The only good part of the winter are these capybaras in a yuzu bath

This is One Good Thing, a weekly column where we tell you about one of the few nice things that happened this week.


Baths are an extremely overrated form of self-care: they’re often too warm, incredibly filthy, and loaded with foul bacteria.

Meanwhile, baths for nature’s most underrated animal, the capybara, provide plenty of soothing both for the animal and for the sad human voyeur.

I’m a particular fan of this video of capybaras soaking in a yuzu bath which went viral this week, and for which we should all be grateful.

SEE ALSO: How to give kids good body image in the age of Snapchat

Every year for the winter solstice, zookeepers at multiple zoos across Japan soak capybaras in yuzu baths. The tradition started at Izu Shaboten Zoo in 1996 and has since taken off, though the practice has been used as a way to ward off illness for centuries.

It’s unclear how effective these baths are, but who cares? It’s cute AF and we all deserve something cute AF in our lives.

Yuzus are a citrusy fruit frequently used by the more highbrow contestants on the Great British Baking Show

Indulge your deepest anthropomorphic fantasies and look at how happy it makes them:

Enormous furry rats deserve self-care too. Thank you to the zookeepers who gave joy to these creatures as well as the voyeuristic humans who love them. 

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10 movies we can’t wait for in 2019

2018 was a whirlwind, but we still got some epic movies out of the madness. 

2019 promises the same, with pivotal sequels, live-action reboots, books adapted for the screen – and new, original movies that might just blow us away.

Here are the top 10 movies we’re looking forward to in 2019.

SEE ALSO: The 10 best films of 2018

1. Us – March 15

Starring Lupita Nyong’o and Winston Duke, Us is the story of a couple visiting a childhood home – but in true Peele fashion, it’s also a psychological thriller, a monster movie, and probably a welcome subversion of the horror genre.

Audiences didn’t know what to expect with Peele’s directorial debut Get Out blew away audiences and critics alike in 2017. This time around we consider ourselves prepared – if only for the collective gasps of our fellow theatergoers and to leave the experience feeling profoundly fucked up in the best way.

2. Avengers: Endgame – April 26

We don’t have any time to pretend we’re not shaking in our boots at the prospect of the fourth O.G. Avengers film. Thanos killed half of our friends and the rest are extremely traumatized and/or trapped in space! We gotta get rid of this guy and get our heroes back. Shoutout to Captain Marvel who will undoubtedly save the day and also has her own movie out just a few months earlier. 

3. Men in Black: International – June 14

Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson suit up as Men in Black agents in this prequel film about the organization that tracks aliens on Earth. Early behind-the-scenes looks (courtesy of social media) teased Thompson and Hemsworth falling into their established Ragnarok chemistry, and the trailer proves we’re in for another memorable romp with these two and some intergalactic enemies.

4. Toy Story 4 – June 21

The fourth Toy Story movie will arrive a decade after its predecessor, a film so emotionally pitch perfect that we’re still recovering from its achievement. The toys will return for this enigmatic film, joined by an adorable spork with enough self-awareness to realize that he’s the one thing that’s not like these others.

5. The Lion King – July 19

We’ve been sweating with anticipation for this movie ever since the casting went public, and that jaw-dropping teaser only stoked the flames. In the words of a famous lion cub, we just can’t wait.

6. It: Chapter II – Sept. 6

Andy Muschietti’s adaptation of the Stephen King horror novel was one of 2017’s unexpected hits, and though we’re terrified to journey back to Derry with adult Losers, we’re ready nonetheless. The cast is already out of Twitter’s dreams – including Bill Hader as Richie and Jessica Chastain as Beverly – with Bill Skarsgård reprising his role as voracious demon Pennywise. 

7. The Kitchen – Sept. 20

Image: mashable composite/shutterstock

Melissa McCarthy, Tiffany Haddish, and Elisabeth Moss team up as mob wives in the 1970s in this crime movie we somehow have to wait nine months for. The trio take over  the neighborhood after their husbands are taken into custody by the FBI.

8. Last Christmas – Nov. 15

Here’s the breakdown: Emilia Clarke. Henry Golding. Michelle Yeoh. Rom-com. Script by Emma Thompson, directed by Paul Feig. We’re in.

9. Star Wars Episode IX – Dec. 20

The final installment of the trilogy that began in 2015 draws to a close with (hopefully) answers about Rey, Finn, Poe, and Kylo Ren – with the fate of the Jedi and the First Order shaping the future of our favorite distant galaxy.

10. Always Be My Maybe – TBD

Comedian Ali Wong and 'Fresh Off the Boat' actor Randall Park will play the romantic leads of Netflix's 'Always Be My Maybe.'

Comedian Ali Wong and ‘Fresh Off the Boat’ actor Randall Park will play the romantic leads of Netflix’s ‘Always Be My Maybe.’

Image: mashable composite/shutterstock

This Ali Wong-penned romcom starring Wong and Randall Park stars the duo as childhood sweethearts who reconnect after 15 years apart. The cast includes Keanu Reeves, Daniel Dae Kim, Michelle Buteau, Deadpool‘s Karan Soni, and more. That’s literally all we know and enough for us to need it desperately.

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The events that shook Palestinian territories in 2018

Over the past year, Palestinians have experienced no respite from the Israeli occupation, let alone a breakthrough of ending it. Although no full-scale war broke out in 2018, as some had expected, it did bring a grim year of deadly violence, illegal settlement expansion and home demolitions.  

At least 289 Palestinians – men, women and children – were killed throughout 2018, while thousands of others were wounded, including many who were maimed for life by Israeli gunfire. According to the Defense for Children organisation, the death toll includes 56 Palestinian children – an average of more than one child every week.

At least 538 housing units and facilities were demolished in the occupied West Bank, resulting in 1,300 Palestinians losing their homes, a report by the Palestinian Liberation Organisation’s centre for studies and documentations said.

Meanwhile, the Israeli-Egyptian blockade on Gaza is still ongoing, which the United Nations has repeatedly warned is having a devastating effect on the strip’s two million population.

On an internal level, the national reconciliation talks between rival governments of Hamas and Fatah, who control the Gaza Strip and pockets of the West Bank respectively, have made precious little progress. The division in Palestinian politics continued for the 11th year running, as the main deadlock remains centered on allowing the Palestinian Authority full control over security forces in the Gaza Strip, including the military wing of Hamas.

A number of jarring decisions made by the United States, such as moving its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, finally convinced the Palestinian leadership of the US’ bias in the conflict. President Donald Trump has also declared an end to the funding of the main UN refugee agency for Palestinians, putting five million refugees in the occupied territories and neighbouring countries such as Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Egypt, at risk of not receiving food aid, education, vocational training, jobs and much more.

Here is a recap of the main events that shook the Palestinian territories in 2018:

Ahmad Jarar – February 6

The violence in 2018 began with a Palestinian shooting dead a Jewish settler on January 9 near the occupied West Bank city of Nablus. The shooter fled the scene, which prompted Israeli forces to go on a manhunt that lasted almost one month.

On February 6, Israeli soldiers assassinated Ahmad Jarrar. The 22-year-old was killed in a shootout from his hiding place in the village of Yamoun, some nine kilometres from his hometown of Jenin. His body was taken by Israel forces, who have a policy of seizing bodies – a practice condemned by international law.

The pursuit of Jarrar resulted in almost daily raids of various towns and villages in the West Bank. Three homes belonging to the Jarrar family were demolished, and two Palestinians – including Jarrar’s cousin Ahmad Ismail Jarrar – were killed in separate raids.

Residents reported that the Israeli forces used loudspeakers to call out, “Ahmad Jarrar, turn yourself in or we will demolish the village house by house.”

Gaza’s Great March of Return protests – March 30

On March 30, Palestinians from all backgrounds staged the first weekly Friday protest near the Israeli fence, east of the Gaza Strip. Demonstrators have been calling for the right of return for Palestinian refugees to their lands (under UN Resolution 194) and are demanding an end to the 12-year Israeli blockade.

Asad Abu Sharekh, spokesperson for the campaign, told Al Jazeera that the march is meant to send a message to the international community to actively support the right of Palestinians to return to their lands.

According to health officials in Gaza, to date Israeli forces have killed at least 220 Palestinians in the besieged coastal enclave and wounded more than 18,000 people.

“Great March of Return” demonstrations have continue in Gaza every Friday since March 30 

About 80 percent of the Gaza population is dependent on humanitarian assistance, while the strip experiences regular power outages and high unemployment. It has been dubbed as the world’s largest open-air prison, with Palestinians needing Israeli army permits to enter and exit the enclave.

US embassy move to Jerusalem – May 14

The Trump administration delivered on its promise to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, ignoring worldwide condemnation and protests from outraged Palestinians.

The ceremony was attended by Trump’s daughter Ivanka and her husband, Jared Kushner, who also serves as a senior adviser to Trump.

Senior White House Adviser Ivanka Trump and US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin opened the new US embassy during the dedication ceremony in Jerusalem on, May 14 [Ronen Zvulun/Reuters]

Many of Jerusalem’s Palestinian areas were shut down on the day, with an increased presence of Israeli police on the streets. The closures spread to occupied East Jerusalem, where access to the Old City was curtailed in areas leading to it such as al-Tur, Mount of Olives, Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan.

Yet Israel’s bloody response took place in the Gaza Strip during Palestinian protests near the fence, where 61 protesters were shot dead.

More than 2,400 others were also wounded as the Israeli army fired live ammunition, tear gas and firebombs at protesters assembled along several points near the fence with Israel.

70th anniversary of the Nakba – May 15

Palestinians commemorated 70 years since the Nakba, or “catastrophe”, which is defined as the removal of 750,000 of the population from historical Palestine in 1948. Paramilitary Zionist groups seized or destroyed some 500 Palestinian villages and towns in the process, and have barred the resultant refugees from returning ever since.

Protests took place in smaller Palestinian towns and villages, while the cities such as Ramallah and Bethlehem went on strike for the day, protesting against the killing of Palestinians in Gaza the day before.

Israel’s nation state law – July 19

The Israeli parliament, the Knesset, adopted the controversial legislation that defined Israel as “the historical homeland of the Jewish people and they have an exclusive right to national self-determination in it”.

The bill makes Hebrew the country’s national language and defines the establishment of Jewish communities as being in the national interest. It further marginalises the 1.8 million Palestinian citizens of Israel, who now have more than 65 Israeli laws that discriminate against them.

It also states that an undivided Jerusalem is the capital of Israel, and strips Arabic of its designation as an official language, downgrading it to a “special status”.

Ahed Tamimi freed from jail – July 29

Ahed Tamimi made international headlines when she was arrested in a pre-dawn raid on her home by Israeli forces in her village of Nabi Saleh, known for its weekly popular protests against the Israeli occupation.

The then 16-year-old was arrested by Israeli forces in December 2017 after a video went viral showing the teenager slapping two armed Israeli soldiers outside her home.

Palestinian teenager Ahed Tamimi gave a speech at the annual festival of Greek Communist Youth in Athens, Greece, on September 22 [Costas Baltas/Reuters]

At the time, the teen was reacting to news that her 15-year-old cousin Mohammed had been shot in the face by Israeli forces with a rubber-coated steel bullet earlier in the day, leaving him in critical condition.

Tamimi was sentenced to eight months in prison. Her arrest drew international condemnation and again put the spotlight on Israel’s treatment of Palestinians, especially Palestinian youth.

US UNRWA cuts – August 31

The US government, a major ally of Israel, announced it was stopping its funding to the UN Relief Works and Agency (UNRWA) after determining the organisation to be an “irredeemably flawed operation”.

UNRWA was established in 1949 after 700,000 Palestinians were forcibly displaced from their homes by Zionist paramilitaries in the run-up to the establishment of the state of Israel.

Palestinian children protested against the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees’ (UNWRA) decision to dismiss personnel in Gaza City on September 25 [Reuters]

It currently provides services to five million Palestinian refugees in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, as well as Jordan, Lebanon and Syria.

Demolition of Khan al-Ahmar village on hold – October 23

Khan al-Ahmar, located northeast of occupied East Jerusalem, has been under threat of demolition for several years.

But in September, the Israeli high court ruled that the Bedouin village, home to 180 people, will be demolished on October 1 under the pretext that it had been built without a permit.

However, three weeks later, the Israeli government announced it was putting the demolition on hold for a “short, fixed period of time”.

People staged demonstrations in support of the Al-Khan Al-Ahmar Bedouin hamlet, which is at the risk of demolition by Israeli authorities [AP]

The village’s location between two major Israeli settlements, Maale Adumim and Kfar Adumim, has been a thorn in the side of the Israeli government, which wants to expand the two in order to build a ring of settlements around East Jerusalem.

Khan al-Ahmar is in Area C of the occupied West Bank, which is under full Israeli control. In order to build anything, Palestinians living in the area need a permit rarely issued by Israeli authorities.

Netanyahu official visit to Oman – October 25

Marking what was the first visit by an Israeli leader to the sultanate in over two decades, Netanyahu’s office said the visit came at the invitation of Sultan Qaboos and followed “lengthy contacts between the two countries”.

His office added that it formed part of a policy of “deepening relations with the states of the region”.

Oman and Israel do not have diplomatic relations. The visit was expected to increase pressure on Palestine to participate in US-led peace negotiations.

Netanyahu visited Sultan Qaboos bin Said in Oman [Israel GPO/Handout via Reuters]

The last Israeli prime minister to visit Oman was Shimon Peres in 1996.

On October 29, Israeli Sports and Culture Minister Miri Regev’s official visit to the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in Abu Dhabi was seen by Palestinians as further proof that Arab countries were being swayed by Israel’s bid for normalisation.  

A day before, Regev was present when the Israeli anthem was played for the first time in the UAE after a Israeli athlete won the gold medal in the Judo Grand Competition in Abu Dhabi.

Israel’s botched undercover operation in Gaza Strip – November 11

An Israeli covert operations unit infiltrated the Gaza Strip and had their cover blown, resulting in the killing of seven Palestinians and one Israeli soldier.

Nour Baraka, a senior commander of the Qassam Brigades, was among those killed, as Israeli forces pounded the Khan Younis area with air raids to give the unit cover to escape back into Israel using a civilian car.

Hamas published photos of what it says are members of an Israeli covert operations unit that infiltrated the Gaza Strip on November 11

By November 13, seven more Palestinians were killed by Israeli air raids, which had targeted a number of residential and government-owned buildings such as the offices of the al-Aqsa television channel.

The latest round of fighting, which had raised fears of a fourth Israeli offensive on the strip since 2008, ended on the same day after Egypt brokered a ceasefire, leading Avigdor Lieberman, Israel’s defence minister, to resign in protest.

Ramallah lockdown – December 13

Following a night where Israel killed three Palestinians in separate raids in the occupied West Bank, an unknown Palestinian shooter killed two Israeli soldiers near the illegal settlement of Ofra before fleeing the scene.

This prompted the Israeli army to declare Ramallah a closed military zone, and carry out searches near areas of roads entering and exiting the city.

Israeli security forces and emergency personnel at the scene of a shooting attack near the Israeli settlement of Ofra in the occupied West Bank [Ammar Awad/Reuters]

A fourth Palestinian was also killed after what Israeli forces said was a car-ramming attempt. Palestinian witnesses however said Ardah lost control of his vehicle.

According to the Palestinian Red Crescent, 69 Palestinians were injured in protests against the Israeli army raids into Ramallah and various other towns and villages in the West Bank.

Looking ahead

There is little reason for optimism about the prospects for 2019. The new year looks to offer more in terms of stagnation in the Middle East peace process, as well as the national reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas.

With the Trump administration firmly backing Israel on the international stage, and tacitly approving illegal settlement construction in the occupied West Bank, Palestinians will continue to regard the US as an impossible broker of peace talks.

Furthermore, the so-called deal of the century, reportedly pushed for by Trump’s son-in-law Kushner, in all its ambiguity and what has been leaked to the media, has failed to win the approval of the Palestinian leadership.

On April 9, Israel will hold snap elections for which Natanyahu called on Israeli voters to give the government a clear mandate to continue governing on its current path. However, the prime minister will first have to fend off prosecutors who are after him and his wife in a criminal case relating to receiving funds from wealthy benefactors.

On a domestic level, the unity talks between Fatah and Hamas will unlikely witness a breakthrough.

On December 22, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas declared his intention to dissolve the largely defunct Palestinian parliament, the Palestinian Legislative Council, where Hamas holds a majority. Abbas, citing a Constitutional Court order, also announced that general elections would be held within six months of the PLC being dissolved.

The PLC has not held an official session since 2007, after Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip. The movement rejected Abbas’ decision as an “invalid political decision”.

There also seems little intent to lift the Israeli-Egyptian blockade on Gaza, and the Israeli military presence shows no sign of abating in the West Bank. On a political level, optimism remains as elusive as ever.

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Saudi Arabia recruited Darfur children to fight in Yemen: NYT

Saudi Arabia recruited children from Sudan‘s conflict-ravaged Darfur region to fight on the front lines in Yemen, the New York Times has reported.

The kingdom offered desperate Sudanese families as much as $10,000 to enlist their children to fight in the nearly four-year-old war against Iran-aligned Houthi rebels, the NYT said on Friday.

Led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia, along with the United Arab Emirates, intervened in Yemen in 2015 in support of the internationally recognised President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi.

Sudan joined the Saudi-led alliance, deploying thousands of ground troops to Yemen. 

Five Sudanese fighters who had returned from Yemen told the NYT that children made up 20-40 percent of their units in Yemen.

Many of the child soldiers were aged 14 to 17, the report said, and were often sent off to war by their parents, some of whom were so eager for money that they bribed officers of the Sudanese units in Yemen to let their sons go to fight. 

“Families know that the only way their lives will change is if their sons join the war and bring them back money,” Hager Shomo Ahmed, who was recruited to fight in Yemen in 2016 when he was just 14, told the NYT.

Hodeidah ceasefire – UN monitors meet both sides in port city (2:06)

At any time in the past four years, as many as 14,000 Sudanese people have been fighting in the Gulf country alongside Yemeni-armed groups backed by the Saudis, the newspaper said, quoting returnees as well as Sudanese legislators.

Darfur survivors 

The NYT report said almost all of the Sudanese fighters apparently come from the impoverished region of Darfur, where some 300,000 people were killed after mostly non-Arab rebels rose up against Khartoum in 2003.

Most of them belonged to the Rapid Support Forces, a paramilitary group known as Janjaweed, which was blamed for the systematic rape of women and girls, indiscriminate killing and other war crimes.

The fighters told the NYT that while in Yemen, the Saudi and Emirati commanders overseeing the Sudanese units ordered them almost exclusively by remote control so that they could keep a safe distance from the battle lines.

“They never fought with us,” Mohamed Suleiman al-Fadil said.

A 25-year-old fighter, identified as Ahmed, told the newspaper: “They treat the Sudanese like their firewood.”

Hundreds of Sudanese fighters have been killed in Yemen, according to the report.

A spokesperson for the Saudi-led coalition denied recruiting Sudanese children in a statement to the newspaper, labelling the allegations “fictitious and unfounded”.

The NYT said Babikir Elsiddig Elamin, a spokesman for Sudan’s Foreign Ministry, declined to comment on troop levels, casualties or paychecks in Yemen. He told the newspaper that Sudan was fighting “in the interest of regional peace and stability”.

The Sudanese ground troops have made it easier for the Saudis and Emiratis to extend the war in Yemen, by insulating them from casualties that might test the patience of families at home, the NYT said. 

The war in Yemen has killed more than 60,000 people, according to the war monitor Armed Conflict Location and Event Data, and has pushed the already impoverished country to the verge of famine.

According to the United Nations, the conflict has triggered the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. 

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Politico Magazine’s Top Reads of 2018


Photo and Illustrations from Cristiana Couceiro; AP Images; Chris Gash; and John Jay Cabuay.

Photo and illustrations from Cristiana Couceiro; AP Images; Chris Gash; and John Jay Cabuay.

2018

Here are 18 of our biggest stories of the year.

Continue to article content

2018 has been anything but a slow news year, and when the groundbreaking news just keeps coming, we know it can be hard to find time to step back and settle down with a captivating read. Luckily, the holidays offer the perfect chance to catch up on the great journalism you might have missed this year. Below are some of the stories our readers liked most—from a first-person article by the uncle of President Donald Trump’s anti-immigration architect, to a reported look into the genocide that the United States didn’t see coming, to a profile of the distinguished liberal Harvard professor who has become Trump’s most ardent legal defender on TV. Enjoy!

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Story Continued Below

Stephen Miller Is an Immigration Hypocrite. I Know Because I’m His Uncle.

If my nephew’s ideas on immigration had been in force a century ago, our family would have been wiped out.

By David S. Glosser | Read More >>

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The Hardest Glass Ceiling in Politics

This was supposed to be the year of the woman. But dozens of female political operatives say they weren’t invited to the party.

By Abby Livingston | Read More >>

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John McCain’s Last Fight

The Arizona senator’s twilight struggle with Donald Trump is so bitter because they’re more alike than you think.

By Michael Hirsh | Read More >>

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The Puzzle of Sarah Huckabee Sanders

How a bright, competent and likable young operative became the face of the most duplicitous press operation in White House history.

By Jason Schwartz | Read More >>

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The Genocide the U.S. Didn’t See Coming

Barack Obama was determined to open up to Myanmar. Now the country’s military is slaughtering its most vulnerable ethnic group. Could the United States have prevented it?

By Nahal Toosi | Read More >>

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This Is What Happens When Bitcoin Miners Take Over Your Town

Eastern Washington had cheap power and tons of space. Then the suitcases of cash started arriving.

By Paul Roberts | Read More >>

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How Silicon Valley Became a Den of Spies

The West Coast is a growing target of foreign espionage. And it’s not ready to fight back.

By Zach Dorfman | Read More >>

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Kent Sorenson Was a Tea Party Hero. Then He Lost Everything.

Inside his rise and fall.

By Tim Alberta | Read More >>

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‘My Dearest Fidel’: An ABC Journalist’s Secret Liaison With Fidel Castro

The untold story of how Lisa Howard’s intimate diplomacy with Cuba’s revolutionary leader changed the course of the Cold War.

By Peter Kornbluh | Read More >>

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The Voice of the ‘Intellectual Dark Web’

Claire Lehmann’s online magazine, Quillette, prides itself on publishing ‘dangerous’ ideas other outlets won’t touch. How far is it willing to go?

By Amelia Lester | Read More >>

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Church of The Donald

Never mind Fox. Trump’s most reliable media mouthpiece is now Christian TV.

By Ruth Graham | Read More >>

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Young Trumpies Hit D.C.

… And D.C. hits them right back.

By Daniel Lippman and Ben Schreckinger | Read More >>

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‘He Pretty Much Gave In to Whatever They Asked For’

Trump says he’s a master negotiator. Those who’ve actually dealt with him beg to differ.

By Michael Kruse | Read More >>

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George Conway’s Tweets Raise West Wing Eyebrows

The spicy Twitter feed of Kellyanne Conway’s husband has gotten noticed in the Oval Office. But friends say the real target of his ire isn’t Donald Trump.

By Annie Karni | Read More >>

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This Is What It’s Like to Be a Migrant in the Age of Trump

Do tough U.S. policies really discourage people from trying to cross the border? Probably not—but they’re changing the landscape in ways no one yet understands.

By Lauren Markham | Read More >>

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Generation Pickleball: Welcome to Florida’s Political Tomorrowland

Republicans’ political future looks a lot like this vibrant, fast-growing, Trump-friendly retirement community outside of Orlando.

By Michael Grunwald | Read More >>

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How Billionaires Learned to Love Populism

What’s behind the Trump alliance between self-dealing plutocrats and blue-collar voters.

By Amy Chua | Read More >>

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‘What Happened to Alan Dershowitz?’

How a liberal Harvard professor became Trump’s most distinguished defender on TV, freaked out his friends and got the legal world up in arms.

By Evan Mandery | Read More >>

***

Still want more? Read our best of 2017 list, and keep an eye out for what we publish next year at politico.com/magazine.

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Indonesia’s poor bear brunt of deadly tsunami

Banten, Indonesia – Ahmad Hidayat’s smile seemed strangely incongruous given the mess that lay around him.

I have seen that smile before in Indonesia – a natural response, no matter the situation, maybe out of innate shyness or deference when talking to a stranger. And here, standing beside the dripping pile of clothes, home appliances, children’s books and toys, Ahmad grinned broadly.

Helped by his wife and his uncle, he was busy dragging out the waterlogged contents of his home to see what could be salvaged.

The building was swamped on the night of December 22, when tsunami waves believed to have been triggered by an erupting volcano surged over the thin strip of beach that separated Ahmad’s home in the village of Sambolo from the sea. 

At least Ahmad’s roof was intact, giving him the chance to dry out some of his goods.

His neighbours’ homes were missing roofs altogether, so their possessions were likely to stay wet until the end of the rainy season, still many weeks away.

Behind Ahmad’s smile was the pain of knowing just how vulnerable people were here, with the monster of Anak Krakatoa volcano rumbling just over the horizon.

“This is my home. I have no other place to go,” he said with a shrug. “But if I had money I’d buy somewhere safer to live.” 

Indonesia rescuers hampered by rain after tsunami (1:41)

‘No warning’

For many people living along the Sunda Strait, which separates the islands of Java and Sumatra, the sea is their only livelihood.

From the fishermen to the family-owned resorts and restaurants that dotted the shoreline, people have no choice but to resume their previous ways of life.

“There was no warning at all,” said Babay Halimatusadiah, the owner of a small food stall. “It happened suddenly.”

She was standing beside her husband in the little food stall they own, set back about 100 metres from the beach in Carita district. On the day the tsunami hit, they were serving evening diners at the same spot.  

Indonesia raises alert, reroutes flights around erupting volcano (1:43)

Two days after the disaster, they were already back in business. The couple, however, said they would be a lot happier with a better early warning system.

“I hope the government can use newer technology,” Halimatusadiah’s husband Hasbialoh Asnawi told Al Jazeera.

“Because we’re afraid there’s going to be worse in future.”

The lack of a tsunami warning has sparked a fierce debate in Indonesia about the country’s preparedness for such disasters, given how prone the sprawling archipelago is to earthquakes and destructive waves.

Much of the current warning system was put in place after the so-called Boxing Day tsunami of 2004 – a far more devastating event that struck more than a dozen countries along the shores of the Indian Ocean. It claimed an estimated 200,000 lives in Indonesia alone.

‘Still afraid’ 

Coincidentally, the 14th anniversary of the 2004 tsunami fell on Wednesday, as the clean up from the latest disaster continued. 

On both occasions, the full force a tsunami can unleash could be seen in the damage done to the bigger, more solidly built homes and blocks in holiday resorts.

This time too, whole walls were swept away, exposing the rooms, furniture and toilet fixtures inside.

And then, as now, it is the poorer, more vulnerable communities who bore the brunt.

Stretches of coastline now stripped clean of any signs of life were once thriving communities of simple huts made from bamboo, thatch and metal sheeting.

The piles of debris swept back 100-200 metres inland were the only reminders of the people who have been killed, injured and displaced.

In the town of Labuan, a couple of kilometres inland, thousands of homeless people were waiting to see when and how they can return home. The area is only a few metres above the sea level, but it was enough to offer a level of security for people who have experienced what the sea is capable of.

In one of the temporary camps that have sprung up, Watinah – the wife of a fisherman who now has no way to support herself and her three children – was watching the monotonous rain outside.

“I don’t know how long we are going to stay here,” she said. “We haven’t been back to see the condition of our home because we’re still afraid.”

Just at that moment, more bad news arrived. Al Jazeera producer Syarina’s device began beeping. The alert level on Anak Krakatoa had just been raised to Level 3, one below the maximum 4.

The people have reason to fear. the Anak Krakatoa still rumbles ominously.

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Egyptian forces ‘kill 40’ in response to tourist bus attack

Several armed groups are active in Cairo, where they have targeted security forces in the past few years [Anadolu]
Several armed groups are active in Cairo, where they have targeted security forces in the past few years [Anadolu]

Egypt’s interior ministry has said at least 40 fighters have been killed on Saturday in response to an attack on a tourist bus in which four people killed the night before.

According to the official state news agency MENA, security forces killed the suspected fighters in raids in Giza and northern Sinai – a volatile desert region that has been a hotbed for various armed groups.

A roadside bomb hit a tourist bus near the Pyramids of Giza, south of the capital Cairo, on Friday, killing three Vietnamese tourists and their Egyptian guide.

The blast wounded 11 other Vietnamese tourists as well as the Egyptian driver.

Egypt coup: Five years since Sisi took power

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

The bombing is the first deadly attack against foreign tourists in Egypt for over a year and comes as the tourism sector, a vital source of foreign currency revenue, recovers from a sharp drop in visitor numbers since a 2011 uprising that toppled former leader Hosni Mubarak.

Egypt has for years been battling an armed movement in the thinly populated Sinai, which has gained pace since the military overthrew democratically elected President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood in mid-2013.

Other armed groups are active in Cairo, as well as other cities, where they have targeted security forces, judges, and pro-government figures in the past few years.

The government says the battle against such groups is a priority as it works to restore stability after the years that followed the 2011 protests.

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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Sudan opposition leader arrested hours after new protests

Sudanese security forces have arrested a top opposition leader following a crackdown on new anti-government demonstrations held in several cities on Friday. 

The protests were the latest in a wave of demonstrations that began across much of Sudan on December 19, first against a rise in prices but later against the government of President Omar al-Bashir, in power since a 1989 military coup.

The demonstrations coincide with worsening economic woes that saw a currency devaluation, fuel shortages and a steep rise in the price of bread, a main fare for most Sudanese.

The opposition Sudanese Congress Party said that a few hours after protests began in Omdurman on the west bank of the Nile on Friday, its chief, Omar el-Digeir, was arrested by security forces.

“He has been taken to an unknown location,” the party said in a statement.

The Sudanese Writers’ Association said that well-known poet, Mohamed Taha, had also been arrested on Tuesday after he participated in a protest in Khartoum, the capital.

“We don’t know his whereabouts,” the association said.

The Sudanese journalists network said that two journalists were also detained.

Nineteen people have been killed so far in the crackdown on protesters, the government said, but Amnesty International put the death toll at 37 since December 19.

The UN on Friday called on the authorities in Sudan to investigate the deaths.

Police on Friday fired tear gas at hundreds of worshippers who staged demonstrations in the railway city of Atbara north of Khartoum, Obeid in the western North Kordofan province, and Senar and Wad Madani south of the capital.

Photographs posted by activists on social media showed thick plumes of smoke rising from some neighbourhoods in Khartoum as protesters burnt garbage and tyres.

In Omdurman, crowds of worshippers chanted “Freedom, Peace, Justice” as they poured out of a mosque belonging to main opposition National Umma Party, a witness said.

But they were quickly confronted by anti-riot police, the witness added.

Al Jazeera’s Hiba Morgan, reporting from Khartoum, said the demonstrations against the price hikes are morphing into a national movement against the government.

“It is not only these protests that people have been carrying out to try to voice their demands, some of them have also been on strikes, doctors have announced that they are going to go on a strike until the government steps down.

“Many journalists are also marching in solidarity of those who were harassed and arrested while covering the protests, they also said they will go on a national strike against the government,” Hiba said.

A group of opposition parties met late on Thursday and agreed to “push for more protests” in the coming days, the Sudanese Communist Party said in a statement.

It is not the first time al-Bashir has faced protests against his rule. There were demonstrations in January over the same issues, with police using tear gas to disperse hundreds of protesters in Khartoum. Similar protests were held in Sudan in late 2016 after the government cut fuel subsidies.

The oil-rich country’s economy was badly affected when it split with South Sudan in 2011 and the government is also battling several rebel groups.

Is it Sudan’s version of the Arab Spring?

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Andrew Wiggins Says Timberwolves Have ‘Some S–tty Fans’ After Loss to Hawks

MINNEAPOLIS, MN -  DECEMBER 28: Andrew Wiggins #22 of the Minnesota Timberwolves. looks on during the game against the Atlanta Hawks on December 28, 2018 at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 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 2018 NBAE (Photo by David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images)

David Sherman/Getty Images

Minnesota Timberwolves guard Andrew Wiggins received a chorus of boos during the end of Friday’s overtime loss to the Atlanta Hawks, but he hit back at the fans after the game.

“That’s fans for you,” Wiggins said, per Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic. “We’ve got some s–tty fans and we’ve got some good fans. That’s just how it works.”

Wiggins missed three different free throws in the final minute of overtime that could have tied the game and showed obvious disappointment:

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

Wiggins’ face when he missed this FT 💀 https://t.co/1zBtRuD9PG

This ended up making a major difference as the home team suffered a 123-120 loss.

Wiggins finished the game with 16 points on 5-of-14 shooting from the field and a dreadful 5-of-12 from the free-throw line.

The 23-year-old is now averaging 16.6 points per game on the season, a steep drop from when he averaged 23.6 points per game two years ago. He has come under fire in the past for his inefficiency as well as problems on the defensive end, and that certainly hasn’t changed in 2018-19.

His struggles at the line against an inferior opponent likely won’t endear him to fans and neither will his latest comments.

Still, the guard signed a five-year max extension before last season, and he is under contract through 2022-23 at over $25 million per year.

This makes it unlikely Wiggins will be going anywhere else soon, so both the player and fans better learn how to appreciate each other before the relationship gets any uglier.

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Live: ISU, Wazzu Going Down to the Wire

  1. Cyclone Football @CycloneFB

  2. Was This a Catch?

    Chris Hassel @Hassel_Chris

    Terrible! That’s a catch! Elbow down. https://t.co/cxF4HBrMuD

  3. Minshew Sets Pac-12 Single-Season Record on This Toss

    WSU Cougar Football @WSUCougFB

    During that last drive, Gardner Minshew II set the Pac-12 Single-Season Passing Record, now with 4,729 passing yards in 2018

    #GoCougs https://t.co/pyW23RXodX

  4. Borghi in for the Score

    #NobodyDied @ftbeard_17

    Max Borghi!!!! 10 yard TD! #AlamoBowl https://t.co/OCN42bYOoq

  5. Watch: Hakeem Butler skies for one-handed grab in Alamo Bowl

    via 247Sports

  6. Paul Clark @cyclonereport

  7. COUGFANcom @COUGFANcom

  8. Russell Brown @RussNFLDraft

  9. Minshew Keeps the Play Alive 🔥

    #NobodyDied @ftbeard_17

    MINSHEW!!! #Wazzu https://t.co/bpUMuZYfKm

  10. ISU WR 1-Handed Grab 😱

    SportsCenter @SportsCenter

    Hakeem Butler got UP for this one 💪 #SCtop10 https://t.co/MePyaC4oIt

  11. Live: ISU, Wazzu Going Down to the Wire

    via Bleacher Report

  12. College Football @CollegeFootball

  13. Cyclone Football @CycloneFB

  14. Theo Lawson @TheoLawson_SR

  15. David Montgomery Plows in for 6

    #NobodyDied @ftbeard_17

    Watch how David Montgomery throws #34 off of him as he goes into the end-zone 😂😂😂😂😂 https://t.co/FUkeF6gJ7r

  16. Connor Assalley Nails a 50-Yrd FG

    #NobodyDied @ftbeard_17

    50 yard FG!!!! #CollegeKickers https://t.co/lnRr7eRa6l

  17. Controversial targeting call causes Iowa State coach Matt Campbell to lose his mind

    via Des Moines Register

  18. WAZZUWATCH @WazzuWatch

  19. Dylan Montz @dylanmontz

  20. COUGFANcom @COUGFANcom

  21. Gardner Minshew Is Unstoppable

    ESPN CollegeFootball @ESPNCFB

    Gardner Minshew went full Houdini on this scramble 👀 https://t.co/BIDvkNYY6G

  22. Gardner Minshew Is Cold 😎

    Jackson Frank @jackfrank_jjf

    Gardner Minshew is incredible https://t.co/hMqGSyUlwY

  23. WSU Pick-6 Gets Called Back 🙃

    #NobodyDied @ftbeard_17

    Marcus Strong makes a great play, picks off Purdy and takes it back for a TD…. but it gets called back because he was taunting. #AlamoBowl https://t.co/sgxhXcazpN

  24. Alex Halsted @AlexHalsted

  25. CougCenter @CougCenter

  26. Cyclone Football @CycloneFB

  27. Deion Sanders Weighs in

    Deion Sanders @DeionSanders

    Marcus Strong u ain’t do nothing wrong my brother. The way u broke on that slant u deserve to look back after u outran everyone! #Truth WASHINGTON STATE!!!!!!!!

  28. Minshew Gets Cougars on the Board

    WSU Cougar Football @WSUCougFB

    Minshew finds a WIDE-OPEN Renard Bell for the early lead! #GoCougs https://t.co/tcfwXKiznw

  29. How to watch Iowa State vs. Washington State

    via CycloneAlert

  30. ROB GRAY @ROBWGRAY

  31. Russell Brown @RussNFLDraft

  32. Three final thoughts: Iowa State vs. Washington State

    via CycloneAlert

  33. Cyclone Fans Are Pumped 🙌

    Derek Hoodjer @CoachDHoodjer

    #CyclONEnation is ready. https://t.co/V45EPApQND

  34. Cyclone Football @CycloneFB

  35. COUGFANcom @COUGFANcom

  36. Cyclone Football @CycloneFB

  37. COUGFANcom @COUGFANcom

  38. Russell Brown @RussNFLDraft

  39. Wide Right & Natty Lite @WideRtNattyLt

  40. Pac-12 Network @Pac12Network

  41. WAZZUWATCH @WazzuWatch

  42. Chris Williams @ChrisMWilliams

  43. WSU Cougar Football @WSUCougFB

  44. Russell Brown @RussNFLDraft

  45. COUGFANcom @COUGFANcom

  46. Theo Lawson @TheoLawson_SR

  47. COUGFANcom @COUGFANcom

  48. ROB GRAY @ROBWGRAY

  49. WAZZUWATCH @WazzuWatch

  50. CougCenter @CougCenter

  51. COUGFANcom @COUGFANcom

  52. WSU Cougar Football @WSUCougFB

  53. Cyclone Football @CycloneFB

  54. Paul Clark @cyclonereport

  55. Theo Lawson @TheoLawson_SR

  56. ROB GRAY @ROBWGRAY

  57. Russell Brown @RussNFLDraft

  58. COUGFANcom @COUGFANcom

  59. COUGFANcom @COUGFANcom

  60. COUGFANcom @COUGFANcom

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