to £1.25m per year and we’re extending our Priority Services Register from 12% to 20% of our customers,” the company said.
‘Postcode lottery’
Andy White, senior leader for the CCW, said it was good that more people than ever were getting help through social tariffs.
“However, it also shines a light on the fact that there are significant differences in the support that is available to customers depending who serves them as a water company,” he said, describing it as a “postcode lottery”.
“Whether you actually get the help and qualify for that, and how much help that is, depends entirely on the scheme that each company is offering,” he said.
“And we don’t think it’s right that people should have different support depending on where they live.”
The CCW wants companies to have one social tariff for people who cannot afford their water and to all contribute to a shared **** so that the costs do not fall heaviest on the poorest areas.
Water ***, which represents water companies, said: “Ultimately it is up to Government to set the guidance on social tariffs, but water companies offer significantly higher reductions than other utilities such as energy.”
The government said it was committed to supporting vulnerable consumers with their bills and addressing water ********, and had announced “an Independent Water Commission which will report back next year with recommendations to protect customers”.
How do water companies decide who to help?
Every company applies its own criteria for deciding whether someone can have a social tariff.
Thames Water’s website says its WaterHelp is for people whose bills are more than 5% of net income and offers a 50% discount to those who qualify, while Yorkshire Water says people might be eligible for its WaterSupport if they have a household income below £19,000 and an annual water bill of more than £364.
Companies may also ask about savings. Southern Water says people must have less than £16,000 as well as a household income of less than £22,020, or that everyone must be receiving pension credits, to be eligible for its Essentials tariff.
Welsh Water, which is not for profit, offers support if someone in the household receives at least one means-tested benefit and has different income thresholds depending on how many people live there.
Social tariffs are not the only form of support on offer. The CCW data also showed an additional £66m went to more than 200,000 accounts on a separate scheme called Watersure, which caps bills for people on meters who claim certain benefits and have a high water use.
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#Record #numbers #customers #social #tariffs
Pelican News
View the full article at [Hidden Content]
Call Of Duty: ****** Ops 6 Season 1 Update Accidentally Nerfs ******** Rifles
Call Of Duty: ****** Ops 6 Season 1 Update Accidentally Nerfs ******** Rifles
You’re not imagining things if it feels like your favorite ******** rifle in Call of Duty: ****** Ops 6 just isn’t packing the same punch after the Season 1 update. Developer Treyarch is actively looking into issues with the “damage range values” for the ******* type.
On X, the official Call of Duty Updates account noted that the team is investigating reports about ******** rifle effectiveness, with a Trello card adding that Treyarch is “looking to return ******** rifles to their intended damage range values.” A popular Reddit post yesterday wondered “what the *****” happened with ******** rifles.
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COD Warzone & ****** Ops 6 – Season 01 Battle Pass Overview Trailer
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Yesterday, ****** Ops 6 Season 1 went live with a massive file size: 74GB on Xbox and 50GB on PlayStation. The update also led to a massive list of patch notes for the game, which funnily enough, mentioned increasing effectiveness for ******** rifles in ********* mode.
That’s not all that’s new with Season 1, either. In a pleasant surprise, Modern Warfare 3 players have seen their double XP tokens from that game get carried over to ****** Ops 6. The same is true for players of Modern Warfare 2 and Warzone. As for Zombies, ****** Ops 6 now lets you buy Gobblegums with real money.
Earlier this week, a ****** Ops 6 player revealed that they reached Prestige 1 without ******** a single person in multiplayer. They’ve apparently been playing with a pacifist mindset since 2020’s ****** Ops Cold War.
For more, check out GameSpot’s Call of Duty: ****** Ops 6 multiplayer review.
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#Call #Duty #****** #Ops #Season #Update #Accidentally #Nerfs #******** #Rifles
Pelican News
View the full article at [Hidden Content]
How Zambia’s Margret Chola has become a fashion icon
How Zambia’s Margret Chola has become a fashion icon
Luxury Media Zambia
A grandmother in rural Zambia has become an accidental style icon and internet sensation – after agreeing to play dress-up and swapping outfits with her fashionista granddaughter.
Margret Chola, who is in her mid-80s, is known to the world as “Legendary Glamma” – and adored by 225,000 Instagram followers for her striking and playful fashion photographs.
“I feel different, I feel new and alive in these clothes, in a way that I’ve never felt before,” Ms Chola tells the BBC. “I feel like I can conquer the world!”
The fortnightly Granny Series was created in 2023 by her granddaughter Diana Kaumba, a stylist who is based in New York City.
Luxury Media Zambia
“Legendary Glamma” in Zambia’s national colours
She came up with the idea when she was visiting Zambia to mark the second anniversary of the ****** of her father – the person she says inspired her passion for fashion because he always dressed well.
During that visit Ms Kaumba had not worn all her carefully curated outfits, so she asked her grandmother – or “Mbuya” in the Bemba language – if she wanted to try them on.
“I wasn’t doing anything at the time, so I just said: ‘OK. If that’s what you want to do let’s do it – why not?'” Ms Chola said.
“You will miss me when I **** and at least this way you will be remembering me.”
Luxury Media Zambia
Fashion has created a bond between grandmother and granddaughter
Ms Kaumba wore Mbuya’s top and “chitenge” – a piece of patterned cloth wrapped around the waist. And Mbuya’s first outfit was a silver pantsuit.
“I thought it would be nice to dress up Mbuya in high fashion and then take photographs of her in her natural habitat,” Ms Kaumba tells the BBC.
That natural habitat is a farm in the village of 10 Miles, just north of the Zambian capital, Lusaka.
Most often Ms Chola is photographed in all her glamour outside – often sitting on an elegant wooden chair or lounging on a leather sofa.
Luxury Media Zambia
Could sofa surfing get more glamourous?
In the background are exposed brick buildings with corrugated iron roofs, ploughed fields, mango trees and maize crops.
“I was so nervous when I posted that first photo. I left my phone for 10 minutes and in those 10 minutes there were 1,000 likes,” Ms Kaumba says.
“My mind was blown. The comments were flying in and people were asking for more.”
It was in April 2024 that the Granny Series really took off – after Ms Kaumba posted a series of photos of her grandmother in a red Adidas dress, several chunky, golden necklaces and a glittering jewelled crown.
“It surprised me to hear that so many people around the world love me,” Ms Chola says – who does not know her exact age because she does not have a birth certificate.
Luxury Media Zambia
Margret Chola, who is not entirely sure of her age, is happy to try funky styles
“I didn’t know I could make such an impact at this age.”
Ms Chola poses in clothes that are a mix of vibrant colours, textures and styles.
From a green ********* football jersey, combined with a layered frilly red dress styled as a skirt – in the colours of the Zambian flag to pay homage to 60 years of independence.
To a blue, ****** and green sequined top, complete with a golden snake necklace and bracelet.
And Mbuya’s personal favourite – jeans, a graphic T-shirt with her image on the front and a blonde wig.
“I had never worn jeans or a wig before – so I was happy, and I was dancing.”
Ms Kaumba, who has been a stylist since 2012, says that her grandma has “courage, grace – and nails every look”.
All the looks reflect her maximalist-chic aesthetic – which celebrates the joy of excess, eclectic combinations, the big and the bold, and clashing patterns and colours.
At the heart of it all are eye-catching accessories – bold sunglasses, oversized hats, necklaces, bracelets, pendants, rings, gloves, bags, blonde wigs, crowns.
That influence has come directly from her grandmother, who has “always been a lover of pearls and bangles”.
In one particularly playful scene called GOAT – short for greatest of all time – Ms Chola appears with a goat – that is decked out in Mbuya’s beloved pearls.
Luxury Media Zambia
A nanny nod to Margret Chola’s love of pearls
Other accessories also reflect Chola’s personality and story.
In some shots Mbuya is holding the beloved radio that she carries around all day and takes to bed with her.
Or she’s clutching an “ibende” – a long wooden stick that over the years she has used to pound millet or cassava or maize.
She is smoking a pipe or holding a metal cup full of tea, and hanging off the edge of the chair arm is an “mbaula” or charcoal brazier that Zambians often use for cooking – especially now that the country is plagued by severe power cuts.
Kooma Jnr
The “ibende” represents the hard labour of life in rural Zambia
Ms Kaumba hopes that the Granny Series will highlight that older people still have a lot to offer – and making memories together is an important way to “leave footprints for the next generation”.
“Do not write them off, love them just the same till the end because remember we will be just like them one day.”
As a result of Mbuya’s photo shoots, Ms Kaumba’s been hired by four granddaughters to style their grandmothers – aged between 70 and 96.
Luxury Media Zambia
The more pearl bling the better
Ms Chola hopes that the Granny Series will inspire people “to live their lives and not worry about being judged by society”.
She urges people to “always forgive yourself for whatever mistakes you made. You can never change your past – but you can change your future”.
The photo shoots have brought granddaughter and grandmother closer – and through their special bond Ms Kaumba has learnt so much more about her Mbuya’s often difficult life.
Luxury Media Zambia
Margret Chola had to leave school at the age of 12 or 12
Ms Chola was raised by her grandparents, went to school until she was 12 or 13 and then, because of economic reasons, was forced to marry a man in his 30s.
She had three children, ended up drinking heavily and eventually escaped the marriage.
Luxury Media Zambia
The charcoal brazier is something all Zambians will recognise these days because of the power cuts plaguing the country at the moment
That trauma still haunts her – but her unexpected global fame has given her a new lease on life.
“I’m now able to wake up with a purpose knowing that people around the world love to see me,” Chola says.
Penny Dale is a freelance journalist, podcast and documentary-maker based in London.
Kooma Jnr
“Legendary Glamma” has found that age is no barrier to style or garnering Instagram likes
More BBC stories on Zambia:Getty Images/BBC
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Dragon Age: The Veilguard Bucks a Problematic Fantasy Villain Trend
Dragon Age: The Veilguard Bucks a Problematic Fantasy Villain Trend
Dragon Age: The Veilguard bucks a problematic trend by featuring a wide array of genuinely complex and terrifying female villains.
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#Dragon #Age #Veilguard #Bucks #Problematic #Fantasy #Villain #Trend
Pelican News
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Why Trump’s tariff proposals have some business owners worried
Why Trump’s tariff proposals have some business owners worried
Los Angeles — Bobby Djavaheri is trying to stock up his warehouse with appliances from overseas, while he can still afford it.
“We’ve been preparing for the last six months — both our factories and us as importers — for Trump to win,” Djavaheri told CBS News.
Djavaheri is president of Los Angeles-based Yedi Houseware Appliances, which manufactures its products in China. He says President-elect Donald Trump’s threat to increase tariffs will force him to charge more.
His company’s Yedi Evolution air fryer is currently priced at $130, Djavaheri said. He estimates that Trump’s proposed tariffs would raise that price to about $200. Yedi’s two-quart air fryer currently costs between $30 and $40. Trump’s tariffs could raise that to almost $100.
Trump campaigned on implementing a blanket tariff of 10% to 20% on all imports, along with an additional 60% or more on goods from China.
“It would decimate our business, but not only our business,” Djavaheri said. “It would decimate all small businesses that rely on importing.”
Djavaheri says it is not ******** companies that pay the tariffs, it is his own business.
“We’re getting the bill, the bill comes straight to us from the government,” Djavaheri said.
Brian *****, adjunct assistant professor of international trade law at USC, says Trump’s tariffs could also be a negotiating tactic.
“If he doesn’t like a certain practice or policy initiative, he can use it as leverage to threaten them,” ***** said. “…It’s important for the ********* people to understand that the people who pay tariffs are U.S. importers. Not China, not foreign governments, not foreign companies. That’s going to come down to your wallet.”
An August study by the Peterson Institute for International Economics indicated that Trump’s proposed tariffs could cost middle-income households more than $2,600 a year.
In 2018, when Trump slapped tariffs on imported washing machines, prices jumped almost $100. But foreign appliance makers also moved some production to the U.S., and a year later they had created 1,800 new jobs.
Other countries, however, retaliated with tariffs on U.S. exports, which led to job losses.
According to Djavaheri, most of Yedi’s products cannot at the moment be manufactured in the U.S.
“There’s no factory in America,” Djavaheri said. “A factory that could potentially produce hundreds of thousands of air fryers in one year, same quality, there’s no where in the world other than the ********.”
Djavaheri’s advice? If you’re considering a purchase, make it before the potential tariffs kick in.
Carter Evans
Carter Evans has served as a Los Angeles-based correspondent for CBS News since February 2013, reporting across all of the network’s platforms. He joined CBS News with nearly 20 years of journalism experience, covering major national and international stories.
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#Trumps #tariff #proposals #business #owners #worried
Pelican News
View the full article at [Hidden Content]
India families still waiting for compensation
India families still waiting for compensation
Afreen Fatima
Politician Javed Mohammad’s house was demolished in 2022
“You can be homesick at home, you know?”
That’s how Afreen Fatima, an activist from the northern Indian city of Prayagraj, finds herself feeling, every now and then.
In the summer of 2022, Ms Fatima’s childhood home – a yellow-brick two-storeyed house in the bustling depths of the city – was torn down by authorities overnight.
The house was demolished after her father, a local politician named Javed Mohammad, was arrested and named as the “key conspirator” of a protest by Muslims, which had turned violent.
He denies the allegations, and has never been found guilty of any ****** linked to the June 2022 protests.
The family is just one of many who have found themselves at the mercy of so-called “bulldozer justice” – when authorities swiftly demolish the homes of those accused of ******* – but hopefully among the last.
On Wednesday, India’s top court banned the practice which has been on the rise in recent years, particularly in states governed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
While the victims include Hindu families, critics say the action is mostly targeted at India’s 200 million odd Muslims, especially after religious ********* or protests – a charge the BJP denies.
Chief ministers of several states have linked such demolitions with their government’s tough stance on ******. Officially, however, the reason given is that these structures were illegally constructed.
Experts have repeatedly questioned this, saying that there is no legal justification for it and that punishing someone for an alleged ****** using laws meant for another makes no sense.
Getty Images
Critics say bulldozers are being used to target ******* citizens
Ms Fatima says that during the 20 months that Mr Mohammad spent in jail – he got bail earlier this year – she and her family moved houses twice in the city.
It took some effort, but they finally feel settled. Still, there are times when their new house feels strangely unfamiliar to her, she says, like an “adopted space” which has not been lived in enough.
“It’s not the same. I spent most of my life in our old house. There are no memories here, it feels empty,” she says.
So when the court was reading out its judgement this week, Ms Fatima was hopeful of finally getting some closure.
But the outcome turned out to be bittersweet.
Because, while the court has outlawed authorities from arbitrarily razing down homes and businesses of those accused or convicted of *******, it did not mention any form of redressal to families like Ms Fatima’s, who’ve been the victims of such demolitions in the past.
“We welcome the judgement, but what about those of us who have already lost our homes?” she says.
Somaiya Fatima
Authorities cited ******** construction as the reason for razing Mr Mohammad’s house – a charge he denies
The practice had become commonplace: in 2022, authorities in five states bulldozed 128 structures in just three months “as punishment”, a report by Amnesty international shows.
In its order, which ran over 95 pages, the court came down heavily on the state governments, saying it cannot “become a judge and decide that a person accused is guilty and, therefore, punish him”.
Giving out such punishment “reminds one of a lawless state of affairs, where might was right”, the judgement added.
The court then issued a set of guidelines, which make it mandatory for authorities to give at least 15 days’ advance notice to an occupant before an ******** structure is torn down and to publicly explain the reason for the demolition. All public officials will also be personally held responsible under Indian laws if a demolition is carried out wrongfully, the judgement added.
Rights groups, lawyers and opposition leaders have hailed the order as a “turning point” in tackling the unfair practice that has gone unchecked for years. “Late is the hour in which these guidelines chose to appear – but better late than never!” said Delhi-based lawyer Gautam Bhatia.
Govind Mathur, a judge and former chief justice of a high court, agrees that the order does not mention anything about the victims, but adds that “doesn’t restrict any claim of compensation by such persons”.
“If an act is ********, then the victim can always demand for compensation. The wrong committed will remain a wrong and the cost of that has to be paid by the wrong doers,” he says.
The order, Justice Mathur adds, is a “strong message for state machinery to not align with political bosses but to act in accordance with law”.
Somaiya Fatima
Afreen Fatima is a prominent activist
Ms Fatima, however, points out that the reality is not that simple.
It’s been more than two years since her family first challenged the demolition in a high court. But there hasn’t been a single hearing, she says.
She still remembers the day it all happened. Onlookers glued themselves to the corner to watch for the excavator as it came down on their house. Many of them held cameras and phones. Ms Fatima, who watched the demolition on her own phone from a relative’s house, remembers going numb.
She thought of her room and the sheer volume of keepsakes and furniture stored there. There were stories everywhere – precious everyday memories, like the time she spent with her sister and the lively family discussions around the dinner table. “All of that was gone,” she says.
While Ms Fatima’s family was able to rebuild their lives in some capacity, others say they are still stuck in limbo.
“We are practically on the streets, with nothing and no one,” says Reshma, a daily wage worker in Rajasthan state. In September, Reshma’s house in Udaipur city was demolished on grounds of ******** encroachment, a day after her eight-year-old brother allegedly stabbed his classmate.
The child was taken into custody and sent to a juvenile home, while his father was arrested on the charges of abetment to *******. Since then, Reshma, her mother and sister have been living in a small shanty on the edges of the city.
To them, the court ruling is meaningless, she says. “We want actual help, some money or compensation to rebuild our lives, this changes nothing.”
Vivek Singh
The court has said such demolitions reminds one of ‘lawless state of affairs’
Like Ms Fatima, Reshma’s family has also challenged the demolition in court. Legal experts say that the Supreme Court’s guidelines could potentially impact the way all such pending cases are heard in the future.
“This decision will change many things – courts will have to see whether legal processes were followed while carrying out these demolitions,” senior Supreme Court lawyer CU Singh told BBC Hindi.
Ms Fatima is not entirely sure whether the court’s order would actually halt the demolitions.
But her father, Mr Mohammad, is brimming with hope, she says.
Sometimes, she catches her father thinking about their old home – the sofas and the rugs, the rows of books on the shelves, which he had painstakingly put together, probably still lying in the rubble.
“He did most of the improvements, from the curtains to the cushion covers. Losing the house broke his heart more than anyone else’s,” she says.
But Mr Mohammad does not want to linger on the suffering and is already busy making fresh improvements to the house and his life. “He keeps telling me, this is a historic order and we have to talk about it as much as we can,” his daughter says.
“Just like this house, we are building lives again and renovating our memories.”
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Pelican News
View the full article at [Hidden Content]
3 new Xbox Game Pass games to play this weekend (November 15-17)
3 new Xbox Game Pass games to play this weekend (November 15-17)
November is shaping up to be a quieter month for Xbox Game Pass than October, but some solid titles are still hitting Microsoft’s game subscription service. This week, the three recent additions I’m recommending all have one thing in common: You don’t play as humans in them. If you want to let out some steam and relax this weekend, become a dragon, goat, or turnip and cause some mayhem in these games.
Spyro Reignited Trilogy
All Scaled Up Reveal Trailer | Spyro Reignited Trilogy | Spyro the Dragon
Following in the footsteps of Call of Duty: ****** Ops 6 and two StarCraft games, Spyro Reignited Trilogy is the latest Activision Blizzard title to finally make its way to Xbox Game Pass. Developed by the now independent Toys for Bob, this is a remake collection of the first three games in the Spyro series: Spyro the Dragon, Sypro 2: Ripto’s Rage!, and Spyro: Year of the Dragon. Those were excellent innovative 3D platforms on PS1 and faithfully re-created by Toys for Bob with vibrant new visuals for the Reignited Trilogy. Spyro has yet to get a new current-gen game like ****** Bandicoot, so check this out if you want to show Xbox and Activision that there’s demand for more.
Spyro Reignited Trilogy is available across PC, Xbox One, and Xbox Cloud Gaming with Game Pass Ultimate. It’s also on PS4 and Nintendo Switch.
Goat Simulator: Remastered
Goat Simulator Remastered – Announcement Trailer
Funny games that let players mess around in large sandboxes with ridiculous physics are common nowadays, but the original Goat Simulator was a precursor to all of them. Goat Simulator lets players loose to ******** or mess with everything in their path as a goat. While players earn points and complete objectives as they do that, Goat Simulator is all about ***** fun. That attitude helped it go viral on platforms like YouTube when it first came out in 2014. Coffee Stain remastered Goat Simulator this year, and while this intentionally rough-looking and somewhat glitchy game doesn’t exactly benefit from the typical remaster treatment, it’s at least nice to have all of the original’s DLC, which crosses over with the likes of Payday and DayZ, available as part of one package.
Xbox Game Pass Ultimate subscribers can check out Goat Simulator: Remastered on PC or Xbox Series X/S. It’s also available on PS5.
Turnip Boy Robs a Bank
Turnip Boy Robs a Bank Announcement Trailer
One of 2024’s first notable releases was Turnip Boy Robs a Bank, a roguelike where players ****** and rob their way through a bank over and over again as a surprisingly violent turnip working for the ******. As ridiculous as that premise is, Turnip Boy Robs a Bank actually has some hilarious writing and an entertaining story. Its gameplay isn’t too shabby either, as this is an enjoyable top-down twin-stick shooter with plenty of powerful weapons. Previously just available in the Xbox Game Pass Ultimate tier, Turnip Boy Robs a Bank is now available to Xbox Game Pass Standard subscribers as part of their game catalog. If you haven’t played it yet, that gives Standard subscribers an excuse to finally check out this game.
Turnip Boy Robs a Bank is now available to Xbox Game Pass standard subscribers on PC and Xbox One. The game is also on Nintendo Switch.
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#Xbox #Game #Pass #games #play #weekend #November
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View the full article at [Hidden Content]
Businesses brace for Trump’s proposed tariff hikes
Businesses brace for Trump’s proposed tariff hikes
Businesses brace for Trump’s proposed tariff hikes – CBS News
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President-elect Donald Trump campaigned on raising tariffs — especially on products from China — as a way to boost manufacturing in the U.S. Carter Evans met a California business owner who’s worried about the impact the tariffs could have if enacted.
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‘We cannot be made into enemies’
‘We cannot be made into enemies’
EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
Tensions remain high in Amsterdam after last week’s *********
A fragile calm hangs over the Dutch capital, still reeling from the unrest that erupted a week ago when ******** football fans came under ******* in the centre of Amsterdam.
City officials described the ********* as a “toxic combination of antisemitism, hooliganism, and anger” over the war in Gaza, ******* and elsewhere in the Middle East.
As the streets are cleared of Maccabi Ultras stickers and tensions linger, there is concern about the damage done to relations between Amsterdam’s ******* and ******* communities.
The tensions have spilled over into Dutch politics too.
The Netherlands’ coalition government has been left hanging by a thread after a Moroccan-born junior minister resigned because of language used by coalition colleagues.
Amsterdam had already seen protests and tensions because of the war in the Middle East, and local ****** Lody van de Kamp believes it was like a tinderbox: “If you put 2,000 [********] football supporters on to the streets, you know you are in trouble.”
VLN Nieuws/ANP/AFP
Police were out in force on 8 November but were unable to prevent a series of violent attacks
Maccabi Tel Aviv fans had arrived in the city for a Europa League match against Ajax and footage was widely shared the night before showing a group of fans climbing up a wall to tear down and ***** a ************ flag.
An Amsterdam council report said taxis were also attacked and vandalised.
Emine Uğur, a well-known columnist in the ******* community, says underlying tensions surrounding the war in Gaza meant that the ensuing ********* was “a long time coming”.
She speaks of a lack of acknowledgement of the pain felt by communities affected by a conflict that had left many without an outlet for their grief and frustration.
The flag-burning incident as well as anti-***** chants were seen as a deliberate provocation.
But then messages calling for retaliation appeared on social media, some using chilling terms such as “**** hunt”.
On the evening of the match, a pro-************ protest was moved away from the Johan Cruyff arena, but it was in the hours afterwards that the ********* erupted.
The 12-page report by Amsterdam’s authorities describes some Maccabi supporters “committing acts of vandalism” in the centre.
Then it highlights “small groups of rioters… engaged in violent hit-and-run actions targeting ******** supporters and nightlife crowd” in locations across the city centre. They moved “on foot, by scooter, or car… committing severe assaults”.
The mayor of Amsterdam, Femke Halsema, described the incidents as deeply alarming, and noted for some they were a reminder of historical pogroms against Jews.
For a few hours, swathes of the ******* community in a ********* capital felt as though they were under siege.
These events coincided with the anniversary of the ***** pogroms on Jews in 1938, also known as Kristallnacht.
That only intensified the fears of Amsterdam’s ******* community, although local imams and other members of the ******* community took part in the commemorations.
Senior members, including Esther Voet, editor of the Dutch ******* Weekly, organised emergency shelters and coordinated rescue efforts for those fearing for their lives.
Esther Voet
Esther Voet welcomed fans into her home to protect them from *******. Their faces are blurred to hide their identities
The Dutch government has responded by allocating €4.5m (£3.6m) to combat antisemitism and support victims.
Justice Minister David van Weel emphasised that ******* people must feel safe in their own country and promised to deal severely with perpetrators.
However, the chairman of the Central ******* Committee, Chanan Hertzberger, warned that these measures alone might not suffice.
He blamed in part an atmosphere where “antisemitic rhetoric has gone unchecked since 7 October”, adding: “Our history teaches us that when people say they want to ***** you, they mean it, and they will try.”
The ********* and its aftermath have also exposed political rifts, and some of the language from politicians has shocked the Netherlands’ Moroccan community.
Geert Wilders, whose far-right Freedom Party is the biggest of the four parties that make up the Dutch coalition government, has called for the deportation of dual nationals guilty of antisemitism.
Both he and coalition partner Caroline van der Plas, among others, have pointed the finger at young people of Moroccan or North ******** descent.
One Dutch-Moroccan commentator, Hassnae Bouazza, complained that her community had for years been accused of not being integrated, and was now being threatened with having their Dutch nationality taken away.
Nadia Bouras, a Dutch historian of Moroccan descent, told Amsterdam’s Het Parool newspaper that using the term “integration” for people who had already lived in the Netherlands for four generations was like “holding them ********”.
“You are holding them in a constant state of being foreign, even though they are not.”
The junior minister for benefits, Nora Achahbar, who was born in Morocco but grew up in the Netherlands, said on Friday she was standing down from the government because of ******* language she had heard during a cabinet meeting on Monday, three days after the ********* in Amsterdam.
She may not be the last.
REMKO DE WAAL/EPA-EFE
Junior minister Nora Achahbar decided to resign after she was alarmed by what she called ******* language by coalition colleagues
****** van de Kamp has told the BBC he is concerned that antisemitism is being politicised to further Islamophobic agendas.
He warns against repeating the exclusionary attitudes reminiscent of the 1930s, cautioning that such rhetoric not only endangers ******* communities but deepens suspicions within society: “We must show that we cannot be made into enemies.”
The impact on Amsterdam’s ******* and ******* residents is profound.
Many Jews have removed mezuzahs – the small Torah scrolls – from their doorposts, or they have covered them with duct tape out of ***** of reprisal.
Esther Voet sees the emotional toll on her community: “It’s an exaggeration to say that the Netherlands now is like the 1930s, but we must pay attention and speak out when we see something that’s not right.”
Muslims, meanwhile, argue they are being blamed for the actions of a small *********, before the perpetrators have even been identified.
Columnist Emine Uğur has herself faced increased threats as a vocal ******* woman: “People feel emboldened.”
She fears for her son’s future in a polarised society where the lines of division seem to be hardening.
ROBIN VAN LONKHUIJSEN/EPA-EFE
Pro-************ demonstrators gathered in Amsterdam in the days after the *********, despite a ban on protests
Academics and community leaders have called for de-escalation and mutual understanding.
Bart Wallet, a professor of ******* Studies at the University of Amsterdam, stresses the need for careful terminology, warning against equating the recent ********* with pogroms of the past.
Like others, he hopes the ********* was an isolated incident rather than a sign of worsening ******* polarisation.
Mayor Femke Halsema is adamant that antisemitism should not be followed by other forms of racism, emphasising that the safety of one group must not come at the expense of another.
The ********* has left Amsterdam questioning its identity as a diverse and tolerant city.
There is a collective recognition, in the Dutch capital and beyond, that as residents seek to rebuild trust, they must address the tensions that fuelled such unrest.
Rubbing his hands against the cold, as Amsterdam’s cyclists stream by, ****** van de Kamp recalls his mother’s words: “We are allowed to be very ******, but we must never hate.”
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