“I felt like that was just in the moment, and if they was going to trade for me and extend me, they should have did it,” Thomas said after the game, per Curtis Crabtree of Pro Football Talk.
The Pro Bowler had seven tackles and two interceptions in the 24-13 Seattle win.
While the Cowboys were unable to trade for Thomas during the offseason despite reportedly offering the Seahawks a second-round pick, they are interested in opening the conversation again, according to IanRapoportof NFL.com.
ChrisMortensenof ESPN reported the Seahawks are engaging in trade talks with several teams and are considering fining the safety for missing practice last week.
The bow represents the latest message to the Cowboys in what has become a bizarre saga.
The Texas native told Dallas to “come get me” last season after a game, and it seems the NFC East squad is still on his mind.
After showing the Cowboys what they are missing Sunday, a trade for Thomas could be in the near future.
Brett Kavanaugh in a statement called the allegation a “smear” that “did not happen.” | Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo
Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee are investigating another allegation of sexual assault against Brett Kavanaugh, the embattled Supreme Court nominee, according to a new report.
The federal judge is already facing an accusation from Christine Blasey Ford, who claims that Kavanaugh drunkenly forced himself on her at a house party in Maryland more than three decades ago. But the latest charge comes from Kavanaugh’s time as a student at Yale University.
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Deborah Ramirez, who is 53, told Ronan Farrow and Jane Mayer of The New Yorker that when Kavanaugh was a freshman at Yale in the 1983-84 academic school year, she remembers that he “exposed himself at a drunken dormitory party, thrust his penis in her face, and caused her to touch it without her consent as she pushed him away.”
In a statement Kavanaugh made to The New Yorker and released by the White House, he called the allegation a “smear” that “did not happen.”
“The people who knew me then know that this did not happen, and have said so,” he said. “This is a smear, plain and simple. I look forward to testifying on Thursday about the truth, and defending my good name — and the reputation for character and integrity I have spent a lifetime building — against these last-minute allegations.”
White House spokeswoman Kerri Kupec echoed that language in a statement on Sunday night, saying Ramirez’s “35-year-old, uncorroborated claim” was simply “the latest in a coordinated smear campaign by the Democrats designed to tear down a good man.”
Kupec added: “This claim is denied by all who were said to be present and is wholly inconsistent with what many women and men who knew Judge Kavanaugh at the time in college say. The White House stands firmly behind Judge Kavanaugh.”
Farrow and Mayer have both previously reported on abuses of power and allegations of sexual misconduct by powerful men. Farrow’s most recent reporting related to the #MeToo movement was the catalyst for CBS’ decision to oust its longtime network head, Les Moonves, earlier this month.
Jared Kushner’s charm offensive reflects a broader realization within the Trump White House that elite donors are now a constituency that must be carefully tended to. | Andrew Harnik/AP Photo
The president’s son-in-law, once a member of New York City high society, has quietly taken on the role of ambassador to the GOP’s moneyed set.
Jared Kushner huddled behind closed doors with some of the Republican Party’s most powerful donors at a midtown Manhattan hotel earlier this month.
The mission: convince them that the Trump White House isn’t a mess.
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While the administration raced to extinguish that day’s firestorm — President Donald Trump’s denial of Hurricane Maria’s 2,975-person death toll — Kushner insisted that the circuslike perception is wrong. Real work is getting done. There are serious people in the White House who are following an actual process, he said, and low-performing staffers had been replaced.
The appearance before the secretive American Opportunity Alliance donor conference, previously unreported, sheds light on the latest addition to Kushner’s expansive portfolio: ambassador to the GOP money set, a contingent that remains wary of the administration and its never-ending tumult. The 37-year-old Trump senior adviser has attended at least four donor gatherings since August, and those close to him say he may soon appear at more. He has been in regular contact with Las Vegas casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, one of the GOP’s most prolific benefactors and a staunch pro-Israel figure. The two spoke last week.
Kushner’s charm offensive reflects a broader realization within the Trump White House that after dismissing elite donors in 2016, they are now a constituency that must be carefully tended to. With his party racing to save its congressional majorities and a treacherous reelection contest fast approaching, Trump can’t afford ignore them.
Kushner’s presentation drew a multitude of bold-faced names, including financial executive Charles Schwab, Chicago Cubs co-owner Todd Ricketts and Los Angeles investor Marc Stern. Some in the room had complicated histories with the president, such as billionaire hedge fund manager Paul Singer. During the 2016 GOP primary, Singer backed Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and bankrolled an anti-Trump super PAC. He has since been in touch with the president and other top administration officials and has helped to fund the efforts to confirm Trump’s Supreme Court nominees.
Trump’s son-in-law detailed his work on trade and prison reform and was pressed on a range of issues, including the administration’s unorthodox approach to foreign policy. At one point, it was pointed out to Kushner that while previous American presidents had typically chosen to make their first foreign trip to a traditionally allied country like Canada, Mexico or the United Kingdom, Trump went to Saudi Arabia.
Kushner made the case that it wasn’t a random pick. It was aimed at cultivating a relationship with eventual Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Saudi King Salman, he said, resetting the relationship with the Arab world.
Donors “walked in doubting that the president has serious, thoughtful people around him,” said Ken Kurson, a longtime Kushner friend who attended the conference, but “left feeling reassured.”
Kushner is filling a void with his outreach. Previous administrations had unofficial donor liaisons who were regularly in touch with influential givers, such as Karl Rove in George W. Bush’s White House and Valerie Jarrett in Barack Obama’s. But Trump, who spent much of the GOP primary campaign attacking his rivals for kowtowing to big contributors, hasn’t had such a figure.
It’s a natural role for Kushner, a wealthy former real estate executive and newspaper publisher who before entering the White House was a mainstay of Manhattan high society. His father, Charles, was for years a major Democratic benefactor in New Jersey. Kushner, an Orthodox Jew, has made his focus the Middle East peace process, an issue of paramount interest to many of the party’s top patrons.
Kushner’s involvement underscores his changing position in the turbulent Trump White House. After taking on a high profile during the first year of the administration, he has increasingly become a behind-the-scenes player. Kushner, who has come under widespread criticism for failing to tame his father-in-law’s most self-destructive impulses and for taking on too many responsibilities, has told people that he’s content being out of the spotlight.
Kushner declined to comment for this story.
Dan Senor, a former George W. Bush administration official and confidant of Singer and House Speaker Paul Ryan, has helped Kushner navigate some of his outreach.
His tour began last month, when he appeared at a donor retreat hosted by Ryan in Jackson Hole, Wyo. At a mountaintop restaurant, Kushner — who saw the event as an opportunity to address a group of establishment-aligned donors who weren’t fully on board with Trump’s 2016 campaign — spoke on a range of policy issues. His wife, Ivanka Trump, attended with him.
Karen Kemmerer, a Wyoming-based contributor who was in the audience that evening, acknowledged she initially felt some skepticism toward Kushner, a newcomer to government. But she said she came away impressed.
“I think certainly for my husband and I, before meeting either of them, we had on our minds like, ‘What backgrounds and capabilities do they really have to be working in the White House? What kind of experiences do they have? What are they doing? I don’t want to say we had a negative impression, but we were kind of neutral,” she said. “So it was really very eye-opening to hear from both of them that night. And I think the majority of the other donors felt the same way.”
After Labor Day, Kushner attended a dinner at New York City’s Pierre Hotel that drew an elite crowd of donors, think tank leaders, and foreign policy elders from both parties. Among those in attendance was New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, who gave $1 million to Trump’s inauguration, and billionaire investor Ira Rennert.
With Singer at one side of a long table and Democratic mega-donor Haim Saban at the other, Kushner — joined by U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley and Trump Middle East envoy Jason Greenblatt — engaged in a free-flowing conversation about the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.
Saban, an Israeli-born Hollywood mogul who was close to 2016 Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, has forged an unexpectedly warm relationship with Kushner. In an interview, Saban, who’s grown frustrated with what he described as the antagonistic posture some in his party were taking toward Israel, said he and Kushner spoke several times a month.
Saban, who was in such frequent contact with team Clinton that he became known as its “favorite billionaire,” contended that Kushner is the “ideal candidate” in the Trump White House to take on the role of donor whisperer.
“He clearly has the president’s ear. He clearly, when it comes to the U.S.-Israel relationship, is familiar with the issues and has access at the highest level,” said Saban, who added that he remains a Democrat.
Kushner’s most recent foray came on Thursday, when he flew to Ohio to headline a fundraiser for Rep. Jim Jordan, a founder of the conservative House Freedom Caucus. Kushner, who has grown close to Jordan, fielded an array of questions from attendees.
People familiar with the planning for the event stressed that Kushner’s appearance wasn’t intended as an endorsement of Jordan’s bid for House speaker, and that the fundraiser was agreed to long before the congressman announced his candidacy for the post.
It’s unclear how Kushner’s role will evolve as Trump’s reelection bid kicks into gear. After helping to spearhead his father-in-law’s 2016 campaign, he has told people that he doesn’t expect to have a formal position on the 2020 campaign and will remain in the White House.
The blitz has soothed the nerves of some donors, who’ve watched as the Trump administration has endured a torrent of scandals and flare-ups. As Kushner’s talk at the American Opportunity Alliance conference came to a close, a question was posed to him.
“Mr. Kushner, you really reassured me,” an audience member said. “But are you having fun?”
‘Tis the season for nightmare fuel, and one fascinating but unsettling discovery is getting into that fall spooky spirit.
A woman in northern Virginia found an extremely rare baby copperhead snake in her neighbor’s yard recently, complete with not one but two heads. Because, ya know, the venomous viper part wasn’t terrifying enough in itself.
After initially being picked up by the Virginia Wildlife Management & Control, the rare serpent is now being taken care of by an unnamed, experienced private reptile keeper.
J.D. Kleopfer, a specialist from the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, has been posting updates on its status for the past several days.
“Wild bicephalic snakes are exceptionally rare, because they just don’t live that long. Too many challenges living day to day with two heads,” he explained in a Facebook post. “We’ll provide an update when we are confident of its survival. It has a tough road ahead, so keep your fingers crossed.”
Kleopfer also put up a video, if you’re brave enough to watch. When a commenter asked about the capabilities of the two heads, he clarified, “They both appear to be capable of biting.”
Cool! So here’s to never sleeping again!
In a statement on Friday, Sept. 21, the Wildlife Center of Virginia in Waynesboro posted details from the radiographs that they did on the rare snake:
It appears as though the left head is more dominant – it’s generally more active and responsive to stimulus. Radiographs revealed that the two-headed snake has two tracheas [the left one is more developed], two esophaguses [the right one is more developed], and the two heads share one heart and one set of lungs. Based on the anatomy, it would be better for the right head to eat, but it may be a challenge since the left head appears more dominant.
As for what will happen to this little baby two-headed killer, Kleopfer also said that, “With a little luck and care, we hope to eventually donate it to a zoological facility for exhibit.”
So the citizens of Virginia can rest assured that both the animal and their streets are safe… for now.
Google chief Sundar Pichai wants the people working for him to understand this clearly: Google’s search results aren’t influenced by political bias.
That’s the message Pichai focused on sending in a Friday email to all employees. He was responding to reports of a January 2017 email chain that started a few days after Donald Trump instituted his first version of the Muslim ban.
A Thursday report from the Wall Street Journal noted that, in early 2017, employees talked about using Google’s search features to respond to Trump’s controversial travel ban that focused on predominantly Muslim countries. They sought a way to push back against “islamophobic, algorithmically biased results from search terms ‘Islam’, ‘Muslim’, ‘Iran’, etc.” and “prejudiced, algorithmically biased search results from search terms ‘Mexico’, ‘Hispanic’, ‘Latino’, etc.”
While the WSJ report does note that the chain included “cautionary notes” that warned using the platform for political purposes, Google still issued a statement shortly after the story published. The spokesperson referred to the chain as “a brainstorm of ideas, none of which were ever implemented.”
The statement continued: “Google has never manipulated its search results or modified any of its products to promote a particular political ideology—not in the current campaign season, not during the 2016 election, and not in the aftermath of President Trump’s executive order on immigration. Our processes and policies would not have allowed for any manipulation of search results to promote political ideologies.”
Pichai’s memo apparently strikes a similar tone. A New York Times report reveals that he shut down any notion of Google engaging in political activities.
“Recent news stories reference an internal email to suggest that we would compromise the integrity of our Search results for a political end. This is absolutely false,” Pichai wrote. “We do not bias our products to favor any political agenda. The trust our users place in us is our greatest asset and we must always protect it.”
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy has made no official announcement, but key GOP lawmakers say they expect this will be the last week the House is in session before Election Day. | Andrew Harnik/AP Photo
Republican lawmakers want to be home campaigning for an increasingly challenging midterm, but Trump could be a wild card in their plans.
With the Supreme Court drama dominating the headlines, House Republican leaders are quietly preparing to adjourn at the end of this week until after the midterm elections, giving rank-and-file GOP lawmakers nearly 40 days at home to try to save their endangered majority.
That is if President Donald Trump doesn’t do something to derail their plans.
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House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) has made no official announcement on the schedule yet, but key Republican lawmakers and aides say they expect that this will be the last week the House is in session before Election Day.
“That’s the plan,” a senior House Republican leadership aide said. “Fingers crossed.”
The Senate, on the other hand, may stay in session for several more weeks. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has vowed to push through Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation to the Supreme Court, despite a sexual assault allegation hanging over the nominee’s head, as well other executive-branch picks sought by Trump, before adjourning.
That also keeps vulnerable red-state Senate Democrats in town instead of back home campaigning.
But with Democrats now favored to take the majority, House Republicans are desperate to spend the final six weeks back home campaigning. Democrats have significantly widened their lead in surveys, now holding a 12-point advantage in congressional preference among voters, according to a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll released Sunday.
That bad news for Republicans comes despite a booming economy, a top talking point for the GOP on the trail. Increasingly, however, independent voters say they want Democrats to control Congress as a check on Trump’s power. And Republicans on Capitol Hill have given little reason to believe they’ll ever stand up to the president, despite a White House that has bounced from chaos to crisis and back again.
House Republicans in swing districts face the difficult task of trying to motivate their Trump-loving GOP base while also keeping the unpopular president at a distance to avoid alienating the women and swing voters they need to win. Trump’s approval numbers remain in the upper 30s, a huge problem for Republicans.
With a Friday adjournment as their target, House GOP leaders plan to pass a “minibus” spending bill this week that funds the Pentagon, as well as the departments of Labor and Health and Human Services. Trump has already signed into law another minibus that covers military construction, energy and water programs, and Congress’ own funding.
GOP leaders then plan to temporarily extend funding for the remaining federal agencies through Dec. 7 via a “continuing resolution,” or CR. At that time — a month after Election Day — House and Senate GOP leaders have promised Trump they will push for his border wall with Mexico, even if it triggers a partial government shutdown.
The Senate is expected to quickly approvethe CR this week. The House would then follow suit before leaving town.
Should Trump go along with the plan, as he has promised, GOP leaders would breathe a huge sigh of relief.
Yet the president has intermittently threatened to trigger a shutdown fight over the border-wall project. His unpredictability scares GOP leaders and campaign strategists, who fear that a shutdown now would be the final nail for the eight-year-old House Republican majority and could cost them the Senate.
But Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), McCarthy and other congressional leaders said they had received assurances he won’t shut down the government before Election Day, a move that would be a political disaster for the party.
Still, GOP leaders have devised a back-up plan to make it more difficult for Trump to veto the CR: They’re linking the short-term bill with this week’s long-term boost for military funding, a strategy they believe will get Trump to sign it. Rebuilding the military was, after all, a central component of Trump’s 2016 campaign for the White House.
McCarthy’s office declined to comment on whether the House will adjourn Friday.
“There are no changes to the legislative calendar to announce,” said Erin Perrine, McCarthy’s press secretary.
With time running out, a short-term extension of the Federal Aviation Administration’s authority is turning into a “last train leaving the station” as lawmakers seek to add their own provisions to the bill. Nearly $1.7 billion in disaster aid for the Carolinas in the wake of Hurricane Florence has been added to the measure. Both parties are supporting the funding.
“Congress stands with our neighbors affected by this terrible storm, and we extend our deepest sympathies to those who have lost their homes, their livelihoods, and their loved ones,” Appropriations Committee Chairman Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-N.J.) said in a statement. “This legislation will provide a first round of assistance for the residents who must rebuild their homes, businesses, and lives in the wake of this disaster.”
Rep. Nita Lowey of New York, the top Democrat on the committee, added in a statement: “I am pleased that there has been bipartisan agreement on the urgent need to help families affected by Hurricane Florence and other natural disasters across our nation, and that this funding has been included in the FAA reauthorization bill.”
No, this is not an episode of Breaking Bad. This is real life.
On Friday, Sept. 21, the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) posted on Facebook about a drug mix up that sounds like it has just as wild a story behind it as the hit AMC TV series.
The department received 45 boxes of donated bananas from Ports of America in Freeport near the Gulf of Mexico. But it turns out the donation was a greater gift than either organization could have imagined, containing an additional 540 packages of cocaine, valued at nearly $18 million.
“Sometimes, life gives you lemons. Sometimes, it gives you bananas,” the TDCJ post joked.
According to the post, the discovery was made by two of its sergeants after they noticed “something not quite right” with the boxes after they were unloaded. Once they started pulling apart these suspicious boxes, they discovered a white powdery substance and notified port authorities.
Sure enough, when life handed them bananas, it was actually a shit ton of cocaine.
Not many other details are known about this bizarre turn of events. But the TDCJ assured its followers that the Drug Enforcement Administration, U.S. Customs, and Border Protection were now investigating into the matter.
I guess we’ll have to wait for the Season 6 of Breaking Bad that’s never happening to fully understand the plot twist of sending a massive cache of illegal drugs to a literal prison.