Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Rebecca Gordon | The Uses of a Well-Regulated Militia by an Unregulated President: Where Will the National Guard Be Sent in 2019?





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Rebecca Gordon | The Uses of a Well-Regulated Militia by an Unregulated President: Where Will the National Guard Be Sent in 2019? 
California National Guard troops in 2018 at the border with Mexico in the background. (photo: John Gibbins/Zuma Press)
Rebecca Gordon, TomDispatch
Gordon writes: "God help us all if Donald Trump figures out that he's actually the commander-in-chief of a force that, unlike the U.S. military, can legally be deployed for law enforcement purposes inside the United States itself."
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Pat Shanahan (left). (photo: AP)
Pat Shanahan (left). (photo: AP)

New Pentagon Chief With No Military Experience Makes Global Debut With Status Uncertain
Robert Burns, Associated Press
Burns writes: "At an extraordinary moment in Pentagon history, a former business executive with little political stature and without military experience is making his international debut as the acting U.S. secretary of defense."
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David Hogg and other Parkland activists are focusing on the quiet, unglamorous work of grassroots organizing. (photo: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images/March For Our Lives)
David Hogg and other Parkland activists are focusing on the quiet, unglamorous work of grassroots organizing. (photo: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images/March For Our Lives)

'We Can't Let Fear Consume Us': Why Parkland Activists Won't Give Up
Lois Beckett, Guardian UK
Beckett writes: "Today, David Hogg and the other students who first spoke out after the Parkland shooting are focusing on the quiet, unglamorous work of grassroots organizing."
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Protesters attend the Women's March in Paris in 2017. (photo: Getty Images)
Protesters attend the Women's March in Paris in 2017. (photo: Getty Images)

In the 'Year of the Woman,' Many Were Missing From International Reporting
Gabby Deutch, The Atlantic
Deutch writes: "Journalism around the world remains dominated by male reporters and their male sources. But that's starting to change."
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Governor Ralph Northam addresses the media at the Governor's Mansion in Richmond, Virginia. (photo: Julia Rendleman/WP)
Governor Ralph Northam addresses the media at the Governor's Mansion in Richmond, Virginia. (photo: Julia Rendleman/WP)

Could a Sexual Assault Scandal Save Ralph Northam?
Eric Lutz, Vanity Fair
Lutz writes: "Virginia's political maelstrom, once centered on Governor Ralph Northam, has shifted to Lieutenant Governor Justin Fairfax, who faces possible impeachment."
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A prisoner stands in line for his release during a ceremony handing over the Bagram prison to Afghan authorities, at the US airbase in Bagram, north of Kabul March 25, 2013. (photo: Mohammad Ismail/Reuters)
A prisoner stands in line for his release during a ceremony handing over the Bagram prison to Afghan authorities, at the US airbase in Bagram, north of Kabul March 25, 2013. (photo: Mohammad Ismail/Reuters)

What Happened to Prisoners at Bagram, 'Afghanistan's Guantanamo'?
Jenifer Fenton, Al Jazeera
Fenton writes: "Some were deported, others feel safer in Afghan jail than home and little is known about a US-accused Egyptian prisoner."
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Polar bears in Arctic Russia are losing their sea-ice habitat. (photo: All Canada Photos/Alamy)
Polar bears in Arctic Russia are losing their sea-ice habitat. (photo: All Canada Photos/Alamy)

What Polar Bears in a Russian Town Reveal About the Climate Crisis
Jonathan Watts, Guardian UK
Watts writes: "Polar bears prowling around a children's playground. Polar bears lumbering along the corridors of apartment blocks and offices. Polar bears descending on a sleepy Russian town in their dozens."
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