Tuesday, February 28, 2017

LIVE: Watch Donald Trump Address Congress for the First Time as President

On Tuesday, Donald Trump will give his first formal address to Congress as president, where he'll be expected to outline some concrete proposals for the country and solidify his administration's agenda.

Trump campaigned on relatively vague promises to repeal Obamacare, create jobs, build infrastructure, defeat ISIS, and radically change the country's immigration policy. This address, which the White House press team is already calling his "biggest speech yet," will be his opportunity to explain what Congress needs to do to accomplish those goals.

Congress will be eager to hear how the president wants to tackle a repeal of Obamacare and see if he embraces any of the details in the replacement plan draft that House Republicans are currently working on. According to Politico, that plan would shrink subsidies and eliminate Medicaid expansion. 

Congress will also be interested in finding out more about how Trump intends to pay for his proposed budget plan, which would bump up military spending to $54 million and increase spending on law enforcement and infrastructure. It's likely that the money will come from other departments, although it's not yet clear which ones. 

Watch the livestream of Trump's speech below at 9 PM EST.



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'Ghost Recon Wildlands' Draws from the Real-Life Cartel War

One half of the team moved in on the cartel boss' hideout by night, watched overhead by their partners in an helicopter gunship. The narcos retreated to the second floor of a building, scattering to pick up machine guns and a grenade launcher.

That's when the helicopter's minigun opened fire, hammering through the walls and tearing the narcos apart. With another capo down, the team moved in to search for intel that might lead to their next target.

Though it might seem like a mission out of  Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Wildlands, this battle between Mexican Marines and the Beltrán Leyva drug cartel actually occurred two weeks ago, in the Mexican city of Tepic. It wasn't the first time the Marines had used helicopter gunships against cartel targets, but previous incidents had been in rural areas, not the heart of a city. This underscores why it's difficult to create believable fiction out of the ongoing Mexican Cartel War: what's over-the-top one day might be standard tactics the next.

"In 2009,  Breaking Bad had an episode where Mexican cartels used an IED," says Ioan Grillo, a journalist and author of the book  Gangster Warlords. "I thought 'Oh, that's too much,' then in 2010 there was an IED in Ciudad Juarez."

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White House Says the Shooting of Two Indian Men in Kansas Was Likely 'Racially Motivated'

Almost a full week after a 51-year-old bar-goer reportedly shouted "get out of my country" before murdering an Indian man, the White House denounced the act as likely "racially motivated hatred," according to Agence Presse France.

"As more facts come to light and it begins to look like this was an act of racially motivated hatred," Sarah Sanders, a White House spokeswoman, told reporters. "I want to reiterate the president condemns these or any other racially or religiously motivated attacks in the strongest terms. They have no place in our country."

Last Wednesday, Adam Purinton allegedly walked into Austin's Bar and Grill outside of Kansas City and opened fire at two Indian patrons. He then drove 70 miles to an Applebee's where he confessed to a bartender that he had "done something really bad" to some people he erroneously believed to be from Iran. He was arrested without incident at the restaurant after staff called the police.

Srinivas Kuchibhotla, a 32-year-old Indian engineer, died at the hospital that night. Purinton has since been charged with first-degree murder and two counts of attempted first-degree murder for injuring Kuchibhotla's friend, Alok Madasani, and Ian Grillot, a 24-year-old who tried to intervene. The FBI announced Tuesday that it is investigating the Kansas bar shooting as a hate crime.

Madasani's parents have since warned other Indian parents not to send their children to the United States, saying the country is now dangerous for foreigners of color following Donald Trump's election. Trump campaigned on banning Muslims from entering the country, and soon after he took office, he issued an executive order that barred immigration from seven majority-Muslim nations.

Today's statement from the White House is the first time the administration acknowledged the attack since Friday, when press secretary Sean Spicer said that there was no correlation between the president's rhetoric and the shooting.

"Any loss of life is tragic," he said at the daily press conference. "But I'm not going to get into, like, that kind of––to suggest that there's any correlation, I think is a bit absurd."

Follow Allie Conti on Twitter.



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Inside LA's History of Chicano-Style Tattoos

On an all new episode of NEEDLES & PINSVICELAND's series following Grace Neutral as she explores the journey of tattoo art from subculture to global phenomenon—we head to LA to explore the history of Chicano-style tattoos, learning how they evolved from the prison cells and gang culture of LA to the wider world.

NEEDLES & PINS airs Tuesdays at 10 PM on VICELAND.

Want to know if you get VICELAND? Head  here  to find out how to tune in.




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Losing All Inhibition at the 'Dirty Masquerade'

J'ouvert is New York City's most controversial cultural celebration. For one thing, the raucous street masquerade, filled with its writhing, unfettered black bodies, doesn't quite fit in with the matcha-sipping, downward-dogging image of gentrified, white Brooklyn that helps sell overpriced real estate. Not to mention, the parade route for the celebration goes through rival gang territories in the neighborhoods of Flatbush and Crown Heights, giving way to violent clashes. Every year, there are national headlines about shootings, stabbings, and assaults during J'ouvert, which has led New York City officials like former police commissioner William Bratton to characterize it as the city's "most violent cultural event" and New York assemblyman Walter T. Mosley to call for it to be suspended. 

But that's just one shortsighted take on J'ouvert. It's so much more than drunk asses shooting at one another. The street masquerade plays an important role in Brooklyn's Carnival, taking place in the pre-dawn hours of Labor Day as a prelude to the massive West Indian Day Parade. Brought here by West Indian immigrants, J'ouvert's origins lie in the emancipation of enslaved Africans in colonized Trinidad in the 19th century, who used street masquerades to mock and satirize their former masters. Today, J'ouvert brings together more than 200,000 people, who join in the revelry by playing mas (short for masquerade), which consists of donning macabre costumes or covering themselves up in mud and paint and chipping (a sort of marching shuffle) down the street to the sounds of riotous steel pan music. 

Fascinated by all this contention and culture, VICE's Wilbert L. Cooper decided to immerse himself in J'ouvert. In the run up to Labor Day 2016, he met with old-school Trinidadian mas men to learn about its origins and its ability to speak truth to power through its satirical costumes and placards. He talked with local politicians about how they planned to regulate the festival and make it safer than years past. And he connected with the young Caribbean Americans to find out how they were carrying on the tradition and what they thought about the violence the celebration has become known for. After all the talking and intellectualizing, Wilbert realized that the only way he'd ever really understand J'ouvert would be by joining a mas camp and playing himself. 

Watch Wilbert's transformative experience at J'ouvert in VICE's new feature documentary, Brooklyn's Dirty Masquerade:  



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Why Has Rectal Cancer Quadrupled in Millennials?

Cancers of the colon and rectum are on the rise in young people. Though the number of Americans over 55 diagnosed with the diseases has steadily dropped, Millennials now have double the risk of developing colon cancer and quadruple the risk of rectal cancer as someone born in 1950 at the same age, with rates as high as they were in 1890.

These were the findings in a new study, published Tuesday in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. They looked at a well-known data set of nearly 500,000 patients 20 and older diagnosed with colorectal cancer between 1974 and 2013, and divvied them up by what year they were born and their age at diagnosis. They found that from the mid-80s to 2013, the incidence of colon cancer has been rising fastest for people between the ages of 20 and 29, by 2.4 percent per year (it also rose for people ages 30-39 in that same time frame, and, starting in the mid-90s, for people in their 40s, too). The increase was even more dramatic for rectal cancers, increasing by about 4 percent per year for adults in their 20s since since 1974.

Read more on Tonic



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Don’t You Dare Compare ‘Kiki’ to ‘Paris Is Burning’

Sara Jordenö understands why her documentary Kiki, which she co-wrote with Twiggy Pucci Garcon, reminds people of Paris is Burning . On the surface, they seem to belong together. Separated by 25 years, the two documentaries give viewers a firsthand look at New York City's still-vibrant underground ballroom scene. But Jordenö doesn't want you to call her documentary, which premiered at Sundance in 2016 and finally sees its New York theatrical release tomorrow, a remake of Jennie Livingston's landmark queer classic. And definitely don't call it an "unofficial sequel."

She bristles when I bring it up. We're sitting in New York's NeueHouse, a coworking space where she'll later shoot some videos with the wildly talented subjects of her film. Mention of that other documentary about vogueing and ballroom culture feels like a necessary pit stop in our conversation; thankfully, she's more than happy to discuss it, if only to dispel further comparisons. It's not that she doesn't see the parallels. But the need to bring it up mostly reminds her how under-documented and under-represented queer youth of color are on screen. "It's a community that thousand of films should be made about," she says. And so, knowing full well that there's no escaping the looming presence of Livingston's documentary, she's all too happy to talk about the ways in which Kiki deserves to stand on its own. 

For starters, Jordenö's film doesn't have as much actual vogueing as you'd expect. It does open with fabulous sequences where we see members of the "kiki scene" strutting and posing around New York (on the subway, by the piers, on the streets). Yet the film's emphasis clearly leans toward the political activism and community organizing that motivates this younger offshoot of the city's ballroom scene. The artistry of the ballroom scene is what brings these teens together, but it is their ongoing advocacy for trans rights, HIV prevention and LGBTQ homelessness that truly sets them apart. 

That advocacy is what originally drew Jordenö to the project. It was Pucci, a self-described gatekeeper of the kiki ballroom scene who works at the LGBTQ youth homelessness organization True Colors Fund, and Chi Chi Mizrahi, a beloved ballroom community member, who first approached her about collaborating on a project centered on these politically active and artistically ambitious teenagers. They were thinking of something small, like a web series. But once Jordenö attended several meetings and a handful of kiki balls, she knew this had to be a documentary on a much bigger scale.

Trained as an academic and with a background in the visual arts, the Swedish-born and New York City-based filmmaker knew she would need help pulling it off. That meant not only collaborating with Pucci ("Ethically, we both knew it was the right thing to do," Jordenö said, wanting to avoid feeling like she was exploiting those she profiled) but seeking out the best team she could assemble. She sought out cinematographer Naiti Gámez, who despite initial wariness and having broken her knee ahead of shooting, was eventually so enamored by the kiki scene that she recruited her girlfriend to help her stay on her feet on set despite her crutches. Jordenö also recruited producers Lori Cheatle and Annika Rogell; it was, by design, an all-female affair.  "It's actually quite radical that we had two female producers, two female directors of photography, and the sound person was female. I really think that made a difference. It was an intersectional feminist project."

Jordenö's intersectional politics helped her connect with those in the kiki community who, as the film shows, are as well-equipped to vogue and slay as they are to discuss society's structural biases against queer and trans people of color. As Gia Marie Love, a striking young woman whom we meet in the film both before and after her gender transition notes, the community they've created is a safe haven from the oppressive world around them. It has as much to do with high-spirited ballroom competition, where vogueing and dressing up allow participants to show their real selves, as with the comfort they feel when being around others who love them unconditionally. "You try to live in the heteronormative system and they don't work and they oppress you," as she put it in the film, "so why we don't just create our own systems?"

Kiki's political message surely reads differently today than when it screened at festivals last year. When I ask Jordenö how it feels to see this film's theatrical release amid a hostile political climate for trans youth (when we talked, neither of us had yet heard about the Trump administration's latest order to rescind protections for trans students, for example), she doesn't miss a beat. "I'm grateful. At first I was angry, because I wanted it to come out—it's tricky to come out a year after. But now I'm like, 'Yes, this is the exact right time!' Because wherever we've been showing Kiki it seems to give people hope." When they showed it in San Francisco shortly after the Orlando shooting, she recalled, many audience members approached her to say a film like Kiki is exactly what the community needed to heal. 

Despite being a document of the Obama era (the film shows Pucci visiting the White House as the former president espoused his commitment to LGBTQ rights), Kiki should serve as a template of how to organize and mobilize communities to help those most at-risk. As Pucci says in the film, "We still have to fight for our equality in the workplace and non-discrimination, we still have to fight LGBT homelessness, we still have to fight for trans rights. There's so much left." Society and pop culture may flippantly appropriate ballroom slang and gag over jaw-dropping death-drops, but there's plenty to be learned from these socially conscious activists. Not least the way they find light in the darkness. Jordenö puts its best, "There's this urgency and resilience, but there's also joy. They're not gonna be stopped."

Follow Manuel Betancourt on Twitter.



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What Trump Could Learn from Carnival

If President Donald Trump is going to have any chance of improving his tanking poll numbers, he's going to have to undertake some uncharacteristic gestures. With Lent right around the corner, one option he ought to consider is embracing the tradition of role reversal. Typically associated with the Carnival festivals of late winter, a theatrical switcheroo between rich and poor has long been a gesture of humility from those in power that ingratiates them with the common man. 

Like Christmas, Carnival is one of those Christian holidays that has been interpreted a thousand different ways throughout time and geography and is inextricably linked to numerous pagan traditions. It has no singular definition but is typically a hedonistic party featuring a lot of meat—the name is believed to descend from the latin words "carne" and "vale," which means "a farewell to meat." It usually happens at the time of year when you're balls deep into winter and are about to enter a period of fasting—either because your meat is about to spoil, or you're a Catholic sinner who doesn't deserve anymore flesh until Easter.

"It was a way to let off emotional steam after months of winter," says Dr. Carl Raschke, professor of religious studies at the University of Denver. "It's common in many cultures to have this ritual of excess to restore balance to the universe. Like today's bachelor party, it's the idea of getting it out of your system before you have to go into a disciplined mode of life."

In order to quell the social unrest that could build up after months of winter, men in positions of authority would give those subservient to them the chance to answer that age-old question posed by Joan Osborne: "What if God was one of us?" Sometimes this could be children disciplining their parents or an enslaved man impersonating his prissy, upper-class oppressor.

"It was like how only the court jester could make fun of the king," says Raschke. "It was an undermining of authority that doesn't really upset the order. It was a harmless diversion for unhappy people, so you give them a socially approved instrument to express their rebellion or resentment of authority."

"All were considered equal during carnival," wrote Russian philosopher Mikhail Bakhtin, who coined the phrase "carnivalesque." "Here, in the town square, a special form of free and familiar contact reigned among people, who were usually divided by the barriers of caste, property, profession, and age... People were, so to speak, reborn for new, purely human relations."

In the Christian tradition, this role reversal was often an extension of Jesus's revolutionary edict that one day "the last will be first and the first will be last." 

"The incarnation of God becoming human overturns the conventional hierarchy," says Max Harris, author of Carnival and Other Christian Festivals. "The Catholic tradition is very hierarchical, from the pope all the way down. Carnival says, 'There's something wrong there, because the Christian narrative is about the guy at the top, God, becoming the guy at the bottom, Jesus.'"

When it came to slavery of blacks in the US and the Caribbean in the 18th century, this Freaky Friday tradition didn't always play out as a progressive utopia where rich and poor realize we're all humans who breathe the same air and should live harmoniously. In some cases, it fueled harmful stereotypes of blacks as carnal beasts with none of the civilized restraint of white folks.

"In Trinidad, the white slave owners would put on blackface and strut around and aspire to licentious activities that they believed blacks indulged in," says Harris.

While it's true that in many cases enslaved blacks would be served booze and invited into the homes of their overlords for a fine meal, former slave and iconic abolitionist Frederick Douglas saw this hospitality as a kind of Chinese finger trap that robbed them of their dignity (and, thereby, their ability to rebel).

"From what I know of the effect of these holidays upon the slave, I believe them to be among the most effective means in the hands of the slaveholder in keeping down the spirit of insurrection," wrote Douglas. "Were the slaveholders at once to abandon this practice, I have not the slightest doubt it would lead to an immediate insurrection among the slaves. These holidays serve as conductors, or safety-valves, to carry off the rebellious spirit of enslaved humanity.

"Their object seems to be, to disgust their slaves with freedom, by plunging them into the lowest depths of dissipation," he continues. "So, when the holidays ended, we staggered up from the filth of our wallowing, took a long breath, and marched to the field—feeling, upon the whole, rather glad to go, from what our master had deceived us into a belief was freedom, back into the arms of slavery."

This dynamic of making a peasant king for a day would likely be the side of Carnival that President Trump would be down with. When attending the Iowa State Fair last year, Trump didn't put on cowboy boots and munch on deep-fried butter with the rest of the common folk. Instead, he offered free rides in his helicopter to giddy children, literally raising them out of a land of poverty, watched in awe by the open-mouthed mortals below.  

While it's true that the golden-haired billionaire once dressed up in overalls and sang the theme from Green Acres. And he has appeared on a Saturday Night Live skit that jabbed at the idea of his presidency (remember when it was all seemed too wacky to even consider?), these were always profoundly safe, pre-approved exhibitions of humility. The whole humbling yourself before poor people routine doesn't seem to really be in Trump's wheelhouse. 

Although Carnival masquerades were used by European colonialist to present harmful stereotypes of enslaved Africans, after emancipation in colonies like Trinidad, the newly freed African men and women hosted on their own Carnival masquerades. They used the celebrations to do much more than just pretend they were their former masters—they mocked and made fun of their former masters. This tradition of speaking truth to power has carried on to this day in celebrations like J'ouvert, where Carnival revelers across the African-diaspora lampoon those in power with satirical costumes and critical placards. This subversive aspect of Carnival is probably something that would never fly with Trump. Even when he was honored with his own Comedy Central Roast, he made every comedian on the bill promise to never joke about him not being as rich as he claims he is.

It's also a poorly kept secret that the humiliation he received at the hands of Obama during the Correspondents Dinner in 2011 helped motivate him to officially run for president. Now that he is in the White House, he has opted to skip the Correspondents Dinner entirely, making him the first president in 30 years to refuse to subject himself the gentle chiding of a comedian. That is bad news for America.  

The divisive poison of the 2016 election, the catty drama of the inauguration, and a month of terrifying executive orders all amount to one long proverbial winter. And like ancient Europeans in need of a good Carnival before the meat runs out, the American people are in desperate need of Carnival's role-reversal pageantry, even if just for a moment, before our hope runs out.

Art by Duane Bruton

Follow Josiah Hesse on Twitter



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What It's Like to Be a Foster Mom When You're Only 23

I remember one time we were at the zoo, and this random woman asked me if my son was 'the way he was' because I was such a young mom. I was so shocked, I asked her to repeat herself, but I think she suddenly realized what she had said and got really embarrassed and walked away." Gina, from the seaside town of Margate, UK, has been a foster carer for Ben*, an autistic and epileptic child with multiple complex needs, for the last nine months. He is 12 years old. She is 23.

A child is taken into care every 20 minutes in the UK, and there is a constant and desperate need for thousands more foster families, particularly to home disabled children and teenagers. There are currently 55,000 foster families in the UK, but young carers are a rarity. A recent survey published by the Fostering Network found that, of the 2,530 foster carers who responded, just 4.2 percent were aged 18-34, compared to 80.3 percent who were aged between 45 and 54 years old.

In some ways, this is unsurprising. Kevin Williams, chief executive of the Fostering Network, says that lifestyle and financial restraints can make fostering trickier for people in their twenties. "Relatively few 25 year olds have a spare room or the financial independence which fostering requires," he says, "but age, in itself, should not be a barrier."

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The Feds Are Reportedly Trying to Shut Down Las Vegas's Cannabis Cup

Since Nevada voted to legalize recreational marijuana last November, High Times magazine decided to bring the Cannabis Cup—its roving celebration of everything tokable—to the Las Vegas area for the first time. But now the feds are reportedly trying to shut it down, according to the Reno Gazette-Journal.

This year's festival—which usually attracts between 7,000 and 35,000 stoners—is set to take place on land that belongs to the Moapa Paiute Tribe, a short 30-minute drive from the Strip. Even though weed is now legal in the state, tribal lands fall into murky territory regarding the drug's legality. Under two Department of Justice memoranda, US district attorneys are supposed to consider local laws regarding marijuana enforcement, and work with tribal governments on a case-by-case basis.

Despite those directives, US District Attorney Daniel Bogden, who is based in Las Vegas, recently sent a letter to the tribe, reminding them that the sale, transport, and use of marijuana is still illegal under federal law.

"Nothing in the Guidance Memorandum or the Cole Memorandum alters the authority or jurisdiction of the United States to enforce federal law in Indian Country or elsewhere," Bogden wrote in the letter, obtained by the Gazette-Journal.

Darren Daboda, the tribe's chairman, has reportedly been working with the US Attorney's Office to smooth things out before the weekend. The festival is set to feature an edibles cooking contest, high-tech vape pen demonstrations, and performances by Ludacris, Chief Keef, and B-Real.

"The tribe is promoting it as a vendors' crafts, food, and concert event. We're not promoting the distributor or selling [marijuana]," Daboda said. "To us, we're looking at it as utilizing our sovereignty. As long as [marijuana] is not visible, we're told it will be OK."

This could be something of a test case for how the Trump administration is going to handle federal enforcement of drug laws in states where marijuana has been legalized. If federal agents were to show up and shut down the Cannabis Cup, it would certainly indicate how the new White House sees local marijuana laws. 

Last week, White House press secretary Sean Spicer hinted that the feds would be cracking down on recreational weed, but didn't offer a specific plan. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has no love for legalized marijuana either, telling reporters last week, "States, they can pass the laws they choose... I would just say it does remain a violation of federal law to distribute marijuana throughout any place in the United States, whether a state legalizes it or not."



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Power Trip Wants to Build a New Underground Resistance

Last week's release of   Nightmare Logic by Texas crossover thrashers Power Trip couldn't have come at a more perfect time. Written and recorded with the 2016 election race as its foreboding backdrop, the album offers a dystopian vision that no one quite expected to come true. Channeling the Cro-Mags, Sepultura, Discharge, and Nuclear Assault through a fast-paced thrashing attack that takes a hit at right-wing Christianity, big pharma, and corporate greed—all the while pushing for direct action and the rise of people power— Nightmare Logic is the album we hoped we wouldn't need. But boy, do we need it now.

Power Trip's Riley Gale grew up in the Dallas hardcore scene listening to as much Sacrilege as he did Sick Of It All. With their second album, he and his bandmates have jumped into the heavy metal world full-throttle. Whether they're touring with Title Fight, Lamb of God, or Napalm Death, Power Trip is ready to spread their message of dissent and Gale knows it will be the fight of their lives. While their biggest problem used to be whether they were too punk for the metalheads, or too metal for the punks, there are now, as Riley says, "bigger fish to fry." This is a time for actions, not words.

I spoke to Gale as he was on his way to play a benefit show where all proceeds went toward a young cancer survivor's medical bills. He talks about scene unity, but challenges essential scene politics. He wants to stop preaching to the choir, but has to make careful decisions about touring with bands who don't share the same ideals. He is painfully aware of the dichotomy of fronting an outspoken thrash band as we stare into the abyss of the current political climate. But he also knows that if it's not now, it's when. And if it's not Power Trip, then who.

Read more on Noisey



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Senior US Officials Say They're Unaware of Any Intelligence Benefit from the Yemen Raid

Senior government officials said they were "unaware" of any significant intelligence results from the military raid in Yemen that left Navy SEAL Ryan Owens dead, NBC reports. The officials' statements contradict the Pentagon and Sean Spicer who have said that the terror raid brought in "actionable intelligence" that could "prevent the potential deaths or attacks on American soil."

At the beginning of February, the Pentagon released a video it claimed was recovered from the raid—which also killed Yemeni civilians and children and wounded three other SEALs—only to pull it offline after BuzzFeed News pointed out that the video has been available since 2007

 The father of the SEAL who died in the raid, Bill Owens, spoke out against the military action in an interview with the Miami Herald last weekend after refusing to meet President Trump. 

"Why at this time did there have to be this stupid mission when it wasn't even barely a week into his administration? Why?" Owens said. "For two years prior, there were no boots on the ground in Yemen—everything was missiles and drones—because there was not a target worth one American life. Now, all of a sudden we had to make this grand display?"

The White House, which initially touted the raid as a success and show of strength from Trump's administration, has backpedaled somewhat following Owens's statements. Sean Spicer admitted Monday that the raid was not "100 percent successful" because of the SEAL death, and Trump tried to blame the whole thing on Obama during a Tuesday interview on Fox & Friends.

"This was a mission that was started before I got here," Trump told Fox & Friends. "This was something that was, you know, just—they wanted to do. And they came to see me and they explained what they wanted to do, the generals, who are very respected... And according to General Mattis, it was a very successful mission. They got tremendous amounts of information."

Apparently some senior officials would disagree.



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Trump Says He's Bailing on the White House Correspondents' Dinner Because of 'Fake News' and 'Other Things'

In his first morning TV interview since becoming president, Donald Trump sat down with Fox News to talk about the Oscars, blame Obama for the current wave of leaks and town hall protests, and explain his decision to opt out of attending the annual White House Correspondents' Dinner. 

"I just thought in light of the fact of fake news and all of the other things we're talking about now, it would be inappropriate," Trump said of attending this year's event. He added, "I have great respect for the press, I have great respect for reporters and the whole profession. With all of that being said, I just thought it would be better if I didn't do the dinner. That doesn't mean I'm not going to do it next year."

Trump announced via Twitter on Saturday that he would not be attending the annual scholarship dinner—which was started back in 1921 in an effort to recognize quality political reporting and foster relationships between the press and the president's administration—a day after numerous major news outlets were barred from the daily White House press briefing. 

He'll be the first president to sit out of the dinner since Ronald Reagan did in 1981. Though Reagan was recovering from an assassination attempt at the time, and still managed to make remarks by phone, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

Trump's self-proclaimed "running war" with the media has raised questions about whether or not the dinner would even happen this year. While multiple news outlets have already canceled their parties around the event, the White House Correspondents Association (WHCA) has said that it will go on as usual. 

"We look forward to shining a spotlight at the dinner on some of the best political journalism of the past year and recognizing the promising students who represent the next generation of our profession," WHCA president, Jeff Mason, said in a statement



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Does 'The Artist' Actually Suck?

Does It Suck? takes a deeper look at pop cultural artifacts previously adored, unjustly hated, or altogether forgotten, reopening the book on topics that time left behind.

Remember the days when cinema would cast its spell in silence? When the fusion of fantasy and aspiration would sustain our imagination, and allow us to surrender completely to the wordless magic on screen? No? Me neither.

The Artist feels like both Hollywood schlock and a weird sort of video art. It's so saccharine that its sincerity dates it more than the fact that it's a silent film. The Artist tells the story of Hollywood between 1927 and 1932, arguably one of the industry's biggest transitionary periods as it moved out of the silent era and into "talkies." It pushed the culture forward, and pushed an entire generation of performers to the sidelines.

In The Artist, a silent film actor falls for an up-and-coming young actress whose ascension coincides with his growing antiquity. The plot cements The Artist as a postmodern Hollywood collage, but it also places it in direct conversation with classics like Singin' in the Rain, which also used the evolution of sound in cinema to tell a story about both people and Hollywood itself. That's just one of its many references; others include Sunset Boulevard and Citizen Kane. It even sampled the score to Vertigo, an act Kim Novak compared to rape, proving The Artist's theory that all actors are inherently extra.  

The word most used to describe The Artist was "charming," and it's hard to disagree. The Artist is certainly charming in a "Rodgers and Hammerstein meets the Westminster Dog Show" way. At its best, the movie achieves an overall feeling of ease—one that Hollywood often struggles to make seem natural. There are moments of genuine sublimity, such as when Jean Dujardin's George Valentin is giving a performance that attempts to be Astaire adjacent. His footwork recalls an older generation of performers, but his look—that jaw, the smile, the grease mallet hair—sits him squarely in the midcentury of American exceptionalism. He looks like Cary Grant drawn by Disney.  

The film's sporadic use of sound is particularly inspired, most notably in a dream where Valentin interacts with his surroundings, taking in the sounds of a phone ringing and faucet dripping as if for the first time (in the film's diegesis, it's the first sound we've heard aside from the score). It feels like a Twilight Zone episode by way of a musical number, and it gives the film a sudden sense of radical purpose.

When it was released in 2011, Michel Hazanavicius's film was something of an outlier. The phrase "French silent film" sounded like it would have about as much broad appeal as "Italian Western." All of those things ended up working out just fine, thus insuring that The Artist be able to charm its way to the front of the awards season pack thanks largely to buzz built out of Cannes, where it was screened in competition in 2011.

And charm it did. The Artist is an inarguably inoffensive movie meant to make us feel more than think. Would Carl Sagan watch The Artist and then go into his room to "reconsider some things"? Probably not; this is not exactly life-affirming and earth-shaking art. It's an example of the sort of movie that film fans call "love letters." Anything can be a love letter to anything: a love letter to New York, to Paris, to old Hollywood. It's a lovely image, but while watching The Artist in 2017, I wonder who this letter was addressed to.

When The Artist won the Best Picture Oscar at the 84th Academy Awards, it was seen as a polite and predictable win. At the time, the other big Oscar contender was The Help, a feel-good movie about black maids in the South that was designed just as much for TNT reruns as it was award season. At the time, the face off between the two films wasn't really much of one at all. The Artist was an actively uncomplicated film, which used to be enough. Now, it's akin to firing a shot.

Its closest proxy is this year's divisive La La Land which, much like The Artist, borrows flourishes and textures from a different era, albeit with a decidedly more commercial and contemporary lean. In La La Land, musicals of yesteryear serve as a well of inspiration to dip into; in The Artist, Hazanavicius throws us into the deep end of the pool, placing us in the era itself. And in retrospect the image of The Artist and The Help in competition is tense: a film celebrating Hollywood's golden era up against a film in which three black women play maids—the only kind of role available to black actresses in that same "golden era."

The Oscars, as with most cultural events, are now imbued with an overwhelming pressure regarding optics. When it comes to the Oscars, good storytelling makes for good entertainment and can nab you a few golden statues in the process. But what is the story that the Oscars are trying to tell about Hollywood, about culture, about us? This year, the Academy found itself in a tug-of-war as The Artist vs. The Help, with rightfully adored fan-favorite Moonlight up against the vocal mob-like suspicion of La La Land. Just what, everybody seems to be asking, is this movie trying to get past us?

The Artist is a safe film, but "safe" in a way it no longer should be. It feels culturally agnostic in a moment in which everything is loaded. The Super Bowl becomes a microcosm of a divided nation; the Grammys were another example of racial conflict. Meanwhile, revisiting The Artist and reassessing it feels less about quality and more about context. It feels like an artifact both of the silent era and the era just before this one—before the hyper-politicized moment we find ourselves in, in which a film's success speaks to another film's failure. The Artist reads about as enjoyable as it did the first time I saw it, but it no longer pays to be silent.

Follow Rod Bastanmehr on Twitter.



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Ten Questions You Always Wanted to Ask a Soccer Hooligan

Image above doesn't show the supporter interviewed for this piece.

This article originally appeared on VICE Greece.

Hooliganism, like racism or electro-swing, is something you'd imagine humanity might have evolved beyond by now. But here we are.

Although organized violence between supporters might have peaked in Britain near the end of the 1980s, it's still pretty common to see burly guys bashing one another's heads in purely because they support different teams. Take, for example, the battle in Marseille between the two titans of hooliganism—Russia and Britain—during the 2016 Euros. Or what happened just last weekend when Wolves played Birmingham.

In Greece, organized violence among soccer supporters started appearing during the 80s and had its "golden age" in the 1990s. One of the people involved in the riots every weekend was Niko, a hardcore PAOK Thessaloniki fan. I've known him for years, and I've never really understood that side of him. I've also never asked him about it—so I decided to sit down with him to find out what it's like to cause mayhem and destruction because you think your soccer team is good and other teams are shit.

VICE: Do you remember the first time you got into trouble for being a PAOK supporter?
Niko: It was in high school, with a "Martian"—that's what we call fans of Aris Thessaloniki FC. We got into a fight about the basketball teams of both clubs, because back then Aris was the only rival basketball team of PAOK. I don't remember exactly how we got to the point that we were fighting each other. I only know he later became an Anchovy—a fan of Olympiakos.

Do you ever contemplate the pointlessness of throwing punches and doing so much damage just because your team is playing a rival team?
Well, yes. Sometimes I do, especially when I'm outside the context of the match, like in a shop or a bar. I've been attacked while just having a drink with my friends. That's just stupid. It wasn't too bad in the end because I was able to explain to the guy who attacked me that the bar wasn't the right place for fights—save it for a match. Generally taking part in this kind of violence is a form of release for me, but only if it happens when and where it should.

Read: Ten Questions You Always Wanted to Ask a Nurse

Why did you get involved in this scene?
When I was younger, my father took me to our local team playing PAOK. We were in the stands. Until that moment, I had no idea fandom like that existed. They won me over with their energy, their slogans—just the whole vibe gave me the goosebumps.

What's the worst thing you've ever done to a fan of a rival team?
The worst thing I can remember happened on another night when I went for a drink with a friend. Out of nowhere, two rival supporter groups popped up and began chanting. They lit flares, and I didn't know what was going on until some guy punched me, and I hit the ground. When I got up, I saw that my friend was down, and four people were beating and kicking him. I didn't think. I just grabbed an empty beer bottle and ran toward them.

But just before I got to them, the guy who punched me appeared in front of me, and I immediately brought the bottle down on his head. I hit him twice, hard, since the bottle didn't break the first time. He was drenched in blood, and I froze for a second. After that, my friend and I ran away because the bar owner had called the cops. The strange thing is that the next day that same guy found my number and rang me to apologize for everything. So that's how the matter ended. It was all good times.

Have you ever been severely beaten up?
I have been beaten up, and I have beaten other people up—never with weapons, though, always just with my fists. Although, thinking about it now, the body can be a terrible weapon. Someone headbutted me once, which left me with a broken nose.

Read: Ten Questions You Always Wanted to Ask a Gynecologist

Can you hang out or have any kind of relationship with someone who supports another team, or does that always end in blood and tears?
Oh, it's definitely possible. When I meet people who like the same music as I do, for example, it doesn't really matter to me what team they support. You'll tease each other a bit when their or your team loses, but that's about as far as it goes. I'm married to an Olympiakos fan, but she doesn't get involved. She'll just say her team is and will always be the best. If she sees that I've taken the bait, she'll stop there.

So say you're in this big fight between supporters of your team and another, and you suddenly see a friend who supports that other team—what would you do?
Well, fortunately, that hasn't happened yet. I certainly have friends who support other teams, and I guess that what would happen depends on what they would do. It would be complicated, for sure.

What, in your recollection, is the most extreme damage you've ever done?
I think that must have been one time when a group of us went looking for a guy who had messed with a kid from our group. He was supposed to be at a bar, but when we got there, it turned out he wasn't. Since we were already there, we trashed the bar anyway.

Which of your sworn enemies do you hate the most?
The worst—in my opinion—are the Martians [fans of Aris Thessaloniki FC]. They can't be trusted—they're all talk and propaganda. After them, the Anchovies [Olympiakos supporters], definitely.

What was your craziest day as a soccer supporter like?
One day, after we'd seen the PAOK soccer team play a match, we went from Thessaloniki to Trikala to watch the PAOK basketball team play—knowing full well that they wouldn't let us in. When we arrived, and I saw some friends collecting rubbish bins to set on fire, I knew it was going to be a long day. We kept going at it with the cops; I think it lasted for about two hours. We completely wrecked the city center. I remember just standing there, in the middle of all these people, bars, and cafes, just throwing flower pots at everything and everyone.



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Here’s Why Net Neutrality Is Essential in Trump's America

It's been called "the free speech issue of our time."

But many Americans may not realize just how important net neutrality—the internet's open access principle—is for economic growth, civic empowerment, and political activism.

Net neutrality is the concept that every website and online service should be equally accessible to all people. That means everyone—from consumers to innovators to activists—has open access to the internet.

From a consumer perspective, net neutrality means that users can access a giant over-the-top online video product like HBO GO just as easily as they can reach a smaller service like Vimeo. It also means that internet service providers (ISPs) like Comcast, AT&T and Verizon can't favor their own video or communications tools at the expense of rivals.

One month into the Trump presidency, net neutrality is under attack by the Republicans who run Trump's FCC and the GOP lawmakers who control Congress. To do this, these officials intend to hand the broadband industry a gift on a silver platter, by dismantling the legal basis for the policy, which relies on Title II of the Communications Act and classifies ISPs as "common carriers," thereby requiring them to maintain open access to the internet.

Read more on Motherboard



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The VICE Morning Bulletin

Everything you need to know about the world this morning, curated by VICE.

US News

Trump Accuses Obama of Being 'Behind' Protests
President Trump believes Barack Obama and "his people" may be organizing the outbreak of angry town hall protests across the country. In a pre-taped interview for Fox News, Trump said, "I think President Obama is behind it because his people certainly are behind it." Trump also suggested Obama's allies are behind White House leaks to the press, adding, "Some of the leaks possibly come from that group."—CNN

Wilbur Ross Confirmed as Commerce Secretary
Billionaire Wilbur Ross has been confirmed as the Trump administration's commerce secretary following a vote of 72-27 in the Senate. Although Ross faced no serious opposition from Democrats, Senator Elizabeth Warren pointed out his "extensive ties to Russia" and described him as "practically a cartoon stereotype of a Wall Street fat cat."—AP

Feds Drop Opposition to Texas Voter ID Law
The Department of Justice has dropped its objection to a pivotal part of a controversial voter ID law passed by Texas in 2011. Under Barack Obama, DOJ had argued that the law—which among forms of ID often possessed by Republicans allows gun permits but not college IDs at polling places—was intended to discriminate against minority voters.—The New York Times

No Significant Intelligence Gathered in Yemen Raid, Officials Say
President Trump's Navy SEAL raid in Yemen did not lead to any "significant" new intelligence despite 25 civilian deaths along with that of a SEAL, according to multiple US officials. Although the White House press secretary claimed "an unbelievable amount of intelligence" was gathered, most officials say they have seen no evidence of it, other than an old bomb-making video.—NBC News

International News

Women Will Be Charged with Killing of Kim Jong-nam
Two women will be formally charged with the murder of the North Korean leader's half-brother Kim Jong-nam this Wednesday: Doan Thi Huong, 28, from Vietnam, and Siti Aisyah, from Indonesia, face a mandatory death penalty if convicted, according to Malaysia's attorney general.—Al Jazeera

At Least 12 Officers Killed at Afghan Police Station
At least a dozen policemen in Afghanistan's Helmand province are dead after a militants assaulted their headquarters. According to a police source, an infiltrator is believed to have allowed Taliban militants inside the police station in Lashkar Gah Sunday night, before fleeing with the militants after the killing of the officers.—BBC News

Australian Man Charged with Aiding ISIS Missile Efforts
An Australian citizen has been arrested and charged with terrorism offenses, suspected of giving ISIS advice on developing "high-tech weapons capability," according to Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. Police will allege that Haisem Zahab, 42, was offering "fairly sophisticated" guidance, federal Police Commissioner Andrew Colvin said.—The Guardian

Samsung Chief Charged with Bribery and Embezzlement
Samsung Group chief Jay Y. Lee and four other top Samsung executives will be charged with bribery, embezzlement, and, in a few cases, hiding assets overseas by South Korea's special prosecutor. The charges were announced on the last day of the probe that has rocked the national political scene.—Reuters

Everything Else

Tourists Sign Up for SpaceX Moon Mission
SpaceX has announced that two paying customers will take a trip around the Moon in late 2018. Founder Elon Musk did not reveal the identity of the pair who paid a "significant deposit," but did reveal "it's nobody from Hollywood."—USA Today

Jackie Evancho's Sister Wins Bathroom Case
Jackie Evancho's sister Juliet and two other transgender students in Pennsylvania have won the right to use school bathrooms matching their gender identity after a federal judge ruled in their favor. Jackie Evancho sang at President Trump's inauguration, and her sibling's lawsuit will continue making its way through the courts.—Billboard

Lorde Teases Fans with New Video Clip
Lorde has dangled what seems to be a clip of her new single, out in two weeks, in a TV ad shown in New Zealand. The artist is seen in the back seat of car hurtling down a tunnel in the clip, which also features a snippet of new music.—Noisey

Internet of Things Teddy Bear Exposed Two Million Recordings
Spiral Toys, makers of the "smart" teddy bears that allow parents and kids to exchange messages, apparently left two million recordings exposed online. Naturally, hackers appear to have attempted to hold the data for ransom, according to security researchers.—Motherboard

Spain Appoints Sex Commissioner
Spain has appointed a sex tsar to come up with a strategy to get more people making babies, in order to combat the country's low birth rate. Edelmira Barreira's official title is "commissioner for the demographic challenge."—VICE



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The Dancing 'Pink Windmill' Kids Have Recreated That Viral Video as Adults

Remember, at the end of last year, just before Christmas, the viral video of those dancing children? The ones in colorful sweaters who were very excited about telling you their own names, before breaking into an astonishing choreographed dance and doing some whooping?

I'm sure you do. It was a big moment in internet history. So big that we interviewed some of the kids from Emu's All Live Pink Windmill Show—who are now, of course, adults—about what it feels like to have something you filmed, as a child in the 1980s, suddenly thrust onto the world's Facebook feeds 30 years later.

Good news: some of those adults got back together to recreate the video in support of Comic Relief, a major charity organization in the UK, and we've got it here for you to enjoy:

The Pink Windmill Kids clip is one of a number of original skits being released this year on Comic Relief's social media channels. To see more, and to find out how you can get involved in this year's Red Nose Day, on March 24, visit the official website.



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What We Know About Trump’s Plans to Make the American Economy Great Again

"We're going to make Pennsylvania so rich again. Your jobs are coming back," Donald Trump told a rollicking rally at an arena in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, last October.

Trump had only been on stage for a matter of minutes, but he was already repeating himself. "They've taken our jobs out of Pennsylvania. We're going to be bringing them back, folks, believe me," he'd said a few minutes earlier. This time, he delivered the line as a sort of aside, almost a throwaway, after nonchalantly tossing a page of his speech to the crowd the way a sweaty singer working a Vegas crowd might toss a towel to a particularly adoring fan.

Hard along the Susquehanna River, Wilkes-Barre's economy has been in decline since the 1920s, when the anthracite coal from the hills of Luzerne County that once heated millions of American homes began to be replaced by oil and gas. Americans aren't going back to coal cellars. Nor is employment in Luzerne County—which peaked in 1914—rebounding any time soon.

Still, the sheer audacity of Trump's promise—why would he say it if he couldn't really do it?—was effective. After voting for Barack Obama by 8 percentage points in 2008 and 5 percentage points 2012, Luzerne County flipped, going for Trump by almost 20 percentage points.

Read more on VICE News



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Desus and Mero Guess How Nicki Minaj Will Respond to Remy Ma's Diss Track

We all learned two very important lessons this weekend: Don't trust the Oscars, and don't get on Remy Ma's bad side—the Bronx rap legend dropped one of the most savage tracks in recent history, "ShETHER," which tears apart her foe, Nicki Minaj. 

The single—titled after Nas' classic diss track, "Ether"—takes no prisoners, and features lyrics about Minaj's brother, who is going to jail for child molestation. Remy doesn't play around. 

On Monday night's Desus & Mero, the hosts debated whether or not Nicki will release an equally brutal clapback track. Although it's likely she will respond in some way, there are some topics that might be too taboo even for a brutal track. But if Remy Ma was willing to call out Nicki's brother, who knows how far Minaj will go.

Are Remy Ma and Nicki Minaj the new Jay Z and Nas? Only time will tell. 

You can watch last night's Desus & Mero for free online now, and be sure to catch new episodes weeknights at 11 PM on VICELAND.



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Monday, February 27, 2017

How Rugby Gives Queer Women a Place to Be Themselves

You never forget your first time. Playing rugby, that is.

Although men and women alike have been scrumming it down and shooting the boot since the 19th century, the rugby world has seen an exponential growth in female players over the last decade. It's considered one of the fastest growing sports across the planet, with more than two million women regularly booting up worldwide as of last July, according to World Rugby, the sport's global governing organization. The United States has quickly become a women's rugby mecca; according to country-specific participation figures released by World Rugby in 2014, there are over 24,000 registered female players in America. Of those, about 15,000 are adult players.

But numbers are just the beginning when it comes to the significance rugby holds for women. In a society that hastily assigns female athletes a plethora of stereotypes, rugby allows those athletes to challenge them in a nuanced way. And significantly, rugby cultivates a space in which females can explore their identities in a safe and empowering manner—something queer female ruggers I spoke with acknowledge as being a major draw of the sport.

While gay and queer-friendly male rugby teams are as prevalent today as ever, queerness in women's rugby operates under a different, more fluid mechanism. Most women's teams do not brand themselves as queer, whereas an international network of men's teams does exactly that. Queer female ruggers, like their non-queer teammates, nonetheless embrace rugby as a channel to challenge, define and embrace their own understanding of what it means to be both a female and an athlete.

"Rugby is a safe space, first and foremost, for queer folk," said Sky Knight, a player for the Life West Gladiatrix, a Bay Area-based women's club team. Knight, a seven-year rugby veteran, said the sport has allowed her to become both confident and intentional in the way she expresses her queer identity. In many ways, Knight said other sports pale in comparison when it comes to fostering a welcoming and inclusive community. "Rugby teaches you to be big and bold," she said.

Although youth rugby teams do exist, many female ruggers first encounter the sport in college, joining with little to no experience. Taking up a new sport can be daunting regardless of gender or sexual identity, but rugby's culture is often unique in welcoming players into the fold without pretense or expectation—it levels the playing field in a way many others don't. Portland Pigs player Lynne Stahl, who first played in her sophomore year in college, credits her then-coach for fostering an inclusive and positive environment for new players, particularly through her use of humor. "It sounds counterintuitive, but her way of keeping people from taking themselves seriously created a space for profound confidence among people society generally works to tear down in various ways," Stahl said.

Coming out is often anxiety-inducing, and Stahl noted that rugby can work to alleviate some of those concerns for queer players. Stahl said rugby creates something of a neutral space for lesbian, bi and otherwise queer women to engage in a dialogue about their identities around others who want to do the same. "Queer social groups can be wonderful, but they're not for everyone, and sometimes it's nice to have a less formal environment that's queer-heavy but not formally focused on sexuality—it's a good atmosphere for casual conversation," Stahl said.

Because rugby players come to the sport in all manner of sexualities, sizes and gender presentations, it provides a unique space where female are allowed to be unabashedly themselves. "Once females recognize that we're in a space where they're not going to be judged for their size or sexuality or gender presentation," said Stahl, "we can relax psychological defenses we don't even know we always have up."

Such spaces can allow females who may not consider themselves feminine to reclaim their identities, and allows all players to exercise fluidity with their gender and sexuality. It embraces and normalizes the varying spectrums of sexuality and gender players bring to the field. Portland Pigs player Ariel Acosta said the sport allowed her to explore and understand her own sexual identity in an encouraging and supportive culture. "It allows you to be fluid," she said. "Nobody's prying, nobody's poking. If you show up to the social with a guy, awesome. If you show up to the social with a girl, great."

"Rugby definitely is very accepting of whoever you are," said USA Olympian Kelly Griffin. "Everybody can be themselves. It has a culture of respect." To her, the game lets players express their individuality while working towards a greater goal, which allows players to find a family within their teams (a phenomenon by no means limited to rugby). As with finding a family, the sport eventually becomes an inextricable part of one's identity. "I'm a rugby player. That's what I do. That's what I love. It's been a big part of my identity," Griffin said.

Rugby extends beyond welcoming queer women with open arms—players stress that ruggers actively urge their teammates to reach their full potential both on and off the pitch. Teams become advocacy groups for women to come into their own as women, athletes and as human beings. They serve as platforms for women to build confidence, explore their identities and kick ass along the way. Spaces like that aren't always easy to come by. And at the end of the day, we all want to be seen and taken as who we are, especially if you're sticking your face in someone's ass on a regular basis (don't make it weird) and if you're drinking libations from your captain's sweaty, dirt-filled cleat. Sometimes, all it takes is a nudge. Or a stiff arm to the face.

Camila Martinez-Granata is a Bay Area-based writer.



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The Feds Are About to Stick it to Pain Patients in a Big Way

Before she turned 18, Anne*, a nurse, had endured at least five major surgeries, all without the use of post-op medication stronger than ibuprofen. As a child in Birmingham, Alabama, she had been diagnosed with cerebral palsy, but eventually learned that she actually has primary generalized dystonia, a genetic disorder that causes frequent painful muscle spasms and rigidity. By 19, she says, she had tried pretty much every treatment available, including a spinal implant that made matters worse.

Then she was given a prescription opioid.

Here is where your typical American news story might turn into a parable of addiction and dysfunction, even though the evidence we have suggests the vast majority of pain patients don't become addicted. But Anne's story is different, and there are millions of patients taking opioids for pain whose voices are rarely heard. 

Their ability to live and function well is now in danger because doctors and insurance companies have turned what were supposed to be voluntary guidelines issued last year by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) into inflexible rules. Soon, Medicare plans to follow suit, with potentially massive implications for how pain is treated—or not treated—in America. This relentless focus on cutting medical use of opioids in the face of a real addiction crisis is starting to damage the middle- and working-class people it was intended to help. And because so many are also facing job-loss and wage stagnation, we can't really help until we recognize how economic, emotional, and physical pain are intertwined. 

In Anne's case, opioids seemed like a godsend. Thanks to this class of drugs, she says, she was able to complete nursing school and become a hospice nurse. And even when her disease progressed and she could no longer work, opioids allowed her to live independently. When she decided at one point for herself to go for months without them, Anne tells me, she lost the use of her hands.

In a letter to a local medical board explaining why access to these medications matters, Anne wrote that during six months without opioids, "I was in the worst shape of my entire life—reliant on a power wheelchair, losing weight rapidly, with severe rigidity… unable to sit without support, with clenched fingers that rendered my hands useless."

Now 36, Anne fears she will be forced to go back to that straitened way of life. Over the last few years, doctors who prescribe high doses of opioids for patients like her have been increasingly targeted by law enforcement and medical boards, leaving some physicians terrified that any unusual prescribing pattern will put them at risk of losing their license or going to prison. And interviews, news stories, blog entries and emails from numerous pain patients—as well as surveys and social media posts—suggest Anne's case is far from unusual.

After one of Anne's doctors stopped prescribing, she says, she called more than 60 physicians before finding one willing to prescribe the medication that works for her, despite a documented medical history without signs of addiction. But the CDC guidelines—which were supposed to be flexible and to be used by primary care doctors (not specialists)—have increasingly taken on the air of law. To protect themselves, some pain specialists have stopped prescribing any opioids at all or cut back patient doses to fall within the guidelines, regardless of whether their current doses are helping their patients. 

Worse, just this month, the Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) announced that it will soon apply the CDC guidelines to everyone insured via Medicare, which means that patients on high doses may find themselves cut off without much—or any—notice.

Doses outside the guidelines—except in end-of-life care—could soon trigger a process that prevents pharmacists from filling prescriptions. Yet that process for other exceptions is not yet clear, according to Stefan Kertesz, associate professor of preventive medicine at the University of Alabama, who has corresponded with the agency. (VICE reached out to CMS for comment, but the agency did not provide comment prior to publication.)

"If a doctor could anticipate the need for special approval and if he or she could obtain it in a rapid fashion, this process might not cause serious harm to patients," Kertesz says. "However, we have no basis for expecting that kind of fluid rapid and clear communication in the history of managed care… I'm worried that the mechanics of how this will be implemented would result in patients being thrown into acute withdrawal, which would be medically risky."

The Medicare plan seems to be based, at least in part, on a white paper written in collaboration between insurance companies and academic researchers. And according to Kertesz, insurers often extend policies that originate in Medicaid and Medicare to their private patients. What this means is that soon, anyone—either on Medicare, Medicaid or privately insured—who takes a dose of opioids that is outside the CDC's acceptable range may be pressured to cut down or stop the medications entirely, even if the same meds are keeping them functional and productive. 

"It's like a runaway freight train," says Pat Anson, a journalist who covers these issues for a specialist publication, the Pain News Network

Indeed, in every other area of medicine, personalization and individualized care are the buzzwords—but not when it comes to opioids.

Meanwhile, the crackdown isn't curing people with addiction, even if it does seem to be shifting them to heroin. The result, among other things, has been more death: Just this past week, in fact, the CDC released data showing yet another jump in the overdose death rate, even though prescribing has continually fallen since 2012. According to the study, the proportion of overdose deaths involving heroin has tripled since 2010, while those involving prescription opioids have fallen. It's not really in dispute at this point that being cut from medical opioids can send people in search of of riskier street drugs, sometimes cut with the super potent fentanyl and its derivatives.

But In the regions hardest hit by opioid problems—yes, these are some of the same areas that fell unexpectedly hard for Trump—opioid deaths are not the only kind of mortality on the rise. Deaths from suicide and alcoholism have risen, too—and the rise has been so large for whites that it has paused what once seemed like inevitable increases in lifespan in successive generations. Neither of these causes of death can be blamed solely or even mostly on increased opioid supply; instead, the trend points increasingly to an underlying common cause: the slow-motion economic collapse of these communities.

"These tend to be places that were once dependent on manufacturing or mining jobs and then lost a chunk of those," explains Shannon Monnat, assistant professor of rural sociology at Penn State, who has published research on the Trump-voter-death-rate connection. "They tend to have experienced a decline or stagnation in median income. They have higher rates of poverty. It's really that these are downward mobility counties."

Check out our interview with director Barry Jenkins, whose film 'Moonlight' won Best Picture at the 2017 Academy Awards.

Opioids seem to be hitting these communities hard for the same reason crack was so devastating in black neighborhoods in the 1980s and early 1990s. Basically, not only did the drugs themselves provide escape and relief from distress, but they also offered one of the few avenues of economic opportunity: jobs in the drug trade. 

Overwhelmingly, these rural addictions do not start with medical use, which reflects national patterns. However, a critical factor in their stories is childhood trauma, according to Khary Rigg, assistant professor in the Department of Mental Health Law And Policy at the University of South Florida. "These are folks who primarily are using painkillers, but also heroin," he says before describing how the interviews he conducts with participants involve telling their stories chronologically. "They start talking about really, really intense traumatic experiences: rape, things like child abuse, molestation, witnessing someone die."  

Traumatized people seeking emotional relief are not going to be fixed by cutting off one source of their drug supply. Nor are patients like Anne. To wit: When yet another doctor recently stopped prescribing and she was forced to lower her dose to near the CDC-recommended levels, Anne fell out of her wheelchair and broke two crowns she'd just had placed on her teeth.

"My whole body was like, one shaking, jerking mess," she says.

The Medicare changes are open for public comment until March 3 at this email address. 

*Last name withheld to protect the patient's privacy and to avoid undue scrutiny falling on her current doctor. 

Reporting for this column was supported by the journalism nonprofit the Economic Hardship Reporting Project.

Follow Maia Szalavitz on Twitter.



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Confronting the UK's Everyday Extremism

On the season finale of our VICELAND series HATE THY NEIGHBORhost Jamali Maddix goes home to Britain to confront its most deep-rooted fears about the future of the country and Britain's acceptance of multiculturalism and racism in the shadow of Brexit.

HATE THY NEIGHBOR airs Mondays at 10 PM on VICELAND

Want to know if you get VICELAND? Head  here  to find out how to tune in.



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How Gross Is It to Share Your Toothbrush?

Ah, friends. They're like family but cooler. Fully customizable. Fall and one of them will be right there to pick you back up. But as great as friends can be, they also do a lot of really stupid stuff. Stuff that blows your mind. Like, sometimes it seems crazy that you even hang out with people who make such crappy decisions. Stuff that, were it to get out, would be mortifying for anyone with even a shred of self-respect. Lucky for your friends, they've got you to ask their deepest, darkest questions for them. And lucky for you, we started this column to answer those most embarrassing of queries. Couples share stuff. Tacos. A credit card. A fork. A bed. Bodily fluids. But letting your partner borrow your toothbrush? The jury's out. A quick straw poll of friends elicited the following responses: "Ew," "Hell no!" "It depends what she's eaten," and, um, "Are we not supposed to do that?"

The scenario: Your friend's significant other is spending the night, and he's arrived empty-handed. No tacos or toothbrush. She searched the bathroom cabinet for a spare, but crickets. Not even one of those tiny travel toothbrushes that sometimes get handed out on international flights is gathering dust on the top shelf. What does she do? Declare "sharing is caring!" and hand over her own toothbrush? Or insist he goes to bed with fuzzy teeth and just prepare for a wake-up call of seriously nasty morning breath?

Read more on Tonic



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Spain Appointed a Sex Commissioner to Get People Making Babies Again

The "Spanish Sex Tsar" sounds like one of those wacky made-up sex acts like a "Cleveland Steamer," but the sex position is all too real. In an effort to help correct Spain's population decline, the country's government appointed Edelmira Barreira to serve as its official "commissioner for the demographic challenge," Spain's ABC reports.

Last year, Spain saw the number of deaths outpace the number of births for the first time, which means that its total population actually shrunk. Spain's total fertility rate is one of the lowest in the developed world: women between the ages of 18 and 49 have an average of 1.3 children, which is below the EU average of 1.58 children, and America's average of 1.82. A representative from Spain's education ministry told ABC that birth rate decline "aggravates other economic imbalances and generates important impacts in the welfare state."

Barreira, a demographics expert, is currently tasked with creating a national strategy to correct the demographic imbalances and present it to Spanish prime minister Mariano Rajoy. It will most likely be something boring and technical, rather than a super sexy suggestion, like playing Barry White over the national radio or giving out tax credits for lingerie purchases.

Many believe that declining birth rates in industrialized nations are due to women being more involved in the workplace, waiting to have children later in life, the increased cost of having children, and a variety of factors, but no one has pinned down the exact reason for Spain's low output.

Rafael Puyol, a professor at the IE Business School in Madrid, thinks that the problem is that people are too tired after long working hours. "They do not help with making a family. Then a child arrives and it is even worse," he tells ABC. Maybe Spain could try offering people a paid one-hour break during work to go home and have sex, like a councilman Sweden proposed for government workers recently.

Other countries with low birth rates have tried some inventive ways to boost couples' sex lives. In Denmark, the government created "Do it for Denmark," a 2014 ad campaign to persuade couples to take romantic vacations to have sex. In 2010, South Korea ordered the lights in all office buildings to shut off at 7:30 PM once a month to encourage people to head home and see what happens with the lights off. And in 2012, Singapore's government created a "National Night" for couples to stay home and "make a baby, baby," which was sponsored by Mentos



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Another Wave of Bomb Threats Hit Jewish Schools and Community Centers Across America

In the latest eruption of hate targeting Jews in America, Jewish community centers and schools around the country received bomb threats Monday, spurring evacuations in multiple states.

NBC News reports that at least 16 institutions received calls within hours of one another Monday, including schools and community centers in North Carolina, Delaware, Alabama, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Florida, and Indiana. Facilities in Maryland, VirginiaMichigan, and Rhode Island also reportedly received threats. According to the Associated Press, many of the buildings were evacuated, and local law enforcement has not recovered any explosives.

"Members of our community must see swift and concerted action from federal officials to identify and capture the perpetrator or perpetrators who are trying to instill anxiety and fear in our communities," Jewish Community Center (JCC) Association of North America's David Posner said in a statement.

Though no one appears to have been injured, the calls fit into a broader trend of anti-Semitic threats so far in 2017, which has already seen dozens of bomb scares across the country. And the hate has spilled over into actual violence: In the last week alone, hundreds of headstones were vandalized at two Jewish cemeteries—roughly 170 in Missouri and some 100 more in Philadelphia this past weekend.

President Trump, the self-proclaimed "least anti-Semitic person" there is, commented on the recent rise in anti-Semitic threats last week, intoning, "The anti-Semitic threats targeting our Jewish community and community centers are horrible and are painful and a very sad reminder of the work that still must be done to root out hate and prejudice and evil." That statement fell short in the eyes of the Anne Frank Center, which after the Philadelphia grave attacks called on the president to make a televised address about the broader climate of fear in America.

"The FBI and the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division are investigating possible civil rights violations in connection with threats to Jewish Community Centers across the country," Carrie Adamowski, Philadelphia's FBI public affairs specialist, said Monday. "The FBI will collect all available facts and evidence, and will ensure this matter is investigated in a fair, thorough, and impartial manner."



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When You Have Body Dysmorphia, Coping Through Plastic Surgery Can Be a Nightmare

After performing cosmetic surgeries for nearly a decade, Dr. Beverly Fischer, head surgeon at the Advanced Center for Plastic Surgery in Maryland, encountered a patient who would haunt her for years.

A young woman in her 20s, who had recently lost weight, was seeking nasal reconstruction surgery. "She told me, 'I don't want a cute turned-up nose, I just want it slightly smaller,'" said Dr. Fischer. "Everything she asked for sounded realistic. I operated on her and when she first came back she was like, 'I don't know if it's small enough. I don't know if I see much of a difference.' I told her that it takes close to a year for the swelling to go away and that she had to be patient."

This dissatisfaction with her surgery resulted in multiple visits to Dr. Fischer's office. The patient would come in, appointment or no appointment, requesting more surgeries, expressing dissatisfaction about teasing from family and friends, and worrying that she couldn't go out at night because she thought she looked like a trauma patient. "She was coming in every week complaining about something," said Dr. Fischer. "She was almost incapacitated to the point where she couldn't go out of her house anymore."

After Dr. Fischer suggested she see a psychiatrist, the patient, who felt offended by her comment, continued to harass Fischer and her staff, even bringing in her husband to chastise the doctor on her medical advice. "It got to be a nightmare," admits Fischer. "I just gave her back their money and told her that I couldn't communicate with her anymore, and that it was best if she left the practice."

Read more on Broadly



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A Canadian Man Suffered Third-Degree Burns After an E-Cigarette Battery Exploded in His Pocket

A man from Calgary in Alberta, Canada was badly burned Friday night after an e-cigarette battery exploded in his pocket.

Terrence Johnson, 32, had been out downtown for dinner with his wife Rachel Rex and was just leaving the restaurant when something in his pocket burst into flames. A Global News video shows Johnson standing outside with his wife and a restaurant staffer when a huge flash comes from his leg.

A lithium e-cigarette battery in Johnson's pocket had reportedly come into contact with with coins, causing it to overheat and explode, which can happen when the circuitry inside the battery is damaged.

Johnson was taken to the hospital where he was treated for third-degree burns on this leg—where his polyester underwear melted and fused to his thigh—and second-degree burns on his right hand, which he used to try to stop the flames. His wife told Global News he will likely need a skin graft.

"We had heard about the actual devices exploding but never knew the risk of the batteries," she said. "It was horrific and, needless to say, his vaping days are over."

Johnson isn't the only Albertan to fall victim to an e-cigarette related accident. Last year, an e-cigarette exploded in the face of teenager Ty Greer when he went to light it, leaving him with second-degree burns and broken teeth. Greer's father said his son "wanted to die" from the pain.

The vaping industry has been criticized for its lack of regulations, something the federal government in Canada has said it plans to amend.

Follow Manisha Krishnan on Twitter.



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