NASA’s Cassini probe has emerged unscathed after its first dive between Saturn and its rings. The spacecraft’s ground team had to spend 20 hours wondering whether the probe was doing well or whether it plunged to its death a few months too early. Tha…
LG Electronics has posted its Q1 2017 results, which show a nearly 10 per cent year-over-year jump in revenue. The electronics maker is reporting KRW 14.66 trillion ($12.70BN) in revenue, an increase of 9.7 per cent from the same period last year. Read More
The Secret Service Can't Keep Up With the Threats Made Against Trump on Twitter
Posted in: Today's ChiliBarack Obama may have been the first president with a Twitter account, but Donald Trump will definitely be remembered by history as the first social media president. President Trump tweets morning, day, and night—eliciting plenty of love from his supporters and torrents of hate from his detractors. But Trump’s…
The hunt for Planet 9—a hypothetical, Neptune-sized object beyond Pluto—has stirred the scientific community since last year year, when a pair of Caltech astronomers argued in favor of the idea. Those intrepid scientists—Mike Brown, best known as the guy who killed Pluto, and Konstantin Batygin—are currently…
Hope For the Best, Prepare For the Worst With This Fully Stocked First Aid Kit, On Sale Today Only
Posted in: Today's ChiliI’m not saying civil society is going to break down in the relatively near future, necessitating survival preparedness. But I’m not not saying it. This 326 piece first aid kit is OSHA and ANSI certified for 100 people, so it should (hopefully) last you and your family for quite some time, no matter the situation.
Some like their cars with finesse and suave. Others like theirs with missile launchers and all sorts of hi-tech weapons of mass destruction. For the latter class, the closest you’ll get to cars like those are in movies like the Fast & Furious or toys like Anki OVERDRIVE. So, why not have them both? That is exactly what Anki and … Continue reading
Scarlett Johansson And Tilda Swinton Spark 'Whitewashing' Fury With Asian-Inspired Movie Roles. Again.
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe backlash following “Ghost in the Shell” and “Doctor Strange” is finally fizzling out. But critics are going after actresses Scarlett Johansson and Tilda Swinton yet again.
This time, for being cast in Wes Anderson’s upcoming stop-motion film, “Isle of Dogs.”
As Fox Searchlight released the film’s April 2018 premiere date along with a Japanese-themed promo poster on Tuesday, people couldn’t help but notice Johansson and Swinton’s names included in the star-studded cast list.
Their names, along with most of the words on the poster, were printed in both English and in Japanese kanji.
It’s leaving many with a sense of déjà vu.
Critics said the actresses’ roles in Anderson’s Japanese-inspired film were adding insult to injury after both starred in big budget movies accused of whitewashing Asian roles.
Last year, Swinton was cast as “The Ancient One,” based on a Tibetan sorcerer in the Marvel comic “Doctor Strange.” And in March, “Ghost in the Shell,” a live-action remake of a Japanese anime, debuted with Johansson as the main character. The outrage for both movies went viral as critics bashed Hollywood for choosing to cast white actors instead of Asian ones.
Both actresses defended their roles but seem largely unfazed by the criticism. And now, Johansson and Swinton’s appearance in yet another Asian-inspired film is just too soon for some.
This is Anderson’s first film since his critically acclaimed 2014 movie “The Grand Budapest Hotel” ― and with a cast that includes Bill Murray, Bryan Cranston and Edward Norton, the animated film is expected to have the same appeal.
Set in Japan, “Isle of Dogs” follows a boy’s journey as he looks for his dog, according to the movie’s website.
Anderson has said that his film was heavily influenced by Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa. It also features a number of Japanese talent, including musicians Mari Natsuki, Yojiro Noda and Yoko Ono and actors Akira Takayama and Akira Ito.
It’s unclear which characters the actors will voice, so it may be too soon to judge the movie’s casting decisions as a whole. But that hasn’t stopped people from calling out Swinton and Johansson.
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Elizabeth Warren Wades Into Democratic Party’s Debate On Candidates’ Abortion Views
Posted in: Today's ChiliWASHINGTON ― Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) is siding with prominent members of Congress instead of the new chairman of the Democratic National Committee in the party’s debate over the politics of reproductive freedom.
DNC Chairman Tom Perez announced last week that no Democrat who broke with the party on abortion rights would get any support from the national party, reversing his previous decision on the matter.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who caucuses with Democrats, have argued instead that there should be no litmus test and that the party should be open to supporting some Democrats who break with the party platform on the issue.
Warren, in an interview with HuffPost as part of her book tour, began by re-affirming her own strong support for reproductive freedom. “Let me start with this part, because these are deep-down issues. I am strongly pro-choice. I am strongly pro-choice, and I will fight,” she said.
But that’s not how everyone in the party feels, she said, and she respects that. “I recognize that not all of my colleagues agree with me. I’ll do everything I can to persuade them, but they are my colleagues, and that’s just how it is with the Democrats,” she said. “But I got to say, it does not dampen my energy in this fight.”
The debate was not one that Democrats were necessarily looking to have, but it jumped out of Omaha, Nebraska, as the DNC and Sanders were headed to town to campaign on behalf of a Democratic candidate for mayor, Heath Mello, who was running against a rock-ribbed anti-abortion politician, the incumbent mayor.
Mello, it turned out, had a long anti-choice record as a state legislator, and NARAL pounced, denouncing Democrats for again selling out women, who have been the driving force of the resistance movement. Perez and Sanders responded by saying the party ought to be a big tent; after a browbeating, Perez reversed himself and zipped the tent shut, but Sanders held firm. He was then followed by Pelosi and Schumer, who insisted that the party needs to support anti-abortion candidates in some circumstances.
In at least one way, the debate over Mello is in the past, since he has declared that he will govern as mayor as if he were pro-choice, despite his personal views. But it has extra salience given the specific role Nebraska ― and Mello ― played in the abortion wars over the past decade.
In May 2009, George Tiller, a doctor who performed late-term abortions, was assassinated in the foyer of his Kansas church while handing out bulletins. He had been the subject of dozens of attacks by then-Fox News host Bill O’Reilly and had become a central figure of scorn within the anti-abortion movement. In his first comments after the murder, O’Reilly declared that there would be “no back pedaling.”
“Every single thing we said about Tiller was true, and my analysis was based on those facts,” O’Reilly declared. “Now, it’s clear that the far left is exploiting ― exploiting ― the death of the doctor. Those vicious individuals want to stifle any criticism of people like Tiller. That ― and hating Fox News ― is the real agenda here. Finally, if these people are soooo compassionate ― so very compassionate, so concerned for the rights and welfare of others ― maybe they might have written something, one thing, about the 60,000 fetuses that will never become American citizens. Or am I wrong?”
Dr. LeRoy Carhart, who occasionally had worked with Tiller, said publicly that he would continue performing such procedures at his clinic in Bellevue, Nebraska.
The Nebraska Legislature responded by banning abortions after 20 weeks. “I didn’t find this bill, it found Nebraska,” Mike Flood, the Nebraska legislature’s speaker said, referring to Carhart.
In reality, such procedures are extraordinarily rare and typically the result of something catastrophic gone wrong with the pregnancy. The Nebraska law, however, said that they could only be performed if the mother were on the brink of death. The law, passed with Mello’s help, was flatly unconstitutional, a violation of Roe v. Wade, but abortion rights groups elected not to challenge it, worried the Supreme Court might use it as an opportunity to chip away at the law or overturn it altogether.
Mello’s vote on the bill, though, was academic on one level: It passed 44-5.
But the law became extraordinarily popular with the anti-abortion movement, and 20 states now have similar statutes on the books. With those wins pocketed, the movement is pushing to ratchet down the threshold, arguing on behalf of so-called “heartbeat” bills, which could ban abortion as early as six weeks.
Mello also voted for a bill that would ban telemedicine in cases of abortion, a big deal particularly in a rural state like Nebraska, where such medications may be the best option for women. And he backed a controversial bill that began by requiring women seeking an abortion to undergo and view an ultrasound, an invasive and unnecessary procedure with no medical benefit. That measure was watered down to simply requiring doctors to offer one.
Jane Kleeb, chair of the Nebraska Democratic Party and an ally of Mello’s, credited him with weakening the measure. “It was Heath’s credibility with pro-life legislators that enabled him to take mandatory ultrasounds off the table and substitute a bill that stated that women had a choice to have one and to see the image,” she told The Nation.
Sofia Jawed-Wessel, who teaches sexual health at the University of Nebraska, also told the magazine that the local reproductive health community had made progress with Mello. “I wish the national organizations would respect the relationship we have been nurturing, instead of just assuming we don’t know what we’re doing,” Jawed-Wessel said. “Then they might have reframed their statement in a way that added momentum to someone we consider a strong ally.”
While Mello may have come around on the issue, his opponent, Mayor Jean Stothert, remains committed against abortion rights. According to Nebraska Right to Life, Stothert supports defunding Planned Parenthood, overturning Roe v. Wade and banning abortion in all cases except rape, incest or to protect the life of the mother. Mello, meanwhile, did not take the organization’s questionnaire.
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A cop is being praised for acting quickly to rescue a man just as he began to jump head-first off a sixth-floor balcony in Hamden, Connecticut.
Officer Justin Martin’s bodycam video shows just how close a call it was ― as Police Chief Thomas Wydra noted, just one more second may have been too late. “His actions are certainly heroic,” Wydra said, according to the New Haven Register.
Martin was responding to a call of a “combative resident” at the Whitney Center senior living community, the Hamden Police Department noted in a Facebook post on Tuesday. As he spoke with staff, he saw a man run away and Martin ran after him up stairs to a roof terrace.
There he saw the man “dive head first” over a short railing, but he managed to grab his legs, pulling him to safety, police said.
The resident underwent evaluation at Yale-New Haven Hospital.
Here’s the department’s video of the April 21 incident:
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Nintendo has sold 2.74 million Switches to date, the first official number released by the company by way of its FY 2016 earnings report, released on Thursday. The total hardware units sold have also led to decent game sales – 5.46 million total across the library, but Zelda: Breath of the Wild looks to be the only real breakout hit for the console with 2.76 million Switch units sold,… Read More