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The ‘Law of the Land’ Has Been Replaced

The Dubai International Financial Center is home to thousands of companies from around the world. Some of them have organic connections to the emirate; others are merely taking advantage of the center’s business-friendly rules and regulations around tax, immigration, and labor. A third group of businesses have chosen the DIFC not for the office space, or the taxes, but as a home base for legal disputes alone. In the event of a lawsuit, the DIFC is where they want to have their day in court.

That’s because Dubai’s financial center is not governed by Dubai—at least, not in the way most of us understand governance. The enclave is a special economic zone overseen by a board appointed by the city-state’s ruler, with its own bespoke laws drawn up for the benefit of its clients.

The DIFC is also a shimmering shopping center with three hotels, luxury apartment towers, high-end restaurants, clothing stores, spas, beauty salons, and art galleries. There’s even a mosque, open 24/7. The 110-acre compound sits in the shadow of the Gate, a gigantic rectangular structure inspired by the Arc de Triomphe. The Gate looks like the Parisian monument—had the French only chosen to commemorate their war dead with millions of gray Legos. But when you walk through it, you enter a microcosm of a world where we may someday all live. This is a world where boundaries are drawn not just around nations but around people and companies and wealth—a world with new kinds of states and new kinds of laws. Dubai is a test case for where they will take us.

[From the March 2024 issue: The great Serengeti land grab ]

The DIFC’s story began in the early 2000s, when Dubai began opening gated business districts—Media City, with nominally freer speech laws than the rest of the country; Healthcare City; Internet City; and so on. In 2004, the president of the UAE changed its constitution to allow zero-tax, low-regulation “zones” specifically geared toward the exchange not of material goods but of financial assets. With that, the DIFC was born.

Book cover The essay was adapted from the forthcoming book The Hidden Globe: How Wealth Hacks the World.

In a part of the world that had been losing money to wars and civil unrest, the DIFC promised businesses an oasis of protection and deregulation: a little Switzerland on the Gulf. The center’s tenants—who would come to include Bloomberg, Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs—would benefit from such concessions as corporate tax breaks, fully foreign ownership of companies, and expedited immigration procedures for expat workers.

But Dubai couldn’t stop there. After all, those who wanted Switzerland already had Switzerland—and Luxembourg, and the Cayman Islands, and any number of places that exacted little or nothing in taxes and had long track records of protecting wealth at all costs. So to entice investors further, the DIFC sold them on something new: law.

Law is no static thing. It does not sprout from the soil, like a tree. It doesn’t require a particular habitat to thrive, like a bug or a bird. It behaves more like a virus, hopping from place to place, cultivating new hosts and carriers, and mutating along the way.

Early on, the DIFC established a start-up court to oversee civil and commercial matters within the special zone. Its laws came mostly from elsewhere. So did its judges, plaintiffs, and defendants. The result was a state within a state within a state, or to borrow from a DIFC publication, an “example of how globalisation is reconfiguring the relationship between legal institutions and political systems in the twenty-first century.”

[Read: Trump’s interest vs. America’s, Dubai edition]

Legal pluralism—the maintenance of multiple systems of law within a given territory—wasn’t a new concept in Dubai. From the early 19th century until 1971, Dubai and its sister emirates had been British protectorates, with one set of rules for non-Muslim subjects and another for natives and believers. After achieving independence, the new nation-state set out to build a devolved judicial system that allowed each emirate to strike out on its own or abide by federal rules instead.

From a judicial standpoint, the UAE had much in common with the federalism of the United States. But no matter the emirate, court hearings were in Arabic and rooted in Islamic jurisprudence as well as civil law. This, the then-ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, and his advisers realized, was a problem: To put it crudely, Western lawyers did not want to deal with Muslim courts.

Although a free zone with low taxes and minimal red tape was all well and good, Dubai’s rulers understood that foreign firms wanted a familiar legal system in which to settle things such as bankruptcy, data protection, intellectual property, and employment. Grafting on an identically British system would be too close to colonialism for comfort. So they sought another model: a composite jurisdiction, stitched together from regulations borrowed from elsewhere and with judges trained in the laws of the world.

To put it all together, the DIFC would need its own Dr. Frankenstein. He came to them by chance, in the form of a blue-eyed Englishman named Mark Beer.

I met Beer for breakfast in Manhattan on a spring day in 2022. He came off as game and unpretentious: a dad of five who looks like he could have been a rugby player if he hadn’t ended up working as the registrar of an upstart court very far from home. His career had taken him around the world. After law school in the U.K., Beer trained as a mediator in Singapore and worked for brief stints in Dubai and Switzerland. In 2003, he returned to the Gulf to take a job in Internet City, as an in-house lawyer for Mastercard. For most of his life, he had operated under the conventional wisdom that ever since the world had been organized into a map of decolonized nation-states, laws and lands had been inextricable. The law was about codifying the values of a society and—in the best case—achieving justice. But he began to think of legal systems differently: “not just as a tool for fairness, but as a tool for economic development,” he told me.

In 2006, Beer met Nasser Saidi, a Lebanese politician who was then the chief economist of the DIFC. The commercial zone he was pitching to companies wasn’t just a group of high-end buildings; it was, as he put it, a “Vatican of international finance.” Beer was in the business of law, not divinity, but the similarities were striking: What was the DIFC if not a micro-sovereignty devoted to the interests of a group of powerful men serving what they believed was a higher power—in this case, the market?

In 2008, Beer became the new court’s first registrar. He understood that the role of the court was to “provide confidence” to businesses, he told me. “I don’t think anyone was that fussed about principles of the rule of law. In order to have confidence, they needed to feel that their promises would be honored. And they wanted to do that in a familiar environment—hence the establishment of that court.” He foresaw the possibility of an independent court not just for the free zone, or for the emirate, but perhaps for the entire world.

[Read: An ally held me as a spy–and the US is complicit]

The first big cases the court handled, however, were not what anyone had anticipated. Just as the DIFC was finding its feet, the global financial crisis brought Dubai World, the city-state’s equivalent of a sovereign wealth fund, to its knees. Before the crash, Dubai World employed 100,000 people working in real estate, shipping, and logistics spread over some 200 subsidiary companies. It was huge—and now it had almost $60 billion in debts that neither the parent company nor its offspring could repay on time. When the firm’s creditors came knocking, Dubai did something novel: It assembled a team of outside advisers to establish a brand-new insolvency tribunal, to be run by three DIFC judges. In December 2009, the court opened its doors to any of Dubai World’s creditors, regardless of where they conducted their business. The cases were complex, but the tribunal proved that it could be counted on to hear them fairly and impartially.

In the process, it broke the territorial seal. All kinds of parties showed up to file claims, including New York City hedge funds and local contractors. “The judges were clearly independent and agnostic as to who owed the money and were quite happy to award damages and costs and all sorts of things against the government,” Beer told me. The DIFC’s courts were now open to all. As of 2011, anyone could opt into the financial center’s judges, laws, and procedures to resolve their disputes. The court was in Dubai—but it could have been anywhere.

On the surface, such a court might seem like a nice thing for Dubai to have—a little strange, sure, but befitting a city full of migrants and expatriates. There aren’t any real losers in these trials, because to file a claim in the DIFC is to be, almost by definition, in a position of privilege to begin with. This is not a venue conceived for the overworked Filipina housekeepers, the trafficked Moldovan sex-workers, the injured Bangladeshi laborers on whose backs Dubai has been built.

At the same time, Dubai’s legal entrepreneurship reveals something more troubling: that speaking only of a “law of the land” no longer makes much sense. The law itself is the commodity here. The DIFC court thus set a new standard in play. To accommodate the needs of foreign firms, multinationals, and expatriates, countries can go so far as to offer them a separate system of justice.

The DIFC has since exported its court-in-a-box to other jurisdictions. In 2008, Saidi proclaimed in a speech that “we have been approached by countries as far away as the Caribbean and Latin America and Korea and Africa to establish DIFC clones.” By last year, independent commercial courts and DIFC-style tribunals, which are both part of and separate from the domestic system, had popped up in Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Benin, Kosovo, Iraq, the Netherlands, France, and Kazakhstan—where Mark Beer led the charge.

When it comes to seducing capitalists, Kazakhstan’s defining features—its enduring autocracy, its dependence on oil exports, its tendency toward graft, that goddamn Borat movie—might seem like disadvantages. Who would want to open a company in such a place? It turns out that there are perks to doing business in a state with such a lousy reputation.

In 2016, Beer was appointed to an advisory body called the International Council of the Supreme Court of Kazakhstan, whose purpose was to modernize and internationalize the country’s domestic courts. Two years later, the Astana International Financial Center was launched, combining an arbitration center (in which disputes are mostly privately resolved) and a DIFC-style tribunal.

Beer was bullish on the tribunal. He wrote celebratory columns for the local English-language newspaper and made cameos in press releases and videos. In June 2020, he wrote a report for the Council of Europe praising the success of Kazakhstan’s judicial reforms. “Objectively, no other judiciary has endeavored to achieve so much reform at such an accelerated pace,” he wrote.

All the while, Kazakhstan was battling a series of high-level corruption cases and experiencing unprecedented popular unrest over graft and inequality. Billions of profits from extracting uranium, titanium, gold, copper, and, of course, oil had been hoarded by oligarchs who stashed most of their wealth in foreign property holdings and offshore accounts.

[From the January 1967 issue: The eagles of Kazakhstan]

Beer has described his mission in Kazakhstan as an effort to increase the low levels of trust that foreigners would (understandably!) have in the country’s judicial and political systems. But however well the new court works, it won’t necessarily do ordinary citizens much good. At worst, it will end up helping an undemocratic regime make more money and launder its reputation by attracting fancy international businesses, without doing anything to improve economic inequality, social justice, or human rights.

When I confronted Beer with this objection, he invoked the response of Sir Anthony Evans—the chief justice of the DIFC—when he was fielding a controversy about Dubai’s treatment of migrant workers. Beer said, “His answer, which I thought was brilliant, was: I must be doing what I do to improve the system. People have access to a system they didn’t have access to before. If the court is credible and independent, it must be making a positive contribution.” Beer pointed out that the idea of a female judge was for a long time sacrilegious in the UAE. But after the DIFC appointed one and “the sun continued to rise the next day,” the “onshore” system decided to appoint female judges too.

In fact, Beer has been succeeded in his post at the DIFC by a woman: Amna Al Owais, a vivacious young Emirati lawyer from Dubai. Under Al Owais’s leadership, the court has kept expanding, adding clients, cases, and divisions. It’s also been conscious not to overshadow the original courts of Dubai. Even in Dubai, whose ruler invited the court in, replacing a homegrown legal system with borrowed law and rented judges on quasi-extraterritorial ground remains controversial. To help maintain the fragile balance between the national and the global, authorities have created yet another court, staffed with a mix of local and foreign judges, to decide which court has jurisdiction in contested scenarios.

But when I visited the DIFC in late 2021, I discovered a more literal display of power. Near the main entrance stood a glass case, and inside it, the clay handprint of Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, alongside those of his six children. The artifacts seemed a crude attempt at conveying an important point: that no matter where its laws and litigants and judges had come from, this cathedral of high finance was still very much a part of Rome.

In the years since leaving Dubai, Mark Beer has found an additional venue for his ideas and ambitions, one as far from the Gulf, the Steppe, and his home in Oxford as you can get.

Beer’s latest preoccupation is with the laws of outer space: an arena with no nations, no territory, and no people. In a sense, space is the ultimate free zone—an extraterrestrial DIFC, offshore even from offshore. Of course it needs laws. And who better to serve as their keeper than Mark Beer?

Beer told me he got curious about space when he met the owner of a satellite company at the Davos World Economic Forum in 2017. Shortly thereafter, Beer nominated himself to become the justice minister of Asgardia: the world’s first space-based nation, whose “landmass” was briefly a server on a satellite orbiting the Earth, whose “population” communicates predominantly on a blog platform, and whose “laws” are decided by the community.

[Listen: Our strange new era of space travel]

I had signed up to be a citizen of Asgardia too, long before I met Beer. Like him, I wanted to understand what it might mean to have a jurisdiction without a nation or a territory. But I let my membership lapse because the citizenship fees—$110 a year—began to add up. Beer, by contrast, persisted, as one of a handful of officials who is “not a Trekkie,” as he puts it. (He’s not in it for the money: The position is unpaid. In the meantime, he also mounted a run for Oxford City Council, in 2022, as a Conservative, but lost that race.)

“Like in Dubai, I want to do more, and perhaps I’m pushing harder than I ought to,” he told me. “But we’ll soon launch the formation of companies in Asgardia, and I think that gives a whole new dimension and platform to talk about economic zones outside any territorial jurisdiction.”

For the time being, Asgardia is cosplay: a thought experiment for those of us who like to imagine a world beyond our own, whether it’s for fun or out of despair, or even, perhaps, in the hopes of striking it rich (asteroid mining, anyone?). “It’s a bit like the pioneers of the internet,” Beer told me. “We thought they were crackpots too.”

As we finished our breakfast, it occurred to me that Beer was either light-years ahead of most political thinkers when it came to predicting the silhouette of state sovereignty 10, 20, 50 years from now—or he was on a different planet. And just maybe, these things were not opposed, but one and the same.

The essay was adapted from the forthcoming book The Hidden Globe: How Wealth Hacks the World.


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The Anti-Semitic Revolution on the American Right
The New York Times once dubbed the Princeton professor Robert George, who has guided Republican elites for decades, “the reigning brain of the Christian right.” Last year, he issued a stark warning to his ideological allies. “Each time we think the horrific virus of anti-Semitism has been extirpated, it reappears,” he wrote in May 2023. “A plea to my fellow Catholics—especially Catholic young people: Stay a million miles from this evil. 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One was populism, which pits the common people against a corrupt elite. Populists play on discontents that reflect genuine failures of the establishment, but their approach also readily maps onto the ancient anti-Semitic canard that clandestine string-pulling Jews are the source of society’s problems. Once people become convinced that the world is oppressed by an invisible hand, they often conclude that the hand belongs to an invisible Jew.Another such force is isolationism, or the desire to extricate the United States from foreign entanglements, following decades of debacles in the Middle East. But like the original America First Committee, which sought to keep the country out of World War II, today’s isolationists often conceive of Jews as either rootless cosmopolitans undermining national cohesion or dual loyalists subverting the national interest in service of their own. In this regard, the Tucker Carlsons of 2024 resemble the reactionary activists of the 1930s, such as the aviator Charles Lindbergh, who infamously accused Jewish leaders of acting “for reasons which are not American,” and warned of “their large ownership and influence in our motion pictures, our press, our radio and our government.”Populism and isolationism have legitimate expressions, but preventing them from descending into anti-Semitism requires leaders willing to restrain their movement’s worst instincts. Today’s right has fewer by the day. Trump fundamentally refuses to repudiate anyone who supports him, and by devolving power from traditional Republican elites and institutions to a diffuse array of online influencers, the former president has ensured that no one is in a position to corral the right’s excesses, even if someone wanted to.As one conservative columnist put it to me in August 2023, “What you’re actually worried about is not Trump being Hitler. What you’re worried about is Trump incentivizing anti-Semites,” to the point where “a generation from now, you’ve got Karl Lueger,” the anti-Jewish mayor of Vienna who inspired Hitler, “and two generations from now, you do have something like that.” The accelerant that is social-media discourse, together with a war that brings Jews to the center of political attention, could shorten that timeline.For now, the biggest obstacle to anti-Semitism’s ascent on the right is the Republican rank and file’s general commitment to Israel, which causes them to recoil when people like Owens rant about how the Jewish state is run by a cabal of satanic pedophiles. Even conservatives like Trump’s running mate, J. D. Vance, a neo-isolationist who opposes foreign aid to Ukraine, are careful to affirm their continued support for Israel, in deference to the party base.But this residual Zionism shields only Israeli Jews from abuse, not American ones—and it certainly does not protect the large majority of American Jews who vote for Democrats. This is why Trump suffers no consequences in his own coalition when he rails against “liberal Jews” who “voted to destroy America.” But such vilification won’t end there. As hard-core anti-Israel activists who have engaged in anti-Semitism against American Jews have demonstrated, most people who hate one swath of the world’s Jews eventually turn on the rest. “If I don’t win this election,” Trump said last week, “the Jewish people would have a lot to do with a loss.”More than populism and isolationism, the force that unites the right’s anti-Semites and explains why they have been slowly winning the war for the future of conservatism is conspiracism. To see its power in practice, one need only examine the social-media posts of Elon Musk, which serve as a window into the mindset of the insurgent right and its receptivity to anti-Semitism.[Yair Rosenberg: Elon Musk among the antisemites]Over the past year, the world’s richest man has repeatedly shared anti-Jewish propaganda on X, only to walk it back following criticism from more traditional conservative quarters. In November, Musk affirmed the Great Replacement theory, replying to a white nationalist who expressed it with these words: “You have said the actual truth.” After a furious backlash, the magnate recanted, saying, “It might be literally the worst and dumbest post I’ve ever done.” Musk subsequently met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and accompanied Ben Shapiro on a trip to Auschwitz, but the lesson didn’t quite take. Earlier this month, he shared Carlson’s discussion of Holocaust revisionism with the approbation: “Very interesting. Worth watching.” Once again under fire, he deleted the tweet and apologized, saying he’d listened to only part of the interview.But this lesson is also unlikely to stick, because like many on the new right, Musk is in thrall to a worldview that makes him particularly susceptible to anti-Jewish ideas. Last September, not long before Musk declared the “actual truth” of the Great Replacement, he participated in a public exchange with a group of rabbis, activists, and Jewish conservatives. The discussion was intended as an intervention to inoculate Musk against anti-Semitism, but early on, he said something that showed why the cause was likely lost before the conversation even began. “I think,” Musk cracked, “we’re running out of conspiracy theories that didn’t turn out to be true.”The popularity of such sentiments among contemporary conservatives explains why the likes of Carlson and Owens have been gaining ground and old-guard conservatives such as Shapiro and Erickson have been losing it. Simply put, as Trump and his allies have coopted the conservative movement, it has become defined by a fundamental distrust of authority and institutions, and a concurrent embrace of conspiracy theories about elite cabals. And the more conspiratorial thinking becomes commonplace on the right, the more inevitable that its partisans will land on one of the oldest conspiracies of them all.Conspiratorial thinking is neither new to American politics nor confined to one end of the ideological spectrum. But Trump has made foundational what was once marginal. Beginning with birtherism and culminating in election denialism, he turned anti-establishment conspiracism into a litmus test for attaining political power, compelling Republicans to either sign on to his claims of 2020 fraud or be exiled to irrelevance.The fundamental fault line in the conservative coalition became whether someone was willing to buy into ever more elaborate fantasies. The result was to elevate those with flexible approaches to facts, such as Carlson and Owens, who were predisposed to say and do anything—no matter how hypocritical or absurd—to obtain influence. Once opened, this conspiratorial box could not be closed. After all, a movement that legitimizes crackpot schemes about rigged voting machines and microchipped vaccines cannot simply turn around and draw the line at the Jews.For mercenary opportunists like Carlson, this moment holds incredible promise. But for Republicans with principles—those who know who won the 2020 election, or who was the bad guy in World War II, and can’t bring themselves to say otherwise—it’s a time of profound peril. And for Jews, the targets of one of the world’s deadliest conspiracy theories, such developments are even more forboding.“It is now incumbent on all decent people, and especially those on the right, to demand that Carlson no longer be treated as a mainstream figure,” Jonathan Tobin, the pro-Trump conservative editor of the Jewish News Syndicate, wrote after Carlson’s World War II episode. “He must be put in his place, and condemned by Trump and Vance.”Anti-Semitism’s ultimate victory in GOP politics is not assured. Musk did delete his tweets, Owens was fired, and some Republicans did condemn Carlson’s Holocaust segment. But beseeching Trump and his camp to intervene here mistakes the cause for the cure.Three days after Carlson posted his Hitler apologetics, Vance shrugged off the controversy and recorded an interview with him, and this past Saturday, the two men yukked it up onstage at a political event in Pennsylvania before an audience of thousands. Such coziness should not surprise, given that Carlson was reportedly instrumental in securing the VP slot for the Ohio senator. Asked earlier if he took issue with Carlson’s decision to air the Holocaust revisionism, Vance retorted, “The fundamental idea here is Republicans believe not in censorship; we believe in free speech and debate.” He conveniently declined to use his own speech to debate Carlson’s.
theatlantic.com
Lizzo claps back after Ozempic accusations; shows off weight loss transformation
When it comes to Ozempic allegations towards Lizzo, “don’t say it ‘cause you know [she’s] cute.” Lizzo clapped back at an online user on Instagram who accused her of using Ozempic to lose weight. Watch the full video to learn more about the singer shutting down the allegations. Subscribe to our YouTube for the latest...
nypost.com
Jennifer Lopez and Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs cuddle up in bed in resurfaced party pics
The then-couple were photographed at the embattled music mogul's Fourth of July bash in 2000 with Aaliyah and more A-list party guests.
nypost.com
Stranger spent 5 months searching for person who lost $500: "It wasn't mine."
After misplacing $500 from a football pool win, Greg Thow got a life-changing call from a woman who spent months searching for him to return the lost money.
cbsnews.com
California lawsuit alleges Exxon misled consumers about plastics recycling
Less than 10% of plastics in the U.S. are recycled.
cbsnews.com
Stylish Olympic shooter Kim Yeji got an acting gig. She plays an assassin, of course
Kim Yeji, whose cool style and demeanor made her a "main character" of the Summer Olympics, has landed an acting gig and work with fashion brands. She says her athletic career remains her priority.
npr.org
Does this 1941 photo include an iPad? Some shocked viewers think so: ‘Time for the Twilight Zone theme’
While the image may look inconspicuous at first glance, some have wildly claimed the snapshot is proof of time travel. What do you think?
nypost.com
Why Trump, 78, Can’t Rally Like He Did Before
GettyWhat a difference eight years makes, especially at his age. Donald Trump is holding way fewer rallies than he did during his previous presidential runs, in part because he’s older and enjoys staying in at Mar-a-Lago, Axios reports.The former president did 72 rallies in the summer leading up to the 2016 election, barn-burning events that demonstrated Americans’ enthusiasm about his bid. This summer, he did 24, just over a third as many.According to people on Trump’s team, besides his inclination to remain at his resort, voters already know who the former president is, so there’s less need for him to introduce himself to live audiences. Rallies are also costly, and his campaign is trying to budget carefully as his fundraising lags behind that of Kamala Harris.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Gym junkie’s arms ‘explode’ while doing pull-ups for Crossfit challenge: ‘This was a wake-up call’
She got swole -- and not in a good way.
nypost.com
Kristen Bell Scolds ‘The View’s “Divided” Reaction To Dax Shepard Eating Her Chewed Gum: “There Really Shouldn’t Be A Divide About This”
"He didn’t ask you to take his gum, did he?"
nypost.com
ESPN host praises Caitlin Clark for battling through 'BS and noise' to win AP WNBA Rookie of the Year
ESPN broadcaster Andraya Carter praised Caitlin Clark for battling through the obstacles she faced to have a solid rookie season with the Indiana Fever.
foxnews.com
12 of the ocean’s creepiest creatures that are sure to make your skin crawl
The ocean is full of creatures that will give you chills. A few of the many scary sea creatures that swim through the ocean's waters are the blobfish, stonefish and vampire squid.
foxnews.com
Kamala Harris chants ‘down with deportation’ in resurfaced video
Harris was grand marshal of the 2018 Kingdom Day Parade, meant to celebrate the legacy of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. — but was caught on tape repeating the far-left slogan.
nypost.com
Wall Street extends record run as Argentina president visits New York Stock Exchange
After closing at record on Friday, the blue-chip Dow hit an all-time high on Monday.
nypost.com
President Joe Biden To Make History With First-Ever Live Appearance On ‘The View’ By A Sitting President
Biden will be live from the Hot Topics table this week.
nypost.com
Princess Elisabeth of Belgium, 22, Is the Latest Royal to Move to the U.S.
Max BuenoWhile much of the media’s focus has been on Prince Harry hitting New York this week, another European royal has quietly been making herself at home on the East Coast in recent days.Princess Elisabeth of Belgium, the 22-year-old heir apparent to the throne of the tiny European country, joined the Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) in Boston last week.The Belgian royal household has gone into full proud parent mode, sharing images of the gifted youngster’s first few days at college, with the Mail saying that the images were taken by a fellow student, Max Bueno from Connecticut.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Free COVID-19 tests are back for fall 2024. Here's how to get them.
The government has already disbursed more than 900 million free at-home COVID-19 tests, and is reopening its free test kit portal.
cbsnews.com
Donna Kelce’s Chiefs hat is stitched with tribute to Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s relationship
The 71-year-old sported the embroidered cap when the Kansas City Chiefs played the Baltimore Ravens at Arrowhead Stadium earlier this month.
nypost.com
House moves toward averting a shutdown, sidestepping a Trump demand
Defying former president Donald Trump, the Republican-controlled House is expected to advance a bipartisan funding bill to keep federal agencies open.
washingtonpost.com
Japan scrambles flare-shooting jets to warn Russian spy plane
Japan's defense minister said the use of flares was a legitimate response to airspace violation and "we plan to use it without hesitation."
cbsnews.com
Joanna Coles and Samantha Bee Launch the Daily Beast Podcast
The Daily Beast PodcastThe Daily Beast is turning up the volume by launching a new podcast to help make sense of an intense news cycle.The Daily Beast Podcast, which will debut on Thursday, will bring listeners all the news they need—and the news they didn’t know they needed, carefully curated and unflinchingly dissected by the Daily Beast’s Chief Creative & Content Officer Joanna Coles and by Emmy-winning comedian Samantha Bee. The conversations between Coles, Bee and weekly special guests will serve up—and consume—an all-you-can-eat buffet of stories. The first episode will feature Kara Swisher, whose ruthless dissection of the world of tech has made her the definitive—and sharpest—chronicler of Silicon Valley.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Patrick Mahomes explains why Travis Kelce has had such a small role in Chiefs’ offense
As the scrutiny on Travis Kelce's performance this season grows, his quarterback is coming to his defense.
nypost.com
Israel strikes Lebanon in latest series of attacks aimed at Hezbollah
Israel carried out widespread missile strikes overnight in Lebanon in the latest in a series of attacks against the militant group Hezbollah. It comes after Hezbollah sent dozens of rockets into northern Israel over the weekend.
cbsnews.com
Igor Shesterkin’s Rangers contract talks will stop by season opener if no deal is reached as free agency looms
The countdown to Oct. 9 represents more than just the start to the Rangers' 2024-25 season.
nypost.com
Birmingham officials plead for information on mass shooting, offer reward money
Police Chief Scott Thurmond said at a news conference that police are still sifting through tips, as five injured victims remain in the hospital.
latimes.com
These issues are the key to winning swing state votes
Polling data shows that people in swing states are looking toward these issues when deciding who to vote for.
nypost.com
Here’s the Trump roasting that cowardly Kamala has ducked
I don’t see why she should escape the roasting she deserves, so here’s the speech that Donald Trump might have made if Kamala hadn’t canceled:
nypost.com