Former Dallas Fed adviser Danielle DiMartino Booth on the impact of U.S. trade tensions with China on the markets and the impact of the strong U.S. economy on President Trump’s reelection efforts.

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHPP7AfbPUU

Family-run Latin food giant Goya weighs possible $3 billion sale

Goya, one of the most iconic names in Latin American cuisine, has hired investment bank Goldman Sachs to weigh options that could include a sale of the 83-year-old company,…

read more

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/05/29/dont-say-we-didnt-warn-you—a-phrase-from-china-signals-the-trade-war-could-get-even-worse.html

After 19 reported tornadoes across five states on Tuesday, another day for severe weather is in the offing on Wednesday.

In the last 12 days, the U.S. has had 352 reported tornadoes in 22 states from California to New Jersey. In fact, this May has been the most active month for tornadoes since April 2011, when there were more than 800 reported tornadoes.

Unfortunately, more severe weather is forecast Wednesday from Texas to New York, including tornadoes, damaging winds and large hail.

The biggest threat for tornadoes Wednesday will be from Texas into southeastern Oklahoma and into western Arkansas. That includes the Dallas metro area.

ABC News
Severe weather is again possible from Texas northeast to Illinois and eastward over to Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

The Northeast and Mid-Atlantic will see severe storms again Wednesday — mostly with damaging winds and hail, but an isolated tornado or two cannot ruled out. Major cities in the Northeast that will see these damaging storms include New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington, D.C.

More heavy rain is expected with these storms, which could bring flash flooding from Texas all the way to New Jersey.

ABC News
Flood warnings are in effect along the Arkansas River due to heavy rains over the past few weeks.

In the next 24 to 36 hours, as much as 6 inches of rain could fall, especially from northern Texas into eastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas. These areas are dealing with historic flooding and cannot take any more rain. Historic flooding will continue for the Arkansas River because of the coming rain.

ABC News
The highest rainfall totals will come in Texas and northern Arkansas over the next few days.

Finally, there is some good news. It looks like Wednesday will be the last big severe weather day.

Over the next couple of days the pattern will shift slightly, giving most of the U.S. a break from severe storms and tornadoes.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/day-tornadoes-severe-weather-store-texas-york/story?id=63340767

LAWRENCE, Kansas – A two-week barrage of tornadoes that’s ravaged much of the Midwest left this university town reeling Wednesday after tearing apart dozens of homes and businesses and injuring at least 15 people.

The latest wave of severe weather wreaked havoc Tuesday all the way to Pennsylvania, where Caernarvon Township Police Chief John Scalia said no injuries were reported but confirmed that “we have devastation.”

Tuesday marked the 12th straight day that at least eight tornadoes were reported to the National Weather Service. Twisters have killed at least 10 people during that time. 

In Lawrence, the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office said three of the injuries from their tornado were serious. However, “we are happy to report that no fatalities have been reported,” the sheriff’s office said on Twitter.

Downed power lines, trees and debris blocked off roads in and around Lawrence, the home to the University of Kansas about 40 miles west of Kansas City. Billy and Julie Brumley, both 59, picked through the wreckage of their bedroom Wednesday, the roof and two walls ripped away.

Billy Brumley recalled being alone in the home when the storm hit – rushing to the basement, lying face down with a blanket pulled over his body as the storm roared overhead.

“I thought I was going to die,” Brumley said. 

Vic and Colleen Strnad had spent several minutes hunkered down beneath their basement stairs, hands over their heads, as the twister slammed through their Shank Hill neighborhood.

Colleen Strnad, 68, recalled hearing the winds pick up above them and the sounds of shattering glass. The power was still out Wednesday and their home of 40 years will need substantial repairs, but the couple were thankful it was still standing.

Power lines hung low over their street, and utility trucks were lining up a few miles away.  A neighbor lost the second floor of the family’s home. A trampoline was overturned in a nearby tangle of trees.

Vic Strnad, 71, pointed to a mangled 6-foot-tall decorative windmill sitting in a neighbor’s ditch. Before the storm, the windmill was on display in Strnad’s yard.

“You want me to come get my windmill?” Strnad asked the neighbor with a laugh.

“Nah, I think it’ll be OK,” he responded, waving him off with a chuckle before returning his attention to his own mangled home.

The storm spared the immediate Kansas City metro area, but travelers at Kansas City International Airport took shelter in parking garage tunnels as a precaution. Air traffic controllers delayed all flights until just after midnight local time. 

“We apologize for the inconvenience,” the airport said in a tweet at 12:20 a.m. Wednesday. “A tornado destroyed homes and businesses miles away & debris rained down onto the airport. Our crews had to clean it up in order to be safe.”

As the system moved into Missouri, the weather service urged residents of areas such as Excelsior Estates and Mosby to take shelter from confirmed tornadoes. Damage reports were not immediately available, but about 13,000 customers lost power throughout the state. 

The White House issued a state of emergency in 18 Kansas counties Tuesday evening.

The tornado sightings are part of a massive severe weather system mostly positioned in the central United States. Preliminary reports show 28 tornadoes struck mainly Kansas and Missouri on Tuesday, the Storm Prediction Center said. But the East has not been entirely spared.

On Monday, tornadoes reached into Ohio, killing one person, injuring several more and causing severe damage to neighborhoods. Almost 40,000 homes and businesses remained without power Wednesday morning.

On Tuesday, tornado warnings reached as far east as Pennsylvania, Maryland, New York and New Jersey. In northern New Jersey, fierce storms pounded the region with torrential rains, some hail and a tornado that damaged Lenape Valley Regional High School in Stanhope.

The National Weather Service confirmed that a tornado hit eastern Pennsylvania, and a team was sent to Morgantown in Berks County to survey the damage and determine its strength. County emergency officials reported structural damage to about 20 properties.

“We are very, very lucky and blessed,” Chief Scalia said. “When you drive around and see the destruction, you realize how lucky we are that nobody was hurt.”

Bacon reported from McLean, Va. Contributing: Kristin Lam, USA TODAY; Jasmine Vaughn-Hall, York Daily Record; William Westhoven, Morristown Daily Record; The Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/05/29/kansas-tornado-latest-round-twisters-devastates-communities/1268223001/

Ashton Kutcher is expected to testify Wednesday in the trial of an alleged serial killer called the “Hollywood Ripper.” Los Angeles prosecutors say Michael Gargiulo murdered three women including Ashley Ellerin who was friendly with the actor. Kutcher’s testimony is only expected to take a few minutes but it will be the first time we’ve heard Kutcher speak publicly about the case.

As a prosecution witness, Kutcher is expected to help establish the time of death for Ellerin. Kutcher and Ellerin were scheduled to go out on a date on the night she was murdered. When Ellerin failed to answer her cellphone earlier in the evening, Kutcher went to her Hollywood home and knocked on the door.

During opening statements, prosecutors told jurors they believe Ellerin was attacked from behind by Gargiulo after she exited her shower on February 21, 2001. Around 10:45 p.m., Kutcher arrived to take her to a Grammys party. According to deputy district attorney Daniel Akemon, Kutcher looked in the window when he arrived at Ellerin’s home and thought he saw wine spilled on the floor. “We believe now the evidence will show that was actually blood,” Akemon said.

Kutcher allegedly told police, when she didn’t answer the door he left. Ellerin was found brutally stabbed to death by her roommate the next morning.

Prosecutors describe Gargiulo as a “methodical and systematic” killer. He is accused of attacking at least four women, three in California and one in Illinois.
 
Michelle Murphy, the prosecution’s first witness, was allegedly Gargiulo’s only survivor. Prosecutors claim Murphy battled for the knife and say Gargiulo used to stab her, cutting him, and leaving his DNA at the crime scene – DNA that was found years earlier on another victim, Tricia Pacaccio, across the country.

The family of 18 year-old Tricia was called to testify in this trial because of the similarities between Tricia’s 1993 death in suburban Chicago and the three cases from L.A. County. Investigators believe Pacaccio was Gargiulo’s first victim.
 
Her murder was unsolved until 2011, when two witnesses came forward after watching a “48 Hours Mystery” report on the case. Within a few weeks, Gargiulo was indicted, but has not yet been tried. His attorneys deny he killed anyone.
 
The Pacaccio family had never met the two witnesses who blew open the case until they all came to L.A. to testify. But the Pacaccios must wait for the trial in L.A. to end, before Gargiulo can be brought back to stand trial for their daughter’s death. 
 
“Fighting for this case goes on with me forever. And that’s the way it’s gonna be,” Diane Pacaccio said.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ashton-kutcher-to-testify-in-hollywood-ripper-trial-today-2019-05-29/

LAWRENCE, Kansas – A two-week barrage of tornadoes that has ravaged much of the Midwest descended on this university town Tuesday, blasting homes and businesses and injuring at least a dozen people.

The latest wave of severe weather wreaked havoc as far east as Pennsylvania, where Caernarvon Township Police Chief John Scalia said no injuries were reported but confirmed that “we have devastation.”

Tuesday marked the 12th straight day that at least eight tornadoes were reported to the National Weather Service, resulting in at least 10 deaths.

Downed power lines, trees and debris blocked off roads in and around Lawrence, the home to the University of Kansas about 40 miles west of Kansas City. Vic and Colleen Strnad had spent awful minutes hunkered down beneath their basement stairs, hands over their heads, as the twister slammed through their Shank Hill neighborhood late Tuesday.

Colleen Strnad, 68, recalled hearing the winds pick up above them and the sounds of shattering glass. The power was still out Wednesday and their home of 40 years will need some repairs, but the couple were thankful it was still standing.

Power lines hung low over their street, and utility trucks were rolling into the neighborhood. A neighbor lost the second floor of the family’s home. A trampoline was overturned in a nearby tangle of trees.

Vic Strnad, 71, pointed to a mangled 6-foot-tall decorative windmill sitting in a neighbor’s ditch. Before the storm, the windmill sat in Strnad’s yard.

“You want me to come get my windmill?” Vic Strnad asked the neighbor with a laugh.

“Nah I think it’ll be OK,” he responded, waving him off with a chuckle before returning his attention to his own mangled home.

The storm spared the immediate Kansas City metro area, but travelers at Kansas City International Airport took shelter in parking garage tunnels as a precaution. Air traffic controllers delayed all flights until just after midnight local time. 

“We apologize for the inconvenience,” the airport said in a tweet at 12:20 a.m. “A tornado destroyed homes and businesses miles away & debris rained down onto the airport. Our crews had to clean it up in order to be safe.”

As the system moved into Missouri, the weather service urged residents of areas such as Excelsior Estates and Mosby to take shelter from confirmed tornadoes. Damage reports were not immediately available, but about 13,000 customers lost power throughout the state. The White House issued a state of emergency in 18 Kansas counties Tuesday evening.

The tornado sightings are part of a massive severe weather system mostly positioned in the central United States. Preliminary reports show 27 tornadoes struck mainly Kansas and Missouri on Tuesday, the Storm Prediction Center said. But the East has not been entirely spared.

On Monday, tornadoes reached into Ohio, killing one person, injuring several more and causing severe damage to neighborhoods. On Tuesday, tornado warnings reached as far east as Pennsylvania, Maryland, New York and New Jersey.

In North Jersey, fierce storms pounded the region with torrential rains, some hail and winds that damaged Lenape Valley Regional High School in Stanhope.

The National Weather Service confirmed that a tornado hit eastern Pennsylvania, and a team was sent to Morgantown in Berks County to survey the damage and determine its strength. County emergency officials reported structural damage to about 20 properties.

“We are very, very lucky and blessed,” Chief Scalia said. “When you drive around and see the destruction, you realize how lucky we are that nobody was hurt.”

Bacon reported from McLean, Va.; Lam from Los Angeles. Jasmine Vaughn-Hall, York Daily Record; William Westhoven, Morristown Daily Record; Contributing: The Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/05/29/kansas-tornado-latest-round-twisters-devastates-communities/1268223001/

Mr. McConnell did occasionally mention the divided government in 2016, but it was not his chief argument at the time and was frequently omitted from his remarks. Last October, when asked about the issue on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” he said, “What I did was entirely consistent with what the history of the Senate’s been in that situation going back to 1880.”

The last time a Republican-led Senate confirmed a nominee put forth by a Democratic president was 1895, when it confirmed Rufus W. Peckham after he was nominated by Grover Cleveland. Since then, Democratic-controlled Senates have approved 13 nominees by Republican presidents.

Before 2016, there had been just seven election-year confirmation battles since the beginning of the 20th century. In the most recent case, Anthony M. Kennedy, who was appointed by President Ronald Reagan, was confirmed in 1988 by a Democratic Senate in a 97-to-0 vote after a grueling seven-month process.

The only time a Senate has failed to confirm a nominee in an election year was 1968, when the nomination of Abe Fortas was withdrawn. Both the Senate and the White House were controlled by Democrats at the time.

On the current court, two of the justices are in their 80s, and one of them, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, 86, has suffered a series of health problems.

In Mr. McConnell’s remarks to the Paducah Chamber of Commerce, in his home state of Kentucky, he said that legislative accomplishments like tax reform could be undone by future administrations, but that Supreme Court confirmations could have a more lasting impact.

“What can’t be undone is a lifetime appointment to a young man or woman who believes in the quaint notion that the job of a judge is to follow the law,” he said. “That’s the most important thing we’ve done for the country, which cannot be undone.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/29/us/politics/mitch-mcconnell-supreme-court.html

In a gloriously brutal concurring opinion published Tuesday, Justice Clarence Thomas took on Planned Parenthood, the meaning of abortion, and birth control. While writing a concurring opinion in Box v. Planned Parenthood, Thomas likened abortion to eugenics and scolded Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg for nonsensical opinions in the same case.

Thomas wrote his opinion in response to the court’s opinion about Box, which addressed two provisions in an Indiana law. The first provision prohibits abortion providers from treating the bodies of aborted children as “infectious waste” and incinerating them alongside used needles and the like. The second provision “made it illegal for an abortion provider to perform an abortion in Indiana when the provider knows that the mother is seeking the abortion solely because of the child’s race, sex, diagnosis of Down syndrome, disability, or related characteristics.”

The 7th Circuit ruled these laws should be struck down. However, the Supreme Court ruled the former should be reversed and they said they wouldn’t hear the second. However, Thomas took on the second provision in his 20-page opinion, which included legal analysis, historical anecdotes, and moral indignation.

As if he had been waiting all of his 27 years on the court for the right case to come to his desk so he could unleash hell on Planned Parenthood, Thomas agreed with Indiana’s law and said, “this law and other laws like it promote a State’s compelling interest in preventing abortion from becoming a tool of modern-day eugenics.” In a lengthy diatribe connecting Planned Parenthood’s roots to cherry-picking abortionists today, he wrote:

Thomas went on like this, giving a multi-page history lesson on eugenics and birth control, occasionally excoriating Ginsburg’s opinion on this case by way of footnote — as Supreme Court justices do. Even though the court won’t hear further argument on this particular case, Thomas said the time will come. ”Given the potential for abortion to become a tool of eugenic manipulation, the Court will soon need to confront the constitutionality of laws like Indiana’s.”

Of course, conservatives were relieved to see Indiana’s law upheld, requiring aborted babies to be buried humanely, but Thomas’ one-man manifesto, a moral crusade against abortion, articulated what many pro-life advocates have believed for decades.

In a statement, Jeanne Mancini, the president of the March for Life said, “Every human life has inherent value and dignity. We welcome the Supreme Court’s ruling today in favor of a provision requiring more dignified treatment of human remains following the tragedy of abortion. We look forward to the day, too, when the Court will consider the use of abortion to eliminate persons on the basis of race, sex, or disability.”

The Left of course, has freaked out about Thomas’ opinion, particularly since he cited conservative columnist George Will. Will once said in a piece the abortion rate for children diagnosed with Down syndrome in utero in Iceland was nearly 100% (Will’s critics said the statistic was false). The Daily Beast published a piece already saying today’s opinion proves the Supreme Court “chips away at abortion.”

I’m glad to see a man such as Thomas, what with his quiet dignity, moral fervor, and legal chops, address the abomination that is abortion, both in terms of history and jurisprudence. More black babies are aborted in New York City than are born. Who better to speak up for them than the second African American Supreme Court justice?

Nicole Russell (@russell_nm) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner’s Beltway Confidential blog. She is a journalist who previously worked in Republican politics in Minnesota.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/justice-clarence-thomas-slams-planned-parenthood-for-using-abortion-to-achieve-eugenic-goals

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/weather/dangerous-floods-leave-plains-midwest-mercy-mother-nature-n1011156

Democratic presidential candidates chasing former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenBudowsky: Warren has a plan for Democrats Biden unveils sweeping education plan Trump claims he was ‘sticking up for’ Biden with ‘low IQ’ comment MORE in the polls are shifting gears as they seek to gain momentum heading into the first debate next month.

Sen. Kamala HarrisKamala Devi HarrisHarris praises Amash for calling for Trump’s impeachment: He has ‘put country before party’ Harris on Indiana abortion law: ‘On this issue, I’m kind of done’ Overnight Health Care: Justices avoid major abortion ruling over Indiana law | Thomas warns court must address abortion soon | Missouri’s only abortion clinic expects to be shut down | Groups sue Trump over religious protection rule MORE (D-Calif.) is trying to engage President TrumpDonald John TrumpDemocrat to announce Senate bid Wednesday against Lindsey Graham Harris praises Amash for calling for Trump’s impeachment: He has ‘put country before party’ NY Times reporter wears wedding dress to cover Trump in Japan after last-minute dress code MORE in direct confrontations to command part of the news cycle and move up, while former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas), whose campaign has struggled, is doing more media appearances.

Meanwhile, South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete ButtigiegPeter (Pete) Paul ButtigiegJoe Biden in 2007: ‘It was the Biden Crime Bill that became the Clinton Crime Bill’ The Hill’s 12:30 Report: Justices sidestep major abortion decision despite pressure Franklin Graham calls for ‘Special Day of Prayer’ to protect Trump from enemies MORE (D) is aiming to win over African American voters to broaden his support.

Biden has pulled ahead from the pack in national polls, while also leading in early voting states like Iowa and New Hampshire.

In the RealClearPolitics average of national polls, Biden has a roughly 25-point lead over Sens. Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth Ann WarrenBudowsky: Warren has a plan for Democrats Ben & Jerry’s spent over K on criminal justice reform Facebook ads in past week Yang becomes fourth presidential candidate to sign pledge to end ‘Forever War’ MORE (D-Mass.) and Harris and a 17-point lead on Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersBudowsky: Warren has a plan for Democrats Biden unveils sweeping education plan Ben & Jerry’s spent over K on criminal justice reform Facebook ads in past week MORE (I-Vt.), who often places second in the polls.

The race is closer in Iowa, with the RealClearPolitics average showing Biden up 4 points on Sanders and 12 points on third-place Buttigieg. In New Hampshire, he has a 13-point lead on Sanders and an 18-point lead on Buttigieg.

Warren has seen her numbers inch upward in recent weeks, but she’s still well behind Biden.

Still, the Iowa caucuses, when the first balloting of the 2020 primary season begins, are still nine months away. And many candidates are quick to note that they are very much in the early phases of their campaigns, insisting that they are more focused on introducing themselves to voters and mapping out coherent policy proposals than jockeying for front-runner status in opinion polls.

But at the same time, the White House hopefuls are betting on standout performances in the first Democratic primary debates next month to bolster their campaigns and pitch their visions before a national audience.

Their shifting strategies underscore a political reality: With more than 20 people vying for the party’s nomination, candidates are under more pressure than ever to compete for the votes, donations and media attention necessary to power a prolonged national campaign.

“In this business there are winds that blow, and seasons tend to change quickly,” said Antjuan Seawright, a South Carolina–based Democratic strategist. “I think people are recalibrating. They’re making adjustments and they’re trying to figure out how to stay on the tops of the hearts and minds of voters.”

O’Rourke conceded earlier this month that he needed to “do a better job” reaching national audiences after largely avoiding high-profile television appearances for most of his presidential campaign so far.

That remark, made during an appearance on MSNBC, was followed the next day by an appearance on ABC’s “The View” and later by a well-received televised town hall on CNN.

“The CNN town hall was a big success for him, the kind of national TV that I think people had been asking for,” one aide to O’Rourke told The Hill. “I think they got to see on stage that he hasn’t forgotten how to play ball. He’s getting better.”

O’Rourke has focused on expanding his national team — bringing on Jeff Berman, who ran former President Obama’s delegate operation, as his senior adviser on delegate strategy — and building out his top aides in New Hampshire.

The apparent reboot comes as he has struggled to elicit the same energy that defined his unsuccessful 2018 Senate bid against Sen. Ted CruzRafael (Ted) Edward CruzHBO documentary shows Beto O’Rourke apologizing to staffers for being a ‘giant a—hole’ The top 10 Democrats in the 2020 race On The Money: Conservative blocks disaster relief bill | Trade high on agenda as Trump heads to Japan | Boeing reportedly faces SEC probe over 737 Max | Study finds CEO pay rising twice as fast as worker pay MORE (R-Texas).

While his presidential announcement in March was met with fanfare by supporters, he has seen his poll numbers drop into the low single digits in recent weeks and has faced criticism for lacking policy specifics.

O’Rourke’s aides and allies argue that the fundamentals of his campaign — he has said he prefers face-to-face interactions to TV appearances and large campaign rallies — remain the same.

But his reemergence on national TV underscores how much of the 2020 presidential contest has been driven by viral moments and media exposure.

For Harris, her viral moment came earlier this month with her pointed questioning of Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrComey: Trump peddling ‘dumb lies’ Amash doubles down on accusing Barr of ‘deliberately’ misleading the public on Mueller report Barr’s probe could play right into the Kremlin’s hands MORE during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, an exchange that helped the California senator reestablish her prosecutor bona fides by taking on one of the Trump administration’s highest-profile officials.

That line of questioning was reflective of a shift in strategy for Harris after struggling for months to hone her campaign message.

She has sought to court the Democratic Party’s liberal base by taking more progressive positions on issues like health care and voting rights. But some strategists say that in doing so, Harris has risked alienating more moderate voters.

Harris in recent weeks has more aggressively positioned herself as the candidate willing to take on Trump, a nod to the overwhelming desire among Democratic primary voters to pick a nominee who is capable of defeating the president in 2020.

In an appearance on “The Late Show with Stephen ColbertStephen Tyrone ColbertGillibrand seizes on abortion debate to jump-start campaign Colbert tops Fallon, Kimmel in key demographic for season Kamala Harris says Democrats won’t end Trump investigations even if he ‘holds America’s infrastructure hostage’ MORE” last week, Harris criticized Trump after he walked out of a meeting with Democratic congressional leaders on infrastructure and demanded that Democrats halt their ongoing investigations of him and his administration.

“We cannot abandon our democracy for the sake of appeasing somebody who is completely focused on his interests only,” Harris said.

Harris’s more aggressive posturing against Trump, as well as her questioning of Barr, may be paying off. A Monmouth University poll released Thursday showed her tied with for second place with Sanders, at 14 percent, among early primary and caucus voters.

For Buttigieg, who saw his political stock rise quickly after entering the presidential contest as a relative unknown, the shift in campaign tactics is in part a response to criticism that he has drawn mostly white audiences on the trail.

He met earlier this month with civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton in Harlem and has said he plans to spend more time in South Carolina, the first state to vote in the primaries where a majority of the Democratic electorate is made up of black voters.

Adding even more weight to the vote in South Carolina is the fact that the Palmetto State is the last state to vote before Super Tuesday, when delegates from 13 states will be up for grabs.

Biden has built up a sizable lead in South Carolina. A poll released earlier this month by Change Research and The Post and Courier newspaper in Charleston showed the former vice president with 46 percent support among likely Democratic primary voters in the state. Sanders came in second, with 15 percent, followed by Buttigieg, with 8 percent.

Seawright, the Democratic strategist, said that carrying the support of African American voters in South Carolina will be crucial not just to winning that primary, but to taking the Democratic presidential nomination.

“Black people will decide who our nominee will be. Anything other than making our community a priority is not smart political thinking,” Seawright said. “The ballgame is going to be in South Carolina. If you’re not making serious investments here, you may as well not even participate.”

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/445472-2020-democrats-look-to-retool-campaigns-as-biden-takes-wide-lead

Former Obama speechwriter Jon Favreau believes that the media will help President Trump win reelection in 2020.

“Trump’s surest path to victory in 2020 will be the same as it was in 2016: depress Democratic turnout. He’ll hit the nominee from the left, knowing that reporters will be more interested in chasing his attacks than calling out his lies and hypocrisy,” Favreau tweeted Monday.

Favreau, 37, joined Barack Obama’s speechwriting team in 2005 when Obama was a freshman senator. After Obama won election to the presidency in 2008, Favreau joined Obama in the White House as the president’s speechwriting director, the second-youngest person to ever hold that position.

Favreau gained fame and some notoriety while working for Obama. Time named Favreau one of the world’s most influential people in 2009.

A picture of Favreau groping a cardboard cutout of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at a party surfaced online in 2008 weeks after Obama won election. Obama had beat out Clinton in the Democratic primary. Favreau was forced to apologize for the incident.

The former speechwriter later joined with several other Obama administration alums to launch the “Pod Save America” podcast, one of the top podcasts on iTunes. Favreau hosts the podcast along with Obama’s former joke writer Jon Lovett, former communications director Dan Pfeiffer, and former National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor.

[Opinion: Liberal Media Scream: Anti-Trump media fears he’ll never leave office]

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/obama-speechwriter-says-media-will-help-trump-to-2020-reelection

A DJI Technology drone flies during a demonstration in Shenzhen, China, in 2014. DJI sells the majority of Chinese-made drones bought in the United States.

Kin Cheung/AP


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Kin Cheung/AP

A DJI Technology drone flies during a demonstration in Shenzhen, China, in 2014. DJI sells the majority of Chinese-made drones bought in the United States.

Kin Cheung/AP

Drones have become an increasingly popular tool for industry and government.

Electric utilities use them to inspect transmission lines. Oil companies fly them over pipelines. The Interior Department even deployed them to track lava flows at Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano.

But the Department of Homeland Security is warning that drones manufactured by Chinese companies could pose security risks, including that the data they gather could be stolen.

The department sent out an alert on the subject on May 20, and a video on its website notes that drones in general pose multiple threats, including “their potential use for terrorism, mass casualty incidents, interference with air traffic, as well as corporate espionage and invasions of privacy.”

“We’re not being paranoid,” the video’s narrator adds.

Most drones bought in the U.S. are manufactured in China, with most of those drones made by one company, DJI Technology. Lanier Watkins, a cyber-research scientist at Johns Hopkins University’s Information Security Institute, said his team discovered vulnerabilities in DJI’s drones.

“We could pull information down and upload information on a flying drone,” Watkins said. “You could also hijack the drone.”

The vulnerabilities meant that “someone who was interested in, you know, where a certain pipeline network was or maybe the vulnerabilities in a power utilities’ wiring might be able to access that information,” he noted.

DJI offered a bounty for researchers to uncover bugs in its drones, although Walker said Johns Hopkins didn’t accept any money.

In a statement, DJI said:

“At DJI, safety is at the core of everything we do, and the security of our technology has been independently verified by the U.S. government and leading U.S. businesses. DJI is leading the industry on this topic and our technology platform has enabled businesses and government agencies to establish best practices for managing their drone data. We give all customers full and complete control over how their data is collected, stored, and transmitted.

“For government and critical infrastructure customers that require additional assurances, we provide drones that do not transfer data to DJI or via the Internet, and our customers can enable all the precautions DHS recommends. Every day, American businesses, first responders, and U.S. government agencies trust DJI drones to help save lives, promote worker safety, and support vital operations, and we take that responsibility very seriously. We are committed to continuously working with our customers and industry and government stakeholders to ensure our technology adheres to all of their requirements.”

There are other, more covert, ways that foreign governments could obtain the type of information gathered by drones, said John Villasenor, a fellow at the Brookings Institution who teaches at the University of California, Los Angeles.

“[If] you fly a drone above a pipeline, there’s a pretty good chance someone is gonna see it up there,” he said, but “a spy satellite just takes a picture from 120 miles up or whatever. Then, of course, no one’s going to know what happened.”

This is not the first time the U.S. government has expressed concern over the use of Chinese-made drones. In 2017, the U.S. Army barred use of DJI’s drones.

Villasenor said the government’s concern over Chinese drones “is not new, although the fact that it has surfaced now may or may not be tied to these broader trade tensions which have flared up in recent months.”

The Department of Homeland Security’s warning about Chinese drones coincides with the Trump administration’s campaign against tech manufacturer Huawei, which also coincides with the ongoing trade war between the two countries.

It also comes as officials are warning transit agencies in New York and Washington, D.C., against buying new subway cars made by a Chinese manufacturer.

Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., along with the region’s other Democratic senators, has introduced legislation prohibiting the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority from buying the Chinese-made cars because of security concerns.

“A rail car might have a whole host of sensors [and] communication tools, and when that equipment is manufactured in China,” Warner said, “and when that equipment sometimes can be upgraded on a remote basis in terms of a software upgrade, there are national security implications.”

Underlying the tech concerns is the Chinese government’s control over all Chinese companies.

“The Communist Party of China now has in their law the ability to interfere and take information from virtually every Chinese company,” Warner warned. “And as long as that exists, that provides a whole set of vulnerabilities I think American business has to consider on a going-forward basis.”

The bottom line, the Department of Homeland Security said, is that customers should be cautious when buying Chinese technology.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/05/29/727612692/we-re-not-being-paranoid-u-s-warns-of-spy-dangers-of-chinese-made-drones

DAYTON, Ohio (WDTN) – The tornado that tore through two neighborhoods in Celina on Monday, killed one man and left several seriously injured was confirmed to be at least an EF-3. 

The assessment was handled by the National Weather Service from Wilmington, which said the survey was still ongoing and a final assessment would be completed at a later date. 

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine visited Celina earlier Tuesday after storms devastated much of the northern Dayton area and Celina. 

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Source Article from https://www.wdtn.com/news/local-news/celina-hit-with-at-least-an-ef-3-tornado-according-to-nws/2033951319

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Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/harris-says-trump-s-overseas-tweets-contrary-best-interests-our-n1011186

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An apparent tornado hit Lawrence, Kansas, on Tuesday, injuring 11 people in the town, while Kansas City International Airport briefly shut down due to damage.

Monday marked the 11th consecutive day where multiple tornadoes were reported throughout the country, according to the NWS.

NWS issued a “tornado emergency” alert for parts of eastern Kansas on Tuesday night as dangerous weather touched down in the area.

Police in Lawrence, the home of Kansas University, said a massive tornado left large trees, power lines and debris along the streets, making some major roads impassable. There were 11 people injured in the town, mostly minor, according to a Lawrence Memorial Hospital spokesperson.

Kansas University is already out for the summer.

Kansas City International Airport said two flights were diverted and passengers waiting in the airport were rushed to the parking garage tunnels at about 7 p.m. The”all clear” was given about 45 minutes later.

The airport remained closed, however, due to “unsafe conditions from area storm debris.” The airport planned to reopen after 11 p.m. local time.

“Most structural damage appears to have occurred near Lawrence as the tornado passed just outside the city limit,” the Lawrence Police Department said in a tweet. “Please do not go sight seeing tornado damage. This only hampers the efforts of emergency workers.”

Chris Neal/The Topeka Capital-Journal via AP
A man and woman inspect the damage to their home and classic cars after being hit by a tornado on Tuesday, May 28, 2019, in a neighborhood south of Lawrence, Kan., near US-59 highway and N. 1000 Road.

There were also about 13,000 customers without power in the Lawrence area late Tuesday.

Tornadoes devastated parts of Ohio on Monday night, leveling homes and leaving thousands without water and power.

“I don’t know that any community is fully prepared for this type of devastation,” Dayton Assistant Fire Chief Nicholas Hosford said Tuesday on ABC’s “Good Morning America.” “We have homes flattened, entire apartment complexes destroyed, businesses throughout our community where walls have collapsed,” Hosford said.

Residents near New York City also braced for a possible tornado, but despite warnings it did not materialize.

The National Weather service issued tornado warnings for several counties surrounding Manhattan on Tuesday evening, urging residents in the path of the “dangerous storm” to stay inside.

The service has said the storms could produce hail the size of quarters.

“Flying debris will be dangerous to those caught without shelter. Mobile homes will be damaged or destroyed. Damage to roofs, windows, and vehicles will occur. Tree damage is likely,” NWS said in a statement. “This Tornado Warning replaces the Severe Thunderstorm Warning issued for the same area.”

The warning covers areas surrounding Staten Island and parts of northeastern New Jersey, including Hudson County, Union County and southern Essex County.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/kansas-declares-tornado-emergency-11-injured-airport-shut/story?id=63334787

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/not-obama-ok-trump-mcconnell-now-says-he-d-confirm-n1011166