Philippines vows to ‘crush’ attackers after fatal church bombings

President Rodrigo Duterte and his top security officials are scheduled to visit the southern Philippines where twin bomb blasts at a Roman Catholic cathedral during a church killed at least 20 people and wounded scores.

Sunday’s attack on Jolo island, in the country’s restive south, came six days after a referendum on expanded autonomy for the mainly Muslim region returned an overwhelming “yes” vote amid hopes the plan would bring development, jobs and peace to a region long plagued by poverty and instability.

The first blast went off inside the cathedral on Jolo island, in Sulu province, and was followed by a second expolosion outside the compound, which was detonated as security forces raced to the scene, officials said.

The initial bomb scattered the wooden pews inside the Cathedral of Our Lady of Mount Carmel and blasted window glass panels, witnesses said. The second hurled human remains and debris across a town square fronting the church.

Police said the blasts killed 15 civilians and five soldiers, revising an earlier death of 27. More than 110 were wounded. 

“The enemies of the state have boldly challenged the capability of the government to secure the safety of the citizenry in that region,” said Salvador Panelo, Duterte’s spokesman.

“The armed forces of the Philippines will rise to the challenge and crush these godless criminals.”

INSIDE STORY: Can there be peace in the southern Philippines? (24:35)

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group claimed responsibility for the attack via its Amaq website.

Police are investigating the claim but suspect it was the work of Abu Sayyaf, a domestic armed group that has pledged allegiance to ISIL and has carried out bombings, kidnappings and behadings in the strife-torn region of Mindanao.

“They want to show force and sow chaos,” national police chief Oscar Albayalde told DZMM radio, suggesting Abu Sayyaf was the prime suspect.

In a statement, the Philippine army said the explosions were likely caused by improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

Photos on social media showed debris and bodies lying on a busy street outside the cathedral, which has been hit by bombs in the past.

Troops in armoured carriers sealed off the main road leading to the church while vehicles were transporting the dead and wounded to the hospital.

Some casualties were evacuated by air to nearby Zamboanga city.

“I have directed our troops to heighten their alert level, secure all places of worships and public places at once, and initiate proactive security measures to thwart hostile plans,” Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said in a statement.

Pope Francis, the head of the Roman Catholic Church, expressed “the firmest reproach for this episode of violence”.

Yousef Al-Othaimeen, the head of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, the world’s largest body of Muslim-majority countries, also condemned the attack, expressing “deep indignation” over the bombings.

‘Offertory prayers disrupted by explosions’

Bishop Angelito Rendon Lampon served as a priest at the Cathedral for almost two decades, until his transfer to Cotabato, another city in Mindanao, last week. He said many of his former parishioners were shaken following the attack. 

“I know many of the victims because I worked there for 21 years. I am praying for the victims and their families,” Lampon told Al Jazeera. 

“We are condemning this attack. Those who are responsible have no respect even for the sanctity of the place,” he said, adding that the priest, who was officiating the mass at the time of the bombing, Fr. Ricky Bacolcol, “was still in shock and could not speak about what happened”.

Jolo has long been troubled by the presence of Abu Sayyaf, which has been blacklisted by the Philippines and the United Statesas a “terrorist organisation”.

The first bomb went off in or near the cathedral of Jolo, followed by a second blast outside the compound as government forces were responding to the attack [Philippine army/AFP]

The attack followed Friday’s announcement that the region, a mainly Muslim part of the predominantly Roman Catholic Philippines, had ratified the creation of an autonomous area called Bangsamoro, with 85 percent of voters behind it.

The Bangsamoro, meaning Moro nation, is is expected to replace the existing ARMM, which has been criticised as merely nominal, and failed to end the violent conflict that has left at least 120,000 people dead over the past five decades.

Although Sulu, including Jolo, was among only a few areas that rejected autonomy, it will still be part of the new entity when it is fully formed in 2022.

Rebels and the government in Manila hope a new, peaceful Bangsamoro will finally draw the investment needed to pull the region out of the brutal poverty that makes it a hotspot for violence.

Muslim rebels have long been battling for the independence or autonomy on Mindanao, which they regard as their ancestral homeland dating back to when Arab traders arrived there in the 13th century.

With additional reporting by Ted Regencia.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2RkPWjJ
via IFTTT

Watch Paul George Posterize Giannis on Vicious Dunk in Thunder’s Win vs. Bucks

  1. Four Years Ago, Klay Drops Record 37 Pts in One Quarter

  2. Remembering the Night Kobe Scored 81 Points

  3. Happy 37th Birthday Dwyane Wade

  4. Steph Is a Few Shots Away from NBA 3-Point History

  5. Can Harden Keep His Dominance Going?

  6. Steph Gifts Fan Who Asked for Girls UA Kicks with New Curry 6s

  7. Happy 34th Birthday to LeBron 👑

  8. 4 Years Ago, Kobe Passed Jordan on the NBA Scoring List

  9. Drummond and Embiid Reignite Rivalry

  10. Happy 24th Birthday to Giannis Antetokounmpo

  11. D-Rose Turned Back the Clock and Put Up 50

  12. Dubs Trolled Fergie So Hard It Became a Challenge

  13. CP3-Rondo Blowup Was a Long Time Coming

  14. NBA Let Players Know They Have to Cover Branded Tattoos

  15. The NBA Is Back and the Soccer World Is Pumped

  16. Boban Is Back to Break It Down for Another Season

  17. Players Battle Campers in Rivalry of the Summer

  18. Happy 30th to KD!

  19. Andrew Bynum Is Making an NBA Comeback

  20. Kobe’s Hottest Kicks 👟

Right Arrow Icon

Paul George had a message for his fellow All-Star Game starter during his Oklahoma City Thunder‘s 118-112 victory over Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Milwaukee Bucks on Sunday.

After the Bucks closed within four with less than two minutes remaining, George provided some breathing room with a monstrous dunk over Antetokounmpo. As if that weren’t enough, he hit the biggest shot of the game with 48 seconds left with a deep three-pointer to extend OKC’s lead from three to six after Milwaukee’s late run made it a one-possession game.

Oklahoma City was in control for the majority of the contest but needed George’s 36 points, 13 rebounds, three assists and three steals to hold off the visitors.

Two of those points were some of the most memorable of the entire season.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2UiJcVu
via IFTTT

‘Anthem’ gets off to a rocky start as EA’s ‘VIP’ weekend falls apart

Anthem looks like a promising step in a new direction for BioWare, the studio behind Dragon Age and Mass Effect. But it’s not there yet, clearly.

Publisher Electronic Arts picked the final weekend in January to serve as the timeframe for Anthem‘s “VIP Demo,” ahead of a Feb. 22 release. Unfortunately, it’s been a bit of a mess.

SEE ALSO: 10 video games we can’t wait for in 2019

Anthem is an online-focused game with “live” features that shift and evolve according to a schedule, not unlike recent favorites such as Destiny 2 or The Division. What that means is there’s a bunch of different moving parts, many of which are difficult to test inside the studio prior to release.

The stated reason for the release of a VIP Demo, as EA called it, was to let players “dive into the world of Anthem” a few weeks early. Progress made during the demo weekend won’t carry over; rather, the whole thing is designed to give players a taste of the various activities they’ll come across in the final release.

Of course, the demo weekend also served as a live test. Friday marked the first time the general public had any way to try the game, so everyone signing on at once (or trying to) gave BioWare a taste of what the Feb. 22 launch might feel like.

It hasn’t gone well. Players have faced excessively long load times; the inability to access certain unlocks or even progress in the demo; in many cases, people were barred from even starting up the game to begin with.

It got so bad that BioWare’s head of live service, Chad Robertson, wrote an extensive blog post on Saturday running through the demo’s various issues and detailing plans to get them fixed. There are three types of problems players are running into, according to the post.

1. Platform connections – this was caused by the spike in players entering the game when we opened up. Unfortunately, these issues did not present themselves during our internal testing. Investigations are ongoing, and we will continue to apply fixes throughout the weekend.

2. Entitlements – these are account flags that grant players things like their pre-order incentives and demo access. During the demo weekend, we identified a bug where VIP players with a specific combination of entitlements were being blocked from accessing the demo. We believe we’ve resolved most of these, but have additional cases we are addressing.

3. “Infinite loads” – this is occurring for some players, particularly when they transition from Fort Tarsis to an expedition. We saw this only in isolated cases during internal testing and believed it was resolved. Unfortunately, the problem is exacerbated in the real-world where differences with player’s ISPs and home networks introduce new behavior.

Fixing all of this is an ongoing process at BioWare, Robertson wrote. The data the studio was able to start gathering on Friday is going to be essential for making Anthem release-ready, from the sound of things. And for some players, that’s kind of what the problem is.

You see, the VIP Demo was framed as a buy-in bonus. To get a code, you had to either pre-order the full game or be a paying subscriber to one of EA’s “Access” services (EA Access on Xbox One, Origin Access on PC). 

It’s not unusual in this day and age for publishers to make offers like this. Commit to buying one game or another and you can play in that game’s pre-launch beta test. In cases when those tests are open to the public, a pre-order often gets you more time than the general public, as is the case with Anthem (there’s an “Open Demo” running from Feb. 1-3).

The problem, as many have pointed out, is EA’s decision to call the “VIP” access period a demo. That word creates false expectations, some say. Pre-order players went into the weekend planning to sample a working version of the game, and so they were deeply disappointed when that wasn’t universally the case.

Yeah, the issue here isn’t that the server issues happened, the issue was in framing the closed beta as a VIP demo included as a pre-order bonus. https://t.co/rVcoqT35k3

— Kirk McKeand (@MckKirk) January 27, 2019

It’s not an uncommon problem for EA, or even the games industry. While the situation has improved somewhat in recent years, publishers are generally averse to transparency when they don’t have to be transparent. 

Games take a long time and a lot of money to make, which means every single official utterance carries risk. Moreso than in many other entertainment fields, game publishers work hard to control public perception through calculated messaging. 

Unfortunately, that means when things go wrong you get a situation like this: the publisher and/or developer facing a massive backlash because they and their customers had different ideas about what was happening.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2S83MdY
via IFTTT

Unnamed Warriors Player: Gordon Hayward Is ‘Liability on Both Ends of the Court’

BROOKLYN, NY - JANUARY 14:  Gordon Hayward #20 of the Boston Celtics looks on against the Brooklyn Nets on January 14, 2019 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images)

Nathaniel S. Butler/Getty Images

After recovering from a fractured ankle, Gordon Hayward hasn’t been the same player he was with the Utah Jazz, and one unnamed member of the Golden State Warriors went so far as to call the Boston Celtics star a “liability.”

In a video for CLNS Media Network’s Garden Report, Jeff Goodman of Stadium relayed what he had heard from one Warriors player (h/t SB Nation’s Celtics Blog): “I talked to a Warriors player who told me, ‘Listen, Gordon Hayward is not Gordon Hayward right now. He’s hurting them. He’s a liability on both ends of the court.’”

Hayward was an All-Star in 2016-17, which proved to be his final year with the Jazz. He averaged 21.9 points, 5.4 rebounds and 3.5 assists and shot 39.8 percent from three-point range.

Paul George gave some Celtics fans hope that Hayward would immediately continue playing at that level once he was fully healthy. George fractured his leg in August 2014, which kept him out for all but six games during the 2014-15 season. The following year, he was an All-Star for the Indiana Pacers.

Hayward, on the other hand, has struggled mightily in 2018-19. He’s averaging 10.8 points, 4.6 rebounds and 3.4 assists and shooting 31.7 percent from the perimeter.

Describing Hayward as a “liability” is harsh but fair. According to NBA.com, the Celtics have a 3.4 net rating with him on the court. Boston’s net rating improves to 10.0 when he’s on the bench.

Hayward’s lackluster performance carries consequences that extend beyond this season as well.

When they signed him to a four-year, $127.8 million deal, the Celtics viewed him as a foundational piece of their future. A month after landing Hayward, Boston also acquired Kyrie Irving, putting the team one player short of assembling a coveted Big Three.

Now, the Celtics may have to reset expectations with regard to Hayward and their overall ceiling.

Even if Boston reached the point where it wanted to try to trade Hayward and create some financial flexibility, his contract would be a major roadblock.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2HB6EMp
via IFTTT

Harris kicks off campaign by laying into Trump


Sen. Kamala Harris

Sen. Kamala Harris wrapped her campaign opener around two broad themes: truth and civility. | Tony Avelar/AP Photo

2020 Elections

The California senator tells an Oakland crowd: ‘I will lead with integrity and I will speak the truth.’

OAKLAND, Calif. — Sen. Kamala Harris, formally launching her presidential campaign against Donald Trump with a call to end the politics of division, cast herself on Sunday as a voice for progressive causes and a fighter who could stand up to the president — specifically by countering his many falsehoods with the truth.

Speaking at a raucous hometown rally here — where more than 20,000 supporters crowded around a downtown plaza and hundreds more spilled into the streets — Harris declared that American democracy was under attack like “never before.” Set against the flags of all 50 states, but delivered in a deeply divided America, the address invoked the trauma of the Watergate era of high cynicism and low confidence in Washington’s leaders.

Story Continued Below

The California Democrat portrayed her candidacy as the antidote to a growing unease with the country’s direction today, and to concerns that core values that should define the presidency are disintegrating under Trump. She wrapped her campaign opener around two broad themes: truth and civility.

“As we embark on this campaign, I will tell you this: I am not perfect. Lord knows I am not perfect,” Harris said. “But I will always speak with decency and moral clarity and treat all people with dignity and respect. I will lead with integrity and I will speak the truth.”

With the stately backdrop of Oakland City Hall, where a preacher bellowed, a gospel choir sang and “artists of the black diaspora” performed, Harris’ dual message underscored her candidacy as one of both a Democratic uniter and a principled leader tough enough to stand up to the Trump White House, whose administration she said was failing the public.

Without ever mentioning his name, Harris repeatedly cast herself as the direct contrast to the president on a wide range of issues — from women’s and immigrants’ rights, to cybersecurity and American security abroad. Harris called out the Trump administration for what she called “bullying and attacking a free press” and putting “children in cages crying for their mothers and fathers.”

“Don’t you dare call that border security,” Harris said of the practice of separating migrant families at the border. “That’s a human rights abuse. And that’s not our America.”

“America,” she said, “we are better than this.”

Throughout the address, she turned her broader attention to this moment in time, which she called an “inflection point in the history of our nation.” Democratic values are under attack around the world, authoritarianism is on the march, nuclear proliferation is on the rise, and “we have foreign powers infecting the White House like malware,” Harris said.

Harris’ campaign designed the speech as a venue to tie her message to her biography as the daughter of a Jamaican-born father and Indian-born mother. But aides also saw it as a way for the senator to put down stakes on several progressive issues, from Medicare for all, to a $500-a-month tax break for the middle class paid for by rolling back the Republican tax overhaul, to guaranteed universal pre-kindergarten and debt-free college.

The Sunday setting allowed the speech to be carried live on CNN, MSNBC and Fox News. Harris’ campaign slogan — “For the People,” a nod to her background as a prosecutor — was repeated on hundreds of T-shirts, hats and bathing suits in the California crowd, and voters were invited to text the word “Fearless” to her campaign to indicate their support.

Harris said she’d spent her professional life working on behalf of victims. “My whole life, I’ve only had one client: the people,” she said.

Still, in a city famous for sometimes radical progressive politics, the backdrop of Oakland came with risks that Harris, who as state attorney general served as California’s “top cop,” would be met by protests from the far left.

Buffy Wicks, the East Bay assemblywoman who was an architect of the Barack Obama presidential campaign’s grassroots organization, acknowledged that Harris’ law enforcement background could be problematic with some liberals angered about police brutality and the slow progress of criminal-justice reform. But Wicks said Harris also had the “progressive values” that remain her bona fides. “She’s made some tough calls, but she’s is driven by her heart,” Wicks said.

The rollout underscored Harris’ unusual position as a candidate who appears to fit the needs — and the image — of voters with a wide range of interests and political philosophies.

Some in the crowd, like Natalie Walker of East Palo Alto, president of the Rho Delta Omega chapter of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, said that Harris represented “diversity, equal access,” and pointed to the historic candidacy of someone who was only the second African-American woman to be elected to the U.S. Senate.

As a daughter of Oakland, Harris said she was raised to believe that public service is a noble cause, and that the fight for justice is everyone’s responsibility. Invoking an iconic Bob Marley tune, a nod to her own heritage, Harris drew cheers when she summed up her philosophy: “You’ve got to get up and stand up and don’t give up the fight.”

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2SgzfL6
via IFTTT

17 must-read books for activists

Image: MASHABLE COMPOSITE: HarperCollins Publishers / Beacon Press / AK Press

2018%252f10%252f10%252f8b%252funnamed6.aa10f.jpg%252f90x90By Victoria Rodriguez

Reading is one of the best solutions to a rainy day, cancelled plans, and maybe even the state of our world. Whether you’re an activist or just want to take a deep dive into an issue you’re passionate about — immigration, racial justice, gun control —a book is a great tool. 

The catalog of books coming out in 2019 is jam-packed with powerful writers and activists who are encouraging conversations in the hopes of creating a more inclusive, just society. Some, like Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai and Valerie Jarrett’s memoir, Finding My Voice, draw from direct experiences — at refugee camps, the White House, and other places around the world. 

In the below books, you’ll hear from women’s rights trailblazer Gloria Steinem, founder of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America Shannon Watts, former editor-in-chief of Teen Vogue Elaine Welteroth, who helped prove teenage girls in this country care about both fashion and politics. 

SEE ALSO: 13 activists who gave us hope in 2018

Some books provide an escape from the never-ending news cycle while others rejuvenate your desire to protest on the streets, call your representatives, vote in upcoming elections, and continue the work of 2018. 

Whether you’re interested in learning more about the LGBTQ movement, introducing a young reader to the power of community protests, or finding a YA book that features a Muslim American protagonist, consider adding these books to your TBR pile: 

Malala Yousafzai shares stories from refugee girls around the world.

Image: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

In her second book, We Are Displaced, education activist Malala Yousafzai begins with her experience of being internally displaced and eventually relocating to England — far from her home in Pakistan. The book also features stories from refugee girls from around the world who, despite their devastating circumstances, demonstrate resilience and hope. 

Explore how memes are changing social protest.

Image: Beacon Press

Memes are known to magnify and poke fun at pop culture moments, but technologist, writer, and artist An Xiao Mina makes the case that they play a role in today’s politics, as well. While activists in China use them to evade censorship, certain governments and hate groups utilize memes to spread propaganda, according to Mina. Meme culture is engraved in our feeds and conversations, but this book takes a deeper look at the power pictures and hashtags can have. 

Read unpublished interviews with James Baldwin, Martin Luther King Jr., Stokely Carmichael, and others.

Image: The New Press

This book is a collection of interviews between American poet and novelist Robert Penn Warren and various civil rights leaders, including James Baldwin, Martin Luther King Jr., Stokely Carmichael, Ralph Waldo Ellison, and Roy Wilkins. Although excerpts of those conversations have previously been published in Penn Warren’s Who Speaks for the Negro?, this is the first time they will be released in their full, original form.

This picture book will empower young black girls to put their hands up.

Image: Penguin Young Readers Group

Follow the story of a young black girl who raises her hands on a regular basis — to play peek-a-boo and get dressed. When she gets older, the daily action takes on a more powerful meaning when she stands in solidarity with her friends and community at a protest. Parents and children, especially black children, will feel empowered and inspired to make a difference after reading McDaniel’s debut picture book. 

Feminista Jones explores how black feminists are using social media to build communities and platforms.

Image: Beacon Press

In Reclaiming Our Space, social worker and activist Feminista Jones explores how black feminists are using social media to build movements, communities, and platforms to discuss feminism. To better understand the power and innovative nature of hashtags and movements like #BlackLivesMatter, #BlackGirlMagic, and #SayHerName, you’ll want to read Jones’ latest work. 

This book is a great introduction to pleasure activism.

Image: AK Press

Engaging with politics and social justice issues, whether it’s climate change, race, or gender, can feel like work (and it is). Adrienne maree brown makes the case that you can feel good while doing so, hence the term, “pleasure activism.” In addition to brown, you’ll read published essays by feminists Audre Lorde and Joan Morgan, as well as an interview with Cara Page, the former executive director of the Audre Lorde Project. They and other contributors will challenge you to rethink your approach to changing the world. 

Get inspired to help end mass incarceration.

Image: The New Press

Danielle Sered is the executive director of Common Justice, a restorative justice program of the Vera Institute of Justice. In her book, Until We Reckon, she offers ideas on how to help end the mass incarceration of Americans who’ve committed violent offenses. It’s a must-read for people advocating to reform the criminal justice system. 

<img alt="Internment is perfect for fans of The Handmaid's Tale and The Hate U Give." data-credit-name="Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
” data-credit-provider=”custom type” src=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F916004%252Fbdfe7f1b-6e75-4fd6-903b-72b02572a989.jpg%252Ffit-in__1200x9600.jpg?signature=c5qXOOKC41hSK4xkmZL0wntYaU8=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com”&gt;

Image: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

Brought to you by the bestselling author of Love, Hate, & Other Filters, this book follows Layla Amin, a Muslim-American who leads a revolution when she and her family are forced into an internment camp in the U.S. Set in the very near future, this book will inspire readers to fight against Islamophobic rhetoric and politics, ensuring this scenario remains a work of fiction.

<img alt="This book helps explain the unconscious bias that influences our everyday lives and actions." data-credit-name="Penguin Publishing Group
” data-credit-provider=”custom type” src=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F916251%252Fc0ab6d1c-d615-4701-9ce3-c5d75dfd53c7.jpg%252Ffit-in__1200x9600.jpg?signature=m3kjGCyo2ck7ZGvADLM7XNm2_MQ=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com”&gt;

Image: Penguin Publishing Group

You may want to treat everyone with respect and dignity, and maybe you’ve even made efforts to promote equality, but unconscious racial bias can still influence your perception and behavior, which manifests in classrooms, streets, and prisons. In her book Biased, Jennifer Eberhardt, a professor of psychology at Stanford, offers suggestions to organizations and individuals on how to address unconscious bias. 

<img alt="Get inspired by Valerie Jarrett, the senior advisor to President Barack Obama." data-credit-name="Penguin Publishing Group
” data-credit-provider=”custom type” src=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F916262%252Fb82e997b-80fb-4a7a-baf6-d6d888136c9f.jpg%252Ffit-in__1200x9600.jpg?signature=_aZhQT_THbRfi3oMvcUcVmPWD0A=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com”&gt;

Image: Penguin Publishing Group

Valerie Jarrett’s life was forever changed when she interviewed Michelle Obama (then Robinson) for a city government job. She just didn’t know it yet. Jarrett’s memoir, Finding My Voice, follows her journey to becoming a senior advisor to President Barack Obama, as well as an advocate for gender equality, civil rights, criminal justice reform, and working families. 

Learn how indigenous people have fought for environmental justice.

Image: Beacon press 

History books have glossed over indigenous people, especially when it comes to their fight for environmental justice. In As Long As Grass Grows, you’ll learn about it all, including treaty violations and efforts to protect sacred sites. Dina Gilio-Whitaker is a scholar, educator, journalist, and Colville Confederated Tribes descendant. 

Gun control activists will want to read this.

Image: The New Press

In conversations about how to end gun violence, we’ve heard a variety of approaches, such as background checks and bans on assault-style military weapons. Igor Volsky, the co-founder and director of Guns Down America, suggests building a future with fewer guns altogether with federal and state buybacks.  He also proposes a licensing and registration initiative and stricter regulations. Actress and activist Alyssa Milano endorsed the book, writing “Anyone who wants to build safe American communities must read this book.” 

<img alt="Read this in time for the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall rising." data-credit-name="Penguin Publishing Group
” data-credit-provider=”custom type” src=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F916226%252F194d295e-79a5-43bd-b7d7-e5a6f31f631f.jpg%252Ffit-in__1200x9600.jpg?signature=_8As8ASGBqphhifKofaSxSj2nMU=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com”&gt;

Image: Penguin Publishing Group

Ahead of the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall uprising (June 28, 2019), you’ll want to read this anthology. It includes first-hand accounts, diaries, periodic literature, and articles from LGBTQ magazines and newspapers from that time period, all pulled from the New York Public Library’s archives. 

This book honors more than 50 LGBTQ pioneers and activists.

Image: HarperCollins Publishers

For a look at LGBTQ history — from the 1960s to now — turn to Mason Funk’s The Book of Pride, which honors more than 50 LGBTQ activists and revolutionaries, including Evan Wolfson (the founder and president of Freedom to Marry, the campaign that won the right to same-sex marriage) and Charles Silverstein (a licensed psychologist who got the American Psychiatric Association to remove homosexuality as a mental illness). 

<img alt="Hear from Shannon Watts, the founder of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America." data-credit-name="HarperCollins Publishers
” data-credit-provider=”custom type” src=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F916268%252F9065993d-c757-4c17-8e07-051285011a67.jpg%252Ffit-in__1200x9600.jpg?signature=F9VU-j1jKLlxo5GDOGVizGELK7Y=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com”&gt;

Image: HarperCollins Publishers

Shannon Watts is well-known for being the founder of the national advocacy group Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America. In her book, she offers a closer look at what inspired her to start the movement and why women have innate power to become engaged and effective activists in their communities. 

<img alt="Official cover to come, according to publisher." data-caption="Official cover to come, according to publisher." data-credit-name="Penguin Publishing Group
” data-credit-provider=”custom type” src=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F917338%252Fffbc3904-d487-464a-b96c-dcdcf6fe3d99.jpg%252Ffit-in__1200x9600.jpg?signature=bMStCBQdCc3ScXxHvfHcquM21iM=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com&#8221; title=”Official cover to come, according to publisher.”>

Official cover to come, according to publisher.

Image: Penguin Publishing Group

Fans of Teen Vogue and its former editor-in-chief, Elaine Welteroth will be thrilled to get a first-hand account of how the award-winning journalist broke boundaries in the industry, as well as the struggles and lessons she learned along the way. She was the first African American beauty and health director at Condé Nast and then became the youngest editor-in-chief in 2017. In that role, she integrated social justice issues into the magazine’s coverage, validating and empowering teenagers who care about fashion and politics. 

Ibram X. Kendi’s memoir explores how we can all help to build an antiracist society.

Image: Random House Publishing Group

Ibram X. Kendi’s memoir not only challenges readers to think about what constitutes an anti-racist society but also empowers them to think of ways to make one a reality. In telling his own story, Kendi includes history, philosophy, and even imaginative fiction. Kendi is a National Book Award winner, professor, and columnist. 

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2ThBxXw
via IFTTT

Samsung ditches plastic packaging for ‘sustainable materials’

Look out for new packaging materials on Samsung phones, TVs, tablets, and more.
Look out for new packaging materials on Samsung phones, TVs, tablets, and more.

Image: Igor Golovniov/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

2016%252f10%252f18%252f6f%252f2016101865slbw.6b8ca.6b5d9.jpg%252f90x90By Sasha Lekach

Your next Samsung phone could come in recycled and bio-based paper and plastic wrapping.

The company’s electronics division announced its new sustainability policy Sunday and it involves changing product packaging for its phones, tablets, and wearables.

SEE ALSO: Apple says the iPhone will be very useful after the climate apocalypse

Now, instead of plastic, pulp molds will form holder trays. Accessories will be wrapped in eco-friendly materials. Samsung phone chargers will even change from a glossy finish to matte so that the company doesn’t need to use a plastic protection film. The little things add up.

Appliances like TVs, fridges, washing machines, and other kitchen products will no longer come in standard plastic bags, but bags made of recycled plastic and bioplastics, which are made from biomass materials like vegetable fats, corn starch, or sugar cane. 

Say goodbye to all that plastic.

Say goodbye to all that plastic.

Image: samsung

Samsung’s new paper strategy means using environmentally friendly materials for its packaging and manuals. The packaging changes are supposed to start by the second half of 2019. New paper sourcing will be in place by 2020. 

Apple also has taken a hard look at its packaging waste. In 2017, the iPhone maker laid out plans for its paper and plastic sourcing. It started re-examining its packaging materials in 2015. Even back in 2012, its iPod packaging was biodegradable, so Apple’s been thinking for years about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch — essentially a growing island of plastic waste in the Pacific.

And this doesn’t even get into e-waste

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2B7swcB
via IFTTT

Patrick Mahomes Named Offensive MVP as AFC Dominates NFC at 2019 Pro Bowl

AFC quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15), of the Kansas City Chiefs, throws a pass against the NFC during the first half of the NFL Pro Bowl football game Sunday, Jan. 27, 2019, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Mark LoMoglio)

Mark LoMoglio/Associated Press

On a rainy Sunday afternoon in Orlando, Florida, the AFC defeated the NFC in the Pro Bowl, 26-7. 

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes opened the game for the AFC at quarterback and set the tone, throwing for 156 yards and a touchdown, while Indianapolis Colts tight end Eric Ebron and Jacksonville Jaguars cornerback Jalen Ramsey each notched touchdown receptions and Kansas City Chiefs fullback Anthony Sherman scored on a one-yard run. 

Atlanta Falcons tight end Austin Hooper had the lone touchdown for the NFC. 

Mahomes was named the offensive MVP, while New York Jets safety Jamal Adams was the defensive MVP.

Ralph Vacchiano @RVacchianoSNY

Jets S Jamal Adams is the Defensive MVP of the Pro Bowl. Seems fair, since he seemed to be the only one actually playing defense. He had two tackles, one sack and one interception.

Rich Cimini @RichCimini

Jamal Adams named defensive MVP in the AFC’s Pro Bowl win. He picked off a pass, made a sack and decked a mascot. #Jets

As usual, Mahomes alone was worth the price of admission:

Robert Mays @robertmays

Patrick Mahomes might be the only person who could get me to turn on a Pro Bowl.

Albert Breer @AlbertBreer

The power of Patrick Mahomes: The place in Atlanta I’m eating at has the volume up for the Pro Bowl, and a bunch of people loudly gasped at the no-look throw he just attempted. Again … in the Pro Bowl.

The NFC was done in by three interceptions and an inability to slow down the AFC’s passing attack (362 yards). Still, that the team could not top seven points in a game where tackling has basically been outlawed is a bit surprising.

That allowed for one of the most hallowed traditions during the Pro Bowl, however, which of course is making fun of the event and its participants or simply complaining about how it isn’t taken seriously enough:

Beyonce has an uncle named Larry Beyince. Bruh…. @DragonflyJonez

Preseason is trash. Pro Bowl is trash. Theres no possible way to make no stakes football interesting. Football’s entire allure revolves around the mythology of these gladiators putting their bodies on the line in their quest for glory.If thats removed,football just isnt appealing

Deion Sanders @DeionSanders

I’m sorry but this Pro Bowl has turned into a walk thru and it’s ridiculous. If u ain’t gonna compete what are u doing it for,the check? When did it become what it is now? Help me understand a team full of great players not wanting to see who’s the best! #Truth

Charles Robinson @CharlesRobinson

#Cowboys fans looking at Jerry Jones after Jason Garrett’s NFC Pro Bowl squad put up 148 yards of offense https://t.co/pJq2klAbHw

The Ringer @ringer

Jason Garrett just threw a challenge flag in the #ProBowl 🤔 https://t.co/AL0XRKO0Uv

And in perhaps the perfect reminder of just how little the Pro Bowl matters, Monday Night Football analyst and former player Jason Witten accidentally broke the trophy after the game:

Sports Illustrated @SInow

The ProBowl trophy broke 😭😭😭 https://t.co/4asBAqSWnK

While the AFC won the game, the NFC had fun with the exhibition.

Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott, for instance, played all over the field. He had a fourth-down conversion on a fake punt as an upback, taking a direct snap. He also got a few reps at linebacker and one play at quarterback.

NFL @NFL

Zeke behind center?!

@EzekielElliott hands off to @Saquon 👀

📺: #ProBowl on ESPN + ABC + Disney XD https://t.co/g9ypiGjB1L

New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara and New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley played on the defensive line for a few snaps, with Kamara hitting the arm of Deshaun Watson on one play in the second half and causing an incompletion.

NFL @NFL

.@A_kamara6 is BALLING at defensive end 😱😱😱

📺: #ProBowl on ESPN + ABC + Disney XD https://t.co/iICMjnAnea

And Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Evans played some defensive back, even registering an interception in the fourth quarter.

NFL @NFL

.@MikeEvans13_ grabs the interception!!!

And madness ensues 😂😂😂 @saquon

📺: #ProBowl on ESPN + ABC + Disney XD https://t.co/X7AiNO7Mze

The NFC’s shenanigans didn’t always work for the best, however.

Adams blew up a flea-flicker attempt, for one:

NFL @NFL

NFC goes for the flea flicker but @TheAdamsEra says NOPE. 💪

📺: #ProBowl on ESPN + ABC + Disney XD https://t.co/e0CLfp82gB

And Minnesota Vikings wideout Adam Thielen threw an interception worthy of Duck Hunt, straight into the arms of Adams:

NFL @NFL

.@TheAdamsEra is all over the place.

He intercepts @Athielen19 on the double pass 😬

📺: #ProBowl on ESPN + ABC + Disney XD https://t.co/bHrZy3QPU4

Not to be outdone, the AFC gave Los Angeles Chargers edge-rusher Melvin Ingram a carry late in the fourth quarter, while Ramsey scored on a slant pattern in the red zone. By that point, the game was long over, the conclusion of a wet, sloppy and meaningless affair that was equal parts fun and utterly absurd.

If you’re watching the Pro Bowl for serious football, well, you’ll be highly disappointed. If you’re watching it to see running backs pose as defensive linemen or cornerbacks line up at wide receiver, though, you’ll probably enjoy yourself.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2sOSDAg
via IFTTT

Patrick Mahomes Named Offensive MVP as AFC Dominates NFC at 2019 Pro Bowl

AFC quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15), of the Kansas City Chiefs, throws a pass against the NFC during the first half of the NFL Pro Bowl football game Sunday, Jan. 27, 2019, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Mark LoMoglio)

Mark LoMoglio/Associated Press

On a rainy Sunday afternoon in Orlando, Florida, the AFC defeated the NFC in the Pro Bowl, 26-7. 

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes opened the game for the AFC at quarterback and set the tone, throwing for 156 yards and a touchdown, while Indianapolis Colts tight end Eric Ebron and Jacksonville Jaguars cornerback Jalen Ramsey each notched touchdown receptions and Kansas City Chiefs fullback Anthony Sherman scored on a one-yard run. 

Atlanta Falcons tight end Austin Hooper had the lone touchdown for the NFC. 

Mahomes was named the offensive MVP, while New York Jets safety Jamal Adams was the defensive MVP.

Ralph Vacchiano @RVacchianoSNY

Jets S Jamal Adams is the Defensive MVP of the Pro Bowl. Seems fair, since he seemed to be the only one actually playing defense. He had two tackles, one sack and one interception.

Rich Cimini @RichCimini

Jamal Adams named defensive MVP in the AFC’s Pro Bowl win. He picked off a pass, made a sack and decked a mascot. #Jets

As usual, Mahomes alone was worth the price of admission:

Robert Mays @robertmays

Patrick Mahomes might be the only person who could get me to turn on a Pro Bowl.

Albert Breer @AlbertBreer

The power of Patrick Mahomes: The place in Atlanta I’m eating at has the volume up for the Pro Bowl, and a bunch of people loudly gasped at the no-look throw he just attempted. Again … in the Pro Bowl.

The NFC was done in by three interceptions and an inability to slow down the AFC’s passing attack (362 yards). Still, that the team could not top seven points in a game where tackling has basically been outlawed is a bit surprising.

That allowed for one of the most hallowed traditions during the Pro Bowl, however, which of course is making fun of the event and its participants or simply complaining about how it isn’t taken seriously enough:

Beyonce has an uncle named Larry Beyince. Bruh…. @DragonflyJonez

Preseason is trash. Pro Bowl is trash. Theres no possible way to make no stakes football interesting. Football’s entire allure revolves around the mythology of these gladiators putting their bodies on the line in their quest for glory.If thats removed,football just isnt appealing

Deion Sanders @DeionSanders

I’m sorry but this Pro Bowl has turned into a walk thru and it’s ridiculous. If u ain’t gonna compete what are u doing it for,the check? When did it become what it is now? Help me understand a team full of great players not wanting to see who’s the best! #Truth

Charles Robinson @CharlesRobinson

#Cowboys fans looking at Jerry Jones after Jason Garrett’s NFC Pro Bowl squad put up 148 yards of offense https://t.co/pJq2klAbHw

The Ringer @ringer

Jason Garrett just threw a challenge flag in the #ProBowl 🤔 https://t.co/AL0XRKO0Uv

And in perhaps the perfect reminder of just how little the Pro Bowl matters, Monday Night Football analyst and former player Jason Witten accidentally broke the trophy after the game:

Sports Illustrated @SInow

The ProBowl trophy broke 😭😭😭 https://t.co/4asBAqSWnK

While the AFC won the game, the NFC had fun with the exhibition.

Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott, for instance, played all over the field. He had a fourth-down conversion on a fake punt as an upback, taking a direct snap. He also got a few reps at linebacker and one play at quarterback.

NFL @NFL

Zeke behind center?!

@EzekielElliott hands off to @Saquon 👀

📺: #ProBowl on ESPN + ABC + Disney XD https://t.co/g9ypiGjB1L

New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara and New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley played on the defensive line for a few snaps, with Kamara hitting the arm of Deshaun Watson on one play in the second half and causing an incompletion.

NFL @NFL

.@A_kamara6 is BALLING at defensive end 😱😱😱

📺: #ProBowl on ESPN + ABC + Disney XD https://t.co/iICMjnAnea

And Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Evans played some defensive back, even registering an interception in the fourth quarter.

NFL @NFL

.@MikeEvans13_ grabs the interception!!!

And madness ensues 😂😂😂 @saquon

📺: #ProBowl on ESPN + ABC + Disney XD https://t.co/X7AiNO7Mze

The NFC’s shenanigans didn’t always work for the best, however.

Adams blew up a flea-flicker attempt, for one:

NFL @NFL

NFC goes for the flea flicker but @TheAdamsEra says NOPE. 💪

📺: #ProBowl on ESPN + ABC + Disney XD https://t.co/e0CLfp82gB

And Minnesota Vikings wideout Adam Thielen threw an interception worthy of Duck Hunt, straight into the arms of Adams:

NFL @NFL

.@TheAdamsEra is all over the place.

He intercepts @Athielen19 on the double pass 😬

📺: #ProBowl on ESPN + ABC + Disney XD https://t.co/bHrZy3QPU4

Not to be outdone, the AFC gave Los Angeles Chargers edge-rusher Melvin Ingram a carry late in the fourth quarter, while Ramsey scored on a slant pattern in the red zone. By that point, the game was long over, the conclusion of a wet, sloppy and meaningless affair that was equal parts fun and utterly absurd.

If you’re watching the Pro Bowl for serious football, well, you’ll be highly disappointed. If you’re watching it to see running backs pose as defensive linemen or cornerbacks line up at wide receiver, though, you’ll probably enjoy yourself.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2sOSDAg
via IFTTT

We can expect a coal-free Germany by 2038

A coal site in Germany will be shut down under a climate change proposal.
A coal site in Germany will be shut down under a climate change proposal.

Image: Bodo Marks/picture alliance via Getty Images

2016%252f10%252f18%252f6f%252f2016101865slbw.6b8ca.6b5d9.jpg%252f90x90By Sasha Lekach

It took hours, but Germany finally agreed on a plan to close its coal power plants and rely heavily on renewable energy sources.

The country will shut down 84 coal-based power plants — that’s all of them — by 2038 a government group decided on Saturday. The commission convened in Berlin to map out how to move away from coal. 

Fossil fuels still account for about 40 percent of Germany’s power, according to The Guardian, despite recent gains in renewable energy sources. The country also plans to move away from nuclear energy by 2022. Once it gets there, renewable energy will be the main source of power. 

The 2038 goal will cost $45 billion, according to the Los Angeles Times. The decision comes ahead of an energy report from the German coal commission to be released on Feb. 1.

Around the world Saturday, climate change activists held die-ins and other protests to spur government action like Germany’s plan.

A look at U.S. coal consumption shows we have a ways to go. In 2018 the U.S. consumed 691 million tons, down from a 2007 peak, but it’s still a heavy user. China is also consuming tons of coal numbering in the billions: 3.82 billion metric tons in 2017.

SEE ALSO: Guess what? U.S. carbon emissions popped back up in a big way

The UK is racing ahead with renewable sources now that coal provides only 5 percent of energy. 

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2CMP567
via IFTTT