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Showing posts from July, 2020

Trump’s Coronavirus Testing Chief Concedes a Lag in Test Results

With the reopening plans of schools and businesses hinging on rapid test results, the Trump administration’s testing czar says a two- to three-day turnaround “is not possible.” from NYT > Top Stories https://ift.tt/30fWec3 via IFTTT

Rich Lowry: The folly of the Never Republicans

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“Burn it down” is rarely a wise or prudent sentiment. A cadre of Republican opponents of President Donald Trump is nonetheless calling for a purifying fire to sweep through the GOP in the fall, taking down as many Republican officeholders as possible. Only this willy-nilly bloodletting will teach the party the hard lesson it needs to learn for accommodating Trump over the past four years. As a Soviet commissar once put it: "We must execute not only the guilty. Execution of the innocent will impress the masses even more." These Never Trumpers, as my colleague Ramesh Ponnuru puts it, are becoming Never Republicans. Their ranks run from columnist George Will, to Charlie Sykes of the anti-Trump website The Bulwark, to the operatives of The Lincoln Project. Their hoped-for GOP electoral apocalypse doesn’t make sense on its own terms, and their advocacy for one bears all the hallmarks of this perfervid time in our politics — it, too, is rageful and extreme, but satisfyingly emo...

David Brooks: The future of American liberalism

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The United States just endured its worst economic quarter in recorded history. If this trend had continued for an entire year, American economic output would have been down by about a third. So I’m hoping Joe Biden and his team are reading up on Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal. The New Dealers succeeded in a moment like this. Their experience offers some powerful lessons for Biden as he campaigns and if he wins: Offer big change that feels familiar. Economic and health calamities are experienced by most people as if they were natural disasters and complete societal breakdowns. People feel intense waves of fear about the future. They want a leader, like FDR, who demonstrates optimistic fearlessness. They want one who, once in office, produces an intense burst of activity that is both new but also offers people security and safety. During the New Deal, Social Security gave seniors secure retirements. The Works Progress Administration gave 8.5 million Americans secure jobs. Biden...

Dangerous heat wave forecast for south-western areas of US

Forecasters say temperatures could rise to 50C on Saturday in parts of Utah, Nevada and California. from BBC News - US & Canada https://ift.tt/319pccW via IFTTT

Katie Krongard: We don’t pay attention to our School Board. And this is what we get.

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I’d like to think that I take my civic duty seriously. I recall last year, screaming at my husband, our live-in nanny, and her boyfriend, “Everyone in this house will vote! Everyone!” Is this a touch aggressive? Perhaps. Now that you’ve gotten to know me a bit, I am going to get vulnerable. Our elected officials at the Salt Lake City School Board are letting us down; but, we voted for them. The gripping responsibility I feel for what is happening right now is almost unmanageable. I will admit that the School Board was not on my radar quite like it should have been. No one could have anticipated the kinds of decisions that they would have to make this year. Had I known what I know now, perhaps I would have evaluated each of them a bit more harshly. If 2020 has taught us anything, it is that we have a responsibility to each other. And so, when we witness what is an absolutely unacceptable display of leadership by the Salt Lake City School Board, it is our job to hold them accountable...

Red onions culprit in salmonella cases that have sickened nearly 400 in US, another 114 in Canada

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About 400 in the U.S. have gotten salmonella from red onions from supplier Thomson International. Another 114 cases have been reported in Canada.             from USATODAY - News Top Stories https://ift.tt/3fm2J1k via IFTTT

Trump meets with Florida sheriffs who had attended conference with COVID-positive colleague

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President Donald Trump spoke with the sheriffs Friday afternoon after exiting Air Force One on the Tampa International Airport tarmac.             from USATODAY - News Top Stories https://ift.tt/3gijQ5r via IFTTT

Dr Fauci is asked if protests spread coronavirus

"You're putting words into my mouth," the US infectious disease chief says in a grilling by Congress. from BBC News - US & Canada https://ift.tt/319geMO via IFTTT

PokimaneBoyfriend and the Scandalous Reign of Drama YouTube

This week, Twitch streamer Pokimane demonstrated how to expertly handle the internet drama industrial complex. from Feed: All Latest https://ift.tt/2DrzvRj via IFTTT

A Better Year for Trump’s Family Business (Last Year, That Is)

In 2019, the Trump Organization showed improvement over the previous year. But the company’s minimum reported revenues still fell short of the president’s first year in office, his new financial disclosure shows. from NYT > Top Stories https://ift.tt/3hSACsk via IFTTT

Federal Agents Don’t Need Army Fatigues

If you’re an officer of the law, dress like one. Leave the soldiering to soldiers. from NYT > Top Stories https://ift.tt/2XdVF0s via IFTTT

The Less Impossible Israeli-Palestinian Peace

The two-state idea is comatose but not dead. from NYT > Top Stories https://ift.tt/3hWk2aW via IFTTT

LDS Church tweaks policies on ‘moral issues’ ranging from birth control to surrogacy and medical marijuana

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has modified some of its policies regarding what it deems moral issues like fertility treatments, birth control, sterilization, surrogacy, sex education, medical marijuana and unwed parenting — mostly making them more flexible, compassionate and dependent on individual member judgments. These revisions announced Friday are reflected in an updated version of the church’s General Handbook, which spells out the faith’s mission and goals as well as its policies, practices and procedures to help guide members and leaders. In February, the handbook was overhauled , scaled back to a single volume, and posted online for everyone to read. There were additional adaptations in March, and now the church has revised 15 more chapters, including “significant changes to five chapters,” according to a news release. “To date, 16 of the book’s 38 chapters have been completely reworked, and minor changes have been made to several other chapters as part...

Jury rules Washington state liable in Susan Cox Powell boys’ deaths

Tacoma, Wash. • A jury has found that Washington state officials were partially responsible for the deaths of missing Utah woman Susan Cox Powell’s children at the hands of their father. The News Tribune newspaper in Tacoma  reported  that jurors on Friday awarded $98 million to the estates of Charlie and Braden Powell. Josh Powell was a suspect in the presumed killing of his wife in 2009 and living in Pierce County, Washington, in 2012, when he killed their two young sons Charlie and Braden and himself in an explosive house fire. The boys were visiting Josh Powell at his home on a supervised visit with a social worker when they were killed; Powell had locked the social worker outside. Susan Powell's parents, Judith and Charles Cox, alleged in a wrongful death lawsuit that Washington's Department of Social and Health Services did not do enough to keep their 7- and 5-year-old grandsons, Braden and Charlie, safe. The Coxes were in a custody fight for the boys when Josh Powe...

US election 2020: The war hero who could be Biden's running mate

Senator Tammy Duckworth is an Iraq war veteran and the first Thai-American woman elected to Congress. from BBC News - US & Canada https://ift.tt/339acyu via IFTTT

How the Alleged Twitter Hackers Got Caught

Bitcoin payments and IP addresses led investigators to two of the alleged perpetrators in just over two weeks. from Feed: All Latest https://ift.tt/2EFigwH via IFTTT

The Coronavirus Infected Hundreds at a Georgia Summer Camp

The camp took precautions but did not require campers to wear masks, the C.D.C. reported. Singing and cheering may have helped spread the virus. from NYT > Top Stories https://ift.tt/2Ew6iVY via IFTTT

Mahider Tadesse: Legislature’s cuts will hurt Rose Park neighborhood

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This summer, the Utah Legislature voted to cut funding for essential services just as Utah was reaching its highest recorded COVID-19 infection rate to date. According to the recent Tribune Article , some modest funding was able to be saved from the chopping block for education and human services, but the cuts will still result in the closure of at least three community health clinics and other essential services. And my neighborhood, Rose Park, will lose funding for the Jordan River Parkway, a vital resource for nearby nature that is critical right now, as we are holed up in our houses to weather the pandemic. Additional funding was cut for air quality monitoring, even as we know that new research links poor air quality with higher deaths due to coronavirus. Rose Park. The name Rose Park should call to mind a pristine field lined with delicate roses. One would imagine the air is sweet and crisp from the abundance of roses. But there’s nothing sweet about the air in Rose Park. I...

Robert Gehrke: Summit County sues to block Hideout’s ‘land grab’ near Park City

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Summit County is suing the town of Hideout to block an attempt by the hamlet on the banks of the Jordanelle Reservoir from reaching across the county line and annexing hundreds of acres for a developer aiming to build on the land just outside of Park City . In the complaint, filed Friday in 4th District Court, Summit County alleges that Hideout was deceitful and underhanded, plotting in secret meetings with the developer — Nate Brockbank and his partner, Josh Romney — to keep Summit County and the public in the dark until it was too late. (Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) New Tribune staff mugs. Robert Gehrke. (Francisco Kjolseth/) At the center of the dispute is an annexation bill that had been hammered out to address a situation in Weber County, but was amended without debate on the second-to-last night of the state legislative session to allow Hideout to annex land outside the area without the county’s approval. Complaint Petition for Declaratory Injunctive Relief (F...

Utah State women’s soccer player nominated for NCAA Woman of the Year

A Utah State University women’s soccer player has been nominated for the NCAA Woman of the Year award. Aggies defender Mealii Enos is one of two nominees from the Mountain West Conference. She graduated from USU in the spring with a 4.0 GPA, earning Scholar of the Year honors from the Emma Eccles Jones College of Education and Human Services. In four seasons with the Aggies, Enos started 74 of her 76 matches. She also tallied 25 shots and scored three goals. Enos was named to the conference’s All-Newcomer team in her freshman year, the same season she scored her first goal for Utah State. Colorado State’s Katie Olesak was the other player nominated by the Mountain West. The group of 605 nominees will be whittled down to nine finalists — three from each division of the NCAA — who will be announced in September. from The Salt Lake Tribune https://ift.tt/3hYxWts via IFTTT

Cooling of Earth caused by eruptions, not meteors

Ancient sediment found in a central Texas cave appears to solve the mystery of why the Earth cooled suddenly about 13,000 years ago. from Latest Science News -- ScienceDaily https://ift.tt/33hv1aW via IFTTT

MLB commissioner Rob Manfred warns season could shut down if players aren't more careful

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The St. Louis Cardinals had two players test positive, further altering MLB's schedule and casting doubt on the 60-game season.             from USATODAY - News Top Stories https://ift.tt/30fha2Z via IFTTT

Marines: 8 still missing, 1 confirmed dead after sea tank sinks off California coast

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The vehicle sunk and now sits several hundred feet below water, too deep for a diver to reach, Lt. Gen. Joseph L. Osterman said.             from USATODAY - News Top Stories https://ift.tt/33fqply via IFTTT

Here's what we know about Trump suggesting the idea of delaying the November election

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After raising the idea of delaying the November election, Trump later asserted the tweet was aimed at starting discussions around mail-in ballots.             from USATODAY - News Top Stories https://ift.tt/3geEnIl via IFTTT

FBI says errors discovered in more than two-dozen wiretap applications were mostly minor

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The agency said its review of 29 applications to obtain wiretaps on U.S. citizens had only minor, mostly typographical errors.             from USATODAY - News Top Stories https://ift.tt/3fenjAW via IFTTT