Tools
Change country:

Punish Democrats or Stop Trump? Arab Americans are agonizing over their votes

Emily Elconin / Bloomberg via Getty Images" data-portal-copyright="Emily Elconin / Bloomberg via Getty Images" data-has-syndication-rights="1" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/10/gettyimages-2166943399.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&crop=0,0,100,100" />
A demonstrator holds an “Abandon Harris” sign outside the Israeli Consulate during the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Illinois. | Emily Elconin / Bloomberg via Getty Images

Arab Americans are one voting bloc that’s used to being slighted by both major parties. In 1984, Walter Mondale, the Democratic candidate for president, returned donations made by Arab Americans; a campaign official at the time said it was the campaign’s policy to refuse contributions from that community. In 1988, Democratic candidate Michael Dukakis rejected an endorsement by an Arab American group. And in 2016, Donald Trump campaigned on banning Muslims from the country and claimed that Arabs in New Jersey cheered as the World Trade Center collapsed on 9/11. 

Now, Arab Americans feel deliberately ignored and disrespected yet again. The Biden administration’s unflinching political and financial support for Israel — despite the rising death tolls and humanitarian crisis that the war in Gaza has wrought — has roiled the community, and the general lack of empathy the administration has shown for Palestinians has left a bitter taste in people’s mouths. 

When President Joe Biden dropped out and Vice President Kamala Harris became the party’s nominee, Democrats had a chance at a reset with a voting bloc that could very well tip the election. (Arab Americans make up hundreds of thousands of voters in key swing states.) But many feel the Harris campaign’s outreach to Arab Americans has been, to put it mildly, lackluster at best. 

“I was like, ‘All right, you have a blank slate, let’s see what you’re going to do with that,’” said Rowan Imran, a Palestinian American who lives in Phoenix, Arizona. “That was very disappointing to see her dig her heels further in the ground and just uphold every single [Biden] policy … It was very clear that we’re just getting a different face with the same policies.”

As Harris rose to the top of the ticket, she had to find a delicate balance: distance herself enough from Biden to convince some voters that she wouldn’t be the same as him on Gaza while still representing the US government’s policies as the sitting vice president. It’s a balance she never quite struck. At times, she criticized Israel’s actions that led to “far too many” civilian deaths and acknowledged the human toll in Gaza, but she would always couple those kinds of remarks with justifications for the war. Recently, after being asked about the prospect of losing Arab and Muslim voters because of Israel’s conduct, Harris said, “There are so many tragic stories coming from Gaza,” but that “the first and most tragic story is October 7.”

The numbers reflect a dissatisfaction with Harris’s approach: A recent poll showed Harris effectively tied with Trump among Arab Americans, leaving her nearly 20 points behind Biden’s numbers in 2020. Another poll showed Trump with a slight lead

Trump has been trying to take advantage of that. Earlier this week, for example, he tweeted that he would “stop the suffering and destruction in Lebanon,” referring to Israel’s escalating attacks in the region. He then directly appealed to Lebanese American voters by adding, “Your friends and family in Lebanon deserve to live in peace, prosperity, and harmony with their neighbors.” He also touted an endorsement he received from Amer Ghalib, the mayor of Hamtramck, Michigan, a Muslim-majority city on the outskirts of Detroit.

Given how close the election has been — with poll after poll showing a neck-and-neck race in swing states — it’s clear that Arab Americans, who make up a meaningful number of voters in must-win states like Michigan and Pennsylvania, can’t be taken for granted. And some liberals have been expressing frustration toward Arab American voters who refuse to vote for Harris, saying that Trump is worse for them because of policies like the Muslim ban. Harris echoed that frustration when she responded to pro-Palestinian protesters at a rally in August, telling them, “You know what? If you want Donald Trump to win, then say that.”

But many Arab Americans are well aware of who Trump is and do resent the prospect of another Trump presidency. What they feel is that they’ve been pushed between a rock and a hard place.

A difficult choice

Some have dismissed Arab Americans’ concerns and potential protest votes as irresponsible, but the reality is much more complicated. Israel has been credibly accused of genocide, and if you’re a voter who genuinely believes that what’s happening in Gaza is a genocide, then the choice next week might not be so easy: On the one hand, your vote can be used to hold the Biden administration accountable. On the other hand, it can be used to stop Trump’s assault on American democracy. And if you choose the latter, does voting for Harris mean that you’re giving the Biden administration a pass for its handling of Gaza?

Those are the kinds of questions haunting many liberal Arab Americans as they approach the voting booth. But democracy, the voters I spoke with argued, requires politicians to cater to the electorate, not the other way around.

Imran, a 35-year-old psychiatric nurse practitioner, had been a reliable Democratic voter. “I remember crying when Biden won and just feeling this sense of relief and, you know, someone that’s gonna reflect our values, be the voice of the people. And so that’s why a lot of this is so disappointing, because voting and supporting Kamala Harris, it should be a natural decision for me,” she said. “But because of the constant betrayal that we feel, the unconditional aid to Israel, the indifference to the lives of Palestinians, this has become the most complicated, impossible decision of my life.”

Imran is now planning to vote third party. And part of the reason that it’s been a difficult decision for her is because she acknowledges the dangers of a second Trump presidency. “We do not support a Trump presidency. We understand the dangers, the harm,” she said. But “people again feel abandoned, they feel betrayed. We’re seeing our leaders prioritize foreign interests over the lives of people who look like us. And that’s not something we can overlook. You know, votes are not just a given, they need to be earned.”

In her view, it’s not her personal responsibility to stop Trump; it’s Harris’s and the Democrats’. And if Trump has another go at the presidency, then it’s only the Democrats to blame, not the voters who defected. Choosing to sit out or vote third party is a way to remind the major parties that they aren’t doing enough.

Even those who might be voting for Harris have agonized over their decision, and some don’t even feel comfortable speaking about it because she was, after all, part of the administration that financed Israel’s war.

Asma, a 50-year-old medical professional in North Carolina, has voted in every election since she was 18. (Asma asked that Vox use only her first name so she can speak more freely.) And though she usually votes early, this time she’s still holding out in the hopes that she hears some commitment from Harris that she’ll deviate from Biden’s Israel policy. “I’m just looking for validation. I’m looking for basically Harris to do anything, something to show that she has some compassion or some interest in the views that Muslims hold,” Asma told me. 

But Harris never seemed to deliver. “We just wonder, what would she lose by being a little more inclusive in her humanity or her compassion or her empathy toward the Palestinians or toward Muslims?” Asma said. “When asked about Gaza, she doesn’t always have to talk about the October 7 hostages. Yes, we understand how you feel about that — you’ve made that plain and clear. Maybe you need to say something about the Palestinians and their plight, exclusive of [the hostages’] situation.”

Asma said the election has divided many in her community, with many people judging others for how they’re voting, and some saying that a vote for Harris is essentially a vote for genocide. But a lot of people, Asma said, would still prefer voting for Harris over Trump because they believe Trump would make the situation in Gaza even worse.

Still, some voters feel a certain level of guilt holding them back. If Gaza isn’t their red line, then what would be?

That’s how Houston Brown, a 33-year-old Atlanta resident, is thinking of his vote. “The most inconceivable thing you can think of is genocide. It’s horrific,” Brown, whose mother is Palestinian, said. “And if there are no consequences for that, there will be no consequences for anything.”

Brown was hopeful that Harris would distance herself from Biden on Gaza. And though he views her as more conservative than he’d prefer the Democratic candidate to be, he was still willing to vote for her, he said, because he doesn’t agree with any of Trump’s policies. “I would still vote for her regardless of that, regardless of my disagreements with her policies, if there was an arms embargo and a commitment to hold Israel accountable for what they’ve done,” he said.

Harris, of course, made no such commitment, and other moves by her campaign — such as refusing to give a speaking slot to a Palestinian American at the Democratic National Convention — made Brown feel like the vice president was not taking Gaza seriously. Now, Brown is likely going to vote third party, and if that means Trump might be back in the White House, that’s a risk Brown accepts. “The repercussions are what they are, and we’ll cross that bridge when we get there,” he said.

“I understand that it could be worse under Trump,” he added. “But 40,000 dead Palestinians isn’t any different than 40,000 dead Americans to me. And our policies have led to the murder of over 40,000 Palestinians.”

While Trump has tried to make appeals to disaffected Arab Americans, he’s also been saying he’d be even more supportive of Israel than Biden has been. Recently, Trump said that Benjamin Netanyahu was “doing a good job” and that Biden was, if anything, holding the Israeli prime minister back. Trump’s own record on Israel has also been bad for Palestinians. For example, he moved the Israeli embassy to Jerusalem — making the US officially recognize the city as Israel’s capital, despite the fact that East Jerusalem is still occupied Palestinian territory — and his State Department declared that the United States would no longer deem settlements in the West Bank to be illegal under international law.

But many voters who are sitting out or voting third party aren’t under the illusion that Trump is in any way a better alternative for Palestinians. For them, what’s happened in Gaza over the past year already constitutes the worst of outcomes: Israel has killed tens of thousands of innocent people, obliterated educational, religious, and health care infrastructure, created conditions for preventable diseases to spread, and targeted and killed journalists at an unprecedented rate.

“In no way do I imagine Trump is better for Palestine,” Brown said. But “I can’t imagine it worse. I don’t think the Democrats are doing anything to stop it — they’re actively supporting it. So if there’s no real change for Palestine, why would I reward the people who are doing this now?”

Where the Harris campaign goes from here

Arab Americans didn’t always lean toward Democrats. In 2000, Arab Americans predominantly voted for George W. Bush, and Republicans viewed them as a winnable demographic. But since the aftermath of 9/11 and the surveillance of Arabs and Muslims, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and Republicans’ xenophobic and Islamophobic overtures to white voters, Arabs have steadily moved toward Democrats. In 2020, Biden won about 60 percent of the Arab American vote.

Democrats’ progress, however, seems to have all but evaporated. Now, there’s no question that there is a protest vote in the making among Arab Americans and others who, like Brown, feel like a vote for Harris is an endorsement of the status quo. Since the primaries, Democratic voters have organized around this issue, launching an “uncommitted” movement where hundreds of thousands of voters selected “uncommitted” instead of Biden during the Democratic primaries to register their discontent over his handling of Gaza.

The question is whether the protest vote will be big enough to swing the election in Trump’s favor.

“There is a ‘punish’ sense, and you hear that a lot, right? ‘We’re, we’re going to punish the Dems. They don’t deserve to win after what they’ve done,’” said James Zogby, president of the Arab American Institute. “I think that’s a smaller number than one might be led to believe, but if it comes out to a tie as it is right now, those are a lot of votes Democrats will have left on the table … losing 60,000, 70,000 votes in Michigan — that’s a lot of votes to lose in the state that’s going to be close.”

Recently, Harris did address Arab Americans specifically and spoke more candidly about the suffering in Gaza and Lebanon that’s happening as a result of Israel’s assaults.

“I know this year has been very difficult given the scale of death and destruction in Gaza, and given the civilian casualties and displacement in Lebanon. It is devastating,” she said.

At this point, it might seem too little too late for Harris to change people’s minds. And for many Arab Americans and other supporters of the Palestinian cause, actions speak louder than words. And the lack of willingness on the part of the Biden administration to use the levers at its disposal to restrain Israel now leaves voters with a choice: take a unique opportunity to show that there can be electoral consequences for an administration facilitating the kind of war Israel has waged on Palestinians or help end Trump’s political career. But they can’t have both — at least not at the ballot box.


Read full article on: vox.com
Dodgers’ Joe Kelly mocks Yankees and ‘Fat Joe Curse’ in scathing interview
Dodgers reliever Joe Kelly knew the Yankees were in trouble before Game 5's disgraceful fifth inning of the World Series.
nypost.com
Collins Dictionary reveals its word of the year
Collins experts monitor their 20-billion-word database to create the annual list of new and notable words that reflect the ever-evolving English language.
cbsnews.com
Oprah’s Favorite Things 2024 is here — Shop top gift picks from her list
And *you* get a gift! And *you* get a gift!
nypost.com
Kelly Rizzo reveals what late husband Bob Saget taught her – and how she’s applied that to new romance
"I was happy that I was able to make him happy for when I did," the blogger shared.
nypost.com
New York City Marathon set for Sunday
More than 50,000 runners on Sunday will be taking on the iconic 26.2-mile course through the Big Apple in the New York City Marathon. Ted Metellus, senior VP of events for New York Road Runners, joined CBS News to discuss the race.
cbsnews.com
2 killed in downtown Orlando shooting, 17-year-old suspect taken into custody
Police in Orlando, Florida, have arrested a 17-year-old in connection with a mass shooting that killed two people and wounded six others early Friday morning in the city's central business district. Police say the victims range in age from 19 to 39 years old and the motive for the shooting is not yet known.
cbsnews.com
UN says widespread sexual violence in Sudan is 'deeply alarming' amid bloody civil war
The brutal civil war in Africa's third largest country of Sudan has largely been overshadowed by the Mideast conflict. Rampant sexual violence is the latest issue faced by those fleeing the fighting.
foxnews.com
Denmark: "The Pursuit of Happiness" | 60 Minutes Archive
Why is Denmark among the happiest countries in the world? In 2008, Morley Safer went on a quest to find out.
cbsnews.com
'Here' today, gone tomorrow
Los Angeles Times columnist Glenn Whipp checks in on the new movies "Here" and "Juror #2" and remembers Teri Garr in his weekly newsletter.
latimes.com
Here's how much JD Vance is worth, from his bitcoin to real estate
JD Vance, former President Trump's running mate, has come a long way from his hardscrabble childhood of "Hillbilly Elegy."
cbsnews.com
Shop #BookTok creator’s top fantasy book recommendations here
We're about to put on some fairy wings and fly to these recommendations.
nypost.com
‘The Substance’ Makeup Scene Should Earn Demi Moore Her First Oscar Nomination
Moore breaks your heart without saying a single word.
nypost.com
What Melania Trump’s Decision to Speak Out on Abortion Says About the GOP
A changing party can create space for a Republican First Lady to support abortion rights.
time.com
Day of the Dead 2024: The history and meaning behind the Mexican holiday
Día de los Muertos, a braiding together of pre- Colombian ritual and European tradition, celebrates the richness of life and the inevitable journey of death.  
nypost.com
What to do and what not to do when you're voting
Voters in the 2024 Election could be confronted with confusing information or misinformation about the voting process. Melissa Mahtani, executive producer of CBS News Confirmed, has a look at voting do's and do not's.
cbsnews.com
Why Ron Darling isn’t so sure the Mets should go after Juan Soto
the Mets figure to be a team to watch all winter as they look to upgrade a roster that carried the team to Game 6 of the NLCS.
nypost.com
Jennifer Pedranti Reacts To Tamra Judge Saying She’s On The Spectrum: “I Don’t Know How You Come Up With That From One Therapy Session”
Pedranti thinks Judge could "benefit" from therapy.
nypost.com
Trump says of Liz Cheney, "Put her with a rifle standing there with 9 barrels shooting at her"
Former President Donald Trump offered his thoughts on Kamala Harris-supporter Liz Cheney Thursday, saying, "She's a radical war hawk. Let's put her with a rifle standing there with nine barrels shooting at her, OK?" CBS News campaign reporter Libby Cathey has more on that and CBS News campaign reporter Shawna Mizelle has the latest on how Harris is closing out her campaign.
cbsnews.com
Diddy accuser says she woke up on street with date rape drug in her system after meeting mogul backstage
A new Sean "Diddy" Combs accuser says she was drugged and woke up in the street after meeting him backstage at a Diddy-Dirty Money concert in New York City in 2011.
foxnews.com
Harris and Trump head West to woo voters. And, U.S. economy sees solid growth
Harris and Trump look toward undecided voters in Arizona and Nevada as a pathway to the White House. And, the U.S. economy sees solid growth.
npr.org
New Shows & Movies To Watch This Weekend: ‘The Diplomat’ on Netflix + More
This and so much more arrives to streaming this week!
nypost.com
October jobs take a hit from hurricanes, strike
This month's report reflects a lot of noise due to hurricanes, Boeing machinists strike.
cbsnews.com
Harris holds narrow lead over Trump in 'blue wall' states Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin: poll
Vice President Kamala Harris holds a narrow lead over former President Donald Trump in the "blue wall" states of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, according to new polls.
foxnews.com
America Will Still Be a Democracy Next Week
This is not the end.
theatlantic.com
How to get through election season
Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump, speaks at a campaign rally at Madison Square Garden on October 27, 2024 in New York City. When election season rolls around I always run into a lot of people who are having a pretty bad time. It’s the drumbeat of dire news and last-minute plot twists and scandals. It’s the absurdly close polls. It’s the feeling that we — especially those of us who like me live in California — are approximately powerless while a decision of enormous importance gets made. There’s nothing to do but wait and see what happens — not that that stops me from frequently refreshing all the models and squinting at the internals of all the polls. So I wanted to talk about how to keep perspective on presidential elections without pretending they don’t matter or letting them become the sole verdict on whether our world is headed in the right direction. It does matter a great deal who wins on Tuesday, obviously. Kamala Harris and Donald Trump have very different views on Ukraine, on Gaza, on tariffs, on legal immigration, on Latin American coup attempts, on abortion, on whether you should get election boards to discard the results of legitimate elections, and on much more. I’m not here to argue that you should be zen about the election because it doesn’t matter — it matters enormously. But I do think that when you step back and take some perspective, it’s clear that many of the things that matter the most for our lives, the lives of our loved ones, and the lives of everyone on Earth, don’t get decided in elections. And how those things go are much easier to affect than elections are. Looking back at what actually mattered Often the most important gears that turned to affect people’s lives — for better or for worse — did that without a single mention on a debate stage or a campaign platform. Antibiotics. Vaccination. Mass electrification. Contraception. The internet. The nuclear bomb. Factory farming. Most of the ways that we are fortunate to live in the 2020s instead of the 1920s — and most of the ways that the 2020s are far more horrifying than the 1920s — happened despite the lousy presidents and without much aid from the good ones. Even when an issue is hotly contested, the key thing that ends up driving change is often only tangentially related to the part everyone is arguing about. We’re on a much better footing in the fight against climate change because solar is so cheap — most of the debates over everything else end up being a rounding error compared to that. One of my colleague Dylan Matthews’s most famous contrarian Future Perfect-flavored takes was that George W. Bush was actually, if you do the math, an awesome president because of PEPFAR, his AIDS program that saved at least a million lives in Africa at a time when no one was giving AIDS the prioritization it deserved. Sure, he also started a couple of unnecessary wars in the Middle East and the pointless expansion of the surveillance state in the name of liberty. Sure, his domestic policy agenda was mostly a flop or got forgotten about in the aftermath of 9/11. But still, he saved a lot of children. How much to consider this a defense of George W. Bush is mostly a philosophical question, and frankly I don’t care — I’m not the judge of his soul. But I do think that it’s a very important point if you are thinking about how to do good in the world. Things that no one is paying attention to, neglected programs that a dedicated visionary can make happen — these are often where the enormous effects on the world are. Remember what matters Elections matter. But they are very far from being the only thing that matters. And it’s very hard among the noise and chaos and fury of any given moment to guess which of the many issues contested in an election are the ones that will really matter. (Pandemic prevention, just to take one example, was not much of an issue in 2016, just a few years before Covid hit.)  So if you find yourself feeling paralyzed and helpless about elections, refreshing news sites instead of doing real substantive work toward a better world, my advice — which I have had only mixed success at taking for myself — is to stay oriented to all of the other things that matter just as much and that are much, much easier to change.  Instead of letting every twist and swing of the polls in Wisconsin control your mood, work on something that really matters and that none of our politicians are bothering to solve. This is an important decision you don’t have much control over. But the direction of our country and our world is an important decision you do have an enormous amount of control over.  There are a great many people alive today because of the individual efforts of dedicated people who decided to solve some problem they could no longer bear. There are a great many important scientific projects that need volunteers. There are horrible evils to work on ending, and horrible dilemmas that will become less of a dilemma as advancing technology and human creativity give all of us better options.  So next time you want to hit “refresh” on the polls, think about if you’ll find it more empowering — and the world will find it more useful — for you to pick something else that also really matters, and do that instead.
vox.com
Murdoch Children’s Research Institute initiative unveiled at American Australian Association’s annual benefit dinner at Cipriani
Morgan Stanley’s James Gorman also received a lifetime achievement award, and Sidley Austin’s Yvette Ostolaza was also honored.
nypost.com
Aaron Rodgers had a troubling realization after Jets’ disastrous first half
Aaron Rodgers had a realization about the Jets' season before New York snapped a five-game losing streak by beating the Texans 21-13 on Thursday night.
1 h
nypost.com
Former Playboy model claims Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs made her watch Jennifer Lopez video at ‘Freak Off’
"It was kind of an odd thing," Rachel Kennedy recalled of the 2000 party in Tokyo. "It seemed a little creepy to me."
1 h
nypost.com
Tiki the dog helps Illinois man survive gunshot to the head
Leslie Reeves and Chris Smith were both shot on their first date. Only Smith survived.
1 h
cbsnews.com
The long-term question that will linger from the Yankees’ devastating World Series meltdown
What was the most stunning part of the calamitous fifth inning in Game 5 of the World Series that brought down the Yankees? Maybe it was the fact that Gerrit Cole was tossing a no-hitter with a five-run lead and couldn’t finish the inning with the lead intact, let alone the no-hitter, but bad innings...
1 h
nypost.com
Jimmy Fallon Says ‘Hot Ones’ Host Sean Evans “Almost Killed” Selena Gomez With Hot Wing Challenge: “She Was Throwing Up”
Fallon claims Gomez demanded he "get the F out" of her dressing room after the challenge.
1 h
nypost.com
Death Toll From Spanish Floods Rises to 205 as Residents Appeal for Aid
Some places still don't have electricity, running water, or stable telephone connections after the historic flash floods.
1 h
time.com
Thousands show up in Dublin, duped by online Halloween parade hoax
Large crowds that gathered in central Dublin for a Halloween parade were tricked, not treated, by an apparent online hoax.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Why cryptocurrency owners could impact the U.S. presidential election
Emerging cryptocurrency industry aims to put its stamp on the U.S. election by pouring money into key political races.
1 h
cbsnews.com
MAGA Is Tripping
Donald Trump’s 2024 campaign has cemented the right’s romance with psychedelics.
1 h
theatlantic.com
Country sensation Oliver Anthony leaving industry one year after meteoric rise to start traveling ministry
Country sensation Oliver Anthony has decided to leave the music industry.
1 h
nypost.com
I was lucky to see a baby elephant up close, but it's time to rethink keeping these majestic animals in zoos
I will always cherish the time I spent with a baby elephant being hand-reared at the Oakland Zoo. Now, 28 years later, the zoo made the right decision to retire its last elephant.
1 h
latimes.com
Harris slammed for hiring advisor with ties to dark money group pushing gas stove ban: 'Par for the course'
Energy advocates are criticizing the Harris campaign for hiring an advisor with ties to Rewiring America, an environmental group that made headlines in 2022 for its efforts to ban gas stoves.
1 h
foxnews.com
Menendez brothers’ freedom bid points to shifting attitudes on sex abuse
Erik and Lyle Menendez’s push for resentencing in the murders of their parents comes as the courts and public take sexual abuse of boys more seriously, experts say.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
After back-to-back hurricanes, animal shelters are ‘in crisis’
Animal shelters and rescues are flooded, destroyed and overcrowded after Hurricanes Helene and Milton struck the Southeast.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Revisit Pennsylvania election results from 2020 and 2016 ahead of Election Day
The state of Pennsylvania played a key role in the 2020 and 2016 presidential elections, helping President Biden and former President Donald Trump win on their respective paths to the White House.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Revisit Georgia election results from 2020 and 2016 ahead of Election Day
Georgia played a key role in President Biden winning the White House in 2020 and former President Donald Trump's election victory in 2016.
1 h
cbsnews.com
L.A. Affairs: We learned L.A. together. Could our love survive us being 700 miles apart?
After she finished school at UC Santa Barbara, we began dating long-distance. She was adjusting to life at home in Utah, on the hunt for a job and with no near future plans to move to L.A.
1 h
latimes.com
With carpenter bees nearby, are wood shutters a good option?
We took our wood shutters down when we got new windows. What is our best option for replacing them?
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Restoring cast-iron cookware strips the rust while saving the memories
At a cast-iron manufacturer in South Carolina, vintage skillets and other items arrive the worse for wear — and return to their owners with a gleam.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
The History Behind Steve McQueen’s World War II Drama Blitz
The real people and events that inspired Steve McQueen's World War II drama 'Blitz'
1 h
time.com
Influencer goes viral after sharing text from man who didn’t pay for their first date
An influencer has gone viral for sharing the wild act a man did on a first date - and the text he sent after.
2 h
nypost.com
We may have just seen the moment that changes this Jets season
Garrett Wilson stole the show in interim coach Jeff Ulbrich’s first victory.
2 h
nypost.com