инструменты
Изменить страну:

Republican Allegedly Refusing To Lower Flags to Half-Staff Sparks Anger

A local Democrat said lowering the flags would be "a small yet powerful gesture that reflects our shared values."
Читать статью полностью на: newsweek.com
Prep talk: Reggie and Cheryl Miller honored in Riverside Poly gym
Reggie and Cheryl Miller have their jerseys hanging on a wall in Riverside Poly gym.
latimes.com
Inside Putin’s mindset: What team Trump can expect from Moscow when negotiating options on Russia-Ukraine war
Russian President Vladimir Putin will drive a hard bargain with President-elect Donald Trump on Ukraine, because he is confident that Russian military can outlast Ukraine’s and that Team Trump does not have leverage.
foxnews.com
Meghan Markle’s dad Thomas moves to other side of world to escape ‘awful drama’: ‘Ready for a change’
The retired TV lighting director, 80, has revealed that he's looking to make the move overseas in a desperate bid to have a "fresh start."
nypost.com
Dozens of marine mammals found dead after oil spill
An animal rescue group said 61 dead cetaceans - an order of aquatic mammals that includes whales and dolphins - had been recorded since the oil spill.
cbsnews.com
Mom Wakes At 1AM To Find 2-Year-Old Missing, Unprepared For What Comes Next
Lauren Remillard got up to use the bathroom. When she came back the light and TV were on in her room, with no one to be seen.
newsweek.com
Map Shows IRS' New Tax Deadline for 24 States
Disaster-area taxpayers in 14 states have until February 3 to file their 2023 returns, and, in 10 other states, until May 1.
newsweek.com
HMPV: Two Babies Diagnosed With Virus in India
The flu-like virus can lead to serious illness among vulnerable groups, such as young children, the elderly and people with weakened immune systems.
newsweek.com
I Faced a Humiliating Condition After Giving Birth—Then It Inspired Me
Having a big baby can do a number on your body, and I was no exception.
newsweek.com
Zelensky Wants To Attend Trump's Inauguration, Hasn't Been Invited Yet
The Ukrainian president said he could not come during the war "unless President Trump invites me personally."
newsweek.com
Deadly New Year's trend strikes again in Japan
Choking on mochi is so common that authorities offer tips every year on how to help someone who has the food lodged in their throat.
cbsnews.com
North Korea Fires Hypersonic Missile in First Weapons Test of 2025
The South Korean military said the weapon may have been a variant capable of carrying a hypersonic payload.
newsweek.com
5 things to watch as NYS lawmakers kick off 2025 and top Democrats brace for Trump’s return
Even before their official return to the capital city Wednesday, Democrats have already started jostling for their pet projects and political priorities in a year that policy debates are likely to take a back seat to the contentious mayoral primary and the Governor’s own promised reelection bid in 2026.
nypost.com
U.S. Capitol Police chief opposes pardons for assaults against police
Pardons would send a message that police don’t matter, and risk politicizing law enforcement of violent protests, Manger says on eve of the Jan. 6 anniversary.
washingtonpost.com
Texans considered easier playoff opponent for Chargers but 'They've got playmakers'
Many believe the Chargers (11-6) got a break when they earned the No. 5 AFC seed and a wild-card game with the Texans (10-7) but Jim Harbaugh is not so sure.
latimes.com
School Closings Near Me: How Winter Storm Has Impacted Your State
The National Weather Service issued winter storm warnings from Kansas and Missouri all the way to New Jersey.
newsweek.com
Ground Beef Sparks Health Alert Over Metal and Plastic Fears
The raw ground beef "may be contaminated with foreign material, specifically hard plastic and metal," according to the USDA.
newsweek.com
Pope Names Robert McElroy, an Ally on Immigration, as Cardinal in Washington
The appointment of Robert W. McElroy is a signal of the pope’s priorities, two weeks before Donald J. Trump’s term begins.
nytimes.com
Gunmen open fire on bar customers, killing 5 and wounding 7
Gunmen burst into the bar La Casita Azul and opened fire at customers, leaving bloodied bodies strewn on the floor according to local media.
cbsnews.com
Donald Trump Blasts 'Corrupt' Judge Merchan Days Before Sentencing
The president-elect is not expected to receive a custodial sentence for his hush money conviction.
newsweek.com
Keir Starmer Responds to Elon Musk Over Grooming Scandal
Keir Starmer has responded to Elon Musk over comments the world's richest man made against him regarding the Rotherham grooming scandal.
newsweek.com
James Franklin and Marcus Freeman recognize the historic nature of their CFP semifinal
James Franklin of Penn State and Marcus Freeman of Notre Dame will face off in the Fiesta Bowl. The winner will be the first Black coach to play for an CFP title.
latimes.com
Mike Pence Posts Bible Forgiveness Quote Before Jan 6 Anniversary
The Old Testament verse posted by the former vice president appeared to be inspired by the anniversary of the Capitol riot.
newsweek.com
Texas pizzeria tips hat to highest bidder after petty theft uncovers another crime
A Texas pizzeria went viral on social media in efforts to replace stolen tip money, but ultimately uncovered another victim of the teenage bandits.
foxnews.com
Senate GOP Leader Casts Doubt on Trump's Deportation Plan
"Is it realistic to deport everybody? I mean, there are a lot of people in this country who are here illegally," John Thune said.
newsweek.com
Harris to Certify Trump’s Victory, and Driving in Manhattan Gets Pricier
Plus, you probably haven’t seen the Golden Globe winners.
nytimes.com
These aren't your daddy's Chargers. Jim Harbaugh has team primed for playoff run
The Chargers could on the cusp of winning multiple playoff games, and it has everything to do with its transformation under Jim Harbaugh and Justin Herbert.
latimes.com
What to know about Jimmy Carter funeral in D.C., Jan. 9 federal holiday
The public will be able to pay their respects in D.C. starting on Tuesday. Here’s what to know about visiting hours, what you can bring and road closures.
washingtonpost.com
How the Brian Eno music documentary shifts its scenes with every viewing
The 500 hours of footage available for 'Eno' are assorted and resorted in abrupt, unpredictable ways that keep the eyes and mind jumping.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Attacks on the 'deep state' are really attacks on we the people
The 'deep state' is just another name for the millions-strong federal workforce that is loyal only to the Constitution, not whichever party is in power.
latimes.com
A lack of wastewater testing is blinding the Central Valley to its bird flu problem
The Central Valley is home to many of California's most vulnerable groups to bird flu: agricultural workers. It's also where wastewater surveillance of the virus is the weakest.
latimes.com
My new year's resolutions include — don't laugh — these apple fritters in L.A.
Looking for hope and joy in the new year with my favorite apple fritters.
latimes.com
Ryan Seacrest spins ratings gold as new host of 'Wheel of Fortune'
Replacing a game show host isn't easy. But ratings are up for 'Wheel of Fortune' after Pat Sajak's departure.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: When will AI start giving humans commands? Or is it already, and we just don't know it?
Mary Shelley in "Frankenstein." Stanley Kubrick in "2001." We've long been warned about our inventions turning on us, and it may happen soon with AI.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: These problems will always prevent L.A. from solving homelessness
It's way too easy to become homeless in L.A. The city's and county's main homeless services agency can never fix that.
latimes.com
The top 6 highlights of the Golden Globes, according to those who were there
Our team on the ground at the Beverly Hilton reports on their favorite moments of the night from the red carpet, inside the ballroom, backstage and more.
latimes.com
Why Pedro Almodóvar believes in euthanasia — and celebrating life
Inspired by the 2020 novel 'What Are You Going Through,' Pedro Almodóvar created a movie that examines mortality.
latimes.com
Column: Bring it on! Rams bench stars, lose game, but send a powerful playoff message
Rams coach Sean McVay might be criticized for benching starters in a loss to the Seahawks and dropping to the NFC's No. 4 seed, but it was the right choice.
latimes.com
Why playing a 70-year-old bat mitzvah student was so freeing for Carol Kane
Carol Kane really wanted to work with Jason Schwartzman. Then she found out about the director's unusual approach to filmmaking.
latimes.com
Biden's legacy, like Jimmy Carter's, is complex — and it's in Donald Trump's hands now
Jimmy Carter showed that presidents seen as failures on leaving can be viewed generously years later. What about Biden? His legacy is in Trump's hands.
latimes.com
It is easier than ever to disable Location Sharing on your Android phone
Google Maps Location Sharing is now built into Android settings; no need for Maps settings. Tech expert Kurt “CyberGuy" Knutsson discusses the welcome improvement for Android users.
foxnews.com
4 years after Capitol attack, Trump pardons cloud future of Jan. 6 cases
With Trump's pledge to issue pardons and shut down the investigation, many of those who breached the Capitol four years ago could see their convictions erased and records wiped clean.
cbsnews.com
Democrats blame Merrick Garland slow-rolling Trump investigation for election loss: 'Fatal mistake'
Democratic lawmakers blamed the Department of Justice not bringing charges against President-elect Donald Trump sooner for assuring his election victory.
foxnews.com
Kursk Maps Show Ukraine's Shock New Incursions Into Russia
Ukraine's fresh offensive in Kursk comes nearly six months after Kyiv first sent troops into the western Russian region.
newsweek.com
An 'industry behemoth.' Inside the federal government's efforts to break up Google
Google, the Mountain View-based search and digital advertising giant, is facing increasing scrutiny as the government has recommended it is broken up and its lucrative search index opened to rivals. We look at the challenges the company faces ahead.
latimes.com
Preliminary designs for new D.C. jail attract mixed feelings
What the facility will ultimately look like remains in flux, with city officials recently ordered to make changes to their latest design proposal.
washingtonpost.com
Trump aides ready ‘universal’ tariff plans — with one key change
Trump’s aides are refining tariff proposals as the inauguration nears, focusing on critical imports.
washingtonpost.com
Elon Musk hyped meme coins are soaring in value — and analysts say they’re here to stay
Savvy smaller investors and investment funds have poured millions into the space — and reaped impressive returns for doing so.
nypost.com
January 6 and the Triumph of the Justification Machine
Try to remember for a moment how you felt on January 6, 2021. Recall the makeshift gallows erected on the Capitol grounds, the tear gas, and the sound of the riot shields colliding with hurled flagpoles. If you rewatch the video footage, you might remember the man in the Camp Auschwitz sweatshirt idling among the intruders, or the image of the Confederate flag flying in the Capitol Rotunda. The events of that day are so documented, so memed, so firmly enmeshed in our recent political history that accessing the shock and rage so many felt while the footage streamed in can be difficult. But all of it happened: men and women smashing windows, charging Capitol police, climbing the marbled edifice of one of America’s most recognizable national monuments in an attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election.It is also hard to remember that—for at least a moment—it seemed that reason might prevail, that those in power would reach a consensus against Donald Trump, whose baseless claims of voter fraud incited the attack. Senator Lindsey Graham, a longtime Trump ally, was unequivocal as he voted to certify President Joe Biden’s victory that night: “All I can say is count me out. Enough is enough.” The New York Post, usually a pro-Trump paper, described the mob as “rightists who went berserk in Washington.” Tech platforms such as Facebook and Twitter, which had generally allowed Trump to post whatever he wanted throughout his presidency, temporarily suspended his accounts from their service. “We believe the risks of allowing the President to continue to use our service during this period are simply too great,” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote then.Yet the alignment would not last. On January 7, The Atlantic’s David A. Graham offered a warning that proved prescient: “Remember what yesterday’s attempted coup at the U.S. Capitol was like,” he wrote. “Very soon, someone might try to convince you that it was different.” Because even before the rioters were out of the building, a fringe movement was building a world of purported evidence online—a network of lies and dense theories to justify the attack and rewrite what really happened that day. By spring, the narrative among lawmakers began to change. The violent insurrection became, in the words of Republican Representative Andrew Clyde of Georgia, a “normal tourist visit.”[David A. Graham: Don’t let them pretend this didn’t happen]The revision of January 6 among many Republicans is alarming. It is also a powerful example of how the internet has warped our political reality. In recent years, this phenomenon has been attributed to the crisis of “misinformation.” But that term doesn’t begin to describe what’s really happening.Think back to the original “fake news” panic, surrounding the 2016 election and its aftermath, when a mixture of partisans and enterprising Macedonian teenagers served up classics such as “FBI Agent, Who Exposed Hillary Clinton’s Cover-up, Found Dead.” Academics and pundits endlessly debated the effect of these articles and whether they might cause “belief change.” Was anyone actually persuaded by these stories such that their worldviews or voting behavior might transform? Or were they really just junk for mindless partisans? Depending on one’s perspective, either misinformation posed an existential threat for its potential to brainwash masses of people, or it was effectively harmless.But there is another, more disturbing possibility, one that we have come to understand through our respective professional work over the past decade. One of us, Mike, has been studying the effects of our broken information environment as a research scientist and information literacy expert, while the other, Charlie, is a journalist who has extensively written and reported on the social web. Lately, our independent work has coalesced around a particular shared idea: that misinformation is powerful, not because it changes minds, but because it allows people to maintain their beliefs in light of growing evidence to the contrary. The internet may function not so much as a brainwashing engine but as a justification machine. A rationale is always just a scroll or a click away, and the incentives of the modern attention economy—people are rewarded with engagement and greater influence the more their audience responds to what they’re saying—means that there will always be a rush to provide one. This dynamic plays into a natural tendency that humans have to be evidence foragers, to seek information that supports one’s beliefs or undermines the arguments against them. Finding such information (or large groups of people who eagerly propagate it) has not always been so easy. Evidence foraging might historically have meant digging into a subject, testing arguments, or relying on genuine expertise. That was the foundation on which most of our politics, culture, and arguing was built.The current internet—a mature ecosystem with widespread access and ease of self-publishing—undoes that. As the mob stormed the Capitol on January 6, the justification machine spun up, providing denial-as-a-service to whomever was in need of it, in real time. Jake Angeli, the “QAnon Shaman,” was an early focus. Right-wing accounts posting about the insurrection as it unfolded argued that these were not genuine “Stop the Steal”–ers, because Angeli didn’t look the part. “This is NOT a Trump supporter…This is a staged #Antifa attack,” the pastor Mark Burns wrote in a tweet that showed Angeli in the Senate chamber—which was then liked by Eric Trump. Other “evidence” followed. People shared a picture of Angeli at a Black Lives Matter protest that conveniently cropped out the QAnon sign he had been holding. People speculated that he was an actor; others interpreted his tattoos as a sign that he was part of an elite pedophile ring and therefore, in their logic, a Democrat.The use of Angeli as proof that these people were not MAGA was just one of many such scrambles. Within a few hours, MAGA influencers speculated that one protester’s tattoo was a hammer and sickle—proof of leftist agitation. On TV, a Fox News host argued that Trump supporters don’t wear dark helmets, or use black backpacks, so the mob couldn’t be Trumpist. Fairly quickly, the narrative emerged that the attack was a false flag, and the media were in on it. Conspiracists pointed to the time stamp of an NPR live blog that seemed to announce the riot before it happened as evidence it was all preplanned by the “deep state” (and neglected to note that the story, like many, had been updated and re-headlined throughout the day, while retaining the time stamp of the original post). The famous footage of a Capitol Police officer heroically leading the mob away from the door to the Senate was “proof” in MAGA world that Trump supporters were being coaxed into the Capitol by the cops. Similarly, images of officers overwhelmed by rioters and allowing them past the barricades were further proof that the insurrection had been staged. The real organizer, they argued, was the deep state, abetted by far-left groups.For a while, the rush to gather evidence produced a confusing double narrative from the right. In one telling, the riot was peaceful—the Trump supporters in the Capitol were practically tourists. The other highlighted the violence, suggesting that anti-fascists were causing destruction. Eventually, the dueling stories coalesced into a more complete one: Peaceful Trump supporters had been lured into the Capitol by violent antifa members abetted by law-enforcement instigators working for the deep state.The function of this bad information was not to persuade non-Trump supporters to feel differently about the insurrection. Instead, it was to dispel any cognitive dissonance that viewers of this attempted coup may have experienced, and to reinforce the beliefs that the MAGA faithful already held. And that is the staggering legacy of January 6. With the justification machine whirring, the riot became just more proof of the radical left’s shocking violence or the deep state’s never-ending crusade against Trump. By January 7, Google searches for antifa and BLM (which had not played a role in the event) surpassed those for Proud Boys (which had). In the months and years after the attempted coup, the justification machine worked to keep millions of Americans from having to reckon with the reality of the day. December 2023 polling by The Washington Post found that 25 percent of respondents believed that it was “definitely” or “probably” true that FBI operatives had organized and encouraged the attack on the Capitol. Twenty-six percent were not sure.Conspiracy theorizing is a deeply ingrained human phenomenon, and January 6 is just one of many crucial moments in American history to get swept up in the paranoid style. But there is a marked difference between this insurrection (where people were presented with mountains of evidence about an event that played out on social media in real time) and, say, the assassination of John F. Kennedy (where the internet did not yet exist and people speculated about the event with relatively little information to go on). Or consider the 9/11 attacks: Some did embrace conspiracy theories similar to those that animated false-flag narratives of January 6. But the adoption of these conspiracy theories was aided not by the hyperspeed of social media but by the slower distribution of early online streaming sites, message boards, email, and torrenting; there were no centralized feeds for people to create and pull narratives from.[Read: I’m running out of ways to explain how bad this is]The justification machine, in other words, didn’t create this instinct, but it has made the process of erasing cognitive dissonance far more efficient. Our current, fractured media ecosystem works far faster and with less friction than past iterations, providing on-demand evidence for consumers that is more tailored than even the most frenzied cable news broadcasts can offer. And its effects extend beyond conspiracists. During this past election season, for example, anti-Trump influencers and liberal-leaning cable news stations frequently highlighted the stream of Trump supporters leaving his rallies early—implying that support for Trump was waning. This wasn’t true, but such videos helped Democratic audiences stay cocooned in a world where Trump was unpopular and destined to lose.Spend time on social media and it’s easy to see the demand for this type of content. The early hours of a catastrophic news event were once for sense-making: What happened, exactly? Who was behind it? What was the scale? Now every event is immediately grist for the machine. After a mass shooting, partisans scramble for evidence to suggest that the killer is MAGA, or a radical leftist, or a disaffected trans youth. Last week, in the hours after a mass murderer ran a car into civilians on Bourbon Street in New Orleans, Trump began tossing out lies and speculation about the suspect, suggesting that he was a migrant (information later arrived indicating that the driver was a U.S. citizen and Army veteran). The tragedy and the chaos of its immediate aftermath became an opportunity to attack Democrats about the border.This reflex contributes to a cultural and political rot. A culture where every event—every human success or tragedy—becomes little more than evidence to score political points is a nihilistic one. It is a culture where you never have to change your mind or even confront uncomfortable information. News cycles are shorter, and the biggest stories in the world—such as the near assassination of Trump last summer in Pennsylvania—burn bright in the public consciousness and then disappear. The justification machine thrives on the breakneck pace of our information environment; the machine is powered by the constant arrival of more news, more evidence. There’s no need to reorganize, reassess. The result is a stuckness, a feeling of being trapped in an eternal present tense.This stagnation now defines the legacy of January 6. Once Republicans rewrote their side’s understanding of the insurrection (as a nonevent at best and an example of deep-state interference at worst), they dismissed all attempts for accountability as “Trump derangement syndrome.” Senate Republicans blocked initial attempts at a bipartisan January 6 commission; then–Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called it a “purely political exercise” that would not “uncover crucial new facts or promote healing.” During the congressional hearings on the attempted coup, Fox News largely ignored the proceedings. Trump, now president-elect, is pushing for an FBI probe of former Representative Liz Cheney for her involvement in the commission. Its findings, released in a detailed report, were immediately discredited by Republicans, who called it dishonest, politically motivated, and part of a witch hunt. By Republicans’ cynical logic, the events of January 6 were overblown, but are also ancient history. Only hysterical Democrats, obsessed with taking down Trump, could not move on.Democrats—and the two Republicans on the committee—were right to seek accountability for January 6, but it proved exceedingly difficult to do so in an information environment that is constantly stuck in the now and the new. Trump and the MAGA media complex used the insurrection to portray Democrats as a party of scolds, obsessed with the past, droning on about democracy. The commission’s work was the sort of precise and methodical case-building that is the opposite of the frenetic and immediate justification engine. In an anti-institutional moment, the congressional truth-gathering process read to some as academic, slow, even elitist. Many simply didn’t pay attention to the process. Meanwhile, the right-wing ecosystem’s work to refute the commission likely felt more improvised, authentic, and ultimately convincing to its followers.When the Democratic Party chose to make the 2024 election about Trump, his threat to the rule of law, and the “battle for the soul of this nation,” as President Biden once put it, it was under the assumption that the indelible images of January 6 would be able to maintain their resonance nearly four years later. That assumption, broadly speaking, was wrong. Confronted with information that could shake their worldviews, people can now search for confirming evidence and mainline conspiracist feeds or decontextualized videos. They can ask AI and their favorite influencers to tell them why they are right. They can build tailored feeds and watch as algorithms deliver what they’re looking for. And they will be overwhelmed with data.The hum of the justification machine is comforting. It makes the world seem less unpredictable, more knowable. Underneath the noise, you can make out the words “You’ve been right all along.”
theatlantic.com