Society's Child
The Times made its official announcement after the paper's in-house cartoonist leaked their plans in a blog post. Complaining about the "moralistic mobs" that "gather on social media and rise like a storm," cartoonist Pat Chappatte - who did not draw the offending cartoon - nevertheless slammed the image as something "that should never have run in the best newspaper of the world," blunting his message with the suggestion that he sympathized with the outrage mobs in this case.
"The media need to renew themselves and reach out to new audiences. And stop being afraid of the angry mob," Chappatte wrote, attaching a final cartoon featuring a sad-looking artist with broken pencil gazing down at a memorial to the cartoonists murdered in 2015's Charlie Hebdo massacre in Paris. "In the insane world we live in, the art of the visual commentary is needed more than ever. And so is humor."
Caving in to groupthink? Journalist backtracks on 'best book' about US imperialism by Max Blumenthal
Blakeley initially raved about Blumenthal's book, 'The Management of Savagery', a look at how US imperialism fuels terrorism and ultra-nationalism around the world. She even called it "the best book I've read all year" and described its contents as an "excoriating indictment of US, British and French imperialism in the Middle East."
But the impressed journalist had a sudden change of heart on Monday and deleted the tweet. She then informed her followers that she had been informed of Blumenthal's "apologism" for Syrian President Bashar Assad.
A tweet has gone viral with a compilation of photos featuring the Hollywood actor posing together with women, in which he performs perhaps what is colloquially known as the 'hover hand' - a phenomenon that occurs when two people embrace for a photo op, but one or both leave their fingers an imperceptible distance away from the other. Only, the Matrix star exhibits an almost comically exaggerated version - arms inches away from the waist, open palms exposed to the camera.
"See, no touching!" his body language screams.
This investigation is just one way Mayor Bill deBlasio is trying to address a misuse of home sharing platforms, like Airbnb, to develop large-scale lodging businesses. New York City has been stepping up its pursuit of "large illegal hotel operators" right around the same time as Airbnb is preparing for an IPO.
A spokesperson for Airbnb said that it "wants to work with New York City on legislation to protect hosts so that the city can focus enforcement resources on large-scale illegal hotel operators."
I am Amina Salah, a Palestinian woman. I grew up with three sisters, two brothers, and too many relatives and friends to count - too many loved ones who I try not to count, so that I don't fall apart when I realize how many I have lost.
I always dreamt of an outrageous, courageous, and ambitious life, with a future of achievements and success waiting for me. But when I grew up, I quickly realized that as a Palestinian, holding on to my dreams wouldn't be so simple.
The AN-32 military aircraft disappeared in Mechuka in Arunachal Pradesh near the border with China last Monday, with 13 people on board. It lost contact after it took off from Jorhat in Assam.
The IAF announced the wreckage of the aircraft was spotted Tuesday "16 km north of Lipo, northeast of Tato" by a military helicopter flying over the expanded search zone, the Hindu reports.
In a dizzying weekend Twitter rant, McAfee claimed that the Department of Justice is compiling a bogus case against him for money-laundering, racketeering, and murder.
Not only are millions of clients dumping the bank following countless scandals involving the bank's cross-selling of accounts, not only did the Fed slam the bank with an unprecedented penalty (as Janet Yellen's last act before she retired), not only did the bank's former CEO, Tim Sloan, unexpectedly resigned under dramatic pressure from Congress, but now the WSJ reports that the bank is having trouble getting top bankers interested in its open chief executive officer job.
According to the WSJ, the bank's board approached a small group of top candidates, including JPMorgan consumer banking chief Gordon Smith, PNC CEO William Demchak and former U.S. Bancorp chief Richard Davis.
The results were ungood: both Demchak and Davis took a hard pass on potentially replacing Sloan, while Smith, who is JPMorgan's co-chief operating officer, reportedly told confidants that he is reluctant to take the job and is likely to stay at JPMorgan.
In honor of Father's Day, allow me to dig into the data on how parents spend their time, and to bring to light a side of it that few seem willing to discuss. It's a side that makes dads look . . . good.
My core points are these: Among married couples living together with kids, if anything, it's dads who do more work in total-adding up paid work, housework, child care, and even shopping. Moms do work more in some specific circumstances, but the data acquit fathers as a group of the slacking charges so frequently leveled against them. Further, the biggest complaint that is actually consistent with the numbers-that moms and dads do different blends of home work and paid work-is not necessarily a problem at all, and to insist otherwise is to devalue parents' own preferences.
"It's quite possible that the future belongs to the four-day week as the foundation of the social labor contract," Medvedev said as an example of what corporations may offer laborers in the future.
He argued that paying the same money for less working hours may not be a loss for employers and national economies. After all, when the previous major change in working hours took place in early 20th century, with people like Henry Ford agreeing to 40-hour week at their plants, there was a productivity boost.















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