Sunday, June 8

Business

FIFA and UEFA fine with ignoring Russia’s war with Ukraine
Business, Opinion, Politics, World News

FIFA and UEFA fine with ignoring Russia’s war with Ukraine

FIFA, global soccer’s governing body and arguably the most powerful sports organization in the world, announced this week it was lifting a ban that kept Russian teams from participating in international competitions, clearing the way for the country’s men’s and women’s teams to take part in their respective U-17 World Cups.FIFA’s decision came a week after the executive committee of UEFA, European soccer’s governing body and one whose influence in the sport is eclipsed only by FIFA, moved to lift its own boycott of Russian teams, imposed after the country’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Russia celebrated the announcements Thursday by sending a missile into a cafe and grocery store in a tiny village in the Kharkiv region of eastern Ukraine, killing at least 51 civilians.The fact that the missil...
Actors guild SAG-AFTRA, major studios continue negotiations
Business, Opinion, Politics, World News

Actors guild SAG-AFTRA, major studios continue negotiations

Leaders of SAG-AFTRA and the major Hollywood studios are wrapping up their first week of negotiations since the 160,000-member performers union went on strike in mid-July, but the sides aren’t yet close to a deal, sources familiar with the talks said Friday.The two groups met three days this week at SAG-AFTRA’s headquarters on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, and have agreed to resume talks on Monday. The sessions have been productive, these sources said, providing an opportunity for ranking company executives to hear directly from union leaders, including SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher, who has been sharply critical of industry leaders.Friday marked the 85th day of SAG-AFTRA’s strike against the major entertainment companies.“This is the fight for our lives — and for our art,” actor ...
How not to cover Donald Trump’s 2024 campaign
Business, Opinion, Politics, World News

How not to cover Donald Trump’s 2024 campaign

The press should borrow a lyric from “The Sound of Music” and ask itself: “How do you solve a problem like Donald?” Or, put another way, how should journalists cover Trump’s unprecedented campaign for president while under indictment for trying to overturn an election and more?The question concerns not just Trump but also politics and campaigns more broadly in an age of fragmented media and polarized politics. The answer requires recognizing journalists’ altered role and fulfilling it with more care, preparation and diligence.Many confronting the challenge of covering Trump conclude that, as a recent column in the Arizona Republic put it, “It’s time to stop giving Trump airtime.” The larger point is that the media shouldn’t give exposure to people they know are going to make provably false...
Sudden war in Israel and Palestinian enclave Gaza upends regional diplomacy and politics
Business, Opinion, Politics, World News

Sudden war in Israel and Palestinian enclave Gaza upends regional diplomacy and politics

WASHINGTON —  The Palestinian militant offensive against Israel on Saturday — possibly the deadliest and largest ever — will dramatically alter diplomatic and political calculations in the Middle East and deprive Washington of whatever leverage it has in influencing Israel, diplomats and analysts say. Vowing “mighty vengeance,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu launched massive airstrikes on the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip in response to the militant attacks that left hundreds dead and many abducted. Netanyahu declared his country at war and a full-scale but perilous ground incursion, 18 years after Israel withdrew from Gaza, is not out of the question, experts say.The looming and urgent question then will be whether fighting extends farther into the volatile region, involving Lebanon o...
As Israel-Gaza battle rages, security is stepped up in L.A. area
Business, Opinion, Politics, World News

As Israel-Gaza battle rages, security is stepped up in L.A. area

Local leaders in Southern California swiftly denounced Hamas militants and increased security around Jewish institutions Saturday hours after a deadly attack killed at least 700 Israelis in the Middle East, with more than 400 in Gaza killed in counterattacks.“I join voices across the nation condemning this horrific attack on Israel,” Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said Saturday in a statement. “The Los Angeles region has the second largest Jewish population outside of Israel, and many families are anxiously awaiting developments as they unfold. My thoughts are with those families this morning. Angelenos stand with those under siege mourning loss. May their memories be a blessing.”Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore said Saturday that the department added extra patrols to areas of the city...
Opinion: 50 years after Ms. magazine’s debut, why is the patriarchy still alive and well?
Business, Opinion, Politics, World News

Opinion: 50 years after Ms. magazine’s debut, why is the patriarchy still alive and well?

Who would have thought, back when the women’s media landscape was dominated by Ladies’ Home Journal and Good Housekeeping, that a magazine born of the second great American feminist wave would be around 50 years later?Certainly not the late Harry Reasoner, who, as the anchor for ABC Evening News, personified the white male media establishment. Opinion Columnist Robin Abcarian “After you’ve done marriage contracts, role-changing, female identity crisis, what do you do next? Organize foods for Christmas dinner, I expect,” proclaimed Reasoner after paging through the first issue of Ms. magazine in 1972.Five years later, his portrait appeared in a full-page New York Times ad celebrating Ms.’ fifth anniversary. You couldn’t see the egg on his face, but it was ther...
U.S., Mexico try to forge partnership on fentanyl, migration
Business, Opinion, Politics, World News

U.S., Mexico try to forge partnership on fentanyl, migration

MEXICO CITY —  The Biden administration has been dedicating a significant amount of time to its prickly ally and neighbor to the south, Mexico.High-level meetings have taken place in both countries over the last two weeks, with the two sides speaking of their determination to cooperate on vexing issues including migration and cross-border smuggling of fentanyl and weapons.But even as America’s top diplomat, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, extolled what he judged to be the countries’ “closest cooperation” in decades, Mexico’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, was excoriating the U.S. for its foreign policy.Late last month, as Mexico’s Foreign Secretary Alicia Bárcena met with Blinken in Washington ahead of his arrival in Mexico City last week for more talks, López Obrador con...
Here’s how we know the Republican Party has become an autocratic movement
Business, Opinion, Politics, World News

Here’s how we know the Republican Party has become an autocratic movement

It’s often said that Donald Trump has a cultlike following. But that’s far too benign.“Star Wars” has a cultlike following. Taylor Swift has her cult of “Swifties.” A political organization that has no platform other than loyalty to the leader is not a cult, it’s an autocratic movement.The tragicomic chaos in the House in the last week is the natural result of a political party that has lived under Trump’s thumb. It should end any pretense that the current Republican Party is a serious governing party.As Hannah Arendt wrote in “The Origins of Totalitarianism”: “Total loyalty is possible only when fidelity is emptied of all concrete content, from which changes of mind might naturally arise. The totalitarian movements, each in its own way, have done their utmost to get rid of the party prog...
Opinion: Jim Jordan should never be House speaker. Here’s why
Business, Opinion, Politics, World News

Opinion: Jim Jordan should never be House speaker. Here’s why

When House Republicans in January chose Rep. Kevin McCarthy as speaker, that was bad enough: The highest ranking official under the Capitol dome was someone who’d been complicit in then-President Trump’s stoking the worst attack on that very building since its burning by the British in 1814. Replacing the Bakersfield Republican with Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan would be so much worse. Opinion Columnist Jackie Calmes Jackie Calmes brings a critical eye to the national political scene. She has decades of experience covering the White House and Congress. Here’s the key difference between them: Trump’s “My Kevin” McCarthy played along as the defeated president spun up his MAGA militia with false claims of Democrats’ election steal. But Jordan — he plotted along with th...
Israeli hostage’s family determined to get him back
Business, Opinion, Politics, World News

Israeli hostage’s family determined to get him back

JERUSALEM — Their eyes red from exhaustion and worry, Jonathan Polin and his wife, Rachel Goldberg, sat Tuesday in a corner of their Jerusalem living room, now converted into a makeshift command center with one aim: finding their son, Hersh Goldberg-Polin. It had been five days since Goldberg-Polin, a 23-year-old California native, left a family dinner celebrating the Jewish holiday of Simchat Torah to meet up with his best friend. Goldberg kissed her son goodbye, expecting to see him the next day, Saturday. The following morning, however, air-raid sirens reverberated throughout Jerusalem shortly after 8 a.m. — the first sign there of the massive Hamas operation that would swiftly grow into the deadliest attack on Israel in 50 years. Stepping out of her apartment building’s underground she...