инструменты
Изменить страну:

The Global Outrage Machine Skips the Uyghurs

China has exploited the crisis in Gaza to present itself as a defender of the Palestinians and a champion of the oppressed. That posture appears to be benefiting China in its geopolitical competition with the United States—even though Beijing is guilty of human-rights abuses against a Muslim community within its own territory. The Uyghurs of China suffer mass detention, population suppression, and cultural assimilation under a brutal authoritarian regime. Yet few protests on university campuses demand their freedom, nor do major diplomatic efforts seek to alleviate their misery.

How does China get away with it? The widespread indifference to the Uyghurs’ predicament exposes double standards, not only among today’s prevailing political ideologies, but also within the international politics of human rights. And it flags the danger that China presents to the very principle of universal values.

The issue is not a matter of which group—Palestinians or Uyghurs—is more worthy of the world’s concern. Both suffer, and their suffering is awful. The Palestinian cause is important and deserves the attention it receives. Yet the Uyghurs could use some outrage, too. Isolated in remote Xinjiang, their historic homeland in China’s far west, the Uyghurs have no hope of defending themselves against Beijing’s repression without support from the international community.

[Read: One by one, my friends were sent to the camps]

The United States has tried to pressure China’s leadership to end the Uyghurs’ mistreatment—for instance, by barring companies from importing products that originate in Xinjiang into the U.S. But most world leaders have ignored the Uyghurs’ plight. Many of the same diplomats who oppose Israel at the United Nations then vote in favor of China when the Uyghurs come up for debate. Even Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of the Palestinian Authority, took Beijing’s position on Xinjiang during a visit to China in 2023. In a joint statement he issued with China’s leader, Xi Jinping, Abbas asserted that Beijing’s policies toward Muslims in Xinjiang have “nothing to do with human rights and are aimed at excising extremism and opposing terrorism and separatism.”

Some advocates of the Uyghurs have tried to get attention by drawing parallels between Gaza and Xinjiang. “The suffering of Palestinians reverberates with a familiar pain,” Rayhan Asat, a Uyghur human-rights lawyer, recently wrote on the website of Dawn, an organization dedicated to human rights in the Middle East. “The dehumanization of the Palestinian people and the collective punishment they endure from Israel’s war have shattered the very fabric of their society, much like what China has inflicted upon my people.” The Georgetown scholars Nader Hashemi and James Millward, in a recent essay on the same site, weave a parallel narrative of colonization, repression, (sometimes violent) resistance, and more repression. That world leaders deny the true brutality of one group’s repression or the other—depending on their geopolitical perspective—“reveals the hole at the heart of the supposedly rules-based international order,” they wrote.

This viewpoint overlooks some fundamental differences. Israel was formed by Jews who saw the region as their historic homeland and who were fleeing persecution, pogroms, and the Holocaust in Europe, and persecution throughout the Middle East and North Africa. The map of the area today has been drawn by a convoluted history of interstate wars, outside interference, contentious politics within both the Israeli and Palestinian communities, and aborted attempts at a peaceful resolution. By contrast, Xinjiang was conquered in the mid-18th century by the Qing dynasty (around the same time the British were marching on India) and then claimed by the current People’s Republic of China after its formation in 1949. Now the Communist Party insists that Xinjiang is an integral part of China. Beijing has imposed its political system and Chinese language and culture on the Uyghurs, who are a Central Asian people and speak a language related to Turkish. The community of less than 12 million is also under pressure from an influx of migrants (you could call them “settlers”) from the dominant Han Chinese ethnic group. Official census data from 2020 show that the Han population in Xinjiang expanded by 25 percent over the preceding decade, while the number of Uyghurs grew by only 16 percent.

At the moment, the most obvious difference between the Palestinians and the Uyghurs is that Xinjiang is not at war. But there is also no Hamas in Xinjiang to start a war. Rather, Xi has greatly intensified repression of the Uyghurs in recent years in an effort to tighten his control of the region. A million or more Uyghurs were arbitrarily detained in “reeducation camps” and then imprisoned or pressed into a system of forced labor. The Israelis keep the Palestinians something of a people apart; Xi seeks to assimilate the Uyghurs into a broader “Chinese” identity by suppressing their language, history, and religious life. The Australian Strategic Policy Institute described the strategy as a “systematic and intentional campaign to rewrite the cultural heritage” of the community. Perhaps the most chilling element of Beijing’s program is a concerted effort to curtail the growth of the Uyghur population through forced sterilization and other means. The pressure has contributed to a sharp reduction in the number of Uyghur births. The goal of these policies, as one Chinese official put it, is to “break their lineage, break their roots.”

[Listen: A Uyghur teen’s life after escaping genocide]

The Chinese government denies that it commits these human-rights abuses in Xinjiang and insists that it is merely rooting out terrorism. A concerted propaganda campaign on state-owned media platforms presents Xinjiang as a model of peaceful economic development. Meanwhile, Beijing has erected a police state that has effectively sealed off the region from international scrutiny. With journalists, activists, and officials from international agencies unable to freely investigate or monitor conditions, the stream of stories and images that might fuel anger is limited, and the Uyghurs’ plight is kept largely out of sight. Beijing’s “slow, horrifying obliteration of cultures and peoples,” Hannah Theaker, a historian of Xinjiang at the University of Plymouth, explained to me, “does not produce images of destruction that are likely to seize attention in a crowded news environment.” By contrast, she said, “the horror of Gaza is unfolding in real time to the international public eye.”

Still, the evidence of Chinese abuses is substantial, and the reasons for ignoring it run deep into ideologies about the injustices of a postcolonial world, at least among some elements of the political left. Israel, from this viewpoint, is an outgrowth of European colonialism; it represses and displaces a local people, with the backing of the United States, which is seen as the successor to the empires of the West. China doesn’t fit neatly into this narrative. As a socialist state (or so many believe) also victimized by Western imperialism, China is perceived by elements of the left as less malign than Israel, however terrible its human-rights abuses might be.

In this view, China’s “ethnic policy may be misguided at some points, it may be imperfect, it may be worth improving,” but it “cannot be worse than what the former Western colonial powers have done or are doing,” Adrian Zenz, the director of China studies at the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation and a leading expert on the Uyghurs, told me. Gaining greater empathy for the Uyghurs “would require a total reversal of ideological categories that would crumble the left-wing ideological world.”

In this respect, the Uyghurs are treated differently from another oppressed people of China, the Tibetans. The appeal of Buddhism, and admiration for the Dalai Lama, once helped make “Free Tibet” a rallying cry that Richard Gere, the Beastie Boys, and other Western celebrities could embrace. Some parts of the far left did adopt Beijing’s line that China had “liberated” the Tibetans from feudal “serfdom.” But for the most part, Tibetans have enjoyed a sympathy that the Muslim Uyghurs, who lack a charismatic, internationally recognized leader—or a comparably long history of activism, given the recency of the campaign against them—do not.

The Uyghurs do receive attention from some members of the political right, including President-Elect Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of state, Marco Rubio. But such conservative backing may hurt the Uyghur cause in the eyes of activists on the left, who view U.S.-government support with particular suspicion. Within certain activist circles on the far left, “there is a hesitancy to want to recognize that what’s happening to the Uyghurs is a type of genocide,” Sang Heae Kil, a justice-studies professor at San Jose State University, told me. She surmised that some activists believe that “what’s happening to the Uyghurs might be overblown,” based on “suspicions that the U.S. media is just trying to kind of knock down China as a Communist country.”

[Read: ‘I never thought China could ever be this dark’]

The Uyghur cause is also hampered by the hard realities of Chinese global wealth and power. Unlike Israel, which is largely diplomatically isolated beyond a handful of major supporters, China is a growing force in international diplomacy. Many world leaders’ silence about Xinjiang has, in effect, been purchased. These governments know that China could cut off the gravy train of aid, investment, and financing if they publicly criticized Beijing’s mistreatment of the Uyghurs. Imran Khan, the former prime minister of Pakistan, admitted as much in a 2021 interview. Asked why he criticizes the West’s attitude toward Muslims but not China’s abuse of the Uyghurs, he responded, “Whatever issues we have with the Chinese, we speak to them behind closed doors. China has been one of the greatest friends to us in our most difficult times. When we were really struggling, our economy was struggling, China came to our rescue.”

For its part, China has aimed to capitalize on the turmoil in Gaza in order to win international support in its geopolitical competition with the United States, especially in the global South. Beijing’s diplomats have vociferously supported the Palestinians throughout the Gaza conflict and carefully avoided criticism of Hamas and its October 7 atrocities against Israeli civilians, in sharp contrast to Washington’s backing of Israel, which is widely unpopular around the world. The strategy has succeeded in bolstering China’s image. A survey of public views in the Middle East by Arab Barometer found that China’s standing in the region has risen since the Gaza crisis began, while the U.S. is seen less favorably. (China’s boost seems to be more a reaction to U.S. policy than a response to anything Beijing has actually done. At most, 14 percent of respondents in the Arab Barometer survey believed China was committed to defending Palestinian rights.)

The fact that China’s leaders even attempt to champion the Palestinians while treating Muslims in their own country as enemies of the state is an indication of how steep the Uyghurs’ climb will be to win international support and sympathy. For now, advocates for the Uyghurs will find it hard to overcome this combination of ideological certainties and raw Chinese political and economic power. The Uyghurs will remain outsiders to the global outrage machine, and some injustices will be considered less unjust than others.


Читать статью полностью на: theatlantic.com
Pittsburgh Man Who Threw an Explosive at University Police Gets 5 Years
Brian DiPippa was accused of dropping smoke bomb containers at a University of Pittsburgh campus transgender rights protest in 2023. His wife, Krystal DiPippa, was sentenced to probation.
nytimes.com
Don’t let Facebook off the hook for its pro-censorship past so easily
In a video posted Tuesday, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced that the company is going to get rid of its third-party fact-checking system, which he acknowledged was riddled with bias, and replace it with X-style "community notes."
nypost.com
Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss’ family and Candace Dillard blast Allison Holker for airing out his alleged drug use
Stephen “tWitch” Boss’ family and friends are putting Allison Holker on blast for airing out his alleged drug use. Following the release of the widow’s exclusive People interview, the late dancer’s loved ones, as well as Candiace Dillard, called her out for “smearing” tWitch’s legacy. Watch the full video to learn more about what they...
nypost.com
Austin Butler and Kaia Gerber split after 3 years of dating: report
A source told TMZ Tuesday that there is no bad blood between the two but that their relationship had simply run it's course.
nypost.com
Thousand Oaks man accused of killing his girlfriend in a hotel room, then alerting authorities
A 31-year-old Thousand Oaks man was arrested Monday night at the Palm Garden Hotel after authorities say he killed his girlfriend.
latimes.com
Trump Says That Jack Smith’s “Fake Report” Is Dead. Don’t Be So Sure.
It’s not up to a Trump judge to decide.
slate.com
Hoda Kotb, Jenna Bush Hager say ‘it’s time’ for Taylor, Travis to get engaged
After accurately predicting two A-List proposals, Hoda Kotb and Jenna Bush Hager guessed the next celebrity couple to get engaged. On today’s episode of “Today with Hoda and Jenna,” the co-hosts predicted that Travis Kelce will soon put a rock on Taylor Swift’s finger. Watch what they had to say in the clip! Subscribe to...
nypost.com
Robber busted in driverless Waymo taxi — when it pulls over after detecting sirens
A high-tech, low-intelligence thief tried to escape in a self-driving Waymo car after robbing a Los Angeles grocery store Monday night -- only to be foiled when cops used its technology to nab him.
nypost.com
Tattoo artist sparks outrage for inking 9-year-old girl who asked for a portrait of Trump but got an American flag instead
Sosa said he tried to "scare" the girl and family away from the very permanent decision by charging them $500 for what would have otherwise been an $80 tat.
nypost.com
Suspect charged in deaths of NHL star Johnny Gaudreau, brother Matthew pleads not guilty
Sean Higgins, the man charged with killing NHL star Johnny Gaudreau and his brother, Matthew, pleaded not guilty in New Jersey court on Tuesday.
foxnews.com
Raiders despiden al entrenador Antonio Pierce tras temporada con marca 4-13
Los Raiders de Las Vegas despidieron el martes a Antonio Pierce, después de apenas una temporada como su entrenador en el jefe, el último en una serie de cambios de estrategas del equipo en los últimos años.
latimes.com
Driver led astray by GPS winds up at the bottom of a ski trail in Colorado
"I'm the Jerry of the Day, I guess," the driver said in the video.
nypost.com
Cowboys’ Brandon Aubrey apologizes after kickoff goes awry, drills cheerleader in head
Dallas Cowboys cheerleader Michelle Siemienowski shared the "kind" apology note she received from kicker Brandon Aubrey after she was hit in the head during kickoff on Sunday.
foxnews.com
Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss’ family blasts Allison Holker for airing out his alleged drug use, enforcing NDAs to attend funeral
"She’s been trying to tarnish his legacy and refuses to let the Boss family see the children. Only to exploit and LIE on my cousin," said the late dancer's cousin.
nypost.com
Blue state gov changes tune after vowing to fight Trump deportation efforts, now hopes he fixes border
Democratic Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey said she hopes President-elect Donald Trump fixes the border crisis after vowing to obstruct his mass deportation plan.
foxnews.com
California criminal suspects caught on camera learning about new tough-on-crime measures: 'OH S---!'
Several California criminal suspects seemed shocked to learn they would not be cited and released but going to jail instead.
foxnews.com
Ashton Jeanty declaring for 2025 NFL Draft after outstanding Boise State season
Jeanty is coming off an earth-shattering junior season, finishing with 2,601 yards on the ground and 29 touchdowns while helping Boise State reach the College Football Playoff. 
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Doc’ On Fox, About A Doctor Whose Memories Of The Past Eight Years Are Wiped Out After An Accident
Molly Parker, Scott Wolf, Omar Metwally and Jon-Michael Ecker star in the medical drama.
nypost.com
LI dad reveals horror of 14-year-old daughter who vanished mysteriously for a month and was found on a boat
Frank Gervasi said his 14-year-old daughter was drugged and sex trafficked by unsavory creeps after she went missing from the family's Long Island home.
nypost.com
Zendaya had ‘no idea’ Tom Holland was going to propose
Tom Holland caught Zendaya by surprise! A source exclusively told Page Six that Zendaya didn’t expect the actor to pop the question. Watch the full video to see Page Six’s Senior Reporter Sarah Jones break down what the insiders are saying. Subscribe to our YouTube for the latest on all your favorite stars.
nypost.com
‘Gold Bar Bob’ Menendez’ daughter does not ‘understand’ his ‘grace and forgiveness’ of wife Nadine: Letter
Former US Senator Bob Menendez 'scrappy kid' who grew up fast, according to letters from family, friends seeking lenient sentencing
nypost.com
'Do we need to throw hands?' Shaquille O'Neal-Dwight Howard beef still going strong in 2025
Shaquille O’Neal says he wasn't going to mention Dwight Howard's name again, only to trash him a day later. The ex-Laker centers who used the 'Superman' nickname are beefing again.
latimes.com
What banning medical debt from your credit score actually means
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau director Rohit Chopra arrives to testify before a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on Capitol Hill on December 11, 2024, in Washington, DC. | Kent Nishimura/Getty Images In the final days of its tenure, the Biden administration has banned credit reporting agencies from including medical debts in their reports, aiming to make it easier for people to access credit, including loans and mortgages. “No one should be denied economic opportunity because they got sick or experienced a medical emergency,” Vice President Kamala Harris said in a White House statement announcing the new rule Tuesday. The administration first proposed the rule in June 2024, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) issued the final ruling today.  The new rule is part of a constellation of federal, state, and local strategies, stretching back to the Obama administration, to reduce the burden of medical debt on Americans. Advocates hail the change as an important step, but its effects may not be as significant as the administration hopes. And with Republicans already speaking out against it, it’s possible the rule might be reversed or not enforced at all. How the ban — and medical debt reporting — works It’s up to individual medical providers whether they report debt to credit agencies. The information in that report is then used to calculate a person’s credit score, which helps lenders like banks determine how likely a person is to pay off debt they accrue. The idea to remove medical debt from credit reports isn’t new. In 2023, major companies like TransUnion, Experian, and Equifax stopped including medical debt under $500 in their credit reports. The new rule “will remove an estimated $49 billion in medical bills from the credit reports of about 15 million Americans,” according to the CFPB. The CFPB claims that medical debt isn’t actually a very good predictor of a person’s overall creditworthiness, and that “consumers frequently report receiving inaccurate bills or being asked to pay bills that should have been covered by insurance or financial assistance programs.” The new rule only addresses medical debt when it has already gone into collections, Stanford University economics professor Neale Mahoney explained. “You can basically either address medical debt at the source, like right after hospitalization, or you can sort of address things downstream,” like the new rule, he said. Other downstream interventions include retiring medical debt, as some municipalities have done.  The change can improve people’s financial situations, according to Francis Wong, an economist at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.  “Our research indicates that people are better off, in the sense that having medical debt removed from their credit reports leads to meaningful increases in credit scores, especially for those who do not show signs of financial distress outside of their medical debt,” Wong wrote in an email. As part of the broader landscape of medical debt interventions, the new rule is an important tool because it could encourage people to continue seeking medical care, according to Eva Marie Stahl, vice president of programs and policy at Undue Medical Debt, an organization that helps pay off medical debt and advises on policy solutions to medical debt. “In some cases, [reported medical debt] could prevent somebody from accessing work or a place to live,” Stahl said. “It’s top of mind for people when they access health care. So we’re hoping that people are just sort of breathing a sigh of relief today and thinking a little bit differently about how they engage with the health system, so that they’re putting their health care needs first.” Will the new policy make a difference? However, Wong and Mahoney, who worked together on a research paper about paying off medical debt, also cautioned how the new rule will impact people’s financial situations.The change will be most significant for people who don’t carry much other debt, according to Mahoney. “There are people who have otherwise good credit except for medical debt and collections, and so for those folks you see, I think, meaningful increases in credit scores,” Mahoney told Vox. This might look like an increase of 14 points on average and an increase of $900 in credit limits, which is not insignificant. Simply leaving medical debt off credit reports doesn’t address the broader problem of continued medical debt. “Those who owe medical debt may be grappling with ongoing issues associated with the original medical event, such as poor health and inability to work,” Wong wrote. For many people, it also probably won’t mean the difference between getting a home loan and being denied, he said. “Although removing medical debt from credit reports is likely to increase access to credit card borrowing, the same may not be true for access to mortgages, given that few people with medical debt may be in a position to afford a mortgage.” Ultimately, the debt still exists, whether or not it shows up on a credit report, and it impacts people’s finances and their ability to access medical care.  Then there’s the possibility that whatever relief the rule brings to people in debt will not last. Republicans in Congress have already spoken out against the rule, both from a policy perspective and as part of an effort to curtail the CFPB’s regulatory agenda. In an August memo to CFPB director Rohit Chopra, members of the House Committee on Financial Services wrote that “restricting inclusion of medical debt in credit reports and scores will undermine underwriting processes and increase risk in the financial system, to the detriment of consumers,” and argued that the rule would have “significant negative effects on access and affordability of credit for all consumers, and particularly for low-income borrowers.” Banking industry lobbying groups, like the Bank Policy Institute and the Consumer Bankers Association, urged Chopra to withdraw the rule, saying that it would actually make credit more expensive because it would be riskier and more scarce if access improved. The groups also pushed back against the common argument that medical debt, as a product of circumstances beyond people’s control, is different from other kinds of debt related to a lack of financial knowledge or adequate planning.  A Republican Congress might not have the votes to roll back the new rule. But the CFPB will change dramatically under the incoming Trump administration, and leadership may not enforce the medical debt credit reporting ban or the other protections the agency has put in place in the last months of the Biden administration. 
vox.com
Amnesty’s authoritarian turn, ban the mask and other commentary
“Amnesty International is free to operate in Israel, but Amnesty Israel isn’t free to operate within Amnesty International,” snarks Commentary’s Seth Mandel.
nypost.com
Trump Is Treating the Globe Like a Monopoly Board
Why is Trump muses about military action against our closest allies?
time.com
U.S. asks court to stop plea agreements in alleged 9/11 architect's case
A plea hearing for alleged 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is currently scheduled to take place Friday at Guantanamo Bay.
cbsnews.com
NYC neighborhood joint named the country’s best new restaurant in shock poll: ‘Are you kidding me?’
The winner was chosen from a list of 20 contenders from across the country — selected by a panel of food and travel experts and voted on by readers.
nypost.com
Kamala Harris says Jimmy Carter's "works will echo for generations to come"
Vice President Kamala Harris delivered a eulogy for former President Jimmy Carter at the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday. She discussed his legacy as president and his extraordinary work redefining what it means to be a former president.
cbsnews.com
RFK Jr. to meet with slew of Dems including Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders
RFK Jr. begins meeting with Senate Democrats this week as his coalition for getting confirmed to HHS secretary remains uncertain.
foxnews.com
One of America’s Booming Lunch Places Just Waded Into the Exact Wrong Debate
Seed oils have many enemies, including, it seems, $15 salad chains.
slate.com
Chilling new photo shows New Orleans terrorist Shamsud-Din Jabbar calmly prowling French Quarter on bike weeks before deadly rampage
The fresh image, taken by a high-resolution security camera and released by the FBI on Tuesday, affords a clear view of Jabbar riding the bicycle Oct. 31, just blocks away from where he slammed a pickup truck into a crowd of revelers on Bourbon Street last week.
nypost.com
Mike Johnson remembers Jimmy Carter's remarkable life in eulogy
House Speaker Mike Johnson delivered a eulogy for former President Jimmy Carter at a funeral service at the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday. He reflected on Carter's roots in Georgia, his Naval service, his presidency and his life after.
cbsnews.com
Suffolk County DA Ray Tierney touts work on fentanyl crisis, Gilgo Beach murders as he announces reelection campaign
"This is just the beginning," DA Ray Tierney said. "We're going to continue the work, and I’m going to continue to fulfill those promises.”
nypost.com
Jimmy Carter's casket taken into U.S. Capitol
Former President Jimmy Carter's casket was carried into the U.S. Capitol and into the Rotunda where he will lie in state until his funeral service on Thursday. Carter died at 100 and lived longer than any other U.S. president.
cbsnews.com
Serial couture klepto nabbed in the Hamptons after stealing from pair of tony stores: cops
His bust in the epicenter of the posh town’s designer valley — featuring stores ranging from Gucci to Ralph Lauren, Henry Lehr and Zimmerman — capped a two-year sticky-fingered spree, police said.
nypost.com
Brenda Song finally reveals name of her and Macaulay Culkin’s 2-year-old son
The Disney Channel alum and the "Home Alone" star also share a 3-year-old son named Dakota.
nypost.com
Klobuchar hit with 'Community Note' on X after backlash from Jan 6 claim about 'killed' officer: 'Just sick'
Minnesota Democrat Sen. Amy Klobuchar is facing criticism over her claim that police officers were killed during the January 6 riot, earning her a "Community Note" from X.
foxnews.com
Meghan Markle reveals her beloved rescue dog Guy is dead in emotional tribute: ‘I have cried too many tears to count’
"The best guy any girl could have asked for."
nypost.com
Holiday shoppers used ‘buy now, pay later’ options more than ever in 2024
More people leaned on services such as Klarna, Affirm and Afterpay to buy gifts in November and December, according to new online sales data.
washingtonpost.com
Toma de posesión en Venezuela: qué postura tienen los países de Latinoamérica ante Maduro y González
A días de la controvertida toma de posesión prevista en Venezuela, varios países de América Latina se han pronunciado para reconocer o respaldar al líder opositor Edmundo González como presidente electo frente a los resultados de las elecciones anunciados oficialmente el año pasado que dieron por ganador a Nicolás Maduro.
latimes.com
NYC congestion pricing turns Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge into toll trap that hits drivers with $9 charge — even if they’re not heading downtown
“The bridge is basically not free anymore,” Felicia Brown, a 40-year-old who works on First Avenue but lives in Queens, told The Post.
nypost.com
Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaks at Jimmy Carter's service at U.S. Capitol
Senate Majority Leader John Thune delivers a eulogy for former President Jimmy Carter from the U.S. Capitol Rotunda on Tuesday.
cbsnews.com
'Run for your lives' Motorists trying to flee Pacific Palisades face flames, chaos, danger
Fleeing Pacific Palisades proved a terrifying challenge for residents as roads jammed with traffic and the fast-moving fire made evacuation routes risky.
latimes.com
FDNY promotes 97 firefighters — including 3 who lost Bravest dads in 9/11
"I see faces weathered by hard times and by good times, and I see a collective desire to serve,'' FDNY Commissioner Robert Tucker said in addressing the crowd Tuesday.
nypost.com
"Es como un infierno". El incendio de Pacific Palisades estalla mientras miles de residentes huyen
Un incendio de rápida propagación en Pacific Palisades alcanzó el martes 200 acres en medio de vientos "potencialmente destructivos y que ponen en peligro la vida". Se ordenó la evacuación de los residentes cercanos.
latimes.com
Air Force officer-turned-Miss America says you don't need to 'sacrifice' your personality to join the military
During an appearance on “Fox & Friends" on Tuesday, Madison Marsh — who was crowned Miss America in 2024 — detailed the moment she realized what an impact she has on her peers.
foxnews.com
College football coach fired for refusing COVID vaccine loses lawsuit after Obama-appointed judge's ruling
Former Washington State head football coach Nick Rolovich has lost his lawsuit against the university over his firing for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine.
foxnews.com
Vladimir Putin’s wobbly empire gives US a path to stifle Russia’s threats
Vladimir Putin's Russia is embroiled in war and plagued by systemic decay — and Donald Trump can exploit its weakness to end its campaign of global instability.
nypost.com