Korean War veterans hope Trump-Kim talks bring end to conflict

Song Jinwon was in middle school when the Korean War broke out in 1950.

As the North Korean army invaded the South, Jinwon realised he had to hide until it was safe.

“When the South Korean army recaptured my area, I thought I should take revenge from the North Koreans,” Jinwon told Al Jazeera. “So my colleagues and I decided to join the military as student soldiers. Afterwards, I joined the army as a military cadet and took part in the Sudo Hill battle where nearly half of my platoon was killed.”

As Donald Trump and Kim Jong prepare to meet in Vietnam for high-stakes and complex nuclear negotiations, war veterans, including Jinwon, hope the summit will also act as a big step towards officially ending the Korean War.

The two Koreas are technically still at war as the hostilities stopped in 1953 with a truce signed by the United States, representing United Nations forces, and the militaries of North Korea and China. The armistice agreement – adhered to but not signed by South Korea, whose leaders at the time rejected the idea of a ceasefire that left the peninsula divided – fell short of a peace treaty and has governed the conflict ever since.

In April, Kim became the first North Korean leader to cross the border since the end of the fighting decades ago for talks with South Korean President Moon Jae-In.

In a joint statement after their landmark summit, the two leaders vowed to work with the United States to end the “current unnatural state of armistice” as it was a “historical mission that must not be delayed any further”, as well as pursue “complete denuclearisation” of the peninsula.

Just months before the meeting in the border village of Panmunjom along the demilitarised zone, North Korea had conducted more than five nuclear tests, threatened to fire a missile towards the US Pacific territory of Guam and detonated what it said was a hydrogen bomb.

Amid the rising tensions, Trump meanwhile had used his first speech at the United Nations in September 2017 to threaten to “totally destroy” North Korea and mock Kim as a “rocket man”.

But in the months that followed, a number of diplomatic initiatives eased tensions and led to Kim and Trump holding an unprecedented summit in Singapore in June last year. And now, days before their second meeting in Hanoi on February 27-28, those who fought in the war hope a permanent resolution is found. 

Veterans of Korean War hope Trump-Kim summit brings peace

“Of course I want the war to end and peace to be established. And in the Singapore summit last year, dismantling of North Korea’s nuclear weapons was proposed as precursor to that,” Ro Moosik, vice chairman of The Korean War Veterans Association (KWVA) in Seoul, told Al Jazeera.

“But the problem is that North Korea is only saying this and nothing is actually being done. It still possesses various weapons and a large number of troops. They are ready for war,” added Moosik, who also joined the army as a student.

‘Battlefield of ideological conflict’

Seoul and Pyongyang both claim sovereignty over the entire Korean peninsula which was divided along the 38th parallel, a line drawn after World War II in 1945. A communist regime was set up by the Soviet army and its proxies in the north directly opposing the US-backed government in the south.

In June 1950, almost 100,000 North Korean forces, backed by the Soviet Union, invaded South Korea. United Nations forces, led by US marines, came to Seoul’s aid, while China also joined the war on the side of the North Koreans.

The result was one of the 20th century’s most horrific conflicts, which killed millions of civilians and military personnel.

“The Korean peninsula ended up being the battlefield of the ideological conflict,” Park Soonyoung, a director at the KWVA, told Al Jazeera.

“If the Korean War was [just] a conflict between the two Koreas, the ceasefire wouldn’t have lasted this long [and we would’ve achieved peace],” said Soonyoung.

“But back then, the conflict between the ‘free world’ and the newly born communist world was intensifying,” he added. 

“We are very unfortunate that we cannot solely make decisions of our own since a lot of stakeholders are involved in this.”

But according to Lee Seong-hyon, an expert on reunification at the Sejong Institute, a formal declaration ending the war in the Vietnam summit would be “a kind of peace treaty” that would be nothing more than a “symbolic” move.

“North Korea and the US are both making tactical moves without trusting each other fully,” he said.

“Declaring an end to the war can save Trump’s and Kim’s faces, and South Korea will welcome it. It is a carrot chewed by all.”

Narushige Michishita, professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo, warned of the “considerable risks” an official end-of-war declaration – first proposed by South Korea’s Moon as a political statement towards achieving permanent peace in the future – would carry.

“South Korean government officials have emphasised that such a declaration would be more of a political matter with no legal implications, but there is no guarantee that North Korea and China would accept those terms,” said Michishita.

“Countries may propose declarations at the UN. In such an event, the Security Council resolutions adopted in 1950 would lose force. If that happens, the United Nations Command in South Korea would be disbanded, use of the UN flag would end, and the Status of Forces Agreement between Japan and the UN forces would become void.”

Pyongyang has long made a peace treaty a top priority in its denuclearisation negotiations with Washington, which, for its part, insists North Korea must first take more concrete steps towards giving up its nuclear arsenal. The US is also wary of potential additional demands for a withdrawal of its troops from the South, according to analysts.

In October, Moon expressed optimism that the US and North Korea would soon declare an end to their state of war, in a move that would be seen as a confidence-building measure ahead of official peace-treaty negotiations.

“If North Korea takes certain measures, the end-of-war declaration would be a political statement that would announce that the longstanding hostile relations between Pyongyang and Washington had ended,” he said in an interview.

But Soonyoung said he hoped Pyongyang would also worked towards establishing peace and a permanent end to the war – instead of just Seoul pushing the case forward.

“The current government [in Seoul] aims at maintenance of peace no matter what. It is trying its best to keep peace with North Korea, China and other countries. However, the problem is that North Korea never kept its promise in regard to diverse activities and decisions made for peace.

“People are thinking we are approaching real peace but we are worried about possibility of the current South Korean administration being fooled again, as it always has been. We just hope that we are not deceived again. Trust is what is important.”

‘Not much time left’

Last August, dozens of elderly North and South Koreans met for the first time since their families were broken apart by the war nearly 70 years ago.

The reunion, the first in almost three years, took place at Mount Kumgang, a scenic resort in North Korea following thawing of relations between the two Koreas.

Since 1988, more than 132,000 people have registered with the Red Cross in South Korea for the reunion programme.

Over half of them have since died. With the reunion event an irregular one and people being selected randomly, the lucky few do get to meet family one last time.

For the others, there is hope in the two countries – and other stakeholders – agreeing to end the war and the relations normalising, enabling those separated by the conflict to see their family members once last time.

“I signed up for a reunion 30 years ago but have yet to be picked for one,” said 80-year-old Nam Gyu-hyeong.

“For me, there isn’t much time left. Five of the nine people I fled North Korea with are dead already.”

Additional reporting by Heonjoon Lee and Sookyoung Lee

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California leads 16 states in lawsuit against Trump national emergency declaration


Donald Trump

The complaint alleges that President Donald Trump “has veered the country toward a constitutional crisis of his own making” despite Congress refusing to allocate the funds needed to start construction. | Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

national emergency

“It’s kind of awkward to say that on Presidents’ Day we’re going to be suing the president of the United States,” California’s attorney general says.

A coalition of 16 states filed suit to block President Donald Trump’s effort to fund his border wall by declaring a national emergency, calling it a “flagrant disregard of fundamental separation of powers principles.”

“Contrary to the will of Congress, the President has used the pretext of a manufactured ‘crisis’ of unlawful immigration to declare a national emergency and redirect federal dollars appropriated for drug interdiction, military construction, and law enforcement initiatives toward building a wall on the United States-Mexico border,” a complaint obtained by POLITICO and filed Monday in the U.S. District Court for Northern California read.

Story Continued Below

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra had been telegraphing for weeks that he was prepared to take swift legal action if Trump followed through on his repeated vows to invoke an immigration emergency to justify diverting wall funding.

“It’s kind of awkward to say that on Presidents’ Day we’re going to be suing the president of the United States, but sometimes that’s what you have to do,” Becerra said during a Monday appearance on CNN.

The complaint alleges that Trump “has veered the country toward a constitutional crisis of his own making” despite Congress refusing to allocate the funds needed to start construction. It cites his remarks in a Friday press conference that he “didn’t need to do this” as evidence his emergency declaration is without merit.

Just as Trump’s emergency declaration seemed designed to invigorate supporters to whom he promised a physical southern barrier, it seemed guaranteed to unify Democrats in opposition. Except for Maryland, all of the states that joined the lawsuit have Democratic governors.

The complaint repeatedly underscores the larger political context, arguing the president is indulging in a “vanity project“ — a favorite formulation of the wall’s opponents — and citing years of Trump’s tweets and public statements to highlight how he has been intent on the project dating back to at least August of 2014.

In addition to arguing that “there is no objective basis” for a national emergency given that unlawful entries to the U.S. have tumbled to a 45-year low, the lawsuit argues that states would suffer from losing millions of dollars to fund drug enforcement and forfeiting funds tabbed for military construction projects to the detriment of state economies.

The border states of California and New Mexico would also incur “irreparable environmental damage,” the suit argues. Becerra has already challenged the Trump administration’s move to expedite construction by waiving environmental laws, though courts have so far sided with the federal administration.

The lawsuit builds on California’s record of defying the Trump administration with dozens of lawsuits over the past few years. In addition to California, the other states that joined the lawsuit are Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon and Virginia.

“Declaring a National Emergency when one does not exist is immoral and illegal,” New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement. “Diverting necessary funds from real emergencies, crime-fighting activities, and military construction projects usurps Congressional power and will hurt Americans across the country. We will not stand for this abuse of power and will fight using every tool at our disposal.”

New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal echoed his fellow attorneys general in saying Trump’s action was ill-considered and unconstitutional.

“The real national emergency is a President who refuses to adhere to the rule of law,” Grewal said in a statement. “In its effort to cater to a select few on the right, this Administration is trampling on our Constitution and circumventing the will of Congress. As the chief law enforcement officer for New Jersey, I have a duty to stand up for New Jersey’s residents – including our immigrant community – and so I’m joining states across the country in challenging this emergency declaration in court.”

—Laura Nahmias in New York contributed to this report.

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Please enjoy the unnecessarily lit ‘Act My Age’ by One Direction meme

Image: Neil Mockford/film magic/getty images

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

One Direction may have disbanded three years ago, but their songs are still undeniable meme-worthy bops. 

You’ve probably stumbled across this bizarre meme in the past few days: A trio goes hard and dances in perfect sync to what sounds like the beginning of a sea shanty. 

That tune is a One Direction deep cut — in the 2014 song “Act My Age,” the five lads croon about how their romantic interests will keep them young at heart forever. But before they break into singing about being “fat and old,” the song opens with a jaunty melody. 

SEE ALSO: Twitter turned this massive fried rice prank into a pretty great meme — All the Memes

If a boy band moonlighted as a crew of pirates on the high seas, this would be their anthem:

In November 2017, Twitter user and Directioner @hozierlesbian included it in their thread of One Direction-related Vines. 

Twitter user @ccrstrna brought it back last week with a Titanic reference. 

From there, the meme blew up. 

her, la la land and call me by your name coming together when i’m feeling depressed to see which movie i’m going to rewatch to make myself feel worse pic.twitter.com/LO59L2Xnsd

— martín (@chlaamet) February 18, 2019

One Direction truly is the gift that keeps on giving.

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Creators on Instagram and other platforms made nearly $7 billion, study says

Creators in the U.S. are earning more than ever on internet platforms like Instagram, YouTube, and Tumblr — nearly $7 billion, according to a new study.

The sprawling 97-page report by the Re:Create Coalition analyzes how many people in the U.S. are creating online content, where in the country they’re located, and how much they are earning. According to the study, nearly 17 million Americans earned an estimated $6.8 billion across nine internet platforms in 2017.

The Re:Create Coalition, a group which advocates for fair use and balanced copyright law, conducted the research in order to update its previous findings from 2016 on what it calls “America’s New Creative Economy.” The most recent report found a nearly $1 billion increase in earnings and more than 2.4 million additional creators over the one-year period between studies. 

Instagram and Twitch both experienced the largest jump in total revenue earned by creators over the year with a 49.5 percent and 30 percent increase, respectively.

SEE ALSO: For every Facebook Watch success story, there are countless failures

Of the nine platforms analyzed in the study, Instagram is the top creator platform with 5.6 million Americans generating an income on the service. WordPress, Tumblr, and YouTube also have millions of U.S. users earning from each platform. 

Out of all the U.S. states, researchers found that California has the most people generating earnings online with more than 3.2 million creators, followed by New York with nearly 2 million creators, and Texas, with more than 1 million creators. However, even states with the smallest number of creators — such as Wyoming and North Dakota — saw a double digit percentage increase in creators between 2016 and 2017.

Of the nearly 17 million U.S. content creators earning online, less than 117,000 make more than $10,000 a year

The report estimates that of the nearly 17 million U.S. content creators earning online, less than 117,000 make more than $10,000 a year. While that number may sound low, Techdirt points out many of these platforms are enabling people to create income via avenues that didn’t exist years ago. 

Re:Create Coalition included an addendum explaining how its findings are conservative —it looked at just nine platforms, and only used data provided by the platforms and analysts. The study also only analyzed independent creators, leaving out, for example, mainstream Hollywood talent and music industry stars. 

Even without major platforms like Facebook, Twitter, Kickstarter, iTunes, Spotify, and Patreon, the study found a burgeoning creator industry made possible by the internet. 

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‘Trade and investment’ to top Saudi crown prince’s India visit

New Delhi, India – Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, looking to boost ties with Asian allies, arrives in India on Tuesday for a two-day visit amid rising expectations of further investment deals following a high-profile trip to Pakistan.

In New Delhi, Prince Mohammed will hold talks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is a recipient of Saudi Arabia‘s highest civilian honour, the King Abdulaziz Sash. 

“Trade and investment, defence and security, including counter-terrorism, and renewable energy” will be discussed during the crown prince’s meeting with Modi on Wednesday, India’s foreign ministry said.

The two sides are also expected to discuss Saudi oil giant Aramco’s investment in refineries in India, including the company’s stalled project to build a $44bn facility on the western coast of India.

On Monday, Devendra Fadnavis, chief minister of Maharashtra state, announced that the Indo-Saudi project would be moved to a new location following demonstrations by farmers protesting against land acquisition. 

Energy supplies 

India’s ties to Saudi Arabia have grown significantly over the past two decades. Home to more than 2.7 million Indian expatriates, the kingdom is India’s fourth largest trading partner, while bilateral trade is worth $28bn. 

Riyadh is also the top source of India’s energy supplies, supplying 20 percent of its crude.

“India, as a massive consumer of oil, and Saudi Arabia, as a major producer is an obvious synergy,” Manoj Joshi, at the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation think-tank, told Al Jazeera.

“Indian corporates, skilled personnel and managers are already playing a big role in Saudi Arabia. The Saudis in turn hope to play a role in India’s growth by becoming investors in the National Investment and Infrastructure Fund soon. Investment in non-oil sectors in India is also part of Saudi economic strategy,” he added.

In November, the powerful crown prince and heir to the throne announced he was on the verge of finalising an initial investment in India’s National Investment and Infrastructure Fund, a quasi-sovereign wealth fund, to help accelerate the building of ports, highways and other projects in India.

WATCH: Did Saudi crown prince deserve Pakistan’s highest civilian honour? (04:32)

Pakistan ties

Saudi Arabia has also long been a source of financial aid for India’s nuclear-armed rival, Pakistan.

Tensions between neighbours India and Pakistan have flared since last week in the aftermath of an attack that killed at least 42 Indian paramilitary police in Indian-administered Kashmir.

On Sunday, during Prince Mohammed’s visit in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia signed investment agreements with the South Asian nation worth $20bn.

“The texture of Saudi Arabia’s relationship with Pakistan is different,” Joshi said. “Islamabad looks up to Saudi Arabia as a co-religionist and indeed, leader of the Islamic world. The Indian relationship is based on a practical partnership of two sovereign states.” 

Prince Mohammed’s Asia trip includes a last stop in China, where he is expected to announce deepening cooperation on Beijing’s Belt and Road initiative, a modern-day revival of the ancient Silk Road.

#Saudi crown prince #BinSalman #MBS no welcome in #India

Protest of thousands of people against his Visit.

He is sponsor of #Wahhabi Terrorism@MEAIndia@HMOIndia @PMOIndia #IndiaRejectsMBS pic.twitter.com/hLjwLmVadY

— MSO OF INDIA (@msoofindia) February 18, 2019

The Saudi leader has been battling a major political crisis after the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul in October.

Joshi said the India trip would “help a little bit” in the attempts to refurbish the international image of the Saudi rulers.

Before his arrival in New Delhi, hundreds of people on Monday protested against the Saudi military onslaught in Yemen and Khashoggi’s killing.

“Saudi Arabia is guilty of war crimes in Yemen. Civilians and children have died because of the war criminal Mohammed bin Salman. The Indian government should not give him a red-carpet welcome,” Shujaat Ali Quadri, organiser of the protests in New Delhi and spokesman of All India Tanzeem Ulema e-Islam, told Al Jazeera. 

WATCH: Why is Saudi crown prince turning to the east for business? (12:05)

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Stone posts photo of federal judge with crosshairs in background


Roger Stone

“What some say are crosshairs are in fact the logo of the organization that originally posted it something called corruption central. They use the logo in many photos,” Roger Stone wrote. | Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images

Days after a federal judge gagged Roger Stone from talking about the special counsel’s Russia investigation around U.S. District Court in Washington, the Republican strategist and provocateur on Monday posted a photo of the judge with crosshairs in the background.

“Through legal trickery Deep State hitman Robert Mueller has guaranteed that my upcoming show trial is before Judge Amy Berman Jackson , an Obama appointed Judge who dismissed the Benghazi charges again Hillary Clinton and incarcerated Paul Manafort prior to his conviction for any crime. #fixisin. Help me fight for my life at @StoneDefenseFund.com,” Stone wrote in the Instagram post, which has since been deleted.

Story Continued Below

Stone, whom the special counsel has charged with lying to Congress and obstructing the Russia investigation, appeared to be reacting to Jackson’s order on Friday in which she said she’d take “no action” on his objection that the case should have been randomly assigned to a judge instead of being earmarked specifically to her.

Mueller’s team had deemed Stone’s case related to another in front of Jackson that involves 11 Russian military officials accused of hacking the Democratic Party’s computer systems to sabotage the 2016 election. The two cases share common search warrants and evidence, the special counsel’s office said in its initial court filings accompanying the Stone indictment.

The same day that Jackson gagged Stone and his lawyers, the special counsel’s prosecutors suggested in a filing that they might have discovered “Stone’s communications” with Wikileaks, which made stolen Democratic emails public before the 2016 election.

The photo illustration of Jackson appears to be taken from a conspiracy site that contains photos of judges and politicians with crosshairs in the background and the words “corruption central” alongside them.

Stone’s original Instagram post was later replaced with a similar photo and wording but without the crosshairs. The second post was deleted, as well. Stone told The Washington Post that the photograph was not posted by him but a “volunteer” who helps with social media.

“A photo of Judge Jackson posted on my Instagram has been misrepresented,” Stone wrote in a subsequent statement on Instagram. “This was a random photo taken from the internet. Any inference that this was meant to somehow threaten the Judge or disrespect court is categorically false.”

Stone posted again half an hour later on Instagram, further defending his original post.

“What some say are crosshairs are in fact the logo of the organization that originally posted it something called corruption central. They use the logo in many photos,” Stone wrote.

Reacting to the posts, Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) wrote on Twitter: “This image is stomach turning. The real Roger Stone — criminally threatening a federal judge. Another Trump associate demonstrates contempt for the rule of law & the desperate need for accountability.”

If a judge interprets the photo as a threat from Stone, he could land in custody, since threatening a federal judge constitutes a federal crime, according to several notable lawyers who commented on Twitter.

“This is both very troubling and remarkably stupid on Stone’s part,” tweeted Randall Eliason, a professor at George Washington University Law School. “Twitter has already suspended his account and this may land him in custody.”

Steve Vladeck, a professor from University of Texas School of Law, who linked to the statute, wrote on Twitter: “This. Is. Not. Okay.”

Darren Samuelsohn contributed to this report.

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‘Fake’: Thousands rally in US against Trump’s national emergency

Washington, DC – Thousands of people rallied nationwide on Monday to protest against the national emergency US President Donald Trump declared last week to help fund his long-promised wall across the US-Mexico border.

More than 250 rallies were organised across the United States on President’s Day, a US government holiday, with protesters carrying banners and placards that called the national emergency “fake”.

“I do think we have a national emergency in this country, this is an emergency to our democratic system,” Angelina Huynh, who joined the rally in Washington, DC, outside the White House with her two preschool children, told Al Jazeera.

As snow fell in Boston, Massachusetts, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley took to the stage to speak against Trump’s bid to bypass Congress and help free up $8bn in funds for his wall, which was one of his biggest 2016 campaign promises.

Protesters and civil rights organisations called on Congress to take action against Trump’s latest move.

“Thank you other cities & states filing lawsuits! No better way to spend Presidents’ Day than rallying to stop this crazy President [with] his fake emergency to build a wall!” tweeted Congresswoman Maxine Waters before a rally in Los Angeles, California. 

“Come for one, face us ALL!”

Immigrants, Muslim, Black and LGBTQ folks, and white allies standing united outside the White House and Trump’s #FakeNationalEmergency.

Our solidarity is #HeretoStay. pic.twitter.com/ulUZLHg4na

— Daniel Altschuler (@altochulo) February 18, 2019

Trump declared the national emergency after Democrats refused to cave to his demand of more than $5bn in funding for the wall. That demand led to the longest government shutdown of its kind late last year and into 2019. 

The shutdown ended in late January when Trump, his fellow Republicans and Democrats agreed to temporarily fund the government while talks on border security continued. 

Racing against the clock, Democratic and Republican negotiators came to an agreement last week to keep the government open. The deal did not include funds for Trump’s wall, but did include about $1.37bn in funding for physical barriers. 

Trump agreed to sign the legislation, but also announced he was declaring a national emergency over the border, drawing immediate challenges from Democrats and rights groups.   

The president maintains that a wall is needed to stem irregular immigration and the flow of illicit drugs into the country. But statistics show that irregular immigration has been on the decline for decades and most illegal drugs enter the US through official ports of entry. 

Angelina Huynh joins a rally in Washington, DC, against Trump’s national emergency deceleration with her two children on February 18, 2019. [Ola Salem/Al Jazeera]

‘How many people are angry?’

Activists and civil rights organisations were joined at rallies on Monday by those affected by Trump’s policies over the past two years since he took office, including those affected by the ban on travellers from several Muslim-majority countries, the crackdown on undocumented immigration and child separations at the border.

“I have a question, how many people are angry?” a speaker called out to hundreds of protesters at noon in Lafayette Park in the US capital. “How many people are sick and tired of being sick and tired?” the crowd was asked as they cheered in response.

Jo Hannah from Texas visited the border in 2017 and said she saw no emergency. Instead, she saw a plan that would devastate wildlife in the area and a plan that could tear down a wildlife centre in San Antonio.

“Around 10,000 monarch butterflies breed in this centre every year, and they are going to tear this centre for the wall,” she said to Al Jazeera from the Washington, DC rally. 

Check out all the people at the #PresidentsDayProtest against the #FakeTrumpEmergency and his racist agenda. Congress must act now! @MoveOn pic.twitter.com/U4850v7GBH

— Deborah Rosenman (@drosenman) February 18, 2019

Legal challenges

Since Trump’s announcement on Friday, several Democrats said they would challenge the declaration that will help Trump override Congress’ purse power.

Cheers erupted outside the White House as a member from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) told a crowd that the civil rights group was preparing to sue Trump for declaring a national emergency. 

So far, three Texas landowners and an environmental group have filed the first lawsuit challenging Trump, nonprofit watchdog group Public Citizen said.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra told local media that he plans to file a suit as well. In an interview, he said the suit was “definitely and imminently” coming.

New Mexico, Oregon, Minnesota, New Jersey, Hawaii and Connecticut are among several states joining the lawsuit, local media reported, quoting the attorney general’s office. 

Protesters outside the White House rally against Trump’s national emergency deceleration on February 18, 2019. [Ola Salem/Al Jazeera]

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This ‘Alien’ cake is the only good gender reveal

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

Congrats, it’s a parasitic alien! 

Gender reveal parties are exhaustingly overdone — from starting wildfires to nearly killing Grandpa, the heteronormative announcements can backfire beautifully. Twitter user @mskittenfish posted a video of a rare gender reveal done well. 

SEE ALSO: Watch a baby gender reveal party backfire spectacularly

But there’s a twist: The baby is neither a girl nor a boy. It’s a genderless otherworldly predator!

Instead of revealing pink or blue filling, this party was interrupted when a toothy alien burst out of the cake. 

Despite the screams of the party guests, other Twitter users found the reveal party downright lovely.

Well done. I think gender reveals are stupid and would never go to one but this one makes me reconsider.

— Jane Eyre (@Candyqtpie75) February 18, 2019

CongratuSKREEEEEEE

— Dan ‘I am that guy’ Entwistle #ScreamingFirehawks (@Garcian_Smith) February 17, 2019

The new standard for gender reveals.

All humans are monsters~ ❤

— destiny_scarlett (@dalewdredpanda) February 17, 2019

Let’s get rid of gross gender reveals and have alien reveals instead.

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Forgotten challenge to Mueller lingers at appeals court


Robert Mueller

A single judge expressing criticism of any aspect of Robert Mueller’s appointment or conduct is sure to be seized on by President Donald Trump and his allies as fresh evidence that Mueller’s installation as special counsel was illegitimate. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

A wait of more than three months for the first appeals court ruling on the legality of special counsel Robert Mueller’s appointment is fueling suspicion among court watchers that the decision might contain an unwelcome surprise for Mueller’s team.

Even the lawyer who brought the challenge doubts that the three-judge D.C. Circuit panel hearing the case will upend Mueller’s authority nearly two years into his investigation of alleged collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia. But just a single judge expressing criticism of any aspect of Mueller’s appointment or conduct is sure to be seized on by President Donald Trump and his allies as fresh evidence that Mueller’s installation as special counsel was illegitimate.

Story Continued Below

When a district court judge publicly questioned Mueller’s mandate and tactics last year, the president leapt at the opportunity to bolster his efforts to discredit the special counsel.

Whether Trump will get another chance to do that in the coming days or weeks because of the as-yet-unreleased D.C. Circuit ruling remains the subject of active debate in legal circles, but a judicial opinion raising doubts about Mueller could be particularly welcome in Trump’s camp as it braces for a potential release containing some of Mueller’s findings.

“On occasion when a case takes longer, it tends to show there are disparate opinions. That could mean there’s a dissent, but it might not be,” said Enrique Armijo, a law professor at Elon University in North Carolina and a former D.C. Circuit law clerk. “The fact that it’s taking a longer time, if I had to lay down money, I’d say there could be multiple opinions.”

The challenge the D.C. Circuit panel is wrestling with was brought by Andrew Miller, a former assistant to the longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone. Arguing that Mueller was illegally appointed, Miller fought a subpoena to appear before a grand jury in Washington. After losing in front of a district court judge, Kamenar took Miller’s case to the appeals court, which heard arguments in November.

“That it’s been over three months since the case was argued tells me that the assigned judge is writing a long and carefully crafted opinion in this important constitutional case, considering the District Court opinion was 92 pages long,” Miller’s attorney Paul Kamenar said.

At one point, it looked as if Mueller might be waiting for Miller’s testimony before charging Stone, who had said publicly since last May that he was bracing to be indicted. As the fight with Miller unfolded last year, however, no indictment of Stone emerged.

Stone was finally indicted last month, about 10 weeks after Miller’s appeal was argued.

A few days later, Kamenar turned up at the federal courthouse in Washington, chatting with journalists about the Mueller challenge he brought that has dropped from the headlines.

Stone’s indictment prompted Kamenar to ask prosecutors whether Miller’s testimony was still needed. He said they replied with a one-line email saying the grand jury still wanted to hear from his client.

Federal court rulings and Justice Department policy say grand juries should be used to investigate only potential future charges, not past ones. That prosecutors are still pressing for Miller’s testimony suggests further charges against Stone or one of his associates, Kamenar said.

Measured against a typical D.C. Circuit case, the pace of the Miller appeal is not particularly sluggish. The median wait for a decision in a case argued at the D.C. Circuit is 3.1 months, according to data released last year by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts.

However, the court typically treats grand jury cases with greater urgency than other disputes, since the lack of testimony or records from a particular witness can sometimes impair an ongoing investigation. And the court initially seemed intent on moving the Miller case along quickly.

An expedited briefing schedule was set just two days after the appeal was docketed last August. The Nov. 8 argument date also vaulted the case ahead of many others pending at the court.

“That seems to imply that they viewed the issue to have some urgency,” said Armijo, the Elon law professor.

In recent months, Miller’s challenge has been eclipsed by another, more mysterious grand jury fight involving the special counsel: a showdown with a foreign-government-owned company refusing to turn over information demanded by a jury working with Mueller’s prosecutors.

That dispute quickly sprinted past the Miller case, both in terms of timing and public attention after POLITICO first reported on the mystery battle last October.

The grand jury appeal involving Mueller and the foreign firm was argued in secret at the D.C. Circuit on Dec. 14, with an initial ruling from the three-judge panel emerging just four days later. A more detailed 23-page opinion and a five-page concurrence were released last month, less than four weeks after the case was argued.

The still-unidentified firm prolonged the battle by taking the issue to the Supreme Court, where Chief Justice John Roberts briefly issued a stay, which was dissolved when the full court declined to take action. The company’s request to add the case to the high court’s docket is still pending.

Kamenar said he saw a “stark contrast” between the D.C. Circuit’s rapid-fire handling of the firm’s case and the more drawn-out pace in his one. “I expect a decision any day now,” he added.

The legal issues involved in the foreign company’s fight are more narrow than those raised by Miller’s appeal, which challenges both the constitutionality of Mueller’s directing the investigation without Senate confirmation and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s power to name a special counsel.

Former prosecutors said they remained doubtful that Mueller would suffer an outright defeat in the Miller case, but they said the passage of time suggested some trouble for the special counsel.

“I suspect if they were going to cut Mueller off at the knees, as it were, they would’ve done so promptly,” said Barbara McQuade, a former U.S. attorney in Detroit.

The panel considering the challenge to Mueller’s appointment consists of two Democratic-appointed judges and one Republican appointee: Judith Rogers, who was appointed by President Bill Clinton; Sri Srinivasan, an appointee of President Barack Obama; and Karen LeCraft Henderson, who was appointed by President George H.W. Bush.

“I wonder if Judge Henderson is battling the others. Otherwise, I don’t get the delay,” McQuade said.

Clearly, Trump would embrace any judicial suggestion — even a dissent — suggesting that Mueller’s investigation was flawed from the outset.

“The Mueller investigation is totally conflicted, illegal and rigged!” the president wrote on Twitter on Sunday. “Should never have been allowed to begin, except for the Collusion and many crimes committed by the Democrats. Witch Hunt!”

Last May, a judge handling one of Mueller’s cases against Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chairman, publicly challenged Mueller’s tactics, saying the prosecution had nothing to do with Mueller’s mandate to investigate Russian interference in the 2016 presidential race. U.S. District Court Judge T.S. Ellis also questioned whether Mueller was asserting “unfettered power” to pursue any case he wished.

Trump was so thrilled at Ellis’ critique that he read a news account about it aloud at a speech in Texas to thousands of National Rifle Association members. “I’ve been saying that for a long time,” Trump said, praising the judge as “really something special.”

The following month, however, Ellis rejected Manafort’s legal arguments against the special counsel. The judge called aspects of Mueller’s approach “distasteful,” but said that it was common practice by prosecutors and no reason to dismiss the case against Manafort, who was later convicted by a jury on eight felony charges, including tax and bank fraud.

Despite speculation that Henderson might part with her colleagues, Armijo — who clerked for her — said it would be a mistake to predict a dissent from her solely based on her Republican ties.

“She’s not a terribly partisan person at all with respect to her decisions from the bench,” the professor said. “I have no doubt that if she’s writing separately she’s being very careful about what she would say.”

Darren Samuelsohn contributed to this report.

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Lakers News: Luke Walton Tells TMZ He and LeBron James ‘Get Along Just Fine’

Los Angeles Lakers' head coach Luke Walton, right, talks things over with LeBron James, left, during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Philadelphia 76ers, Sunday, Feb. 10, 2019, in Philadelphia. The 76ers won 143-120. (AP Photo/Chris Szagola)

Chris Szagola/Associated Press

According to Luke Walton, he and LeBron James “get along just fine.” 

The Los Angeles Lakers coach spoke to TMZ Sports, telling them there is no truth to any rumors he and James are at odds.

“I don’t know anything about that … LeBron and I get along just fine, Walton said.

Bill Plaschke of the Los Angeles Times reported James’ “associates” have not been happy with Walton’s coaching this season. The Lakers have stayed committed to Walton, who is expected to remain the team’s coach for the rest of the season. 

“Nothing is going to happen with Luke,” a source told Brodrick Turner of the Los Angeles Times. “There hasn’t even been any talk about it and there won’t be any talks about it. Luke will definitely finish the season and he has the full support. So any talk in the media or on social media can be put to bed about Luke. He’s not going anywhere. There has been no conversation about it.”

Walton is 89-132 in two-plus seasons with the Lakers and was hand-picked by owner Jeanie Buss. He previously coached under Steve Kerr with the Golden State Warriors, leading them to a 39-4 record during the 2015-16 season when Kerr took a leave of absence.

The Lakers are a disappointment at 28-29, albeit an understandable one. LeBron missed 18 games due to a groin injury, the longest absence of his career. The team has also been without Rajon Rondo and Lonzo Ball for extended stretches.

Add in the drama surrounding a potential Anthony Davis trade, and Walton’s been handed a near-impossible coaching job. The Lakers roster is a bunch of one-year guys who aren’t part of the long-term plans, young guys who are essentially viewed as trade fodder and LeBron, a living legend who understandably lives in his own ecosystem on the floor. 

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