New United Video Shows Moments Before Officers Dragged Doctor From Plane

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After authorities violently dragged a doctor off a United Airlines flight to free up his seat for an employee, the company CEO called David Dao “disruptive and belligerent.” But newly released video of the incident doesn’t appear to support the company’s argument.

“I’m a physician and I have to work tomorrow at 8 o’clock,” Dao politely tells Chicago airport security officers in the footage.

The video, taken by passenger Joya Cummings and uploaded to Facebook early Tuesday, shows a calm and restrained Dao. 

“No, I am not going,” he says. “I am not going.”

Dao also talks on his phone to an unknown person, at one point discussing the possibility of a lawsuit against United.

An officer tells Dao that they will be forced to drag him off the plane.

“Then drag me down,” Dao responds. “I am staying right there.” He also says he’d rather go to jail. 

A short time later, Dao was forcibly and brutally dragged off the airplane. 

It’s possible that the confrontation became more heated between Dao and authorities before they pulled him from his seat. But other passengers on the plane can be heard arguing with authorities over Dao’s treatment as the horror unfolds. 

The incident occurred Sunday after United asked volunteers to give up their seats on a flight from Chicago to Louisville, Kentucky, and then resorted to choosing people to be bumped off the plane involuntarily.

Dao refused to give up his already-purchased seat, and footage of him being dragged down the aisle by security went viral this week. United CEO Oscar Munoz apologized for having to “re-accomodate these customers.” Dao says he is still recovering in a hospital.

“He just wanted to go home, had to work the next day and did not feel it was right to have to give up his seat, a seat he was already sitting in upon the plane,” Cummings, who took the new video, said in a Facebook post. “I was not concerned for my safety, nor that of my toddler’s or for my pregnancy until the police were called aboard our plane to remove him. I was worried about what a physical altercation would entail with us sitting directly behind him and if the officers were armed in a tiny, confined space.”

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Donald Trump Once Had A Much More 'Beautiful' Chocolate Cake

Earlier on Wednesday, Fox News aired an interview with President Donald Trump where he revealed that he told the president of China, Xi Jinping, about the Syrian missile strike over “the most beautiful piece of chocolate cake.”

“I was sitting at the table,” Trump recalled to Fox News Business host Maria Bartiromo, “We had finished dinner. We’re now having dessert. And we had the most beautiful piece of chocolate cake that you’ve ever seen, and President Xi was enjoying it.”

Trump then misspoke, saying that he bombed Iraq before Bartiromo corrected him with a reminder that it was Syria.

“So what happens is, I said, ‘We’ve just launched 59 missiles heading to Iraq and I wanted you to know this.’ And he was eating his cake. And he was silent.”

Perhaps too much has already been said about how ridiculous it is that Trump remembered more about the cake served at his Mar-a-Lago estate than the country he bombed. We’ve all been forgetful one time or another, even if not about where we launched 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles just a few days ago.

But the thing is, Trump’s actually had a much more “beautiful” chocolate cake in the past. In comparison, this new piece of dessert shouldn’t have been anything to write home about, let alone fixate on while discussing his recent strike of a Syrian air base.

As The New York Times reported in 1996, Trump celebrated his 50th birthday with the most ridiculous beautiful cake of all time.

The celebration was unforgettably classy:

Then, as the Superman movie theme began to play, the cake was wheeled onto the stage ― with all of Mr. Trump’s buildings on it, and a sugar figure of Mr. Trump, dressed like Superman with a money sign on his chest. Ms. Kitt sang “Happy Birthday,” and 600 gold balloons cascaded from the ceiling.

Here’s Trump blowing out the candles on his “super” cake.

Here’s a slightly better view of the magnificent cake Trump really threw under the bus by calling his recent piece of cake “the most beautiful.”

Here’s Trump eating the 1996 chocolate cake, in what apparently was not a memorable experience.

Watch the Fox News interview yourself and determine whether it was unfair of Trump to claim his new piece of chocolate cake was the best he ever had. 

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Kellyanne Conway: 'Just Because Somebody Says Something Doesn't Make It True'

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White House adviser Kellyanne Conway on Wednesday offered an impressively ironic defense against media allegations that she is an agent of misinformation.

Speaking at a Washington D.C. forum on President Donald Trump’s first 100 Days, Hollywood Reporter’s Michael Wolff told Conway that she’s viewed as “the darkness” for many reporters. 

“I’m going to tell you, when they say ‘democracy dies in darkness,’ you’re the darkness,” Wolff said, referring to the Washington Post’s front-page motto.

“I’m not the darkness,” Conway responded, accusing the media of exhibiting “presumptive negativity” in its coverage of Trump.

“It’s what I tell small children: Just because somebody says something doesn’t make it true,” she said. “It’s a great lesson for everyone.”

At another point, Conway lamented the lack of truthfulness on television.

“You can turn on the TV — more than you can read in the paper because I assume editors are still doing their jobs in most places — and people literally say things that just aren’t true,” Conway said, drawing laughter from the crowd.

These are awkward observations coming from Conway, who began her tenure at the White House by defending the administration’s lies as “alternative facts,” and just weeks later, attracted widespread ridicule for inventing the “Bowling Green Massacre” ― a terrorist attack that didn’t actually happen.

Last month, Conway defended Trump’s unsubstantiated claims about former President Barack Obama targeting him with surveillance by arguing that microwaves can “turn into cameras.” She later clarified that she wasn’t suggesting Obama had actually turned Trump’s kitchen appliances against him.

Although Conway was a regular spokesperson for Trump on news programs over the opening weeks of his presidency, her controversial relationship with the truth has led to credibility issues. Producers for shows on CNN and MSNBC have gone so far as to decline opportunities to interview Conway on as a guest.

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College Kid Trolls Southwest Airlines And Their Response Is Perfect

United Airlines is being rightfully condemned for having a customer dragged off a flight, but some airlines do know how to provide customer service ― even when they’re being trolled.

One Twitter user recently decided it would be funny to complain to Southwest Airlines about a flight attendant.

The prankster is a 19-year-old male college student in Chicago named Juan, who tweets as @xadoringpaige.

Juan reached out the airline and saved the entire exchange via screenshots.

Then he weaved an intricate trolling web by playing on a customer service rep’s worst fears.

Then Juan sprung his trap.

Just when it seemed as if Juan had won, the Southwest Airlines rep managed to convert the trolling into an epic save. One so good that even the troller had to tip his hat to her.

Juan told HuffPost he decided to troll Southwest Airlines strictly out of humanitarian purposes.

“What inspired me to make it is that there has been a lot of airline drama and I wanted to lighten up the mood,” he told HuffPost by email. “Of course, I wasn’t intending of shifting the focus away from what happened with United, but I wanted to make people smile and laugh. And I am happy I was able to do that.”

Screenshots of the exchange have since gone viral and have been retweeted more than 54,000 times and liked more than 83,000 times.

Southwest Airlines sent HuffPost this statement about the exchange:

“We take every inquiry seriously, but try not to take ourselves too seriously. This was an excellent example of one of our Representatives taking great care to investigate a potential issue, and pivoting when the user revealed it was a joke.”

The joke continues to be on Juan. He suggested to Southwest that they give him a free trip to thank him for all the positive viral attention they’ve received because of his trolling, but they have yet to respond.

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Bookseller Plans To Open A Bookstore In D.C. By And For People Of Color

For 16 years, Angela Maria Spring has worked as a bookseller ― most recently as the manager of Washington, D.C.’s iconic Politics and Prose bookstore. Now she’s planning to open her own store, Duende District, which will be run by a deliberately diverse staff.

On April 10, Spring launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund the creation of a pop-up Duende District bookstore to operate at the 2017 Artomatic festival. Spring, who is Latinx and the daughter of a Panamanian immigrant, felt inspired to open the intentionally multicultural bookstore after several years at Politics and Prose. Though D.C. is a highly diverse city, she found herself in a primarily white neighborhood, working with white booksellers and catering to a largely white clientele.

“For five years, almost every other Latino I saw was cleaning somebody’s house or yard, taking care of someone’s baby or cooking someone’s meal,” she wrote on Kickstarter.

By launching her own bookstore, Spring hoped to give opportunities to colleagues of color and to build a literary space that put multiculturalism and diversity front and center. Creating a browsing space that’s “owned, operated, and managed by a majority of people of color,” she says in her Kickstarter video, can create a “high-quality, welcome experience for everyone.” 

A Publishers Weekly piece on the bookstore points to “the current political environment” as one motivation for Spring’s bold move. On the Kickstarter page, she describes the new venture as “part of my resistance effort.” But also, she told PW, the dazzling whiteness of the bookselling world was a long-time concern. 

As with every facet of the publishing industry, bookselling isn’t as diverse as the community it ostensibly serves ― an issue writer Roxane Gay addressed in a keynote at the American Booksellers Association Winter Institute in January, in which she argued that publishing and bookselling gatekeepers “don’t really want to do what it takes, to invest money” to foster true diversity.

Even apparent commitments to improving representation, may only hide still-severe problems. A significant percentage of children’s books today are about characters of color ― over 20 percent. But the percentage of children’s books created by non-white authors is much lower, suggesting that while white authors have changed their approach toward race, significant barriers remain for writers of color. 

Spring’s bookstore, and its Kickstarter campaign, encourage book lovers to get serious about diversity by supporting a business that doesn’t just welcome a diverse customer base, but gives power and voice to underserved communities. 

 Check out the Duende District Kickstarter.

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The Strange Paradox Of Trump's Anti-Immigrant Crusade

One puzzle of the Trump era is why he has staked so much political capital on anti-immigrant actions.  It was the issue that branded his campaign, and it shaped his early executive orders. Yet the public seems ever more tolerant of unauthorized immigrants.  How do these two phenomena—official animus and popular acceptance—coexist?  

The easy answer to the first of those questions is the populist appeal of “othering” for society’s ills.  The “illegals,” especially Mexicans, are ready-made targets—there’s a long history of discrimination of America’s southern neighbors.  Racism is in play, as is uneasiness with Spanish as an increasingly audible second language. The Republican base condemns any attempt to legalize unauthorized immigrants. It has long been a staple of right-wing blogs, social media, radio, and television.  

Yet the public, with relatively weak leadership by the Democratic Party, has formed broadly accepting attitudes toward these migrants. The polling statistics, which have held steady for years, are noteworthy. Support for legalization of unauthorized immigrants has consistently equaled two-thirds of the public. In early March, CNN released a nationwide poll that asked how these immigrants should be treated provided they “have been in the country for a number of years, hold a job, speak English, and are willing to pay any back taxes that they owe.” Ninety percent of the respondents said they would favor legislation to allow the immigrants to stay and apply for citizenship.

That is an astonishing number, but fairly consistent with other survey findings.  On related issues, nearly 60 percent of Americans oppose building the wall along the Mexican border.  The travel ban affecting seven Muslim-majority countries is increasingly unpopular: a mid-March Quinnipiac University poll found more than 60 percent opposed to the ban.

The question is, then, why doesn’t such overwhelming sentiment supporting legalization of unauthorized immigrants and opposing Trump’s policies prevail over Trump’s attitudes and actions? Clearly, the narrative of economic anxiety in the white working class is insufficient—that is, the issue is not “lost” jobs.  There is, as I’ve explained elsewhere, ample evidence of cultural anxiety at the core of anti-immigrant sentiment—worries about some pure, American way of life being sullied by unwanted foreigners. But the survey numbers demonstrate that even those sentiments infect only a small minority. (The one outlier, the so-called sanctuary cities that are a target of new measures by the Justice Department, have public disapproval reflecting Trump’s rhetoric.)

Consider an alternative explanation for Trump’s actions.  It’s not that the anti-immigrant crusade is popular, but that it opens the gates for other policy options. It was striking that during the Obamacare repeal fiasco, one element of the repeal effort was to deny health care benefits to unauthorized immigrants—a policy in place for years. But it signaled again how such immigrants are used for a variety of political and policy goals.  

Enhanced police powers and diminished civil liberties are examples.  Trump has repeatedly claimed that crime is at all-time highs (it’s actually quite low historically) and frequently talks about illegal immigration as a source of this crime wave.  He has created a registry to report on crimes committed by immigrants, a very public way of stigmatizing them.  Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced this week an enormous expansion of the law enforcement effort against illegal immigration.  In fact, however, immigrants of all kinds commit a fraction of the crimes, per capita, that native-born Americans do.   But by repeating these falsehoods, Trump tries to justify new spending for border controls (including the Wall, estimated at $21-38 billion) and harsh tactics for removal by law enforcement.  

Those tactics have included sweeps that net immigrants who have committed no crimes, have jobs, and are well-integrated into their communities.  Even some Dreamers—those brought illegally into America as children—have been arrested.  Families are being broken up.  Children are missing school out of fears of being identified.  Domestic abuse and other crimes go unreported by the undocumented because they worry that any interaction with police could mean deportation.  

But the “othering” goes even further.  As the Obamacare debate shows, unauthorized immigrants are identified with fraudulent access to social services, an unsupportable charge.  None can get food stamps or financial support or Medicaid.  Yet this association not only denigrates the immigrant as a freeloader, but is also an attack on the welfare state itself.  The reason why so many Americans voted for Trump was in part because many white working class people perceived that minorities and immigrants were unfairly receiving federal benefits.  Equate “illegals” with those on welfare, and resentment toward immigrants and “the system” will result.

Another guilt-by-association has grown on the right, namely, the notion that terrorists are entering through our “open borders” using the same networks that Mexicans and other Hispanics have forged to cross into the United States. There is zero evidence of this. Likewise, the travel ban has been largely justified as an anti-terror measure, yet no one from those seven countries has committed an act of political violence in the United States.  With few exceptions, terror incidents have been committed by American-born criminals.  

All of this adds up to a feast of recrimination against Latinos and Muslims, and feeds attitudes and policies to diminish civil liberties, disparage the courts (which are often at odds with anti-immigrant policy), set loose a callous roundup of unauthorized residents, challenge entitlement programs, raise fears about crime and terrorism, and even attack the Fourteenth Amendment, which grants birthright citizenship.  Along the way, contractors building the Wall and those supplying expanded border and urban policing will be enriched.

One thing that can be said for Trump’s immigration ideology is that it’s been consistent and he has begun to fulfill campaign promises.  It seems probable that in the election “immigrants” were a proxy for other disgruntlements.  Now, as president, Trump can use that same cudgel to reach for a broad array of policy goals, even as unauthorized immigrants become more firmly ensconced in American life. It is yet another paradox of the Trump era.

John Tirman, executive director of MIT’s Center for International Studies, is author of Immigration and the American Backlash.

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Maria Borges Is The First African Cover Girl On Elle *This Century*

Twenty years have passed since Elle’s U.S. edition featured an African model on the cover of its magazine. Maria Borges just changed all that. 

Borges is a 24-year-old supermodel whose star has seriously been on the rise, from her stunning Fashion Week appearances to rocking her natural hair at the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show. 

Now, Borges is one of six stars on the cover of Elle’s May 2017 Swimsuit Issue. And she is the first African model to appear on Elle’s cover this century, BuzzFeed reported. Sudanese model Alek Wek graced it back in 1997 as the magazine’s very first black cover girl since it was first issued in 1985, according to Fashion Bomb Daily. 

She tweeted to celebrate the moment. 

Borges spoke about the vital need for representation in the fashion industry in her interview. 

“The fashion industry is here for everyone, [regardless] of color or race,” she told Elle. “When I was growing up, I never saw someone like me, and now the other girls can see someone like them. It’s all about inspiration.”

Borges, who grew up in Angola and was recently dubbed one of the African models breaking barriers by CNN, became the face of L’Oreal Paris in February. At the time, she spoke about inspiring other women. 

“I believe in the beauty of diversity,” she said in a statement at the time. “The empowering message that a girl who started from the bottom can be an international beauty symbol and be living proof that our dreams are valid, and the future ahead of us is bright.”

Reps for Elle and Borges were not immediately available for additional comment. 

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