Author: Kate

Art Of The Deal

https://theconservativetreehouse.com/2018/12/21/checkmate-saudi-crown-prince-mbs-sends-replacement-troops-to-defend-kurds-in-syria/

First, remember Turkish President Recep Erdogan was the antagonist in the Kashoggi matter and Erdogan orchestrated the blame toward Saudi Crown Prince MbS. There is no better motivated mid-east ally to protect the Kurds against any military action by Turkey other than MbS. No doubt MbS and UAE will send their best forces.

 

Secondly, what military equipment will MbS and the UAE be shipping along with their military troops? Those would be military purchases directly from the U.S.

 

Third, who stood up against international pressure and refused to condemn MbS over the Kashoggi matter? That would be a strategic U.S. President Trump. MbS owes a favor; see how that works?

O, Sweet Saint Of San Andreas

Hear my prayer.

California ranks No. 1 among the 50 states for the percentage of its residents 25 and older who have never completed ninth grade and 50th for the percentage who have graduated from high school, according to new data from the Census Bureau.

In related news: the Vice Chancellor for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion at the University of California, Los Angeles makes over $400,000 dollars a year.

Theresa May’s Britain

Where the foxes caper unmolested, the government packs your school lunch, and the Radio Shack Luftwaffe holds a nation in its icy grip.

Thousands of passengers remain stranded at Gatwick as police continue their search for the operator of a drone that has caused the airport to shut down.
 
Flights were brought to a standstill after a drone was seen over the airfield on Wednesday.
 
[…]
 
Sussex Police has been locked in a game of cat and mouse with the drone since the airport shutdown began.
 

Despite dozens of sightings, the device, which detectives believe to have been “adapted and developed” to cause deliberate disruption, has not been found.
 

Det Ch Supt Jason Tingley said police were re-evaluating plans for armed officers to shoot the drone down after other methods failed.

Three days in, and no one has called for a pigeon hunter.

Jerry Dias is Regular People

Jerry Dias is the president of Unifor, Canada’s largest private sector union. They represent everyone from janitors to journalists.

Two of their biggest groups, auto workers and people working the oil patch are hurting right now.

Jerry likes to claim he is just like the front line workers. So here he is at last night’s Raptors game in Toronto, sitting in court side seats. Those seats cost $1,200 a piece.

Who paid for them? Union members through dues? Jerry himself? Was it a lobbyist?

Y2Kyoto: Uncredible Journey

Unexpectedly.

A car made from waste plastic has been forced to abort its mission to the South Pole because of bad weather.
 
Solar Voyager was set to be the first solar-powered expedition to reach the world’s most southernmost point.
 
But despite it being Antarctica’s summer, unexpected heavy snow has meant progress has been slow, and now the team have had to turn around.

Russia! Russia! Russia!

The New York Times story is infuriating in its efforts to downplay what happened here. (Just hit the ‘esc’ key a few times as it loads to bypass the page blocker) This story would be front page, hang-the-bastards international news had it been the Trump administration.

Your Moral And Intellectual Superiors

More on Der Fakenewser;

In February 2017, my husband and I attended a concert at our local theater, and were sipping some wine in the lobby before the show started. Several people came up to us at separate times excitedly, and asked, “did you meet the German guy yet?!”
 
I hadn’t, but my spider senses perked up when I heard that he worked for Der Spiegel, a magazine based in Hamburg, and that he was writing about the state of rural America in the wake of Trump’s presidency.
 
[…]
 
Relotius has received accolades for his daring quest to live among us for several weeks. And yet, he reported on very little actual truth about Fergus Falls life. In 7,300 words he really only got our town’s population and average annual temperature correct, and a few other basic things, like the names of businesses and public figures, things that a child could figure out in a Google search. The rest is uninhibited fiction (even as sloppy as citing an incorrect figure of citywide 70.4% electoral support for Trump, when the actual number was 62.6%), which begs the question of why Der Spiegel even invested in Relotius’ three week trip to the U.S., whether they should demand their money back from him, and what kind of institutional breakdown led to the supposedly world-class Der Spiegel fact-checking team completely dropping the ball on this one.

Break Them Up

Into a hundred thousand million pieces.

Back in 2015, a woman named Imy Santiago wrote an Amazon review of a novel that she had read and liked. Amazon immediately took the review down and told Santiago she had “violated its policies.” Santiago re-read her review, didn’t see anything objectionable about it, so she tried to post it again. “You’re not eligible to review this product,” an Amazon prompt informed her.
 
When she wrote to Amazon about it, the company told her that her “account activity indicates you know the author personally.” Santiago did not know the author, so she wrote an angry email to Amazon and blogged about Amazon’s “big brother” surveillance.
 
I reached out to both Santiago and Amazon at the time to try to figure out what the hell happened here. Santiago, who is an indie book writer herself, told me that she’d been in the same ballroom with the author in New York a few months before at a book signing event, but had not talked to her, and that she had followed the author on Twitter and Facebook after reading her books. Santiago had never connected her Facebook account to Amazon, she said.

Update.

Facebook admits that it allowed Netflix and Spotify to access your private messages

Your Moral And Intellectual Superiors

Der Spiegel says star reporter perpetrated years-long fraud;

The magazine published a lengthy report Wednesday following an internal investigation into the work of Claas Relotius, a 33-year-old staff writer known for his vivid investigative stories.
 
Spiegel reported that Relotius, who previously worked for other publications and won a CNN Journalist of the Year award in 2014, has resigned after admitting to inventing interviews.

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