Saturday, August 31, 2019

At Least 5 Dead and 20 Wounded In West Texas After Gunman Sprayed Highway With Bullets

At least five people are dead and 21 wounded after a gunman started randomly shooting at motorists along a major thoroughfare in West Texas between the cities of Odessa and Midland.

The shooter, described by law enforcement as a “white male in his mid-thirties” was apprehended in the parking lot of the Cinergy movie complex in Odessa, and died in a shootout with police, Odessa Police Chief Michael Gerke said at a brief press conference.

As of 6.15 p.m. local time, the situation was still chaotic. “This is a very fluid and changing situation,” said Gerke. “Everything I’m telling you is not written in stone.”

Police are investigating earlier reports of a possible second shooter, but said there have been no more casualties since apprehending the first suspect. “We believe that we have the threat contained but can’t be 100 percent positive,” Gerke said.

Among the victims being treated for gunshot injuries was a 17-month old toddler who was shot in the face. Three law enforcement members were also injured by gunfire.

“A subject, possibly two, is currently driving around Odessa shooting at random people,” Odessa police said in a statement on Facebook at around 5.00 p.m local time. “At this time there are multiple gunshot victims. The suspect just hijacked a U.S. mail carrier truck and was last seen in the area of 38th and Walnut.”

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said in a statement that he’s made plans to travel to Odessa on Sunday.

“The First Lady and I are heartbroken over this senseless and cowardly attack,” Abbott said. “I want to remind all Texans that we will not allow the Lone Star State to be overrun by hatred and violence.”

President Donald Trump said he’s been briefed on the shooting.

The Odessa shooting comes exactly four weeks after a shooting at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, left 22 people dead, and a mass shooting in Dayton, Ohio left nine dead.

Cover: Odessa and Midland police and sheriff's deputies surround the area behind Cinergy movie theater in Odessa, Texas, Saturday, Aug. 31, 2019, after reports of shootings. (Tim Fischer/Midland Daily News via AP)



from VICE https://ift.tt/34c9EG6
via cheap web hosting

Daily Horoscopes: September 1, 2019

Download the Astro Guide app by VICE on an iOS device to read daily horoscopes personalized for your sun, moon, and rising signs, and learn how to apply cosmic events to self care, your friendships, and relationships.

Astro Guide app banner

Mercury connects with Uranus at 10:10 AM, bringing a eureka moment! Surprises are in the air, but so is support as Venus connects with Saturn at 2:48 PM. The moon in Libra clashes with serious Saturn at 5:40 PM, reminding us of our limitations—but we're also keeping our standards high and our optimism up as the moon connects with lucky Jupiter at 7:24 PM.

All times ET.

1539034965147-virgo

Virgo (August 23 - September 22)

Your ruling planet Mercury connects with rebellious Uranus, inspiring you to embark on a new journey! You're craving freedom and feeling eager to take a risk. A supportive energy flows as lovely Venus connects with the planet of time and structure, Saturn.

1539034784565-libra

Libra (September 22 - October 23)

Messenger planet Mercury connects with brilliant Uranus, bringing you a big breakthrough! Your ruling planet Venus connects with Saturn, inspiring a supportive energy as you discuss plans and commitments.

1539034801431-scorpio

Scorpio (October 23 - November 22)

Communication planet Mercury connects with rebellious Uranus, bringing unexpected news your way and surprises to your relationships. Lovely Venus connects with stable Saturn, inspiring a supportive energy in your partnerships.

1539034821529-sag

Sagittarius (November 21 - December 21)

Messenger planet Mercury connects with wild Uranus, inspiring you to shake up your routine. A career risk is taken! Supportive energy flows as Venus connects with Saturn, helping you make plans and ask for what you're worth!

1539035339511-capricorn

Capricorn (December 21 - January 19)

Communication planet Mercury connects with genius Uranus, bringing surprises and breakthroughs, and inspiring you to take a risk! Venus connects with your ruling planet Saturn, creating a supportive atmosphere that's lovely for discussing plans.

1539034878965-aquarius

Aquarius (January 19 - February 18)

Communication planet Mercury connects with your ruling planet Uranus, bringing an emotional breakthrough—and a genius idea! Sweet Venus also connects with your other ruling planet, Saturn, inspiring support as you move through many changes.

1539034890954-pisces

Pisces (February 18 - March 20)

Messenger planet Mercury connects with wild Uranus, bringing exciting news and brilliant ideas! A surprising conversation takes place in your relationships, and sweet Venus connects with Saturn, creating a supportive atmosphere in your partnerships.

1539034901837-aries

Aries (March 20 - April 19)

Communication planet Mercury connects with unruly Uranus, inspiring you to take a risk. A eureka moment arrives, and you're receiving brilliant ideas that help you professionally or financially—or both! Venus connects with Saturn, creating a supportive energy in your career. You're feeling valued. Ask for help from higher-ups if you need it!

1539034914646-taurus

Taurus (April 19 - May 20)

Communication planet Mercury connects with rebellious Uranus, inspiring you to take a risk in love and in your creative endeavors. Your ruling planet Venus connects with Saturn, inspiring a supportive energy as you make exciting changes.

1539034930110-gemini

Gemini (May 20 - June 21)

Your ruling planet Mercury connects with brilliant Uranus, bringing an emotional breakthrough. Sweet Venus connects with Saturn, bringing you support as you take some unexpected risks!

1539034941619-cancer

Cancer (June 21 - July 22)

Surprising news comes as communication planet Mercury connects with electric Uranus. You're running into eccentric people today, but it's a wonderful time to connect, and serious conversations are broached with kindness as Venus connects with Saturn. It's a lovely time to think about commitments.

1539034953104-leo

Leo (July 22 - August 23)

Exciting conversations about your career and finances take place as chatty Mercury connects with genius Uranus. It's an amazing day for problem-solving, and a supportive energy flows in your career as Venus connects with taskmaster Saturn!

What's in the stars for you in September?

Want these horoscopes sent straight to your inbox? Click here to sign up for the newsletter.



from VICE https://ift.tt/2LiCN9T
via cheap web hosting

Trump Could Get His Wildest Primary Challenge Yet With ‘Mr. Appalachian Trail’ Mark Sanford

DES MOINES, Iowa — Mark Sanford thinks it’s pretty rich that President Donald Trump is attacking him for having an extramarital affair. But he’s savvy enough to know it comes with the territory when you’re publicly mulling a primary bid against this president.

“There's a certain level of irony — given his record — in raising those issues, but he's entitled to do whatever he's going to do,” Sanford said.

But Sanford noted that there’s one big difference between his own well-documented infidelity and those of the president.

“I learned from that very public failure. And that stands in strong contrast to what the president said, which is he regrets nothing,” Sanford said. “We’ve all got to own our stuff and I’ve tried to own mine.”

Still, Sanford is self-aware enough to understand that the guy best known for going AWOL from his job for a week in 2009 to have an extramarital affair in Argentina while telling his staff he was hiking the Appalachian Trail might not be people’s first choice to primary Trump.

“We’ve all got to own our stuff and I’ve tried to own mine.”

Trump seems to know it too. He tweeted a jab at Sanford Tuesday, calling him, “Mr. Appalachian Trail.”

But hey, that’s even what Sanford told his friends who he said keep bugging him to run. (He would not reveal who, because he said he doesn’t want to get them in trouble). Initially, he thought, let one of the other prominent Republican critics of Trump run against him.

“I was like, ‘Thanks, but no thanks. And let's get, you know, [former Arizona Sen. Jeff] Flake, [former Ohio Gov. John] Kasich, you know, the Governor of Maryland [Larry Hogan], whoever, somebody else, to grab that charge and run with it.’ But nobody showed up,” he said.

READ: Joe Walsh acted like Trump for years. Now he's trying to take him down.

So Sanford is on the verge of taking on that burden. He spent a few days this week touring Iowa, talking to political operatives about whether he should take the plunge, following up on trips to other early primary states, like New Hampshire and South Carolina. He’ll probably decide by the end of Labor Day weekend whether he’ll do it, he said, speaking at a Panera before heading to the airport.

Sanford doesn’t have much to lose. Not at this point, anyway. He rode out the scandal and finished his gubernatorial term in 2011. He became engaged to the woman with whom he had an affair, but the relationship was soon broken off.

In 2013, he returned to Congress, where he had served in the 1990s. But he was beaten by a pro-Trump challenger in a 2018 primary, after his criticism of the president landed him in a public feud with Trump. (That challenger lost to a Democrat later that year). Now, most of his old pals in the Trump-aligned House Freedom Caucus aren’t really part of his life anymore.

“What that tells you is political friends oftentimes are good friends for a chapter of your life," he said. "Politics, particularly on a national level, is transactional, and when you no longer part of the equation of help or hindrance, you don't exist.”

And that’s just as well, Sanford said. Congressional Republicans have shown a disappointing level of complacency in the face of Trump’s takeover of the party — not to mention they didn’t stick up for him when Trump came for his head.

READ: A climate debate could still happen — if 2020 Democrats revolt against their own party

“Everybody is very quiet in D.C., as you well know. They're not going to speak up against him,” he said. “Take as witness of that what happened to the Freedom Caucus, the way it completely morphed from being about certain ideas that were supposedly to advance and in the pursuit of freedom to lapdogs for the president.”

But don’t expect Sanford to make a principled presidential run as an independent, or vote for a Democrat over the man who derailed his political career and the party that abandoned him. He would still never support a Democrat, he insists.

Burned bridges aside, Sanford could instantly become the Trump detractor most likely to possibly, maybe, get even a modicum of support — but that’s not saying much. Trump’s grip on the party is that strong. Ninety-five percent of Republicans in Sanford’s home state of South Carolina said they would cast a ballot for Trump, according to a poll released this month. Only 5 percent said they think Sanford would make a good president.

The few announced Trump primary challengers don’t seem destined to fare much better. Conservative shock jock Joe Walsh, who held office as a congressman from Illinois for one term, is already drawing jeers for his Trump-like past behavior, including stating recently that former President Barack Obama is a Muslim.

READ: Bernie Sanders isn't going to take down Elizabeth Warren: 'It's not what I do.'

Former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld, who has not held elected office in more than two decades, has proven just as objectionable, but to the right wing. He’s out of step with mainstream Republicans, most notably on the issue of favoring legal access to abortion.

Sanford, for all his baggage, is a pretty mainstream fiscal conservative, someone who could justify asking for a protest vote from an everyday Republican who is frustrated with Trump’s lack of focus on policy and substance.

But Sanford said he’s fine being one among a lonely crowd. He knows none of them are actually going to beat Trump, but just maybe, the message that there are Republicans frustrated with the president will get through to him.

“If he's out there alone, the President can easily dismiss it. If you‘ve got two or three people, it's like, ‘Wait a minute,’” he said.

Sanford’s self-awareness of his own past might also be why he, unlike other Trump opponents, is not focusing on the moral case against the president — even if he believes there is one to be made.

“Other people can make the personality-based charge, but that wouldn't be my thing,” Sanford said. “My thing would be, where are we on spending exactly? Where are we on trade, which used to be a significant tenet of the Republican Party? Where are we on our embrace of institutions and changing things slowly? That's what conservatives do.”

If nothing else, Sanford wants to elevate the issues of the debt and government spending so that it is talked about somewhere in a campaign, because he thinks neither Trump nor Democrats will address it. And when he hears that Trump is promising Republicans he’ll cut entitlement spending in his second term, Sanford rolls his eyes.

“Give me a break. It’s not credible. It's not believable, because this is the same guy that said in 2016, ‘If you elect me, I'll completely eliminate the debt,’” Sanford said. “Instead, we've seen record numbers in terms of debt and deficit and spending that there's been no curtailment, no pull back from his end.”

Cover: Former U.S. Rep. Mark Sanford speaks with attendees at U.S. Rep. Jeff Duncan's annual fundraiser on Monday, Aug. 26, 2019, in Anderson, S.C. Sanford is mulling a 2020 GOP challenge to President Donald Trump. (AP Photo/Meg Kinnard)



from VICE https://ift.tt/2MN3iHK
via cheap web hosting

Inside the Resistance Fighting India's Occupation of Kashmir

SRINAGAR, KASHMIR — Every night by 6 p.m., Indian security forces lock down the streets of Kashmir’s capital city. For almost a month, people here have been without internet or cell phone service, and have been banned from gathering in public.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ruling party suspended the autonomy of the states of Jammu and Kashmir on Aug. 5, and has sent an additional 35,000 troops to quell the resistance in this picturesque Himalayan valley.

But one neighborhood in Srinagar is resisting the occupation. Young men from his neighborhood have dug up trenches, take turns guarding barricades blocking their streets, and throw stones at security forces when they try to force their way in at all hours of the night.

“We stay up all night, our boys stand up to them. There are at least 300-400 people here.” Mohammed, a protester in Soura, an enclave of Kashmir’s capital, told VICE News.

“They use a lot of shotgun pellets, tear gas, and power shells, but by the grace of god they haven’t succeeded.” he said. “As long as there are men living here, we won’t let them in.”

Kashmir used to be India’s only Muslim-majority state. Now, it will become two federally administered territories, giving the central government direct control over an area that’s been the focal point of three wars with Pakistan, its nuclear-armed neighbor, and a 30-year-long separatist insurgency.

More than 150 people have been injured in clashes with the police since the lockdown began.

Hassan, who is also from Soura, was on the frontlines of one of the first protests when police shot him with a pellet shotgun.

“The doctor says that it was a full cartridge, and the pellets penetrated inside my body.” Hassan told VICE News. “Some people lost their eyes.They also captured five or six boys and we have no news about them to this day.”

While many have been arrested during protests, others have been taken from their homes in the night. Security forces have detained thousands, and reports suggest some have been tortured, though officials have denied these claims.

“The police raids several places at night. Sabotaging takes place,” Hayat Ahmed Bhat, a community organizer in Soura told VICE News. “They take small children, God knows where they take them, and they don’t release them. We can’t even comprehend what's going on in Jammu and Kashmir right now.”

Bhat spent nearly two years in jail in “preventive detention” and was released before the lockdown began. He immediately started organizing from the local mosque. The government spies on his rallies with drones as they’ve been unable to shut them down.

Bhat continues to organize despite his concerns for his family. He worries he will be arrested again if his neighborhood is overrun by the army.

“God willing we will completely resist this campaign.” Bhat said. “We have decided that until Article 370 is brought back, and Jammu and Kashmir get its rights…. And all the local captives are released, no Kashmiri, will sit here peacefully.”



from VICE https://ift.tt/34htfoc
via cheap web hosting

How Two Sisters Pulled Off a Daring Escape From Saudi Arabia

ISTANBUL — Dua and Dalal AlShowaiki spent five years planning their escape from Saudi Arabia. In early June, they finally had their chance during a family vacation in Istanbul.

When their father walked into the hotel bathroom, asking his second wife to watch the young women, Dua told her younger sister to get her shoes on. They grabbed their phones, left their hijabs behind, and ran for it.

“Despite our dire situation — we have no money, we have nothing, we're just out on the street — but I was laughing, saying to myself, ‘Look at what I've done,’” Dua, 22, said. “Later on, we understood the gravity of the situation, the disaster we’re in.”

They were escaping a life they describe as brutal. The sisters say they were beaten on a regular basis and prohibited from going anywhere without a male guardian and full veil. And they say they were about to be forced to marry men they’d never met, one of whom was more than twice their age.

But days after their escape, they found themselves in another crisis: trying to survive on the streets without passports or money, and writing desperate pleas for help on social media.

“Later on, we understood the gravity of the situation, the disaster we’re in”

They were working against the clock: If they didn’t find a country to resettle them, their father could find them and take them back to Saudi Arabia. There, they believed, they would face punishment, and possibly death, for their defection.

“I felt both afraid and nervous. All I could think of is that my dad is just gonna suddenly appear in front of us,” Dalal, 20, said.

Dua and Dalal AlShowaiki
Saudi sisters Dua and Dalal AlShowaiki on a call with human rights organizations, pleading for their case to move along. (Daniel Vergara for VICE News)

The AlShowaiki sisters’ father, meanwhile, denies all allegations of abuse and forced marriage, and says he doesn’t know why his daughters fled. But the sisters say they couldn’t do simple things when they were younger, like watch TV or play outside, and they had to be fully covered. When they talk about their childhood, they physically cringe at the memories.

“I was maybe 9 or 11 years old. They had me wear a hijab, a niqab, and even an abaya. There’s something called an abaya that covers you from the head down,” Dalal said. “I never lived my normal childhood, being able to go out and play.”

“I wake up every couple of hours to check the windows and check on my cell phone”

Now, more than two months since their escape, the sisters are still in hiding in Istanbul, spending nearly 24 hours a day in a secret location. Their story, meanwhile, has spread across the world, highlighting the oppressive life that Saudi women and girls can face. Guardianship laws have historically required women to receive permission from a male guardian to travel, marry, work, or in many cases, just leave the house.

According to Dua and Dalal, Turkish authorities have said their father and Saudi government officials are offering to pay people to find their location. The Saudi Consulate in Istanbul did not respond to VICE News’ requests for comment for this story. And their father denies these allegations, but Dua and Dalal are terrified. Throughout the night, Dua looks out her window checking for suspicious cars.

“I wake up every couple of hours to check the windows and check on my cell phone,” Dua said. “I’m always afraid. I’d tell Dalal, ‘Look at this car that just passed: Of course, our dad must be in it. There’s a big black SUV. Of course it must be someone from the [Saudi] embassy,’” referring to the same embassy where journalist Jamal Khashoggi was murdered last year.

“I would be asleep and I dream every night that my father came and entered the room and found us,” Dua said.

Dua and Dalal AlShowaiki
Dua AlShowaiki, who escaped from Saudi Arabia with her sister, looks out of the window, checking for suspicious cars. (Daniel Vergara for VICE News)

On Aug. 2, the Kingdom announced changes to the guardianship system that would allow anyone over 21, male or female, to apply for a passport and travel without the permission of a guardian. The announced changes also allow women to officially register births, deaths, and divorces. But how these new rules will be interpreted remains ambiguous until they’re put into practice later this fall. And some restrictions remain — namely that women will still need permission from their guardian to get married, one of the main causes for women running away in the first place.

While Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has purported to modernize parts of the Kingdom, by allowing women to drive and lifting the travel ban for women in addition to amending the guardianship system, he’s also escalated his campaign to track down and target dissidents abroad, something Dua and Dalal fear.

“What we have seen over the last 12 to 18 months is a crackdown on dissidents,” Dua and Dalal’s pro bono lawyer, Toby Cadman, told VICE News. “A crackdown on female activists. There are a number of high-profile female activists who have been thrown in jail. Many of them have been beaten, tortured. So to suggest that we are looking at a different era in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, if it wasn't so serious, it would be laughable.”

We’re talking about two young women who could be killed at any moment”

According to Human Rights Watch, women often flee due to domestic violence, political repression, and forced marriage, and that number is growing. Nearly 800 Saudis applied for asylum in 2018, up from just 195 in 2012, though UNHCR does not track how many of those individuals are women.

Dua and Dalal say none of their friends have escaped, but many women in Saudi dream of freedom.

“No girl in Saudi Arabia accepts this life that men are controlling them. A girl makes no decisions about her life, even a trivial one; a man controls that,” Dalal said. “I would never accept that for myself. I know that I have rights. For me, this is hell.”

Family members and friends have sent them messages on WhatsApp, Snapchat, and Twitter, telling them to go back to their home. When their father's second wife sent them a message, asking them to meet her in Egypt, where she lives, Dua and Dalal rolled their eyes.

“It’s bullshit,” Dalal said. “I’m not stupid,” her sister added.

Dua and Dalal AlShowaiki
Saudi sisters Dua and Dalal AlShowaiki have been hiding in Istanbul, while they await news of their resettlement to a new country. (Daniel Vergara for VICE News)

The sisters are in a race for resettlement against their father’s efforts to get them back, which they say includes the Saudi government.

“For me, I know that Saudi Arabia will try to send us back, 100%. That is for sure,” Dalal said.

They’re now registered with UNHCR and are under United Nations protection, but that does not include personal security or an official safe house. The Turkish Ministry of Interior granted them each an International Protection Applicant ID, so they’re not at risk of being deported. Cadman is trying to get them asylum in a third country, but they have yet to be resettled.

We’re talking about two young women who could be killed at any moment,” Cadman said. “And if they are… that will be on the conscience of the U.N., the Turkish authorities, and these countries for failing to respond to these pleas for help.”

“I’m so tired. I just want to be safe”

Dua and Dalal say every additional day they’re in Turkey is a day their life is at risk. They say if the Saudi Embassy or their family finds them, they won’t return to Saudi Arabia.

“I will kill myself. Before they kill me, I will kill myself,” Dua said. They’ve gone as far as planning how they would end their lives, believing the alternative is worse.

But, there are moments of levity. They dream of skateboarding outside of their bedroom, playing instruments without being punished, continuing their studies, and going to Eminem concerts. They obsess over their hairstyles and tease each other. When they talk about their dreams for the future, more than anything, they just want peace of mind.

“I’m so tired. I just want to be safe,” Dalal whispered.

Until then — despite the risks — they continue to remain vocal.

“If I die, or something happens to me, I will have left something,” Dalal said. “A presence, an image. I exist.”



from VICE https://ift.tt/2ZKG6M9
via cheap web hosting

Friday, August 30, 2019

'Doom' Programmer John Carmack Says Games Industry Doesn't Need Laws Against Crunch

Doom programmer and game industry legend John Carmack recently went on Joe Rogan’s podcast, a show downloaded by millions each month and a favored space for men to launder bad ideas. The pair talked about judo training, the future of virtual reality, the magnificence of space rockets (which Carmack has designed), and labor in the video game industry. Rogan asked about the long hours developers work to ship a game, often under brutal time constraints, which are known in the industry as "crunch."

Carmack acknowledged that people in the industry work very long hours, and that the long hours he's put into creating Doom and other games have made him rich. But ultimately, he doesn't believe game developers should be prevented from working long hours by law. Growing labor organization efforts in the games industry cite crunch as one of the main reasons developers need to unionize.

“There’s some serious debate about it. Some people despise that about the industry, that no one should work that hard,” Carmack said. “And there are people that think there literally should be laws that prevent people from working that hard. I always have to argue against that. There is a power to obsession and being able to obsess over something—your life’s work. Instead of work-life balance, it’s your life’s work.”

Earlier in the conversation, Carmack described how he works. He puts in 13-hour days and experiences a productivity drop off if he pushes it further. He feels guilty about working less than 60 hours a week. He also became a millionaire in his early 20s because he was a co-founder of id Software, not exactly the lived experience of most video game workers.

“Making games is really really hard,” Carmack said.

He pointed out that programmers fresh out of college who join up with Facebook or Google have nice perks. They work hard, sure, but they get to eat candy at work. They have benefits and job security. But work in the games industry is often punishing, and even he admitted “it doesn’t pay as well, there’s less job security, and they work you a lot harder.”

Big games like Red Dead Redemption 2 don’t ship without workers suffering through long, often mandatory, periods of extended hours called “crunch.” Carmack didn’t see much problem with that.

“It allows products to exist that wouldn’t otherwise exist by people working at that level in a way that couldn’t be sustained in other industries,” he said. “Many of the greatest things that were made in gaming were only possibly by people throwing themselves at that level at it.”

At certain points, Carmack acknowledged his privilege, and how much different his life has been.

“I always have to be aware that my view into the industry is colored by my experiences,” he said. “I never actually worked inside of the big EA or Activision studios. It’s possible that [their workers] have some valid criticism, but I still come down on … I think it’s great when they throw themselves at it, beyond the point that other people think is reasonable.”

And yet, there’s a growing movement in the games industry. Workers are organizing, talking about unions, and pushing back against abusive practices. Game Workers Unite is a grassroots organization that’s just starting to change the industry. The growing truth is that people don’t have to crunch to make games, and bosses shouldn’t require it of them.

“They [workers] have free will, they’ve chosen to do that, and if that’s what they think will get them closer to their goals, I’m not going to try to make that impossible for them,” Carmack said.



from VICE https://ift.tt/2MKdtgn
via cheap web hosting

This Late-Night Glove Salesman Masturbating Story Is Very Weird but Also True

This article originally appeared on VICE Canada.

It was 3 a.m. in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in the dead of winter—typical glove-wearing weather.

Andrew Blackbird had just finished a bartending shift and his wife, who was supposed to drive him home but had presumably fallen asleep, wasn’t answering his calls. Then his phone died. With all the cabs taken up, he started the 25-kilometer [15-mile] walk home.

It wasn’t long until a black SUV rolled up alongside him and a man who looked like Max Headroom asked if he wanted a ride. Desperate and freezing, Blackbird accepted. After Blackbird turned down the man’s request to “party,” the night took a disturbing turn.

According to Blackbird, the man told him, “Drive my jeep and wear my gloves."

Blackbird had no idea how often this strange request has been made to stranded Halifax men after a long night. He just thought it was one of those “weird random freak things.” In fact, it wasn’t until Blackbird saw an incredibly popular Reddit post (which eventually got turned into a podcast and a CBC story) describing an eerily similar experience that he learned the truth: there was an urban legend of a man who scouted the streets of Halifax looking for desperate men to try on his gloves.

1567142589458-leathergloves-smelling
Two images from a YouTube channel connected to the Glove Guy. The video is entitled "Leather Glove Fetish" and shows a man making fists while wearing leather gloves and then sniffing them.

“He gives me a pair of leather gloves which are extremely tight to fit on my hands… He then prompts me to pull the glove right on and thread my fingers together to stretch it on properly, and shows me how to stretch the glove by pulling on it and making a fist,” says the 2017 post, the all-time most popular on the Halifax subreddit. “I turn back to the guy and he has a ‘better fitting’ pair of gloves for me to try on. This time it becomes extremely obvious that he has a fetish for young men wearing leather gloves and this is how he gets off.”

According to several comments (the post has 683 of them), Glove Guy cruises the streets in a black SUV after the bars close, picking up young, often drunk, men, and offering them rides home. Along the way, he gives them a business card and has them try on pairs of excruciatingly tight gloves, assuring them it's for his glove-sales business, “Love the Gloves.”

While many of his alleged actions are in dispute, one thing is clear: Glove Guy is real.

Blackbird acquiesced to Glove Guy’s requests and got behind the wheel. The two of them drove up and down the same patch of road while Blackbird tried on a selection of tight-fitting gloves—gloves he admitted were “really well-made.” Like the Reddit poster, Glove Guy had Blackbird make a “fist a few times to work them in.”

"The whole time I was doing that he's, like, looking at me and, like, fucking rubbing his leg and shit. He's like, 'How do they feel? How do they feel?' and breathing really hard," Blackbird told VICE.

"In my head I was like, 'Jesus Christ,' but I just told him, 'They feel good.'"

There have been enough glove-foisting incidents for the authorities to get involved: Halifax police have received reports and information regarding “a man offering rides to male pedestrians and asking them to try on gloves,” Cst. John MacLeod said in an email to VICE.

One case even resulted in a police charge. Shawn DeWolfe told VICE he was picked up by Glove Guy in 2016. He says that while he was made to try on several pairs of gloves, Glove Guy started to masturbate in the driver's seat. DeWolfe says he fled the vehicle as quickly as possible.

Most people “just think it’s funny,” DeWolfe previously told the CBC. "[But] for other men who had more serious encounters, I just believe that they're too embarrassed or too afraid to maybe even come out and talk because they're afraid that what other people might think of them."

DeWolfe reported the incident, and in May 2016, officers charged Murray Russell James, 50 years old at the time, with one count of committing an indecent act. James pleaded guilty and in January 2017 received a 30-day conditional sentence. According to court documents, he was ordered not to leave his home from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. He was also given a $100 fine and told to have no contact with DeWolfe. James told the CBC he denied masturbating next to DeWolfe and only pleaded guilty to avoid a harsher punishment.

1567171647136-courdocs
A portion of the court documents regarding James masturbating.

In a Facebook post dated August 1, he wrote that his "biggest mistake" was trying to promote his "glove business between the hours of 2 a.m. and 4 a.m." and "providing those with my business card first then showing them my awesome ultrathins [gloves] next." James denied any "inappropriate behavior" to the CBC, but did admit that sometimes he would offer drives at night.

The post continues: "I will say along the way I did get a little pushy to get people/ guy's [sic] to see and try on my gloves because I was so damn proud [of] my products that it creeped some of you out and that was never my intent and am so sorry you felt that way!"

Recently, in a separate incident, James was charged with impaired driving and suspended from driving for 90 days. According to Halifax police, he was arrested on July 29 at 2:30 a.m. on Carmichael St., a street off the city's main bar drag, and was alone at the time. In an email to VICE, James denied this was him, but Halifax police confirmed it was the same Murray James who pleaded guilty in 2016.

James told VICE in another email that the rumors spread by Reddit and the CBC were "fake news,” and he was "not interested in getting involved in most of these lies.” He added, "I would ask you to leave me alone or I will be sueing [sic] you for fake news!"

In another email, James said, “Mark my words you don’t want to fuck with me! I will come after you in every way possible.” He ended the correspondence by emailing the VICE reporter's headshot back to him.

1567142880812-lovethegloves-website
The homepage of the Love the Gloves website. The website is only accessible through the internet archive.

But that's only part of the story. To get the whole picture, which somehow involves allegations of cybersquatting, we first have to take to—yeah, you guessed it—a podcast. Jordan Bonaparte, the host of the true crimes Nighttime Podcast, decided to investigate the legend of Glove Guy after seeing the many Reddit posts. He interviewed four men with Glove Guy tales for two podcast episodes that aired in May 2019.

As one man explained on the show, “The first thing he does after I buckled my seatbelt is open the glove compartment, at which point, God knows how many pairs of gloves spilled onto my lap... and he almost frantically starts requesting that I start trying them on.”

Soon after the interview is aired, James registered "The Nighttime Podcast" as his own business with the Nova Scotia Registry of Joint Stock Companies (NS RJSC). He also purchased a website URL and created a Facebook page with a near-identical name to Bonaparte’s website and podcast (James added "The"). In his email exchange with VICE, James said he would "make it worse on Jordan [Bonaparte]” if the story was published.

In an all-caps Facebook post on The Nighttime Podcast Facebook page, James expressed his displeasure with Bonaparte and stated that there are “two sides" to every story. He admitted to picking up the men and having them try on the gloves but was adamant it was a marketing ploy.

1567142928313-Screen-Shot-2019-08-29-at-54612-PM
Screenshot from the Aug. 4 post.

A large part of James’ glove-related activities are tied to Love the Gloves. VICE could not authenticate if the company is still operational, but it does have a YouTube channel and previously had a website (it’s still accessible by the Wayback Machine).

One YouTube video, "Leather Driving Gloves," shows a man trying on several pairs of very tight leather gloves standing in front of the company banner. It goes on for seven minutes and not a word is spoken. VICE sent images of the man in the video to Blackbird, who confirmed it was the same guy who picked him up.

Another video, called “Leather Glove Fetish,” shows the torso of a man putting on gloves, making fists, and sniffing the leather. Bonaparte declined to comment to VICE for this story. But in an interview with the CBC, Bonaparte said he still retains ownership of his podcast since it is a trademarked product, and the business operates under his personal name. However, he is frustrated that the NS RJSC allowed the business name to be registered without doing research or requiring proof of the applicant’s ownership.

Bonaparte told the CBC he thinks the registrations were done to "squat on [his] work" as a form of retaliation for his podcast.

1567142952770-Screen-Shot-2019-08-29-at-23639-PM
A page from the Love the Gloves website. The website is only accessible through the internet archive.

DeWolfe told VICE he was contacted by James on social media and also threatened, even after the court order. According to DeWolfe, police told him to block James on social media and let them know if he attempted to contact him again.

MacLeod stated that each report is taken seriously and criminal activity should always be reported to local authorities. “We appreciate that this behavior may be disconcerting, and encourage anyone who has been approached in this manner to contact police so we can investigate the matter,” MacLeod said.

As to where the tale of the Glove Guy ends, well, it’s an ongoing saga. It’s unknown if the man is still out there picking up men and asking them to try on his “very well-made” gloves, but the idea of Glove Guy is no longer just a legend that drunk Maritimers tell in a south Halifax bar.

Blackbird sums up his Glove Guy encounter as a strange, uncomfortable experience. “Really, besides the unsettling feeling, he didn't do anything. I didn't really feel threatened," Blackbird said.

“I like to joke about the situation but I imagine if it happened to an 18-year-old college student it would be quite traumatic."

Sign up for our newsletter to get the best of VICE delivered to your inbox daily.

Follow Mack and MJ on Twitter.



from VICE https://ift.tt/2PpLK6z
via cheap web hosting

Google Contractors Are Unionizing With a Steel Workers Union

Contract workers at Google’s office in Philadelphia have just announced their intention to unionize.

66 percent of the eligible contractors at a company called HCL America Inc., signed cards seeking union representation, according to the United Steel Workers union. With the help of the Pittsburgh Association of Technical Professions (PATP), they’re asking the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) for a vote on union representation. The PATP is a project sponsored by the union aimed at "helping Pittsburgh and Southwestern Pennsylvania workers in high-tech fields organize and bargain collectively.”

“Workers at HCL deserve far more than they have received in terms of compensation, transparency and consideration, and it has gone on like this for much too long,” HCL worker Renata Nelson said in a press release. “While on-site management tries to do what they can, where they can, their hands are often tied by arbitrary corporate policy.”

The vote for union representation is an important step, necessary to empower a union to exclusively represent employees and negotiate on their behalf for a collective bargaining agreement. The move also represents an important step in the small but growing movement to unionize Silicon Valley’s workforce. The press release explains that HCL's 90 employees "work side-by-side with those of the giant corporation for far less compensation and few, if any, of the perks."

This is the norm for members of Google's "shadow work force," an army of temps and contractors that outnumber Google's full-time workforce. Earlier this year, organizers of the Google employee walkouts released a statement supporting striking Uber and Lyft drivers, who are not technically employees of those companies and thus receive few benefits. In it, they critiqued of Google’s own classifications for “temps, vendors, or contractors" allowed the company to "abdicate its responsibility to the majority of its workforce."

In some instances, contractors do the same work as employees but are paid less and get fewer benefits. In other scenarios, the contractors are doing “ghost work” because they’re erased entirely as their labor is presented as the product of “artificial intelligence.”

From here, the workers and the union have to wait for the NLRB to determine if the cards and signatures collected qualify and then schedule a representation election. In that election, individual workers will vote for or against being represented by the union.

Google and the United Steelworkers Union did not immediately respond to a request for comment.



from VICE https://ift.tt/2ZEDDH6
via cheap web hosting

Facebook’s Open Source Community Is Reckoning With Toxicity and Harassment

Last week’s React Rally was set to be a highlight of the year for developers who use ReactJS, an open-source front-end framework developed by Facebook that powers much of the web (including Vice.com). But while the conference was going on, a broader conversation about the React community’s toxic and abusive behavior toward women, minorities, and other underrepresented groups in tech was playing out.

Like other open-source communities, ReactJS is now reckoning with how it treats traditionally underrepresented groups in tech. The flashpoint, in this case, were two separate conversations that converged into what’s now being called #Reactgate. One conversation was spurred by a series of tweets by high-profile members of the community, and the other by a talk about how the community must support women, people of color, and gender nonbinary people.

Last week, Heydon Pickering, a designer with a relatively large online following, sent a tweet comparing React to Vue, another framework, insinuating that React developers were into weightlifting, guns, and Donald Trump.

Quickly, Dan Abramov, a developer at Facebook, responded by defending the framework’s user base. Ken Wheeler, a developer who often gives speeches on the React conference circuit tweeted: “Imagine the kind of thought process that paints strength training as a bad thing and then projects a bunch of other unrelated shit onto it, while tying all of this to the use of a specific JavaScript view library,” he wrote, with a crying-laughing emoji for emphasis.

From there, a wider debate happened. Wheeler was already a relatively well-known figure among a certain cohort of coders. Wheeler caused controversy last year when he flashed the “OK” hand symbol, which had become associated online with white supremacy, at the 2018 React Rally as part of his presentation, while staging a large-scale performance of the “circle game.” The conversation about the ReactJS community, and Wheeler’s talk, resurfaced again this week.

Wheeler, for his part, has vehemently denied any accusations that he willingly and knowingly invoked a white power symbol. “So here I am, America enthusiast, jacked up type dude with a shaved head, and I can see how you could get the wrong idea here. But I assure you. At the time, I thought we were just having fun with a game that we played our entire lives, not doing some kind of dogwhistle,” he tweeted as part of a longer thread.

“I had never heard of this being an alt right thing,” he said via Twitter DM, “And I’m sorry if it was.”

But even before Pickering’s tweet, some in the front-end development community had already experienced online harassment and abuse. Earlier on the week of August 19, at the systems design-focused Clarity Conf, designer and art director Tatiana Mac gave a talk about the ways in which systems of oppression can replicate in systems design paradigms. After images of her presentation were made public, some Twitter users, including self-proclaimed “React bros,” began questioning the presentation’s relevance to tech: “Most definitely wasn't a tech conference. I don't see anything about React of [sic] WASM (WebAssembly) on the screen. Looks to be some kind of SJW conference,” one tweet read.

It didn’t take long for the two React-centric debates to converge. Critiques and defenses of Mac’s speech were bandied back and forth on Twitter and Reddit, and she started receiving a torrent of vitriol. Not long after that, both Wheeler and Facebook’s Abramov deactivated their Twitter accounts. Wheeler, in his messages with Motherboard, claims that he deactivated his account “both to deplatform [right wing trolls], and to take a breather.” When he returned to Twitter shortly thereafter, he issued an apology, both for his behavior and for any hatred on behalf of his followers that he might have directed towards Mac. Abramov, too, rejoined Twitter: “Hateful rhetoric has no place in the React community,” he tweeted.

"I receive (and continue to receive) hundreds of messages from people who want me to stop talking about this ‘social justice warrior shit’ and to remove the human side of tech"

But the rhetoric has taken a toll and has opened up a much-needed conversation in the community. Mac said she is stepping away from tech after fulfilling upcoming speaking obligations through 2020: “Your actions/inactions have spoken. Enjoy an industry without me,” she tweeted.

Mac, in DMs with Motherboard, said that the React developers she's worked with directly have been "absolutely lovely to work with," but that the broader community has often erased the contributions of women and people of color: "we're constantly thinking of the face of React developers, which is white dudes," she said.

Mac outlined why she believes the React ecosystem has a tendency to attract an abrasive, bro-heavy culture, one that eventually forced her exit from the community: “I receive (and continue to receive) hundreds of messages from people who want me to stop talking about this ‘social justice warrior shit’ and to remove the human side of tech,” she wrote. “The 'move fast and break things' mentality [of Facebook] has trickled down to React, where they built this framework that gained popularity very quickly and they never went back to build some key foundational elements (like a specific code of conduct) to systemically address things like abuse.”

Mac explained that system design communities, like those who work on the Sass framework, have been able to create less abusive communities by, in part, putting non-white, non-male leaders at their center. “Jina [Anne, Sass core team designer], for example, manages the Design Systems slack,” Mac wrote. “She does an extraordinary job monitoring and enforcing the code of conduct fastidiously.”

Mac said the community should focus on the impact of toxic behavior (including Wheeler’s hand gesture last year), not necessarily the intent. “The impact is that that hand gesture causes irreparable harm to communities of colour especially, who must use that as an identification for white supremacists,” she wrote. “Using it, regardless of intent (knowingly or unknowingly using it as a white supremacist symbol) causes immense fright within me—THAT is the impact (intentional or unintentional).” She is taking a step back from tech, she said, because “the abuse is unsustainable right now.”

Mac said the React core team that develops the language should “take crafting a code of conduct seriously, and enforce it diligently. The work is in the enforcement.”

Before Friday, React’s Code of Conduct redirected to an old version of the Facebook Code of Conduct, which was vague—“Be considerate,” “Be respectful”—and was relatively hard to find on the main React site. On Thursday night, Facebook engineers updated the Facebook Code of Conduct to reflect the Contributor Covenant, a set of guidelines for open source contributions created by technologist Coraline Ada Ehmke, aimed at protecting and promoting an inclusive environment).

When reached for comment, Abramov directed Motherboard to Alexandru Voica, a Communications Manager for the Engineering team at Facebook. Voica outlined three-pronged strategy React will be putting in place to address issues within the community: a new code of conduct, shaped by the Contributor Covenant, a reporting structure for abuses within the community, whether they occur online or at meetups, and “specific activities aimed at promoting diversity and inclusion within the React communities.”

But Mac said the damage has been done: “It feels to hurtful to give—and to love upon—to an industry that is showing me so much hate,” Mac said.



from VICE https://ift.tt/2ZDihpC
via cheap web hosting

6 States Are Now Rejecting Federal Money Because of Trump's Abortion 'Gag Rule'

The Trump administration’s attempt to carve abortion-related services out of the only federal program dedicated to funding family planning has driven entire states to leave it.

At least six states no longer have access to the money provided by Title X program, which once funded some 4,000 U.S. clinics offering services like STI testing, cancer screenings, and birth control. Rather than comply with the administration’s decree that these providers no longer refer patients for abortions — which reproductive health advocates say amount to an unethical “gag rule” — state health departments and individual organizations across the country have decided to leave the program entirely.

Not having access to that money could cripple states’ ability to provide services to the 4-million low-income people, largely women of color, served by Title X.

“They may have to have longer waiting periods for appointments because they’ve had to cut back on clinic hours,” said Alina Salganicoff, senior vice president and director of women’s health policy for the Kaiser Family Foundation. “The clinics may cut back on education and outreach services. You may have to be referred to another site if you want an IUD or an implant because they no longer stock them or offer those services, because it’s too costly.”

In Oregon, Illinois, Vermont, and Washington state, state health departments have all announced that they will no longer operate on Title X dollars. There are zero clinics in those states now using Title X. In two other states, Utah and Maine, the only proprietors of Title X money have also chosen to pull out of the program, effectively cutting the state off from the funding, too.

State health departments in Massachusetts and Maryland are also leaving Title X, but other program recipients remain, according to a Kaiser analysis.

At least four of those states have pledged to try to use their own budgets to cover the loss.

In total, more than one in five of all Title X-funded clinics in the United States will no longer take money from the program, Kaiser found.

READ: 7 days inside an anti-abortion summer camp training the next generation of activists

The Trump administration first announced in mid-July that Title X clinics were officially barred from referring patients for abortions, and that they needed to financially separate any abortion-related services from their other offerings. As of next year, clinics will also need to physically separate out those services.

"We’re gonna see women driving hundreds of miles just to access birth control, like an IUD."

Though 21 state attorneys general had sued to stop the changes from going into effect, some of their home states have since decided to stay in the program, for now. The governor of Hawaii also announced that the state would leave Title X rather than comply with the changes. But the state is currently in limbo.

“At this time, Hawaii has not withdrawn from the program, and the administration will not draw funding from Title X, at least pending the outcome of the current lawsuit challenging the new rules and concurrent efforts to consider procurement options,” Cindy McMillan, communications director for Gov. David Ige’s office, told VICE News in an email.

To further complicate the state of play in the Title X network, not every state has an government-run agency that serves as a Title X “grantee.” Grantees are the funnel of the Title X network: They receives money directly from the federal government, then often disperse those dollars to their own clinics and, often, to other organizations. Some states also have more than one grantee.

READ: Trump’s new abortion rule could hit rural communities the hardest. Just look at Maine.

In Maine, the sole grantee is the nonprofit Maine Family Planning, which announced its departure from Title X hours after the Trump administration’s announcement. Sarah Nelson, a patient at a rural, northern Maine Family Planning clinic, told VICE News last month that she hadn’t had insurance in years. Around early July, Nelson started feeling a vicious pain in her abdomen.

Without Maine Family Planning, she would have had no choice but to make an expensive visit to the emergency room. Instead, Nelson got an appointment at her local clinic, where she found out she only had a cyst.

“So I only ended up having to pay $40, thanks to Maine Family Planning. If it wasn’t for that, like I said, I’d be in debt probably a grand or two,” Nelson said. “My income varies, because I wait tables. I never know what I’m gonna make from one day to the next.”

Similarly, the only grantee in Utah is Planned Parenthood — or rather, it was. Last week, Planned Parenthood announced that it would also leave Title X. The organization, which is also the largest Title X grantee in Alaska, Connecticut, and Minnesota, is surrendering a reported $60 million in funding.

It’s a devastating blow to the people who participate in Title X, as the reproductive health care giant serves about 40% of all Title X patients across the country.

“We are committed to doing some emergency funds to help our patients get through, but it will have an impact. It really does vary state by state,” Alexis McGill Johnson, acting president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, told reporters on a press call last week. While Planned Parenthood might do some fundraising to offset their funding losses, “It’s like holding an umbrella during a tsunami.”

“We’ve already seen the impact of women having to drive these impossible distances just to access abortions,” McGill Johnson went on. “We’re gonna see women driving hundreds of miles just to access birth control, like an IUD.”

Cover image: FILE - In this, Feb. 25, 2019, file photo, Dr. Erin Berry, Washington State Medical Director for Planned Parenthood of the Great Northwest and the Hawaiian Islands, holds a folder as she listens at a news conference announcing a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration's Title X "gag rule" in Seattle. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson, File)



from VICE https://ift.tt/2UhzJio
via cheap web hosting

Joe Walsh Acted Like Trump for Years. Now He’s Trying to Take Him Down.

WASHINGTON — Former Tea Party Congressman turned right-wing radio host Joe Walsh voted for Donald Trump in 2016 and credits himself with helping put him in office. Now, he’s running against the president for the GOP nomination.

“I apologize because I helped put an unfit con man in the White House,” Walsh, 57, told VICE News.

In 2010, the Illinois Republican — a failed actor and twice-failed congressional candidate — rode the Tea Party wave into the House of Representatives, upsetting a three-term incumbent Democrat and stunning the Republican political establishment.

The once-moderate Walsh (in previous iterations, he was both pro-choice and pro-gun control) recast himself as a fire-breathing, big government–hating, welfare state–destroying conservative, warning that President Barack Obama was an existential threat to the republic — and possibly a Muslim fifth columnist. Walsh's campaign was chaotic, his victory quixotic, and his tenure brief.

By 2012, he returned from D.C. with a surplus of anger at supposedly "treasonous" Democrats but also disdain for his supine Republican colleagues. Walsh joined the crowded field of conservative talk-radio hosts. “I was alienated from the party when I got elected. John Boehner and the party didn't exactly love people like me,” he said. “I mean, the Republican Party sucked before Trump.”

But Walsh flipped on Trump. The spittle-flecked partisan who accused Obama of treason now accuses Trump of the same, all while acknowledging it was his brand of rhetoric that created the poisoned political environment in which Trump flourished. Welsh says his conservatism hasn’t changed, but his radio audience’s did. (His national radio show was cancelled earlier this week).

Trump’s “not a Tea Party guy,” but Tea Party voters have dutifully fallen in line behind him.

“On my radio show, the spending bills, everything he's signed, everything he's done that my listeners would be screaming about if Obama had done? They don't say shit,” he said.

While the ideological focus of the Tea Party was limited government and ballooning deficits, the MAGA types gleefully shifted to populism and xenophobia. But Walsh thinks the collapse of Republican principles long preceded Trump.

“Really after about a year or two [after 2010], we knew we were up against the Republican Party. So the Tea Party really dissipated earlier. We all wanted to repeal Obamacare that first year then... fuck, everybody dropped it.”

But what of those Republicans who sold themselves as men of unbending ideological conviction?

“[Rep. Jim Jordan] was like a mentor to me, talking about Obamacare and debt and spending. Every time Obama did anything about spending, we all called a press conference! Jordan was leading the way. Jim doesn't say anything now. I love that guy. I guess that's why it's really disappointing. [Trump] wants to be a goddamn king, a dictator. But what was it, ‘Obama with his pen and his phone?’ We all went ballistic. Jordan and the rest of us. Now they don't say a word. It's really disappointing.”

Walsh has little chance of wresting the nomination from Trump, but he says that’s not the point. “Trump’s unfit. So somebody step up and say publicly that he's unfit.”

This segment originally aired August 29, 2019, on VICE News Tonight on HBO.



from VICE https://ift.tt/2La1oPv
via cheap web hosting

Here Are Some Beautiful Covers of Silver Jews Songs

David Berman, the songwriter best known as the driving force behind Silver Jews, died tragically earlier this month. When any artist dies, it inspires a fair amount of introspection and grief among peers and fans, but the tenor of mourning around Berman has felt different. That's probably in part due to the type of artist he was. Many legends make work that feels untouchable, but even when Berman—as he often did—was gracefully exploring the dark parts of the human psyche, his work felt approachable. Even if there's no way you could write songs like his, it kinda felt like you could.

In the weeks since his death, a number of artists have offered tribute to him by way of playing covers of his songs. It's not an unusual way to pay homage to an artist who's passed, but it's striking how vast and varied the sorts of acts that did so are. Covers have emerged from experimental pop acts, folk bands, grave singer-songwriters, and old punks, all united by a love for the way Berman looked at the world. There's something about Berman's disposition that makes his vast cast of followers make sense. His work was down to earth, and outlined feelings that so many felt in their darkest hours. This was for everyone to share. Here are a few of the most special performances and recordings of Berman's songs released over the last few weeks.

Animal Collective, "Ballad of Reverend War Character"

On Friday morning, Animal Collective's Avey Tare and Geologist shared this slow, oozy cover of this forlorn song from The Natural Bridge alongside a note about what Berman's music has meant to them over the years. "A few weeks ago we planned on seeing Purple Mountains together," he wrote. "Instead we spent the night listening to David's records and talking about how much his music and art meant to us. He was an inspiration for decades." So they picked up their guitars and wrung out this cover, the proceeds of which will go to MusiCares and Music Health Alliance.

Bill Callahan, "Trains Across the Sea"

Berman's longtime friend and Drag City labelmate Bill Callahan shared an incredibly moving tribute to him on Twitter in the days after his death, writing that "the world is and will always be a David Berman lyric." A few weeks later, he opened one of his New York tour dates with another beautiful moment, this cover of "Trains Across the Sea" from Starlite Walker. Callahan is one of a few contemporary songwriters with as much gravity in his voice as Berman, so it's a real tearjerker.

Nothing, "We Are Real"

The dreamy Philadelphia punks play fast and loose with the melody of this beloved American Water track, but the ghostly energy they give it more than makes up for it. It's a testament to the power of the lyrics; it doesn't matter how you sing them.

First Aid Kit, "Random Rules"

The Swedish folk duo add a lightness and hope to this American Water cut. They also wrote a song called "Strange Beauty," in an attempt to process Berman's passing. "We hope the songs can be some kind of comfort," they said in a press release.

The Mountain Goats, "Pet Politics"

John Darnielle originally recorded a stripped down and pissed off cover of The Natural Bridge's "Pet Politics" for a compilation back in 2005, but on the night after Berman's death, he broke it back out in tribute. Video evidence shows it more stark and beautiful than ever.



from VICE https://ift.tt/2PqQau1
via cheap web hosting

That Deadly Nuclear Blast in Russia Happened While Trying to Rescue a Lost Missile From the Ocean Floor

A mysterious, deadly nuclear blast in Russia’s far north earlier this month occurred during a rescue mission to retrieve a lost missile from the ocean floor, a new U.S. intelligence assessment has reportedly concluded.

An explosion on a recovery ship caused a reaction inside the missile engine’s nuclear core that led to a radiation leak, CNBC reported, citing unidentified U.S. officials with direct knowledge of the report.

President Trump has tweeted the accident involved Russia’s secretive Skyfall cruise missile program, which aims to achieve infinite range via an onboard nuclear-powered engine.

Seven people were killed in the Aug. 8 incident, which sent radiation levels spiking in the nearby city of Severodvinsk and prompted a local run on iodine used in treating radiation exposure.

READ: The New Nuclear Arms Race Is Here. And Russia's Already Paying the Price.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has insisted there’s no further danger. But Russia stopped transmitting data to international observers from local radionuclide stations, making it hard for observers to say with certainty what’s really going on.

The U.S.-backed Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty media outlet also published a report concluding that the explosion occurred during a missile-recovery operation, basing its findings on an analysis of photographs of nuclear waste containers and barges at the site.

READ: Everything We Know About Russia’s Nuclear “Skyfall” Missile and That Mysterious Explosion

Skyfall is just one of a series of experimental new nuclear weapons Putin has unveiled to great fanfare at home. The new arsenal is part of an attempt to counter U.S. missile defense systems, even though outside experts say Russia could easily overcome any such shield with the missiles it’s already got.

Russia has suffered some two-dozen casualties in accidents with exotic nuclear hardware this summer, prompting international arms experts to worry about safety practices and the potential for future deadly mishaps in the country’s nuclear programs.

Cover: This video grab from RU-RTR Russian television on Thursday, March 1, 2018, purports to show the launch of what President Vladimir Putin said is Russia's new nuclear-powered intercontinental cruise missile. President Vladimir Putin declared Thursday that Russia has developed a range of new nuclear weapons, claiming they can't be intercepted by enemy. (RU-RTR Russian Television via YouTube)



from VICE https://ift.tt/2NFeaXL
via cheap web hosting

Someone Is Now Suing Popeyes Over That Chicken Sandwich

The frenzied demand for a viral chicken sandwich has reached the judicial branch.

On Wednesday, Craig Barr in East Ridge, Tennessee filed a civil summons — or a request to appear in Hamilton County court — against Popeyes Chicken, the fast-food joint that has stoked national debate and mayhem with its new chicken sandwich, a competitor to Chick-fil-A. His lawsuit came just one day after the chain announced it was officially sold out but would work to bring the sandwiches back soon.

Still, back to Barr’s beef: “No chicken sandwich,” according to a complaint seen by WTVC, the local ABC affiliate. The chain had sold out, Barr found. He’s now asking for $5,000 from Popeyes, which could buy about 1,200 chicken sandwiches (if there were any).

His first reaction wasn’t to head to the courts. When he was told the chicken sandwich was sold out, he returned multiple times to see if his fate would change.

“Countless time waste drive to and from Popeyes,” Barr said in the complaint.

He then went on Craigslist and found an ad — it’s no longer on the website, according to WTVC — that promised to sell him a Popeyes sandwich for $24. He paid up, but the Popeyes worker allegedly behind the “black list” sandwich ring didn’t fulfill his wish for the viral sandwich.

The sandwich was introduced on Aug. 12 but went viral due to a tweet-turned-marketing blitz “feud” with Chick-fil-A last week. People then took to Twitter to defend their favorite chicken sandwich, and enthusiasts grew curious enough about Popeyes’ offerings to line up across the chain’s 2,400 locations, overwhelming employees and Popeyes’ dwindling chicken supply. It’s not yet clear how soon the sandwiches will return.

Cover: This Aug. 21, 2019, photo, shows Popeye's new chicken sandwich, the spicy version, in New Rochelle, N.Y. (AP Photo/Julia Rubin)



from VICE https://ift.tt/2PsKDDa
via cheap web hosting

How to Quit Your Shitty Job and Become a Barber

This article originally appeared on VICE Canada.

Quit Your Shitty Job is a new column that speaks to people who turned their back on their totally average and uninspiring jobs to pursue something they actually wanted.

This week, we spoke to Toronto-based Jonathan De Vela. His previous jobs include recruiting and gardening, but the 27-year-old found the Monday-to-Friday grind exhausting. These days, he’s happy to work 7 days a week, indulging his creative side as a barber and teaching assistant, learning and sharing what he knows about how to cut and style people’s hair.


VICE: What did you do in your previous jobs?
Jonathan De Vela: I studied urban planning at the University of Waterloo. Post graduation, I really struggled with finding a job. I couldn’t find something I was passionate about. I did all kinds of jobs: worked in retail, even worked as a gardener for a community center. What really tipped the scale for me was when I worked as a recruiter for a technical agency.

Why did it suck?
That was my shittiest job because all I did was cold-call people and force my information down their throat in 30 seconds or less and I didn’t feel like I was building any sort of relationships. I was talking to people who really hated talking to me 80 to 100 times a day. I felt emotionally drained.

But I was promised it gets better, that the ceiling is so high in business development and I could make six figures. But I didn’t want to sell my soul and make money just so I could feel like shit about myself at the end of the day.

What did you switch to instead?
I was cutting hair throughout college, and I was starting to cut hair more and more. And I found that the people who sit in my chair, do want to talk to me. [It’s] a genuine connection.

1567167143986-Jonathan-De-Vela-3
Photo via Jonathan De Vela

How did you make it happen?
I was on Instagram and I found an owner of a barber shop who was an educator. As a beginner barber, I didn’t have any formal training so I saw this guy as my ticket in—maybe this will be the guy who can help me.

I walked into his shop and asked for him by his name. I went straight to Jason and he gave me his number—we got to talking and after a few interviews and me hanging out at his shop, I wrote a resignation letter and gave it to my boss at my shitty job the next day. I just knew that I was done and I was putting all my eggs into this other basket. That was my unconventional lightbulb moment.

What do you love most about your job?
It’s different every day—different clients, compensation, haircuts. Even if I see the same client every week, they might choose something different. He might say he has a new girlfriend and he’s going to change it up. It’s just so engaging every day.

I’ve had requests from people getting married for me to be right there, at his hotel by 7 a.m. doing his haircut and hearing how excited he is, or if he has cold feet. Or people will tell me about their girlfriend breaking up with them, and it’s a whole different conversation. I never get bored of it.

Are there any downsides?
My legs get tired. Sometimes I miss lunch. But that’s about it. Just the physical toll. Sometimes I get too into my work. I currently work seven days a week, but I don’t know, I love it. I don’t see myself slowing down. I’m just addicted to the creative process of it.

Have there been any memorable moments?
I cut a client’s hair and he was getting ready for an interview and he was so nervous about it. I related to him because of what I studied and gave him some advice. Two months later, I was cutting someone else’s hair and he came up to me and said “I want to let you know that I got the job and I’ve never been happier. What you and I talked about before the interview really helped.” Stuff like that is just wow. He took time out of his day to come by and say “thanks for helping me out.” Those are things that make this job worth it. I could come home with $5 at the end of the day, but if someone tells me I gave them the best haircut ever, I’d be good.

Rate your life out of 10 before, and now:
When I was in the other job I was a five or six, just getting by. Now I feel like a nine. I don’t want to say it’s a 10 because it can always get better.

What advice would you give other people who hate their jobs?
Don’t quit that job yet. Find something you’re passionate about that you would do for free, and then find someone who’s willing to pay you for it. I’ve seen too many people say they hate their job and then quit, not knowing what their next step is and they end up taking another shitty job, and it’s an endless cycle.

You don’t have to drop everything to start something. I don’t like the term "funemployed" because that just means you’re broke. I’m not saying don’t have fun with it but I’m saying you might hate it so always have a plan, there’s always a way.

Sign up for our newsletter to get the best of VICE delivered to your inbox daily.

Follow Anne Gaviola on Twitter.



from VICE https://ift.tt/2MI4Wud
via cheap web hosting

'Welcome to a Shithole': Most U.S. Prisons Are Filled with Toxic Waste

The Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) recently made national news as the site of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s apparent suicide. Among the details describing the jail’s failings were not only accounts of staffing problems (e.g., guards falling asleep on the job), but also the horrible physical conditions—from pests to raw sewage contaminating the space.

While that latter imagery is striking, it’s not particularly unique. America’s jails are full of environmental hazards that stand to compromise the physical and mental health of the people who work and live within them. One of the most egregious problems: Filthy conditions in jail cells and common areas, particularly those involving human waste and other biological hazards, that have resulted in claims of unconstitutionality due to cruel and unusual punishment.

Built atop a landfill, Rikers, another jail in New York, is plagued by dangerous amounts of poisonous methane gas, damaged water pipes, and an unstable foundation. Recently, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer called on the city to recognize Rikers’ “insufferable environment and the culture of violence and abuse.”

Overflows of raw sewage in San Francisco’s main jail that made people sick led to a class action lawsuit against the City and County of San Francisco, the Sheriff, and other law enforcement personnel. Civil rights lawyer Yolanda Huang, who filed the action, told the San Francisco Bay View that “inmates who have come into physical contact with the sewage have developed skin rashes...intestinal problems, lung problems, breathing problems and headaches.”

In South Carolina, people who were incarcerated at the Lieber Correctional Institution in December 2018 were exposed to floods of human fecal matter after a backup. Residents were reportedly forced to eat meals in the cells that were flooding with raw sewage before jail staff instructed them to clean up the mess. In Pennsylvania, residents of the Fayetteville County Jail faced similar conditions between 2013 and 2017 as a result of “raw sewage running through cells, roaming rats, roaches, mice, and lack of running water.”

Residents were reportedly forced to eat meals in the cells that were flooding with raw sewage.

Exposure to raw sewage and related contaminants, can lead to illness due to the bacteria, funguses, parasites, and other biological hazards that can live in waste. The Center for Construction Research and Training reports that people who are exposed to biological hazards are at risk of developing diseases like e-coli, typhoid fever, salmonella, cholera, roundworm, Hepatitis A, and more.

In Oklahoma, jail staff in Nowata County made national headlines this spring when the county sheriff, Terry Sue Barnett, resigned due to poor jail conditions. Barnett told Tulsa World that there were multiple issues at the jail, including carbon monoxide leaks and issues with the sewer lines. “If you’re a prisoner, you still deserve human dignity. You still need the basics,” she told NPR, referring to the multiple health-code violations and environmental hazards at the jail she deemed dangerous.

The physical impacts are only part of the picture: .

There’s a growing body of research that explains how poor quality of housing, including limited insulation, air pollutants, and building contaminants like raw sewage, negatively impacts mental health—a reality that raises concerns for the14.5 percent of men and 31 percent of women in jails who have a serious mental illness.

Even for systems simply looking to clean up their sewage, there are financial barriers. The cost of imprisonment in the United States is an astounding $182 billion annually. According to the Prison Policy Initiative, almost half of the money spent on running the correctional system goes to paying staff. Money for repairs and maintenance of crumbling infrastructure is hard to acquire given public opinion about the prison system, according to David Tuttle, superintendent for the Worcester County Sheriff’s Office in Massachusetts.

“Corrections are kind of forgotten about at times,” he said. “When you’re a state representative or senator, would you rather stand in front of a new school, park, or hospital with a big check presentation or do you want to stand in front of a prison?”

There are federal regulations that are meant to protect the people who live and work inside correctional facilities. The Federal Bureau of Prisons are inspected by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), according to Denisha Braxton, an official with the Office of Public Affairs of the U.S. Department of Labor. “Employers are responsible for providing workers with a jobsite free of recognized hazards,” Braxton said.

OSHA inspectors, who handle cases involving health-code violations in correctional facilities, focus on the legal responsibilities building managers and related staff members have to ensure that jail and prison employees have a safe and healthful workplace for prison employees. But the various dangers and hazards that lurk behind bars affect people who are incarcerated in unsafe facilities in different ways given the fact that they live there.

While the situation is dire, there is some progress. Earlier this year, Macomb County, Michigan, Sheriff Anthony Wickersham revealed an estimated $400 million plan to replace the crumbling 1,518 bed jail. “We have been replacing and repairing numerous electrical and plumbing supplies throughout the facility for years...tiles are popping off walls in housing units and constant flooding is occurring in our basement,” Wickersham said.

In 2018, Los Angeles County supervisors approved a $2.2 billion proposal to replace the Men’s Central Jail due to years of multiple complaints. “It’s an aging, decrepit facility that’s falling apart structurally and also it’s not conducive to house inmates,” Commander Joseph E. Dempsey of the Custody Services Division told the Los Angeles Times.

“People work better when their offices aren’t falling apart. Prisons and jails work better, and the rehabilitation process works better, if we have the facilities to show these people we’re serious about helping them out,” said Tuttle in Worcester County.

Worcester County’s main jail, which opened in 1973, is currently undergoing multiple Division of Capital Asset Management and Maintenance-funded construction projects that include, but are not limited to, a $30 million dollar medical clinic, $300,000 in plumbing upgrades, and $70,000 in upgrades to housing units.

If the goal of the criminal justice system is to rehabilitate and provide people with the skills and tools required to prevent recidivism, Tuttle said we have to advocate for better living conditions. It’s hypocritical to claim to want to help people while failing to improve the conditions of jail facilities, Tuttle said. “How can I turn to one of our inmates and say, ‘Hey, I want you to turn your life around, I want to help you out, welcome to a shithole.’”



from VICE https://ift.tt/2MMqAO5
via cheap web hosting