‘We’re hurting’: Alabama town mourns victims of deadly tornado

The youngest victim was 6, the oldest 89. One extended family lost seven members.

The cornor released the names of the 23 people killed in the country’s deadliest tornado in nearly six years on Tuesday.

They included six-year-old Armando Hernandez Jr, known as “AJ”, torn from his father’s arms two days after singing in his first-grade class musical; 10-year-old Taylor Thornton, who loved horses and was visiting a friend’s home when the twister struck; and Jimmy Lee Jones, 89, who perished along with his wife of six decades, Mary Louise, and one of their sons.

“Just keep those families in your prayers,” Lee County Coroner Bill Harris said, two days after the disaster.

The search for victims, pets and belongings in and around the devastated rural community of Beauregard continued amid the din of beeping heavy machinery and whining chain saws. But Sheriff Jay Jones said the list of the missing had shrunk from dozens to just seven or eight.

“We’ve got piles of rubble that we are searching just to make sure,” said Opelika Fire Chief Byron Prather Jr “We don’t think we’ll find nobody there, but we don’t want to leave any stone unturned.”

Carol Dean, right, cries while embraced by Megan Anderson and her 18-month-old daughter Madilyn, as Dean sifts through the debris of the home she shared with her husband, David Wayne Dean, who died when a tornado destroyed the house in Beauregard [David Goldman/AP Photo]

Four children were killed, ages six, sight, nine and 10.

The youngest, Hernandez, had taken shelter in a closet with his father and older brother when the tornado hit, said Jack Crisp, the boy’s uncle. The punishing winds tore the family’s home apart, Crisp said, and pulled both boys from their father’s arms. 

“He had them squeezed tight, and he said when it came through, it just took them,” Crisp said. “It just demolished the house and took them.” 

Hernandez’s father and brother both survived.

Jackie Jones said she rushed with her siblings to her parents’ house after the storm passed and nobody answered the phone. “They usually answer on the first ring,” she said.

The siblings found the home reduced to its foundation. One of their two brothers who lived at the house survived and was taken to a hospital. But Jimmy Lee and Mary Louise Jones, married for more than 60 years, had died along with their 53-year-old son Emmanuel.

A wedding photo of Carol Dean and David Wayne Dean sits in a pile of personal items Carol Dean recovered while sifting through the debris after a tornado destroyed their home a day earlier killing her husband in Beauregard [David Goldman/AP Photo]

The body of David Wayne Dean, 53, was found by his son in a neighbour’s yard after the twister demolished his mobile home. He was known as “Roaddog” because of his love for Harley-Davidson motorcycles.

“He was done and gone before we got to him,” said his sobbing widow, Carol Dean, who was at work at Walmart when the storm hit. “My life is gone. He was the reason I lived, the reason that I got up.”

‘The community is torn up’

The tornado was an EF4 with winds estimated at 170mph (274kph) and carved a path of destruction up to nine-tenths of a mile (1.4km) wide in Alabama, scraping up the earth in a phenomenon known as “ground rowing”, the National Weather Service said. It travelled a remarkable 70 miles (112km) or so through Alabama and Georgia, where it caused more damage.

Ninety people were injured in the Beauregard area, authorities said. Most have been released from the hospital.

President Donald Trump said he will visit Alabama on Friday to see the damage. “It’s been a tragic situation, but a lot of good work is being done,” he said at the White House.

Richard Tate retrieves personal items from what’s left of his home where he survived a tornado with his wife in Beauregard [David Goldman/AP Photo]

Along the two-lane country road where some of the victims died, firefighters used heavy machinery to overturn pieces of houses that were blown into a gulley. A car sat atop the remains of one house. A red-brick foundation was all that was left at another lot.

The search took its toll around Beauregard, an unincorporated area of roughly 10,000 people near the Georgia line. Church chaplain Ike Mathews walked down a road lined with broken trees and debris as he went to check on members of his congregation and emergency workers.

“Yesterday I talked to some team members who had found bodies. They’re hurting. The community is torn up. They started crying talking about it,” said Mathews, an associate pastor at Rising Star Missionary Baptist Church.

Many of the people living in the area are senior citizens who moved to the country after retiring from textile mills or an old magnetic-tape manufacturing plant that closed years ago, Mathews said.

“They start with a mobile home and hope they can build a house someday. They invest in their homes, and they have a sense of legacy. It’s something to leave their kids and grandkids,” he said.

‘It was God’

It was the deadliest tornado to hit the US since May 2013, when an EF5 twister killed 24 people in Moore, Oklahoma.

Government teams surveying storm damage confirmed that at least 20 tornadoes struck on Sunday in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina.

Granadas Baker, left, and son Granadas Jr ,18, right, retrieve personal items from the damaged home where they survived a tornado a day earlier in Beauregard [David Goldman/AP Photo] 

Cindy Sanford said one of her neighbours in Beauregard died in the storm, and another neighbuor remained missing on Tuesday.

“I pray to God that they find her,” Sanford said as picked through remains of her home, which tumbled in the wind and is now scattered across neighbours’ land.

Sanford said she left home with her five-year-old grandson about five minutes before the storm struck after she got a feeling it was unsafe.

“It was God,” she said. “And then I heard the siren.”

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I freaking love hate-watching ‘Tiny House Hunters’

A man and his tiny home.
A man and his tiny home.

Image: picture alliance via Getty Image

2018%252f04%252f02%252f74%252fheadshot.edeb7.jpg%252f90x90By Morgan Sung

An Ode to… is a weekly column where we share the stuff we’re really into in hopes that you’ll be really into it, too.


Tiny House Hunters fills me with a rage I cannot describe, and I absolutely crave it. 

The HGTV show, streaming on Hulu, is about people who are sick and tired of being able to stretch in their own home and instead choose to live in glorified mobile homes. It follows either a single person trying to move into the mountains, a couple on the verge of breaking up, or a family who doesn’t seem to get that children get bigger on their quest to find the perfect tiny house. 

SEE ALSO: Crush Twitter proves that sometimes subtweets can be good

Frequent quotes from the show include “Wow, this is tiny,” or “There’s not a lot of storage in here,” and my personal favorite, “A king size bed won’t fit in this loft!” 

These are all things you’d expect from a tiny house, but the people who end up on Tiny House Hunters seem to have deluded themselves into believing that tiny houses have some sort of TARDIS-like magic that makes an impossibly cramped 200 square foot space feel bigger on the inside. 

On a typical episode, an exasperated realtor will show contestants three different, but equally hellish, tiny homes. At the end of the episode, the contestant(s) will sit down and weigh the pros and cons of each house on camera, bitching about the lack of a full-size dishwasher and reluctantly accepting a composting toilet, before settling on the worst possible choice. The final scenes of each episode shows the contestants settled into their tiny homes and resigned to constantly stepping on their partners. 

And nothing brings me simultaneous hate and joy like yelling at the TV in my human-sized living room. 

Others on social media feel the same anger I do when I watch an episode of Tiny House Hunters. I love how furious other people get watching it — it validates my own unbridled rage. 

THIS BITCH ON TINY HOUSE HUNTERS WANTS ENTERTAINMENT SPACE, ROOM FOR MORE THAN ONE GUEST TO STAY OVER, A CRAFTS SPACE, FULL KITCHEN, BIG CLOSET, AND ROOM FOR 4 PETS. I’M ABOUT TO SCREAM AT THE TV LIKE A MAN WATCHING FOOTBALL

— ashley rose (@AshleyLogan_) February 26, 2019

house hunters: we are downgrading to a tiny home but we want arts and crafts space, entertainment space, a room for my daughter, sleeping space for multiple guests at once, space for the 4 dogs, lots of storage, high ceilings, big bathroom

— kellie ! (@nicks_millers) February 26, 2019

Episode 1: Hi, I’m Jarrrrrred with too many r’s. This is my friend who I am clearly banging named Too Good For Me. She thinks this is a bad idea because WIMMINS B SHOPPING and she probably thinks that she would like to not crack her head on the roof of my house

— Apocalypse Aphrodite (@LaurenInk) March 3, 2019

When the dumbass couple on house hunters is buying a tiny house and rules one out because; “it just doesn’t have enough space for entertaining” pic.twitter.com/F11gQnqwjM

— Sam Ewers #Ewers2020 (@whatewers) February 26, 2019

I am not hating on anyone who lives in a tiny house. Personally, I think they’re great, and love the idea of living somewhere with little impact on the environment. Given the chance, I would absolutely live in a tiny house. But would I live in a tiny house with three dogs, two sticky toddlers, and another fully grown human being? Absolutely fucking not. Tiny House Hunters is so rage-inducing because the contestants on the show manage to pick the worst houses and be in the worst circumstances for tiny house living. 

My most vitriolic reaction to the show was during an especially cursed episode, when a couple bought a literal burned down shack surrounded by garbage for a massive $155,000. In a Slate interview, Aubree and Jordan explained that land in Los Angeles isn’t cheap, and that the fact that the patch of trash dirt was already zoned for residential living saved them thousands of dollars on permits. 

To be fair, their reasoning does make sense. But in an infuriating follow-up interview published this year, the couple explained that after clearing the debris from the house and building a tiny guesthouse, they ran out of money and moved into the 18 by 18 foot guest house. Now they’re moving out of the property and into a full-size two bedroom home. 

When Slate asked if they ever watch Tiny House Hunters, Aubree responded with “No, it’s triggering.” 

As Roxane Gay wrote in Curbed, “When one aspires to own a tiny home, they have a corresponding tiny American dream.” 

While some contestants on the show will probably thrive in a mobile tiny house, like most of the single people with pets, many seem to be trying to fix a deeper issue — whether it’s a couple desperately trying to fix their relationship by literally getting closer or a growing family that’s low on funds. Buying a tiny house like slapping on a bandaid after being mauled by a bear. 

Like reading the worst posts on r/relationships or hate watching The Bachelor, I have a sick fascination with unpacking the characters of Tiny House Hunters. What makes anyone feel more alive than yelling at preventable disasters? You’ll probably love it, too. 

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Report: Eric Weddle Cut by Ravens After 3 Seasons Ahead of NFL Free Agency

Baltimore Ravens safety Eric Weddle warms up before an NFL football game against the Los Angeles Chargers in Carson, Calif., Sunday, Dec. 23, 2018. (AP Photo/Kelvin Kuo)

Kelvin Kuo/Associated Press

The Baltimore Ravens reportedly released safety Eric Weddle on Tuesday, according to Ian Rapoport of NFL Network.

Tom Pelissero of NFL Network broke down the financials of the move:

Tom Pelissero @TomPelissero

Eric Weddle was due a $6.5 million base salary plus $1M in incentives in 2019. Cutting him clears $7.5M in salary cap space, at a time the #Ravens are trying to re-sign C.J. Mosley … and now Weddle joins that deep free-agent safety class at age 34.

Weddle had spent three years with the Ravens, earning a Pro Bowl selection in each season. He has six Pro Bowl appearances in his 12-year NFL career.

According to Mike Garafolo of NFL Network, the 34-year-old has said he would be open to playing for another team in 2019 instead of retiring.

While he had initially indicated he would retire this offseason if the Ravens didn’t want him back, he changed his mind in January.

“Obviously, I want to be back. I want to finish out,” Weddle said in January, per Ryan Mink of the team’s official site. “If not, I’ve had an unbelievable experience here and loved every second. So, if it does happen that we both move on, then we do, and we’ll see if I’ll play somewhere else or hang ’em up.”

The Ravens will still have a chance to re-sign him on a more team-friendly deal, but it appears he will get a chance to see what else is out there on the open market.

Meanwhile, Baltimore will also try to re-sign linebackers C.J. Mosley and Terrell Suggs, who are both free agents.

The release of Weddle could free up funds for these players, but Baltimore loses a key player on a defense that ranked No. 1 in the NFL in yards allowed last year.

The safety could have a significant market based on his performance throughout his career, especially the past few years. The only challenge will be competing with a loaded free-agent class at safety that includes Landon Collins and Earl Thomas.

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World Reacts to Madrid Shaming by Ajax

  • Xav Salazar @XavsFutbol

    https://t.co/AbZ0kxJf6d

  • Joel Embiid @JoelEmbiid

    We need to go out and sign players this summer…. Tough times as a Madrid fan!!!! Hi @hazardeden10 lol #HalaMadrid

  • The Swype Sports ™ @SwypeSports

    How many times has Bale been useless for Real Madrid

    https://t.co/nNOEvZxB0Q

  • Bleacher Report Live @brlive

    Real Madrid fans right now 😢 https://t.co/HoyKIPqIBc

  • samar @supremebayern

    @brfootball https://t.co/5rtmqbiB2R

  • YouTube: Shirtless Plantain Show @Nigerianscamsss

    Real Madrid getting #VIOLENCE handed to them at their home where they pay bills and feed their families. https://t.co/UsskaMLt2O

  • Bez @jbez85

    Ajax currently Knocking Real Madrid out! #ajaxmadrid https://t.co/RP1ST64tNV

  • Kuda 🇿🇼 @Qudaboy

    Real Madrid out of all competitions by March? 💉💉💉💉💉 https://t.co/SXwiHxR8Mm

  • FootballJOE @FootballJOE

    Oh, Sergio… https://t.co/rC8kW6zYpC

  • ✗Magdi @_EngMagdi

    Real Madrid fans right now #UCL #RealAjax https://t.co/T1WxpZ2wVb

  • FootballFunnys @FootballFunnnys

    When you ask Real Madrid fans about their last 3 games 🤣 🤣
    https://t.co/gG8BjENOIT

  • Mohsin @Moohsin07

    Real madrid fans right now https://t.co/6tQTsLYbin

  • El Máestro @ElMaestrofcb

    Looking at Real Madrid’s results over the past week https://t.co/VAgxqjXxyv

  • RadioMarca Barcelona @radiomarcabcn

    Y mientras… Sergio Ramos grabando su documental en su palco tuneado tras forzar la amarilla https://t.co/u15EcPVBhy https://t.co/LaRnD8Cpln

  • Indy Football @IndyFootball

    No caption needed.

    😏 #UCL https://t.co/M5OkTS43iC

  • LFC FANS @lfc_allting

    Real Madrid’s results in the last 6 days…

    Real 0 Barca 3
    Real 0 Barca 1
    Real 1 Ajax 4
    https://t.co/qOmVnDtcsa

  • Justin @jmh0628

    “One first class ticket to Madrid, soonest departure available, please.” https://t.co/V7oIbo9RVA

  • ‏ً @xOluwaseyi

    “Real Madrid are going trophyless this season”

    World of Football rn:
    https://t.co/To9IkJK7fp

  • 👑 OLUWAFIFUNMI 🎨🇳🇬 @FifunmiRexx

    Courtois: I’m leaving Chelsea to win the champions league with Real Madrid.

    Ajax: https://t.co/O82ZHYqkYb

  • Tancredi Palmeri @tancredipalmeri

    ATTENTION: if Real Madrid lose 1-4 to Ajax, it will the RECORD WORST EUROPEAN HOME DEFEAT IN THE HISTORY OF REAL MADRID!!

    And you know when it was set previous record?
    Last December v CSKA Moscow!!!

    This is how disastrous is their season…

  • BenchWarmers @BeWarmers

    There’s only one man can save Real Madrid now… https://t.co/Paep4P5HPH

  • falaini @failaini27

    Every real madrid fan #RMAAJA https://t.co/jwvLHBBlqh

  • Troll Football @TrollFootball

    Real Madrid got spanked out of all 3 competitions within 7 days https://t.co/SfcPv1IiJe

  • Sam McGuire @SamMcGuire90

    Watching Real Madrid implode https://t.co/2ryb1ZBxtO

  • FootballJOE @FootballJOE

    Real Madrid diving out of the Champions League like… https://t.co/0wWKOiCLCt

  • B/R Football @brfootball

    Kings no more https://t.co/rDUuqOZPxb

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    World Reacts to Madrid Shaming by Ajax

  • Xav Salazar @XavsFutbol

    https://t.co/AbZ0kxJf6d

  • Joel Embiid @JoelEmbiid

    We need to go out and sign players this summer…. Tough times as a Madrid fan!!!! Hi @hazardeden10 lol #HalaMadrid

  • The Swype Sports ™ @SwypeSports

    How many times has Bale been useless for Real Madrid

    https://t.co/nNOEvZxB0Q

  • Bleacher Report Live @brlive

    Real Madrid fans right now 😢 https://t.co/HoyKIPqIBc

  • samar @supremebayern

    @brfootball https://t.co/5rtmqbiB2R

  • YouTube: Shirtless Plantain Show @Nigerianscamsss

    Real Madrid getting #VIOLENCE handed to them at their home where they pay bills and feed their families. https://t.co/UsskaMLt2O

  • Bez @jbez85

    Ajax currently Knocking Real Madrid out! #ajaxmadrid https://t.co/RP1ST64tNV

  • Kuda 🇿🇼 @Qudaboy

    Real Madrid out of all competitions by March? 💉💉💉💉💉 https://t.co/SXwiHxR8Mm

  • FootballJOE @FootballJOE

    Oh, Sergio… https://t.co/rC8kW6zYpC

  • ✗Magdi @_EngMagdi

    Real Madrid fans right now #UCL #RealAjax https://t.co/T1WxpZ2wVb

  • FootballFunnys @FootballFunnnys

    When you ask Real Madrid fans about their last 3 games 🤣 🤣
    https://t.co/gG8BjENOIT

  • Mohsin @Moohsin07

    Real madrid fans right now https://t.co/6tQTsLYbin

  • El Máestro @ElMaestrofcb

    Looking at Real Madrid’s results over the past week https://t.co/VAgxqjXxyv

  • RadioMarca Barcelona @radiomarcabcn

    Y mientras… Sergio Ramos grabando su documental en su palco tuneado tras forzar la amarilla https://t.co/u15EcPVBhy https://t.co/LaRnD8Cpln

  • Indy Football @IndyFootball

    No caption needed.

    😏 #UCL https://t.co/M5OkTS43iC

  • LFC FANS @lfc_allting

    Real Madrid’s results in the last 6 days…

    Real 0 Barca 3
    Real 0 Barca 1
    Real 1 Ajax 4
    https://t.co/qOmVnDtcsa

  • Justin @jmh0628

    “One first class ticket to Madrid, soonest departure available, please.” https://t.co/V7oIbo9RVA

  • ‏ً @xOluwaseyi

    “Real Madrid are going trophyless this season”

    World of Football rn:
    https://t.co/To9IkJK7fp

  • 👑 OLUWAFIFUNMI 🎨🇳🇬 @FifunmiRexx

    Courtois: I’m leaving Chelsea to win the champions league with Real Madrid.

    Ajax: https://t.co/O82ZHYqkYb

  • Tancredi Palmeri @tancredipalmeri

    ATTENTION: if Real Madrid lose 1-4 to Ajax, it will the RECORD WORST EUROPEAN HOME DEFEAT IN THE HISTORY OF REAL MADRID!!

    And you know when it was set previous record?
    Last December v CSKA Moscow!!!

    This is how disastrous is their season…

  • BenchWarmers @BeWarmers

    There’s only one man can save Real Madrid now… https://t.co/Paep4P5HPH

  • falaini @failaini27

    Every real madrid fan #RMAAJA https://t.co/jwvLHBBlqh

  • Troll Football @TrollFootball

    Real Madrid got spanked out of all 3 competitions within 7 days https://t.co/SfcPv1IiJe

  • Sam McGuire @SamMcGuire90

    Watching Real Madrid implode https://t.co/2ryb1ZBxtO

  • FootballJOE @FootballJOE

    Real Madrid diving out of the Champions League like… https://t.co/0wWKOiCLCt

  • B/R Football @brfootball

    Kings no more https://t.co/rDUuqOZPxb

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    In Myanmar, ‘pervasive hate speech and shrinking freedom’

    The United Nations human rights investigator on Myanmar has expressed alarm over the “pervasive nature of hate speech” in the country, including material in textbooks that reportedly teach fourth-grade students to “loathe those of mixed blood”.

    In a report published on Tuesday, Yanghee Lee described hate speech as “institutionalised” in Myanmar, where the government is under fire over an August 2017 military crackdown that sent hundreds of thousands of members of the mostly Muslim Rohingya minority fleeing into neighbouring Bangladesh.

    The UN special rapporteur was denied entry to the country for her research.

    The government, led by Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, told Lee in a December letter that her visits were “counter-productive”, claiming her previous reports lacked “objectivity and impartiality”.

    “The people of Myanmar have endured decades of abuse; international inaction, or delayed action, is a further injustice,” Lee said in Tuesday’s report, urging the global community to take “concrete action” to advance human rights in the country.

    There was no immediate comment from the Myanmar government.

    Here are some key takeaways from Lee’s report, which the UN envoy is expected to present to the UN Human Rights Council on March 11.

    Institutionalised hate speech

    “The pervasive nature of hate speech is alarming, particularly that it is used by senior government officials,” Lee said, referring to comments by Thura Aung Ko, minister for religious and cultural affairs, who was accused in November of describing Islam as an “extreme religion”.

    Meanwhile, the national elementary school curriculum includes lessons and textbooks that contain discriminatory and incendiary material, Lee said.

    “For example, there is a fourth grade lesson on ‘Wunthanu Spirit’, meaning nationalistic and patriotic spirit. The lesson says ‘we loathe those of mixed blood, for they prohibit the progression of a race’. Teaching children these ideas promotes racial superiority and communal disharmony,” she added.

    Groups linked to the military and members of the government continued to proliferate hate speech and misinformation on Facebook, she said, urging the social media platform to do more to protect human rights in Myanmar.

    Rohingya repatriation

    Myanmar and Bangladesh have signed an agreement to repatriate the more than 730,000 Rohingya who fled the military’s campaign of mass killings and rape in western Rakhine state, but “conditions for voluntary, safe, dignified and sustainable returns do not exist,” Lee said.

    Rohingya were continuing to leave Rakhine for Bangladesh, she said, with newly arrived refugees reporting recent acts of violence against them and their family members.

    Bangladesh, which said it could not take any more Rohingya refugees, has proposed setting up “safe zones” inside Rakhine, but the very “need for ‘safe zones’ undermines the safe, voluntary, dignified and sustainable nature of repatriation”, she said. 

    Also, “confining returnees to ‘safe zones’ could result in their being more vulnerable, would further constrain their freedom of movement and would segregate them from other communities,” she said.

    Taking note of Aung San Suu Kyi’s call for investment in Rakhine during a trade fair in February, Lee said investors must be cautious of the many risks to human rights by the various conflicts in the crisis-hit state. 

    ‘Plagued by conflict’

    Expressing concern over ongoing clashes between the military and ethnic armed groups in the north and east of the country, Lee said: “Myanmar continues to be plagued by armed conflicts and violence.”

    Recent fighting in Rakhine between the military and the Arakan Army, an ethnic armed group that seeks greater autonomy for the people of the state, has resulted in several civilian deaths, including of children, and displaced more than 5,500 people, she said. 

    Meanwhile, the continued instability in other border areas was preventing hundreds of thousands of displaced people and refugees from returning to their homes, she said, voicing worries over the slow pace of progress in peace talks between the rebels and the government.  

    Aung San Suu Kyi’s government has promised to prioritise ending the decades-old conflicts with Myanmar’s various ethnic groups, and Lee stressed “meaningful, open and inclusive dialogue” was necessary to the process. 

    ‘Shrinking democratic space’

    There was a large number of people imprisoned or detained for political activity, including 33 who are serving sentences and 311 awaiting trial, she said, labelling the development “totally unacceptable in a democratic society”. 

    The figure included Reuters reporters Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, who are serving seven-year prison sentences for breaching Myanmar’s colonial-era Official Secrets Act during their reporting of the killing of 10 Rohingya men in Rakhine.

    The “decreasing space for expression of views that are critical” of the government could leave abuses of power unchecked and stymie Myanmar’s transition to democracy, she said.

    Sanctions 

    Examining the role of military-run conglomerates in Myanmar’s mining industry, Lee said fresh sanctions should be considered against the Union of Myanmar Economic Holdings Limited (UMEHL) and Myanmar Economic Corporation (MEC). 

    The two conglomerates, which have received significant international investment since 2011, provide “off-budget financing” to the military, she said, and were involved in natural-resource extraction, where reports of rights abuses were rife. 

    “The unaccounted profits and loss of revenues from resource extraction, and the commercial interests of military-owned and military-affiliated entities is a concern for human rights in Myanmar,” she said.

    “These economic structures sustain the power and influence of an institution that obstructs democracy and commits egregious crimes with impunity.”

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    Armed with memes, Algerian students join anti-Bouteflika protests

    Algiers, Algeria  Thousands of university students have marched in Algeria’s capital, as peaceful rallies against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s bid to seek a fifth term continued for a second week.

    Like their peers who held similar protests across the North African country, the students in Algiers on Tuesday took to the streets to reject the 82-year-old’s candidacy in the April 18 elections.

    “Nobody wants a fifth term for Bouteflika. This is ridiculous, they are treating us with contempt!”, 19-year-old Hamza, a science and technology student who, like many others, has known no other president, told Al Jazeera.

    Bouteflika took office in 1999, while his last public speech dates back to 2012, a year before he had a debilitating stroke that confined him to a wheelchair.

    Algeria has been rocked by protests ince February 22 over Bouteflika’s bid for re-election [Toufik Doudou/AP Photo]

    On Tuesday, the young protesters chanted slogans against the ailing leader and his brother Said, a presidential adviser seen by many as having major political influence.

    They also denounced widespread corruption and government inefficiency, echoing those taking part in mass nationwide  protests  on February 22 and March 1, while also insisting on”silmiya” (peaceful) – a key theme of the rallies so far.

    Alongside the flags and political banners, there were plenty of of tongue-in-cheek signs on display during the students’ rally, as well as a smattering of pop-culture references.

    “Algeria has no master. Algeria is a free country”, read one banner, in reference to a line said by a character in the popular Harry Potter series. “Accio loyal government,” said a different sign, imitating one of the fictional young wizard’s spells.

    😭😂😂 Students downtown #Algiers went full #HarryPotter during their anti- #Bouteflika protests. A poli science student told me: “You know, it’s like in Harry Potter when Donny the slave gets his freedom.”

    They are brave, beautiful and hilarious.#YouthPower#AlgeriaProtests pic.twitter.com/i0qbnlNzeM

    — Farah | فرح (@souamesfarah) March 5, 2019

    Another student wrote: “Where is democracy? I don’t see it”, a meme inspired by Dora the Explorer. A different student brought a completely off-topic sign: “Subscribe to PewDiePie,” the popular YouTube channel.

    Humour is also how many Algerians have been dealing with the president’s absence since the protests erupted last month. A campaign launched on Facebook encouraged subscribers to start calling the HUG hospital in Geneva, Switzerland, where Bouteflika is believed to have been since February 24 for “routine medical checks”, according to officials.

    The hospital has reportedly received hundreds of phone calls from Algeria. “Please tell Mr Bouteflika that the Algerian people are worried about him,” an Algerian can be heard saying in the recording of one such call  posted on YouTube , as an increasingly frustrated operator tries to stick to the script of not revealing patients’ identities.

    On Sunday, Abdelghani Zaalane, Bouteflika’s campaign manager, formalised the president’s candidacy by filing paperwork on his behalf, a move seen by legal experts as illegal as candidates are required by Algerian law to register themselves.

    Zaalane also read a letter attributed to Bouteflika meant to calm the protests, in which he offered not to serve a full term if he won next month’s vote.

    According to the statement, Bouteflika’s first reaction to the demonstrations, the octogenarian vowed to organise a national conference that would set a date for new elections which he would not contest.

    Still, the proposals failed to appease public anger. Disappointed with Bouteflika’s move to maintain his candidacy despite the protests, many took to the streets on the same night, followed by thousands more the following day.

    New mass protests are planned for Friday, March 8 [Ramzi Boudina/Reuters]

    At the students’ protest on Tuesday, the snap election proposal was mocked and criticised. “He wants to stay another year? We’re not renting apartments here,” one sign said.

    “The regime is just trying to stall in order to replace Bouteflika with someone who suits them. We want them all gone”, 22-year-old Amine, a finance student, told Al Jazeera.

    The number of people joining the protests has seemingly made it impossible for police to enforce a protest ban in Algiers, which has been in place since 2001.

    New protests are planned for March 8, in what is becoming a new Friday ritual in Algeria.

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    Bloomberg says he won’t run for president in 2020


    Michael Bloomberg

    AP Photo/John Locher

    Billionaire Michael Bloomberg said Tuesday that he will not run for president in 2020, and that he will instead focus on his clean energy and gun safety efforts, among other issues.

    This story is developing and will be updated.

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    ‘Elder Scrolls: Blades’ is a miraculously smartphone-friendly game

    Elder Scrolls: Blades
    Elder Scrolls: Blades

    Image: bethesda softworks

    2016%252f09%252f16%252f63%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza2.c97cf.jpg%252f90x90By Adam Rosenberg

    Elder Scrolls: Blades is something I never would have expected: a full-blown Elder Scrolls game that is mobile-friendly and playable with just one hand.

    I know that’s how it was introduced way back when at Bethesda Softworks’ E3 2018 press conference, but it’s tough to truly appreciate what that means until you play it. Now that I have, I’m convinced: longtime Bethesda lead Todd Howard wasn’t making an empty promise.

    SEE ALSO: Playing ‘Judgment’ made me finally jump into ‘Yakuza’ games

    When you strip away all the trappings of player progression, loot, scoring, and other dangling carrots that keep players invested, video games all boil down to one thing: mechanics. How they play, and how you play with them.

    Elder Scrolls: Blades has a lot of other things going for it. It looks great and runs super smooth on an iPhone XS Max. It’s not structured in quite the same way as other recent Elder Scrolls games, but the menu-based quest selection and contained play spaces work well for something that’s supposed to be play on the go.

    None of that matters if the game plays like trash, though.

    Some players might prefer a more familiar two-handed control scheme, and that’s an option. If you flip your smartphone into landscape mode, the game automatically adjusts and gives you twin virtual controls in the bottom left and right corners of the screen, to manage your movement and gaze, respectively.

    When Elder Scrolls: Blades starts to roll out later in 2019, the one-handed option will be my go-to.

    I tried that. It seems fine. But when Blades starts to roll out later in 2019, the one-handed option will be my go-to.

    Moving from A to B is as simple as tapping on the screen where you’d like to go. Sometimes you’ll see flashing objects in the environment: a door, a chest, some other point of interest. Tapping on those allows you to inspect or in some other way interact. It’s simple and immediately intuitive.

    Combat consists of pressing and holding in one spot while a meter fills up, and then either releasing or swiping to slash. You can continue holding your finger down after a slash to immediately start filling the meter again if you want to keep the combo going.

    Once a fight begins, you’re effectively locked into a 1-versus-1 perspective until it’s over (think Infinity Blade). So there’s no need to worry about movement or the surrounding environment; you can just focus on the fighting. 

    The hold-and-swipe approach is surprisingly satisfying, especially as you start to get the timing down and string combos together. People with smaller hands or larger smartphones might struggle to cover the full breadth of the screen in one-handed play, but I feel like most people will be able to get down with it.

    Combat apparently gets even more complex as the game goes on and you open up access to shields, learn how to parry, and build up a pool of spells to cast. I only had a little bit of time to play, however, and I unfortunately didn’t get to see any of that. 

    Elder Scrolls: Blades

    Image: bethesda Softworks

    I also didn’t get a sense of the larger game, which involves going on quests, finding treasure, and customizing your own, personal town. Blades is a free-to-play game monetized around using gems to unlock treasure chests: you can spend time playing and build up a pile of them, or you can spend money and buy them outright to get sweet loot more quickly.

    All of these other elements — the advanced combat techniques, the feedback loop of adventuring and town-building, the balance between gems earned vs. gems purchased — are crucial to Blades, and their success or failure will reflect back on the game as a whole. But none of those things count for much in a game that isn’t fun to play.

    Based on the little I played, I don’t think Elder Scrolls: Blades is going to have that problem. We’ll all find out together when it starts opening up for early access later in 2019.

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    Roku devices now play nice with Amazon Alexa

    Roku's new 4K-ready streaming stick.
    Roku’s new 4K-ready streaming stick.

    Image: roku

    Angela Moscaritolo

    for

    PCMag

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    PCMag.com is a leading authority on technology, delivering Labs-based, independent reviews of the latest products and services. Our expert industry analysis and practical solutions help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

    Own a Roku media streaming device or Roku TV? If you also have an Amazon Echo smart speaker or smart display, you can now control your Roku device with Alexa voice controls.

    Starting today, Roku users with Alexa-enabled devices such as the Amazon Echo, Echo Show$129.99 at Amazon, Echo Dot, Echo Spot$129.99 at Amazon, or Echo Plus can pause a show, launch a streaming channel, or search for content using Alexa voice commands, Roku announced. To try it out, open the Alexa app, go to settings, select TV & Video, enable the Roku skill, and link your account. Note that your Roku device needs to be running Roku OS 8.1 or higher for this to work.

    Once you get it set up, just utter a command like “Alexa, find comedies on Roku,” “Alexa, pause Roku,” or “Alexa open Hulu on Roku.” If you have a Roku TV with an OTA antenna connected, you can also use Alexa voice controls to turn it on, change the volume, switch inputs, and change channels.

    You can already control Roku devices with other virtual assistants, including Roku’s own and Google Assistant. The addition of Alexa support gives Roku users another option.

    “Consumers often have multiple voice ecosystems in their homes,” Roku OS Senior Vice President Ilya Asnis said in a statement. “By allowing our customers to choose Alexa, in addition to Roku voice search and controls, and other popular voice assistants, we are strengthening the value Roku offers as a neutral platform in home entertainment.”

    This new voice control option should help users “get to the entertainment they love faster so they can enjoy more of it,” Asnis added.

      This article originally published at PCMag
      here

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