Archive for April, 2017

Fantastical Tea Party, Miami’s Long-Running Geek Gathering, Might Get a Supercon Boost – Miami New Times

Thursday, April 20, 2017 at 9:05 a.m.

Dressed as their favorite fictional characters, from longhaired Hylians to prim Mad Hatters, dozens of local cosplayers will gather at Tropical Park this Saturday for this year's Fantastical Tea Party.

In recent years, the quirky event, combining a potluck and plenty of lallygagging on the green fields of the park, has become a staple in South Florida geek life. Spring has historically been a sleepy season for comic conventions, so the Tea Party was launched in 2010 to give local cosplayers another opportunity to commiserate with and meet like-minded fellows.

Plus, the atmosphere is much more intimate than what many conventions provide.

"Cons are amazing, but every once in a while you just want to eat cookies and play giant Jenga with a bunch of nerds, and the Tea Party fills that informal void for all of us," says 27-year-old Xandra Anneww, who created the event with her team of smiley, whimsicalfriends. They callthemselves "The Outlaw Corps."

In 2014 and 2015, about 100 people flocked to Tropical Park to attend the Tea Party, but last year's event was a bit less crowded. One of the reasons: Many of the major Miami-based conventions Supercon, Animate! Florida, and Paradise City Comic Con moved to Fort Lauderdale, dampening the mood in the Magic City geek scene.

But this past weekend saw the first Supercon Retro, bringing a new convention to Miami that's aimed at rousing local geeks from their slumber. So this year's Tea Party might get a boost in attendance.

Activities at this year's Tea Party range from a costume contest to a scavenger hunt. There will also be a "tea identity contest" the person with the most discriminating palate is poised to win.

The best thing though about the event, though, is the accepting crowd."The spirit of the Tea Party is very relaxed and simple," Anneww says. "Everybody loves a tea party, and everyone just needs an excuse to hang out sometimes."

Fantastical Tea Party Noon to 5 p.m. Saturday, April 22, at Tropical Park, 7900 Bird Rd., Miami. Visit the Facebook event page.

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Fantastical Tea Party, Miami's Long-Running Geek Gathering, Might Get a Supercon Boost - Miami New Times

TIME Magazine: Anti-Trump Tax March is like the Tea Party – Accuracy In Media (blog)

TIME Magazine felt that the anti-Trump Tax March, which allegedly took place in about 200 cities country-wide, was like the Tea Party rallies in 2009. There was no comparison made to the recent anti-Trump Womens March on Washington, which had some vulgar remarks from some of the speakers.

The Tea Party is different from the Tax March because it was a grassroots effort to bring about a wave of political change. The Tax March, according to TIME, is similar to the Tea Party because of the following:

Saturdays Tax March, which took place in nearly 200 cities around the country, was unusual for a liberal protest both in its subject matter and its specificity: rather than focus on more typically leftist issues like police brutality, climate change or reproductive rights, the Tax March was all about taxes, which is typically a rallying cry of Republicans. Specifically, the marchers had just one demand: to see Trumps taxes.

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TIME Magazine: Anti-Trump Tax March is like the Tea Party - Accuracy In Media (blog)

Check out this Marine Corps drill instructor at an adorable tea party with his young daughter – Marine Corps Times

Marine Corps drill instructor Kevin Porter is one tough guy, but even he "couldn't say no" when his wife arranged a surprise photo shoot with their 4-year-old daughter Ashley, who was dressed like a princess for a special tea party.

My husband had no idea what was going to happen until we showed up to the shoot, his wife Lizette told ABC News.He was hesitant at first but after a little talking, I was able to convince him. He would do anything for Ashley."

He was kind of embarrassed, but then my daughter had seen the whole set up and was so excited. He couldnt say no, she said.

The magical moment was captured by Kyndal Courtney, who owns Kyndal Rose Photographyin Oceanside, California.

"As a photographer and wife to a Marine myself, I had the special opportunity to photograph this drill instructor and his daughter. It was an honor to capture the love and joy between them," Courtney told Military Times. She said the photos, which have been widely shared on social media, carry "a powerful message."

"It seems it was just what America needed to see," she said.

Lizette Porter said the photos show a softer side to her husband.Drill instructors still have a life after working long and hard hours, she told ABC News. Many of them have families that after hours they still have to attend to...and yes, a lot of them have a completely different side to them.

Check out more adorable photos of Porter and his daughter on Kyndal Rose Photography'sFacebook page.

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Check out this Marine Corps drill instructor at an adorable tea party with his young daughter - Marine Corps Times

Ukraine: A warm room and hot tea at a contentious checkpoint – ReliefWeb

In the cold, early morning, Red Cross volunteers bring wood and start a fire at the small temporary building that provides warmth and comfort on the edge of the front line.

On the other bank of the Siverskyi Donets river, at a similar building, other Red Cross volunteers do the same thing for people on the other side.

The line of contact between Lugansk in Ukraine and Stanytsia Luhanska, just across the Siverskyi Donets river, is a vital road of commerce. For years, villagers to the river's north have been growing vegetables and fruits and preparing meat and dairy products to be sold in Lugansk, a city of 400,000. Today the products can cross the line only at this checkpoint. Men for hire help those who cannot carry their goods over the bridge's broken steps.

"Here people are accustomed to paying for everything," said Nina, a Ukrainian Red Cross Society volunteer. "That is why when a queue builds up in front of our trailer, we invite people to come in, warm up and have a hot tea. Not everyone agrees, as they do not believe it is free."

About 6,000 people cross the checkpoint a day, 300 of whom stop at the Lugansk heating point. It is a busy season for the volunteers: many visitors are cold, others need a snack, and some have diabetes and need to administer a shot of insulin.

"I have a sister living in Lugansk," said Nelia, a 73-year-old resident of Stanytsia Luhanska. She takes off her gloves and warms her hands by holding a glass of hot tea. "I visit her every week, and I certainly stop by here, both on my way there and back. In autumn I was afraid. What would I do in winter at minus 20 degrees, just freeze? And I never dreamt that someone would put this little house where one can get warm and drink tea."

The volunteers offer health care, tell travelers what documents are required to cross to the non-government controlled territory, and often explain that the visitors can get assistance from the ICRC.

Five hours to the west, the same line of contact separates Svitlodarsk, a town controlled by the Ukrainian government, from Debaltseve. The town is small enough that most people had the phone number to the hospital memorized. During hostilities it treated the wounded and those who were simply scared.

"I remember once we took to the hospital a man whose house had been hit by a shell," said Olena, a nurse. "He was paralyzed with fear, screaming all the time. We did our best to help him all in vain. He responded to our questions with the same thing: 'It's scary, it's scary!'"

"And once a shell landed next to the hospital," her colleague, Natalia, continued. "And we carried the wounded to the basement. It was difficult and dangerous, and we had to act very fast. And then, when every second counted, a woman clutched in my hand and shouted: 'Just don't leave me!' That's when I realized that each hospital should have a psychologist." One recent frosty morning Olena, Natalia and 11 hospital staff met with an ICRC team conducting trainings in psychosocial support. Farhana Javid, an ICRC delegate, muffled up her face with a scarf and joked about her fear of Ukrainian frost. What if her eyes suddenly freeze at minus 20? The cold weather chit chat soon gave way to a story about how friendly Ukrainians can be.

"Here people are very responsible and strive to help each other," Farhana said. "That is why we need to explain to them what stress is and how to deal with it. Only after that they will be effective in helping others."

The hospital staff admit they were initially skeptical about such a training.

"You know, we used to be pretty callous," Natalia confessed. "A patient would come, and instead of telling about his problem he starts sharing his feelings. It was just annoying. Now we understand that people need to speak out, that all the people here are under stress."

Doctors today do not face the complicated medical cases they saw during hostilities. But psychological needs have increased. The line of control lies within view of the hospital, and residents are in constant fear of renewed fighting. The hospital staff see violent outbursts from patients, but others offer only apathy or bitterness. The ICRC trainers take this into account when talking about how to identify and help those suffering from stress.

In the small towns of eastern Ukraine, going to the psychologist is not a common practice. Yet, there are no in-house psychologists in the hospital, and that is why the doctors and nurses listened carefully to everything the ICRC trainers said.

"I remember sitting in the basement, the shells exploding somewhere on the ground. So scary!" Olena says. "And then people approached me and started telling something, I thought: 'What do they want from me?' It is already so scary now, and they approach me! But now I understand everything, and most importantly, I know how to manage these processes."

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Ukraine: A warm room and hot tea at a contentious checkpoint - ReliefWeb

Ukraine not worried relations with US fraying in Trump era – Reuters

By Lindsay Dunsmuir | WASHINGTON

WASHINGTON The United States has strongly signaled it will continue to support Ukraine, Finance Minister Oleksandr Danylyuk said on Friday, adding that the war-torn country had a "good, pragmatic" relationship with Washington.

Ukraine has previously expressed some nervousness about the possibility the Trump administration might try to cut a deal with Russia over Crimea and the eastern part of Ukraine that has been seized by Russian-backed separatists.

President Donald Trump promised a thaw in relations during his 2016 election campaign, but relations between Washington and Moscow currently remain tense due to the countries' military involvement in the Syrian crisis.

"Support of Ukraine is not a snapshot, it's a movie," Danylyuk told Reuters on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank spring meetings in Washington.

Asked about recent rhetoric from some senior U.S. officials that appeared to imply an easing of support for Ukraine, he said that actions spoke louder than words.

"On that front we are getting strong signals from the U.S. that support will continue ... we have a good, pragmatic relationship," Danylyuk said. "There is obviously a U.S. interest for a stable Ukraine."

He added that he had met U.S. Treasury officials as well as Trump administration economic advisers this week.

REFORMS EXPECTED TO PASS

The IMF stepped in with a $17.5 billion bailout program for Ukraine as the nation neared bankruptcy following the annexation of Crimea by Russia in 2014 and the outbreak of the Russian-backed separatist insurgency in its industrial east.

Ukraine expects three more tranches of loans this year but disbursement is dependent on meeting IMF conditions including structural reforms and tackling corruption. Since 2015, Kiev has received about $8 billion in IMF aid.

The global lender has called for an overhaul of the pension system to cut Ukraine's large deficit and action to further liberalize its agricultural sector.

There have been concerns about opposition from vested interests, particularly on land market reform.

"There is a pushback, they've been successful for many years. What will change is this time they are going to lose," Danylyuk said.

The minister said he wanted to have reform laws for both sectors finalized by mid-May and expected Ukraine's parliament to pass them by the end of June, at which point he also hoped for agreement from the IMF to release the next tranche of aid.

He also said that Ukraine plans to issue new sovereign bonds in September or October and submit its appeal in June against a ruling by a British court last month that it failed to offer a court-ready defense for not paying back $3 billion it borrowed from Russia in 2013.

Ukraine had argued that the debt was taken out under duress.

(Reporting by Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by Paul Simao)

MOSCOW Russia has told the United States it regrets Washington's opposition to letting its inspectors take part in an investigation into a chemical weapons attack in Syria earlier this month, the foreign ministry said on Friday.

PANAMA CITY A Panamanian court has granted bail to the two founders of Mossack Fonseca, the law firm at the center of the Panama Papers scandal, in a case allegedly tied to a sprawling corruption scandal in Brazil.

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Ukraine not worried relations with US fraying in Trump era - Reuters