AAA Gets Into The Car Sharing Business With ‘Gig’

If you own a car in America, there is a chance that you might also be subscribed to AAA, which in case you’re unfamiliar is the American Automobile Association which offers its members emergency roadside assistance. However the organization’s interest in cars doesn’t end there as they have launched their own car-sharing startup business called “Gig”.

Gig will be similar in terms of other services like Enterprise CarShare and Zipcar, where users can rent cars via an accompanying app. The rates start at $2.50 per mile, $15 per hour, or if you want a car for long-term, you will be paying up to $85 per day. However the difference n Gig’s model is that you won’t have to return the car to a designated spot.

Instead what has happened is that Gig has made a deal with the host cities that it operates in where users can drop off their cars at any metered parking spots or public parking spaces, which means that you won’t need to make a detour when you end your trip. The service will be launching in Berkeley and Oakland with plans to eventually expand to San Francisco. For those who are interested you can head on over to Gig’s website for the details and download the app.

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Severe Turbulence On Aeroflot Moscow-Bangkok Flight Leaves At Least 27 Hurt

BANGKOK/MOSCOW (Reuters) – At least 27 people were injured on an Aeroflot flight from Moscow to Bangkok on Monday when their Boeing 777 hit an air pocket, the Russian embassy in Thailand said in a statement.

It said 24 of the injured were Russian nationals and 15 of them were taken to a Bangkok hospital for treatment. The other three injured were from Thailand.

Three Russians have undergone operations lasting several hours, Russian RIA news agency reported, citing a Russian diplomat in Bangkok. The diplomat cited doctors who say their lives were not in danger. Aeroflot also dismissed some media reports about spine injuries.

The Russian airline said in an earlier statement that several passengers had been injured during “severe turbulence” 40 minutes before landing in the Thai capital. It said the crew could not warn passengers of the danger because the turbulence occurred in a clear sky.

“All the injured were sent to a local hospital with injuries of a different kind of severity, mainly fractures and bruises,” the embassy said. “The reasons behind the injures was that some of the passengers had not had their seatbelts fastened.”

Airports of Thailand Pcl, Thailand’s main airport operator, told Reuters the Boeing 777 had landed in Bangkok, but said any other comment should come from the airline.

Aeroflot operates two flights a day from Moscow to Bangkok. Thailand is a top destination for Russian tourists, with many visiting the country’s beach resorts.

 

(Reporting by Vladmir Soldatkin in MOSCOW and Cod Satrusayang in BANGKOK; Writing by Amy Sawitta Lefevre; Editing by Tom Larry King)

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Much Ado About Nothing: Politico's Iran Deal Investigation Debunked

It is a sign of the times that when we need to march in defense of facts, of women deserving equal rights, and of science not being a Chinese conspiracy, we also have to defend something as self-evident as the undeniable value of the nuclear deal with Iran from 2015. But in a post-fact era, even diplomatic triumphs that saved the United States from both the threat of nuclear weapons and another endless war in the Middle East face perpetual relitigation.

The latest example is Josh Meyer’s article in the Politico claiming to reveal that the Obama administration gave previously undisclosed concessions to the government in Tehran as part of the nuclear deal, also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). The article is not news, but comes across as yet another hit piece against the nuclear deal, promoted and celebrated by those in Washington who are unrelenting in their commitment to killing it.

Meyer argues, based largely on interviews with what appears to be disgruntled, mid-level officials at the Department of Justice and Homeland Security, that the Obama administration slow-walked investigations against alleged Iranian smugglers serving Tehran’s nuclear program and dropped charges against other Iranian operatives. And Obama apparently did this all behind the back of his own Justice Department.

… to the extent any concessions were made, they were made to win the release of Americans held in Iranian jails.

From the outset, Meyer commits a critical error: He insinuates that any concessions in terms of dropping charges against potential Iranian smugglers were made as part of the nuclear deal. In reality, to the extent any concessions were made, they were made to win the release of Americans held in Iranian jails. The convolution appears intentional, as an article revealing additional concessions to win the release of innocent Americans lingering in Iranian jails would only receive a fraction of the attention of an article claiming those alleged concessions were made to secure the embattled nuclear deal. Few would like to adopt the line that the Obama administration shouldn’t have done what it took to win the release of journalist Jason Rezaian, Marine Corps and Iraq war veteran Amir Hekmati, and the other Americans held in Iran. Spinning the story to create a false link between these alleged concessions and the nuclear deal resolves that problem.

The chronology of events and the mechanisms of the nuclear talks clarifies this. The nuclear negotiations concluded on July 14, 2015. Under the deal, the Iranians agreed to take the first steps to answer remaining questions by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in regard to their nuclear program by October 18. Once this was completed and verified by the IAEA, two simultaneous decisions were made: The Iranians began dismantling parts of their nuclear program, and the EU and the U.S. made a legally binding decision to lift or waive sanctions on Iran once the IAEA confirmed that Iran had fulfilled its commitments. 

This is a critical point: After October 18, the U.S. was obliged to lift sanctions as long as Iran implemented the final phase of the JCPOA roadmap. Meaning, having done all it was supposed to do, Iran had no remaining nuclear leverage to press the U.S. to give additional concessions on the prisoner issue. Indeed, even if the U.S. and Iran had not come to an agreement on a prisoner swap, the nuclear deal would have still proceeded as it was solely dependent upon the IAEA certifying Iran’s completion of the roadmap. This was formally done on January 16, 2016 ― Implementation Day ― after which the U.S. began waiving sanctions on Iran.

Meyer writes that “administration representatives weren’t telling the whole story on Jan. 17, 2016, in their highly choreographed rollout of the prisoner swap and simultaneous implementation of the six-party nuclear deal.” In reality, the swap was more chaotic than it was choreographed. Just days before Implementation Day, 10 American sailors accidentally wandered into Iranian waters in the Persian Gulf and were apprehended by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Navy. The incident risked jeopardizing the prisoner swap, but was quickly resolved within just 16 hours.

But contrary to the Politico article’s claim that the Iranians persistently extracted more concessions from the Obama administration, the Iranians released the American sailors without even demanding a single concession from the U.S. side. If the Iranian modus operandi was to link the prisoner swap with the nuclear issue and force Obama to give more and more to Iran since “the deal was sacrosanct [to Obama], and the Iranians knew it from the start,” as former Bush administration deputy national security adviser Juan Zarate told Politico, then why didn’t they use the 10 captured American sailors to bring Obama to his knees?

In fact, as I describe in Losing An Enemy – Obama, Iran and the Triumph of Diplomacy, the prisoner swap was scheduled to take place earlier but ended up getting delayed as the negotiations proved difficult. And it was the Iranians who originally opposed ― for their own domestic political reasons ― having the swap coincide with Implementation Day. Eventually, though, that is what happened.

But this begs a more important question: What if the Obama administration did drop charges against a few alleged Iranian smugglers in order to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapons option? Why would such a trade-off cause a scandal in Washington? After all, for more than two decades, American and Israeli hawks claimed the Iranian nuclear program was an existential threat and that the heavens would fall if it wasn’t stopped. Yet, after the Obama administration put a lid on the Iranian program, the very same hawks now decry the nuclear deal on the (false) basis that as part of neutralizing this supposedly existential threat, charges were dropped against Iranian smugglers that the U.S. had no way of getting extradited anyway.

One critic of the nuclear deal even told Politico that closing the investigations on these alleged smugglers did “significant and lasting damage” to America’s nonproliferation effort. Apparently, keeping hopeless procurement investigations open is more important to America’s credibility than blocking all of Iran’s paths to a nuclear weapon. Even if the nuclear talks were the reason for the closing of the investigations, who wouldn’t trade several likely hopeless procurement investigations for an agreement that cuts off Iran’s pathways to a nuclear weapon and forces Iran’s nuclear procurement into an official channel subject to the approval of the U.S. and other international powers?

The Politico article… gives a glimpse into the real reason some in Washington obsessively oppose the [Iran deal].

Still, the Politico article is very valuable. Not because it reveals anything nefarious about the nuclear talks, but because it gives a glimpse into the real reason some in Washington obsessively oppose the JCPOA.

On the one hand, they oppose the very principle on which deal-making is based: That in order to get something, you have to give something. In their purist maximalist world, the United States should not have to offer any concessions to get concessions in return. Particularly not to a mid-size power such as Iran. To paraphrase arch-neoconservative Richard Pearl, the only carrot the U.S. should provide is to offer not to bomb countries as long as they comply with American demands.

If one approaches the rest of the world with such a bully-mentality, then closing investigations on alleged Iranian smugglers is unacceptable regardless of what the U.S. would gain in return. By definition, priorities cannot be established, because everything is equally important. Therefore, securing the freedom of American citizens does not take precedence over a procurement investigation ― not even blocking Iran’s pathways to a nuclear weapon would.

Meyer’s investigation claims that “many participants [in counter-intelligence operations] said the way forward is still sufficiently unclear that they can’t, or won’t, proceed.” But who are these participants? Is the off-the-record testimony of mid-level operatives in the Justice Department ― who might only see their own small piece of the picture ― on par with the assessment of senior administration officials with higher security clearances who have the benefit of seeing the larger picture? If you are ideologically opposed to the idea of give-and-take, then yes.

The Politico investigation also sheds light on another point: To large parts of the Washington foreign policy establishment the details of the deal is unimportant. If Iran’s nuclear program truly was the existential threat they had claimed all along, they should be celebrating the nuclear deal ― as much of Israel’s security establishment does today. Refusing to do so suggests that what these hawks really oppose is the very idea of striking a deal ― any deal ― with the government in Tehran. To them, losing Iran as an enemy is the existential threat ― not Iran’s nuclear program.

So much for the decades old U.S.-Iran enmity solely being an ideological obsession of Iran’s notorious hardliners. 

Trita Parsi is the author of Losing an Enemy – Obama, Iran and the Triumph of Diplomacy.

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California Rescuers Use Surf-Leash Tourniquet To Help Shark Attack Victim

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Quick-thinking California beachgoers used a surfboard leash as a tourniquet to stem massive bleeding after a shark attacked a woman wading in the ocean in northern San Diego country on Saturday evening, the Orange County Register reports.

“All of the back of her leg was kind of missing,” one of the rescuers, 29-year-old Thomas Williams, told the outlet. “If she didn’t receive immediate care, it was life-threatening.”

After bystanders carried the woman from the water on a surfboard over slippery rock, Williams, who had passed an EMT training test, and others tended to her. She was later airlifted to a hospital. Several outlets said her condition is still unknown.

Rangers shut the San Onofre State Beach after the attack and posted shark attack warning signs.

The section of shore where the attack occurred — in an area popular with surfers called Church or Churches — is not known as a particularly dangerous spot for shark attacks. A 16-foot female great white shark was filmed a week ago, however, munching on the carcass of a dead humpback whale at Dana Point, about 25 miles north. And on Memorial Day, a swimmer was attacked off Corona del Mar, which is also about 25 miles north.

Great whites have also been spotted breaching in the region recently, notes Surfline.

Earlier this month, a shark beached itself in a rare occurrence in Santa Cruz.

The number of shark attacks is minuscule given the huge number of people swimming, surfing and wading in oceans around the globe. Still marine ecologists fear that global warming may increase shark encounters as fish populations change and more people than ever head to beaches. There were 98 unprovoked shark attacks on humans around the globe in 2015, according to data collected by the International Shark Attack File ― the highest annual total ever recorded. But 2016’s tally of 81 attacks was close to the annual average (82) from 2011 to 2015.

Earlier this year, surf champion Kelly Slater urged a “cull” of great whites off Reunion Island east of Madagascar after 20 shark attacks, eight of them fatal, since 2011. But U.S. surfer Mike Coots, who lost a leg in a shark attack, called culling “fundamentally wrong,” Surfline reported.

In the event of a shark attack, experts urge swimmers or surfers to fight back, punching a shark in the nose or poking its eyes and gills.

“You want to be aggressive because sharks appreciate size and power,” George Burgess, ISAF curator, told Time. “You want to fight like hell. Demonstrate you’re strong and not going to go down easy.”

type=type=RelatedArticlesblockTitle=Related Coverage + articlesList=58f4e1c6e4b0da2ff86211a7

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Donald Trump Won't Give Up Unsupported Claim That Barack Obama Wiretapped Him

President Donald Trump is refusing to let go of his unsupported claim that former President Barack Obama ordered wiretapping on Trump Tower, despite multiple intelligence agencies and congressional investigations finding no evidence of any such activity.

Trump revived the claim — again with no evidence — during an Oval Office interview with CBS’ John Dickerson that aired Monday.

“He was very nice to me, but after that, we’ve had some difficulties. So it doesn’t matter. You know, words are less important to me than deeds, and you saw what happened with surveillance,” Trump said.

When Dickerson pressed him on whether he still stood by the wiretapping claim, Trump wouldn’t say, but claimed “our side has been proven very strongly.”

“You can figure that out yourself,” he said. “I don’t stand by anything. You can take it the way you want. I think our side has been proven very strongly, and everybody has been talking about it.”

Dickerson repeatedly asked Trump to elaborate, but to no avail.

“I just wanted to find out. You’re the president of the United States. You said he was sick and bad,” Dickerson said, referring to Trump’s tweets on his allegation against Obama. “I want to know your opinion.”

“I gave you my opinion,” Trump said.

After several more refusals to answer, Trump dismissed Dickerson and walked back to his desk.

“OK, it’s enough. Thank you. Thank you very much,” the president said.

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Abbi Jacobson Reveals How Similar She Is To Her 'Broad City' Character

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At a recent panel discussion during the Tribeca Film Festival Saturday, comedian Abbi Jacobson opened up about just how closely her character in “Broad City” mirrors her own personality in real life. 

“I think the core of ‘Abbi’ on the show is definitely the core of me,’” she said.

Jacobson was there in honor of Chris Gethard’s comedy special “Career Suicide,” a poignant and hilarious one-man show about his extensive dealings with depression that’ll soon air on HBO. 

Comedian Pete Holmes and director Judd Apatow rounded out the panel, along with “This American Life” producer Ira Glass, who hosted.

Glass asked the panel in general (and then Jacobson in particular) what it’s like to take very personal memories and offer them up to an audience. 

“I think most of the stuff we do is based off our lives,” Jacobson explained, noting that “if people aren’t giving themselves in the [writers’] room, then we just can’t invent. It kind of has to stem from something real for us.” 

“Most of the conversations Ilana and I have as the characters, before we shoot it, we stand there and we say to ourselves, ‘I can’t believe we’re actually doing the conversation that we had in real life on the show,’” she continued. “So, it’s like, a lot is based on our actual shit. A lot of convos, directly pulled …”

“Between you and her?” Glass asked.

“Yeah,” Jacobson replied. “We started off with a Google spreadsheet that was just shit that we talked about, and then we ran out of stuff. We had to hire other writers.”

Jacobson mentioned that Gethard was once her improv teacher at the Upright Citizens’ Brigade theater in Manhattan, when she was starting out in comedy. (He was Holmes’, too.)

When she brought that up, Gethard laughed, “Everyone in comedy who I taught in my class, I’ve just watched them skyrocket past me.”

The comedian won’t have to feel like he’s lagging behind for long. After earning a cult following thanks to “The Chris Gethard Show” and, more recently, the popular podcast “Beautiful/Anonymous,” it looks like he’s poised to take his place in the spotlight.

“Career Suicide” premieres on HBO May 6. “Broad City” will return to Comedy Central in August 2017.

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Twitter to soon stream news 24/7 courtesy of Bloomberg

Fake news, meet real news. Social media has recently come under fire for its role in the spread of fake news, and various networks have tried to address the problem in different ways. Twitter seems to have opted to fight fake news by increasing the amount of its real news content. That will be via a soon to be announced … Continue reading

Galaxy S8 fingerprint scanner becomes a home button with this app

Almost all smartphones these days that have a fingerprint sensor hides it under the home button. In other words, in most cases the home button and fingerprint sensor are in a single spot. The Galaxy S8, however, doesn’t have the convenience, which made it rather awkward, if not annoying for some users. Fortunately, Android’s openness and developer community have yielded … Continue reading

Monday's Morning Email: Budget Deal Reached To Avert Government Shutdown

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DEAL ON BUDGET REACHED TO AVOID GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN “U.S. congressional negotiators have hammered out a bipartisan agreement on a spending package to keep the federal government funded through the end of the current fiscal year on Sept. 30, a senior congressional aide said on Sunday.” Early reports indicate the budget does not include money for a border wall, but does include increases for defense spending and border security. 

‘BILL GATES WON’T SAVE YOU FROM THE NEXT EBOLA’ “The Gates Foundation says responding to deadly outbreaks isn’t its forte. But the Ebola crisis showed just how much global public health depends on the foundation.” 

INSIDE THE CLIMATE MARCH THIS WEEKEND Which saw over 100,000 protesters.

SEVERE WEATHER HITS MIDWEST AND SOUTH Tornadoes and flooding left 10 dead and dozens injured

‘A HIDDEN HORROR’ IN K-12 “Relying on state education records, supplemented by federal crime data, a yearlong investigation by The Associated Press uncovered roughly 17,000 official reports of sex assaults by students over a four-year period, from fall 2011 to spring 2015.” [AP]

1 DEAD, 7 INJURED AFTER SAN DIEGO-AREA SHOOTING The gunman was allegedly drinking a beer when he opened fire.

JOE BIDEN ON 2020 “Guys, I’m not running.”

WHAT’S BREWING

HAVE AN AMAZON ECHO? You can now ask Alexa to listen to The Morning Email! Start your day with a quick update on the latest news by enabling our skill here.

THE PHOTOGRAPHERS OF THE LA RIOTS SPEAK OUT What it was like behind the lens 25 years ago.

WAS YOUR PHOTO TAKEN IN THE MASSIVE TINDER GRAB? Over 40,000 were snagged by a dataset collector looking to use them for “artificial intelligence training.”

HOW MUCH YOUR FAVORITE FOOD BLOGGERS ACTUALLY MAKE It can be a heckuva lot more than you think.

WHAT WENT WRONG WITH THE FYRE FESTIVAL A rundown of the players, the apologies, the best tweets, and why the festival meltdown and ensuing internet rejoicing should have been easy to predict. And wait for it ― the organizers want to throw another one next year. We’ll see if the Seth Rogen-Lonely Island movie about the whole thing scares them off.

ANOTHER MONDAY, ANOTHER ‘90s SITCOM REVIVAL Congrats”Roseanne” fans.

WHAT YOU AND PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP MISSED AT THE WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENTS DINNER Watch Hasan Minhaj’s scorching set, take a look at Carl Bernstein’s words about holding presidents accountable, and hear what journalists thought about the event despite the lack of starpower.

BEFORE YOU GO

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Katy Perry's Comment About 'Old Black Hair' And Barack Obama Causes A Stir

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Katy Perry had a bad hair weekend after coming under fire for a reference to former President Barack Obama, E! reported.

During an Instagram Live exchange in which a fan commented on the singer turning her black hair blonde, the “Bon Appetit” performer replied: “Oh someone says, ‘I miss your old black hair.’ Oh, really? Do you miss Barack Obama as well? Oh, OK. Times change. Bye! See your guys later.”

Harsh reaction to Perry somehow connecting her formerly dark locks to the former commander-in-chief continued on Twitter into late Sunday. Some also came to Perry’s defense, saying she had done nothing offensive.

Vibe wrote that Perry mentioned Obama because the username of the fan in the online exchange was “MsBarackObamaAsWell.”

People noted Perry’s support for Obama previously, but her hair comment had a part of the internet tressing-out.

HuffPost reached out early Monday to a Perry rep for comment.

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