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NY Times reassigns reporter Ali Watkins after her intimate relationship with Senate aide is revealed

ali watkins
© MSNBC
The New York Times has reassigned reporter Ali Watkins after news emerged last month that she had a sexual relationship with a source while she was at her previous employer BuzzFeed.

"We are troubled by Ali's conduct, particularly while she was employed by other news organizations," said Times executive editor Dean Baquet in an internal memo on Tuesday. "For a reporter to have an intimate relationship with someone he or she covers is unacceptable. It violates our written standards and the norms of journalism."

"After careful examination and discussion, I have decided to reassign her to a position in New York for a fresh start, where she will be closely supervised and have a senior mentor," he added along with a promise to put in new internal safeguards to ensure similar situations do not arise in the future.

Comment: Previously:


Bullseye

David Hogg calls on Trump to repeal the Patriot Act, Kyle Kashuv embarrasses him with facts

Kyle Kashuv David Hogg
In response to President Donald Trump calling out the National Security Agency for possible privacy violations and tweeting that it deleted "685 million phone calls and text messages," pro-gun control Parkland activist David Hogg called for Trump to "repeal the Patriot Act":


Comment: Whichever Democrat gave this kid a platform is probably regretting that decision at this point.

See also:


Russian Flag

World Cup proves to the Brits that Russia is not the enemy

red square football game
The UK government is likely to have to eat a lot of crow this year. Despite all the fiery rhetoric about Russian "aggression" and secret spies deployed by Vladimir Putin all around the world, and especially in England, some British citizens came to Russia anyway. The FIFA World Cup is being played here, after all, and football is very important for these people.

As the result of this, the people from one of the most stalwart Western powers are getting a completely different and first-hand, view of Russia.

A news piece in the Guardian, entitled "Message to the English: come to Russia and feel the love" blew the lid off the seal that the British propagandists thought they had placed on the great country to their east, and it was done simply and in the most direct way possible, by portraying the experience of the English tourists who are in Russia en masse now for the tournament. Tom Rosenthal writes:
This. World. Cup. Is. Good. Having been lucky enough to be at Nizhny Novgorod for England 6 Panama 1 (stick that in your hats), St Petersburg for Argentina 2 Nigeria 1 (Messi's foot of God) and Kaliningrad for Belgium against England (the game was literally pointless), I get to write in The Guardian to say my personal experience is that Russia is absolutely killing this World Cup, which is a vast improvement on spies in Zizzi*. The organisation of this tournament has been fantastic and you'll struggle to find anyone who'll say otherwise, which is not because they're a double-agent or a Twitter bot, but because it's true.

Comment: Reports like the above are precisely the reason the UK establishment tried so hard to discourage UK citizens from traveling to Russia. Lies can only persist in a vacuum of access to reality, which is what the World Cup experience brings. But it looks like the dose of reality was too much, because right on time, another couple in Britain has been novichocked into the news: Skripal Lie Redux: Two More People "Poisoned" Near Porton Down

The reality creators are simply livid that Russia is getting deservedly good press, that ordinary people are getting a taste of the real Russia and seeing for themselves that it is not the totalitarian evil empire the reality creators pretend it is.


Arrow Down

San Francisco is now a sh*thole: Logs over 16,000 feces complaints in one week

San francisco homeless
© JOSH EDELSON / AFP / Getty Images
Over 16,000 complaints have been logged with the City of San Francisco regarding 'feces' in the last seven days.

A website and related app that allows local residents to request maintenance or non-emergency services from the city has received 16,015 complaints with the keyword 'feces' in the last week at the time of this writing, and many pertain to human waste in public places.

Additionally, words and phrases synonymous with 'feces' are found in thousands more grievances.

Many of the complaints also connect the fecal matter to vagrants and homeless encampments - a sight all too common now across California.

Users can geotag the location in question, and also provide photos to support their claim.

"Homeless encampment is blocking sidewalk and creates a health hazard w trash and feces," writes one user. "Please move them, and send a cleaning crew. Sidewalk is impassable, forcing pedestrians into the street."

Comment: Interestingly, much like the ideology, this is what the leftist utopia has become: a big toilet. See also:


Bullseye

Oppressive Left has drowned out common sense, says ex-liberal who started #Walkaway campaign

Brandon Straka Walkaway
© YouTube
Brandon Straka, founder of #Walkaway movement, speaks to RT about the success of his campaign
The #Walkaway campaign has helped thousands of disillusioned Democrats regain their own voices and push back against "oppression" and incivility from the Left, the movement's founder told RT in an interview.

The #Walkaway hashtag went viral after New York-based stylist Brandon Straka, an openly gay man, created a short video explaining why he felt alienated by the Democratic Party and had to "walk away" - despite being a "lifelong liberal." Thousands of other wary Democrats have since joined Straka, posting videos explaining why they too felt compelled to leave the party.


Comment: Also: #WalkAway hashtag blowing up, urging fed-up Democrats to leave the party


Sheriff

Iraqi intelligence says Russian missiles killed ISIS leader Al-Baghdadi's son

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
© AP Photo/ Militant video, File
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
Baghdad (AFP) - Russian forces killed the son of Islamic State group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in a missile attack on a Syrian cave in which he was hiding, Iraqi intelligence said Wednesday.

IS's propaganda outlet Amaq said Hudhayfah al-Badri was killed in an "operation against the Nussayriyyah and the Russians at the thermal power station in Homs", in a statement published Tuesday alongside a photo of a young man holding an assault rifle.

Nussayriyyah is the term used by IS for the Alawite religious minority sect of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Iraq's Falcon's intelligence cell said Russian forces on Monday fired three missiles at a cave in Homs that held 30 "terrorist leaders" and several of Badri's bodyguards.

It said 11 people were killed in the attack.

Comment:



Handcuffs

Three men rape 19yo in Canterbury car park, dump her in city center, caught grinning on CCTV after they do it

canterbury rapists

Sali Amet (left), Omer Engin (centre) and Salih Altun were jailed for nine years each after admitting rape
Sick sex attackers were caught grinning on CCTV after they gang-raped a sobbing teenage girl in a car park.

Salih Altun, Sali Amet and Omer Engin submitted their 19-year-old victim to a horrific hour-long ordeal before dumping her on a street in Canterbury, Kent.

Cameras caught Altun, 25, and Amet, 23, leaving The Cuban nightclub with their victim during the early hours of Friday April 13.

They were seen holding the "visibly intoxicated" girl up as she staggered through the streets of Canterbury.

The friends then took her back to her car in Holman's Meadow car park and raped her.

Altun and Amet were later filmed running off to fetch Engin, 24, from The Cuban and he joined the other two in attacking the teenager.

After an hour of raping their victim, the three men left her by a Carluccio's restaurant in Canterbury.

Stock Down

'Squeezed' book review: The American middle class just can't keep up

quart squeezed
Alissa Quart's new book Squeezed: Why Our Families Can't Afford America sports a cover blurb by Barbara Ehrenreich, whose 2001 book Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America became a bestseller by reporting on the deepening financial crisis facing the American middle class. People born in the year Ehrenreich's book came out have grown up in the darkening world her book describes, and Squeezed can easily be seen as a follow-up, a front-lines report on that darkening world.

Quart opens with the story of her own pregnancy, which happened after she and her husband had for years been enjoying the modest professional freedoms of "doing what they want" and which came as a series of eye-opening financial shocks. She quickly realizes that they are in no position to absorb the sheer costs of having a child; before she and her husband find more secure and better-paying jobs, they had been members of what Quart terms "the Middle Precariat," highly educated people whose labor has become irregular and contingent, often entailing a good deal of unpaid "shadow work," and all only barely sufficient to keep up the facade of middle class respectability. "These people believed that their training or background would ensure that they would be properly, comfortably middle-class," she writes, "but it has not worked out that way."

In a series of in-depth and deeply personal interviews, Quart delves into the lives of some of these people - an adjunct professor who must use food stamps to feed herself and her daughter, despite working constantly, harried caregivers who work so much they barely see their own children, and half a dozen others caught in the endless cycle of "running just to stay in place."

Star of David

'Morally irresponsible to ignore the occupation': Birthright dissident calls on Jews to rethink trip

Bethany Zaiman
© Screenshot
Bethany Zaiman, on the day she left the Birthright trip, at the Tel Aviv stock exchange, June 28, 2018.
The other day we reported the dramatic Birthright bailout, when five American Jewish women left their "Birthright" trip to Israel near the conclusion on June 28 because they had not gotten honest answers to repeated questions about the occupation. As they announced their decision to their fellow travelers, in a video posted on Facebook, the young women were answered with belligerence by their Israeli tour guide, who warned them about the violence in the occupation, and a fellow Birthright participant told them, "You will get killed. You will get raped."

One of the Birthright-bolters, Bethany Zaiman, a doctoral student in anthropology, has given an interview to David Kattenburg at Green Planet Monitor and answered some questions re the action.

The action wasn't planned ahead of time, Zaiman implies. She joined the trip as a critic of Birthright hoping for answers. "I was very fortunate on the trip to meet a few other women who had similar reservations and questions."

Comment: Just a little questioning by foreign Jews in Israel and everyone loses their minds. Ideological possession, anyone?

See also: Israelis go hysterical over walkout from 'Birthright' tour - "Radicals!" "You will get raped!"


2 + 2 = 4

Harvard fighting to keep admissions process under wraps as lawsuit proceeds

harvard
© getty
What exactly does it take to be admitted to a top college? It's a secret, according to Harvard.

The past couple of weeks have offered an unprecedented look into the way Harvard University evaluates applicants. The details came to light during a lawsuit alleging that the school of has discriminated against Asian-Americans hoping for a spot at the school - a claim Harvard vehemently denies. Though the suit has certainly pulled back the curtain on the Harvard admissions process, many details still remain under wraps. Harvard is hoping to keep it that way.

As part of the suit, the school filed a brief late last week arguing that certain documents produced as part of the case - including internal training materials and preliminary snapshots of the school's admitted class during specific periods of the application cycle - should remain under seal.

John Grisham: 'Day of reckoning' coming for student debt

The brief is part of a larger request to keep certain documents, like individual applicant files or correspondence with alumni, under seal so as not to violate the privacy of people communicating with or submitting their information to Harvard. "Harvard is deeply committed to protecting the extensive personal information applicants entrust to us in the admissions process," a Harvard spokesperson said in a statement regarding last week's brief.


Comment: What a joke. They're only concerned with protecting their own 'personal information', i.e. the evidence that their admissions process is highly politicized, and monetized. Years ago, Daniel Golden wrote a book about how super-rich families essentially buy admission for their children. That's how Jared Kushner got into Harvard, for example: The Story Behind Jared Kushner's Curious Acceptance into Harvard:
My book exposed a grubby secret of American higher education: that the rich buy their under-achieving children's way into elite universities with massive, tax-deductible donations. It reported that New Jersey real estate developer Charles Kushner had pledged $2.5 million to Harvard University in 1998, not long before his son Jared was admitted to the prestigious Ivy League school. At the time, Harvard accepted about one of every nine applicants. (Nowadays, it only takes one out of twenty.)

I also quoted administrators at Jared's high school, who described him as a less than stellar student and expressed dismay at Harvard's decision.

"There was no way anybody in the administrative office of the school thought he would on the merits get into Harvard," a former official at The Frisch School in Paramus, New Jersey, told me. "His GPA did not warrant it, his SAT scores did not warrant it. We thought for sure, there was no way this was going to happen. Then, lo and behold, Jared was accepted. It was a little bit disappointing because there were at the time other kids we thought should really get in on the merits, and they did not."

Comment: Harvard is a joke: