Pope Francis Pays Moving Silent Tribute To Auschwitz Death Camp Victims

OSWIECIM, Poland (Reuters) – Hunched on a bench near the gate to the Auschwitz death camp site in Poland, Pope Francis prayed silently on Friday in tribute to 1.5 million people, most of them Jews, gassed there by Nazi occupiers during World War Two.

Marking the third day of his trip to Poland for an international gathering of Catholic youth, Francis spent a few minutes speaking quietly and exchanging gifts with about 12 Auschwitz survivors, including a 101-year-old woman.

One of the male survivors gave the pope a picture of himself surrounded by other inmates in a bunk, and asked Francis to sign it. The somber-looking pope kissed each survivor.

The Argentine-born pontiff, 79, made no statement as he proceeded to walk through the barely-lit corridors of the drab, brick building of Auschwitz Block 11 which had housed prisoners selected for special punishment.

Before his trip, Francis said he had decided that silence in prayer was the best way to pay tribute to those who died.

With aides using small flashlights to light his way, Francis visited the underground cell whereFranciscan monk Maksymilian Kolbe was killed after offering his life to save a Polish man whom camp handlers had picked to die of starvation.

In Auschwitz’s commemorative book, Francis wrote in Spanish: “Lord, have mercy on your people. Lord, forgiveness for so much cruelty”.

German occupation forces set up the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp during World War Two in Oswiecim, a town around 70 km (43 miles) from Poland’s second city, Krakow, in the country’s south.

Between 1940 and 1945 Auschwitz developed into a vast complex of barracks, workshops, gas chambers and crematoria.

On July 29, 1941, the camp director, in reprisal for the escape of a prisoner, chose 10 others and sentenced them to death by starvation.

When the selection was completed, Kolbe stepped forward and volunteered to die in place of one of them, Franciszek Gajowniczek. Kolbe was later killed by lethal injection but the man he saved survived the war. He was made a saint in 1982 by then-Pope John Paul II, a Pole.

On Friday, the 75th anniversary of Kolbe’s sacrifice, Francis also visited Birkenau, a part of the camp where most of the killings were committed in gas chambers.

He walked solemnly past guard towers, barbed wire fences and remains of crematoria that the Nazis blew up before the camp was liberated by the Soviet Red Army on Jan. 27, 1945.

Francis listened silently as Poland’s chief rabbi, Michael Schudrich, and a priest recited Psalm 130 meters (yards) away from the end of the infamous single rail track where cattle cars brought hundreds of thousands of prisoners to the camp.

During a visit to Rome’s synagogue in January, Francis appealed to Catholics to reject anti-Semitism and said the Holocaust, in which some six million Jews were killed, should remind everyone that human rights should be defended with “maximum vigilance”. 

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Donald Trump 'Not In The Class Of Really Rich People,' Harry Reid Says

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump won’t release his tax returns because he isn’t even rich, at least according to Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.). 

“Donald Trump can’t show us his tax returns. Why? Because he’s a fraud,” Reid told The Huffington Post at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia this week.

(Listen to an excerpt from the interview on “So That Happened,” the HuffPost Politics podcast.)

 

 

Four years ago, Reid famously said a source had told him that Mitt Romney, the Republican presidential nominee at the time, wouldn’t release his tax returns because he hadn’t paid any taxes for 10 years. Reid endured harsh criticism for the claim, which he couldn’t prove. 

Romney had opened himself to Reid’s attack because, at that point in the summer of 2012, he had only released a return for the 2010 tax year ― less than is typical for a presidential candidate. (He later released his 2011 return and an estimate of his past average tax rate.)

But Trump’s campaign has said the reality TV star wouldn’t release any returns at all, despite the fact that his entire candidacy is premised on his claim that he’s really rich. “Mr. Trump has said that his taxes are under audit and he will not be releasing them,” campaign chairman Paul Manafort said this week, even though an audit by the Internal Revenue Service doesn’t preclude taxpayers from sharing return documents. 

Though he hasn’t got a secret source this year, Reid elaborated on his suspicions of Trump’s tax situation during this week’s interview with Sam Stein and Ryan Grim.

“First of all, Donald Trump, I’m sure he has some money, but he’s not in the class of really rich people,” Reid said. “He’s a leverage guy. If he’d taken the money his dad gave him, which was millions, and just put it in the bank, he’d be rich now. But he’s wasted all that money.”

Trump loves boasting that he’s got billions and billions of dollars, though he’s never proved it. He once sued a journalist who reported Trump was worth as little as $150 million.

Trump’s tax returns would prove how rich he is. The documents would reveal information about his income, business dealings, how much he pays the government in tax and how much he’s given to charity ― possibly very little, contrary to much of his bragging. Even Romney has said Trump ought to cough up the returns. 

“It is disqualifying for a modern-day presidential nominee to refuse to release tax returns to the voters, especially one who has not been subject to public scrutiny in either military or public service,” Romney said in a May Facebook post

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liarrampant xenophoberacistmisogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims ― 1.6 billion members of an entire religion ― from entering the U.S.

“So, That Happened” is hosted by Jason Linkins, Zach Carter and Arthur Delaney. Joining them this week: Huffington Post reporters Akbar Ahmed and Mike McAuliff. 

This podcast was produced, edited and engineered by Christine Conetta with assistance from Zach Young.

To listen to this podcast later, download our show on iTunes. While you’re there, please subscribe to, rate and review our show. You can check out other HuffPost podcasts here.

 

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Liberals Put Corporate Democrats On Blast Over Trans-Pacific Partnership

So, that happened. This week, Philadelphia played host to the 2016 Democratic National Convention, where the big issue of the week was party unification after a bruising primary fight between Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and the man she dispatched, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. But while Sanders’ supporters have, to some extent, made peace with Clinton’s nomination, one issue emerged on which Sanders supporters, in alignment with economic liberals, refused to back down ― the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal.

On this week’s edition of “So That Happened,” we discuss the way constant criticism of the TPP seized a place in the spotlight.

Getting the TPP in place, which would open up new trading avenues between the United States and Pacific Rim nations, has been a major project of the Obama White House and businesses. But it’s come under no small amount of bitter opposition, especially as national figures like Sanders and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D) have emerged as influential leaders on the left. And their skepticism as to whether the trade deal would work for all Americans has real merit.

For example, one area of bitter disagreement is over what’s known as “investor-state dispute settlement.” Like a lot of global trade agreements, the TPP grants corporations the right to challenge laws passed by member nations that are deemed to be too restrictive to trade in international tribunals, which have final say in arbitration. Liberals don’t like this because the laws that are most likely to be tossed in the woodchipper are those that enhance environmental restrictions, labor rights and antitrust regulations.

While conservatives don’t necessarily love those laws either, many of them dislike this arrangement simply because they have a basic, principled objection to international bodies interfering in America’s sovereign affairs. And it’s worth noting that there is no corresponding right for labor unions or environmental groups or humanitarian nongovernmental organizations to issue the same kind of challenges.

A more specific objection to the way the TPP has come together involves Malaysia, a linchpin partner in the trade agreement. The Southeast Asian nation is well-known on the world stage as being among the worst actors in terms of human trafficking and slave labor. Rather than use the TPP as the basis to force Malaysia to embark on much-needed reform, the State Department ― which previously ranked the nation as a “Tier 3” violator of human trafficking laws (a certification that would have prohibited it from being part of the partnership) ― conveniently reclassified the nation as a mere “Tier 2” violator, thus allowing it to participate.

So, the U.S. government withdrew a vital human rights “stick” and fed Malaysia a bunch of “carrots” it had not earned. And lest you think that not holding people accountable creates a culture of accountability, we’ll point out that the U.S. Department of Justice just froze $1 billion in assets that Malaysia’s prime minister embezzled from his nation’s sovereign wealth fund.

Beyond the vocal opposition heard from those in the Wells Fargo Center this week, the TPP found its way into the news after ardent Clinton supporter and Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe badly fluffed his talking points, implying to an interviewer at the convention that Clinton ― after having switched from being a TPP supporter to a TPP opponent (in its current form) ― was going to switch back after the election. This touched off a frenzy of denials from the Clinton campaign, followed by a day of awkward walk-back from McAuliffe (who is very pro-TPP).

This made for an amusing twist in the horse race. But let’s face it, it also revealed something else ― whenever you hear politicians that live comfortably at the nexus of corporate and political power offer promises to oppose the TPP, they are well and truly being as phony as a rubber nickel. And the only thing that gives them pause is the threat of citizen prosecutors, like the ones who showed up in Philadelphia, threatening to capsize their electoral careers.

That is why, despite what you’ve heard, they’ll probably try to pass this thing in the next lame-duck session.

Also on this week’s “So That Happened,” Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) talks to us about Sanders’ campaign and Donald Trump’s tax returns, and we discuss the recent hack of the Democratic National Committee’s servers ― and the looming specter of Russia’s involvement.

“So, That Happened” is hosted by Jason Linkins, Zach Carter and Arthur Delaney. Joining them this week: Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid as well as Huffington Post reporters Akbar Shahid Ahmed, Christine Conetta, Ryan Grim, Mike McAuliff and Sam Stein. 

This podcast was produced, edited and engineered by Christine Conetta, with assistance from Zach Young.

To listen to this podcast later, download our show on iTunes. While you’re there, please subscribe to, rate and review our show. You can check out other HuffPost podcasts here.

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AMD Radeon RX 470 and RX 460 specs and shipping unveiled

radoen-rx470We’ve known that the Radeon RX 460 and RX 470 graphics card were coming for a few weeks now, but we didn’t know key details about either of the cards. These cards were teased a bit back during the AMD E3 show. We knew the names of the cards, but that was about it. Now the specifications of the cards … Continue reading

Sony's mobile division (sorta) makes a profit

Sony’s most recent financial report is out and, if you squint, things almost look good for its moribund mobile division. Sony Mobile posted a profit of $4 million, which the company attributed to the fact that it’s fired enough people to get its cost…

Hearthstone’s New Adventure ‘One Night In Karazhan’ Announced

Last week we brought you word that Blizzard was planning a new Hearthstone adventure that they would be unveiling this week. The speculation was that based on the invitation that Blizzard sent out that it could be based in Karazhan, an area in the Warcraft universe and also where Medivh, one of the key characters in the lore used to reside.

Turns out the speculation was true because Blizzard has officially announced their next Hearthstone adventure, “One Night in Karazhan”. The game will feature a new game board that players can check out while they duke it out against each other. There will be new cards as well as new missions that players can take part in.

The good news is that if you’re not sure if you’d want to pay for the missions, Blizzard will be giving away the prologue mission for free, as well as two cards: Enchanted Raven and Firelands Portal. There will also be the introduction of new legendary cards such as Moroes, new class challenges, and more.

If gamers wish to unlock all four wings, it will be priced at $20, but they can be unlocked individually at $7 each or 700 gold. Hearthstone’s One Night in Karazhan will be going live come 11th of August, but in the meantime you can check out the game’s trailer in the video above.

Hearthstone’s New Adventure ‘One Night In Karazhan’ Announced , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

This Is What The HTC Nexus ‘Marlin’ Could Look Like

htc_marlinThe rumors are saying that HTC could be working on at least two Nexus phones this year: the Sailfish and Marlin. Now earlier a rendering of the Sailfish made its way online and was based on information told to Android Police, and now thanks to the folks at TechDroider, renderings of the Marlin have now been revealed.

However we should point out that this rendering is a recreation of the handset by TechDroider based on information their source gave them. This is similar to what the folks at Android Police did, meaning that while what you see could be pretty close to the actual product, there’s a good chance that it isn’t the actual product, but hopefully it will give you a better idea of what to expect.

Now it is pretty obvious that right off the bat the design is very different from the Sailfish. The glass backing on the back of the phone is gone, but the fingerprint sensor on back and middle portion of the phone has remained. It also looks a bit “sharper” as it seems that the edges of the phone appear to be more chamfered, but otherwise you could tell that both phones do share some relation with each other.

The Marlin is said to be the slightly larger model of the two, sporting a 5.5-inch display versus the alleged 5-inch display of the Sailfish. Unfortunately we do not have a date as to when HTC or Google will announce these phones, but assuming Google keeps to schedule, a Nexus announcement should be coming in the later part of the year.

This Is What The HTC Nexus ‘Marlin’ Could Look Like , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Rise Of The Tomb Raider PS4 Gameplay Trailer Released

The Xbox One and PS4 have different specs from each other, meaning that the way a game looks on one console might not necessarily be the same on the other. Of course developers aim to try and reduce the differences as much as possible so as to not show any favoritism, but sometimes the differences are pretty obvious.

Now previously we heard that the folks at Square Enix were preparing Rise of the Tomb Raider for the PS4, and that one of their goals was to aim for a 1080p/30fps resolution/framerate which would make it similar to the Xbox One, and now a new gameplay trailer for the game has been released, so if you’re curious as to how the game will look like on the PS4, here’s your chance.

The trailer isn’t particularly long but we have to say that it looks pretty good so far, so we don’t think that PS4 players will be “cheated” of their experience. The game has been set for a release on the 11th of October and the PS4 will be pretty much the last of the bunch to get the game. It was launched on the Xbox One last year and the PC earlier this year.

Rise Of The Tomb Raider PS4 Gameplay Trailer Released , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

HuffPost Rise: What You Need To Know On July 29

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Welcome to the HuffPost Rise Morning Newsbrief, a short wrap-up of the news to help you start your day.

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The Navy Is Naming A Ship After LGBTQ Pioneer Harvey Milk

The legend of Harvey Milk lives on.

The Navy is planning to name one of its new oil tankers after the pioneering gay rights activist who served his country as a diving officer during the Korean War, US Naval Institute News reports.

Gay people were banned from serving in the U.S. armed forces until 1994 when The Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy was enacted. That rule, which lasted until 2011, would have allowed Milk to serve, but only if he hid his sexuality. The ban on openly transgender people serving only ended at the end of last month. 

The queer community hailed the decision as “momentous.” Scott Wiener, a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, who’d campaigned for Milk to receive the prestigious honor since 2012, called it “an incredible day for the LGBT community and for our country.”

This momentous decision sends a powerful message around the world about who we are as a country and the values we hold,” Wiener said via a statement posted to Medium.

“When Harvey Milk served in the military, he couldn’t tell anyone who he truly was,” added Wiener, who himself is openly gay and holds Milk’s former seat on the board. “Now our country is telling the men and women who serve, and the entire world, that we honor and support people for who they are.”

The Harvey Milk Foundation also praised the move. “Hope is never silent and will be represented in a world port soon via the USNS Harvey Milk,” a statement posted to Facebook on Thursday read.

Stuart Milk, the Californian politician’s nephew and co-founder of the foundation, said he had “joyful tears thinking of the meaning and symbolism” of the Navy’s gesture.

The LGBTQ pioneer came from a naval family and served on the submarine rescue ship USS Kittiwake from 1951 to 1955, NBC San Francisco reports. He was honorably discharged at lieutenant junior grade. 

Milk moved to San Francisco in the 1970s and became the first openly gay person to be elected to public office in California after winning election to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.

He was assassinated, alongside San Francisco Mayor George Moscone, at the city hall by former Supervisor Dan White on Nov. 27, 1978. Milk was wearing his Navy belt buckle when he was killed.

The USNS Harvey Milk is yet to be built. But it will be part of a fleet of six new ships which will all bear the names of other civil rights champions — including women’s rights activist and abolitionist Sojourner Truth.

The idea of lending Milk’s name to a Navy ship has not been without criticism, however. When it was first proposed, critics said Milk’s opposition to the Vietnam War should see him remembered in a more fitting way.

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