Immigration Non-Decision Reflects Multiple Cases of Government Inaction

In a short June 23 order, the Supreme Court dashed the hopes of millions that the justices would overturn the injunction blocking implementation of Deferred Action for Parents of Americans (DAPA) and expansion of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA). The one-sentence indication that the lower court decision was affirmed by “an evenly divided court” obscures numerous failures to perform governmental duties consistent with the reasonable expectations of the populace. A cryptic order masks responsibility – to the entire nation and, in particular, to the millions of immigrants and supporters represented by those who amassed outside the Supreme Court on argument day in United States v. Texas.

This hidden accountability comes unexpected from a Court that, under Chief Justice John Roberts, has become known in part for its decisions that seem to strategically skirt significant political backlash in the most highly-charged cases, such as those involving the Affordable Care Act. In a case that involved an unprecedented public showing of support for the President’s exercise of executive authority in DAPA and expanded DACA, the Court instead, through its inaction, left in place a preliminary injunction in highly partisan, politicized litigation involving 26 state governments – most led by governors from one party – against a president from the opposite party.

Despite this obscured accountability, the millions of people most aggrieved by the non-decision will certainly soon turn from disappointment to political activism. As they do so, they will aim their opposition at those responsible for this serious, albeit temporary, setback to efforts at more humane, efficient, and uniform immigration enforcement practices nationwide. Here are some of the political dragons whose failure to perform assigned duties lies hidden behind the Court’s order.

First are the justices themselves, in particular those believed to have voted to affirm the injunction. The one-line order means that justices are neither required nor expected to explain their reasoning, including how it squares with previous written opinions or dissents in cases raising similar issues. In ordinary cases, justices craft an individual jurisprudence as they explain their views, by writing or joining a majority or dissenting opinion, on the issues in a case and how those views relate to prior Court opinions, including those they themselves authored.

In this case, without that written reasoning, there is no explanation, for example, of how Chief Justice Roberts concluded that Texas had standing – the right to bring a case – based on the speculative costs of providing subsidized drivers’ licenses to DAPA recipients, despite his previous well-established skepticism about states’ standing to challenge federal actions, as expressed in his previous written decisions.

In addition, the justices have not explained – and this information gap may never be filled – why they waited more than two months after argument to issue their one-line order. Many supporters of DAPA and expanded DACA, consistent with the wisdom of longtime court observers, believed optimism warranted after passage of so much time. Indication of an “evenly divided court” does not require the time for review and editing of opinions that a decided case requires. These are the issues that critics may raise in relation to the Supreme Court as dismay turns to political action.

Equal if not greater responsibility for last week’s order lies with the leadership of the United States Senate, which has shirked its constitutional responsibility to review and vote upon the President’s nominee to the ninth seat on the Court for some time. President Obama nominated Merrick Garland over a full month before the oral argument in United States v. Texas, more than enough time for the Senate, acting with appropriate alacrity, to seat a ninth justice to hear and participate in deciding this critical case. The resistant Senate leadership’s dereliction of duty will not go unnoticed by community activists aggrieved by the Court’s non-decision on such an important matter as deferred action.

Finally, the 26 plaintiff states and their elected leaders cannot long avoid public responsibility for the continued blockage of DAPA and expanded DACA following the indication of an evenly divided Court. This lawsuit marks an unprecedented politicizing of the courts by states that are well represented in the federal Congress, which could, should it so desire, act immediately to restrain any exercise of the President’s constitutionally endowed discretion in enforcement of federal law, including immigration laws. Yet, rather than follow that legislative route – no doubt cognizant of the extreme difficulty of getting the support needed to block the President – the 26 states, led by Texas, chose to take to the federal courts to attack the President’s use of well-established executive authority.

The deeper problem is that the 26 states undertook this political litigation with scant attention, much less analysis, of the overall best interests of their residents, including those families with members who might be eligible for the important, though temporary, relief afforded through deferred action. The thin record of injury presented in court against DAPA and DACA, as well as the implicit demonization of long-term immigrant residents in pursuing the case, exemplify this inattention to states’ own best interests.

History has shown the effects of similar efforts by state leaders. California politics permanently changed, in part through backlash against the anti-immigrant 1994 ballot initiative, Proposition 187. More recently, Arizona has seen a growing Latino civic participation and activism following the notorious SB 1070. The 26 plaintiff states may see similar activity as disappointment transforms into efforts to hold politically accountable those responsible for the Supreme Court’s one-line affirmance.

Historically, Supreme Court decisions on momentous issues have triggered political backlash – both genuine opposition and opportunistic resistance. The level of interest and involvement by so many people in support of DAPA and expanded DACA might make United States v. Texas the first non-decision to catalyze a sustained and significant backlash. If so, these are the leaders most likely to be the focal points of political accountability – for failing to perform expected duties.

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Here's How You Can Throw Your Child An Unforgettable Coming of Age Party

Your child is turning 13 and it’s getting you all excited and nervous at the same time. You know it’s one of life’s important milestones so you want to make sure the mitzvah you’re throwing will be a memorable one. On the other hand, you know you can’t break the bank just to fulfill your child’s wishes for one night because there’s college to think about. So to make the celebration a success without spending all your savings, here are five tips to keep in mind.

1. Set a budget and stick to it.

As with any other important celebration, your budget is one of the first considerations. You can’t jump to planning if you’re not even sure how much funds you’re working with. So sit down with your child and find out what do they specifically want for their mitzvah. Have them choose from a range of options and have them rank their choices according to their heart’s desires so you know which to prioritize and how to improvise with the budget that you have at hand. It won’t be easy but with your creativity and the support of other family members, nothing is impossible.

2. Decide on the mitzvah’s theme.

This second step requires the input of your child so make sure to involve them in the process. It will help to have options (that fit your budget) ready before sitting down with them to talk about it. Once a decision has been made, let them know that it has to be final. They can’t change their mind while you’re halfway through the preparations. Once they agreed, dive to the internet to do a search of other similar parties so you can pick up some tips and have a guide. Be sure to consider getting a professional party planner, too if your schedule won’t allow you to personally check on everything.

3. Look for the perfect venue.

After you’ve determined the final headcount of your guests, the next step is to find the perfect place where you can celebrate your child’s bat or bar mitzvah. When looking for a venue, you should find one which is easy to locate especially for your guests who are coming from far places, complete facilities, ample parking space, and clean.

4. Find a photographer or videographer.

While almost all of us have awesome cameras on our smartphones these days, it still pays to get someone professional to take photos and record the mitzvah’s important moments. This way, your family has a remembrance of the mitzvah that you can watch whenever you want to. More importantly, you can just enjoy the night with your child, marveling at the woman or man she or he has become.

5. Look for a caterer.

Even if you love cooking and you’re a master chef, don’t attempt to cook the menu for everyone you’ve invited. Your child would want you to be there when she or he needs you so you’ll be better off getting a caterer to take care of the menu and refreshments for the mitzvah.

Bar or bat mitzvahs does not have to be elaborate to be special. Yes, they can be stressful for everyone, but with enough preparation, lots of perseverance, and a healthy dose of faith, your child’s coming of age party will be the best she or he can ever ask for.

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The 21 Most Requested Wedding Songs, According To DJs

If you really want to get the party started at your wedding, these songs should do the trick.

Billboard asked wedding DJs in 13 U.S. cities to to submit their most-played wedding songs. Check out the top 21 below, then head over to Billboard to see the full list.

21. Montell Jordan, “This Is How We Do It”

“Let’s flip the track, bring the old school back // This is how we do it”

20. Hall & Oates, “You Make My Dreams”

“I’ve been waiting for, waiting for you girl, oh yeah // You make my dreams come true”

19. The Black Eyed Peas, “I Gotta Feeling”

“Tonight’s the night, let’s live it up // I got my money, let’s spend it up”

18. The Jackson 5, “I Want You Back”

“Oh darlin’, I was blind to let you go // But now since I see you in his arms // I want you back”

17. The Notorious B.I.G., “Hypnotize”

“Biggie Biggie Biggie can’t you see // Sometimes your words just hypnotize me”

16. Ed Sheeran, “Thinking Out Loud”

“Place your head on my beating heart // I’m thinking out loud // Maybe we found love right where we are”

15. Pharrell Williams, “Happy”

“Because I’m happy // Clap along if you feel like a room without a roof”

14. DNCE, “Cake by the Ocean”

“You’re a real-life fantasy, you’re a real-life fantasy // But you’re moving so carefully; let’s start living dangerously”

13. V.I.C., “Wobble”

“God damn I’m so explicit // But I cant help it my flow ridiculous”

12. OutKast, “Hey Ya!”

 “Shake it like a Polaroid picture”

11. Cupid, “Cupid Shuffle”

“Down, down, do your dance, do your dance”

10. The Isley Brothers, “Shout – Part 1”

“You know you make me wanna shout // Kick my heels up and shout”

9. Michael Jackson, “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough”

“Keep on with the force, don’t stop // Don’t stop ’til you get enough”

8. Journey, “Don’t Stop Believin'”

“Just a small town girl // Livin’ in a lonely world // She took the midnight train // Goin’ anywhere”

7. Usher feat. Lil Jon & Ludacris, “Yeah!”

“I said shawty she was checkin’ up on me // From the game she was spittin’ my ear you’d think that she knew me”

6. Earth, Wind & Fire, “September”

“As we danced in the night // Remember how the stars stole the night away”

5. Whitney Houston, “I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me)”

“Oh, I wanna dance with somebody // I wanna feel the heat with somebody”

4. Justin Timberlake, “Can’t Stop the Feeling!”

“I got that sunshine in my pocket // Got that good soul in my feet”

3. Walk the Moon, “Shut Up and Dance”

“Oh don’t you dare look back // Just keep your eyes on me // I said you’re holding back // She said shut up and dance with me”

2. Taylor Swift, “Shake It Off”

“But I keep cruising, can’t stop, won’t stop grooving // It’s like I got this music in my body saying it’s gonna be alright”

1. Mark Ronson feat. Bruno Mars, “Uptown Funk!”

“Stop, wait a minute // Fill my cup, put some liquor in it”

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Finding A Cure Wouldn’t Mean We’ve Defeated Cancer

WebMD wasn’t a research option when Ivy Brown was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma in 1974, so her mother looked up her 12-year-old daughter’s condition the old-fashioned way, in a hardcover medical volume.

“It just said ‘fatal,'” Brown explained. Having moved the family to London a month earlier, Brown’s parents were still trying to liaise with her pediatrician in the U.S. “My father told me recently that he was sleeping with the phone on his stomach because of the time change,” she said.

“They were as scared as you can be when you have a child who you think you might lose,” Brown explained. “It was devastating for them.”

Robin Glassman was also 12 when she was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s in 1972. Her mother wouldn’t let her read the disease’s description. 

While the prognosis for Hodgkin’s, an immune system cancer, is excellent — it’s considered one of the most curable cancers, with 10-year survival rates of about 80 percent — that wasn’t the case fifty years ago. In the 1960s, only 1 in 10 Hodgkin’s patients were expected to survive for five years.

Today, the two women are among the first generation of what’s referred to as “long-term childhood cancer survivors” — kids who were diagnosed in the 1970s and lived for at least five years after their initial diagnosis, a benchmark that their peers born just 10 years earlier would not have likely lived to reach.

The women’s scars are shown here in powerful photos that capture both the fragility and the resilience of surviving cancer. (The photos may not be appropriate for viewing while at work.)

When President Barack Obama announced the $1 billion moonshot initiative in February, he appointed Vice President Joe Biden, whose 46-year-old son Beau died of brain cancer last year, to be the project’s steward.

“Right now, only 5 percent of cancer patients in the U.S. end up in a clinical trial,” Biden wrote in Medium in January. “The science, data, and research results are trapped in silos, preventing faster progress and greater reach to patients. It’s not just about developing game-changing treatments  —  it’s about delivering them to those who need them.”

Wednesday’s National Cancer Moonshot Summit, which harkens back to Richard Nixon’s 1971 “war on cancer,” is a national day of action led by Biden to crowdsource strategies for accelerating cancer-curing research from more than 350 scientists, oncologists, data and tech experts, patients, families and advocates across the country.  

While the summit is a first step toward the moonshot’s expressed goal of doubling the current rate of progress toward a cure for cancer, there has been noticeably little discussion among politicians, advocacy groups and other stakeholders of what curing cancer actually means. 

A spokeswoman for Biden said that the summit incorporated a discussion on survivorship, but declined to comment on the record about specific ways the moonshot would address the issue.

Critics called the initiative oversimplified, and emphasized that because cancer is many diseases, not just one, it’s unrealistic to push for a single cure. Others pushed back on the initiative’s meager budget.

“Let’s be honest,” Ezekiel Emanuel, oncologist and chair of the University of Pennsylvania’s Department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy, told STAT. “There’s not that much money in the moonshot. I just don’t think it is going to have that big an impact.”

Later in January, the vice president added, “I said I believe that we need an absolute national commitment to end cancer as we know,” he said. “I’m not naive, I didn’t think we could ‘end cancer.’ I’m not looking for a silver bullet. There is none.”

Survival is also more complicated than being cancer-free, a concern that’s rarely included in well-meaning, but oversimplified political initiatives and awareness months. Survivors’ stories, particularly those of childhood survivors who have had the longest tenure with cancer and its side effects, could help broaden the focus of the moonshot aims by highlighting their experiences of what life after cancer is like.

So what does defeating cancer actually look like? For Brown and Glassman, living cancer-free hasn’t meant a return to good health. The experiences of these women offer clues into life after childhood cancer, specifically the decades of late-onset effects from the treatments that saved patients’ lives in the first place.  

The life-altering consequences of cancer don’t end with clean scans

There’s a commonly held misbelief that the story ends when kids with cancer are cured, Dr. Laura Hogan, a pediatric oncologist at Stony Brook University Hospital and a childhood cancer survivor herself, explained. “This is something that impacts the quality of their lives and their families’ lives, for a long time — sometimes lifelong.”

Cancer therapy can damage children’s developing organs, according to Dr. Kevin Oeffinger, who directs the cancer survivorship program at Memorial Sloan Kettering that Brown and Glassman are part of. “We are celebrating success of the cures, but also learning how to deal with the aftermath,” he said, listing heart disease, second cancers, lung problems, depression and anxiety as a few of the long-term consequences of cancer treatment.

Radiation therapy, in particular, is linked to countless aftermath effects. Chest radiation can mean heart disease or breast cancer later in life. Abdomen radiation is a precursor to colon or skin cancers. Brain radiation can manifest as memory or information-processing problems.  

Radiation and chemotherapy can work together to treat cancer, and they can also combine forces to cause heart defects and other bodily damage. “Those can be immediate, or they can be decades down the road,” Hogan said. “Your risk of cardiac disease goes up over time.”

 

It’s literally a job to hold my head up throughout the day.
Ivy Brown, Hodgkin’s lymphoma survivor

Receiving radiation therapy as a child came with it’s own set of challenges. “Nobody said cancer to us,” Brown explained. “Nobody even said radiation. They just called it treatment. Everything was masked and they didn’t feel that it was necessary to tell a kid that.”

Both Brown and Glassman struggle with the day-to-day reminders of radiation they received decades ago, including muscle atrophy that fatigues their necks and backs, making it difficult to stand up straight.

“It’s literally a job to hold my head up throughout the day,” Brown said. “Sometimes I’ll see a picture of myself and I’ll be like, ‘Oh my god. I look like a human turtle. Come on, Ivy. Remember to hold your head up, throw your shoulders back.'”

Before Brown joined the Memorial group, she blamed herself for slouching. “I had no idea that there was a reason for it,” she said.

What we know about quality of life after cancer

It was a long time before doctors and scientists started to track those delayed effects in earnest — 1994 to be exact. The first long-term effort, a National Cancer Institute-funded initiative called the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study, surveyed more than 14,000 children who were diagnosed with cancer between 1970 and 1986. 

One of the most recent studies using that data set was published in April. Researchers asked childhood survivors between the ages of 18 and 49 to assign a score between 0 and 1 to their personal well-being. (Zero represented death and 1 represented perfect health.) The results, which were adjusted for education, household income and health insurance, were disheartening, although not necessarily surprising. 

On average, childhood cancer survivors rated their well-being at 0.77, compared to an average score of 0.81 among general population adults. Well-being responses among 18- to 29-year-old survivors were similar to general population 40- to 49-year-olds with no history of cancer, indicating a premature onset of age-related health problems for childhood cancer survivors. 

There was, however, a glimmer of good news: Those without chronic problems, approximately 11 percent of the total group, reported similar well-being to people who’d never had cancer.

Ultimately, cancer survivors’ quality of life hinges on whether or not they suffer from chronic conditions, which of course, is both statistically probable and largely out of survivors’ control, a high-stakes roll of the dice in which they have little or no say.

Radiation is a cautionary tale that should temper our expectations for revolutionary treatments 

Being a first-generation childhood cancer survivor is a peculiar position to be in. Ongoing research will help future survivors — researchers have already studied everything from smoking cessation to infertility — but for first-generation survivors like Brown and Glassman, it’s anyone’s guess what the long-term consequences of their childhood treatments will be.  

That unfinished list of possible side effects looms large. “We know this stuff remains active in people’s bodies,” Brown said. “It’s not like the list ends.”

“I skated by for quite a while,” Brown said of her cancer treatments, which included surgery and radiation, but no chemotherapy. “It just did not even occur to me that I was going to have the kind of repercussions from the radiation that I ended up having.”

It’s complicated, according to Dr. Lisa Diller, a pediatric oncologist and director of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute’s childhood cancer survivorship program. 

You’ll get the same overall survival rates without radiation if you look 10 or 20 years out, said Diller, who co-authored the April survivorship study.

But treatment without radiation comes with a tradeoff. The big issue is weighing the advantages of survival with the likelihood that a child will relapse if he or she isn’t given the strongest possible treatment. If a child relapses, he or she will have to get more intense second-line therapies.

“Can you remove radiation from everyone and allow a certain percentage of patients to relapse, and then treat them more intensely?” Diller asked. “Or do you use as little radiation as possible, to the smallest volume, at the smallest dose, and maintain a larger overall likelihood of relapse?”

Brown’s breast cancer diagnosis in 2005 was the first sign of serious backlash from her treatment. Brown underwent a double mastectomy. A few years later, her aortic valve failed, and she had open-heart, valve-replacement surgery. 

For Glassman, who was treated with both radiation and chemotherapy, the situation was even worse. She had a cancer reoccurrence within a year of her initial Hodgkin’s diagnosis. “Once I lost my hair, in my eyes, I was invisible,” she said. “I was like I don’t want to be seen.”

Years of cancer treatments also took a toll on Glassman’s psyche. She developed an eating disorder after prednisone, a cancer-treatment steroid she was on, made her swell up and gain weight. She turned to alcohol, cocaine and Quaaludes in her 20s, which put her treatment schedule at risk.

“I even wrote it in my journal: They’re worried because if my weight is too low, they won’t give me chemo,” Glassman said. “I mean I wrote this in my journal and I’m like … I don’t know.”

She overcame her doubt, though, and worked with a nurse practitioner to address her eating disorder.

“I didn’t want to harm my body in that way anymore. I was done,” she said.

The physical effects of Glassman’s treatments cropped up in her 30s, when unknown viral infection led to heart problems that necessitated having a pacemaker put in. Then she was diagnosed with breast and basel-cell skin cancers. 

Looking back, Glassman wishes her doctors had placed more emphasis on maintaining her quality of life after treatment. “The main thing is to keep you alive,” she said. “Why would one want to be alive if you’re not living as fully?”

I’ve been really weak, really struggling.
Robin Glassman, Hodgkin’s lymphoma survivor

Both women have thyroid problems, a common affliction among Hodgkin’s patients, and became infertile due to their cancer treatment.

For Brown, not being able to have children has been one of the hardest parts of having cancer. “That is a scar that I will never really get over,” she said. “I tried to adopt, but kept getting sick and got turned down. That is one thing that has kind of left a different sort of emotional scar for me.”

Brown and Glassman, both New York City artists, connected through Memorial’s survivorship group a few years ago, after a nurse practitioner there suggested that they would get along.  

But listening to other group members talk about their health was frightening. It foreshadowed the problems Brown could develop in the future, many of which had never previously crossed her mind.

“There were a lot of people there who were saying things like ‘I’m just waiting for the next shoe to drop,'” Brown said. “The first time I walked out of there, I got off the subway and I started crying.”

For Glassman, the last few months (after these photos were taken) have been especially taxing. She’s had heart problems and fluid in her lungs, and has been cycling in and out of the hospital and ICU.

“I’ve been really weak, really struggling,” she said. “It’s been a hard six months.” 

What Joe Biden can learn from first-generation cancer survivors  

Naturally, doctors and patients approach cancer treatment differently. “The first thing you worry about is not side effects,” said Dr. Vincent DeVita Jr., an oncologist and former head of the National Cancer Institute, who pioneered a Hodgkin’s treatment called MOPP — a combination of four chemotherapy medicines — in the late 1960s. 

DeVita, whose memoir The Death of Cancer, was published in November, emphasized that he preferred to get a good crack at treating his patients’ cancer the first time around, ideally before the cancer has a chance to spread. “The side effects you worry about are the acute side effects,” he said. 

“If you don’t treat the disease, you die of the disease in a relatively short period of time,” DeVita explained. “If you add too many therapies in, you increase the risk, but still, risks never overcome the benefits of treating a disease that’s otherwise fatal.”

Again, a complicated cost-benefit analysis, and a good reminder that the narratives we use to describe medical research and disease treatment, frequently distilled into odysseys for silver bullet solutions, are too simplistic. 

Biden has directly addressed these critiques, but he hasn’t changed the objective of his moonshot campaign. It remains a quest to end cancer, when it might be more fruitful as a combination of cancer prevention initiatives and increased long-term support for survivors like Brown and Glassman.

For her part, Diller says she’s thankful for the sacrifices of survivors like Glassman and Brown, whose experiences paved the way for children with cancer today.

“They contributed to the changes we’ve made in the 90s and the aughts to change therapy,” she said. “The next generation of survivors in their 40s hopefully don’t have the same problems.”

In the meantime, with no consensus on what “cured” means beyond crude five-year and 10-year survival benchmarks, a reasonable objective for Biden’s cancer moonshot would be acknowledging that oncology is nuanced. Ending cancer relies on a binary assumption: You have cancer or you are cancer-free. Unfortunately it’s not that simple.

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We Prayed For Paris — But What About Istanbul?

Once again, there was relative radio silence in response to a deadly terror attack on a predominantly Muslim country.

While there was an outpouring of international solidarity following last year’s terrorist attacks in Paris, which killed almost 130 people, and March’s terrorist attacks in Brussels, which killed more than 30, the response to the suicide bombing on Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport on Tuesday, which killed 41 and injured another 239, was decidedly less impressive.

Only a handful of countries paid tribute by lighting up buildings or monuments in Turkish flag colors:

Paris did not light up the Eiffel Tower in Turkish colors as it did with Belgium’s flag colors after the Brussels attack — even though just weeks ago it projected Turkish colors onto the landmark after soccer fans won a contest. 

Neither did the World Trade Center, which lit up in Belgium’s and France’s flag colors after their attacks. The Empire State Building did not go dark, as it did following those two attacks. 

And the absence of vigils honoring the dead was astounding. 

The Union of European Football Associations said it would not hold a moment of silence during the Euro 2016 quarterfinals because Turkey had already been eliminated from the series, Associated Press reporter Rob Harris tweeted.

While Facebook turned on its safety check feature, which allows users to mark themselves as safe during a crisis, it did not provide a filter that lets users easily modify their profile picture with an overlay of the Turkish flag — something they’ve done with the French flag, the Belgian flag and with other symbols during tragedies. 

The following illustrations aptly summed up the sentiment:

True #PrayForTurkey

A photo posted by Αʏƨɛиʋя || Αяι иσтı¢є∂ χ2 (@wafflegomez) on Jun 29, 2016 at 5:35am PDT

A Facebook post that went viral after a deadly bombing in Ankara, Turkey’s capital, in March highlighted the disturbing reality that the outpouring of support in the wake of an attack in Turkey was significantly more muted than it was after the attacks in Paris or Brussels.

The author, James Taylor asked readers to think about the victims being “people you see every day on your way to work, people just like you and I, normal, happy people.”

“These people are no different. They just happen to be Turkish,” he wrote. 

Read More On The Istanbul Attacks

Deadly Suicide Bombings Hit Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport

Airport Surveillance Video Captures The Terrifying Moment Of An Explosion

Aid Worker Who Narrowly Escaped Syria Alive Was Injured In Istanbul Attack

How To Help Victims Of The Istanbul Airport Attack

Turks Step Up To Help The Injured And Stranded In Wake Of Istanbul Triple Suicide Bombing

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What's Actually Inside An Airplane's Black Box?

What's Actually Inside An Airplane's Black Box?

Whenever you hear about a tragic plane crash, you always hear about the mythical black box. What exactly does the black box do and what’s even inside it? What’s Inside took a look by cutting the black box (it’s not actually black) in half and ripping it open to see its guts.

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Did Prehistoric People Watch the Stars Through This 6,000 Year Old 'Telescope'?

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Turning your Chevy into a 4G hotspot just got much cheaper

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Crystal Pepsi is back for your 90s retro pleasure

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