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The Bathtub Murder of Kendy Howard

Did a former Idaho state trooper use his law enforcement skills to stage his wife’s death in their bathtub? "48 Hours" correspondent Peter Van Sant reports.
Read full article on: cbsnews.com
Chat with Alexandra Petri and tell her your jokes
Alexandra's live chat with readers starts at 11 a.m. ET on Tuesday. Submit your questions now.
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washingtonpost.com
Adams’ indictment ‘lawfare’: Letters to the Editor — Sept. 30, 2024
NY Post readers discuss allegations that the indictment levied against Mayor Adams was political in nature.
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nypost.com
Parents, your preteen girl’s skincare fetish is harming her — body, mind and soul
The aggressive marketing toward young girls happens mainly on social media, as influencers showcase their daily skincare regimens and brand preferences on TikTok, YouTube and Instagram.
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nypost.com
Mayor Hochul to the rescue? Here’s how gov can help NYC as Adams flounders
Gotham needs a strong governor to fill the power vacuum Hizzoner’s scandals have created — and Hochul has powers she can wield to the city’s benefit.
nypost.com
Harris and the Democrats are waging all-out war on constitutional order
Democrats have targeted virtually every institution that makes "democracy" tenable in a diverse and sprawling nation like ours.
nypost.com
Mets to start David Peterson in crucial Sunday game vs. Brewers
The sinking Mets will turn to David Peterson to bail them out.
nypost.com
I once snuck into a Diddy party – here’s how I schmoozed with the stars at an event with naked women and the best hot dogs
For one night 25 years and 35 pounds ago, I was millionaire financier Ted Ammon.
nypost.com
USC can reach the playoff thanks to a tough quarterback who never stops swinging
USC quarterback Miller Moss loves his school and never backs down from a fight, inspiring the Trojans to match his intensity and win.
latimes.com
A restful fly, a deer in the headlights and a winking Sarah Palin make for memorable VP debates
In nearly 50 years, not a single vice presidential debate has made a difference in the race for the White House. Still, the match-ups have provided some of the most memorable political moments in recent history.
latimes.com
D.C. 911 officials tout staffing improvements as scrutiny intensifies
D.C. is not alone in its staffing challenges. 911 workers who responded to a national survey last year overwhelmingly said their call centers were understaffed.
washingtonpost.com
What a 1,000-mile railway across the Yucatán jungle says about Mexico's outgoing president
The $30-billion train line has come to symbolize the presidency of López Obrador, an ambitious, often divisive leader obsessed with cementing his legacy.
latimes.com
In fight to be No. 2, Vance and Walz share humble roots that created different paths
With JD Vance, Trump doubled down on the GOP's America-first agenda, while Harris' selection of Tim Walz helped balance the Democratic ticket.
latimes.com
Money Talk: Trust in the flexibility of living trusts
Deciding the best way to leave money to a heir can be complicated. When the choice is between naming someone as a beneficiary of an account or putting the account into a living trust, the trust offers more flexibility.
latimes.com
How Michael Connelly's look at the Wonderland Massacre led him to Liberace's former boyfriend
In the MGM+ docuseries, the best-selling novelist investigates the notorious 1981 quadruple murder and interviews former Liberace boyfriend Scott Thorson, a key witness.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Your 'protest vote' for Jill Stein is really a vote for Donald Trump
Don't like Kamala Harris' recent comment on guns? The solution is to support gun control, not vote for a Trump-enabling third-party spoiler.
latimes.com
Long-awaited review of D.C. police staffing renews debate over force size
A reform panel asked for scrutiny of D.C. police staffing years ago. They finally got it, but it’s unclear what will happen with the results.
washingtonpost.com
Opinion: Child care is now a central issue in the presidential race. That didn't happen overnight
Before Kamala Harris pushed family support to the forefront, contrasting with Donald Trump, generations of feminist activists championed care workers.
latimes.com
European officials dismiss claim world leaders 'are laughing' at Trump, praise his 'strong message'
Vice President Harris, during September's presidential debate, claimed world leaders were "laughing" at former President Trump. Several foreign officials beg to differ.
foxnews.com
What kind of country would kill Marcellus Williams despite the doubts about his conviction?
The Supreme Court should have stayed Missouri's execution of the convict last week. A top prosecutor and the victim's family argued that he should be spared.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: A 2026 California governor debate in 2024? Please don't
Six weeks before the 2024 election, the 2026 candidates for governor are already debating. Must the media give us all elections, all the time?
latimes.com
D.C.-area forecast: Cloudier today with a few showers. Staying unsettled through Tuesday.
A drier, brighter pattern finally arrives starting Wednesday.
washingtonpost.com
Iran Is Losing. That May Matter More Than Israel’s Mistakes.
Military success rarely brings true peace, but it can preserve societies.
nytimes.com
As antiabortion protests escalate after Dobbs, new California law will crack down on harassers
California abortion providers want harsher sentencing for harassment at clinics amid increase in protests
latimes.com
To Beat Donald Trump, Kamala Harris Needs to Answer One Question
She has prosecuted the case against Donald Trump and clarified some policy views, but not her why. That’s what voters want to know.
nytimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Donald Trump has a point about civil service rules being too protective
It's too hard to dismiss a federal government employee for poor performance. High unionization and civil service protections are to blame.
latimes.com
Staff shortage at U.S. Forest Service hampers Southland wildfire response, locals say
Tactical disputes between the Forest Service and local fire agencies are not new, but recent federal staffing shortages have exacerbated long-simmering tension.
latimes.com
Sometimes real life has to intrude on the news. In this election year, what's crucial will catch up to you
Even a week where news and the election take a back seat to real life can't dim this reality: 2024 is the most consequential election in memory.
latimes.com
The donors shelling out big money in Md.’s critical U.S. Senate race
Maryland’s Future, a deep-pocketed super PAC backing Hogan, the state’s popular former governor, reserved $18 million in airtime during the last six weeks of the race.
washingtonpost.com
The climate crisis is here. We can still have a better world. 
If I asked you to tell me the one issue that makes you feel the most pessimistic, what would it be? I feel pretty confident saying that the most popular response — certainly one of the most popular responses, anyway — would be climate change. But is climate despair really as tempting and reasonable as it seems? The problem isn’t imaginary. Climate change is real and terrifying, but even if it’s as bad as the worst predictions suggest, do we gain anything by resigning ourselves to that fate? What effect might our despair have on our ability to act in the present? Is our fatalism undercutting our capacity to tackle this problem? On a recent episode of The Gray Area, I invited Ayana Elizabeth Johnson on to talk about how we might collectively address climate change without falling into despair or getting mired in false hope. She’s a marine biologist, a co-founder of the non-profit think tank Urban Ocean Lab, and the author of a new book called What If We Get it Right? It’s a curated series of essays and poetry and conversations with a wide range of people who are all, in their own ways, trying to build a better future. And this is not a blindly optimistic book: The point isn’t that everything is fine. The point is that we have to act as though the future is a place we actually want to live in — not centuries into the distant future but now and in the decades to come.  According to Johnson, there are already many concrete climate solutions. If we were motivated by a belief in a better tomorrow — not a worse one — we would implement more of those solutions (and find new ones). So, if you’re someone looking for inspiration, or reasons to feel hopeful — or, even better, for guidance on what to do and where to start — then this book, and this conversation with Johnson, is for you. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Sean Illing You’re a marine biologist, which I think is a standard top-five dream job for kids. Was that your gateway to environmentalism? Is that why you do this work?  Ayana Elizabeth Johnson Super common dream job — like many 5- to 10-year-olds are very into marine biology as a life path. But I was really just a kid who loved nature, which is honestly not very unique. How many kids like bugs and fireflies and shooting stars and octopuses and autumn leaves and all the rest of it? I was just like, “This all seems very cool.” That innate curiosity — that biophilia, as E.O. Wilson calls it, the magnificent entomologist — is just part of who we are as humans.  It’s normal to love the world. It’s less common to make that your job. But of course, once you fall in love with nature — whether it’s with one ecosystem or a few specific species — and you find out that it’s threatened, you’re like, “Wait a second, what are we doing about this? Is there a grown-up who’s already on top of this? Is this not sorted? Seems like we should protect forests and coral reefs and all the rest.” My mom was cleaning out the closet and found these old school papers, and apparently I was writing the same essays since I was like 10 about nature being great and how we should protect it. So, it wasn’t always going to be the ocean. I wanted to become a park ranger at one point, an environmental lawyer at another. But the ocean seemed like it needed more advocates at the particular moment that I was thinking about graduate school.  Sean Illing You open your book by saying that any time you tell people that you do climate work, they invariably ask, and I’m quoting you — “how fucked are we?” Well, Ayana, how fucked are we?  Ayana Elizabeth Johnson We’re pretty fucked, but there’s a lot we could do to have a better possible future. And I think it’s important to always hold both of those things together. We have already changed the climate. We are already seeing the intense heat waves and floods and droughts and wildfires and hurricanes. All of that is already supercharged by our changed climate.  But there’s still so much we can do. We basically have the solutions we need. We’re just being really slow at deploying them, at implementing them. We already know how to transition to renewable energy and stop spewing fossil fuels. We know how to protect and restore ecosystems that are absorbing all this carbon. We know how to green buildings, insulate buildings, shift to better public transit, improve our food system — the solutions are all right there. My book has a reality check chapter where I lay out all the bad news, but that’s three pages. And then the rest of the book asks, what are we going to do about it?  Sean Illing There’s no point anymore in talking about how to solve the problem of climate change, right? I mean, that ship has sailed. It’s all about adaptation now.  Ayana Elizabeth Johnson Yeah. I mean, the climate has already changed. There’s not a time machine back to before we put a completely mind-boggling amount of excess carbon into the atmosphere. Whether and how well we address the climate crisis determines the outcomes of life on Earth for all 8 million species and whether hundreds of millions of people live or die, and how well we all can live. So even though perfection is not an option, there’s such a wide range of possible futures, and we just need to make sure we get the best possible one.  Sean Illing This is really about degrees of suffering and the consequences of specific choices we make — or won’t make, as it might be. The difference between temperature spikes of 2 and 4 degrees is the difference between lots of people living and dying. Right?  Ayana Elizabeth Johnson It’s easier for me to think about it in terms of the human body running a fever: the difference between you having a fever of 100 and 102 or 103 is a huge difference. And that’s the level of sensitivity to temperature that all species and ecosystems have. If we can prevent a half a degree of warming or a degree of warming, that actually makes a big difference. It’s worth the effort.  Sean Illing People like to use different words to describe the project ahead of us — words like “sustainability” or “revolution.” You like to use the word “transformation.” Why is that a better way to frame this?  Ayana Elizabeth Johnson The two words that I pair together are “possibility” and “transformation.” There’s this wide spectrum of possible futures. I’m not an optimist. I’m not particularly hopeful given human history because we don’t have a great track record of addressing collectively major challenges that we face. There are some important exceptions to that, but the sense of possibility really drives me because the future is not yet written. Like, what if we just wrote a better one than the trajectory that we’re on?  Sean Illing How do we reshape and reimagine how we live on this planet and with each other? I can get excited about possibility and transformation — like, what kind of future do we want to create together?  Ayana Elizabeth Johnson Okay, you can’t see me right now but I’m wiggling — I’m wiggling my fingers, gesturing with like, possibility, excitement, sparkles. I just feel like we need to be asking more big questions of ourselves and each other in this moment. We’re at this inflection point in human history. We either get our shit together or we don’t. And obviously I would like us to at least try.  Sean Illing But you don’t like the word “sustainable,” right? You feel like that’s setting the bar too low?  Ayana Elizabeth Johnson It’s sort of just an everywhere word. It is useful — but it doesn’t have a lot of meaning. It’s very general. A useful analog I’ve heard is: If someone asked you how your marriage was going and you were like, “Eh, it’s sustainable,” I would probably say, “Well, okay, don’t want to trade lives with you.”  So, yes, I would say we should set a higher bar than sustainability, especially given that we’ve already degraded nature so much that I don’t want to just sustain what we have. I want to protect and restore.  Sean Illing A beautiful question you pose in your book is: What if climate adaptation is beautiful? So, let’s talk about that. What if climate adaptation is beautiful? What then? Is it rainbows and sunshine? What are the kind of things we have to look forward to? Ayana Elizabeth Johnson Well, I think we will always have rainbows and sunshine. That’s the good news. But imagine if we were just deliberate about building things that were aesthetically pleasing and durable and could be deconstructed and repurposed instead of demolishing things. Some cities and towns are now passing essentially deconstruction ordinances that say you have to take apart buildings instead of demolishing them, instead of just pulverizing everything and sending it to the landfill. You have to take it apart so the pieces can be reused like Legos, which seems obvious, almost like, “Why wouldn’t we always have been doing that?” There are so many choices that we’re currently making that shape our societal trajectory. Every day, we are building a piece of the future, something that will be here in 10 years or a century or more. So let’s just be really thoughtful about all that and make it nice.  Sean Illing Are you encouraged by the direction of the climate movement as it stands at the moment? What are your major concerns?  Ayana Elizabeth Johnson My primary concern is that we’re just not moving fast enough, given that we have basically all the solutions that we need to begin to make a difference. It’s just incredibly frustrating how politics are holding us back.  I mean, in this country, there’s division between the two major parties about whether climate change exists and whether it’s something we should address, which is just so retrograde, I don’t even know where to start. And it’s especially frustrating because most Republican politicians are literally just pretending they don’t think it exists; they are fully aware that climate science is real, but it’s untenable politically for them to admit that. That’s a huge part of why we’re in this mess, as well as the fact that the fossil fuel lobby is ridiculously powerful in this country. And, you know, so many politicians are bought and paid for in one way or another, even though the fossil fuel industry doesn’t account for very many jobs.  Then you have the banking sector, which is funding all these fossil fuel corporations to continue expanding their extraction and infrastructure. Since the Paris Agreement was signed in 2015, 60 banks have provided 6.9 trillion in financing to fossil fuel companies. But the top four US banks alone, JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America, have provided almost $1.5 trillion to finance fossil fuel companies.   So, yeah, if you have your money in any of those banks, I would encourage you to do something like move your retirement savings to a place that does not make the problem worse.  Sean Illing What would be the difference between a Harris administration and another Trump administration? What are the stakes on the climate front?  Ayana Elizabeth Johnson The stakes are sky high. There are actually graphs projecting the difference in greenhouse gas emissions between the two. It’s really remarkable because on one hand, you have Vice President Harris, who was the deciding vote in passing the Inflation Reduction Act, the largest ever investment in climate solutions in world history. This Biden-Harris administration has created the American Climate Corps that has put tens of thousands of young people to work implementing climate solutions from reducing wildfire risk to installing solar panels to replanting wetlands. We have a loan program office in the Department of Energy that has hundreds of billions of dollars that they’re giving out to businesses that are figuring out this renewable energy transition. All of that could be completely wiped out, essentially on day one of a Trump administration.  And so on the other hand, you have in Trump a candidate who has offered to fossil fuel executives that if they donate $1 billion to his presidential campaign, he will basically do their bidding once he gets into the White House. That is how stark a difference this is.  Sean Illing There’s part of the book where you write — I’m quoting again— “Fuck hope. What’s the strategy?” Do you feel like we, meaning all of us collectively, have a clear, concrete strategy for creating a better future in the face of climate change? Or are we going to keep doing what we’ve been doing? Ayana Elizabeth Johnson This is where I think media, Hollywood, music, art, culture makers broadly matter so much. I cannot literally show you what the future could look like. I can talk about it. I can write about it. I can interview people about it. I can, as I did for this book, commission art about it.  But if it’s possible to go through our day-to-day and not encounter anything about climate, that’s a huge problem. Right now, climate coverage accounts for less than 1 percent of the minutes on major TV news stations; that’s actually gone down from recent years, so we’re going in the wrong direction.  If this is not part of our day-to-day exposure, then it’s just always on the back burner. There’s always something more important. And we’re thinking about climate as something separate from our other concerns, whereas it’s actually just the context within which everything else right now is playing out.  So there’s a chapter in the book called “I Dream of Climate RomComs,” where I interview producer Franklin Leonard, founder of The Blacklist out in Hollywood, and Adam McKay, filmmaker, writer, director, about the role of Hollywood in this. Because basically, to date, Hollywood has just shown us the apocalypse, the fire and brimstone, The Day After Tomorrow kind of stuff. And there are very few examples of not like utopian rose-colored glasses stuff, but like literally, what if we just used the solutions we had and projected that forward? What would that look like? To hear the rest of Illing’s conversation with Johnson, listen to our latest episode on The Gray Area, available wherever you get your podcasts. 
vox.com
NFL Week 4 predictions: Picks against the spread for every game
The Post's Dave Blezow returns for Season 31 of the Bettor's Guide to give his Week 4 NFL picks.
nypost.com
Ukraine’s artillery is helping boost Scranton’s economy
In one U.S. community churning out materiel for Kyiv’s defense, jobs and investment are flowing.
washingtonpost.com
Opinion: MTG’s Boyfriend Brian Glenn Wants People Racially Profiled While Voting
Animated GIF by Thomas Levinson/The Daily Beast/GettyListen to this full episode of The New Abnormal on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon, and Stitcher.Brian Glenn, the national campaign correspondent at far-right outlet Real America’s Voice and the boyfriend of MAGA Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, wants voters racially profiled at polling places to ensure election integrity.“If you go to a polling center and you see busloads, van loads of people walking up to vote that clearly perhaps look like they could be… let’s just make sure people are checking IDs because if people are going in with zero ID and they’re not a U.S. citizen then they shouldn’t be allowed to vote, period,” he said while covering a Trump rally last weekend. “So we need poll watchers that can perhaps sound the alarm if they think that is going on so that maybe some election officials can double check on that. So if we start to see all these caravan of people coming in, let’s make sure they’re all legal before we allow them to vote. It’s as simple as that.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
California teen, 17, previously tried as a minor for double murder charged in another killing after release
A 17-year-old charged in California as a juvenile for a double murder that happened five years ago is now charged in connection with another murder.
foxnews.com
Why the World’s Biggest Powers Can’t Stop a Middle East War
The United States’ ability to influence events in the Mideast has waned, and other major nations have essentially been onlookers.
nytimes.com
Slate Crossword: Linda Ronstadt Hit … or a Repeated Lyric in Salt-N-Pepa’s “Push It” (Eleven Letters)
Ready for some wordplay? Sharpen your skills with Slate’s puzzle for Sept. 28, 2024.
slate.com
Florida sailor living on dream boat with his dog recalls terrifying moment they became stranded in Gulf of Mexico during Hurricane Helene
For the first year on the water, the adventurous sailor, alongside his pooch, experienced "peace and healing" until Helene formed in the nearby waters.
nypost.com
Excuse Me, Tim Walz Took His Wife to See Which Movie on Their First Date?
I think I know what happened here.
slate.com
Jets’ Jamien Sherwood likely to start again in place of injured C.J. Mosley
It appears that Jamien Sherwood is going to start at linebacker again this week as C.J. Mosley recovers from the toe injury he suffered two weeks ago.
nypost.com
Francisco Alvarez returns to action as pinch hitter a day after back injury
MILWAUKEE — Francisco Alvarez was on the bench for Saturday’s game after departing the previous night with back spasms, but found his way into action. The catcher entered as a pinch hitter in the eighth inning of the 6-0 loss to the Brewers and remained in the game in the bottom of the frame. A...
nypost.com
El Chapo’s former lawyer Mariel Colón launches music career
The scene is from “La Señora,” the latest music video from Colón, who spent several years working as a defense lawyer for Guzmán while he faced trial in a US court.
nypost.com
Comet visible from Earth for first time in 80,000 years: 'Most anticipated comet of the year'
A comet that has not been seen for more than 80,000 years is expected to be visible from Earth, potentially during two separate time periods in the next month.
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foxnews.com
DOJ sues Alabama, state’s top election official for allegedly purging noncitizen voters too close to election
The Justice Department seeks injunctive relief that "would restore the ability of impacted eligible voters to vote unimpeded on Election Day," the department said in a statement.
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nypost.com
Liberty’s Sabrina Ionescu the X-factor in rematch vs. defending champion Aces
The newfound versatility of Sabrina Ionescu will be crucial to the early semifinal meeting with the Aces starting on Sunday in the best-of-five series.
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nypost.com
What We Know About Hurricane Helene’s Destruction So Far
Helene was the strongest storm to ever hit Florida’s Big Bend region. As it made its way across the Southeast, the storm inundated towns with floods and mudslides, killing at least 60.
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nytimes.com
Coppola’s ‘Megalopolis’ Plays to Near-Empty Theaters
Francis Ford Coppola spent roughly $140 million on the film, which debuted to an estimated $4 million in weekend ticket sales.
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nytimes.com
Beneath the Potential Strike at U.S. Ports: Tensions Over Innovation
Port operators have long embraced automation, while dockworkers view it as a threat to their livelihoods.
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nytimes.com
Five Court Cases to Watch Ahead of Election Day
A blizzard of voting lawsuits are landing in swing states in the final weeks before the election. Here’s a guide to the cases that could matter most.
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nytimes.com
Donald Trump and His Real-Life Apprentice
The former president views JD Vance as a kindred political spirit, while Mr. Vance has spoken of Mr. Trump as a kind of father figure.
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nytimes.com