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Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Showing posts with label TANZANIA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TANZANIA. Show all posts

Sunday, December 29, 2019

RSN: John Kiriakou | The Report Is "Don't Miss" Television



Reader Supported News
29 December 19

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RSN: John Kiriakou | The Report Is "Don't Miss" Television
From 'The Report.' (image: Amazon)
John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News

ALSO SEE: The Report


Kiriakou writes: "I finally took the time on Christmas Day to sit and watch Amazon's new film The Report, written and directed by Scott Z. Burns, on Senate Intelligence Committee investigator Daniel Jones and his investigation of the CIA's torture program. In the interest of transparency, I was a script consultant on the film, although I never saw the final script and I had no idea how it would turn out until I saw it on television like everybody else."

The Report is “don’t miss” television. I experienced the events depicted in it first-hand in the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center (CTC) and as the CIA’s chief of counterterrorist operations in Pakistan. In mid-2002 I became the daily briefer for Jim Pavitt, the CIA’s deputy director for operations. I worked directly under the notorious CTC director Jose Rodriguez and the equally notorious Gina Haspel. I knew these people well. Scott Burns captures them perfectly. You will come to realize only minutes into this film that our intelligence services and the White House are run by sociopaths – people with no capacity for remorse or regret, people for whom human rights, civil rights, civil liberties, and the rule of law mean literally nothing. You will see, too, that the CIA will crush anyone it deems a threat to its own dominance of the government narrative.
In the end, The Report is a tale of cowardice. Certainly Dan Jones is a hero, both in the film and in real life. The guy singlehandedly took on the CIA and, regardless of what was good for his career or his personal life, dug deeper and deeper into the CIA’s crimes to the point that Obama’s CIA director, John Brennan, tried to have him arrested.
The cowardice, though, is on display everywhere else, from the CIA to the White House to the Justice Department to Capitol Hill. And it was not limited to the cartoon characters who made up the Bush administration. It extended deep into the Obama White House, with Chief of Staff Dennis McDonough reminding us repeatedly that Obama had sold himself to the American public as “the first post-partisan president.” What a joke. That narrative doesn’t play here. The cowardice is on display on Capitol Hill, where nearly every Republican senator on the Intelligence Committee voted against even investigating the torture program. Why? Just because.
Burns takes us methodically from the captures of Abu Zubaydah in March 2002 and Khalid Shaikh Muhammad in August 2002 to the creation of the torture program in the minds of unqualified contract psychologists James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen, reminding us that their PhD dissertations were not on issues surrounding torture, but on nutrition and family counseling respectively. (And he tells Feinstain in one scene that the CIA has paid them $80 million for their “services.”) Burns shows us how Justice Department attorneys John Yoo and Jay Bybee practically stood on their heads to justify and “legalize” a torture program that was unjustifiable and illegal. He shows us how US Attorney John Durham, now the great hope of liberals who think he’s going to prosecute John Brennan for his role in the “Russiagate” investigation, ignored Dan Jones’s repeated entreaties to share information, only to then close the case on CIA torture and say that it was not prosecutable.
Burns shows us the psychopathy of CIA officials like Rodriguez, Haspel, Pavitt, George Tenet, and ultimately John Brennan, the boogeyman in the film, even though he represented that post-partisan “progressive” president, all of whom continued to defend and promote the torture program even after it was conclusively proven to be a failure. Rodriguez’s cable to CIA field operatives, telling them to “stop putting objections (to torture) in writing,” shows him as the real monster in those early days. Haspel’s order to the CIA chief at the secret torture site to destroy videotaped evidence of the torture doesn’t make her look so good either.
None of this was new, however. The real revelation in the film was the fact that so many post-torture program officials and Democrats were co-conspirators in this whole mess. Former CIA director Michael Hayden, who headed the organization after the torture program had ended, went on the Sunday morning talk shows after the killing of Osama bin Laden along with former Attorney General Michael Mukasey, also a post-torture appointee, to perpetuate the lie that torture led the CIA to bin Laden’s location. That position had been conclusively proven false. But that false narrative was also endorsed by members of the Obama National Security Council, including John Brennan.
Another important data point that was “new” to most Americans was how the CIA cooperated with Hollywood film studios on movies such as Zero Dark Thirty and television series like “24” to continue to perpetuate the lie that torture worked and led to bin Laden. At one point in The Report, Senator Dianne Feinstein’s chief of staff tells Jones upon the release of Zero Dark Thirty, “The CIA just got the president re-elected.”
Even John Kerry, that self-proclaimed hero of peace and the left, comes out in opposition to Feinstein’s decision to release a heavily-redacted version of the Torture Report’s Executive Summary, saying that its release would cause the coalition against ISIS to collapse. Ridiculous. (I was John Kerry’s intelligence advisor and senior investigator on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee when he chaired it. The American people have no idea just how conservative he is.)
In the end, Jones gives us his bottom line when he says, “They said the Enhanced Interrogation Techniques saved lives. But all they did was make it impossible to prosecute.” He’s absolutely right.
When I moved from analysis to operations at the CIA in 1998, I was told very clearly, “The ultimate mission is to protect the Agency.” Every officer knew that if he got into trouble, he would be abandoned, at least bureaucratically. The Agency didn’t care about you. But, by God, you’d better care about the Agency. The same was true at the White House. “The mission is to protect the president.” The Report shows us why these are the most dangerous mission statements in the world.



John Kiriakou is a former CIA counterterrorism officer and a former senior investigator with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. John became the sixth whistleblower indicted by the Obama administration under the Espionage Act - a law designed to punish spies. He served 23 months in prison as a result of his attempts to oppose the Bush administration's torture program.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Police cordon at the house where the attack took place. (photo: Seth Harrison/AP)
Police cordon at the house where the attack took place. (photo: Seth Harrison/AP)

Hanukah Stabbings: Five Hurt in Monsey, New York State
Reuters and Associated Press
Excerpt: "An attacker has stabbed five people during Hanukah festivities at a rabbi's home in New York state."
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Striking Chicago public school teachers and their supporters rally in Union Park before marching through the streets on October 21, 2019 in Chicago, Illinois. (photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Striking Chicago public school teachers and their supporters rally in Union Park before marching through the streets on October 21, 2019 in Chicago, Illinois. (photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images)

The Year in Class Struggle
Joe Demanuelle-Hall and Dan DiMaggio, Jacobin
Excerpt: "The year 2018 could have been a tough act to follow. It's not every year that a grassroots movement of teachers captures the nation's attention."
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The GEO Group, a private company, operates the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) Adelanto processing Center in Adelanto, Ca. (photo: Jay Calderon/USA TODAY)
The GEO Group, a private company, operates the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) Adelanto processing Center in Adelanto, Ca. (photo: Jay Calderon/USA TODAY)

ICE Signs Long-Term Contracts Worth Billions for Private Detention Centers, Dodging New State Law
Rebecca Plevin, Palm Springs Desert Sun
Plevin writes: "U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has entered into long-term contracts worth billions of dollars with for-profit prison companies to operate four private immigration detention centers in California."
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Julie Berman, a Toronto trans rights activist, was murdered on Dec. 22, 2019. (photo: Globe and Mail)
Julie Berman, a Toronto trans rights activist, was murdered on Dec. 22, 2019. (photo: Globe and Mail)

Activist Who Raised Awareness About Transphobia Murdered in Toronto
Maan Alhmidi, The Globe and Mail
Alhmidi writes: "When Julie Berman came up to the open mic at the trans day of remembrance event on Nov. 20, 2017, she delivered a speech about transphobia in Toronto. She talked about a trans friend of hers that was murdered."
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Women at the 'The Footprints of Commander Ramona' venue in Chiapas, Mexico, Dec. 28, 2019. (photo: Twitter/@Milenio)
Women at the 'The Footprints of Commander Ramona' venue in Chiapas, Mexico, Dec. 28, 2019. (photo: Twitter/@Milenio)

Mexico: Zapatista Meeting of Women Who Fight Starts in Chiapas
teleSUR
Excerpt: "Around 3,200 women from all over the world are gathered in the mountains of Chiapas, Mexico, to participate in the "Second International Meeting of Women who Fight," which has been convened by the Indigenous political group Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN)."

The reunion convened by the Zapatista Army of National Liberation focuses on violence against women.

round 3,200 women from all over the world are gathered in the mountains of Chiapas, Mexico, to participate in the “Second International Meeting of Women who Fight,” which has been convened by the Indigenous political group Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN).
Women from countries such as Argentina, Germany, Peru, Spain, and the United States are gathered at “The Footprints of Commander Ramona” venue where about 200 women who are former guerrilla fighters entered the site dressed in their customary green jacket, armed with bows and batons.
The Zapatista spokesperson commander Amada thanked the visitors for responding to the short notice for the meeting, which focuses on violence against women across the world.​​​​​​​
"Nowadays, although they preach that there are many advances for women, the truth is that being a woman has never been so deadly before in the history of humankind," Amada said.
“They say that women are now taken into account, but they keep killing us. They say there are now more laws protecting women, but they keep killing us. They say that it is now very well seen to speak well of women's struggles, but they keep killing us,” she added.​​​​​​​




✊🏾💜 | 3.200 participantes en el II Encuentro Internacional de Mujeres que Luchan convocado por el Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional en el Caracol de Morelia, Chiapas.

📸: @lmguari



View image on TwitterView image on TwitterView image on TwitterView image on Twitter



"3,200 participants in the 2nd International Meeting of Women who Fight convened by the Zapatista Army of National Liberation in Caracol de Morelia, Chiapas."
In the meeting, some groups use different colored scarves to express their main ways of thinking or concerns.
Some women wear green scarfs to symbolize the right to free and safe abortion. There are also those wearing scarves, which stand for the fight against gender-based violence and femicide.
On this last issue, Commander Amanda sent her solidarity to the families and mothers victims of femicide.
“We want to send a special hug to the families and friends of the disappeared and murdered women. A hug that lets you know that you are not alone. With our mode and in our place, we accompany your demand for truth and justice,” she said​​​​​​​.
The name of the international meeting venue pays tribute to Ramona (1959-2006), who was one of seven female commanders of the EZLN and became an icon of dignity for Indigenous women.

Black rhinos typically live up to 43 years old in the wild. (photo: Ben McRae/Alamy)
Black rhinos typically live up to 43 years old in the wild. (photo: Ben McRae/Alamy)

'World's Oldest' Rhino Dies in Ngorongoro Sanctuary in Tanzania
Agence France-Presse
Excerpt: "A black rhino believed to be the oldest in the world has died in Tanzania at the age of 57, according to authorities in Ngorongoro where the animal was living."

The female rhino, named Fausta, died of what is believed to be natural causes on 27 December in a sanctuary, after living most of her life in the wild, the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority said in a statement on Saturday.
“Records show that Fausta lived longer than any rhino in the world and survived in the Ngorongoro, free-ranging, for more than 54 years” before she was moved to a sanctuary in 2016, said the statement.
“Fausta was first located in the Ngorongoro crater in 1965 by a scientist from the University of Dar Es Salaam, at the age of between three and four years. Her health began to deteriorate in 2016, when we were forced to put the animal in captivity, after several attacks from hyenas and severe wounds,” it added.
Sana, a female southern white rhino, aged 55, was considered the world’s oldest white rhino when she died in captivity at the Planète Sauvage zoological park in France, in 2017.
The Ngorongoro conservation area estimates the life expectancy of rhinos to be between 37 and 43 years in the wild, while they can live to older than 50 in captivity.

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Monday, September 23, 2019

Ayman Odeh | We Are Ending Netanyahu's Grip on Israel




Reader Supported News
23 September 19

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Without our contributions, Reader Supported News cannot persist and without independent, reader supported groups like RSN, big, corporate owned and sponsored news wins and that would be a big loss for "We The People".
This is what the founders of our country had in mind, not big media and misinformation giants like Fox News. I really hope that more and more RSN readers and the media consuming American public in general come to realize.
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Reader Supported News
22 September 19
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Ayman Odeh | We Are Ending Netanyahu's Grip on Israel
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (photo: EPA)
Ayman Odeh, The New York Times
Odeh writes: "The Arab Palestinian citizens of Israel have chosen to reject Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, his politics of fear and hate, the inequality and division he advanced for the past decade. Last summer, Mr. Netanyahu declared that Arab Palestinian citizens of Israel, who make up a fifth of the population, were to be second-class citizens, officially."
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Betsy DeVos. (photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Betsy DeVos. (photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images)
The Right's Latest Attack on Academic Freedom Might Actually Work
Mark Joesph Stern, Slate
Stern writes: "The Trump administration has threatened to withdraw federal funding from the Duke-UNC Consortium for Middle East Studies because it does not portray Christianity or Judaism in a sufficiently 'positive' light."
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Memorial signs posted near Sandy Hook Elementary School in Monroe, CT, following a 2012 shooting. (photo: Jessica Hill/AP)
Memorial signs posted near Sandy Hook Elementary School in Monroe, CT, following a 2012 shooting. (photo: Jessica Hill/AP)

Watch the Harrowing New 'Back to School' Shooting PSA From Sandy Hook Parents
Claire Schaffer, Rolling Stone
Schaffer writes: "Sandy Hook Promise, the foundation led by the parents of students killed in the 2012 school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, have released a PSA today that quickly went viral."





The clip is not the first PSA from Sandy Hook Promise to go viral. In 2016, the group’s “Evan” video, which demonstrated how the warning signs of someone planning a school shooting could hide in plain sight, amassed over 11 million views on YouTube. They’ve since released several similar videos over the past three years.
Since the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting, over 400 people have been shot in over 200 school shootings nationwide, according to a New York Times report, using data from the Gun Violence Archive. This past month, student activists and survivors from the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, unveiled an ambitious gun control and reform program for 2020.



Amber Guyger, right, arrives for jury selection in her murder trial in Dallas last week. Guyger was fired by the police department shortly after Jean's murder. (photo: Tom Fox/AP)
Amber Guyger, right, arrives for jury selection in her murder trial in Dallas last week. Guyger was fired by the police department shortly after Jean's murder. (photo: Tom Fox/AP)

Murder Trial to Begin of Ex-Officer Who Killed Unarmed Black Man in His Home
Tom Dart, Guardian UK
Dart writes: "Testimony is to begin on Monday in the trial of a former Dallas police officer who claims she killed an unarmed black man after entering his apartment by mistake."
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(photo: Eckehard Schulz/AP)
(photo: Eckehard Schulz/AP)

Will You Lose Your Job to a Robot?
The Week
Excerpt: "Over the next decade, automation and artificial intelligence could throw 54 million Americans out of work. Here's everything you need to know."
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Health workers assist at an Ebola treatment center in Goma, Congo, in August. (photo: Baz Ratner/Reuters)
Health workers assist at an Ebola treatment center in Goma, Congo, in August. (photo: Baz Ratner/Reuters)

WHO Accuses Tanzania of Withholding Information About Suspected Ebola Cases
Max Bearak, The Washington Post
Bearak writes: "The World Health Organization accused Tanzanian authorities of withholding information about multiple suspected Ebola cases in the country this month, potentially hampering the containment of the deadly virus."
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A weather reporter. (photo: Keithcarsonmet)
A weather reporter. (photo: Keithcarsonmet)

Local Weather Forecasters Have Become the Unsung Heroes of the Climate Crisis
Pam Radtke Russell, Guardian UK
Russell writes: "Over the past decade, a growing number of meteorologists and weathercasters have begun addressing the climate crisis either as part of their weather forecasts, or in separate, independent news reports to help their viewers understand what is happening and why it is important. And the reports are having an impact."
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Saturday, September 14, 2019

Bernie Sanders, Not Joe Biden, Sets the Democratic Party Line




Reader Supported News
14 September 19

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Reader Supported News
14 September 19
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Bernie Sanders, Not Joe Biden, Sets the Democratic Party Line
Bernie Sanders. (photo: Antonella Crescimbeni)
Justin Charity, The Ringer
Charity writes: "In his opening remarks at the third Democratic presidential primary debate, Joe Biden struck a lonesome defensive in his battle against 'Medicare for All.'"

EXCERPT: 

Castro then ridiculed Biden’s attempt to deflect questions from the Univision anchor, Jorge Ramos, about 3 million deportations—“the most ever in U.S. history,” Castro stressed—recorded under the Obama administration. “Every time something good about Barack Obama comes up, he says, ‘oh, I was there, I was there, I was there, that’s me, too,’ and then every time somebody questions part of the administration that we were both part of, he says, ‘well, that was the president,’” Castro said. “He wants to take credit for Obama’s work but not have to answer to any questions.”
Biden didn’t quite lose to Castro, whose remarks verged on arrogance and cruelty. But Castro’s pointed attacks on Biden’s record as vice president underscored a persistent riddle in these debates. Obama remains highly popular among Democratic voters, and Biden wastes little opportunity to tout that administration’s record.

Border Patrol agents check migrants' documents after they were apprehend crossing the border in El, Paso, Texas, June 8, 2019. (photo: Paul Ratje)
Border Patrol agents check migrants' documents after they were apprehend crossing the border in El, Paso, Texas, June 8, 2019. (photo: Paul Ratje)

An Asylum Officer Speaks Out Against the Trump Administration's "Supervillain" Attacks on Immigrants
Debbie Nathan, The Intercept
Nathan writes: "It has been a very bad week for defenders of political asylum in the United States."

EXCERPT: 

sylum officers at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, or USCIS, were reeling after John Lafferty, director of the asylum division, was replaced on Monday by Andrew Davidson, former deputy associate director for USCIS’s fraud detection and national security directorate. Then came the Supreme Court’s ruling Wednesday reinstating the Trump administration’s “third-country” rule, which effectively denies asylum to all Central American immigrants if they passed through another country on the way to the U.S. border with Mexico. It has been a very bad week for defenders of political asylum in the United States.
Lafferty had previously worked as a lawyer at Catholic Charities, an immigrant legal services nonprofit, and the asylum officers who worked under him at USCIS have generally had similar backgrounds. Many are highly educated attorneys who have worked in nonprofits assisting immigrants with asylum claims rather than trying to deport them. Lafferty’s ousting and replacement by a fraud investigator is just the latest development in the Trump administration’s assault on the asylum system, according to a USCIS asylum officer who contacted The Intercept. The asylum officer’s name is being withheld to protect against retaliation.
In recent months, Customs and Border Protection agents have been conducting asylum screening interviews in place of asylum and refugee officers from USCIS. These interviews have been taking place in detention centers in border states. Perhaps more ominously, they are also happening with immigrants trapped in Mexico by the so-called Migrant Protection Protocols, or MPP. Mexico is also where many immigrants will be dumped as the “third country” policy rolls out.


Americans face rapidly ballooning health-care costs and get pursued into financial ruin for the crime of getting sick. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Americans face rapidly ballooning health-care costs and get pursued into financial ruin for the crime of getting sick. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

How Greedy Hospitals Fleece the Poor
Libby Watson, The New Republic
Watson writes: "The episode was a good reminder of the dangers of Wonk Brain, which leads sufferers to fight viciously over questionable methodology and imprecise rhetoric while ignoring the bleeding obvious and the obvious bleeding."

EXCERPT:

Or read the newspaper, because lately, they are filled with tales of chicanery from those same hospitals. On Monday, a Kaiser Health News report detailed the University of Virginia hospital system’s heartless pursuit of poor patients who owe them money. The hospital has sued its patients 36,000 times over six years, for as little as $13.91, with devastating consequences. The hospital has garnished wages and put liens on houses, levying high interest on delinquent patients. It sued its own employees for unpaid bills around 100 times a year.
It’s not just happening at UVA, though they are particularly aggressive. Last week, The New York Times reported on Carlsbad Medical Center in New Mexico, which has sued many more of its patients for unpaid medical bills than nearby hospitals; even the county judge who hears the cases was sued. In June, ProPublica published a story on Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare Hospital in Memphis, which filed 8,300 lawsuits against patients in five years. 
These hospitals are outliers in their communities, pursuing cases more aggressively than other hospitals do; some don’t file lawsuits against patients at all. These particularly aggressive hospitals are only known about because reporters have highlighted their practices. How many more of the 6,210 American hospitals are suing their patients? And, in turn, how many Americans have been sued by their hospitals? We don’t know, but it’s at least thousands. 
We are, however, learning some of the stomach-churning details about these hospitals’ practices. The primary case documented in the UVA article involved Heather Waldron, who was sued over a $164,000 bill she received for emergency intestinal surgery. The article notes that figure is “more than twice what a commercial insurer would have paid for her care.” What relationship, then, does that charge have to what it actually cost UVA to provide Waldron’s care? We don’t know. The hospital probably doesn’t even know. It doesn’t have to tell anyone anything about how they came to this dollar amount in order to pursue her to the point where she has to sell her house and go on food stamps. 
Last year, The Wall Street Journal reported on the case of a Wisconsin hospital that had actually attempted to determine the real cost of a knee surgery at its facility, for which the list price was more than $50,000. It turned out the answer was $10,500. The hospital had set the price nearly five times higher “using a combination of educated guesswork and a canny assessment of market opportunity,” according to the Journal


A MUST READ! REPUBLICANS LEAD WITH FEAR, HATE AND MISINFORMATION! 

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. (photo: Getty Images)
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. (photo: Getty Images)



Fredreka Schouten, CNN
Schouten writes: "Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Thursday criticized a television ad from a new Republican-aligned political action committee that calls her 'ignorant' and sets fire to her picture."

EXCERPT: 

Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar, another member of the so-called Squad, on Friday called the ad "horrifying to watch" and said it should be pulled from the airwaves.
"When will the Republicans learn how to offer ideas and solutions without stroking fear and inciting violence?," she tweeted. "Enough is enough. They need to pull this garbage off the air and issue an apology to @AOC."

Huffman admitted to paying a Harvard graduate $15,000 to correct her daughter's answers on the SAT, securing her a 400-point boost on the college entrance exam. (photo: Getty Images)
Huffman admitted to paying a Harvard graduate $15,000 to correct her daughter's answers on the SAT, securing her a 400-point boost on the college entrance exam. (photo: Getty Images)

Felicity Huffman Gets Prison Time in College Admissions Scandal
Olivia Messer, The Daily Beast
Messer writes: "When Felicity Huffman finally received her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2012, she and husband William H. Macy were bookended by their grinning blonde daughters, Sophia and Georgia."
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Indian occupied Kashmir. (photo: Reuters)
Indian occupied Kashmir. (photo: Reuters)

"Kashmir Turned Into an Open-Air Prison"
Kumail Sayeed, Jacobin
Sayeed writes: "I arrived in Kashmir on Thursday, August 1, delighted to be home after eleven months away. I planned on celebrating Eid with family and friends, and going hiking, fishing, and boating."
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A lion. (photo: Sabi Sabi)
A lion. (photo: Sabi Sabi)

Trump Admin Grants First Lion Trophy Import Permit Since Listed as Threatened
Jordan Davidson, EcoWatch
Davidson writes: "A Florida man has been allowed to import a Tanzanian lion's skin, skull, claws and teeth, a first since the animal was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, according to US Fish and Wildlife Service records uncovered by the Center for Biological Diversity through the Freedom of Information Act."

EXCERPT: 

The documents show that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued a permit in May for hunter, Carl Atkinson, to bring home the lion trophy which was taken from a game preserve in July or August, according to Courthouse News. The hunter's attorney, John Jackson III, is a member of the Interior Department's own International Wildlife Conservation Council, which Ryan Zinke created as Secretary of the Interior to highlight the "economic benefits that result from US citizens traveling to foreign nations to engage in hunting," as CNN reported.
"This is tragic news for lion conservation, and it suggests that the Trump administration may soon open the floodgates to trophy imports from Tanzania," said Tanya Sanerib, international legal director at the Center for Biological Diversity, in a statement. "Tanzania is a lion stronghold, but it's been criticized by scientists for corruption and inadequate wildlife protections. Opening the U.S. market to these imports doesn't bode well for the lion kings of Tanzania."
Tanzania is thought to be home to 40 percent of Africa's lions, though exact populations are difficult to count. It has a history of mismanaging populations of lions, elephants and other threatened animals. By allowing hunters to bring their trophies back to the U.S. there are ripple effects. Hunters often seek out mature male lions, which make desirable trophies. Yet, killing one lion often leads to the death of many more. Since those mature male lions are usually pack leaders, a new pack leader will move in and assert dominance by killing the hunted lion's offspring, resulting in the loss of many lions, as the Center for Biological Diversity noted.