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China eleva la edad de jubilación, que está entre las más bajas entre las grandes economías

La medida se considera necesaria desde hace tiempo en un país que enfrenta una disminución de la población y el envejecimiento de la población activa.
Read full article on: latimes.com
Submit a question for Jennifer Rubin about her columns, politics, policy and more
Submit your questions for Jennifer Rubin’s mail bag newsletter and live chat.
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washingtonpost.com
The ultimate fan’s guide for Commanders-Bengals game day
Here’s everything you need to know as Jayden Daniels and the Washington Commanders meet Joe Burrow’s Cincinnati Bengals on “Monday Night Football.”
washingtonpost.com
NY GOP House bill would bypass states with liberal policies to give funds directly to cops, local governments
The bill, sponsored by upstate Rep. Marc Molinaro (R-NY) and shared exclusively with The Post would distribute some federal law enforcement funding directly to localities if they have laws on the books like New York’s Clean Slate Act and loose bail laws.
nypost.com
Letters to the Editor: The problem with U.S. civics education? It isn't basic and rigorous enough
Civics education is already a graduation requirement in California. The problem is a lack of accountability for teachers and students.
latimes.com
The trans 'Will & Grace' is here, and it's a Netflix road movie starring Will Ferrell
With 'Will & Harper,' the 'SNL' star and his friend Harper Steele face a new twist on an old challenge in LGBTQ+ representation: How to educate cis viewers without alienating trans ones.
latimes.com
With the Disney Channel's slow demise, where will Gen Alpha find their 'Hannah Montana'?
Since its heyday, the network's viewership has plummeted. Not even the Mouse House has come up with a similarly lucrative strategy to capture Generation Alpha.
latimes.com
Faculty accuse UC campuses of labor violations over pro-Palestine protest crackdowns
The Council of UC Faculty Associations, along with faculty associations from seven UC campuses, filed a 581-page unfair labor practice charge Thursday with California’s Public Employment Relations Board.
latimes.com
How can Usha Vance stand by her husband as he fans bigotry?
JD Vance, the GOP vice presidential candidate, used to say he deplored Donald Trump. Now they both foment hate for nonwhite people. But Usha Vance knows better.
latimes.com
'Wonder Woman' star Lynda Carter snubs Republican sister, endorses opponents in Arizona race
"Wonder Woman" actress Lynda Carter snubbed her sister Pamela last weekend when she endorsed the two Democrats in the state house race for Arizona's Legislative District 4.
foxnews.com
New XEC COVID subvariant poses potential threat heading into winter. Doctors urge vaccinations
The coronavirus subvariant XEC is drawing more attention as a potential threat heading into late autumn and winter — prompting doctors to urge residents to get an updated COVID vaccine.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Latinos are being left out of California's voter turnout push
If California expects to see record voter turnout, campaigns and civic groups need to do a better job reaching out to Latinos.
latimes.com
Harris and Trump campaigns are targeting Black men, but many say they feel neglected
Kamala Harris needs to expand her majority among Black voters to match President Biden’s winning formula from 2020.
latimes.com
Universal rolls out its first all-female monster maze. Here's why it matters for horror
"Universal Monsters: Eternal Bloodlines," a maze at Halloween Horror Nights, highlights villains and heroines such as Saskia Van Helsing, the Bride of Frankenstein and Countess Marya Zaleska.
latimes.com
How bloodthirsty Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua used NYC migrant shelters to build a criminal empire: ‘Hiding in plain sight’
The violent Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua trickled into the Big Apple hidden among the thousands of migrants flocking to the city. They've used the shelter system to establish a criminal foothold.
nypost.com
U.S. pitches ban on Chinese tech in driverless and connected vehicles
U.S. to crack down on Chinese tech in driverless and connected vehicles
washingtonpost.com
California's underground puppy trade 'raises serious alarms' and demands for state action
A Times investigation of California's underground puppy resale market "raises serious alarms about the inhumane treatment of pets," Gov. Newsom's office said.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Trump is actually a threat to democracy. It's OK to speak the truth
Calls to tone down the rhetoric about Trump ignore that he's actually done and said so many things that threaten democracy.
latimes.com
Federal judge tosses suit ex-Sheriff Alex Villanueva brought over 'Do Not Rehire' designation
A judge tossed ex-Sheriff Alex Villanueva's lawsuit over a 'Do Not Rehire' designation, but his lawyers say they plan to refile.
latimes.com
As arts groups struggle, San Diego Symphony debuts a $125-million makeover
San Diego Symphony used its pandemic closure as an opportunity to gut parts of Jacobs Music Center, built in 1929 as a movie palace. The goal: improve sound and sight lines, replace seats and otherwise entice the audience to return.
latimes.com
Israel and Hezbollah Trade Fire, and Polls Find Trump Ahead in Sun Belt States
Plus, the White Sox go for a record (low).
nytimes.com
Newsom's office announces new California environmental campaign at Climate Week NYC
Gov. Gavin Newsom is asking Californians to take actions in their daily lives to help combat climate change — from composting to taking public transit to avoid driving.
latimes.com
Pastrami sandwich face-off: What's the best order at Langer's?
Members of the L.A. Times Food team weigh in on their Langer's orders — and owner Norm Langer shares some of his customers' strangest requests through the years.
latimes.com
Trump wants to turn the federal bureaucracy into an 'army of suck-ups.' Here's how that would be a disaster
Trump wants the right to fire civil servants he sees as disloyal: Cue IRS audits for Trump enemies, anti-vaxxers in the FDA, revenge prosecutions.
latimes.com
Jane Fonda on climate activism, 2024 election: "We can't lose another 4 years"
Jane Fonda spoke with CBS News about why she joined the fight: "This isn't just about the environment. This is about the whole planet."
cbsnews.com
A UCI professor was accused of sexual harassment. He's back in the lab
UC Irvine professor Bruce Blumberg returned to campus in the spring after a university sexual harassment investigation.
latimes.com
What a sight! Rams save their season with awestruck win against 49ers
The Rams were on the verge of staying winless, but Sean McVay's team never gave up hope and managed to pull off a season-saving comeback against the 49ers.
latimes.com
On the Road With a Latino Border Vigilante
In June 2022, the man known online as “Conservative Anthony” drove me to a couple of what he calls migrant “hot spots,” by the border in El Paso, Texas. He’s made a career out of migrant hunting; he stalks and confronts people he suspects of being migrants while livestreaming the encounters on his website, Border Network News, and many social-media accounts. He has given border tours to Republican lawmakers, including Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene, and was captured in January 6 videos chanting “Our house!” as the mob left the Capitol.Conservative Anthony’s real name is Pedro Antonio Aguero. He was born and raised in El Paso, a child of Mexican immigrants. Like many Latinos in South Texas, he grew up a Democrat. But Aguero now believes that the Democratic Party is allowing an “invasion” across the southern border. And the popularity of his content—his followers total more than 100,000 across different social-media platforms—suggests that he’s not alone. This essay has been adapted from Paola Ramos’s new book, Defectors: The Rise of the Latino Far Right and What It Means for America. Aguero is an extreme example of a broader phenomenon. Many Latinos have shifted to the right on immigration in recent years, warming up to the ideas of building a wall, shutting down the southern border, and even conducting mass deportations. Support for Donald Trump among Latino voters grew by 8 percentage points from the 2016 to the 2020 presidential election, and polls suggest that Trump continues to make inroads with Latino voters leading up to the 2024 election. Anti-immigrant sentiment often comes from a place of fear. People may be afraid that immigrants will take something from them: jobs, opportunities, or, perhaps more profoundly, a sense of their own national and cultural identity. But I have come to understand that anti-immigrant Latinos aren’t just afraid of loss. Unlike white Americans, they also have something to prove: that they, too, belong in America. “I don’t lock the doors because I hate the people outside,” Aguero told me. “I lock the doors because I love the people inside.”[Read: Why Democrats are losing Hispanic voters]Aguero’s online persona is intimidating. But when I met him, he struck me as shy. He avoided eye contact and spoke with a shaky voice and a frontero accent. He had agreed to allow me to shadow him for a couple of hours for a Vice News story. He picked me up at a gas station in El Paso. When I opened the door, I saw that a friend of his, a former Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent, was sitting in the back. We’d be going on one of the surveillance runs Aguero makes along the border to get footage for his social-media channels.“I live and breathe the border,” Aguero told me. “It makes it hard to even have a relationship or even friendships at times, because I’m just so obsessively, compulsively dedicated to this.”As we drove, he told me about the evolution of his political views. As a young man, he had studied for a real-estate license. While at school, he’d volunteered with Democratic Representative Beto O’Rourke, a fellow El Paso native. One day in class, Aguero’s professor challenged him to articulate why he was helping Beto. “I didn’t have an answer,” he told me. His professor responded with a proverb: “Dead fish go with the flow.” Aguero remembers this as the moment when he began questioning his loyalty to Democrats. He quit working for O’Rourke and eventually found a home in conservativism, and a particular interest in immigration issues.In 2019, the Southern Poverty Law Center flagged Aguero’s connections to the United Constitutional Patriots, a now-defunct militia group that would detain migrant families along the New Mexico border, at times holding them at gunpoint before turning them over to law enforcement. Aguero would often patrol and post videos with UCP members, and occasionally identified himself as the group’s spokesperson.In 2020, Aguero ran as a Republican to represent Beto’s former district, which includes most of El Paso and its suburbs. He lost the primary—by a lot. He told me that his politics don’t fit the traditional GOP framework either. Aguero blames Democrats and Republicans for the country’s immigration crisis. Both parties, Aguero believes, deceive the public, saying they “work together to control the masses.”Riding in the car, Aguero told me that while he is patrolling remote locations, the first thing he looks for are footprints, discarded clothes, plastic water bottles, and other trash. We eventually got out of the car and followed a trail of footprints that led us into underground tunnels that smugglers and immigrants use to hide from Border Patrol agents on the U.S. side of the border. We eventually came across piles of T-shirts, candy wrappers, backpacks, and electrolyte water, all left by immigrants who had shed their belongings as they struggled to survive the desert heat. (A Swiss NGO counted more than 700 migrants who died or went missing while trying to cross the U.S.-Mexico border in 2021, making it the world’s most lethal land crossing.)We also found belts and shoelaces strewn across the ground, indicating Border Patrol apprehensions. When undocumented immigrants are caught, agents typically have them remove their laces and belts—items that are deemed dangerous because they can be used as weapons or to commit suicide—before escorting them to detention centers.Despite Aguero’s vigilance, we didn’t run into any immigrants that day. But he assured me that, before he picked me up, he had spotted someone he thought was undocumented, and tailed him around El Paso, recording him until Border Patrol officers arrived. “They made the apprehension,” he told me proudly in between sips of an energy drink.Many people would empathize with those making this crossing, but Aguero does not. He often criticizes mainstream news outlets for portraying asylum seekers as vulnerable people, and was keen to convince me that the people crossing the border—“all males looking like Ninja Turtles”—were dangerous. Online, I had seen Aguero call immigrants “roaches.” Many of the young men he chased had the same accent as Aguero, the same color skin—their ancestors came from the same places. I got the feeling that by hunting them, he was distancing himself from them, and from his own foreignness.A couple of months after my encounter with Aguero, during the 2022 midterms, I covered the election in Texas’s Fifteenth Congressional District—a long drive east from El Paso. The district, part of which sits along the southern border, is more than 80 percent Latino and has traditionally been a Democratic stronghold. I was expecting voters to rally around Michelle Vallejo, the 33-year-old Latina running as a progressive Democrat who campaigned around town in blue jeans, Tejano boots, and a star-spangled button-down. During her campaign, she stood beside her father, Daniel, acknowledging her humble Mexican roots.But another Latina, the conservative Monica De La Cruz, had a narrative that voters found more appealing. “People are upset that while they waited their turn to immigrate to the United States, Democrats are actively ignoring laws on the books and allowing millions of migrants to come into our country illegally,” read one of her campaign emails to voters. Democrats, it went on, welcome them because “if they’re given enough handouts, these migrants will eventually be Democrat voters.” De La Cruz made history by flipping the district red.That kind of rhetoric shares some elements with the“Great Replacement” theory—the idea of a coordinated effort to replace white people with immigrants and people of color. Eric Ward, a senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center and an expert on authoritarianism, told me, “It’s used to justify this idea that we are not dealing with an immigration crisis, but we are in an existential war for the preservation of white America.”De La Cruz’s victory surprised me, but it shouldn’t have. I’ve come across many other Latinos who, although not as militant as Aguero, are starting to harbor similar anti-immigrant feelings. When I was in El Paso, I spent an evening at the home of Dolores Chacon, a Mexican immigrant and Trump supporter who lives in a humble home overlooking the border wall. I had never seen a house so physically close to the border—just a few feet. Chacon had put up what she called a “freedom fence” to secure her property from immigrants. From her backyard, I could hear the rumbles of Ciudad Juárez and, every now and then, the screech of an American Border Patrol car engaged in a high-speed chase.[From the March 2022 issue: There’s no such thing as ‘the Latino vote’]That night, Chacon and I hosted a roundtable discussion for Vice News on immigration in her home with about 10 other Latinos. They were teachers, entrepreneurs, and local politicians; old and young; light- and dark-skinned; naturalized citizens and American-born; lifelong Republicans and recent converts. Most of them were the descendants of immigrants.“We have to call the things what they are … They are criminals because they are breaking the law,” Irene Armendariz Jackson, a grandmother who is now running for Congress, called out. “I’m talking about pedophiles. I’m talking about murderers. I’m talking about rapists.”“Why doesn’t Nancy Pelosi let them all into her house?!” Jennifer Ivey, a farmer whose mother is from Mexico City, yelled.“Now that we have that monkey virus. Now we’re gonna have to get another vaccine!” Chacon said, laughing, referring to Black Haitian immigrants at the border. (The World Health Organization has renamed monkeypox “mpox,” because the original virus name plays into “racist and stigmatizing language.”)The most telling part of our conversation was when the group started talking about American culture and identity. Milcha Bermudez, who had the strongest Spanish accent in the room and had lived in Mexico for years, kept insisting that her point be heard.“It’s very important that they assimilate,” she reiterated, wearing a red MAGA hat.“When you say that immigrants should assimilate, what does it look like to ‘be an American’?” I asked the group.“This is a free country. We have a certain way of living here,” Bermudez said.Armendariz Jackson added that “people come into the country with their culture” and might not understand “there’s an American culture, and part of the American culture and traditions are our laws, our flag.”Our laws, our flag. Research suggests that opposition to immigration may have less to do with economic anxieties about jobs and wages than it does with cultural identity. Jens Hainmueller, a professor at Stanford, and Daniel Hopkins, who teaches at the University of Pennsylvania, reviewed more than 100 studies about attitudes toward immigration from more than two dozen countries. The pair concluded that nativism is rooted in a fear that newcomers will distort national identity and corrode cultural norms. Natives, Hainmueller and Hopkins noted, don’t care that much about the race and ethnicity of immigrants as long as they learn the language.The more Latinos migrate to the United States, the more they have struggled to prove themselves as “real Americans.” A 2021 study investigated how white people’s attitudes toward Mexican and Black Americans shifted from 1970 to 2010. In places that experienced higher levels of Mexican immigration, white people grew more hostile toward Mexicans and warmer toward Black people. The findings suggest that xenophobia against Latinos runs so deep, it can subdue even this nation’s most pernicious form of prejudice: anti-Blackness.If assimilation is what Latinos seek—and, of course, many of them do—then their embrace of nativism should come as no surprise. The political scientist Benjamin R. Knoll began predicting in the early 2000s that this would happen. Knoll, who at the time was a graduate student at the University of Iowa, remembers a woman scoffing at the notion that Latinos could be nativists as he presented an early version of his dissertation, about immigration attitudes, at a political-science conference in Chicago. Knoll concluded that as Latinos continued to assimilate into American society, their pro-immigration bias would slowly dissipate, and “perhaps eventually disappear altogether.”The quest to fit into American society is driving some Latinos toward extreme nativism; after all, nothing is more nationalistic than making immigrants, a sworn enemy of many white Americans, your enemy as well.Toward the end of the day I spent driving around El Paso with Aguero, I broached a subject that had been on my mind for many hours. Aguero, who constantly referred to immigrants as “illegals,” has a criminal record himself.In 2003 and again in 2004, he was arrested for possession of marijuana. (The charges were later dropped, but he was convicted for possession of drug paraphernalia.) In 2010, he was sentenced to two years of probation for assaulting a woman, having punched her in the face after she refused a kiss. He did not comply with the probation requirements, so he was sentenced to three days in jail in 2012. And in 2015, he pleaded guilty to a third-degree felony after getting in a car crash while driving intoxicated, seriously injuring a passenger in his car. I mentioned to him that I knew of these convictions, and asked: “Should I be more scared of migrants than, say, someone like you?”“Well, I’m an American citizen. I’m not out here breaking into other countries,” he said. “These people are in America!”Aguero spends as many as nine hours a day alone in his car, scanning the desert. He knows people think it’s weird, he said: They tell him so. “I travel with the music off a lot of the time.”“And what do you think about?” I asked.“Just everything,” he responded.But I was sure it must get lonely out there, surveilling the border—hunting shadows of himself.This essay has been adapted from Paola Ramos’s new book, Defectors: The Rise of the Latino Far Right and What It Means for America.
theatlantic.com
Should I sacrifice my emergency savings to pay off a loan?
On the Money is a monthly advice column. If you want advice on spending, saving, or investing — or any of the complicated emotions that may come up as you prepare to make big financial decisions — you can submit your question on this form. Here, we answer two questions asked by Vox readers, which have been edited and condensed. I’m debating whether to pay off a personal loan with a savings account or keep the savings and keep paying the loan. I have no other debts but that personal loan of $25K. I’m 42 years old with two jobs in Hawai’i, and it’s been frustrating. My thought is to pay it off and start all over with no savings. Please help. Dear Personal Loan, I followed up with you to get some more information about your finances, including the interest rate on your loan, and here are the numbers worth considering: Personal loan interest: 5.75% Monthly minimum payment: $738 Monthly income from both jobs: $1,500 Monthly discretionary income: $200 The original balance on your 60-month loan was $35,000 when you took it out in August 2023. In a year, you’ve taken the balance down to $24,800, which you accomplished by pulling back on discretionary purchases and putting more money toward your loan. Well done, especially on a budget as tight as yours. I also learned that your savings account has $5,000 in it and that you’re considering pulling $20,000 out of your life insurance mutual fund. This would leave you with no money in your savings account and no money in your life insurance account — but you’d have no debt. Is the trade worth it?  From my perspective, you’ve successfully paid off 30 percent of your personal loan in a single year. If you stick it out for the next two or three years, you could get the personal loan paid off entirely. Yes, that means a few more years of careful budgeting and limited discretionary purchases. It also means putting more than half of your monthly income toward your debt. If you took the other option — paying off the loan with savings and life insurance — your first priority after paying off your personal loan would be to replenish your savings account. If you save every penny that would have gone toward personal loan payments, you should have the $5,000 taken care of in about six months.  The trouble is that you won’t have much of an emergency fund if something should happen to you in those six months. Your budget doesn’t give you much extra cash at the end of the month, and the last thing you want to do is turn an unexpected expense into unexpected debt. Yes, there are scenarios in which a family member could help out, or you could get a 0 percent APR credit card to cover the cost and pay it off before the regular interest rate kicks in. That said, I’d avoid dipping into your savings to pay your loan if at all possible. The life insurance, on the other hand, has possibilities. If you have a permanent life policy that allows you to withdraw the cash value without any penalty, there’s an argument to be made for paying down $20,000 of your debt right away and paying off the remainder of your personal loan out of your carefully budgeted income. You’d save a lot of money in interest that way, and you’d get to keep your $5,000 emergency fund. Which means the real question is whether you need the money in your life insurance policy. Do you have dependents who could benefit from the $20,000 if something were to happen to you? The budget you showed me didn’t appear to include expenses related to a partner or children, but I don’t want to assume. The other question is why you took out the personal loan in the first place. The answer may be personal, but it’s worth considering. In 2023, you borrowed $30,000, and I’d hate to see you find yourself in a situation where you needed to take out another five-figure loan a year from now. That’s why I’d still recommend paying off the loan the way you’ve been doing. At 5.75 percent APR and $800 in monthly payments, you’ll clear out your debt in two years and 10 months. It’ll cost you $2,112.11 in interest, which may seem like more than you want to pay, but during that time your $5,000 in savings could accumulate as much as $625 in interest (if you have a high-yield savings account with 4.25 percent APY, for example) and your life insurance mutual fund might be earning a 6 percent return.   You get to decide what’s best for you, but at least you understand your options. Read more from On the Money Should you combine finances with your partner? How to cope with inflation and lifestyle creep How are you supposed to start investing? Do you have questions related to personal finance? Submit them here. Is it prudent to have a variety of mutual funds, like a work-provided 401(k)/403(b) and a personal IRA, as well as one or two additional investment accounts? Or is it more efficient to have just one account like the work-provided 403(b)? Dear Prudent, Employer-sponsored retirement plans are great. I always recommend signing up for them, especially if you get a company match. These plans allow you to save pre-tax dollars, which allows you to put more of your earnings directly into your retirement fund while simultaneously reducing your tax burden. Yes, you will pay taxes on your withdrawals later on, but many people are in a lower tax bracket by then. More importantly, many employers automatically match your 401(k) or 403(b) contributions up to a certain percentage. As the financial advisers like to say, that’s “free money.”  That said, these kinds of investment accounts are not at all what you’d consider “efficient.” 401(k) accounts, which are designed to help private-sector employees save for their own retirements, and 403(b) accounts, which are often available to nonprofit employees, teachers, and people who work for the government, can help you set aside money for the future — but in many cases, the types of investments you can make through employer-sponsored accounts are relatively limited. Not only are you tied to the investment provider associated with your employer’s plan, but you may only get to choose from a small number of investment options. If I recall correctly, I didn’t even get to pick my investments the last time I had a 403(b). The onboarding program asked me to select my risk level — low, medium, or high — and then created a portfolio for me.   Which is all fine and good, and I still recommend signing up for these kinds of things, but the odds are that you’re going to be invested in funds that may offer lower returns and higher expense ratios than what you might get if you opened your own IRA and created your own portfolio after comparing the options available at various top brokerages. You can’t do anything about returns, of course — not even if you choose the extremely popular total-market funds that people tend to recommend on investing forums — but you can do something about expense ratios. Basically, investment providers determine in advance how much it’s going to cost you for them to manage the fund; they provide that number in the form of an expense ratio, and you can compare expense ratios before you make investments. Lower expense ratios are generally better, since you get to keep more of the money you invest.  However, employer-sponsored retirement plan providers don’t really have an incentive to keep expense ratios low because they know you don’t have any other choice. If your employer’s 403(b) is with a certain provider, you can’t just switch your 403(b) investments to a different provider, so you’re stuck paying whatever the provider decides to charge. This isn’t to suggest that investing in an employer-sponsored account is a waste of money. Employer-sponsored accounts are great, especially for people who might not otherwise be incentivized to save for retirement. It’s just to hint that putting everything into the employer-sponsored retirement account may not be the most efficient use of your money. I can’t give you investment advice because I’m not an investment adviser, but I can suggest that you contribute as much as is required into your 403(b) to get the tax break and the company match, and put the rest of your retirement savings into an IRA that you can control. Traditional IRAs allow you to contribute pre-tax dollars and reduce your taxable income during your prime earning years, and Roth IRAs allow you to contribute post-tax dollars and withdraw your contributions (but not your returns) ahead of schedule if you need to. Since IRAs max out at a certain dollar amount per year, you may also want to consider opening a brokerage account that isn’t necessarily tied to retirement and continue your investing journey that way. It’ll take a little extra time to compare all of the possibilities and make the best choices for your financial situation, but it could be worth it.
vox.com
Suspect in possible Trump assassination attempt expected in federal court
Ryan Routh is expected to appear in federal court for a detention hearing. Authorities say he pointed a rifle through a fence at Trump’s golf club in West Palm Beach.
washingtonpost.com
In critical Ohio Senate race, crypto cash looks to tip the scales
The cryptocurrency industry is pouring money into the Ohio Senate race to support Bernie Moreno against Sherrod Brown.
washingtonpost.com
Angel Reese MVP vote sparks scrutiny on social media
One WNBA MVP voter selected Angel Reese for fourth place during the 2024 season, and it miffed social media on Sunday as the award winner was announced.
foxnews.com
Which Type of Pet Is Most Appreciated by an Ailurophile?
Test your wits on the Slate Quiz for Sept. 23, 2024.
slate.com
Taylor Swift fans worry for Travis Kelce as he looks downcast during game
As Travis Kelce struggled to get involved in the Kansas City Chiefs' offense on Sunday against the Atlanta Falcons, Taylor Swift fans were worried.
foxnews.com
Israel Launches ‘Extensive Strikes’ in Southern Lebanon After Evacuation Warnings
The strikes come as the Israeli army issued evacuation orders, the first of its kind in nearly a year of a steadily escalating conflict.
time.com
Israel launches new strikes on Hezbollah in Lebanon, warns people to flee
Israel has launched a new wave of airstrikes targeting Hezbollah in Lebanon, with residents in some areas being warned to evacuate.
cbsnews.com
Slate Crossword: Captain Who Says “Make It So” (Six Letters)
Ready for some wordplay? Sharpen your skills with Slate’s puzzle for Sept. 23, 2024.
slate.com
I Spent Thousands to Save My Cat’s Life. Now My Friend Won’t Shut Up About How Stupid That Is.
It's my money!
slate.com
Tennessee woman attempted to hire hitman to kill wife of man she met on dating website: 'Needs to seem random'
A Tennessee woman will spend more than eight years behind bars after attempting to hire an online hitman to kill the wife of a man she met on the dating website Match.com.
foxnews.com
The Right Doesn’t Need to Ban Books Anymore. Schools Are Doing It Themselves.
Teachers say it only takes one parental complaint for school administrators to get nervous.
slate.com
Boy Kidnapped at 6 Found Alive Over 70 Years Later
KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco YouTubeA 6-year-old California boy who was kidnapped from an Oakland park by a woman offering to buy him candy has been found more than 70 years later.Luis Armando Albino, who was abducted on Feb. 21, 1951, is now a retired grandfather and Vietnam veteran. He was reunited with his family in June thanks to the persistence of his now 63-year-old niece Alida Alequin—who found her uncle on the East Coast after using an online DNA test, old newspaper records, and family photos, The Mercury News reported.Alequin’s first tip was the result of the online DNA test in 2020, which revealed her uncle as a 22 percent match—not enough to be sure, but enough to investigate. Her initial attempts to contact him did not receive a reply.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Musk Says ‘Doomed Humanity’ Will ‘Never Reach Mars’ if Harris Becomes President
Omar Marques/Getty ImagesEven among the most unhinged X users, few can boast of having had an online meltdown on such an interplanetary scale.But on Sunday, Elon Musk took to his own social media platform to post an unusually lengthy commentary on how SpaceX’s flagship Mars program is being “smothered by a mountain of government bureaucracy” under the Biden administration. It’s that red tape, he maintains, that threatens to scupper his ambitions of one day colonizing the Red Planet.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
The Rules for Keeping Your Long Distance Friendship Alive
I’ve fine-tuned the art of keeping in touch as people come and go.
slate.com
Everyone Says Dating Is Impossible Now. But I’ve Struggled More With Something Just as Important.
A lot of us are lonely. Slate's Advice Week can help.
slate.com
What Janet Jackson Did—and Didn’t—Say About Kamala Harris’ Race
Jackson’s representatives denied an apology purported to be made on her behalf after she echoed misinformation about Harris’ race.
1 h
time.com
Making (And Keeping) Parent Friends
Plus: healthy snacks, friendship necklaces, and the beauty of phones.
1 h
slate.com
Defense Lawyers Scramble to Halt Marcellus Williams’s Execution in Missouri
A hearing on Monday in the state’s Supreme Court could determine whether Marcellus Williams is executed on Tuesday for a 1998 murder conviction.
1 h
nytimes.com
Just When You Thought Politics Couldn’t Get Any Grosser
The Mark Robinson story is yet another case of self-declared morality being at variance with actual behavior.
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nytimes.com
What’s Behind Trump’s Best Poll Results in Weeks
In a shift from a Times/Siena survey last month, he leads in three Sun Belt battleground states.
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nytimes.com