8 Caribbean Natural Wonders You Have To See To Believe

There’s no better time than the winter for a warm tropical getaway, and there’s no better destination than the Caribbean islands. Home to some of the most unique and inspiring scenery this side of paradise, the Caribbean is the perfect sensory feast for anyone who needs to hit refresh during the cold winter months.  

That’s why we’ve teamed up to talk itineraries with global cruise line Royal Caribbean. We’ve mapped out the eight natural wonders that will steal the show on your next island-hopping adventure, because it’s time to swap out those winter blues for the bright blue skies of the tropics!

Escape the winter time blues with a Royal Caribbean adventure, and visit some of the most breathtaking natural wonders in the Caribbean. Visit Royal Caribbean to explore itineraries and find out how you can trade the ordinary for the extraordinary. 

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Supreme Court Explores Whether Sex Offenders Have Free Speech Rights On Social Media

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WASHINGTON ― The U.S. Supreme Court is aware that President Donald Trump tweets and that knowledge of his social media use is one way for the public to engage in the civic life of the nation.

But do sex offenders have a First Amendment right to so engage online? And if not, to what extent may a state limit their participation in the marketplace of ideas in cyberspace?

The justices on Monday considered these and other questions as they weighed a North Carolina law that makes it a felony for a person on the state’s sex offender registry to “access” a breadth of “commercial social networking” sites where they can create “personal profiles” to “communicate with other users” who may or may not be minors.

The law doesn’t specifically name what sites are off limits, but it is written broadly enough to encompass even the president’s favorite social media site.

“Everybody uses Twitter,” Justice Elena Kagan said as she pointed to Trump’s own penchant for the site and those who follow it. “All 50 governors. All 100 senators. Every member of the House has a Twitter account. So this has become a … crucially important channel of political communication. And a person [listed as a sex offender] couldn’t go onto those sites and find out what these members of our government are thinking or saying or doing. Is that right?”

All 50 governors. All 100 senators. Every member of the House has a Twitter account. So this has become a … crucially important channel of political communication.
Justice Elena Kagan

Even though states across the country have similar laws limiting social media use by sex offenders, North Carolina’s is especially strict, and the likelihood of being prosecuted under it for otherwise innocent conduct is more than theoretical. Lester Packingham, the man at the center of Monday’s hearing, was convicted in 2010 after he expressed gratitude on Facebook for beating a traffic ticket.

“Man God is good!” he posted, noting that he did not even have to sit through a court hearing. “No fine, No court costs, no nothing spent …. Praise be to GOD, WOW! Thanks JESUS!”

But then Packingham was prosecuted for his Facebook post. 

Because he had been convicted in 2002 of a sex-related offense with a minor when he was 21, he was registered as a sex offender, so state authorities said that his Facebook posting violated the North Carolina law. A jury agreed, and he was slapped with a suspended sentence of up to eight months, which he was ordered to serve on probation supervision.

But the justices by and large seemed troubled that North Carolina’s law, though admittedly important for the government’s interest in protecting children, painted with a broader brush than constitutionally permissible.

At one point, Kagan wondered whether the law’s confusing language would “mean that there’s a constitutional right to use Snapchat but not to use Twitter” for sex offenders ― since the law exempts sites that are used only for “photo sharing” but not sites that allow photo sharing, private messaging and other functions.

Justice Anthony Kennedy suggested that the social media sites of today “are greater than the communication you could ever have, even in the paradigm of the public square” — a reference to that place where the First Amendment provides the greatest protection for speech.

But not so with the North Carolina law, which Justice Sonia Sotomayor said could be “applied indiscriminately” not just to those who have been convicted of abusing children but to anyone the state labels as a sex offender ― including those who have consensual sex with someone a few years younger than themselves and are then convicted of statutory rape.

“What’s the inference that every sexual offender is going to use the internet to lure a child?” Sotomayor asked. She later held up a printout of the comments on The New York Times website, where readers can create profiles that let them engage in lively discussions ― a type of activity that an overzealous prosecutor could potentially use against a registered sex offender.

What’s the inference that every sexual offender is going to use the internet to lure a child?
Justice Sonia Sotomayor

“Even if The New York Times is not included,” Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg observed, “the point is that these people are being cut off from a very large part of the marketplace of ideas. And the First Amendment includes not only the right to speak but the right to receive information.”

Justice Samuel Alito noted that one possibility for “avoiding First Amendment problems” raised by the law might be to limit its prohibitions to “core social networking sites,” which indicates he might be inclined to overturn Packingham’s conviction but not strike down the whole law.

Still, a majority of the Supreme Court may decide the entirety of the law needs to go. As Kagan seemed to see it, North Carolina simply went too far in excluding sex offenders from sites that are nonetheless an integral part of how society communicates today.

“So whether it’s political community, whether it’s religious community — I mean, these sites have become embedded in our culture as ways to communicate and ways to exercise our constitutional rights, haven’t they?” she asked.

The justices are expected to decide Packingham v. North Carolina before the end of June.

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U.S. Muslim Vets Vow To Defend Jewish Centers Under Siege

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The frightening increase in bomb threats against U.S. Jewish centers and schools and the desecration of Jewish cemeteries has triggered an outpouring of support on Twitter from Muslim veterans offering to protect the sites any time, anywhere.

 One vet wrote: “If your synagogue or Jewish cemetery needs someone to stand guard, count me in.” 

Another tweeted: “I’m a Muslim Veteran in Arizona & will readily stand guard at any Jewish Synagogue or Cemetery at ANY hour. #WeAreOne.”

The response follows yet another surge of bomb threats Monday against Jewish centers and school across America, the fifth major wave of such intimidation this year. There was a second flurry of threats called in Monday evening against Jewish centers — and at least one school — in California, Washington, Nevada and Arizona. 

The hate crimes, which exploded following the divisive rhetoric of the presidential campaign, have had the unexpected outcome of uniting American Jews and Muslims. A Muslim activist helped raise over $135,000 to repair gravestones vandalized in a Jewish cemetery in a St. Louis suburb over a week ago. Tarek El-Messidi said extra funds will now be used to also help restore Philadelphia’s Mount Carmel Cemetery, which was vandalized over the weekend.

“We must stand together against these acts of racism, anti-Semitism, and Islamophobia,” El-Messidi wrote on Facebook.

 The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community center in Philadelphia issued a statement condemning the vandalism of the local cemetery and dispatched a team to help with cleanup and security. “We are deeply disturbed by the continuing attacks against our Jewish brothers and sisters,” the organization said in a statement. 

After bomb threats were called into a Jewish centers in New York and New Jersey on Monday, one woman, Elen Arad, a cantor in New York’s Westchester County, talked of her fear to a local radio station. But, she added, “while I’m horrified by what’s happening, I’m really touched by the outpouring by our Muslim friends and our Christian friends.”

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Amazon's Taking 20% Off Dozens of PC Parts, Networking Gear, Gaming Accessories, and More for GDC

To celebrate GDC 2017, Amazon’s taking an extra 20% off select gaming peripherals, PC components, and even complete gaming laptops and desktops today with promo code GDC20.

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This is how much the LG G6 will cost

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Lead an army of cartoon heroes in Epic's latest game

Epic Games announced Battle Breakers, its new free-to-play title for mobile and PC, at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco. The game looks like a Saturday-morning cartoon, complete with larger-than-life characters and a huge, cinematic so…

Will Perez Be Effective?

The Democratic National Committee met this weekend and elected as its new chairman Tom Perez, who narrowly beat out Keith Ellison on the second round of voting. It was the most contentious race for party chair seen in decades, so the first challenge Perez is going to face is whether he can quickly achieve any sort of party unity before the big push for the midterm elections gets underway. He’s got his work cut out for him, but the bigger question is whether he’ll be an effective party leader for the Democrats, and whether he can reverse the slide in the party’s relative strength both nationwide and at the state and local level.

This is a lot to ask of anyone. Normally, party chairs are (somewhat mockingly) called “fundraisers-in-chief,” since a big part of their job is keeping the party’s campaign chest full, by convincing the big donors to keep the money flowing in. But these are not normal times, and that’s before even considering the Trump effect. Even if a run-of-the-mill Republican were in the Oval Office right now, Democrats would still have no real visible leader. Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer are the closest thing to party leaders the Democrats have, but they don’t exactly personify where the energy is in the party right now. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren clearly lead one wing of the Democratic Party, but they can’t realistically be called the outright leaders of the entire party either. All of this puts much more weight on the shoulders of the D.N.C. chair, elevating the position to more prominence than just being the best at shaking down big donors on a regular basis.

The first question that Perez will face is whether the narrative of “the Sanders wing of the party versus the establishment” was overblown during the D.N.C. chair race. The media loved the storyline, but it remains to be seen whether this accurately reflected the reality or not. Ellison was a big Bernie supporter during last year’s primaries, and Perez was seen as being hand-picked by the Obama/Clinton wing of the party. But that’s really an oversimplification to begin with, because the establishment itself has always had some division between supporters of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Putting that aside, the immediate questions are: Was Ellison’s loss really that big a loss for Sanders supporters? Will the anti-Trump activist energy that is currently spreading like wildfire across America be so disgusted with the rejection of Ellison that they spurn the party organization and apparatus? Sanders supporters were disappointed in the 2016 primaries, and they were disappointed this weekend as well. Does this lead to total disillusionment with the Democratic Party, which would mean an exodus of the most fervent of the people now protesting Trump? Or will their abhorrence of all things Trump convince them to work with the party anyway? All good questions that Tom Perez is going to have to address very soon, one way or another.

Ideologically, Ellison and Perez were pretty close. There wasn’t a whole lot of daylight between them, except on one big issue. Perez, being a member of Obama’s cabinet at the time, supported the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Ellison was against the T.P.P. from the beginning. Other than that, their policy disagreements were few and far between. It was more a question of a difference in emphasis, rather than ideology. Accepting Perez over Ellison isn’t quite the same magnitude as the difference Sanders supporters faced between their candidate and Hillary Clinton (Sanders and Clinton had a much wider gap between their agendas than Perez and Ellison do, to put this another way). Perez calls himself a proud progressive, and has some solid history to back that claim up. Will this be enough to convince Ellison supporters to eventually accept him and allow for party unity to return? We’ll see. The answer will probably become apparent within a few months, one way or the other.

It has to be admitted that part of the problem of party unity (and party effectiveness) for Democrats was caused in large part by Barack Obama. When Obama entered office, he morphed the campaign apparatus which got him elected into its own entity, “Organizing For America.” Many Democratic insiders have complained that this parallel organization diverted a lot of money that normally would have gone through the coffers of the Democratic Party, leaving them with fewer resources to contest elections, especially at the state level. O.F.A. had its own agenda, entirely separate from the Democratic Party apparatus, which was to support Obama’s policy positions and legislation.

I don’t completely buy this argument, I should mention. Some donations might have been diverted away from the D.N.C., but that is part of a long-term trend both parties have seen happen in the past few decades. Online advocacy and fundraising (and the Citizens United decision) have opened the floodgates to political groups to raise money outside of the normal party structure, which has weakened as a direct result. Obama didn’t change this entire dynamic, he merely attempted to use it to support what he wanted to get done. Even if O.F.A. hadn’t ever existed, however, the trend would still have caught up to the Democrats. If you want to make a political donation to support some cause or another, with the click of a mouse you can now direct that money to the group you think will do the most to advance it. And fewer and fewer donors (small and big) see the need for the middleman of the party apparatus.

Even having said all of that, the D.N.C. would have had problems even if Obama’s O.F.A. had never existed. The Democratic Party, from all accounts, has been moving steadily away from Howard Dean’s “50-state strategy” for a while now, which has starved the state party organizations of funding. This has had a devastating effect down the ballot, losing hundreds of seats in statehouses, governors’ mansions, and other offices at the state and local levels. This is the biggest challenge Perez will face ― reversing this trend. Both Perez and Ellison (and most of the other candidates for the job) spoke of reviving Dean’s 50-state strategy during the contest for the D.N.C. chair, meaning the party insiders are now fully aware that this is the most important problem to tackle. The party must shift from being most concerned with winning presidential elections by exclusively focusing on swing and battleground states to a broad approach towards rebuilding their power in the states and individual House districts.

Interestingly, Barack Obama has indicated that his goals now align perfectly with the party’s goal of rebuilding at the state level. Obama has chosen for his first post-presidency project the goal of not only winning back state legislature seats and governor’s offices, but doing so with a clear objective in mind ― not getting trounced by Republicans in the congressional redistricting which will take place after the 2020 census. Reversing the blatant GOP gerrymandering which took place after the 2010 electoral rout should indeed be a key goal for Democrats right now, because it could mean control of the House of Representatives for the next whole decade. Republicans drew the lines to benefit their party last time around, and they were wildly successful at it. Democrats are hoping to do the same, and if both Obama and the D.N.C. are working for the same goal, it should hopefully mean that the donor divide between Obama’s organization and the party itself won’t matter as much. If they’re both working to achieve the same goal, it can only help, in other words.

But Tom Perez still has his work cut out for him, that’s for sure. In the short term, he’s got to do everything he can to unify the party. He’s also got to figure out how to use the grassroots energy out there to the party’s advantage. This does not mean trying to co-opt the organic anti-Trump resistance, but rather to convince the protesters that the Democrats share the same goals. If he is successful at avoiding a backlash from the Sanders/Ellison base and truly does allow them room at the table, then he’ll have already been more successful than the last two D.N.C. leaders in restoring party unity. Naming Ellison to a symbolic party position was a step in this direction, similar to Clinton allowing Bernie Sanders to influence the party’s platform document last year. Whether this will be enough remains to be seen, however.

Beyond immediate party unity is the long-term work Perez has to accomplish. To rebuild the party in (as Perez puts it) “every ZIP code in America,” he will have to convince good candidates to run for state offices and then materially support them during their campaigns. He’s got to generate some excitement in the Democratic base by choosing candidates who inspire the crowds. Beyond these nuts-and-bolts changes, Perez also has to rededicate the Democratic Party to its historic roots ― helping the little guy on Main Street live a better life. Democrats are going to have to make the case that Trump’s election was nothing short of a con job of monumental proportions ― a swindle perpetrated on voters that cannot deliver on any of its promises to help the working class. Republican ideology simply will not allow Trump much in the way of relief for the demographics Trump convinced to vote for him. Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell aren’t going to let Trump deliver on his promises, plain and simple. So Democrats have to make the case that their agenda actually helps people and that both Trump and the Republicans are fighting against things that help. The minimum wage is a good place to start, to state the obvious. When the minimum wage rises, it has a trickle-up effect on most other wages, which would effectively give working people a raise they’ve been due for a very long time now.

Still, “Elect us, we’re not Republicans” is not going to cut it. “Elect us, we hate Trump” is also not going to do the job. “Elect us because this is what we’re fighting for” is the only route with any real chance of success. Also, “Why are Republicans always against such good ideas?” might help, as well.

The Democratic Party is at the lowest point since, roughly, the 1920s. It is in desperate need of revitalization. Bernie Sanders proved that there plenty of excitement does exist out there for progressive ideas, and that donations aren’t a problem ― when your agenda matches with regular people’s needs. Both Perez and Ellison seemed to understand that, to some degree. Now that Perez will be leading the Democratic Party, we’ll see how effective a messenger he can be. His first challenge will be an attempt to heal the wounds of party division and work to achieve some sort of party unity that clearly addresses the concerns of Democrats outside of the big donor class. Perez doesn’t have the luxury of merely being the party’s fundraiser-in-chief. That is not what is needed right now, to state the glaringly obvious. Democrats need a complete overhaul of the party’s priorities if the party is going to have any chance of gaining back some of what was lost in the past eight years. These are all daunting tasks, and I personally hope Tom Perez proves up to this challenge. If he manages to successfully achieve these goals, though, he has the opportunity to be the most effective and strongest party chair in a long time.

 

Chris Weigant blogs at:

ChrisWeigant.com

Follow Chris on Twitter: @ChrisWeigant

 

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Hate Crime Charged In Face-Biting Attack After Barrage of Anti-Muslim Slurs

A Virginian accused of biting a stranger on his face after shouting anti-Muslim slurs at the man in a shopping mall parking lot has been charged with a hate crime, police said.

The confrontation occurred late last year, but the suspected attacker wasn’t arrested until Monday, after a lengthy investigation, according to Fairfax County police officials.

Robin McGreer, 35, has been charged with bias-related malicious bodily injury, officials said.

Investigators said McGreer approached the unidentified victim outside a shopping center in McLean, Virginia, began a conversation, then began hurling anti-Muslim insults. The two men fought, and McGreer bit the man’s face before fleeing, police said.

The victim was treated at a hospital for a “significant facial wound,” according to a police statement. It wasn’t known if the injured man was Muslim.

Hate crimes are on a chilling upward trajectory in the U.S., particularly since the presidential election. The Southern Poverty Law Center has tallied more than 700 hate incidents nationally since the Nov. 8 election. 

There have been waves of bomb threats this year, with 13 Jewish community centers and eight schools across the nation targeted Monday, forcing evacuations in at least 12 states.

Monday evening, another flurry of bomb threats struck Jewish centers, organizations and at least one school in California, Washington and Arizona. The Huffington Post is tracking the threats here

Jewish cemeteries in Philadelphia and St. Louis were vandalized over the last week. In both cases, Muslim communities pledged to raise funds to help with restoration.

In another tragedy being investigated by the FBI as a hate crime, Adam Purinton, 51, of Olathe, Kansas, appeared in Johnson County District Court on Monday to face charges in a bar shooting. Purinton has been charged with first-degree murder and two counts of attempted first-degree murder after the death of Srinivas Kuchibhotla, 32, and the wounding of two other men in suburban Kansas City. Witnesses said that Purinton told Kuchibhotla and his friend Alok Madasani, 32, to “get out of my country.” Both men came to the U.S. from India to study and work at a tech company. Purinton reportedly told another bar owner several hours later that he had shot two “Iranians.”

Former Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton tweeted Sunday that President Donald Trump must “step up and speak out” against hate crimes. 

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Jeff Sessions Didn't Read DOJ's Chicago Police Report. But He Thinks It's 'Anecdotal.'

WASHINGTON ― Calling police officers the “frontline soldiers” in the fight against crime, Attorney General Jeff Sessions signaled Monday that the Trump administration’s Justice Department would take a new position in the Civil Rights Division’s approach to police abuse.

“We’ve got to go back and make sure that our police departments understand that they’re being supported, both by the Department of Justice as an ally, and by the American people,” Sessions told reporters at DOJ headquarters on Monday, in a preview of a speech he will give before a gathering of the nation’s attorneys general on Tuesday.

“I do believe the Department of Justice is the leading advocate for law enforcement in America, and I hope to be able to fulfill my responsibility in that regard,” Sessions said. 

Asked by The Huffington Post whether he had read the Civil Rights Division’s investigative reports on the police departments in Chicago and Ferguson, Missouri, Sessions conceded he had not. But, he said, he didn’t think they were necessarily reliable. 

“I have not read those reports, frankly. We’ve had summaries of them, and some of it was pretty anecdotal, and not so scientifically based,” Sessions said. 

A DOJ report released in the final days of the Obama administration, based on an investigation that spanned nearly 14 months, detailed troubling patterns of unconstitutional conduct within the Chicago Police Department.

In Ferguson, much of the reporting was based upon the city’s very own reports, and indicated widespread abuse of constitutional rights of citizens

Sessions said Monday he had “not made a decision” about how the DOJ would proceed in the Chicago case, but told reporters he was “really worried” about “the surge in murders” in the city. He was also troubled by the drop in the numbers of stop-and-frisk stops in Chicago, he said.

Sessions’ position echoed the view he expressed throughout his nomination, when he indicated he subscribed to the “bad apples” view of policing, which holds that police abuse is not systemic in certain departments but the fault of individual rogue actors. Sessions said during his confirmation hearing that it was a “difficult thing” for a city to face allegations they had systemically violated the civil rights of citizens.

“We’ve got to understand that police are the frontline soldiers in the effort to keep the crime under control, along with sheriffs’ deputies,” Sessions said on Monday. “Many departments are not doing well in terms of morale, in terms of following good policies.” 

Sessions referenced a story in the Wall Street Journal last week on worries officers had about “becoming the next viral video,” and high murder rates in certain cities.

Sessions told reporters that any individual serious allegation of excessive force is subject to a federal investigation.

“Sometimes local police departments really step up and do a great job. It’s almost disrespectful [to] them for the feds to go in and try to take it over,” Sessions said in response to a question from The Huffington Post.

Sessions also said the nation had “gotten a little overconfident” about public safety and it affected how police responded to violence.

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Trump Blames Obama For His Political Protester Problem

President Donald Trump sat down for an interview with “Fox & Friends” and said that former President Barack Obama and “his people” are behind recent town hall protests.

In recent weeks, activists have planned protests at Republican lawmakers’ events around the country. Protesters have shown up at Democratic lawmakers’ events, too. Last week, demonstrators rallied outside an event featuring Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) after the senator did not hold a town hall meeting when Congress was in recess.

“I think President Obama is behind it because his people are certainly behind it,” Trump said in a preview of the interview. But, he said, “that’s politics, and it will probably continue.”

The president added that he also thought it was possible Obama and “that group” were behind “some of the leaks” coming out of the White House.

Trump’s interview will air in full at 6 a.m. Eastern time Tuesday on “Fox & Friends.”

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