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rightnewshindi · 7 months
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रूस की पोलैंड पर हमले की आशंका के बीच जो बाइडेन से मिले राष्ट्रपति डूडा, जानें अमेरिका ने क्या कहा
रूस की पोलैंड पर हमले की आशंका के बीच जो बाइडेन से मिले राष्ट्रपति डूडा, जानें अमेरिका ने क्या कहा
Washington News: रुस-यूक्रेन युद्ध के बीच पोलैंड के राष्ट्रपति और प्रधानमंत्री के संयुक्त अमेरिका दौरे ने दुनिया का ध्यान आकर्षित किया है. पॉलिश राष्ट्रपति ने यहां यूरोप के भविष्य पर बड़ी चिंता जताई. उन्होंने कहा कि अगर पुतिन यूक्रेन जीत गए तो वो अपने युद्ध का दायरा बढ़ा सकते हैं. राष्ट्रपति आंद्रेज डूडा ने पोलैंड और अन्य देशों पर संभावित रुसी अक्रमण को लेकर चिंता जताई, जिस पर हिटलर के हमले ने…
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libertariantaoist · 1 year
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News Roundup 6/13/2023 | The Libertarian Institute
Here is your daily roundup of today's news:
News Roundup 6/13/2023
by Kyle Anzalone
US News
The White House is developing plans to expand the number of permanent members to the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), the Washington Post reported on Monday. Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield is spearheading the effort to enlarge the body by adding six new members. The Institute
Russia
US Ambassador to NATO Julianne Smith has said that Ukraine is unlikely to receive an invitation to join NATO at the alliance’s July summit in Vilnius, Lithuania. AWC
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has confirmed that Ukrainian forces have started their long-awaited counteroffensive. AWC
A group of nine bipartisan members of the House is urging President Biden to supply Ukraine with longer-range weapons and expedite the delivery of M1 Abrams tanks to the country. AWC
Sweden on Monday approved the extradition of a man to Turkey who has previously expressed support for the PKK, a Kurdish militant group Turkey, the US, and the EU consider a terrorist organization. AWC
The Netherlands’ defense minister told Reuters on Monday that training for Ukrainian pilots on F-16 fighter jets could begin as soon as this summer. AWC
Polish President Andrzej Duda said Monday that NATO must respond to Russia deploying nuclear weapons to Belarus. AWC
China
The Chinese Foreign Ministry on Monday denied allegations that China was spying on the US from Cuba and criticized the conflicting information coming from the US government and media outlets. AWC
Iran
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman warned the US would suffer economic consequences if President Biden retaliated for OPEC oil cuts that were announced last fall, The Washington Post reported. AWC
American bombers were joined by aircraft from Washington’s Middle East partners for war games last week. The exercises were said to showcase America’s “ability to deliver overwhelming power at a moment’s notice.” The Institute 
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Sunday that there was “nothing wrong” with Iran reaching an agreement related to its civilian nuclear program as long as its infrastructure remains intact. AWC
The Iranian Foreign Ministry on Monday said that Iranian officials held indirect talks with the US in Oman last month but dismissed the idea that an interim nuclear deal was on the table. AWC
Israel
The Taliban used American military equipment in a battle against Iran. Fox News
Israel’s military has created a new intelligence unit to prepare for war with Iran amid simmering tensions between the two nations, Ynet reported on Sunday. AWC
Israel has informed the White House that it intends to announce the planning and building of thousands of new settlement units in the occupied West Bank later this month, according to US and Israeli officials speaking to Axios. One of the sources told the outlet, at a minimum, the plan includes 4,000 new housing units being built in existing West Bank settlements. The Institute
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rwood2477 · 2 years
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Biden hit for boasting of growing up in Polish community during Poland visit: 'I thought he was Puerto Rican' | Fox News
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best2daynews · 2 years
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Poland’s Duda to push Biden on increasing US presence in country amid Russia threat: diplomat
Polish President Andrzej Duda is expected this week to press President Biden during his Warsaw visit to increase the number of permanent U.S. troops in nations along Russia’s borders, a top diplomat in the U.S. told Fox News Digital. Biden’s visit comes after Monday’s surprise trip to Ukraine, where he met with President Zelenskyy. All this happening just days ahead of the one-year anniversary of…
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newstfionline · 4 years
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Thursday, March 25, 2021
Poll: Learning setbacks a top concern for parents (AP) Parents across the U.S. are conflicted about reopening schools. Most are at least somewhat worried that a return to the classroom will lead to more coronavirus cases, but there’s an even deeper fear that their children are falling behind in school while at home. Sixty-nine percent of parents are at least somewhat concerned that their children will face setbacks in school because of the coronavirus pandemic, including 42% who say they’re very or extremely worried about it, according to a new poll from The University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Nearly as many, 64%, say they are at least somewhat concerned that in-person instruction will lead to more people being infected, but it’s only 33% who say they are very or extremely worried about the risk. That tension reflects the fears of a nation on the cusp of a widespread return to classroom teaching. More than a year after the pandemic started, more schools are now opening their doors to students or plan to do so in coming weeks.
Home school (US Census Bureau/Numlock) Since 2012, the rate of homeschooling in the United States has been pretty steady at about 3.3 percent. Then the pandemic hit, and according to the U.S. Census during the period late April to early May 2020, roughly 5.4 percent of households with children reported homeschooling. To be clear this isn’t doing school at home—they adjusted for that—it’s yank-the-kids-out-of-the-district homeschooling. By fall, that number was 11.1 percent of households opting for true homeschooling rather than virtual learning through school.
Damage from virus: Utility bills overwhelm some households (AP) Millions of U.S. households are facing heavy past-due utility bills, which have escalated in the year since the pandemic forced Americans hunkered down at home to consume more power. And now, government moratoriums that for months had barred utilities from turning off the power of their delinquent customers are starting to expire in most states. As result, up to 37 million customers—representing nearly one-third of all households—will soon have to reckon with their overdue power bills at a time when many of them are struggling with lost jobs or income. A study done by Arcadia, which runs a service that helps households lower utility bills, found that the average past-due amount by those in its network was roughly $850.
Is bad news the only kind? (NYT) Bruce Sacerdote, an economics professor at Dartmouth College, noticed something last year about the Covid-19 television coverage that he was watching on CNN and PBS. It almost always seemed negative, regardless of what was he seeing in the data or hearing from scientists he knew. When Covid cases were rising in the U.S., the news coverage emphasized the increase. When cases were falling, the coverage instead focused on those places where cases were rising. And when vaccine research began showing positive results, the coverage downplayed it, as far as Sacerdote could tell. But he was not sure whether his perception was correct. To check, he began working with two other researchers, building a database of Covid coverage from every major network, CNN, Fox News, Politico, The New York Times and hundreds of other sources, in the U.S. and overseas.      The results showed that Sacerdote’s instinct had been right. The coverage by U.S. publications with a national audience has been much more negative than coverage by any other source that the researchers analyzed, including scientific journals, major international publications and regional U.S. media. “The most well-read U.S. media are outliers in terms of their negativity,” Molly Cook, a co-author of the study, told me. About 87 percent of Covid coverage in national U.S. media last year was negative. The share was 51 percent in international media, 53 percent in U.S. regional media and 64 percent in scientific journals. Sacerdote is careful to emphasize that he does not think journalists usually report falsehoods. The issue is which facts they emphasize. Still, the new study—which the National Bureau of Economic Research has published as a working paper, titled, “Why is all Covid-19 news bad news?”—calls for some self-reflection from those of us in the media. Sometimes our healthy skepticism can turn into reflexive cynicism, and we end up telling something less than the complete story.
As Europe’s Lockdowns Drag On, Police and Protesters Clash (NYT) In Bristol, an English college town where the pubs are usually packed with students, there were fiery clashes between the police and protesters. In Kassel, a German city known for its ambitious contemporary art festival, the police unleashed pepper spray and water cannons on anti-lockdown marchers. A year after European leaders ordered people into their homes to curb a deadly pandemic, thousands are pouring into streets and squares. Often, they are met by batons and shields, raising questions about the tactics and role of the police in societies where personal liberties have already given way to public health concerns. From Spain and Denmark to Austria and Romania, frustrated people are lashing out at the restrictions on their daily lives. With much of Europe facing a third wave of coronavirus infections that could keep these stifling lockdowns in place weeks or even months longer, analysts warn that tensions on the streets are likely to escalate. In Britain, where the rapid pace of vaccinations has raised hopes for a faster opening of the economy than the government is willing to countenance, frustration over recent police conduct has swelled into a national debate over the legitimacy of the police—one that carries distant echoes of the Black Lives Matter movement in the United States.
Subterranean playgrounds—and refuge (Atlas Obscura) Thought to be the world’s only city with an underground master plan, Helsinki began excavating tunnels through bedrock in the 1960s to house power lines, sewers and other utilities. City planners quickly realized that the space could also be home to retail, cultural, and sporting attractions—and that it could shelter the city’s population of 630,000 in the event of an invasion from its neighbor to the East, Russia. Today, nearly 200 miles of tunnels snake beneath Helsinki, providing a weatherproof subterranean playground. But hidden behind the bright lights are emergency shelters fitted with life-sustaining equipment: an air filtration system, an estimated two-week supply of food and water, and cots and other comforts. “It’s comfortable and safe,” says Eija Kivilaakso, Helsinki’s chief underground planner. “If it’s raining, you can drive into the city center to an underground car park and go straight into department stores from elevators. You can dress for comfort instead of in cold-weather clothes. If the weather is not comfortable, people choose the underground.”
Cars become home for Spain’s pandemic casualties (AP) When the social worker called to tell Javier Irure that he was being evicted, the 65-year-old Spaniard couldn’t fathom that he could end up homeless after five decades of manual labor. “I grabbed some clothes, a few books and other things, wrapped them up in a bed sheet and told myself, ‘I have one more roof to put over my head: my car,’” Irure said from inside the old Renault Clio compact that has been his shelter for the past three months. Irure belongs to the multitude of economic victims of the coronavirus pandemic. He managed to avoid getting COVID-19, but the labor slowdown caused by restrictions on movement and social activities the Spanish government imposed to control the spread of the virus proved lethal to his financial stability, and he lost his apartment. The pandemic has been particularly hard on Spain’s economy due to its reliance on tourism and the service sector. The country’s left-wing government has maintained a furlough program to reduce the impact, but over a million jobs have been wiped out. Catholic aid organization Cáritas Española said earlier this month that around a half-million more people, or 26% of all its aid recipients, have reached out for help since the start of the pandemic. Like Javier, some are living in their cars.
Writer faces prison after calling Polish president ‘moron’ for confusion over U.S. electoral college (Washington Post) Polish writer Jakub Zulczyk says he is facing up to three years in prison after he called Poland’s president a “moron” for saying he did not understand the U.S. electoral college system. Writing on Facebook on Monday, Zulczyk said that a district prosecutor in Warsaw had filed an indictment, using an article in Poland’s penal code that prohibits insults against the head of state. The writer said he had not been contacted by the prosecutor and had found out about the indictment from a Polish news site. International rights groups have criticized Duda’s ruling Law and Justice party for clamping down on freedom of speech and an independent judiciary. Freedom House, a U.S.-based group, has called Poland’s laws related to insults “harsh” and noted that libel should be a criminal, rather than civil, offense.
Rohingya refugee camp fire (Reuters) A devastating fire that tore through a sprawling Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh killed 15 people and left tens of thousands homeless, the United Nations said Tuesday. More than 550 people were injured and 400 remain missing. The fire began Monday afternoon at Balukhali camp, one of several such settlements in Cox’s Bazar in southern Bangladesh, which is home to nearly 1 million Rohingyas who fled from neighboring Myanmar.
North Korea fires short-range missiles in challenge to Biden administration (Washington Post) North Korea fired off multiple short range missiles last weekend after denouncing Washington for going forward with joint military exercises with South Korea, according to people familiar with the situation. The missile tests, which have not previously been reported, represent North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s first direct challenge to President Biden, whose aides have not yet outlined their approach to the regime’s nuclear threat amid an ongoing review of U.S.-North Korea policy. For weeks, U.S. defense officials warned that intelligence indicated that North Korea might carry out missile tests. The regime elevated its complaints about U.S. military exercises last week when Kim’s sister warned that if the Biden administration “wants to sleep in peace for the coming four years, it had better refrain from causing a stink.” The tests put renewed pressure on the United States to develop a strategy to address a nuclear threat that has bedeviled successive Republican and Democratic administrations for decades.
South Koreans Are Furious Over Housing Scandal (NYT) The 10 people bought $8.8 million worth of land in an undeveloped area southwest of Seoul, registering it for farming and planting numerous trees. It’s a common trick used by shady real estate speculators in South Korea: Once the area is taken over for housing development, the developers must pay not only for the land, but the trees, too. A national outrage erupted this month when South Koreans learned that the 10 people were officials from the Korea Land and Housing Corporation (LH)—the government agency in charge of building new towns and housing—suspected of using privileged information to cash in on government housing development programs. The incident has thrown President Moon Jae-in’s government into crisis mode just weeks before key mayoral elections that are largely seen as a referendum on him and his party ahead of next year’s presidential race. Young South Koreans are saying they are fed up with corruption and the president’s failed policies on runaway housing prices. The LH scandal is now set to become a critical voter issue in Mr. Moon’s final year in office. President after president has promised to make housing more affordable in South Korea, but real-estate prices have kept soaring, undermining public trust.
Massive cargo ship turns sideways, blocks Egypt’s Suez Canal (AP) A cargo container ship that’s among the largest in the world has turned sideways and blocked all traffic in Egypt’s Suez Canal, officials said Wednesday, threatening to disrupt a global shipping system already strained by the coronavirus pandemic. The MV Ever Given, a Panama-flagged container ship that carries trade between Asia and Europe, became grounded Tuesday in the narrow, man-made waterway dividing continental Africa from the Sinai Peninsula. An Egyptian official blamed a strong wind in the area for the incident. Egyptian forecasters said high winds and a sandstorm plagued the area Tuesday, with winds gusting as much as 50 kph (31 mph). The Egyptian official said tugboats hoped to refloat the ship and that the operation would take at least two days. The Ever Given, built in 2018 with a length of nearly 400 meters (a quarter mile) and a width of 59 meters (193 feet), is among the largest cargo ships in the world. It can carry some 20,000 containers at a time. About 12% of world trade by volume passes through the canal connecting Europe and Asia.
Work affects bosses, workers differently (Bloomberg) A new survey of 30,000 workers in 31 countries by the popular gaming and social networking service Microsoft found that 61 percent of business leaders said that they were striving, while just 39 percent said they were surviving or struggling. That 61 percent living their best life is markedly out of step with the entire rest of society—23 percentage points higher than the average worker—where 54 percent said they are overworked, 39 percent described themselves as exhausted, and straight up 41 percent of people said they are considering just leaving their jobs, a level of burnout not seen before.
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serenagaywaterford · 4 years
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Over a few short weeks, a third of the world has been placed under lockdown. Soldiers maneuver military vehicles through city centers, police cars broadcast calls for citizens to disperse from public spaces, public announcements are made via drones—and all of it has become normal. The soaring death rate and rapid spread of the disease—overwhelming some of the best public health systems in the world—suggest that this dramatic response is the correct approach. While it may succeed in mitigating the spread of the coronavirus, however, the world now faces another danger: that when the virus recedes, many countries will be far less democratic than they were before March 2020. In times of crisis, checks and balances are often ignored in the name of executive power. The danger is that the temporary can become permanent.
Initially, populist and autocratic leaders were ill-prepared for the pandemic. A disdain for science and expertise, combined with nepotism and neglect of state institutions, including health care, made governments such as those of U.S. President Donald Trump, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, and Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro more vulnerable.
Before the health crisis became impossible to deny, government propaganda outlets or supportive media in these countries systematically downplayed the dangers posed by the coronavirus. In the United States, for example, Fox News blamed Democrats for playing up the threat. In Serbia and Turkey, pro-regime media gave voice to pundits and so-called experts who claimed that their populations were genetically protected from infection. In the long term, the pandemic might undermine autocratic leaders—as the usual tactic of blaming scapegoats fails and citizens come to appreciate the value of expertise and functioning institutions. But if strongmen are threatened with a loss of legitimacy, they’re likely to double down on their authoritarian practices and take advantage of the state of emergency to consolidate power.
Long before the virus hit, the world was already experiencing a decline of democracy. Since 2006, more countries have seen their democracies degrade than those that have improved. Last year, according to Freedom House, 64 countries became less democratic, and only 37 became more so.
Now, as countries around the world institute extraordinary measures to fight the pandemic, both dictatorships and democracies are curtailing civil liberties on a massive scale.
A number of European leaders, including Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, have praised Beijing’s rapid and highly repressive response to the virus (after the country corrected its initial bungling approach). The decline in new infections in China itself and the delivery of Chinese aid to countries such as Austria, Greece, Italy, and Spain have improved China’s reputation in Europe.
Freedom of assembly, a fundamental right, has been severely restricted almost everywhere. But free movement is far from the only right being infringed on. In a number of countries, elections are beginning to be delayed. Voting for the Democratic primary in the United States has been postponed in at least 12 states and territories. In Serbia and North Macedonia, national elections scheduled for April have been postponed. In Britain, local elections scheduled for May have also been postponed. In the current environment, holding elections is certainly difficult and even dangerous. It appears that the first round of French municipal elections held on March 15 might have accelerated the spread of the coronavirus. At the same time, postponing elections for months might deprive governments of their legitimacy and allow autocrats to use the delay to strengthen their power and hold elections when it suits them. Where elections are still slated to move forward, they pose other dangers to democracy. Though the majority of Poles want presidential elections planned for May to be postponed, the country’s government insists they will go ahead. Such elections would unfairly favor incumbent President Andrzej Duda, an ally of the ruling Law and Justice party; emergencies often help sitting leaders and make it difficult for the opposition to run a campaign. Altogether, postponing elections is the better choice, but such decisions should follow a clear cross-party agreement and timetable.
“We are at war,” French President Emmanuel Macron recently declared, echoing language other leaders have used as well. Such dramatic rhetoric can help rally a strong effort to fight the pandemic and highlight the sacrifices citizens have to make. Such appeals can be dangerous, however. The virus is not an army, and evoking war can transform a health crisis into a security one, justifying repressive measures.
Measures like closing businesses, enforcing social distancing, and keeping people off the street, including curfews and bans on gatherings, are needed to control the rapid spread of the coronavirus. But there is a serious risk that these efforts are leading to a new wave of authoritarianism. In Azerbaijan, President Ilham Aliyev used the Nowruz spring holiday address to describe the opposition as a dangerous fifth column and threatened that “during the existence of the disease, the rules of completely new relationships will apply. … It is possible that a state of emergency may be declared at some point. In this case, the isolation of representatives of the fifth column will become a historical necessity.”
   Self-Isolation Might Stop Coronavirus, but It Will Speed the Spread of Extremism
Millions of people stuck at home will turn to social media, where disinformation is rife. Radical Islamists and far-right groups are exploiting widespread confusion and fear to spread hate.
   Cambodia’s Leaders Line Up a Coronavirus Scapegoat
Hun Sen needs somebody to blame for the impending disaster.
Numerous countries have already passed emergency laws or declared states of emergency—a tactic autocrats can use to consolidate power. In Hungary, the government of Viktor Orban on March 30 passed a law “on protecting against the coronavirus” that allows the government to rule by decree and suspend existing laws. Furthermore, parliamentary oversight is suspended for the duration of the crisis, with only the prime minister permitted to determine when it will be lifted. The new law introduces draconian fines for spreading fake news and breaking quarantine and curfews, with penalties of up to five years’ imprisonment. The law triggered an unusually clear letter by the secretary-general of the Council of Europe, the Continent’s key human rights watchdog, to the Hungarian government, stating that “[a]n indefinite and uncontrolled state of emergency cannot guarantee that the basic principles of democracy will be observed and that the emergency measures restricting fundamental human rights are strictly proportionate to the threat which they are supposed to counter.” In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has used the emergency to postpone his corruption trial, block parliament from sitting, and grant extraordinary domestic surveillance powers to the internal intelligence agency.
The extraordinary powers given through emergency laws and other emergency measures can lead to abuse among democratic leaders as well. Liberal democracies have also taken unprecedented measures to monitor citizens, such as tracking their movement through cell-phone data, including in Italy, Germany, and Austria. In Montenegro, the government even published the names and addresses of citizens who are supposed to be in quarantine to ensure compliance.
Confronting the coronavirus crisis will take extreme measures, but any infringement on civil liberties must be temporary and proportional. Crucially, emergency measures need to have a clearly defined time frame to avoid leading into a permanent state of emergency.
Furthermore, legislative bodies need to remain active. The Austrian parliament, for example, passed a number of laws in an accelerated procedure, and the European Parliament supported special EU funds to help countries affected by the pandemic—with most parliament members participating and voting remotely.
Fake news, meanwhile, is best confronted through government transparency—rather than with penalties. In fact, penalties for spreading false news are particularly popular in countries such as Hungary, Serbia, and Turkey, where pro-government media have been disseminating misleading and false information about the health risk of the disease. Part of the success of countries like Taiwan and Singapore in confronting the coronavirus is due to their clear and open communication about the pandemic.
The dangers are clear. The pandemic may well lead to a serious decline in democracy around the world. It is crucial that liberal democracies show self-restraint and vigilance. Governments such as Canada and South Korea have thus far demonstrated how to respond effectively to the pandemic while ensuring that a critical, vibrant debate remains alive. Others must follow suit.
Florian Bieber is a professor of Southeast European history and politics and Jean Monnet chair for the Europeanization of Southeastern Europe at the University of Graz, Austria. He is the author of Debating Nationalism: The Global Spread of Nations. Twitter: @fbieber
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profoundpaul · 2 years
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Fox News Guest: 'Horse's A** Biden' Was Defeated by a Piece of Pizza in Front of the Entire World
How strong can the world think President Joe Biden is when he’s defeated by a piece of pizza?
That’s what one Fox News contributor was asking after Biden’s trip abroad last week when he had the most-examined food-related presidential incident since George H.W. Bush’s trip to Japan in 1992.
At least the current president didn’t end up vomiting on the head of state — although panelists on Fox News’ “Hannity” weren’t impressed by it either way.
The incident was yet another Biden gaffe — and, as we’ve pointed out here at The Western Journal, these aren’t inconsequential things. Evidence is piling up that he simply doesn’t have the mental wherewithal to be president. For the most part, the mainstream media isn’t going to talk about all this. We will. You can help us bring America the truth by subscribing.
The pizza incident was overshadowed by a bigger Biden gaffe, one that could have had serious consequences. He capped off a speech in Poland on Saturday by calling Russian President Vladimir Putin a “butcher” and then saying — in a statement that almost certainly wasn’t in the original draft of the speech — “for God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power.”
The White House would later clarify this. “The president’s point was that Putin cannot be allowed to exercise power over his neighbors or the region,” a statement from the administration read. “He was not discussing Putin’s power in Russia, or regime change.”
All this was enough to make you forget about this moment during a lunch where he had pizza with American troops in the 82nd Airborne Division stationed in Poland:
Apparently one of these guys put jalapeños on Biden’s pizza.
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— Jimmy Salford (@1Fubar) March 27, 2022
The handlers forgot to call ahead for some oatmeal, it seems. According to Mediaite, Biden referenced it later when he coughed during a meeting with Polish President Andrezj Duda.
“I was visiting our troops and I had pizza pie with hot peppers on it,” he said.
There were numerous issues regarding Biden’s visit, not the least of which were remarks he made in which the president seemed to call the language of the Declaration of Independence “corny” and said we hadn’t lived up to its ideals.
“We’re based on an idea,” he said. “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all women and men are created equal. Sounds corny, but it’s the truth of who we are. We’ve never lived up to it, but we never walked away from it.”
Biden tells American servicemen in Poland “DON’T JUMP!” as troops sit in awkward silence, then calls the Declaration of Independence “corny” SECONDS later
WATCH THIS. pic.twitter.com/HSSlbrSkbc
— Danny De Urbina (@dannydeurbina) March 25, 2022
On “Hannity” on Friday, guest host Pete Hegseth and panelist Charlie Hurt took aim at Biden for treating the founding documents “dismissively” and said he had been “defeated” by a slice of pizza.
According to a transcript from Fox News, Hegseth was infuriated by “this idea that the president of the United States would go talk about our founding documents dismissively on the border of a shooting war when, this is not to praise Vladimir Putin, but there’s no way when he was on stage there was one equivocation about the justification of his stance on Russia.”
“If there’s one place to say this is the most beautiful document, we have the best system, we will defeat you, it’s there. Yet he makes statements like that,” he added.
Hurt then noted Biden spoke all of this “in a roomful of men and women probably, who have sworn, have signed up and sworn to give their lives not only for their fellow man beside them but for that corny document. They have literally and they would walk into any fire to give up their life for that document.”
“And to have this horse’s a** up there, their commander in chief, and I hate talking like this because he’s still the commander in chief and out of respect to those men in that room. I — you know, you hate to drag the guy, but he shouldn’t be there.”
As footage of the pizza incident rolled, Hurt noted, “And there he is, defeated by a slice of jalapeño pizza.”
Guest: There he is, defeated by a slice of jalapeño pizza pic.twitter.com/b5XjmWZaZ4
— Acyn (@Acyn) March 26, 2022
Not that we necessarily need to disrespect the president on live TV by calling him a “horse’s a**,” but the point is well-made otherwise:
“He is not fit for this, and he’s standing in a roomful of people who have sworn to die to for our liberty and just to die for that document and he’s going to go in there and it’s beyond just not inspiring,” Hurt noted. “It’s not inspiring, but it’s beyond that.”
And yes, you can say it’s just a piece of pizza and we shouldn’t be focusing on it. However, the moment has become low-key emblematic of the Biden administration the same way Bush’s vomiting incident in 1992 was for that administration. The then-president — who was in Asia on a trade trip — threw up in the lap of Japanese Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa and fainted.
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The incident was the source of constant mocking, the implication being that Bush was older and weaker than his Democratic competition that year. (He was only 67 at the time, as The New York Times noted, making him 12 years younger than Biden is now.)
Furthermore, with the Cold War over, our trade imbalance — particularly with Japan — was one of the biggest issues of the 1992 campaign; given that background, vomiting in the Japanese prime minister’s lap didn’t make him look particularly great.
As Hurt pointed out, we have to endure three more years of this. Not only that, Russia already has begun its campaign of irredentism with its invasion of Ukraine, and China is not likely to be far behind with Taiwan.
We’re on the precipice of a new Cold War — or maybe even a hot war. And, among other gaffes, the president is getting defeated by pizza on foreign soil. Wonderful.
The post Fox News Guest: 'Horse's A** Biden' Was Defeated by a Piece of Pizza in Front of the Entire World appeared first on The Western Journal.
source https://www.westernjournal.com/fox-news-guest-horses-biden-defeated-piece-pizza-front-entire-world/
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elefapt · 3 years
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Live: President Biden meets with Poland’s president
Live: President Biden meets with Poland’s president
U.S. President Joseph R. Biden holds a bilateral meeting with President of Poland Andrzej Duda. #FoxNews Subscribe to Fox News! https://bit.ly/2vaBUvAS Watch more Fox News Video: https://ift.tt/I0qcK6e Watch Fox News Channel Live: https://ift.tt/jGDxO3u FOX News Channel (FNC) is a 24-hour all-encompassing news service delivering breaking news as well as political and business news. The number one…
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foxnewsalerttoday · 4 years
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Members of Poland's parliament on Thursday used the swearing-in ceremony of President Andrzej Duda's to make a political statement, forming a rainbow with their clothing to highlight accusations of homophobia against his campaign.  via FOX NEWS At: August 7, 2020 at 01:21AM Follow the link to read full news: https://foxnews.com/world/polish-opposition-shows-rainbow-solidarity-swearing-in
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go-redgirl · 7 years
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Trump in Poland: President calls on 'all nations' to confront North Korean threat By Edmund DeMarche
Published July 06, 2017
Fox News
NOW PLAYING
President Trump: Something has to be done about North Korea
President Trump on Thursday called on ‘all nations’ to confront North Korea two days after the rogue country test-fired its first intercontinental ballistic missile.
Trump did not give specific details about what a confrontation would look like. He took a shot at former President Obama, saying he doesn’t “draw red lines.”
“We’ll just take a look at what happens,” Trump said during a joint press conference with Poland’s President Duda in Warsaw. “It’s a shame that they are behaving this way. Something has to happen.”
Trump touched on a variety of topics during the press conference. He said Russia is destabilizing the region and promised to work with Poland on its security. Trump thanked Duda for his country’s commitment to NATO and paying its fair share. Of the 28 member nations, Poland is one of five that pays its commitments.  
Trump-- who has been an outspoken critic of countries that do not pay their dues-- said ever since his criticism, money has been “pouring in.”
Trump arrived in Warsaw late Wednesday for a 16-hour visit that includes a keynote address to the Poles from Krasinski Square, site of a monument commemorating the 1944 Warsaw Uprising against the Nazis. Scores of people who lined darkened roads waved American and Polish flags and recorded video of Trump’s motorcade as it sped him and his wife, Melania, to their hotel.
The press conference was televised at about 4:30 AM ET.
He was asked whether or not he believed Russia meddled in the 2016 elections. Trump said Russians probably played a role, but said so did other countries. He said Obama was aware of the reported meddling in August and did little to intervene because he was under the wrong assumption that Hillary Clinton was a shoo-in.
Trump was also asked about the recent reports that CNN faced backlash for appearing to imply that it would reveal the identity of the Reddit user who made an anti-CNN, Trump-themed GIF if he reneged on an apology.
CNN has defended its handling of the story, issuing a statement Wednesday saying the network did not publish the user’s name out of concern for his safety -- adding, "Any assertion that the network blackmailed or coerced him is false."
Trump said, “CNN was unfortunate for them. They have been fake news for a long time. NBC is equally as bad. Despite the fact that I made them a fortune with Apprentice.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report
Edmund DeMarche is a news editor for FoxNews.com. Follow him on Twitter @EDeMarche.
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tuseriesdetv · 5 years
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Guía de series: Estrenos y regresos de enero 2020
Empezamos el nuevo año con más series nuevas que días tiene el mes. ¿Preparados para no dar abasto? ¿Qué criterios seguiremos a la hora de elegir nuestras nuevas adquisiciones?
¡Feliz año!
Leyenda:
Verde: series nuevas.
Rojo: series de las que haremos reviews semanales.
Negro: regresos de otras series.
Naranja: miniseries o series documentales.
Amarillo: tv movies, documentales, especiales o pilotos.
Morado: season finales.
Púrpura: midseason finales.
*
Calendario de series
1 de enero: 
Messiah (1T completa) y Spinning Out (1T completa) en Netflix
Dracula y Doctor Who (12T) en BBC One
Bancroft (2T) en ITV
Mrs Brown's Boys (especial Año Nuevo) en BBC One
Almost Family (vuelve) en FOX
2 de enero: Last Man Standing (8T) y Deputy (1T) en FOX
3 de enero: 
Anne with an E (3T y última completa) en Netflix
Blue Bloods (vuelve), Hawaii Five-0 (vuelve) y Magnum P.I. (vuelve) en CBS
Dracula en BBC One
5 de enero: 
Golden Globes en NBC
Call the Midwife (9T) en BBC One
Power (vuelve) en Starz
God Friended Me (vuelve) y NCIS: LA (vuelve) en CBS
Bless the Harts (1T finale) en FOX
6 de enero: 
Manifest (2T) en NBC
Father Brown (8T) en BBC One
All Rise (vuelve), Bull (vuelve), The Neighborhood (vuelve) y Bob Hearts Abishola (vuelve) en CBS
7 de enero: 
Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist (1T) en NBC
Schitt's Creek (6T y última) en Pop
The Haves and the Have Nots (7T) en OWN
FBI: Most Wanted (1T), FBI (vuelve) y NCIS (vuelve) en CBS
Mixed-ish (vuelve), Black-ish (vuelve) y Emergence (vuelve) en ABC
The Resident (vuelve) en FOX
8 de enero: 
Party of Five (1T) en Freeform
White House Farm en ITV
Criminal Minds (15T y última) en CBS
Modern Family (vuelve), Single Parents (vuelve) y Stumptown (vuelve) en ABC
Chicago Fire (vuelve), Chicago PD (vuelve) y Chicago Med (vuelve) en NBC
9 de enero: 
Death in Paradise (9T) en BBC One
Mom (vuelve), Carol's Second Act (vuelve), The Unicorn (vuelve) y Evil (vuelve) en CBS
The Good Place (vuelve), Superstore (vuelve), Will & Grace (vuelve), Young Sheldon (vuelve), Perfect Harmony (vuelve) y Law & Order: SVU (vuelve) en NBC
10 de enero: 
AJ and The Queen (1T completa), Medical Police (1T completa) y Jamtara (1T completa) en Netflix
Lincoln Rhyme: Hunt for the Bone Collector (1T) en NBC
Deadwater Fell (1T) en Channel 4
Sick of It (2T) en Sky One
Grantchester (5T) en ITV
King Gary (1T) en BBC One
SKAM España (3T completa) en Movistar+
High School Musical: The Musical: The Series (1T finale) en Disney+
11 de enero: The New Pope en HBO
12 de enero: 
The Outsider (1T) en HBO
Vera (10T) en ITV
Critics' Choice Awards en The CW
13 de enero: 
Cold Feet (9T) en ITV
The Good Doctor (vuelve) en ABC
14 de enero: 
Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts (1T completa) en Netflix
Arrow (vuelve) y Legends of Tomorrow (vuelve) en The CW
This Is Us (vuelve) y New Amsterdam (vuelve) en NBC
15 de enero: 
Good Trouble (2bT) en Freeform
The Magicians (5T) en Syfy
68 Whiskey (1T) en Paramount Network
Grace and Frankie (6T completa) en Netflix
Pequeñas coincidencias (2T completa) en Amazon
The Goldbergs (vuelve) y Schooled (vuelve) en ABC
Riverdale (vuelve) y Nancy Drew (vuelve) en The CW
SWAT (vuelve) en CBS
16 de enero: 
Everything's Gonna Be Okay (1T) y Grown-ish (3T) en Freeform
Legacies (vuelve) en The CW
17 de enero: 
Sex Education (2T completa) y Ares (1T completa) en Netflix
El embarcadero (2T y última completa) en Movistar+
Little America (1T completa) en Apple TV+
Diary of a Future President (1T) en Disney+
Cobra (1T completa) en Sky One
Troop Zero en Amazon
American Housewife (vuelve) y Fresh Off the Boat (vuelve) en ABC
Charmed (vuelve) y Dynasty (vuelve) en The CW
Servant (1T finale) en Apple TV+
19 de enero: 
9-1-1: Lone Star (1T) en FOX
Avenue 5 (1T) y Curb Your Enthusiasm (10T) en HBO
Batwoman (vuelve) y Supergirl (vuelve) en The CW
20 de enero: 
Carter (2T) en WGN America
Family Reunion (2T completa) en Netflix
All American (vuelve) y Black Lightning (vuelve) en The CW
Prodigal Son (vuelve) en FOX
21 de enero: 
Legends of Tomorrow (5T) en The CW
The Conners (vuelve) y Bless This Mess (vuelve) en ABC
22 de enero: Awkwafina is Nora From Queens (1T completa) en Comedy Central
23 de enero: 
Outmatched (1T) en FOX
The Bold Type (4T) en Freeform
The Dead Lands (1T) en Shudder
The Ghost Bride (1T completa) y October Faction (1T completa) en Netflix
Grey's Anatomy (vuelve), Station 19 (vuelve) y A Million Little Things (vuelve) en ABC
Supernatural (vuelve) en The CW
24 de enero: 
Star Trek: Picard (1T) en CBS All Access
Chilling Adventures of Sabrina (3T completa) y The Ranch (4bT y última completa) en Netflix
Shrill (2T completa) en Hulu
26 de enero: Shameless (10T finale) en Showtime
28 de enero: 
Miracle Workers (2T) en TBS
Arrow (series finale) en The CW
29 de enero: Good Trouble (2T finale) en Freeform
30 de enero: 
Evil (1T finale) en CBS
The Good Place (series finale) en NBC
31 de enero: 
BoJack Horseman (6bT y última completa), Luna Nera (1T completa), Diablero (2T completa) y Ragnarok (1T completa) en Netflix
Ted Bundy: Falling for a Killer en Amazon
Shrill (2T finale) en Hulu
*
Estrenos de series
Messiah (Netflix)
Un hombre llamado Al-Masih (Mehdi Dehbi, Tyrant) dice ser el mesías en Oriente Medio. Sus presuntos milagros están propiciando un seguimiento internacional cada vez mayor, y las dudas sobre su identidad crecen también, incluso en la CIA. Con Michelle Monaghan (The Path, True Detective), John Ortiz (The Guest Book, Togetherness), Tomer Sisley (La commune, Les Innocents), Will Traval (Arrow, Jessica Jones), Melinda Page Hamilton (Devious Maids, Mad Men), Stefania LaVie Owen (The Carrie Diaries), Jane Adams (Hung), Beau Bridges (Homeland, Masters of Sex) y Philip Baker Hall (Room 104, The Loop). Creada por Michael Petroni (The Book Thief) y dirigido por James McTeigue (Sense8, V for Vendetta). Diez episodios. Estreno: 1 de enero
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Spinning Out (Netflix)
Una prometedora patinadora artística (Kaya Scodelario; Skins, The Maze Runner) está a punto de colgar sus patines tras una aparatosa caída. Cuando aprovecha la oportunidad surgida de competir por parejas con un chico (Evan Roderick, Arrow), teme que salga a la luz un oscuro secreto. Completan el reparto January Jones (Mad Men, The Last Man on Earth), Willow Shields (The Hunger Games), el ex patinador olímpico Johnny Weir, Sarah Wright Olsen (Marry Me, Parks and Recreation), Will Kemp (Reign, Girlfriends' Guide to Divorce), Kaitlyn Leeb (Shadowhunters, Slasher), Amanda Zhou (October Faction), Mitchell Edwards (All American, The Fix), Svetlana Efremova (The Americans) y Charlie Hewson (White Collar). Creada por Samantha S. Stratton (Mr. Mercedes), antigua patinadora. Escrita por Stratton y Lara Olsen (90210, Boy Meets World). Diez episodios. Estreno: 1 de enero
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Dracula (BBC One)
Basada en la novela de Bram Stoker (1897), nos trae a un Dracula (Claes Bang; The Square, Bron) recién llegado a la Inglaterra victoriana. Con John Hefferman (Collateral, Dickensian), Dolly Wells (Doll & Em, Blunt Talk), Joanna Scanlan (No Offence, Requiem), Mark Gatiss (Sherlock, Game of Thrones), Morfydd Clark (Patrick Melrose, The City and the City), Lujza Richter (Phantom Thread), Clive Russell (Curfew, Rellik), Catherine Schell (The Spoils of War, Doctor Who), Jonathan Aris (Sherlock, Lucky Man), Sacha Dawan (Iron Fist, Line of Duty), Nathan Stewart-Jarrett (Misfits, Utopia) y Youssef Kerkour (Nightflyers, Home). Escrita por Mark Gatiss y Steven Moffat, creadores de Sherlock y guionistas de Doctor Who. Tres episodios. Estreno: 1 de enero
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Deputy (FOX)
Cuando muere el sheriff del condado de Los Ángeles, una vieja regla aprobada en el salvaje Oeste convierte en su sucesor al hombre menos indicado: Bill Hollister (Stephen Dorff; True Detective, Star), un abogado de quinta generación que se encuentra más cómodo acabando con los criminales que manejando temas políticos. Lidera un equipo de personas ambiciosas y complicadas que no descansarán hasta impartir justicia. Completan el reparto Yara Martinez (Jane the Virgin, True Detective), Brian Van Holt (Cougar Town, The Bridge), Danielle Moné Truitt (Rebel), Bex Taylor-Klaus (Arrow, The Killing), Shane Paul McGhie (Sacred Lies, After), Mark Moses (Desperate Housewives, Mad Men), Natalia Cigliuti (This Is Us, The Glades) y Karrueche Tran (Claws, The Bay).
Escrita y producida por Will Beall (Aquaman, Training Day). El piloto fue dirigido por David Ayer (Training Day).
Estreno: 2 de enero
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Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist (NBC)
Zoey Clarke (Jane Levy; Suburgatory, Castle Rock) es una programadora informática que vive en San Francisco y, a partir de un acontecimiento inusual, comienza a escuchar a través de canciones los deseos y necesidades de la gente que le rodea. Al principio se cuestiona su cordura, pero pronto se da cuenta del maravilloso regalo que ha recibido. También cantarán Skylar Astin (Pitch Perfect, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend), Lauren Graham (Gilmore Girls, Parenthood), Peter Gallagher (The O.C., Covert Affairs), Alex Newell (Glee), John Clarence Stewart (Luke Cage, What/If), Carmen Cusack (Sorry for Your Loss), Mary Steenburgen (Back to the Future, Last Man on Earth), Andrew Leeds (Barry, Get Shorty), India de Beaufort (Veep, Kevin (Probably) Saves the World), Michael Thomas Grant (Roadies), Kapil Talwalkar (American Princess), Alice Lee (Brittany Runs a Marathon) y Stephanie Styles (Bonding, American Vandal).
Drama musical escrito por Austin Winsberg (Gossip Girl, 9JKL), dirigido por Richard Shepard (Girls) y producido por Paul Feig (A Simple Favor, The Office).
Estreno: 7 de enero
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FBI: Most Wanted (CBS)
Spin-off de FBI centrado en el equipo de búsqueda de los fugitivos y los criminales más buscados del país. Está protagonizada por Julian McMahon (Charmed, Runaways), Keisha Castle-Hughes (Game of Thrones, Manhunt: Unabomber), Kellan Lutz (Twilight, The Comeback), Roxy Stemberg (Absentia, Emerald City), Nathaniel Arcand (Heartland, Black Summer), Alana De La Garza (Law & Order, Forever), Lorne Cardinal (Kayak to Klemtu) y YaYa Gosselin.
Creada por René Balcer (Law & Order).
Estreno: 7 de enero
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Party of Five (Freeform)
Reboot de la serie emitida entre 1994 y 2000 que seguía a cinco hermanos que crecían juntos tras la muerte de sus padres. En esta ocasión, los hermanos Acosta tratan de sobrevivir juntos tras la deportación de sus padres a México. Protagonizada por Brandon Larracuente (13 Reasons Why, Bloodline), Emily Tosta (Mayans MC), Niko Guardado (The Goldbergs), Elle Paris Legaspi (To My Family), Garcia (Tales of the City), Sol Rodriguez (Devious Maids) y Elizabeth Grullon. Creada por Amy Lippman (Party of Five, Masters of Sex) y Christopher Keyser (Party of Five, The Society). Diez episodios. Estreno: 8 de enero
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White House Farm (ITV)
Drama sobre el asesinato de cinco miembros de la misma familia -abuelos, madre e hijos gemelos de seis años- en una granja de Essex en agosto de 1985 y la investigación posterior. Basada en hechos reales. Protagonizada por Freddie Fox (Cucumber, Year of the Rabbit), Mark Addy (Game of Thrones, The Full Monty), Stephen Graham (This Is England, Boardwalk Empire), Gemma Whelan (Game of Thrones, Gentleman Jack), Mark Stanley (Sanditon, Criminal), Alexa Davies (Detectorists, Harlots), Cressida Bonas (The Bye Bye Man), Alfie Allen (Game of Thrones, Close to the Enemy), Amanda Burton (Silent Witness, The Level) y Nicholas Farrell (The Cry, Will). Escrita por Kris Mrksa (The Slap, Requiem) y Giula Sandler (Nowhere Boys, Glitch) con la cooperación de Colin Caffell, padre de los gemelos asesinados. Seis episodios. Estreno: 8 de enero
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AJ and The Queen (Netflix)
Ruby Red (RuPaul) es una drag queen arruinada que viaja de club en club en una caravana de los años 90 junto a AJ (Izzy Gaspersz), una huérfana de once años un tanto desquiciante. Con Josh Segarra (Arrow, Orange Is the New Black), Michael-Leon Wooley (Dreamgirls, The Princess and the Frog), Katerina Tannenbaum (Sweetbitter, The Bold Type), Tia Carrere (Relic Hunter, Wayne's World), Misty Monroe (Overdue, Foursome) y Matthew Wilkas (New York is Dead, Top Five). Comedia creada por RuPaul y Michael Patrick King (2 Broke Girls, Sex and the City). Diez episodios. Estreno: 10 de enero
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Medical Police (Netflix)
Es un spin-off de la comedia Childrens Hospital en el que Lola (Erinn Hayes) y Owen (Rob Huebel) descubren un virus en el hospital pediátrico de São Paulo, Brasil y trabajarán juntos como agentes del gobierno para encontrar una cura y descubrir la conspiración que está detrás de todo. Completan el cast Lake Bell (Cat), Rob Corddry (Blake), Ken Marino (Glenn) y Malin Akerman (Valerie) volverán como recurrentes. Completan el cast Sarayu Blue (I Feel Bad, No Tomorrow), Fred Melamed (Casual, Lady Dynamite) y Eric Nenninger (One Day at a Time, Wet Hot American Summer).
Escrita y producida por Rob Corddry, creador de la original. Dirigida por David Wain (Childrens Hospital, Wet Hot American Summer). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 10 de enero
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Jamtara (Netflix)
El estado de Jharkhand es la capital del phishing en la India. Allí, los primos Sunny y Rocky, junto a sus amigos, dirigen un exitoso negocio de estafa desde la pequeña ciudad de Jamtara. Cuando las noticias informan de este negocio, todo el mundo quiere formar parte de él. Protagonizada por Amit Sial, Dibyendu Bhattacharya, Aksha Pardasany, Sparsh Srivastava, Monika Panwar, Anshumaan Pushkar, Kartavya Kabra, Rohit Kp, Harshid Gupta, Sarfaraz Ali Mirza y Aatm Prakash Mishra.
Inspirada en hechos reales. Escrita por Trishant Srivastava y dirigida por Soumendra Padhi. Nueve episodios.
Estreno: 10 de enero
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Lincoln Rhyme: Hunt for the Bone Collector (NBC)
Inspirada en la novela 'The Bone Collector (1997) y en la película de 1999, sigue a Lincoln Rhyme (Russell Hornsby, Grimm, Proven Innocent), un antiguo detective de la policía de Nueva York y genio forense que tuvo que retirarse tras el ataque de un asesino en serie. Amelia Sachs (Arielle Kebbel; Midnight, Texas; Ballers) es una joven oficial que sigue el rastro del criminal y se alía con Rhyme para atraparlo. Completan el reparto Brian F. O'Byrne (Aquarius, FlashForward), Tate Ellington (Quantico, The Brave), Courtney Grosbeck (Parenthood, Homeland), Ramses Jimenez (Vida, Fear The Walking Dead), Brooke Lyons (The Affair, Life Sentence), Roslyn Ruff (Divorce, Godfather of Harlem) y Michael Imperioli (The Sopranos, Mad Dogs).
Escrita y producida por VJ Boyd (Justified, SWAT) y Mark Bianculli y dirigida por Seth Gordon (The Goldbergs, Atypical).
Estreno: 10 de enero
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Deadwater Fell (Channel 4)
En una pequeña e idílica comunidad escocesa, una madre (Anna Madeley; The Crown, Patrick Melrose) y sus tres hijos aparecen asesinados. Aunque parecían una familia feliz y perfecta, el padre (David Tennant; Broadchurch, Doctor Who) es el principal sospechoso. Con Cush Jumbo (The Good Fight, The Good Wife) y Matthew McNulty (Misfits, Versailles).
Escrita por Daisy Coulam (Humans, Grantchester). Cuatro episodios.
Estreno: 10 de enero
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King Gary (BBC One)
Comedia sobre un matrimonio de los suburbios que quiere encajar y ser aceptado por los vecinos y también impresionar y estar a la altura del padre de él (Simon Day; The Fast Show, The Life of Rock with Brian Pern). Protagonizada por Tom Davis (Murder in Successville, Plebs), Laura Checkley (Wanderlust, Detectorists), Camille Coduri (Doctor Who, Him & Her), Neil Maskell (Humans, Utopia), Romesh Ranganathan (The Reluctant Landlord), Dustin Demri-Burns (Sick Note, GameFace), Lisa McGrillis (Mum, No Offence), Mim Shaikh (Informer) y Emma Sidi (W1A).
Creada por Davis (Murder in Successville) y James De Frond (Murder in Successville). Seis episodios.
Estreno: 10 de enero
The New Pope (HBO)
Continuación de The Young Pope en la que John Brannox (John Malkovich; Being John Malkovich, Places in the Heart) reemplaza a Lenny Belardo (Jude Law) como papa. Con Sharon Stone (Basic Instinct, Casino), Marilyn Manson (Salem, Sons of Anarchy), Ulrich Thomsen (Banshee, Counterpart), Mark Ivanir (Barry, Homeland), Kika Georgiou, Massimo Ghini (Raccontami), Jessica Piccolo Valerani (Loro), Antonio Petrocelli, Henry Goodman (Genius) y Yulia Snigir. Vuelven Javier Cámara, Cécile de France, Ludivine Sagnier, Ignazio Oliva, Silvio Orlando y Maurizio Lombardi.
Escrita y dirigida por Paolo Sorrentino (Youth, La grande bellezza). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 11 de enero
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The Outsider (HBO)
Adaptación de la novela de Stephen King (2018) en la que una simple investigación de asesinato lleva a un policía y a un investigador a cuestionarse qué es real, ya que una malvada fuerza sobrenatural interviene en el caso. Protagonizada por Jason Bateman (Ozark, Arrested Development), Cynthia Erivo (Bad Times at the El Royale, Harriet), Ben Mendelsohn (Bloodline, Rogue One), Bill Camp (The Looming Tower, The Leftovers), Mare Winningham (The Affair, Mildred Pierce), Paddy Considine (Informer, Peaky Blinders), Julianne Nicholson (Masters of Sex, Law & Order: True Crime), Yul Vazquez (Treme; Midnight, Texas), Jeremy Bobb (The Knick, Godless), Marc Menchaca (Ozark, The Sinner), Michael Esper (Trust, The Family), Hettienne Park (Hannibal, Blindspot), Derek Cecil (House of Cards, Treme) y Max Beesley (Jamestown, Ordinary Lies).
Escrita por Richard Price (The Deuce, The Wire) y dirigida y producida por Jason Bateman (Ozark). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 12 de enero
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68 Whiskey (Paramount Network)
Dramedia militar, adaptación de la israelí Charlie Golf One, que sigue las vidas de un grupo de médicos del ejército que trabajan en Afganistán. Protagonizada por Sam Keeley (Dublin Murders, Burnt), Gage Golightly (Red Oaks, iZombie), Cristina Rodlo (The Terror, Too Old to Die Young), Jeremy Tardy (Dear White People, Ballers), Nicholas Coombe (Imaginary Mary, Dora and the Lost City of Gold), Derek Theler (Baby Daddy, American Gods), Beth Riesgraf (Leverage, Complications), Lamont Thompson (NCIS: LA, The Brink), Usman Ally (On Becoming a God in Central Florida, A Series of Unfortunate Events), Artur Benson (Shooter), Aaron Glenane (Picnic at Hanging Rock) y Linc Hand (Revenge, Ghosted).
Escrita por Roberto Benabib (Weeds), dirigida por Ron Howard (Arrested Development, Felicity) y producida por Brian Grazer (Arrested Development, Friday Night Lights). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 15 de enero
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Everything's Gonna Be Okay (Freeform)
Comedia creada, escrita y protagonizada por Josh Thomas (Please Like Me) sobre un neurótico de veinticinco años que vive con su padre soltero y dos hermanas adolescentes, una de ellas con autismo, y no ayuda a criar a las chicas hasta que su padre cae gravemente enfermo. Completan el reparto Kayla Cromer, Maeve Press y Adam Faison (Here and Now). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 16 de enero
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Ares (Netflix)
En la primera serie neerlandesa original de Netflix, Rosa (Jade Olieberg) y Jacob (Tobias Kersloot) descubren, tras el accidente de un amigo, que la sociedad secreta de estudiantes a la que se han unido para entrar en la élite de Ámsterdam oculta oscuros secretos del pasado de la nación. Completan el cast Lisa Smit, Robin Boissevain, Frieda Barnhard, Rifka Lodeizen, Roos Dickman, Jip van den Dool, Steef de Bot, Janni Goslinga, Dennis Rudge, Minne Koole, Jennifer Welts y Florence Vos Weeda.
Creada por Pieter Kuijpers y escrita por Michael Leendertse. Ocho episodios.
Estreno: 17 de enero
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Little America (Apple TV+)
Antología que adaptará las sorprendentes historias reales de inmigrantes en Estados Unidos contadas en Epic Magazine.
Escrita por Emily V. Gordon y Kumail Nanijani (The Big Sick) junto a Lee Eisenberg (Hello Ladies, The Office). Ocho episodios. Ya está renovada por una segunda temporada.
Estreno: 17 de enero
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Diary of a Future President (Disney+)
Comedia sobre las idas y venidas en la vida de Elena (Tess Romero), una niña cubanoamericana que se convertirá en la Presidenta de Estados Unidos (Gina Rodriguez; Jane the Virgin, Annihilation). Con Selenis Leyva (Orange Is the New Black, Maniac), Charlie Bushnell, Michael Weaver (Here and Now, Ouija: Origin of Evil), Carmina Garay, Harmeet K. Pandey, Sanai Victoria (The Paynes, No Good Nick), Avantika Vandanapu, Nathan Arenas, Tiernan Jones y Connor Falk.
Creada por Ilana Peña (Crazy Ex-Girlfriend) y escrita por Robin Shorr (The Middle, Galavant). Producida por Gina Rodriguez (Carmen Sandiego). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 17 de enero
Cobra (Sky One)
Drama que nos contará qué ocurre en los pasillos de las sedes del gobierno británico durante tiempos de emergencia nacional. Protagonizada por Robert Carlyle (Once Upon a Time, Trainspotting), Victoria Hamilton (The Crown, Doctor Foster), Richard Dormer (Game of Thrones, Fortitude), David Haig (Killing Eve, Penny Dreadful), Marsha Thomason (White Collar, Better Things) y Lucy Cohu (Broadchurch, Ripper Street).
Escrita por Ben Richards (Strike, The Tunnel). Seis episodios.
Estreno: 17 de enero
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9-1-1: Lone Star (FOX)
Spin-off de 9-1-1 ambientado en Texas y protagonizado por un sofisticado policía de Nueva York (Rob Lowe; Parks and Recreation, Brothers & Sisters) que se muda con su hijo (Ronen Rubinstein, Dead of Summer) a Austin, donde tendrá que compaginar su trabajo con su vida personal. Completan el reparto Liv Tyler (The Lord of the Rings, The Leftovers), Jim Parrack (True Blood, The Deuce), Sierra McClain (Empire, Mindhunter), Natacha Karam (The Brave), Brian Michael Smith (Queen Sugar), Rafael Silva (Fluidity) y Julian Works (American Crime, Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones).
Producida por Lowe, Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuk y Tom Minear.
Estreno: 19 de enero
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Avenue 5 (HBO)
Comedia de turismo espacial ambientada cuarenta años en el futuro, cuando la humanidad puede viajar por el Sistema Solar. En pleno viaje alrededor de Saturno, una serie de dificultades técnicas provoca el descontento de los pasajeros y varios acontecimientos inesperados. Protagonizada por Hugh Laurie (House M.D., The Night Manager), Josh Gad (The Comedians, Frozen), Zach Woods (The Office, Silicon Valley), Nikki Amuka-Bird (Luther, Quarry), Rebecca Front (Humans, The Wrong Mans), Lenora Crichlow (Being Human, Flaked), Suzy Nakamura (Go On, Dr. Ken), Ethan Phillips (Star Trek: Voyager, Girls), Himesh Patel (Yesterday, The Luminaries), Kyle Bornheimer (Casual, Brooklyn Nine-Nine) y Jessica St. Clair (Playing House, American Housewife).
Creada, escrita y producida por Armando Iannucci (Veep). Ocho episodios.
Estreno: 19 de enero
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Awkwafina is Nora From Queens (Comedy Central)
Comedia protagonizada y producida por Awkwafina (The Farewell, Jumanji: The Next Level), e inspirada en su vida, sobre una veinteañera que vive en Queens con su padre (BD Wong; Mr. Robot, Gotham), su abuela (Lori Tan Chinn; Orange Is the New Black) y su primo (Bowen Yang, Saturday Night Live).
Escrita por Awkwafina, Karey Dornetto (Portlandia, Community) y Teresa Hsiao (Family Guy, American Dad!) y dirigida por Lucia Aniello (Broad City). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 22 de enero
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Outmatched (FOX)
Cay (Maggie Lawson; Psych, Santa Clarita Diet) y Mike (Jason Biggs; American Pie, Orange Is the New Black), un matrimonio de clase obrera y sin estudios del sur de Jersey, tratan de arreglárselas para criar a cuatro hijos, tres de los cuales resulta que son genios: Brian (Connor Kalopsis, The Grinder), un condescendiente y pretencioso fenómeno de las matemáticas que cree que sabe más del mundo que sus padres; Nicole (Ashley Boettcher, Gortimer Gibbon's Life on Normal Street), una prodigio del lenguaje falsa y manipuladora que consigue todo lo que quiere; y Marc (Jack Stanton, The Mick), un sabio introvertido que quiere ser el próximo Beethoven. Solamente una hija no es un genio, y esa es Leila (Oakley Bull; Thanksgiving, Beautiful Boy), la única a la que sus padres pueden entender aunque sea remotamente. Les acompañan Tisha Campbell-Martin (Empire, Dr. Ken) y Finesse Mitchell (Roadies, Saturday Night Live).
Escrita y producida por Lon Zimmet (Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, I'm Sorry). Jonathan Judge (School of Rock, Life in Pieces) dirige el piloto.
Estreno: 23 de enero
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The Dead Lands (Shudder)
Inspirada en las tradiciones e historias maorís, nos presenta a Waka Nuku Rau (Te Kohe Tuhaka), un guerrero asesinado que regresa de entre los muertos para redimir sus pecados. Pero el mundo al que regresa ha sido devastado por una brecha entre la muerte y el más allá y los espíritus de los que acaban de morir acosan a los vivos. Waka conocerá a Mehe (Darneen Christian), una mujer decidida que se convertirá en su protegida y en su guía moral, y juntos combatirán a las fuerzas tanto naturales como sobrenaturales que se crucen en su viaje para reparar el mundo.
Creada por Glenn Standring. Ocho episodios.
Estreno: 23 de enero
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The Ghost Bride (Netflix)
En Malaca (Malasia), a finales del siglo XIX, una joven (Huang Peijia) recibe la lucrativa proposición de convertirse en la novia fantasma de un chico fallecido recientemente (Wu Kang Ren) para salvar a su adinerada familia de una deuda de por vida.
Basada en la novela de Yangsze Choo (2013), escrita por Kai Yu Wu (Hannibal, The Flash) y dirigida por Quek Shio-Chuan (Guang) y Ho Yuhang (At the End of the Daybreak, Mrs K). Seis episodios.
Estreno: 23 de enero
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October Faction (Netflix)
Adaptación del cómic de Steve Niles en la que Deloris (Tamara Taylor; Bones, Altered Carbon) y Fred Allen (J.C. MacKenzie; Molly's Game, Vinyl), un matrimonio de cazadores internacionales de monstruos, se retiran y comienzan a vivir junto a sus hijos adolescentes, Viv (Aurora Burghart) y Geoff (Gabriel Darku, Impulse), en el estado de Nueva York y pronto descubren que vivir en un pueblo pequeño no es tan ideal como pensaban. Completan el reparto Wendy Crewson (Saving Hope, Revenge), Megan Follows (Reign, Winonna Earp), Stephen McHattie (Orphan Black, The Strain), Amanda Zhou (Spinning Out), Sara Waisglass (Degrassi: The Next Generation) y Maxim Roy (Shadowhunters).
Creada, escrita, producida y dirigida por Damian Kindler (Sleepy Hollow, Sanctuary). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 23 de enero
Star Trek: Picard (CBS All Access)
Patrick Stewart (X-Men) vuelve a interpretar al capitán Jean-Luc Picard, personaje de Star Trek: The Next Generation, en el siguiente capítulo de su vida. Con Santiago Cabrera (Heroes, Salvation), Michelle Hurd (Blindspot, Devious Maids), Alison Pill (The Newsroom, American Horror Story), Harry Treadaway (Mr. Mercedes, Penny Dreadful), Rebecca Wisocky (Devious Maids, For All Mankind), Isa Briones (Hamilton) y Evan Evagora.
Escrita por Gene Roddenberry (Star Trek, Star Trek: The Next Generation) y dirigida por Hanelle Culpepper (Star Trek: Discovery, Criminal Minds). Diez episodios. Ya está renovada por una segunda temporada.
Estreno: 24 de enero
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Luna Nera (Netflix)
Nos encontramos en la Italia del siglo XVII. Una joven matrona acusada de brujería (Nina Fotaras; Il nome della rosa, Skam Italia) se ve obligada a huir de su pueblo junto a su hermano pequeño y se une a un grupo de mujeres. Es entonces cuando deberá elegir entre un amor imposible y perseguir su destino. Protagonizada Giada Gagliardi, Adalgisa Manfrida, Lucrezia Guidone (La ragazza nella nebbia), Barbara Ronchi (Fai bei sogni), Giorgio Belli, Manuela Mandracchia (Fai bei sogni) y Federica Fracassi (Benedetta follia).
Creada por Francesca Manieri (Il Miracolo), Laura Paolucci (L'amica geniale, Gomorra) y Tiziana Triana. Basada en la trilogía de novelas de Triana, cuyo primer libro se publicó en 2019. Seis episodios.
Estreno: 31 de enero
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  Ragnarok (Netflix)
En Edda, un pueblo ficticio de Noruega, los inviernos calurosos y las fuertes trombas de agua auguran la batalla de los dioses en el fin del mundo. Magne (David Stakston, Skam), recién llegado al pueblo, parece distinto al resto de chicos de su edad. Quizás pueda salvarlos a todos. Con Jonas Strand Gravli (22 July, Amundsen), Herman Tømmeraas (Skam), Emma Bones (Home Ground), Theresa Frostad Eggesbø (Skam), Henriette Steenstrup (Lilyhammer) y Gísli Örn Garðarsson (Beowulf, Prince of Persia).
Escrita por Adam Price, creador de Borgen y Herrens veje. Seis episodios
Estreno: 31 de enero
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elefapt · 3 years
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Concha: Biden is using this crisis to avoid accountability
Concha: Biden is using this crisis to avoid accountability
Fox News contributor Joe Concha slams the Biden administration for pushing messaging that Vladimir Putin is the reason for surging gas prices. He also criticizes Kamala Harris’ meeting with Polish President Duda #FoxNews Subscribe to Fox News! https://bit.ly/2vaBUvAS Watch more Fox News Video: https://ift.tt/hzles4K Watch Fox News Channel Live: https://ift.tt/W5kzIor FOX News Channel (FNC) is a…
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alaturkanews · 3 years
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EXCLUSIVE: Tucker is joined by Polish president for bombshell interview
EXCLUSIVE: Tucker is joined by Polish president for bombshell interview
President of Poland Andrzej Duda joins 'Tucker Carlson Tonight' to discuss immigration, politics in the Eastern European country. #FOXBusiness #TuckerCarlsonTonight Subscribe to Fox News! https://bit.ly/2vaBUvAS Watch more Fox News Video: http://video.foxnews.com Watch Fox News Channel Live: http://www.foxnewsgo.com/ FOX News Channel (FNC) is a 24-hour all-encompassing news service delivering…
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thegreato1ne · 5 years
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FOX NEWS: Trump, Duda sign agreement to send 1,000 more US troops to Poland
FOX NEWS: Trump, Duda sign agreement to send 1,000 more US troops to Poland
Trump, Duda sign agreement to send 1,000 more US troops to Poland
The United States will send 1,000 more troops to Poland, which has also agreed to pay for a new military facility there, in a move that boosts the nations’ defense ties, President Trump said Monday.
via FOX NEWS Full Story Here
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itsfinancethings · 5 years
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September 24, 2019 at 01:24AM
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — President Donald Trump made his political priorities clear Monday within an hour of arriving at the United Nations for a three-day visit: He breezed by a major climate change summit to focus instead on religious persecution, an issue that resonates with his evangelical supporters.
The climate summit, a centerpiece of this year’s U.N. schedule, was not on Trump’s agenda at all. But he stopped in to observe for about 15 minutes before heading to what he saw as the main event, a meeting on protecting religious freedom.
Trump said it was an “urgent moral duty” for world leaders to stop crimes against faith, release prisoners of conscience and repeal laws restricting religious liberty.
“Approximately 80% of the world’s population live in countries where religious liberty is threatened, restricted or even banned,” Trump said, adding that when he first heard the statistic, he didn’t believe it and asked for verification.
Trump’s speech Monday extends a long-running focus on international religious freedom that speaks to a key priority of his evangelical base. His administration has hosted annual meetings on the topic in Washington, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced during this year’s event that he would create an international alliance dedicated to the issue.
Underscoring the importance of Trump’s action on the issue to evangelical voters who are critical to his 2020 reelection bid, one prominent evangelical backer Dallas-based pastor Robert Jeffress lauded Trump for focusing on religious freedom instead of climate change.
“What president in history would have the guts to do what President Trump is doing?” Jeffress, who was set to be in the audience for Trump’s speech, said on Fox News. “And it’s this kind of leadership that is absolutely infuriating the president’s enemies, but it’s also energizing his base, especially his religious base of voters.”
Trump listed his administration’s efforts on religious freedom and declared, “We’ve done a lot.”
As for the climate summit, he told reporters as he left: “I’m a big believer in clean air and clean water and all countries should get together and do that, and they should do it for themselves. Very, very important.”
Late Monday, he mocked Swedish 16-year-old activist Greta Thunberg, who had scolded the audience at the climate summit, repeatedly asking, “How dare you?”
Trump tweeted: “She seems like a very happy young girl looking forward to a bright and wonderful future. So nice to see!”
The Republican president arrived in New York against a backdrop of swirling international tensions, including questions about his relationship with Ukraine, the uncertain future of Brexit, the U.S. trade war with China, stalled nuclear negotiations with North Korea and a weakening global economy. The president met Monday with leaders of Pakistan, Poland, New Zealand, Singapore, Egypt and South Korea.
His most immediate challenge may be Iran. He will try to convince skeptical global capitals to help build a coalition to confront Tehran after the United States blamed it for last week’s strike at an oil field in Saudi Arabia.
Asked as he arrived at the U.N. building if he will meet soon with Iran President Hassan Rouhani, Trump was noncommittal. “We’ll see what happens,” he said. “We have a long way to go, we’ll see what happens.”
Trump’s fulfillment of a campaign promise to exit the Iran nuclear deal has had wide ripple effects, leading Tehran to bolster its nuclear capabilities and dismaying European capitals who worked to establish the original agreement.
Tensions between Washington and Tehran spiked after a Saudi Arabia oil field was partially destroyed in an attack that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo blamed on Iran and deemed “an act of war.”
He also was noncommittal about a possible fourth meeting with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un to discuss the easing of sanctions in exchange for Pyongyang’s commitment to give up its nuclear weapons. He said only that it “could happen soon.”
Trump’s meetings with other leaders highlighted other hot spots around the globe.
In his meeting with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, Trump was peppered with questions from Pakistani reporters about India’s role in the crisis in Kashmir. Khan has invited Trump to mediate the long-running conflict between Pakistan and India over the disputed Himalayan region. India has not agreed to mediation, but Trump renewed his offer to play middleman between the two nuclear-armed nations.
“I’ve never failed as an arbitrator,” he said.
With Polish President Andrzej Duda, Trump said more U.S. troops will be stationed in Poland as a result of a new defense cooperation agreement they signed. He said Poland asked the U.S. to station more troops there and will pay for the new facilities.
Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien-Loong and Trump signed a memorandum to update defense cooperation between the two nations.
With President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi of Egypt, Trump talked about the recent attacks on Saudi Arabia’s oil facilities, which the U.S. has blamed on Iran, and about Libya, which slid into chaos after a 2011 uprising that left the country split between rival authorities in the country’s east and west.
His meeting with New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern was closed, but the White House said their talks included a discussion of the March shooting deaths of 51 people at mosques in Christchurch.
___
Riechmann reported from New York. Associated Press writer Elana Schor contributed to this report from New York.
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foxnewsalerttoday · 4 years
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Poland's conservative president, Andrzej Duda, was the frontrunner in Sunday's election, but fell short of the 50 percent of votes needed to win in the first round, according to the projection of an exit poll. via FOX NEWS At: June 29, 2020 at 06:34AM Follow the link to read full news: https://foxnews.com/world/poland-presidential-vote-runoff-exit-poll
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