Thursday, February 20, 2020

This Artist Is Trolling ‘Skid Rodeo Drive’ With Chanel and Gucci-Branded Homeless Tents

Rodeo Drive and Skid Row are only about 12 miles apart.




Cover image: BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 15: Cult artist Chemical X brings Skid Row to Rodeo Drive on February 15, 2020 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images)


By Emma Ockerman Feb 18 2020


The sort of tents that typically dot Los Angeles’ Skid Row were driven down the infamously luxurious Rodeo Drive this past weekend. And much like the shops nearby, they were emblazoned with Chanel, Supreme, and Gucci logos.




The tents are an installation from the artist Chemical X to draw attention to the radically different homeless populations on Rodeo Drive and Skid Row, which are only about 12 miles apart. Approximately 16 homeless people live in Beverly Hills, which was once accused of driving away homeless people. Skid Row, on the other hand, is considered to be the most entrenched homeless encampment in the country, with more than 2,700 unsheltered occupants. (Los Angeles County, overall, has a whopping 58,936 homeless people.)


A video of the project, dubbed “Skid Rodeo Drive,” called Rodeo “the street where luxury and poverty meet.” In the past several months, the “designer” tents have also cropped up on Skid Row, outside Los Angeles’ City Hall, and on Hollywood Boulevard.

“It’s a piece of art and people need to just see it and reflect on it,” Chemical X, who wears a mask and doesn’t disclose their identity, told CBSLA. “I think people have stopped seeing the homeless or, if they do, it doesn’t engage them anymore.”

All profits from the art will be donated to the Los Angeles Community Action Network, which advocates for the homeless.


BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 15: CULT ARTIST CHEMICAL X BRINGS SKID ROW TO RODEO DRIVE ON FEBRUARY 15, 2020 IN BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA. (PHOTO BY MATT WINKELMEYER/GETTY IMAGES)




This article originally appeared on VICE US.
Cognitive Experiments Give A Glimpse Into The Ancient Mind
2/19/2020
Symbolic behaviour - such as language, account keeping, music, art, and narrative - constitutes a milestone in human cognitive evolution. But how, where and when did these complex practices evolve? This question is very challenging to address; human cognitive processes do not fossilize, making it very difficult to study the mental life of our Stone Age ancestors. However, in a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, an interdisciplinary team of cognitive scientists and archaeologists from Denmark, South Africa and Australia takes up the challenge. They used engravings on ochre nodules and ostrich eggshells made between about 109,000 and 52,000 years ago in a series of five cognitive science experiments to investigate their potential symbolic function.



Why did the Stone Age man spend time making patterns like these?
[Credit: Rock Art Research Institute]
The engravings originate from the South African Middle Stone Age sites of Blombos Cave and Diepkloof Rock Shelter, and are considered among the earliest examples of human symbolic behaviour. They were found in different layers of the cave sediments, which has made it possible to reconstruct the approximate time and order in which they were produced. Lead scientist Kristian Tylén, Associate Professor at the Department of Linguistics, Cognitive Science and Semiotics and at the Interacting Minds Centre, Aarhus University, Denmark, explains:

"It is remarkable that we have a record of a practice of making engravings spanning more than 40,000 years. This allows us to observe how the engraved patterns have been developed and refined incrementally over time to become better symbols - that is - tools for the human mind, similar to the way instrumental technologies, such as stone tools, are honed over time to do their job more efficiently".

In the experiments, participants were shown the engraved patterns while the researchers measured their responses in terms of visual attention, recognition, memory, reaction times, and discrimination of patterns belonging to different points in time. The experiments suggest that over the period of more than 40,000 years, the engravings evolved to more effectively catch human visual attention, they became easier to recognize as human-made, easier to remember and reproduce, and they evolved elements of group-specific style. However, they did not become easier to discriminate from each other within or between each of the two sites.

Several previous studies have presented speculations on the possible symbolic function of the Blombos and Diepkloof engravings. Some have suggested that they should be regarded as fully-developed symbols pointing to distinct meanings, more or less like written glyphs. This suggestion is, however, not supported by the present study:



This is how the Stone Age patterns have evolved over 40,000 years. From the left are the very early ones, which are about 100,000 years old, while those on the right are about 60,000 years old [Credit: Kristian Tylén el al. 2020]

"It is difficult to make well-grounded interpretations of these ancient human behaviours", says archaeologist and co-author Niels N. Johannsen, Associate Professor at the Department of Archaeology and Heritage Studies and at the Interacting Minds Centre, Aarhus University, "and we have been missing a more systematic, scientific approach. The main advantage of our experimental procedure is that we work directly with the archaeological evidence, measuring cognitive consequences of the changes that these engravings have undergone through time - and from these data, we argue, we are in a better position to understand the possible function of the engravings made by our ancestors tens of thousands of years ago."

The experimental findings suggest that the engravings from Blombos and Diepkloof were created and refined over time to serve an aesthetic purpose, for instance as decorations. However, they also evolved elements of style that could have worked to mark the identity of the group, that is, they could be recognized as coming from a particular group.



The experiments make use of contemporary participants and concerns could be raised that the measurements say little about cognitive processes unfolding in the minds of stone age humans 100,000 years ago.

Kristian Tylén explains: "Previous investigations have relied exclusively on studies of archaeological artefacts, the size and shape of cranial casts, or the mapping of genes. These are very indirect measures of human cognitive processes. While our experimental approach is also indirect in the sense that we cannot travel back in time and directly record the cognitive processes of our Stone Age ancestors, it is, on the other hand, dealing directly with those basic cognitive processes critically involved in human symbolic behaviour."

The study can thus inform foundational discussions of the early evolution of human symbolic behaviour. Not unlike manual tools, the findings suggest that the engravings were incrementally refined over a period of more than 40,000 years to become more effective 'tools for the mind' as their producers became more skilled symbol makers and users. In the challenging pursuit of understanding human cognitive evolution, the approach and findings provide novel insights into the minds of our Stone Age ancestors that cannot be achieved through the traditional methods of archaeology and genetics, or by theoretical work alone.

Source: Aarhus University [February 19, 2020]
The European Union has opened up the prospect that Greece’s claim on the Elgin Marbles could become a bargaining chip in negotiations over its future relationship with Britain.

A section of the Parthenon Frieze on display at The British 
Museum in London
[Credit: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images]

The latest draft of the EU’s negotiating mandate, seen by Bloomberg News, says that the U.K. will need to “address issues relating to the return or restitution of unlawfully removed cultural objects to their countries of origin.”

Officials involved on both sides said the clause was widely interpreted as a direct reference to the ancient statues in the British Museum that were taken from the Parthenon in Athens at the start of the 19th century. A Greek official denied that the clause related to the statues, saying they remain a bilateral issue between the two countries. The official said it was a reference to stolen pieces including a number of 18th and 19th century paintings that often turn up at auction houses in London.

The document, due to be finalized on Wednesday, sets the parameters for the EU’s position for the negotiations which start next month.



The squabble between Greece and the U.K. over ownership of the statues has been running for decades, with the British government refusing to budge despite repeated attempts by authorities in Athens to repatriate them.

The mandate shows how the remaining 27 EU countries are putting down markers so that they can add their own specific grievances to the U.K. trade deal mix. Spain is talking up its claims on the British territory of Gibraltar in the Mediterranean while France is demanding conditions on fishing rights.

The latest draft also clarifies the EU’s position on equivalence for financial services, saying there must be “transparency and appropriate consultation” between the EU and U.K.

In light of the coronavirus outbreak, there is a new section on cooperation on combating pandemics. Both sides should “aim to cooperate in international fora on prevention, detection, preparation for and response to established and emerging threats to health security,” the document says.

Vivid frescoes and never-before-seen inscriptions were among the treasures unearthed in a massive years-long restoration of the world-famous archaeological site Pompeii that came to a close Tuesday.

Credit: Pompeii - Parco Archeologico

The painstaking project saw an army of workers reinforce walls, repair collapsing structures and excavate untouched areas of the sprawling site, Italy's second most visited tourist destination after Rome's Colosseum.

New discoveries were made too, in areas of the ruins not yet explored by modern-day archaeologists at the site -- frequently pillaged for jewels and artefacts over the centuries.




Credit: Pompeii - Parco Archeologico
"When you excavate in Pompeii there are always surprises," the site's general director Massimo Osanna told reporters Tuesday.

Archaeologists discovered in October a vivid fresco depicting an armour-clad gladiator standing victorious as his wounded opponent gushes blood, painted in a tavern believed to have housed the fighters as well as prostitutes.




Credit: Pompeii - Parco Archeologico

And in 2018, an inscription was uncovered that proves the city near Naples was destroyed after October 17, 79 AD, and not on August 24 as previously believed.

That might not be the end of fresh discoveries.



Credit: Pompeii - Parco Archeologico

"It's certain that by carrying out other excavation projects in areas never explored before, the discoveries will be extraordinary," Osanna added.

Kicked off in 2014, the restoration enlisted teams of archaeologists, architects, engineers, geologists and anthropologists and cost $113 million (105 million euros), largely covered by the European Union.



Credit: Pompeii - Parco Archeologico

The project was initiated after UNESCO warned in 2013 it could strip the site of its World Heritage status after a series of collapses blamed on lax maintenance and bad weather. But the project has breathed new life into the historic site.

On Tuesday, workers carefully restored ancient frescoes, hues dulled by years of dirt and calcifications, and cleaned off centuries-old tile floors.



Credit: Pompeii - Parco Archeologico

"You have to be careful not to take off too much," explained Aldo Guida, who was scratching at the surface of the oxblood walls of the 'House of Lovers', a two-storey home in the complex that was closed for repair after an earthquake in 1980.

"Little by little," he added, with a smile.



Credit: Pompeii - Parco Archeologico

The 'House of Lovers' was named after a Latin verse inscribed on a wall next to an image of a duck reading "Lovers like bees live a life as sweet as honey".

The giant eruption of Mount Vesuvius devastated the ancient Roman city of Pompeii nearly 2,000 years ago, covering everything in its path with volcanic ash.



Credit: Pompeii - Parco Archeologico

That sediment helped to preserve many buildings almost in their original state, as well as the curled-up corpses of Vesuvius' victims.

Some of the site has been closed to the public during the restoration, including several "domus" -- family residences for the upper classes -- that have been since reopened to the public.


Credit: Pompeii - Parco Archeologico

The 'House of Orchards' features intricately detailed frescoes of fruit trees and birds, while the 'House of the Ship Europa' boasts a sketch of a large merchant ship.

Though the bulk of the restoration work is now complete, director Osanna said running repairs will never truly be over.

"It's a city in ruins," he said. "The attention we pay to it must never stop."

Author: Alexandria Sage | Source: AFP [February 18, 2020]





First Research Results On The 'Spectacular Meteorite Fall' Of Flensburg

A fireball in the sky, accompanied by a bang, amazed hundreds of eyewitnesses in northern Germany in mid-September last year. The reason for the spectacle was a meteoroid entering the Earth's atmosphere and partially burning up. One day after the observations, a citizen in Flensburg found a stone weighing 24.5 grams and having a fresh black fusion crust on the lawn of his garden.



The meteorite 'Flensburg' in close-up view

[Credit: WWU - Markus Patzek]
Dieter Heinlein, coordinator of the German part of the European Fireball Network at the German Aerospace Center in Augsburg, directly recognized the stone as a meteorite and delivered the rock to experts at the "Institut fur Planetologie" at Munster University (Germany). Prof. Addi Bischoff and PhD student Markus Patzek have been studying the stone mineralogically and chemically ever since. About 15 university and research institutes in Germany, France, and Switzerland now take part in the science consortium.

The first research results show that the meteorite "Flensburg", named after the location of the fall, belongs to an extremely rare type of carbonaceous chondrites. Scanning electron microscopic analyses prove that it contains minerals, especially sheet silicates and carbonates that formed in the presence of water on small planetesimals in the early history of our solar system. Thus, these types of early parent bodies can be regarded as possible building blocks of the Earth that delivered water.

"The meteorite of Flensburg belongs to an extremely rare meteorite class and is the only meteorite fall of this class in Germany proving that 4.56 billion years ago there must have been small bodies in the early solar system storing liquid water. Perhaps such bodies also delivered water to the Earth," Addi Bischoff said.

The new German meteorite "Flensburg" fully fits into the research program of the Collaborative Research Centre „TRR170 - Late Accretion onto Terrestrial Planets", a science cooperation between institutions in Munster and Berlin. The major aim of the Collaborative Research Centre TRR170 is to understand the late growth history of the terrestrial planets.

This leads to the question about the possible building blocks of the Earth. In order to find answers to this question, the researchers investigate various aspects including meteorites - most of them are fragments of asteroids and can be regarded as the oldest rocks of our solar system. Thus, studying them allows scientists to gain insight into the formation processes of the first solids and accretion and evolution of small bodies and planets in our solar system.

First details on the Flensburg meteorite have just been published in the Meteoritical Bulletin Database of the Meteoritical Society.

Source: University of Munster [February 17, 2020]

TED CRUZ OPPOSES MANDATORY VASECTOMIES FOR MEN OVER 50

UPDATED ROFLMAO
Ted Cruz Is Not a Fan of the Government Telling Men What to Do With Their Bodies

An Alabama lawmaker has proposed a bill to force men to get vasectomies.


By Carter Sherman Feb 18 2020

An Alabama state legislator has proposed a bill to force men into vasectomies once they hit 50 or have three children. And Ted Cruz isn’t pleased about it.

“Yikes!” the Texas GOP senator tweeted Sunday. “A government big enough to give you everything is big enough to take everything...literally!”

The bill, proposed last week by Democratic Rep. Rolanda Hollis, is meant to “neutralize” the sweeping law passed last year that would ban nearly all abortions in the state, Hollis told AL.com on Friday. Under that law, even rape and incest survivors would be barred from seeking abortions, though court challenges blocked the ban from taking effect.


“It takes two to tango,” Hollis said. “We can’t put all the responsibility on women. Men need to be responsible also.”

READ: How women are training to do their own abortions

Under Hollis’ bill, men would be required to undergo vasectomies within one month of their 50th birthdays or after fathering three children, “whichever comes first.” The men would also shoulder the cost of their vasectomies.

The bill has essentially zero chance of becoming law in the Republican-controlled Alabama state Legislature. Its synopsis notes that, under Alabama law, there are “no restrictions on the reproductive rights of men.”

This article originally appeared on VICE US.

Ted Cruz, the Republican Texas senator, has given an unwitting boost to an Alabama lawmaker’s attempt to push back on restrictive abortion laws in her state, by tweeting about her proposal to force men to have vasectomies when they reach the age of 50.

Top stories
All men in Alabama will be forced to have a VASECTOMY at 50 under law proposed by Democrat


Ted Cruz criticizes vasectomy bill, exposing his hypocrisy on reproduction rights

All men would be forced to have vasectomies when they reach
 the age of 50 or have a three children, under a new law proposed by an ...
Alabama bill forcing men to get vasectomies at 50: Sen. Ted ...
Alabama bill forcing men to get vasectomies at 50: Sen. ... would 
require Alabama men to get a vasectomy once they reach 50 
or father three children. ... all men have vasectomy at age 50 
or after third child,” Cruz tweeted
Ted Cruz criticizes vasectomy bill, exposing his hypocrisy on ...
Ted Cruz criticizes vasectomy bill, exposing his hypocrisy on reproduction ... 
to force men to have vasectomies when they reach the age of 50.
Alabama Law Would Force All Men To Get Vasectomies At ...
Turnabout Is Fair Play: A new law proposed in Alabama would force all men to get vasectomies once they reach age 50, or father three children ...

You Only Think You're Recycling These Plastics

Here's the depressing results of a survey of all 367 residential recycling facilities in the U.S.
Cover: This Jan. 13, 2012 file photo shows cups of Chobani
 Yogurt at Chobani Greek Yogurt in South Edmeston, N.Y.
(AP Photo/Mike Groll, File)


By Alex Lubben Feb 18 2020

All those yogurt cups, plastic film, and most takeout boxes we’re dutifully gathering every week because they're labeled as recyclable? A survey of every residential recycling facility in the U.S. found that they're mostly just getting trashed. And don’t even bother trying to save those plastic coffee pods.

Only your water and soda bottles, and the thicker plastic that serves as packaging used for shampoo bottles and laundry detergent jugs, are functionally recyclable, according to a report from Greenpeace. While it’s possible to recycle other types of plastic, there’s no market for it and local recycling facilities wind up trashing it.

“Most types of plastics are not recyclable in the United States, and in fact appear to be illegal to even refer to as recyclable,” Greenpeace USA Oceans Campaign Director John Hocevar told VICE News. “Recycling isn’t broken, but plastic is choking it.”

The researchers surveyed all 367 residential recycling facilities in the U.S. In order for a product to be labeled as “recyclable,” 60 percent of the recycling facilities need to be able to recycle it, per Federal Trade Commission guidelines. In order to label a product as recyclable, the company that’s marketing it needs to prove to the government that it can be recycled. But most types of plastics aren’t getting recycled. The report claims that much of the plastic that’s labelled as recyclable is illegally labeled.

Less than 5% of plastic tubs get recycled into a new product, the survey found. Only 4% of recycling facilities will take your plastic bags. Only 14% of facilities will take clamshell takeout containers. Plastic coffee pods, often labeled as recyclable, aren’t accepted at any recycling facility in the U.S.

Chinese recycling facilities for years were processing the bulk of U.S. plastic scrap, even if much of it was actually getting burned or sent to landfills. In 2018, China stopped taking our trash, and, since then, local recycling facilities across the country have stopped accepting the more difficult-to-recycle types of plastic.

“China used to accept most of the #3, 4, 5, and 7 plastics, but it turns out that most of these plastics were not actually being recycled,” the city of Erie, Pennsylvania, which no longer accepts those types of plastics, notes on its website. “They were mostly being burned for fuel.”

Now, that type of plastic is clogging up U.S. recycling facilities. Many have either stopped accepting it altogether, and, when they do receive it, it gets trashed.

The report also notes that creating a viable market for recycled plastic is undermined by historically low plastics prices. It’s cheaper for most companies to buy higher-quality new plastics than it is to use recycled plastics.

The authors are calling for the accurate labelling of plastics products so that consumers can figure out what kinds of plastics they should be putting in the recycling bin. But it’s companies that produce the plastic that are ultimately responsible for the plastics crisis, according to the authors. Greenpeace is threatening to file federal complaints against companies that lie to the public about the recyclability of their products.

“The difficult truth is that most of the plastic that we buy is going to go to a landfill or an incinerator whether or not it goes in the recycling bin,” Hocevar said. “If it goes in the recycling bin, it’s going to reduce the effectiveness of our recycling system.”

Democrats in Congress, just last week, introduced legislation that would ban the use of several types of single use plastics — an effort to cut off plastics pollution at its source rather than promoting recycling after the fact. The new bill, the Break Free from Plastics Act, takes cues from the states, which, in the last several years, have begun to regulate plastics more aggressively: New York’s plastic bag ban, passed last year, will go into effect at the end of the month, and California and Maine have already instituted restrictions on the use of plastic straws and single-use plastics.

This article originally appeared on VICE US.
MEANWHILE IN CANADA
Firefighters' Fire Content Too Horny for Canadian City

St. Catharines won’t support topless firefighters using city equipment, even if it is for charity.


By Anne Gaviola Feb 18 2020


The good people of St. Catharines, Ontario are being denied photos of topless firefighters posing in front of fire trucks after the city ruled that bare torsos aren’t dignified.

The new rules take aim at the Fire Combat Team charity calendar and fashion show, featuring topless male firefighters. In a press release, fire chief Jeff McCormick said the new rules were “about respect and dignity in the workplace and workplace culture” and the six-packed firefighters can’t be featured with city resources, equipment, uniforms, and logos.

The 2020 edition features all male firefighters who are part of a fitness team that competes internationally, in all their well-moisturized, bare-chested glory:

THE SEPTEMBER MODEL FROM THE 2020 ST. CATHARINES FIRE
 DEPARTMENT COMBAT CALENDAR. PHOTO COURTESY OF
 AARON & TARA PHOTOGRAPHY.

St. Catharines introduced the restrictions in January after a city employee complained about a co-worker who had a calendar of topless women hanging in his work locker.

In defence of the worker who had posted the calendar in his locker, the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) argued that in Ontario, it’s legal for women to be topless in public and pointed to the firefighters annual charity calendar as an example of a double-standard.

After the city investigated, though, the employee was disciplined and the city decided to crack down on the topless firefighters’ calendar as well.

In its statement, the city said that “there are no contradictions in the expectations of the corporation, as an employer,” and that it would continue to evaluate policies to ensure it supports an “inclusive workplace.”

The 2020 edition had already been produced, with 2,000 copies printed, going for the totally worth-it price of $10. Future calendars fall under the new rules though, meaning either more T-shirts or fewer fire engines.

The organizing committee will also have to decide whether to cancel this year’s annual fashion show featuring firefighters in their city uniforms or carrying city equipment, because they walk the runway topless. They can choose to use the other equipment and hold it at a venue that isn’t run by the city.


The calendar and fashion show are among the firefighters’ biggest fundraisers. Last year, between the two they raised $18,000 to support mental health initiatives for local youth.

Ryan Madill, the president of St. Catharines Professional Firefighters Association, said that he’s disappointed in the rules. The organizing team behind the calendar is deciding what to do next.

PHOTO COURTESY OF AARON & TARA PHOTOGRAPHY.

“We think it’s unfortunate that the city’s made this decision so now we’ll have to decide if they carry on under the city’s new rules or just go ahead and shoot the calendar on their own, having no connection to the city of St. Catharines,” he said.

It’s easy to draw parallels between this case and another instance of wrong-headed puritanical meddling, as reported by VICE, of 27-year-old paramedic firefighter Presley Pritchard in Montana who was fired for posting photos based on a non-existent social media policy. She said her male colleagues weren’t held to the same standards, and filed a wrongful termination suit and sexual discrimination claims against the Evergreen Fire Rescue (EFR).

Madill said it is hard to reconcile the fact that the new restrictions are because of an incident that had nothing to do with the firefighters’ calendar.

He said the 25-year tradition is a huge morale-booster.

“Everyone who participates in it finds it to be a very positive experience. We haven’t had complaints. If people don’t want to get it, they don’t get it,” said Madill. “Everyone volunteered to be in it, there was no one that was forced or had their arm twisted to be in it.”

Follow Anne Gaviola on Twitter.
The Columnist Who Kickstarted the Biden-Ukraine Conspiracy Did Some Really Shady Things​​

He shared a draft with a Trump associate, coordinated with Rudy Giuliani, and used his personal attorneys with relationships to Ukrainian oligarchs as sources.



TRUMP DOES MUSSOLINI 

By David Uberti Feb 19 2020


The columns that helped ignite the Biden-Ukraine conspiracy have finally been reviewed. And the findings are all kinds of messy.

Fourteen of John Solomon’s pieces in The Hill were chock-full of shady sources with conflicts of interest, the newspaper said in its long-awaited autopsy published Wednesday. The publication found that Solomon, whose work became central to Trump and his allies’ counterprogramming during the impeachment inquiry, shared a draft with a Trump associate, coordinated with Rudy Giuliani, and used his personal attorneys with relationships to Ukrainian oligarchs as sources.

“In certain columns, Solomon failed to identify important details about key Ukrainian sources, including the fact that they had been indicted or were under investigation,” The Hill wrote. “In other cases, the sources were his own attorneys.”

Solomon, who did not respond to VICE News’ requests for comment Wednesday, has repeatedly defended his reporting. But in its review of the former contributor, who parted ways with The Hill in November, the publication concluded that Solomon’s work didn’t meet its editorial standards. On Wednesday, editors added lengthy notes to his pieces with additional context about sourcing and denials by key subjects or their associates.

Solomon wrote about unproven attempts by Ukraine to interfere in the 2016 election and played up alleged corruption in Ukraine by former Vice President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter Biden. GOP lawmakers and pro-Trump media outlets amplified his stories and added confusion to impeachment hearings on Trump’s holdup of nearly $400 million in aid to Ukraine.

At the time of his columns, Solomon identified himself by the odd title of “investigative columnist” at The Hill and allowed Fox News personalities to describe him as a straight-news reporter on TV. He also relied heavily on suspect sources, including Viktor Shokin and Yuriy Lutsenko, discredited former Ukrainian prosecutors who were the source of many eventual GOP talking points.

They and other sources suggested a vast conspiracy by U.S. officials to attack Trump and protect the former vice president’s son, whose work at Ukrainian energy company Burisma raised questions of potential corruption. No evidence has emerged that either Biden did anything illegal.

Yet Lutsenko told Solomon that then-U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch, who pressured local officials about anti-corruption efforts at various points, had given Lutsenko a “do-not-prosecute” list. Lutsenko also asserted that he had opened an investigation into Ukrainian interference in the U.S. election in 2016.

But the State Department had previously identified Lutsenko as an “untrustworthy partner,” according to The Hill’s Wednesday review, which also noted that his “story has changed repeatedly.” It added that Lutsenko’s interview was translated inaccurately to suggest that Yovanovitch had given him a do-not-prosecute list — potential evidence — as opposed to vocalizing it.

Still, Solomon went on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show to promote the Ukrainian-interference story. Trump amplified it on Twitter soon after.

Some of Solomon’s other sourcing was even more bizarre. One column cited an affidavit prepared by his own lawyers, who were reportedly employed at the time by a Ukrainian oligarch looking for damaging information about Biden. Solomon didn’t disclose the relationship.

Lev Parnas, the Soviet-born businessman who helped Rudy Giuliani dig up dirt on Biden, has also turned over documents to Congress suggesting that Solomon was in frequent contact with his lawyers, Parnas, and Giuliani about the stories. (Solomon even shared a draft of one of his stories with Parnas before publication.) The former New York mayor has also said publicly that he supplied Solomon with potential Biden leads.

Solomon has played down many of these nontraditional relationships at various points, just as he minimized his decision to share that draft with Parnas. But none of his behavior was kosher with The Hill, which said it would “reconsider some policies” to differentiate news and opinion content more clearly.

But Solomon, who has been podcasting for a yet-to-be-launched news outlet unironically called Just the Facts, hasn’t done the same.

“We’re gonna give you news, facts, information, no bias, no opinion, no conjecture, no effort to hijack your thinking,” he said in the opening of a recent podcast. “We’re gonna give you a neutral presentation of the facts, and you can make up your own mind.”

Cover image: President Donald Trump holds up a newspaper tat reads "Trump acquitted" during during an event celebrating his impeachment acquittal, in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

This article originally appeared on VICE US.
Bloomberg Said Young People Support Bernie Because They're Dumb

AND BECAUSE BLOOMBERG IS A REPUBLICAN

“Because our kids no longer learn civics in school they longer study Western history, they no longer read Western literature.” SEE WHAT I MEAN



By Daniel Newhauser Feb 19 2020


Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has a surprising theory about why young people love Sen. Bernie Sanders: They’re morons.

In a wide-ranging interview one month after President Donald Trump won the 2016 election, Bloomberg said Sanders would have won that race if he had gotten the Democratic nomination in large part because young people have no idea what they’re doing.

“I don’t mean to knock young people — I wish I was one again — but young people listened to [Bernie Sanders] and they said, ‘Yeah, Democratic: That’s good. Socialism: Yeah, that’s that social media stuff,’” Bloomberg opined. “Because our kids no longer learn civics in school they longer study Western history, they no longer read Western literature.”

“We are trying to change and dumb down the system and if you don't know what happened in the past you're going to have to relive it,” he continued.

The comments were delivered in December 2016 in front of a college audience at Oxford University’s Saïd School of Business. The school posted the entire discussion on YouTube.

Bloomberg was responding to a young woman, who asked whether Bloomberg agrees that lack of communication or socialization between the upper and lower classes led to breakdowns in society and the election of Trump or Brexit.

Bloomberg answered, unprompted, that social grouping has less to do with race and gender than it does with class, because people of the same class generally care about the interest of that class. Widening wealth gaps, however, do lead to gaps in understanding, he seemed to say.

READ: America loves Bernie. Socialism? Not so much.

“Look at a mirror if you want to see why society is the way it is,” he told the Oxford audience. “We're the ones that didn't see Brexit coming, not the people in the rest of the country. We're the ones that didn't think that Donald Trump had a chance; I don't know anybody that thought Donald Trump had a chance.”

But he added that lack of education among the lower classes is equally to blame.

“The solution to our problems is more open borders not closed borders. The solution to our problems is to improve education, not to try to penalize people because they are successful,” he said. “If you don't have successful people you're never going to have the wherewithal to support to help those who are not. We've tried socialism, it doesn't work.”

READ: Trans activists want Bloomberg to apologize for the 'guy in a dress' slur

He then launched into the above-mentioned rant about young people supporting Sanders, before concluding that centrists are necessary to moderate the impulses of “extremists” on both sides of the political spectrum.

“It's very dangerous, the world we're going into,” he said. “You see both the left and the right coming up here, and the middle is getting unfortunately not listened to anymore and it's the extremists that are going to shape the political culture if we're not careful going forward.”

“And we've had extremism before, particularly on this continent, and it didn't work out very well,” he concluded.

Asked if Bloomberg still stands by those 2016 comments, spokesman Stu Loeser responded with another attack on Sanders: "The Bernie who ran in 2016 called himself a truth teller. Even Bernie wouldn't honestly say that about himself anymore — let alone his allies."

The Sanders campaign declined to comment.

Cover: Presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg campaigns and opens his Denver field office February 01, 2020. (Photo: Andy Cross/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

This article originally appeared on VICE US.