Republicans move to stall House from taking up Yemen

Washington, DC – Republican leadership in Congress moved to stall until next year a broadly supported congressional resolution aimed at ending US support for Saudi Arabia’s bombing campaign in Yemen.

The move came as part of a tight procedural vote on Wednesday in the US House of Representatives on an $837bn, five-year agriculture bill.

Tucked within the rules governing the bill is a provision that says the War Powers Resolution, which fast tracks certain bills, won’t apply to any resolution related to Yemen for the rest of this Congress.

The move will effectively block the House from taking up any bill on Yemen this year, even if one makes it through the Senate. The House is expected to pass the farm bill later on Wednesday.

The 206-203 House vote is a temporary win for President Donald Trump who has advanced a policy of US support for the Saudi Arabia in Yemen and its wider, regional standoff with Iran. Trump has avoided blaming Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for the murder of writer Jamal Khashoggi while members of Congress say US intelligence points clearly to the Saudi leader.

Advocates of the resolution to end US involvement in Yemen, which is also pending debate and vote in the Senate on Wednesday, decried the Republican action.

“The only reason the leadership is doing this is because they know that there are dozens of Republicans who will stand with Democrats to stop the killing in Yemen,” said Representative Ro Khanna, a California Democrat, whose party will control the House in the newly elected Congress. 

“I urge my colleagues to look at the pictures of five-year-old, seven-year-old kids starving to death. A Yemeni child is dying every 10 minutes. They tell us to wait until January. That would mean thousands more Yemeni kids dead,” Khanna said.

The Khashoggi murder sparked outrage in Washington, DC and brought renewed attention to the humanitarian crisis in Yemen. CIA Director Gina Haspel, who travelled to Turkey to review evidence of the Khashoggi killing, briefed House leaders behind closed doors earlier on Wednesday.

House Republicans said a closed-door briefing by US Secretaries of Defense and State scheduled for Thursday would give members of Congress an opportunity to review and discuss the situation in Yemen with senior Trump officials.

Undercuts debate in the Senate

The House action on Wednesday effectively undercuts the debate over Yemen in the Senate where a bipartisan majority voted 63-47 earlier this month on a preliminary procedure to advance the measure blocking US military action in Yemen. Outgoing Speaker Paul Ryan, who is retiring from Congress, had said he would support the Trump White House and oppose the measure. 

In the Senate, Republican leaders maneuvered to avoid a vote on the Yemen war resolution while giving senators an outlet to vote on separate measures condemning Saudi Arabia for the Khashoggi murder and expressing non-binding sentiment against US support for Saudi conduct of the war in Yemen.

“Members on both sides have legitimate concerns about the war in Yemen, about the US interest, and especially about the horrible plight of Yemeni citizens caught in the crossfire,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican whose party retains control of the Senate in the next Congress.

“I think every single member of this body shares grave concerns about the murder of Khashoggi and wants accountability. We also want to want to preserve a 70-year partnership between the United States and Saudi Arabia and we want to ensure it continues to serve American interests and stabilizes a dangerous and critical region,” McConnell said. 

On November 9, the US military announced it was suspending aerial refueling of Saudi and UAE jets engaged in bombings over Yemen. More than 10,000 civilians have died in the war, according to the United Nations. Rights groups and monitors estimate the death toll is likely much higher.

The Yemen plan was offered in both chambers of Congress by proponents under rules established by the War Powers Act of 1973, a Vietnam War-era law designed to check the US president’s ability to deploy American forces without approval by Congress.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2PA53VB
via IFTTT

Theresa May wins confidence vote

Latest

Theresa May to face confidence vote

Tory MPs will decide whether or not to back their leader in a ballot Wednesday. If she loses, a party leadership contest will begin.

What lies beneath the Yellow Jackets uprising

There’s a latent feeling of dissatisfaction toward politicians around the EU, regardless of their country or political orientation. But it’s not visible in opinion polls, writes MEP Laurențiu Rebega.

The 17 minutes that gripped Washington

In the Oval Office on Tuesday, Donald Trump, Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer clashed in spectacular fashion, with cameras rolling and shocked reporters watching.

More plastic, more carbon, more cost: why attached bottle caps are not the way to fix waste

With industry, government and society all stepping up action to stop waste, UNESDA Soft Drinks Europe and the European Federation of Bottled Waters join forces to voice their support for the EU’s 90 percent collection goals and their fears for the detrimental environmental and economic consequences of mandating attached bottle caps as proposed in the Single Use Plastics Directive.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2zW9GnX
via IFTTT

Is the face-swapping robot with multiple ‘personalities’ cool or just plain creepy?

Ryan Sedmak

Furhat Robotics, which is based out of Stockholm, is attempting to bring robots that mirror human emotion into the workplace.

The company, which hopes to incorporate the bots into training modules, has designed the product with pre-built gestures and facial expressions.  

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2UATp0F
via IFTTT

Meet the journalists trying to give Yemenis the ‘full picture’

Rimbo, Sweden – It was -3 celsius, snow was beginning to fall, and there was a strong wind battering those waiting in the freezing cold.

A representative from the Yemeni government had just left the latest round of closed-door discussions involving the UN and insisted on holding his press briefing outside.

As the ‘big three’: The Associated Press, the AFP and Reuters, began jostling for position in the damp and slippery grass, up strolled Ahmed Baider, a burly Yemeni journalist from the war-ravaged country’s capital, Sanaa, eager to grab an exclusive line from what he thought was the biggest story of the day.

Carrying just his camera and mobile phone, he managed to weave his way through the media melee to within inches from where the official was standing.

After 20-odd-minutes of questions and answers, he raced past into a neighbouring press room where 11 of his colleagues, the biggest media team on location, were preparing to file the story.

“We want to be in the middle, we want to produce news as we see it with our eyes,” he told Al Jazeera, peppering every sentence with the colloquial English slang word, ‘mate’.

“If we do lives [a live interview] with the Houthis, then we’ll do lives with the Yemeni government.

“If we do an interview with this person, we’ll do an interview with that person. We give both sides an opportunity to speak. We’re balanced”.

Ahmed Baider takes part in an interview with a Yemeni official at the Yemen Peace Newsroom’s temporary office [Faisal Edroos/Al Jazeera]

‘Giving Yemenis the full picture’

Officials from the Yemeni government and Houthi rebels have been meeting in the Swedish town of Rimbo, around 60km north of the capital Stockholm, since Thursday for talks discussing ways to end fighting that has killed more than 60,000 people.

After seven days of discussions, the two sides have made significant breakthroughs, including an agreement to swap a total of 16,000 prisoners within the next 30 days.

Despite this, they appear to be at a major loggerhead over Sanaa airport and Hodeidah port; the latter a major humanitarian lifeline for the country’s 28 million strong hungry and dispirited population.

Since the talks started on December 4, 12 Yemeni journalists from across the country, including Baider, have been regularly filing stories for the ‘Yemen Peace Newsroom’, a new initiative that aims to give Yemenis a full and objective picture of the meetings.

Supported by the French media development agency (CFI) and the UN body UNESCO, they relay developments directly from the talks to potentially millions of Yemenis via Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube.

In the past few days, some of their content has gone viral, having been picked up by both local and international media.

“We send content to a long list of local news websites and I sense that we are the top source of information for dozens of media outlets”, said Aseel Sariyah, an award winning Yemeni journalist.

“The sponsors, [CFI and the UNESCO] understand that local [Yemeni] journalists are the best type of journalists to cover such an event.

“That’s why they sponsored this initiative”.

The Yemen Peace Newsroom is made up of 12 journalists from various backgrounds [Faisal Edroos/Al Jazeera]

World’s fifth highest number of jailed journalists

While the war in Yemen has been raging for more than three years, the conflict has only begun to receive significant media attention since the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist and critic of Saudi Arabia’s foreign policy.

Western powers have expressed their outrage over the killing, with senators in the US questioning Washington’s strategic partnership with Riyadh.

Under the leadership of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the de-facto ruler of the kingdom and alleged architect of the war, the Saudi-led coalition has carried out more than 18,000 air raids with weddings, funerals, schools, and hospitals not spared from the bombardment.

Saudi Arabia intervened in the war after the Houthis overthrew President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and were about to seize the last remaining government bastion of Aden.

Within a matter of weeks, the media became a major battleground between the opposing sides with the Houthis launching a major crackdown on dissent, ransacking the offices of several TV channels including Suhail TV, Yemen Shebab TV, and the offices of Al Jazeera.

Yemen used to have around 295 media publications, according to the country’s National Information Center, with four official state-owned TV channels, and 14 privately-owned TV channels, but within a matter of months, most were co-opted by the Houthis.

An unspecified number of journalists were arrested and are still languishing in Houthi prisons.

The Committee to Protect Journalists reported late last year: “If the Houthis were considered a governing authority, Yemen would have the fifth highest number of journalists in jail in the world”.

The initiative has developed a strong following on Facebook and Twitter, with videos garnering thousands of views [Faisal Edroos/Al Jazeera]

‘We interview everyone’

Saudi Arabia’s intervention further worsened the media landscape with both sides investing vast sums of money in their propaganda operations.

In an attempt to control local and international narratives, the Houthis began detaining journalists without charge, while an army of pro-Saudi Twitter bots began pushing anti-Houthi propaganda and started stifling reports on social media, which documented the killings of civilians in air strikes.

As a result, the Yemeni public and its diaspora began receiving a distorted picture of the war, with both sides either focusing on the other side’s atrocities, or producing content glorifying their humanitarian work.

“Usually Yemenis say if you side with one party to the conflict, you have one enemy. But if you’re neutral you have two enemies,” Baider said.

“Thankfully, the feedback we’ve received has been very positive. People are now aware of what’s going on.

“[Yemenis] are being kept informed and updated and we’re growing bigger and bigger on social media”.

Members of the Yemen Peace Newsroom interview a delegate at the peace talks [Faisal Edroos/Al Jazeera]

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2UGQq6D
via IFTTT

House and Senate reach deal to curb harassment on Capitol Hill


Roy Blunt

“I talked to the speaker about it today and if everything goes to plan we’ll have our members in agreement in the next day or so,” Sen. Roy Blunt said about the legislation. | Susan Walsh/AP Photo

The House and Senate have reached a deal on long-stalled legislation to curb sexual harassment in Congress, according to Sen. Roy Blunt and staff who have been working on the negotiations.

Earlier this year, the Senate passed legislation introduced by Sens. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Blunt that would require members to pay the cost of harassment settlements themselves, among other provisions.

Story Continued Below

The House passed its own version, led by Reps. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.) and Bradley Byrne (R-Ala.), but the bills had substantial differences.

The original House bill made members personally liable for harassment and discrimination settlements, while the Senate bill only made members liable for harassment settlements.

The compromise, according to staff familiar with the negotiations, holds members liable for all forms of harassment and retaliation for harassment claims but not discrimination.

Blunt and Klobuchar (D-Minn.) briefed their respective caucuses on the deal Wednesday. They hope to pass it unanimously this week or next and send it to the House as a stand-alone bill to prevent it from getting tied up in a government shutdown fight.

“I talked to the speaker about it today and if everything goes to plan we’ll have our members in agreement in the next day or so,” Blunt said.

Speier intends to introduce legislation with Byrne in the new Congress to address discrimination, she said earlier this week when discussing the negotiations.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2Bgx3IT
via IFTTT

Happy holidays from this human Christmas tree walkin’ around New York

Huge news: One man in New York City just WON Christmas.

Don’t believe us? Check out this video a paparazzi by the name of Joe Jonas took while standing outside of a Bank of America.

The 13 seconds of footage shows a Christmas tree straight up crossing a street! What a sight, right? And once the tree gets closer you’ll notice there’s actually A MAN inside there who’s so committed to his holiday wardrobe that he even wore some pants that resemble the bark of a tree trunk.

Jonas, who has three brothers and sings in the band DNCE when he isn’t recording festive runway walks, tweeted the video on Wednesday morning with the caption, “How you win Christmas 🎄 … very proud of catching this on camera.”

He even added the holiday anthem, Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas Is You,” to make the video as perfect as possible.

We are also very proud, Joe. Thank you for this early gift.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2rA9hD4
via IFTTT

The correct length for a relaxing YouTube video is 8 hours

Image: YouTube / Johnnie Lawson

2017%2f10%2f20%2fa0%2fchloebryan11.0b114By Chloe Bryan

This post is part of Hard Refresh, a soothing weekly column where we try to cleanse your brain of whatever terrible thing you just witnessed on Twitter.


To the extent that “relaxing” online is possible, YouTube is full of relaxing content, from hot knife ASMR to unedited dog show footage. But sometimes I don’t have two hours to watch the 2017 Crufts sporting group competition. Sometimes I don’t have time to watch anything at all.

This is where relaxing nature sounds come in. When I find myself anxious but truly unable to take a break from work, I pop on a video from artist Johnnie Lawson’s YouTube channel to use as background noise.

The videos range in length from about 20 minutes (perfectly fine) to eight hours (what I actually want). They feature a wide swath of nature audio, from “Nature Sounds and Relaxing Classical Music” to “Forest Waterfall Sounds w/o Birds Singing” to “Forest Waterfall Sounds Birds Singing.”

SEE ALSO: Videos of tech being destroyed will set you free, if only for a few minutes

OK, they are mostly just water sounds, but I love them. They’re muted, pleasant, and repetitive — not so repetitive that I notice, but enough to lull me into something resembling a productive rhythm. 

They’re helpful if you want to sleep, too: One video, “Relax 8 Hours-Relaxing Nature Sounds-Study-Sleep-Meditation-Water Sounds-Bird Song,” has become a famous source of relief for insomnia sufferers.

One video has become a famous source of relief for insomnia sufferers.

Per the BBC, Lawson started making his videos as a way to “bring nature into people’s lives.” He films them himself in the Irish countryside, traveling to discover new shots, new sounds, and new scenery.

Lawson, who seems like a very nice person, began making eight-hour videos so that if insomnia sufferers woke up in the middle of the night, they wouldn’t wake up to silence. Even though I don’t use the channel as a sleeping aid, I appreciate the eight-hour clips, too. Yesterday, I started listening to one at work around 3 p.m., and only made it halfway through by day’s end. I clicked nothing; I chose nothing; I forgot I had the window open. I simply pressed play on eight hours of waterfall noise and went about my day.

And if I had reached the end of the video, it would’ve started playing another video of waterfall noise — perhaps with birds, perhaps without. 

What a paradise.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2GpMnJ9
via IFTTT

Report: Suns Owner Robert Sarver Threatens to Move Team to Seattle or Las Vegas

PHOENIX, AZ - NOVEMBER 10: A close up view of the Phoenix Suns logo during the game against the Orlando Magic on November 10, 2017 at Talking Stick Resort Arena in Phoenix, Arizona. 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 2017 NBAE (Photo by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images)

Michael Gonzales/Getty Images

The Phoenix Suns are reportedly the latest professional sports franchise to contemplate relocation if it doesn’t get a new arena deal.

Per Laurie Roberts of the Arizona Republic, Suns owner Robert Sarver is threatening Phoenix city officials with a move to Seattle or Las Vegas.

Sarver’s threat comes after Roberts reported Phoenix Mayor Thelda Williams and councilwomen Laura Pastor and Debra Star asked to postpone a Wednesday vote on contributing $150 million to a renovation of Talking Stick Resort Arena because the deal wouldn’t pass if held Wednesday.

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app and get the game.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2rAnKyN
via IFTTT