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28 Oct 20:43

This Video of an A**-Kicking, Gun-Toting Military Robot Terrified Twitter — And It Isn’t Even Real

by Caleb Howe

The coming robot apocalypse has everyone on edge these days, wondering how and when it will start and who will be the company that finally took things too far.

Over the weekend, that question seemed to be answered when a frankly terrifying video went viral, showing a nimble, armed robot firing at targets unerringly, even while being pushed, abused, and knocked down.

If you’re into social media robot doom, you’re familiar with the company Boston Dynamics, which has some impressive robots and has put out impressive videos featuring them. Some of those clips you’ll find familiar include Spot, the dog-like robot “designed for sensing, inspection, and remote operation,” and Atlas, the two-legged robot of hopping and climbing fame.

But the video that plunged Twitter into true fear didn’t feature Boston Dynamics, but rather Bosstown Dynamics, which parody name and incredible video are the genius work of Corridor Digital, a production studio based in Los Angeles.

The end-of-the-world bot wasn’t created from wires and plating and an evil computer chip from the future, but instead by CGI. It’s computer graphics. Amazing, convincing, scary good computer graphics.

Graphics that fooled a lot of folks.

When you watch the whole clip on YouTube rather than the parts people were Tweeting, it’s a bit more apparent what is going on. But it’s still completely fantastic.

It’s not Corridor’s first fake robot clip that went viral. Previous clips that rocketed around the internet included one where they simply abused a poor robot.

The Corridor Digital folks explain how it all went down in a separate video, which you can watch on their YouTube channel here.

Awesome.

28 Oct 20:42

Gov. John Bel Edwards accuses Eddie Rispone of ducking media, public during campaign

by Greg Hilburn, Monroe News Star

Democratic Governor John Bel Edwards and Republican businessman Eddie Rispone face off in the Nov. 16 runoff election.

      
28 Oct 20:42

Bomb threat at Joel Osteen's megachurch

by WND News Services

(KTSA) -- A Sunday afternoon service at Joel Osteen’s Lakewood Church was canceled due to a bomb threat.

Houston Police were called to the Church at around noon. The person who made the bomb threat also told the Church he would be waiting in the parking lot to shoot church members.

The building was evacuated and some local roads were shut down while a bomb squad searched the building.

Read the full story ›

The post Bomb threat at Joel Osteen's megachurch appeared first on WND.

28 Oct 20:42

Baghdadi given burial at sea, afforded religious rites: source

The United States has given the remains of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi a burial at sea and afforded him religious rites according to Islamic custom, after he was killed in a commando raid on Saturday, a U.S. official told Reuters.
28 Oct 20:42

America Needs a 21st Century Equivalent of the Ellis Island Open Border Immigration Policy

by Shikha Dalmia

Last week I debated National Review's Ramesh Ponnuru on immigration at American University. I argued that immigration has been very good economically for America and that we need to strive for a 21st century version of the open borders policy we had for the first 150 years of the country's existence. Ramesh, himself a son of Indian immigrants, made a case for a more selective, high-skilled immigration policy along the lines of Canada's.

Our remarks were followed by a vigorous Q&A with the assembled students and faculty.

Here is a video link of the entire evening. Below is a rough transcript of my speech.

What should U.S. immigration policy be? That is the question for this discussion.

In a country that understands itself as the land of immigrants, and where the Statue of Liberty stands tall at its gate, one would think that the answer to this question would not be difficult: a policy of a wide and warm embrace of immigrants. In fact, it would seem odd that this is even an open question. But the interesting thing it seems is that in every century, there is one president who seem to get the answer "right"—or mostly right. And, spoiler alert, it's not Trump for our century.

In the 19th century, the president who stands out on this issue is Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln was a big proponent of maintaining America's open border immigration policy of the time—and opponent of the Know Nothing nativist movement. Even before he became president, in 1855, he wrote in a letter: "As a nation, we began by declaring that 'all men are created equal.' We now practically read it 'all men are created equal, except negroes.' When the Know-Nothings get control, it will read 'all men are created equal, except negroes, and foreigners, and Catholics.' When it comes to this I should prefer emigrating to some country where they make no pretence of loving liberty—to Russia, for instance, where despotism can be taken pure, and without the base alloy of hypocracy." After he became president, on the Fourth of July, 1864, Lincoln singed into law a bill titled An Act to Encourage Immigration.

How quaint that sounds in Trump's America where deportation squads are doubling down to round up peaceful and productive immigrants with long roots in the country in the name of interior enforcement. Or where Trump demanded a 40 percent cut in legal immigration as a condition for legalizing Dreamers. It is striking that a country that committed the original sin of slavery to forcibly bring foreign labor to America should now be going to such draconian lengths to throw voluntary foreign labor out of America.

In the 20th century, the president who came closest to getting the answer right was Ronald Reagan. Trump thinks he invented the "Make America Great Again" slogan. In fact, Reagan beat him to it. He ran on a "Let's Make America Great Again" campaign, except that he used the phrase to argue not for pulling up the drawbridge to promote an ethnonationalist state, as Trump is doing, but the opposite: He said we should throw open America's "golden gate" to immigrants because the immigrants, in his view, "brought with them courage and the values of family, work, and freedom." In other words, without immigrants America wouldn't have any golden gates to slam.

Which brings me to the economic case for immigration to America.

There is an overwhelming consensus among economists that immigration is a great blessing, a win-win for both immigrants and the host country. Every economist of every persuasion—Adam Smith, Keynes, Ludwig von Mises—believed that allowing labor to move wherever it is most productive would be a great boon for everyone. Curiously, the one prominent exception historically has been Karl Marx. He regarded England's decision to absorb the "surplus" Irishmen being driven out of their country during the Great Famine not as a benefit but a ploy by the English bourgeoisie to "force down wages and lower the material and moral position of the English working class." The popular, modern-day retrictionist canard that immigration from the Third World to rich countries is tantamount to "importing poverty" has its genesis in Marxist thought. So it's interesting that we find conservatives today channeling Marx.

The primary reason that people find this kind of thinking appealing is that the case for immigration is indeed counterintuitive. It is hard to see how in a world of finite resources, allowing more people into a country would enhance its prosperity instead of leading to overcrowding and congestion and unemployment. President Trump perfectly encapsulated this mentality when he declared that "our country is full." But if our country is full, should we also restrict childbirth like China did at the height of the population explosion fear? This is a Malthusian worldview that has been thoroughly refuted.

At the heart of this issue is the question: Are humans a liability who deplete resources or an asset who themselves are a resource—indeed, to use the parlance of the late, great environmental economist Julian Simon, the "ultimate resource"?

It is the ingenuity of human beings that turns fallow land bounteous, dirt into valuable metals, and sand into computer chips. There is no given or fixed set of natural resources out there, Simon pointed out. Useless materials become resources once human creativity finds a way to harnesses them. Oil was just a toxic black liquid in the ground till humans discovered that it could be burnt for light and power. The development of high-yield grains increased the productivity of land exponentially while human population grew only arithmetically—the exact opposite of what Malthus predicted.

The most important factor limiting a country's economic progress, then, isn't insufficient physical resources but insufficient human resources. Hence, contrary to Malthusian—or Trumpian—thinking, population increases through immigration are nothing to fret over when you have institutions able to harness human talent. Immigrants are not only mouths that need to be fed but also minds and hands that grow the economic pie. They certainly consume resources. But they produce far more than they consume over the long run when given an opportunity. To the extent that immigrants, whether high- or low-skilled, have jobs, it's because they produce more wealth or value for their employers than they consume in wages.

Imagine for a moment that there were foreign planes periodically airdropping free goods on American homes. Wouldn't it be colossally stupid to send missiles to shoot them down? Yet why is it not equally foolish to shoo away the real source of this wealth, namely, Mexicans whose sweat makes affordable housing possible for Americans and puts cheap goods in these houses? Or when it turns away Chinese computer engineers whose smarts virtually spin gold from sand?

In the modern world, we seem to think migration is something we've invented through plane travel and fast communication. Actually, large movements of people—even between settled civilizations, not just nomadic cultures—have always been part and parcel of human history. What's relatively new are the political barriers to mobility. And these have become tenacious. About 3 percent of the world's population lived outside its birth country in 1900. And 3 percent does so now. Not a deluge, not a tsunami, but a trickle, despite the canard of "mass immigration" that nativists and restrictionists have weaponized to launch their anti-immigration populist backlash around the world.

Refugee flows, as distinguished from economic migrants, are dominating our political consciousness right now. But these are episodic and brief, because they are the result of turmoil. The vast majority of migration is economic in nature, driven by the differential levels of productivity between developed and developing countries. The lower productivity of the latter means, for example, that Mexicans can earn twice more, Indians over 5 times more, Haitians 10 times more, and Nigerians 15 times more for the same work in the United States.

Trapping immigrants in low-productivity countries results in huge losses not just for them but for global productivity. How huge? The Center for Global Development's Michael Clemens has estimated that if everyone could take a job anywhere they wanted, our $75 trillion global world product would experience an instant boost of 50 to 150 percent annually. Using the lower number would mean adding $37 trillion of wealth to the world. Even if you discount Clemens by 50 percent, we are still talking of $17 trillion, or the size of U.S. economy, added to the world every year, which would end global poverty while enriching First World natives.

Even the meager immigration the U.S. has allowed has made this country immensely richer. Reasonable estimates suggest that the total annual contribution of foreign-born workers to the U.S. economy adds up to roughly $2 trillion, or about 10 percent of annual GDP. Optimistic ones put that number higher. And even an immigration pessimist like Harvard University's George Borjas puts it at $1.6 trillion.

Not too many people outside hardcore nativist circles believe that high-skilled foreigners are anything but an unmitigated economic blessing. Even Ramesh and his colleague Reihan Salam accept that. According to one estimate, 50 percent of productivity growth in the United States between 1950 to 1993 could be attributed to the growth in the number of foreign scientists and engineers. Between 2000 and 2017, immigrants won nearly 40 percent of the American Nobel Prizes. An Indian-American economist won the Nobel just last week. Highly educated immigrants obtain patents at double the rate of highly-educated natives.

Immigrants and their children were responsible for founding 46 percent of all the Fortune 500 companies in America in 2017. A quarter of all startups have been started by immigrants. Fifty-five percent of $1 billion–worth startups had an immigrant founder. Apple was founded by the son of Syrian refugees. It is hardly an exaggeration to suggest that if America's economy has become the innovative hub of the world, dominating virtually every industry in the 21st Century from IT to Media/Entertainment, it is because of immigration.

But does all this success by high-skilled immigrants steal jobs and wealth from native-born Americans? No! The rise in GDP due to immigration has boosted native earnings. What about employment? Do high-skilled workers take away native jobs? No again. One additional young, high-skilled immigrant worker creates 3.1 jobs for U.S.–born workers. And because foreign high-skilled workers also earn a high income, they pay far more in taxes than they consume in welfare.

The real immigration controversy is over low-skilled workers. The fear with respect to them is that they don't create jobs for natives—they compete with them and lower their wages and drain social services.

But there is very little support for these fears in the economics literature.

There are three reasons that low-skilled foreigners don't, on the whole, depress native wages:

1. The vast majority of Americans are not competitors of low-skilled immigrants but their customers. And the real wages of these customers are increased because the prices of goods and services go down, allowing them to buy more with the same income, which is tantamount to getting a raise without doing anything extra. Also, these low-skilled workers boost the productivity of high-skilled natives by freeing them for tasks that generate higher returns, monetary or psychic. Lawyers can spend more time on billable hours rather than ironing if they can take their shirts to the affordable corner Korean drycleaner. Or spend more time on bedtime reading for their kids if they can get Chinese takeout. In fact, even Reihan in his book panning low-skilled immigration admits that these immigrants have allowed him to enjoy the lifestyle of a Rockefeller in New York by putting affordable dog walking, housekeeping, nannying, cleaning, cooking, and transportation services at his beck and call.

2. More low-skilled immigration doesn't mean fewer jobs for the native-born, as restrictionists claim, because jobs are not a zero-sum game. To the extent that the foreign-born offer cheaper labor, they allow more businesses to form. And more businesses means more jobs for Americans.

Restrictionists often argue that with less immigration, the labor market would tighten—compelling American businesses to pay native workers more. That may happen in some cases. But what will also happen is that businesses will be compelled to charge higher prices, thus shrinking demand. Some businesses will go broke or shrink or never get off the ground in the first place, thus diminishing jobs for natives.

3. Immigrant workers are complements of native workers, not their substitutes, at both the high-skilled and low-skilled level. If you look at the distribution of immigrants in the economy, it resembles an hourglass with foreigners occupying the higher-rung of jobs in STEM fields where Americans are available—or lower-rung jobs where Americans are unwilling. Americans are concentrated in the mid-skilled service jobs.

In sum, economists who have examined the issue, even Borjas, have found a positive impact on the wages of every cohort of natives whether high school grads or college grads. The only negative impact that anyone has reported is Borjas on the wages of native high-school dropouts, a vanishing subset of the population. But other economists have reported a positive impact even on that cohort. So even if you accept Borjas' negative assessment, well over 90 percent of American workers experience wage gains, not losses, due to low-skilled immigration.

The economic arguments against shutting America's door to low-skilled immigrants are exceedingly weak. But what about the fiscal argument that they strain the welfare state because they consume more in social services than they pay in taxes?

Even that's kind of weak. For starters, contrary to the right-wing stereotype of Hispanics being welfare queens, the fact is that the rate of welfare use among low-skilled immigrants, even their American-born children who are entitled to all the benefits, is lower than it is for natives in the same socioeconomic bracket. As is the value of benefits they receive.

But the big point is that if you look at the social spending in this country, a small portion of it goes toward means-tested benefits for the poor: about $800 billion. About twice that amount, or $1.5 trillion, is spent on the old in the form of Social Security and Medicare. And over $1 trillion is spent on school and college of the young.

But the vast majority of low-skilled immigrants come in their twenties—just after another society has borne the great cost of educating them and before they become entitled to old-age benefits. This means that we get the benefit from their most productive years, just when they start working and paying taxes. So we get a generational windfall. We would have to spend much, much more as a country if we relied entirely on childbirth by natives to maintain our population levels and labor force.

Given these huge economic upsides of immigration to the immigrants, America, and the world, what should U.S. immigration policy be?

In an ideal world, America would implement the 21st century equivalent of the Ellis Island days prior to 1924, when Congress passed the Johnson-Reed Act and made restrictionism rather than open borders America's default policy. That act limited the number of immigrants allowed entry into the United States through a national origins quota system that was designed to keep out Asians and Eastern Europeans. Prior to that foreigners (with some notable exceptions, like the Chinese) could more or less show up by at America's ports, where they were instantly handed papers if they were able-bodied and not "idiots, lunatics, convicts" or suffering from some contagious disease. And right next to the immigration booth when they walked off the ship were companies waiting to hand them employment papers and put them to work.

The beauty of that system was that our immigration policy wasn't in the hands of bureaucrats in the Swamp trying to centrally plan the labor market for the entire country. Rather, employers and the country's residents were calling the shots. Their needs decided how many and what kind of immigrants came to America—not the arbitrary whims of bureaucrats. The government played a legitimate role in keeping out foreigners who posed a genuine security or public health threat. But beyond that, it did not come between willing employers and willing workers. It didn't matter whether the immigrants were coming to work in farms, factories, or hospitals.

That is a far cry from how our system currently works. The best way to describe our current system is that it effectively imposes a blanket ban on immigration which it then arbitrarily relaxes based on predefined bureaucratic categories or some political whim of the moment—whether it is encouraging family reunification or enhancing ethnic diversity or helping some industry that central planners deem important. For 30 years, until Trump came along, central planners had been looking relatively kindly toward foreign techies and made 85,000 H-1B guest worker visas available to them annually. (The demand is twice or three times as much.) Trump is in the process of gutting even this meager program.

But one positive thing about H-1Bs visas is that they are dual-intent visas that allow their holders not only to work here but to apply for permanent residency or green cards. The H-1B equivalents for agricultural and seasonal low-skilled workers don't allow that. They expire, and the immigrants are required to go home. They are also tangled up in red tape and aren't very usable. This is the great source of our problem with undocumented workers. Restrictionists say these people should obey the rule of law and wait in line for their turn. But there is no line for them to wait in, and the rule of law is a sham.

A 21st century equivalent of Ellis Island is a political impossibility in my lifetime. The next best thing would be to try and get our immigration bureaucracy to approximate that model. Get rid of the high-skilled and low-skilled category or at least raise the quotas in these categories and deregulate them to make them more usable. Make all of them dual-intent, not just H-1Bs so that everyone has an option of staying. To placate concerns of native workers, perhaps charge a hefty fee to issue these visas. Some Central American migrants are paying $10,000 to $20,000 to coyotes to sneak them into the country illegally. Some of that could be captured through fees to offset any fiscal impact or create a compensation fund for the natives affected.

But the single best thing that we could do would be to let states write their own immigration programs and hand out visas based on the needs of their own industry and economy. In effect, create their own guest worker programs. Uncle Sam can continue to control the grant of citizenship. Canada is already doing this through its Provincial Nominee Program. This is the real Canadian model we ought to follow, not Ontario's industrial policy point system that Ramesh, I believe, favors.

If we stay on our current course, not only will we hurt immigrants, but we will cripple our economy and, as this president is showing, erode our humanity.

28 Oct 20:41

Dave Chappelle Defends Second Amendment During Awards Ceremony

by Adan Salazar
"The First Amendment is first for a reason. Second Amendment is just in case the First one doesn't work out."
28 Oct 20:41

Video: #WalkAway Founder Calls CNN’s April Ryan A Liar To Her Face

by Kelen McBreen
Ryan fled after being called out at Politicon.
28 Oct 20:41

Facebook Flags A Doctored Video Of Sen Lindsey Graham Praising Democrats’ Green New Deal

by Chris White
A deliberate manipulation
28 Oct 20:40

Criminal Justice Forum Removes Sponsor after Dem Candidates Criticize Sponsor for Giving Trump an Award 

by Spencer Irvine

Over the weekend, multiple Democratic Party presidential hopefuls announced they would boycott a criminal justice forum after one of its sponsors gave a criminal justice award to President Donald Trump. The 20/20 Bipartisan Justice Center was a main sponsor and host of the forum at Benedict College in South Carolina, but the center gave Trump […]

The post Criminal Justice Forum Removes Sponsor after Dem Candidates Criticize Sponsor for Giving Trump an Award  appeared first on Accuracy in Media.

28 Oct 20:40

Impeachment Probe: Ex-Trump Adviser Won’t Testify Until Judge Rules

by Edwin Mora
U.S. President Donald Trump's former Deputy National Security Advisor Charles Kupperman defied a subpoena issued by House Democrats compelling him to testify Monday in the ongoing impeachment probe.
28 Oct 20:40

Former U.S. Senator Kay Hagan Dead at 66

by Breitbart News
Kay Hagan, a former bank executive who rose from a budget writer in the North Carolina Legislature to a seat in the U.S. Senate, died Monday following a prolonged illness. She was 66.
28 Oct 20:39

Justice Department to allow body cameras on joint task forces

by jcoleman@thehill.com (Justine Coleman)
The Justice Department will permit local police officers to wear body cameras during joint task force operations with federal agents in a pilot program, the department announced Monday.The pilot program will allow officers participating on federal...
28 Oct 20:39

Amazon could challenge loss of $10 billion Pentagon cloud deal as early as next week

If Amazon.com decides to fight the Pentagon's decision to award a highly contested $10 billion cloud computing contract to Microsoft, it could act as early as next week.
28 Oct 20:39

Colorado fossil site shows how mammals thrived after the dinosaurs were wiped out

Hundreds of well-preserved mammal fossils found inside a Colorado rock deposit have offered scientists an unprecedented look at what life was like during the first 1 million years after the extinction of the dinos.
28 Oct 20:38

‘Wow, You Really Have Trump Derangement Syndrome’: Rep. Andy Biggs Reacts to Trump Being Booed By World Series Crowd 

by Stephanie Hamill
He standing next to the president
28 Oct 20:38

White House alerted in May of Ukraine's concerns with Giuliani: report

by Justine Coleman
The White House was alerted by at least mid-May that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had concerns about President Trump's personal attorney Rudy Giuliani and his pressure campaign, NBC News ...
28 Oct 20:38

Sinkhole swallows half of Pittsburgh city bus during rush hour

The front of the bus tilted up in the area, while back sunk into the sinkhole.
28 Oct 20:37

Does the Demise of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and his Caliphate Vindicate 2014 Rand Paul?

by Matt Welch

In September 2014, in the wake of the beheading of two American journalists by the Islamic State, the usually intervention-skeptical Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.), then preparing a run for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination, came out in favor declaring war to "destroy ISIS militarily." This was, to put it mildly, controversial among libertarians, particularly though not only those who are fans of his famously anti-interventionist father. More hawkish libertarians, meanwhile, were still going on about Paul's allegedly "fatal pacifism." (Reason's interview with the senator at the time is at this link.)

Many have argued that Paul's tiptoeing through the political minefield created by the alarming rise of ISIS was central to his candidacy's failure to launch, thus clearing the way for another, albeit far less consistent, intervention skeptic to eventually win the nomination in an otherwise typically hawkish GOP field. But now that the U.S. has, well, destroyed ISIS military (or come as close as you can) while also refraining from launching big new interventions in Syria or elsewhere, is this at least a partial vindication for a thoroughly unloved Rand Paul straddle?

So begins today's Reason Roundtable podcast, featuring Nick Gillespie, Peter Suderman, Matt Welch, and Katherine Mangu-Ward. The gang also argues about impeachment, the deficit, bad metaphors, and the new Yeezy. The usual, in other words.

Audio production by Ian Keyser and Regan Taylor.

Music credit: "March to Victory" by Silent Partner

Relevant links from the show:

"Trump Makes Baghdadi Death About Humiliation, not Human Rights," by Elizabeth Nolan Brown

"Rand Paul Wants to 'Destroy' ISIS Yet 'Stay the Heck Out of Their Civil War,'" by Jacob Sullum

"Rand Paul: Conservative Realist?" by Matt Welch

"The Case for Foreign-Policy 'Realism,'" by Rand Paul

"In Search of Libertarian Realism," by Matt Welch, Sheldon Richman, Christopher Preble, William Ruger, and Fernando Tesón

"When House Republicans Act Like Campus Leftists," by Elizabeth Nolan Brown

"Is William Taylor the John Dean of Ukrainegate?" by David Post

"Trump's Cronies Meddling in Ukraine Undermined U.S. Goals, Says Ambassador Taylor," by Elizabeth Nolan Brown

"Federal Deficit Hit $984 Billion Last Year—a Nearly 50 Percent Increase Since Trump Took Office," by Eric Boehm

"The Mind of Mike Judge," by Jesse Walker

"Kanye West Is Misunderstood," by Brian Doherty

28 Oct 20:37

Man accused of killing 5 Maryland newspaper employees admits to crimes, reports say - Fox News

28 Oct 20:37

Microsoft says Russia-linked hackers target sports organizations

Microsoft Corp said it has tracked "significant" cyberattacks coming from a group it calls "Strontium" or "Fancy Bear", targeting anti-doping authorities and global sporting organizations.
28 Oct 20:37

Facebook’s new political-ad policy already showing cracks, loopholes

by Kate Cox
A Facebook logo and

Enlarge / Thumbs down. (credit: Getty Images | Ted Soqui )

If you create a system, someone will try to game it—that's true of everything from Candyland to the tax code. And so we should not be terribly surprised that Facebook—which is desperately trying to create some kind of coherent system for political advertising and speech as the United States careens headlong into the 2020 election season—already has players pushing to exploit loopholes in its policy.

Facebook confirmed earlier this month that while it attempts to fact-check certain kinds of posts and articles, posts by politicians are exempt from review on that basis, as are ads posted by campaigns. But while the social media giant doesn't care if politicians lie outright in their ads, the company does have some standards: nob—including politicians—is allowed to post ads that intentionally try to suppress voter turnout.

So when The Washington Post found a targeted ad campaign on Facebook seemingly designed to mislead voters, the paper had questions.

Read 12 remaining paragraphs | Comments

28 Oct 20:37

Eagles fly to Iran, rack up huge roaming charges

by Timothy B. Lee
A bird of prey flies across a blurred landscape.

Enlarge (credit: Joe McDonald / Getty)

A group of Russian scientists was hit by crippling roaming charges after some of the eagles the researchers were studying flew to countries with high roaming charges, including Iran, Turkmenistan, and Pakistan. The birds were outfitted with electronic devices that tracked their locations and sent back status updates a few times a day.

The scientists have been tracking eagle migration patterns since 2015. This year, the scientists were tracking 13 endangered steppe eagles who spend summers in northern latitudes in Russia and Kazakhstan. In the fall, the birds fly south, passing through countries like Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.

The BBC reports that one eagle, named Min, was particularly expensive for the scientists. He spent his summer in Kazakhstan out of range of cell phone towers. During this period, his tracking device queued up hundreds of messages to send later.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

28 Oct 20:36

Music fan kicked out of concert for refusing to say 'F*** Donald Trump'

by Joe Kovacs

Rapper YG asks one his concertgoers to say "F*** Donald Trump" at a concert in San Antonio, Texas on Sunday Oct. 27, 2019 (YouTube video screenshot)

The White House is blasting the rapper YG for kicking one of his own fans out his concert when the man refused to say "F*** Donald Trump."

"Another example of the tolerant left," White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham told Fox News on Monday.

YG, whose real name is Keenon Daequan Ray Jackson, called the young man onto the stage Sunday at the Mala Luna Music Festival in San Antonio, Texas.

As the pair shook hands, the rapper stated:

"I don't know if I want to shake your hand yet."

"Listen, I spotted you out in the crowd. I asked you if you f*** with Donald Trump. You said you don’t know. So, since you don’t know, I need you to make up your mind tonight ... Because I know your mama, your daddy, your grandmama, your grandfather is watching, I want you to state your name and go 'F*** Donald Trump.'"

When the young man nodded his head no, the rapper instantly had him booted from the event.

"Get his a** out of here! Get him off the stage!" YG exclaimed. "He a Donald Trump supporter, get his a** out of here!"

Watch the event unfold. (WARNING: Video contains graphic language)

Richard Moorhead at BigLeaguePolitics noted, "It's ultimately not surprising that YG chose to shame one of his own fans for being a Trump supporter, considering he has a long track record of anti-Trump commentary in his music. But his act shows the left is strongly committed to waging cultural war against those who don’t share their political and social views.

"Eventually, should the left’s intolerance begin to wear on their conservative neighbors, it’s possible liberals will be kicked out of country music or other musical venues because they don’t support Trump. Such an arrangement is inherently damaging to American national life, in that it creates a segregated culture around political lines."

Those who have seen the video online have reactions mostly favoring the young fan and not the rapper, including:

  • "I bet this kid gets invited to the White House soon. That is so great to see a young person not being a follower and doing what people tell him to say. Props right there."
  • "I would love to be a lawyer for this kid."
  • "YG best hope this was a PR stunt to stir up controversy & he paid that young man to do this. 'Cause if not, he's gonna get hit with a civil suit so fast it's gonna make those fake gold teeth of his spin out of his ugly azzed face."
  • "This 'gangster' is so sensitive, he cant even handle someone disagreeing with him. I guess the rap game has changed. Subservient to everything Democrats say. New plantation anyone?"
  • "Should've gone to a Kanye West concert."

Learn astonishing Bible truth on a higher level than ever before with the Holy Spirit-filled books by Joe Kovacs

Follow Joe on Twitter @JoeKovacsNews

wnd-donation-graphic-2-2019

The post Music fan kicked out of concert for refusing to say 'F*** Donald Trump' appeared first on WND.

28 Oct 20:36

Robert Evans, ‘The Godfather’ Producer, Dead At 89

by Lauryn Overhultz
RIP
28 Oct 20:36

‘GREAT JOB’ — President Trump Declassifies Photo Of Dog Involved In Killing ISIS Leader

by Justin Caruso
Good boy!
26 Oct 16:02

FBI Entrapped Flynn With Manipulated Evidence As Clapper Allegedly Issued 'Kill Shot' Order: Court Docs

by Tyler Durden
FBI Entrapped Flynn With Manipulated Evidence As Clapper Allegedly Issued 'Kill Shot' Order: Court Docs

A bombshell court filing from Michael Flynn's new legal team alleges that FBI agents altered a '302' form - the official record of the former national security adviser's interview - that resulted in the DOJ charging him with lying to investigators.

Early last week Flynn attorney Sidney Powell filed a sealed reply to federal prosecutors' claims that they have satisfied their requirements for turning over evidence in the case. A minimally redacted copy of the reply brief was made public late last week, revealing the plot to destroy Flynn, as reported by The Federalist's Margot Cleveland.

According to the 37-page motion, a team of "high-ranking FBI officials orchestrated an ambush-interview of the new president’s National Security Advisor, not for the purpose of discovering any evidence of criminal activity—they already had tapes of all the relevant conversations about which they questioned Mr. Flynn—but for the purpose of trapping him into making statements they could allege as false."

At the heart of the matter is the 302 form 'documenting' an FBI interview in which Flynn was asked about his conversations with former Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. Powell alleges that FBI lawyer Lisa Page edited her lover Peter Strzok's account of the interview - texting him, "I made your edits."

The edits explained via The Federalist:

“On February 10, 2017, the news broke—attributed to ‘senior intelligence officials’—that Mr. Flynn had discussed sanctions with Ambassador Kislyak, contrary to what Vice President Pence had said on television previously.” Following this leak, “overnight,” Flynn’s 302 was changed—and substantively so. “Those changes added an unequivocal statement that ‘FLYNN stated he did not’—in response to whether Mr. Flynn had asked Kislyak to vote in a certain manner or slow down the UN vote.”

This is a deceptive manipulation” Powell highlighted, “because, as the notes of the agents show, Mr. Flynn was not even sure he had spoken to Russia/Kislyak on this issue. He had talked to dozens of countries.” The overnight changes to the 302 also included the addition of a line, indicating Flynn had been question on whether “KISLYAK described any Russian response to a request by FLYNN.”

But the agent’s notes do not include that question or answer, Powell stressed, yet it was later made into the criminal offense charges against Flynn. And “the draft also shows that the agents moved a sentence to make it seem to be an answer to a question it was not,” Powell added.

Here's Powell describing how they know the 302 form was altered:

Notably, Lisa Page lied to the DOJ, saying that she didn't recall whether she took part in editing Flynn's 302 form.

Laying the groundwork

Leading up to the interview with Flynn, the text messages reveal that the FBI wanted to capitalize on news of the 'salacious and unverified' Steele dossier - and whether they "can use it as a pretext to go interview some people," Strzok texted Page.

Then, quoting from a sealed statement by Strzok, Powell reveals that over next two weeks, there were “many meetings” between Strzok and [FBI Deputy Director Andrew] McCabe to discuss “whether to interview [] National Security Advisor Michael Flynn and if so, what interview strategies to use.” And “on January 23, the day before the interview, the upper echelon of the FBI met to orchestrate it all. Deputy Director McCabe, General Counsel James Baker, Lisa Page, Strzok, David Bowdich, Trish Anderson, and Jen Boone strategized to talk with Mr. Flynn in such a way as to keep from alerting him from understanding that he was being interviewed in a criminal investigation of which he was the target.”

Next came “Comey’s direction to ‘screw it’ in contravention of longstanding DOJ protocols,” leading McCabe to personally call Flynn to schedule the interview. Yet none of Comey’s notes on the decision to interview Flynn were turned over to defense. Even Obama-holdover “Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates candidly opined that the interview ‘was problematic’ and ‘it was not always clear what the FBI was doing to investigate Flynn,” Powell stressed. Yet again, the prosecution did not turn over Yates’ notes, but only “disclosed a seven-line summary of Ms. Yates statement six months after Mr. Flynn’s plea.” -The Federalist

'Kill Shot'

Another startling claim in Powell's filing references a purported conversation between former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and Washington Post reporter David Ignatius, which claims Clapper told the reporter "words to the effect of 'take the kill shot on Flynn,' after Ignatius reportedly obtained the transcript of Flynn's phone calls.

Clapper's spokesman told Fox News that he "absolutely did not say those words to David Ignatius," adding "It's absolutely false" and "absurd."

Powell claims that Ignatius was given the Flynn-Kislyak call transcripts by a Pentagon official who was also Stefan Halper's "handler." Halper - who was paid over $1 million by the Obama administration - was one of many spies the FBI sent to infiltrate the Trump campaign.

Halper, in 2016, contacted several members of the Trump campaign including former foreign policy adviser George Papadopoulos and former aides Carter Page and Sam Clovis.

“The evidence the defense requests will eviscerate any factual basis for the plea and reveal the conduct so outrageous—if there is not enough already—to mandate dismissal of this prosecution for egregious government misconduct,” Powell wrote. -Fox News

Lastly, Powell's filing also notes that US District Judge Rudolph Contreras, who recused himself after accepting Flynn's guilty plea, had a personal relationship with Peter Strzok, according to text messages.

"The government knew that well in advance of Mr. Flynn’s plea that Judge Contreras was a friend of Peter Strzok and his recusal was even discussed in an exchange of multiple texts," writes Powell, referencing Strzok-Page texts discussing Strzok and Contreras speaking "in detail" about anything "meaningful enough to warrant recusal."

"The government knew that well in advance of Mr. Flynn’s plea that Judge Contreras was a friend of Peter Strzok and his recusal was even discussed in an exchange of multiple texts."

Meanwhile, Clapper - who is now under criminal investigation - is getting nervous...

Perhaps Obama should be too?

Tyler Durden Sat, 10/26/2019 - 11:30
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26 Oct 16:01

Quantum computing’s ‘Hello World’ moment - TechCrunch

26 Oct 16:01

Town officials freak out over 12-inch cross in yard

by WND Staff

The banning of a 12-inch white cross on a resident's lawn by the Florida retirement community The Villages could turn into a federal case for alleged violations of the federal Fair Housing Act, Housing and Urban Development rules and the U.S. Constitution.

The American Center for Law and Justice, ACLJ, is representing Wayne and Bonnie Anderson, who were warned to remove the cross in response to a complaint or face "serious consequences, including exorbitant fines, a possible lawsuit, and even the imposition of a lien on their property," ACLJ said.

ACLJ argued the Andersons are one of many residents in The Villages who have decorations in their yard.

"While The Villages' Deed Restrictions Standards state that lawn ornaments are prohibited, this rule is not enforced against numerous properties all across The Villages – except for the Andersons'. This rule is being used against the Andersons arbitrarily and selectively," ACLJ said.

ACLJ noted in a letter to Candice Dennis at The Villages Community Standards Department that the federal Fair Housing Act makes it unlawful "to discriminate against any persons in the terms, conditions, or privileges of sale or rental of a dwelling, or in the provision of services or facilities in connection therewith, because of ... religion."

Similarly, ACLJ said, Housing and Urban Development regulations state, "It shall be unlawful, because of … religion … to impose different terms, conditions or privileges relating to the sale or rental of a dwelling or to deny or limit services or facilities in connection with the sale or rental of a dwelling."

ACLJ said the district is "allowing violation of its deed restrictions to go unaddressed, unless and until a third party individual – who may remain anonymous – files a complaint."

"The complaint could be made based for a discriminatory purpose, yet the district will set the 'deed compliance procedure into motion.' The district's subjective application of its regulations and guidelines is, in fact, subject to scrutiny under federal – specifically the FHA. The district's arbitrary application of the Deed Restriction Standards to prohibit the Andersons from displaying a small cross and a parrot in their yard while permitting numerous other lawn ornaments across The Villages constitutes a violation of the FHA – especially where, as here, selective enforcement can reasonably be interpreted as hostility toward religion."

The district, according to the letter, had explained that it only forced homeowners to comply when there was a complaint, but that standard wasn't good enough, ACLJ said.

"This blatantly arbitrary and selective enforcement is discriminatory against the homeowner's religious speech and expression and is a violation of the protections afforded to them by the United States Constitution."

ACLJ noted the fines already have reached $700.

It asks for confirmation that the district will "cease all religious discrimination and arbitrary enforcement of its deed restriction standards against the Andersons and that every effort will be made to avoid another instance of religious discrimination."

wnd-donation-graphic-2-2019

The post Town officials freak out over 12-inch cross in yard appeared first on WND.

26 Oct 16:01

Nats owner says Trump has 'every right' to come to World Series game Sunday

by Tal Axelrod
Nationals principal owner Mark Lerner said President Trump has "every right" to attend Sunday's World Series game in Washington to watch the Nationals face off against the Astros."Well, he has every right to come,"...
22 Oct 05:08

Canada's Trudeau to remain in power but with minority government

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will remain in power but with a minority government that will require the support of a smaller left-leaning party after a hard-fought election in which he was dogged by scandals.