Archive for April, 2017

Back in the spotlight, Hillary Clinton takes aim at Trump’s budget – Los Angeles Times

March 31, 2017, 8:29 a.m.

Hillary Clinton stepped back into the spotlight this week after laying relatively low since the election, and she had some advice for PresidentTrump: Tear up the White House budget plan.

Clinton was at the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security to bestow an award named in her honor to Colombian leaders who helped bring an end to war in that country and elevate the role of women in the peace process.

She spoke of the progress the world has made in advancing womens rights since she spoke forcefully on the issue two decades ago when the U.N. gathered world leaders to address it in Beijing. But she warned that progress is threatened by Trump.

We are seeing signals of a shift that should alarm us all, Clinton said. This administrations proposed cuts to international health, development and diplomacy would be a blow to women and children and a grave mistake for our country.

Clinton then raised the letter signed by 120 former generals and admirals beseeching the Trump administration not to make the cuts.

These distinguished men and women who have served in uniform recognize that turning our back on diplomacy wont make our country safer. It will undermine our security and our standing in the world.

A lot has changed since Clinton was on the campaign trail, but some things about her style on the stump havent. She pulled out a favorite line from last year as she began to talk about a study that backed up her point about the damage Trumps budget plan could do.

Here I go again, Clinton said to whooping and cheering from an audience of mostly female students, talking about research evidence and facts.

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Back in the spotlight, Hillary Clinton takes aim at Trump's budget - Los Angeles Times

Kremlin makes April Fools jibe at Hillary Clinton over claims Russia hacked the US election – The Sun

Russia poked fun at allegations it interfered in the vote with a jokey phone message

THE Russians have been poking fun at claims they interfered with the US election in a hilarious April Fools Day prank.

The Russian Foreign Ministry decided to get in on the annual joke by posting an audio recording of a new automated phone service which offers to direct callers to hackers and election interference.

AP:Associated Press

The recording, posted on its Facebook page this morning, said it would be the new answering message for Russian diplomats calling from abroad.

It comes a day after a US senator claimed Russia hired 1,000 trolls to deliberately create fake news about Hillary Clinton in the lead-up to the US election in November.

The jokey message said:To arrange a call from a Russian diplomat to your political opponent, press one.

To use the services of Russian hackers, press two and to request election interference, press three.

Reuters

A spokesman for the ministry confirmed the post was an official joke as part of April Fools Day, reports the Daily Mail.

On Thursday Russian President Vladimir Putin fiercely denied interfering in the US elections by quoting former US President George H.W. Bush.

Speaking at the International Arctic Forum on a panel moderated by CNBC, he said: Watch my lips, no. All those things are fictional, illusory and provocations, lies.

All these are used for domestic American political agendas.

"The anti-Russian card is played by different political forces inside the United States to trade on that and consolidate their positions inside.

Rex Features

"We said on numerous occasions and I reiterate that we are confident And know for sure that opinion polls in the Unites States show that very many people are friendly towards the Russian Federation and I'd like to tell these people that we perceive and regard the United States as a great power with which we want to establish good partnership relations."

Despite his insistence, the US intelligence community believes there was an interference in October last year.

A probe into Donald Trump's alleged links with Russian associates will be launched on Wednesday.

Spy expert Clinton Watts has urged US lawmakers to follow the trail of dead Russians to uncover what really happened during the presidential election.

And sacked Trump adviser Michael Flynn's lawyer said he has "a story to tell" and will testify over the Presidents alleged Russia links in exchange for immunity from prosecution, his lawyer has said.

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Kremlin makes April Fools jibe at Hillary Clinton over claims Russia hacked the US election - The Sun

Judge Jeanine: The Left Acts Like Children Who Can’t Get Over the Fact Hillary Clinton Lost the Election – Breitbart News

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Fox News Channel Justice host Judge Jeanine Pirro had a message Saturday for members of the left who refuse to accept President Donald Trump won the election, including newly elected chairman of the Democratic National Committee Tom Perez who said Friday at a rally that Trump did not win the election.

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I have a prediction to make, Pirro said in her opening statement. While the left acts like children who just cant get over the fact that Hillary lost the election and simply wont stop their abusive invectives against the man who was constitutionally elected, calling him not legitimate, and his cabinet scum bags, that man is doing the job we hired him to do.

She continued, He is building up and modernizing the military, as well as strengthening law enforcement.

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Judge Jeanine: The Left Acts Like Children Who Can't Get Over the Fact Hillary Clinton Lost the Election - Breitbart News

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File this under things that are too strange to be fiction. Nobody could make this stuff up! Anthony Levandowski used to work for Waymo, the self driving division of Alphabet, which most of us know as Google. In early 2016, he left Waymo and started his own business called Otto that specialized in creating self driving systems for large trucks. Last year, Uber bought Otto for $500 million. (One presumes that Otto is a play on the word auto, no doubt suggested by a certain famous scene in the movie Airplane!)

It took Waymo 7 years to develop its self driving car technology. Uber is now testing self driving technology that it developed in 7 months. Prior to leaving Waymo, Levandowski downloaded over 14,000proprietary and confidential files from the Waymo server, including the design for a Lidar circuit board. Waymo knew nothing about any of this until a supplier working with Otto accidentally included Waymo in an e-mail.

Once alerted, Waymo filed suit asking for an injunction against Uber using any of the information it obtained from Levandowski via its acquisition of Otto. The complaint alleges,Fair competition spurs new technical innovation, but what has happened here is not fair competition. Instead, Otto and Uber have taken Waymos intellectual property so that they could avoid incurring the risk, time, and expense of independently developing their own technology.

These are very serious allegations, if true, said Tyler Ochoa, a professor at Santa Clara University School of Law. The trade secret case by itself is a blockbuster. Its hard to believe theyd put those accusations into print unless they had evidence, Ochoatold Bloomberg.

This week, Levandowskis attorney, Miles Ehrlich, informedU.S. District Court Judge William Alsup that his client intends to exercise his right against self incrimination based on the potential for criminal action if called to testify in Waymos case against Uber. Attorneys for Uber told the court that Levandowski has a good story to tell and that if he testifies, his testimony would make it clear that Uber is not taking advantage of any of the information he downloaded from Waymo on the way out the door.

That would be a legitimate point, said the judge. Maybe you can convince me of that. But first, Levandowski has to agree to testify.Im sorry that Mr. Levandowski has got his got himself in a fix. Thats what happens, I guess, when you download 14,000 documents and take them, if he did. But I dont hear anybody denying that, Alsup said.

Then the judge warned Ubers attorney,If you think for a moment that Im going to stay my hand because your guy is taking the Fifth Amendment and not issue a preliminary injunction to shut down that youre wrong, according to a report by Autoblog.The court is considering a temporary restraining order against Uber and has set May 3 as the date when it will hear arguments for a permanent injunction.

Obviously, Waymos allegations are not evidence. But the timing of Levandowskis departure from Waymo and Ubers success with its autonomous driving cars is, as they say, curious. It will be interesting to see if Ubers Nothing to see here. Move along strategy convinces the judge not to issue a temporary restraining order.

Tags: Anthony Levandowski, Otto self driving trucks, Uber autonomous car testing, Waymo suit against Uber

Steve Hanley I have been a car nut since the days when Rob Walker and Henry N. Manney, III graced the pages of Road & Track. Today, I use my trusty Miata for TSD rallies and occasional track days at Lime Rock and Watkins Glen. If it moves on wheels, I'm interested in it. Please follow me on Google + and Twitter.

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The hero worship propelling Erdoan to absolute power in Turkey – The Guardian

Supporters of Turkeys president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, wave and cheer at a rally in Istanbul. Photograph: Ozan Kose/AFP/Getty Images

Emine Altinbas had come all the way to Ankara from the northern Turkish city of Amasya, 165 miles away, for a political rally. In the warmth of the afternoon, she listened as the prime minister urged her and other supporters to vote yes in a referendum that would transform the country into a presidential republic.

But Altinbas needed no convincing. In a fortnight she will back Turkeys president, Recep Tayyip Erdoan , and the package of reforms that could keep him in power until 2029. Why? Because, she said, she trusted Erdoan to do the right thing.

Hes sincere towards the people, she said. What he says is true, he does not lie, and what the people want is what happens. The opposition, she said, was in disarray and bent on dividing the country instead of uniting it under strong leadership that would promote progress. Until the end Im going to say yes.

Thousands of supporters of the Justice and Development party (AKP) turned out to witness the launch of the yes (evet in Turkish) campaign in the suburb of Kahramankazan, north-west of the Turkish capital in late February. On 16 April, many will cast their votes in a referendum on constitutional changes that will mark a turning point in the 93-year-old Turkish republic.

The choice of venue was no coincidence. Home to the Aknc airbase, close to where seven civilians gave up their lives resisting the attempted military coup last July, the suburb of Kazan has been renamed, prefixed with kahraman, the Turkish word for hero.

The coup attempt still has the capacity to inflame great emotion. Inside the stadium, when videos from the night of the putsch were shown, a great roar of disapproval and anger emanated from the crowd.

The periods of coups shall be over, Binali Yldrm, the prime minister and head of the AKP, told the crowd. The economy will be stronger, growth will accelerate, there will be new jobs, we will cut the red tape, and the new system will eradicate terrorism.

Outside there was a festive atmosphere as supporters flocked to the stadium in their thousands, chanting Erdoans name. Street vendors hawked T-shirts bearing his image, and banners proclaimed Yes with all my heart and Our strong country, our decision is yes.

The referendum has polarised Turkey, still reeling from the traumatic coup attempt and repeated terror attacks by Islamic State and the Kurdistan Workers party (PKK), a designated terror group fighting an insurgency in the south-east.

Tens of thousands of people have been dismissed or arrested in a multifaceted crackdown that has targeted followers of Fethullah Glen, a US-based preacher whose movement is widely believed to have masterminded the coup, as well as opposition parties, academics and media outlets critical of the government.

Opponents say the constitutional changes, which would allow Erdoan to rule until 2029 and consolidate power in his office, would lead to one-man rule with little oversight by a friendly parliament and a judiciary that would be appointed by him and the ruling party.

But supporters of the yes campaign argue there are enough checks and balances in the amendments, which will revise a constitution imposed under military rule in 1982. They say it will end the fractious politics of coalition governments that have plunged Turkey into recession in the past, and end a longstanding uncertainty in executive authority that has deadlocked administrations.

Emine Nur Gnay, an AKP MP who was at the rally, said the changes would resolve conflicts of power in the executive and promote greater diversity in parliament by allowing younger lawmakers from around the country to run in elections. She pointed out that France, like Turkey, was soon to hold an election under a state of emergency.

Turkeys state of emergency is against terrorists, not the public, she said. Life is going on and the public isnt affected. Turkey endured a lot of terrorist attacks, much more so than Europe, and a lot of innocent people lost their lives.

The white Turks used to be the administrators, but now the people have a say. The elites are no longer in power.

Many among Erdoans grassroots supporters see no problem in giving him more power. These are voters who propelled him to the presidency in 2014 in the first-ever popular presidential election to be held in Turkey. His popularity with them has allowed him to reshape the largely ceremonial position into an influential post by sheer force of personality.

Some have seen their lives improve with the economic reforms of the AKP, and the social benefits they have bestowed on poorer citizens. A common refrain among supporters at campaign rallies is how they no longer need to stand in line to buy expensive medicines, or suffer outside overcrowded hospitals.

Other voters see Erdoans ascent as a vindication of their suffering under decades of secular rule by pro-European elites so-called white Turks when expressions of Islamic values in public life, such as the headscarf, were restricted. They see in him a genuine man of the people who has challenged the political status quo as an outsider, even though his party has been in power for 15 years now and has presided over a break in relations with the EU, a re-igniting of a war with Kurdish insurgents whose ceasefire they had negotiated, and a dramatic uptick in terror attacks. Instead, they see him as a powerful force to combat terrorism in uncertain times.

The disconnect between the condemnatory anti-western rhetoric of the president and the confidence and even elation of his supporters at party rallies is striking. Where the west sees an authoritarian strongman dismantling a democracy, Erdoans supporters see a democratically elected president exerting the will of the people and destroying the agents of a nefarious putsch. Where the west sees a leader with neo-Ottoman imperial ambitions, ordinary Turks who back Erdoan see a man willing to stand up to a morally bankrupt EU and champion the cause of oppressed peoples in the Middle East. Where the west sees a subversion of secularism, his followers see a redemption after decades of oppression under the secular elites, an opportunity to assert their identity as pious Muslims.

He represents us, our thoughts, said one young man in his 20s, from the city of Erzurum, who attended the rally. He wants to abolish a system that went against the people and put in place a new system that will voice our thoughts. There used to be a population called the white Turks, they used to be the administrators, but now the people have a say. The elites are no longer in power.

He scoffed at the suggestion that giving too much power to the president could be bad for democracy: How can he be a dictator if his term is five years and he can only be elected twice?

He has done many things for us, he stood up for us, he faced death for us. We wear our death shrouds for him and stand behind him.

He added: There will be a much stronger Turkey.

Nearby, a woman who did not give her name touched her burgundy headscarf as she stood in the heat of the warm Ankara afternoon. She looked exhausted, having made a 572-mile journey to attend the rally from the eastern city of Van, but she was adamant as she touched her veil.

There is nothing more important than Turkey and hes the only one who can lead this country, she said. Hes the only one we can trust. Because of the headscarf, because of our security, for our Quran and the mosque. He was the only one who supported us, he always stands beside those who were oppressed.

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The hero worship propelling Erdoan to absolute power in Turkey - The Guardian