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Donald Trump Nominates Brendan Carr to Chair FCC

President-elect Donald Trump has nominated Brendan Carr to serve as Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

The post Donald Trump Nominates Brendan Carr to Chair FCC appeared first on Breitbart.


Read full article on: breitbart.com
Giants believe they can become rags-to-riches story with right young quarterback pick
So, if the Giants take a quarterback up high in the first round of the 2025 NFL Draft, does that provide a franchise reset of sorts?
nypost.com
14 suspects linked to powerful cartel arrested in Spain murder probe
The arrests came after a murder victim's family received a large ransom request and $32,000 was paid in cryptocurrency.
cbsnews.com
Federal complaint targets Boston school district for Whites-only teacher training on racism
Group files civil rights complaint against Boston Public Schools over racially-segregated "affinity groups" teaching White teachers and parents how to be less racist.
foxnews.com
Spirit Airlines files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
A federal judge had blocked the budget airline's proposed merger with JetBlue.
abcnews.go.com
Trump support dominates weekend in sports as athletes perform president-elect's dance moves
Support for President-elect Donald Trump was on full display across the entire weekend as athletes performed his dance moves during matches and games.
foxnews.com
Spirit Airlines files for bankruptcy as financial losses pile up and debt payments loom
The last bankruptcy by a major US carrier ended when American Airlines emerged from Chapter 11 protection and simultaneously merged with US Airways in December 2013.
nypost.com
Chilling new report reveals just how widespread antisemitism is at US colleges, including in NYC
A staggering 72% of Jewish college students in the US feel "unwelcome" on their campuses, while more than half have been victims of antisemitism, a dismal new report shows.
nypost.com
An engrossing ballet novel asks whether becoming a star is worth the sacrifice
In 'City of Night Birds,' Juhea Kim takes on the cost of artistic obsession and the tradeoffs between personal life and career.
latimes.com
Has nuclear power entered a new era of acceptance amid global warming?
Public support for nuclear power is the highest its been in more than a decade as the nation struggles to reduce its reliance on planet-warming fossil fuels.
latimes.com
The reuse revolution: Your guide to upcycled and sustainable fashion brands
It all feels different this time, like we’re finally entering the upcycling era.
latimes.com
The elusive and audacious Sagittarian, our true unicorn of the zodiac
The Sagittarian needs to move through the world with a healthy dose of playfulness at all times.
latimes.com
Voters sent a clear message to Newsom, Democrats: We're fed up
Newsom and Democrats need to do less preaching and more listening.
latimes.com
Mexican Mafia settled scores with killing at Long Beach homeless camp, records reveal
Samuel Villalba became a member of the Mexican Mafia in the 1980s. Police found him shot to death in a homeless camp in 2021 and recently arrested one suspected gunman.
latimes.com
Meet the voice coach who's become a 'spiritual guru' to Hollywood's biggest stars
Whether they want to sound like Elvis, Judy, Dylan, Springsteen or just a better version of themselves, celebrities turn to Eric Vetro for help. Here's how he does it.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Harris lost and conceded with dignity. Why the 'mean girl' take on her campaign?
Readers react to Charlotte Allen's view that Kamala Harris might have lost the election when she stopped being nice and cheery.
latimes.com
California's protections for transgender care could be tested under Trump
Donald Trump's return to the White House could undermine access to gender-affirming care in California, advocates and others say, despite vows by lawmakers to protect it.
latimes.com
You can still hike scenic Palos Verdes. Here are 5 safe trails that avoid the landslides
These hikes in Rancho Palos Verdes, Palos Verdes Estates, Rolling Hills Estates and Rolling Hills offer up a range of terrain, native plants and views.
latimes.com
The downtown restaurant bringing some much-needed daytime energy to L.A.'s lunch scene
TK
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Public education is collapsing. Look in a mirror for people to blame
Teachers are leaving their profession in droves. When will the public see this will eventually cause the collapse of our education system?
latimes.com
Tim Weah, healthy and with a clear mind, is back for the USMNT
The 24-year-old winger is set to give the U.S. men a boost after a crushing red card in last summer’s Copa América.
washingtonpost.com
Chloe Bennet knows what it's like to straddle two worlds, and not just in 'Interior Chinatown'
Chloe Bennet, who co-stars in Hulu's 'Interior Chinatown,' discusses how her identity was central to her role in Charles Yu's new series that's based on his book of the same name.
latimes.com
Some Montgomery County high schools will offer a Holocaust studies course
Some Montgomery high schools will offer Holocaust studies as a semester-long elective course, following a school board vote earlier this month.
washingtonpost.com
Rams-Patriots takeaways: With four TD passes, Matthew Stafford keeps breaking records
The Rams' defense has done a fine job, but one of the Rams' best attributes is the passing combination of Matthew Stafford, Cooper Kupp and Puka Nacua.
latimes.com
Trump's worst Cabinet picks aren't just unqualified, they're part of a bigger power grab
Trump’s most controversial Cabinet nominees are ideologues and eccentrics chosen for loyalty. They are also foot soldiers in a power grab.
latimes.com
Los Angeles rezoning plan won't spur enough new housing, report finds
A new plan to rezone Los Angeles for more growth won't lead to the construction of enough homes to meet its goals, an analysis from researchers at UCLA finds.
latimes.com
Ken Burns' absorbing new Leonardo da Vinci doc on PBS sidesteps one important question
For his first non-American subject, documentary filmmaker Ken Burns chose Renaissance polymath Leonardo da Vinci.
latimes.com
Chargers can say 'Start the MVP talk' after Justin Herbert beats Bengals in clutch
Justin Herbert had an extraordinary first half before the Chargers slumped and blew a 21-point lead to the Bengals, but the quarterback was clutch in the end.
latimes.com
Rashida Jones delivers the speech late father Quincy wrote to accept his honorary Oscar
Writer-director Richard Curtis, casting director Juliet Taylor and producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli were also honored at the 2024 Governors Awards on Sunday.
latimes.com
Laken Riley murder suspect Jose Ibarra returns to court for trial as prosecution presents more witnesses
Laken Riley murder suspect Jose Ibarra will return to court Monday for the second day of his trial. Ibarra is accused of attacking and killing Riley on her run on Feb. 22.
foxnews.com
California will lead a Trump resistance again. Round 2 will be harder.
An emboldened Trump has already threatened the state and in his second term will be backed by courts more likely to see things his way.
washingtonpost.com
How a broken juvenile justice system is failing in NYC
More and more Big Apple youngsters are getting busted by police, as New York State's broken juvenile justice system continues to fail troubled teens.
nypost.com
Eat junk food when you’re stressed? These 2 drinks can help your body reset
Just in time for the holidays, some heart-warming news.
nypost.com
I don’t have much money. Is it okay if I don’t give to charity?
Your Mileage May Vary is an advice column offering you a new framework for thinking through your ethical dilemmas and philosophical questions. This unconventional column is based on value pluralism — the idea that each of us has multiple values that are equally valid but that often conflict with each other. Here is a Vox reader’s question, condensed and edited for clarity. As a low-income person, I’m on government assistance and I have government health insurance. My situation makes it so that I cannot donate to others, eat organic, buy slow fashion, etc. I try to thrift and eat organic when I can, but I can’t always ensure that the food I am consuming is being grown or raised in an ethical way — it’s too expensive. And I can’t donate to people. I feel guilt about genocides and wars in other countries, but I cannot afford to donate money to others, not in other countries, and not even in my own country. I am barely above water, but I feel guilt for not being able to do things to better my community, society, and world. Is it okay that I don’t donate because I can’t? Dear Barely Above Water, We live in a consumer society, where there’s a lot of focus on how we spend our money. That can trick us into thinking that our spending is the number one reflection of our moral character — as if buying cheap food or clothes automatically means we’re bad, and donating to charity is the only way to do good. The reality is more complex. For starters, if you really can’t afford to buy things that are ethically sourced, that says more about our society than it does about you. It’s an indictment of our factory farm system, which produces cheap meat at a horrific cost to animal welfare, and of our global supply chains, which are still tainted with forced labor. It’s not an indictment of you as an individual.  Have a question you want me to answer in the next Your Mileage May Vary column? Feel free to email me at sigal.samuel@vox.com or fill out this anonymous form! Newsletter subscribers will get my column before anyone else does and their questions will be prioritized for future editions. Sign up here! The 18th-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant famously said “ought” implies “can.” That means that if you’ve taken a hard look at your finances and concluded that you genuinely can’t afford to buy this or that, then you aren’t morally obliged to.  But there’s a bigger point to be made here, which is that spending is just one aspect of moral behavior — it’s not the only aspect or even the primary one. You write that you can’t afford to donate money, which makes you feel guilty for not being able to improve the world. To which I would say: Donating money to charity isn’t the only way to improve the world!  A handy way to remind yourself of this is to think of the slogan “solidarity, not charity.” The concept of solidarity became very popular against the backdrop of the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century, when modern capitalism was emerging and political theorists like Karl Marx began pushing back. In 1902, the Russian anarcho-communist philosopher Peter Kropotkin published an essay collection titled Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution. Pointing to examples of cooperation between and among different species, he argued that’s what really enables a species to survive through evolutionary history, and developed the idea of mutual aid as distinct from traditional charity. Whereas charity involves a giver and a receiver, and implicitly sets up a hierarchical relationship between them, mutual aid is a voluntary exchange among equals. There isn’t a giver and a receiver, because the assumption is that every single person has something to give others — whether it’s money, a meal, a word of wisdom, or a warm smile. The ways people help each other might be different, but that’s okay, because we all contribute in different ways. Kropotkin made such a compelling case for solidarity — or, as he put it, “the close dependency of everyone’s happiness upon the happiness of all” — that it became a mainstay in communities neglected by the state in Europe and the US. The Black political organization known as the Black Panthers, for example, had a robust mutual aid program that included free breakfasts for Black children.  But it would be a mistake to assume that a focus on solidarity just popped into existence ex nihilo in the modern era. The core insight here — that monetary charity is only one small part of solidarity — has been around for ages. You can find a great example of this in the Islamic tradition, which goes back to the seventh century. The religion places a very high premium on charity — it’s one of the five pillars of Islam. Every year, Muslims are supposed to donate a fixed portion of their wealth to charity; it’s a monetary form of giving known as zakat. But there’s another form of giving, called sadaqah, which isn’t necessarily monetary.    The Hadith, a collection of the sayings and traditions of the prophet Muhammad, contains a beautiful explanation of sadaqah:  A sadaqah is due for every joint in each person on every day the sun comes up: to act justly between two people is a sadaqah; to help a man with his mount, lifting him onto it or hoisting up his belongings onto it, is a sadaqah; a good word is a sadaqah; and removing a harmful thing from the road is a sadaqah.  In other words, sadaqah comes in many shapes and sizes; what seems to unite them is a desire to help others. This is broader than mere charity. It’s what I would call solidarity. And notice how it’s arguably even more morally demanding than monetary charity. All charity requires is writing a check — an action that can be done dispassionately, and even effortlessly for someone lucky enough to have money. It doesn’t require commitment to a broader project of solidarity or justice. In fact, a common critique of charity is it can serve as a distraction from the unjust ways that wealth is created. But sadaqah requires you to be engaged, emotionally and often physically, too. The Vox guide to giving The holiday season is giving season. This year, Vox is exploring every element of charitable giving — from making the case for donating 10 percent of your income, to recommending specific charities for specific causes, to explaining what you can do to make a difference beyond donations. You can find all of our giving guide stories here. There are probably lots of ways you’re already expressing solidarity with others, maybe without even realizing it. As my colleague Rachel M. Cohen reported, acts of service for family, friends, and neighbors are typically not counted as volunteering, and opening your home to relatives or sending remittances to them is not counted as charitable giving. But they arguably should be. Informal caregiving and aid are expressions of solidarity, too.  So, for starters, I’d encourage you to make a list of all the ways you’re already bettering your community. Do you occasionally keep an eye on your neighbor’s kid, or help care for an aunt, or bring over a meal to a friend? Those things count!  Doing more formal volunteer work or organizing requires a currency that may be hard to come by: time. But to the extent that this is feasible for you, consider ways you can make an impact both locally and globally.  Can you volunteer one hour a week to help low-income kids in your community develop their literacy skills? Can you join a labor union? Can you spearhead a petition to get your school or workplace to offer more meat-free alternatives in the cafeteria?  Since you mentioned that war and genocide in other countries weigh heavily on you, can you organize on behalf of, and vote for, politicians with a good stance on foreign policy? Given what an outsized role the US plays in the world, that’s one of the biggest levers you can pull if you’re in America. You’ll notice that none of these options requires monetary giving. They’re all forms of sadaqah. That said, I wouldn’t entirely ignore the zakat part of giving unless you clearly have to.  Some people do have to. There isn’t much sense in donating money if you can’t afford to cover your own basic needs, because then you yourself will be in need of donations. When people give and give until they’ve got nothing left, it becomes unsustainable and doesn’t end well, sometimes leading to burnout or collapse. Even Islam, with its heavy emphasis on charity, recognizes this: that’s why only those who have money over and above a certain minimum amount of wealth are obligated to pay zakat. But if you’ve got even just a few extra dollars here and there, don’t underestimate the good they can do. For instance, Miriam’s Kitchen, a DC-based nonprofit with a mission to end chronic homelessness, can serve a full meal to a person experiencing homelessness for just $1.25. And in poorer countries, your money can go even further. If you donate to GiveDirectly, they will straight-up give your cash to people living in extreme poverty in Africa — where a dollar can buy much more than it can in the US — with no strings attached. I like donating this way because it’s highly cost-effective and it avoids the paternalism of more traditional charities, since it trusts people to make their own decisions about what to buy and how to improve their lives.  Donating doesn’t just help others — it also helps you. Research shows that giving money away actually makes us happier and enhances our well-being. I suspect it’s because it transforms our own consciousness, reminding us that we are connected to others in a vast web of interdependency.  In fact, I’ve seen this firsthand. I grew up in a family on welfare. We always had housing and enough to eat, but we couldn’t afford frills. Yet whenever my dad and I went downtown, he always made sure to carry a few bucks in his pockets, just so he could hand them out to people experiencing homelessness.  To be honest, my child-brain whined with anxiety when he did that: What if we need that money? But I saw how happy it made my dad. He knew it wasn’t enough to transform life for the people we encountered. But by giving them what he could, he was living out his values — caring for people, respecting their autonomy to spend money however they think best — while reminding himself that he’s connected to others. As an adult, I was lucky to get jobs that paid decently, but I kept grappling with money dysmorphia — feeling nervous about money even after becoming financially stable. Donating felt scary to me, so I started small: $10 here, $50 there, and eventually much more. My initial fear soon gave way to a wild, leaping joy. As weird as it may sound, Giving Tuesday actually became one of my favorite days of the year. Just like my dad, I had discovered the psychological benefits of standing in solidarity with others with whatever resources one has.  I don’t want you to miss out on those benefits. I hope you reap them at every turn: by counting all the ways you already stand in solidarity with others, by contributing emotionally and physically, and — to whatever extent possible — by giving financially, too. Bonus: What I’m reading I recently picked up Parfit, a biography of British philosopher Derek Parfit, who once beautifully described his own shift from the pain of disconnection to the joy of connection with others: “I seemed imprisoned in myself. My life seemed like a glass tunnel, through which I was moving faster every year, and at the end of which there was darkness. When I changed my view, the walls of my glass tunnel disappeared. I now live in the open air. There is still a difference between my life and the lives of other people. But the difference is less. Other people are closer. I am less concerned about the rest of my own life, and more concerned about the lives of others.” I’m really enjoying The Islamic Moses, journalist Mustafa Akyol’s new book about the similarities between Islam and Judaism. Fun fact: The Arabic term sadaqah is related to the Hebrew term tzedakah, which is often translated as charity but really has a much broader meaning. Author-activists Astra Taylor and Leah Hunt-Hendrix published a book this year called Solidarity. I’m a sucker for the history of ideas, so I liked the book’s explanation of how the concept of solidarity actually goes all the way back to ancient Rome! 
vox.com
Spirit Airlines files for bankruptcy
Spirit Airlines said Monday that it has filed for bankruptcy protection and will attempt to reboot as it struggles to recover from the pandemic-caused swoon in travel and failed mergers.
cbsnews.com
Spirit Airlines files for bankruptcy
The low-cost airline filed for bankruptcy protection Monday. It will continue to operate as it seeks to restructure its debt.
washingtonpost.com
Which Word Describes the Appearance of a Person Called a Tatterdemalion?
Test your wits on the Slate Quiz for Nov. 18, 2024.
slate.com
Moscow warns US missile authorization may mark new level of involvement in conflict
Russian would consider Ukraine's use of U.S. long-range weapons against Russian forces to be a "qualitatively new round of tensions" between the Moscow and Washington.
abcnews.go.com
Slate Mini Crossword for Nov. 18, 2024
Take a quick break with our daily 5x5 grid.
slate.com
Slate Crossword: Faith Worshiping the Horned God and Triple Goddess (Five Letters)
Ready for some wordplay? Sharpen your skills with Slate’s puzzle for Nov. 18, 2024.
slate.com
Gladiator 2 Is Here. Unfortunately, I Was Not Entertained.
The long-awaited sequel is a dismal retread—with one bright spot.
slate.com
The Resistance Will Look Different This Time Around. That’s OK.
A massive Women’s March was inspiring, sure, but it wasn’t the reason why things got done.
1 h
slate.com
Pro wrestling legend Eric Bischoff shares 1 creative angle that failed to take off
Pro wrestling legend Eric Bischoff explained to Fox News Digital one storyline that didn't get clearance to take off when he was with World Championship Wrestling.
1 h
foxnews.com
Biden to send Congress an emergency funding bill for disaster relief
The bill will be put forth "in the coming days," a White House official said. The bill is meant to address funding shortages reported after a brutal storm season.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Trump's choice for FCC chairman says agency 'will end its promotion of DEI' next year
Brendan Carr, current senior Republican member of the FCC and President-elect Donald Trump's choice for FCC chairman, said the agency will stop promoting DEI in 2025.
1 h
foxnews.com
Florida man arrested after pretending to be undercover police officer to avoid background check
William Milstead was arrested after pretending to be an undercover officer in Florida in order to avoid a background check with a real estate agency.
2 h
nypost.com
Trump taps Musk-backed big tech critic Brendan Carr to head FCC
President-elect Donald Trump tapped Republican Brendan Carr, an Elon Musk-backed critic of big tech, to lead the FCC, calling Carr a "warrior for Free Speech."
2 h
cbsnews.com
Tornado touches down in southwestern Oklahoma, National Weather Service says
The storm was near Granite, a town with a population of about 1,600, at about 3:37 a.m. CST, the service said.
2 h
abcnews.go.com
A beagle’s dream job: Sniffing food that shouldn’t be packed in luggage
Meet the Beagle Brigade patrolling Dulles International Airport for plants and meat products that travelers are prohibited from bringing into the country.
2 h
washingtonpost.com