RawStory

Joe Biden

The other cancel culture: How a public university is bowing to a conservative crusade

In August 2020, Boise State University chose a doctoral student in public policy, Melanie Fillmore, to deliver what is called a “land acknowledgment” speech at a convocation for incoming freshmen. Fillmore, who is part Indigenous, would recognize the tribes that lived in the Boise Valley before they were banished to reservations to make way for white settlers.

Fillmore considered it an honor. She was devoted to Boise State, where she had earned her bachelor’s and master’s degrees, taught undergraduate courses and served on job search committees. She also admired Marlene Tromp, a feminist literary scholar who came from the University of California, Santa Cruz, in 2019 to become Boise State’s first female president. Tromp had been hired with a mandate to promote diversity, and including an Indigenous speaker in the ceremony marking the start of students’ higher education would advance that agenda.

The convocation was to be virtual, because of the pandemic. Fillmore put on beaded Native American jewelry and recorded an eight-minute video on her phone. She began by naming the “rightful owners of this land,” the Boise Valley Indigenous tribes, and then described her own “complicated” background. Her father was Hunkpapa Lakota, her mother white. “I can trace eight generations of my Lakota ancestors being removed from the land of their lifeblood to the reservation, just as I can trace seven generations of Norwegian and English ancestors taking that land,” she said.

Keep reading... Show less

Cassidy Hutchinson: The ex-Trump footsoldier with a 'smoking gun'

Her name evokes an outlaw in the American Old West, and Cassidy Hutchinson did not disappoint as the young gunslinger gave it to Donald Trump with both barrels.

Once an ardently loyal footsoldier in the former commander-in-chief's posse, Hutchinson turned sheriff Tuesday as she fired off a volley of allegations without historical parallel against an American president.

Keep reading... Show less

Taliban to meet US on releasing frozen Afghan funds after quake

Volunteers carry aid from the International Organization for Migration for Afghans hit by a major earthquake in the Spera district in Khost province

Doha (AFP) - The United States and the Taliban plan talks Thursday in Qatar on unlocking some of Afghanistan's reserves following a devastating earthquake, officials said, with Washington seeking ways to ensure the money goes to help the population.

The White House said it is working "urgently" on the effort, but a member of the Afghan central bank's board said it could take time to finalise.

Keep reading... Show less

Here's the full list of fake Trump electors

The 84 people who signed bogus documents claiming that Donald Trump won the 2020 election include dozens of local Republican Party leaders, four current candidates for public office, six current office holders and at least five previous state and federal office holders.

Groups from Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, New Mexico, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin all allegedly met in December 2020 and sent lists of so-called alternate electors to the National Archives after the 2020 election. The scheme is reportedly under investigation by the FBI and the Department of Justice, which have issued subpoenas to several of the people involved.

The plot is also a focus of the U.S. House select committee hearings on the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol and GOP attempts to overturn the results of the election.

Keep reading... Show less

NATO sees Russia as 'direct threat' in new security doctrine

Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg speaks during a press conference at the end of the first day at the Nato summit at the IFEMA Exhibition Centre. Bernd von Jutrczenka/dpa

NATO leaders agreed a new security doctrine that sees Russia as the organization's "most significant and direct threat," alliance Secretary Jens Stoltenberg announced in Madrid on Wednesday.

The doctrine removes Russia's status as a strategic partner of the alliance, Stoltenberg said in a press conference at the summit while outlining NATO's view of China for the first time.

Keep reading... Show less

US citizen in Iran prison appeals to Biden for deal

A US citizen held for nearly seven years in Iran made an appeal from prison Wednesday to President Joe Biden, urging a deal to free Americans regardless of the outcome of nuclear diplomacy.

In an op-ed published in The New York Times, 50-year-old Iranian-American Siamak Namazi said he was concerned about repercussions he might suffer for speaking out while confined to Tehran's infamous Evin prison.

Keep reading... Show less

Rudy Giuliani associate Lev Parnas sentenced to nearly 2 years in prison

Former Rudy Giuliani associate Lev Parnas has been sentenced to 20 months in prison for campaign finance crimes the Associated Press reported Wednesday. The Federal Elections Commission said that they couldn't find evidence to discern whether he was guilty, even after he plead guilty.

"At least seven victims invested a total of more than $2 million in Fraud Guarantee because Parnas and Correia misled them about the financial arrangements," wrote ABC 7 New York in March. "The majority of investor funds were withdrawn as cash and were spent on personal expenditures such as Parnas' rent, prosecutors said."

Keep reading... Show less

'Yesterday was Trump's worst nightmare': Conservative says Cassidy Hutchinson was so compelling even the ex-president had to notice

Cassidy Hutchinson's testimony "was so powerful that it temporarily gobsmacked even Fox News," according to a conservative columnist, and clearly sent Donald Trump over the edge.

The former aide to White House chief of staff Mark Meadows told the House select committee the former president knew his supporters were armed on Jan. 6, 2021, and sent them anyway to the U.S. Capitol, where Congress and vice president Mike Pence were certifying Joe Biden's election win, and The Bulwark columnist Charlie Sykes explained why her testimony was so devastating.

Keep reading... Show less

Rudy Giuliani placed closer to seditious conspiracy by Cassidy Hutchinson testimony

Rudy Giuliani was potentially implicated in the seditious conspiracy involving the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys in newly revealed testimony provided to the House select conspiracy.

Senior leaders from both far-right groups have already been indicted on seditious conspiracy charges related to the Jan. 6 insurrection, and former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson told the select committee that Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani discussed those militant groups when he visited, reported The Guardian.

Keep reading... Show less

NATO begins official admission procedure for Sweden and Finland

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson (L) and US President Joe Biden (R) attend the NATO Summit at the IFEMA Exhibition Centre. Andrew Parsons/No10 Downing Street/dpa

NATO has officially started the process of admitting Sweden and Finland into the alliance, with all 30 leaders in favour, NATO sources inform dpa.

The decision came after Turkey dropped its opposition to the Nordic countries' membership application in a last-minute deal ahead of the start of the NATO summit in Madrid on Wednesday.

Keep reading... Show less

Citing Russia threat, Biden to ramp up U.S. forces in Europe

By Andrea Shalal and Inti Landauro

MADRID (Reuters) -The United States will create a new permanent army headquarters in Poland and deploy additional land, air and sea forces across the length and breadth of Europe in response to threats from Russia, U.S. President Joe Biden said on Wednesday.

Keep reading... Show less

Former members of Trump's inner circle warned they have become 'Trump’s targets' after Cassidy Hutchison testimony

In her column for the Bulwark, former Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) advisor and political commenter Amanda Carpenter commended Cassidy Hutchinson -- the former senior aide to ex-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows -- for her compelling testimony on Tuesday before the House select committee investigating Donald Trump's complicity in the Jan 6th riots.

As the conservative political analyst explained, Hutchinson's revelations about the former president's temper tantrums behind the scenes, as well as his lack of concern about his armed supporters, exposed the former president's propensity for violence or, as she put it, "Trump’s capacity for violence and willingness to break the law on display."

Keep reading... Show less

US opens probe after 51 migrants die in sweltering trailer

The death toll of undocumented migrants who were abandoned in a scorching-hot trailer in Texas rose to 51 Tuesday, as President Joe Biden blamed "criminal" professional smugglers for the tragedy.

Rebeca Clay-Flores, a Bexar County official, reported the new tally of "39 men and 12 women" dead, following the Monday discovery of the tractor-trailer on an isolated road in her district.

Keep reading... Show less