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How far right will Brett Kavanaugh take Supreme Court?

Conservatives are a patient lot, and they proved it after working for decades to get a conservative heavy Supreme Court. Landing Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch in one-term is a dream come true. The latest confirmation gives the majority the power to restrict abortion rights, marriage along with reining in federal regulators.

Corporations may be happy, but as more environmental regulations are turned back and stripped away, get ready for more strange sickness and trips to the doctor. Don’t forget, with the stripping away of ObamaCare aka Affordable Care Act; those trips may wind up too expensive.

republicans on supreme court vs democrats
Brett Kavanaugh makes six Supreme Court justices nominated by a Republican.

The moment conservatives have dreamed about for decades has arrived with Brett Kavanaugh joining the Supreme Court. But with it comes the shadow of a bitter confirmation fight that is likely to hang over the court as it takes on divisive issues, especially those dealing with politics and women’s rights.

The newly constituted court also might broaden gun rights, further relax campaign finance laws and halt the expansion of the rights of LGBT people, who three years ago won the right to marry nationwide with Kennedy in the majority.

Yet Kavanaugh may have a hard time putting behind him the tumultuous confirmation process, which ended with the Senate voting 50-48 to confirm him Saturday, the narrowest margin of victory for a Supreme Court nominee in 137 years.

“In the public mind, there will always be this dark cloud hanging over the court, even if Kavanaugh is eventually embraced by all his colleagues on the court,” said Elizabeth Wydra, president of the liberal Constitutional Accountability Center.

That cloud stems from allegations of sexual assault and other inappropriate behavior by Kavanaugh while he was in high school and college, along with his politically charged testimony that labeled the look into his past a political hit job by Democrats.

Kavanaugh has forcefully denied any inappropriate behavior with women. He also acknowledged in a Wall Street Journal column that some of his testimony went too far, but did not apologize for anything he said.

The bitter partisan fight over the confirmation could continue in another form if Democrats take control of the House after the November elections. Key House Democrats have said they would investigate Kavanaugh.

In the meantime, the focus will be on the court’s new majority’s willingness to take on controversial issues.

A potential early test is two cases involving state efforts to strip public money from Planned Parenthood. The justices are considering appeals from Kansas and Louisiana. Lower courts have blocked the states from going forward. The court could announce Tuesday that it has rejected the appeals, if the justices voted that way in their private conference Friday. But they also could defer action to allow Kavanaugh to weigh in.

It is far from certain that the court will move precipitously on this or any high-profile issue. “It’s not going to be lost on anyone on the court that everybody is going to be watching the new court to see which issues they engage in,” said Paul Clement, solicitor general under President George W. Bush.

The justices could look for cases that are more likely to produce consensus, including those about privacy protections in the digital age, Clement said.

Some contentious issues, though, will be harder to avoid because federal law compels the court’s involvement. In coming months, the issue of drawing political districts for partisan advantage will return to the court in a case from North Carolina. Last term, the justices failed to set limits on the practice known as partisan gerrymandering in cases from Maryland and Wisconsin. Kennedy was seen as the conservative justice most likely to side with liberals on the issue. His retirement dimmed the hopes of proponents of such limits.

New state restrictions on abortion could make their way to the Supreme Court soon, along with challenges to the Affordable Care Act and protection from deportation for young immigrants.

The leader of an anti-abortion group that supported Kavanaugh foreshadowed the fight to come in a statement issued just after the confirmation vote.

“Judge Kavanaugh’s distinguished judicial career has been built upon his constitutionalist approach to law, and we trust that this will serve all Americans well when Roe v. Wade inevitably comes before the Supreme Court for review,” said Catherine Glenn Foster, president of Americans United for Life, referring to the court’s landmark 1973 abortion rights ruling.

Kavanaugh’s arrival on the court after the most tumultuous confirmation battle since Clarence Thomas faced allegations of sexual harassment by Anita Hill in 1991 hardens the alignment of party and ideology: five conservatives appointed by Republican presidents and four liberals by Democrats. That was true with Kennedy on the bench, but he voted with the liberals in cases that preserved abortion rights and affirmative action, expanded LGBT rights and limited capital punishment.

Two of those liberal justices, speaking Friday at Princeton University, talked about the court’s legitimacy, without mentioning their new colleague.

“Every single one of us needs to realize how precious the court’s legitimacy is. You know we don’t have an army. We don’t have any money. The only way we can get people to do what we think they should do is because people respect us,” Justice Elena Kagan said.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor said the nine justices recognize the small world they inhabit, suggesting that the tense atmosphere surrounding Kavanaugh’s nomination is unlikely to be replicated on the court.

“We have to rise above partisanship in our personal relationships. We have to treat each with respect and dignity and a sense of amicability that the rest of the world doesn’t always share,” Sotomayor said.

Chief Justice John Roberts has been especially sensitive to portrayals of the court as a political institution. That perception has waxed and waned over the years, but it was particularly strong following the Bush v. Gore decision that sealed Bush’s 2000 election.

On a practical level, the four liberal justices need a vote from the right side of the court in which they otherwise divide on the familiar ideological fault lines. Kennedy and Sandra Day O’Connor were justices “who found the center,” Kagan said, “and that’s enabled the court to look as though it was not owned by one side of the other. It’s not so clear that you know going forward that that sort of middle position — it’s not so clear whether we’ll have it.”

In stressing Kavanaugh’s frequent agreement with Judge Merrick Garland on the federal appeals court in Washington, the new justice’s backers seem to be suggesting that Kavanaugh’s vote cannot be taken for granted.

“I saw him rule in favor of liberal parties. I saw him rule in favor of criminal defendants who were unsympathetic. For 12 years, I saw him rule where the law led and I expect him to do the same on the Supreme Court,” said Justin Walker, a University of Louisville law professor and former Kavanaugh law clerk.

But the more widely held expectation among court watchers is that Roberts, who joined with the liberal justices to uphold President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul, will determine how far and fast the court moves. “You might think of him as the swing vote, but it’s less that he will be up in the air in various cases. But he will be important in determining which cases the court takes, how quickly they move and how they decide cases,” Clement said.

For Wydra, the new role for Roberts underscores the court’s shift to the right. “I guess he is now the new center, which is rather frightening considering how conservative he is,” she said.

Will Brett Kavanugh confirmation affect #MeToo movement?

With Brett Kavanaugh being confirmed to the United States Supreme Court, many are asking if the Republicans will begin turning the tables on the #MeToo movement. They were crafty in turning the subject of Kavanaugh’s untruths during his questioning, and Donald Trump turned it into a war on our young men.

We’ve hit the one-year mark since #MeToo hit the headlines everywhere to see if the movement has shaped into something more than just a hashtag.

The #MeToo movement has sent dozens of once-powerful Hollywood players into exile, but few of them have been placed in handcuffs or jail cells. And it’s increasingly apparent that the lack of criminal charges may remain the norm.

Harvey Weinstein has been charged with sexual assault in New York, and Bill Cosby was sent to prison in Pennsylvania in the year since stories on Weinstein in The New York Times and The New Yorker set off waves of revelations of sexual misconduct in Hollywood. But those two central figures are exceptions.

A task force launched last November by Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey to handle the surge in allegations against entertainment figures has taken up criminal cases involving nearly two dozen entertainment-industry figures. None has been charged.

The lack of prosecutions stems from a clash between the #MeToo ethos, which encourages victims to come forward years or even decades after abuse and harassment that they’ve kept private, and a legal system that demands fast reporting of crimes and hard evidence.

The task force has considered charges against 22 suspects, including Weinstein, Kevin Spacey, director James Toback and former CBS CEO Leslie Moonves, all of whom have denied engaging in any sex that was not consensual.

Charges have already been rejected for most. Cases involving six suspects, including Weinstein and Spacey, both of whom have multiple accusers, remain open.

In 14 of the closed cases, charges were declined because the allegations were reported too late and thus outside the statute of limitations. The rest were turned down either for insufficient evidence or because the accuser refused to cooperate with investigators after initially reporting the incidents.

While disappointed in the lack of results, several accusers said they were still glad they talked to police and prosecutors, for a variety of reasons both practical and emotional.

“For me it was not necessarily closure, but one of the healthiest things I’ve ever done for myself,” said Melissa Schuman, whose case dating to 2003 against Nick Carter of the Backstreet Boys was rejected over the statute of limitations. “It felt therapeutic to tell the authorities, to be able to take it out of my body and out of my mind and report it.”

Fatima Goss Graves, president of the National Women’s Law Center, which oversees the Time’s Up legal defense fund, said for some “the act of reporting, putting it on the record is critical, even if they’re beyond the limitations.”

When law enforcement agencies welcome women to report their experiences, it can eventually result in more prosecutions, she said.

“In too many cases law enforcement has sent a signal that they won’t treat these issues,” Goss Graves said. “If you’ve created a climate and space that is friendly to people coming forward, more people will come forward.”

Schuman said she found just such a climate. She was well treated by task force investigators and the police in what could have been a much tougher process.

“I really felt supported, and listened to, and cared-for and believed,” Schuman said.

Carter has denied the allegations from the start. He said through his lawyer when charges were declined that he felt confident there would be no basis for charges and was happy to put the matter behind him. A representative did not respond to a request Friday for further comment.

There can be more tangible benefits to reporting. In California, simply filing a police report entitles victims to benefits that can include free psychotherapy. The reports also create additional claims that can help in newer investigations or be brought into court to show a pattern of conduct, as they were for Cosby’s trial.

“It just gives me peace to have it documented and filed,” Schuman said, “and if my abuser does it again, the authorities told me they could use me to help corroborate.”

The sexual assault case that sent Cosby to prison was from 2004 and long pre-dated the #MeToo movement. It was filed just as the statute of limitations was expiring.

California requires that charges be brought within a year for many sexual crimes and within 10 years for many of the most serious crimes, including rape and felony sexual assault.

The task force has been looking at allegations of incidents that are sometimes decades old. One rejected case against Spacey dates to 1992. The allegations against Moonves date to the late 1980s. One case for Toback dates to 1978.

In documents released by the task force explaining why charges were not brought, some officials simply declare the effort pointless and say little else. In other cases, prosecutors provide long and sometimes detailed descriptions of acts and the laws they may have violated, only to reluctantly conclude that too much time has passed.

Page after page of the documents end with the same phrase, “prosecution is declined.”

Aside from confirming which cases it is considering and has declined, the district attorney’s office declined comment for this story.

California has already altered its laws to help victims, eliminating the statute of limitations for rape and other forms of felony sex abuse. But courts have ruled that statutes of limitations cannot be altered to include suspects who are already past them, so the new laws only apply to crimes from 2017 onward, meaning the practical effects likely won’t be felt for years.

Many of the old cases taken under consideration would probably never have reached prosecutors before the Weinstein story broke and cultural attitudes began to change.

Even beyond the time-limit problem, “It would be next to impossible for an investigative agency to find witnesses to corroborate and gather evidence,” said Alan Jackson, a former prosecutor in the district attorney’s office who ran against Lacey in 2012 and now works as a defense attorney.

Many accusers whose cases were considered by the task force have filed civil lawsuits that may have more staying power.

Goss Graves said it’s desirable to leave open as many options as possible.

“What accountability and ultimately healing looks like for survivors is going to vary,” she said. “In many ways, we’re not in the middle of this process. We’re in the beginning.”

Fact vs Fiction: Brett Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey Ford

Brett Kavanaugh has been confirmed to the Supreme Court 51-49 making him Donald Trump’s second high court pick, but there was plenty of fake news surrounding the very contentious and controversial pick.

Here are three of the top fake news articles that spread like wildfire on social media and the actual facts.

NOT REAL: Records Show Dr. Ford Is Not A Licensed Psychologist, May Have Committed Perjury

THE FACTS: Christine Blasey Ford did not violate the law by identifying herself as a psychologist while testifying last week at the Senate hearing where she accused Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct, as numerous reports circulating online suggested. Some reports speculated that Ford, a California college professor, perjured herself when she used psychologist in her job title because she is not licensed in California. State law requires anyone practicing psychology in California to hold a license but makes an exception for psychologists who are hired by academic institutions, public schools, and government agencies under that title. Ford did not identify herself as a licensed psychologist; she referred to herself as a research psychologist at Stanford University School of Medicine and a professor of psychology at Palo Alto University. People hired by a school or university as a psychologist can identify as such, without being licensed, as long as they do not provide services to the general public, said Jeffrey Thomas, an assistant executive officer for the California licensing board of psychology.

NOT REAL: Judge Kavanaugh’s Home Vandalized By Left Wing Extremists

THE FACTS: Kavanaugh’s home was not vandalized by left-wing protesters, as claimed in false reports circulating online this week. The claim originated on a satire site, America’s Last Line of Defense, which wrote a story stating that “200 left-wing protesters” caused $11,000 worth of damage to Kavanaugh’s home in Mayo Lake, Pennsylvania, by throwing calendars, bricks and bottles at his house. Some online sites and social media users circulated the claim as true. Kavanaugh’s residence is in Chevy Chase, Maryland. Mayo Lake, Pennsylvania, is a fictional location. Police have received no reports of vandalism or protests since he was nominated for the Supreme Court on July 10, according to Sgt. Rebecca Innocenti, a spokeswoman for the Montgomery County Police Department in Maryland.

brett kavanaugh fake picture of christine blasey ford

NOT REAL: ‘This is the alleged sexual assault victim. Wow.’

THE FACTS: A photo of a young girl that a Republican official in North Carolina used to mock Ford, who has accused Kavanaugh of sexual assault, is an image that has appeared online for several years. It is not Ford. Cabarrus County GOP chairman Lanny Lancaster shared the photo of a girl wearing large glasses and braces on his Facebook page, with the comment: “This is the alleged sexual assault victim. Wow.” Ford’s legal team confirmed that the photo was not of her.

actual christine blasey ford yearbook picture 1982
Real yearbook photo of Christine Blasey Ford in 1982

The post drew sharp criticism. Frank McNeill, a Democratic candidate for Congress in North Carolina’s 8th District, called it an “assault on the safety and dignity of American women” in an email newsletter. The Daily Mail Online used the photo in their worst yearbook photos list in 2012, saying it came from Worldwideinterweb.

Newest Movie Themed Slots

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When you’ve just walked out of the latest smash hit movie, you’re in a mixture of two moods. You’re happy because the film was awesome, but you’re also sad because it’s over. Everyone enjoys immersing themselves into fantasy land now and then, so it’s only natural that you’ll want to spend more time there.

Fortunately, the biggest and best films also spawn tie-in materials. It might be comic books, or spin-off TV series. You might also be able to play video games based on the movies. If you like the occasional gamble it gets even better – there’s a whole range of movie-themed slot machines you can play online, from the comfort of your own home, on reputable sites like www.roseslots.com. We’re going to break down ten of the latest and greatest for you right here, right now!

wonder woman gal gadot lifting weight slots1. Wonder Women

Being an action movie star isn’t just for men. The massive success of Gal Gadot’s star turn as “Wonder Woman” demonstrated that, and some reviews were impressed by how well it wove all the thrills and spills together with a message about female empowerment. Increasingly, gambling isn’t just a male activity either, and that’s reflected in the online slot that bears its name. It’s a sophisticated slot game, featuring up to 100 pay lines and an adjustable betting stake that makes it suitable for high rollers and more cautious gamblers. It also throws in four separate bonus rounds and a feature game based on Wonder Woman’s belt.

justice league movie images wonder woman shazam2. Justice League

”Justice League” didn’t tick everybody’s boxes on its first release, but it was still a solid offering, as DC Comics go to to toe at the box office with Marvel and their “Avengers” series. The tie-in online slot isn’t something anyone should be complaining about, though. Expect appearances from all your favorites – Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman and all the rest are here – and they’ll do their best to help you win big. It features the progressive jackpot that’s typical of DC tie-ins, but like any good superhero movie, the stakes are huge. If you’re looking for a game that will really offer you high multiples based on what you put in, you’ve found it.

3. King Kong Fury

Step onto Skull Island – if you dare – with this movie tie-in from NextGen games. There are four rows to stay on top of, split across five reels, with an impressive fifty potential pay lines. Throw in a randomly occurring bonus round, and there’s a whole lot going on with “King Kong Fury.” Just be aware that the famous ape could turn up and spoil your fun at any time. He’s pretty angry that you’re loose in his jungle. But then you guessed that from the title, didn’t you?

gladiator russell crowe movie images4. Gladiator

His name is Maximus Decimus. Meridius, commander of the armies of the North, General of the Felix Legions and he’s starring in an impressive new slot game. “Gladiator” is considered to be one of the greatest movies of all time. There’s talk of a sequel, but you can get back into the world of the film with this impressive “Gladiator Jackpot” online slot for now. There are some great visual and audio tie-ins to the movie within the game, along with 25 pay lines and some big potential bonus jackpots.

5. Terminator 2

Well, Arnie did promise he’d be back, didn’t he? And here he is doing battle with the T-1000 once more. Terminator 2 is a bonafide classic, light years ahead of its time when it was released in 1991, and it’s only fitting that it has its own online slot now we have the technology to do it justice. This game is truly interactive – there’s plenty of video footage, and even an innovative “Terminator Sight” feature which lets you hunt down bonus features. With an astonishing 1024 ways to win, it’ll be a while before you’re saying “Hasta la vista, baby” to this one.

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6. Ted

”Ted” was a wild, wacky, offbeat film brought to you by the same twisted minds who gave us “Family Guy.” If you like heavy drinking, crude humor, and lovable but badly behaved bears, watch it. You’re in for a treat. The online slot is exactly as unique as you’d hope for it to be, with a Thunder Buddies bonus and plenty of laughs on the way. And then there’s Ted himself! The bear is asleep right in front of you as you play. If you manage to wake him, he’ll activate some cool additional features for you, but be warned this is no cuddly toy like the characters in Fluffy Favourites; this teddy bear is a bad boy with attitude!

planet of the apes movie images7. Planet Of The Apes

Now, this is an ambitious project. The makers of the “Planet of the Tapes” online slot must not have been able to decide whether to model their game on “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” or “Rise of the Planet of the Apes,” so they’ve given us both at once. That means you’ve got a real beast of a tie-in, with two completely separate three row, five reel games happening side by side at the same time. Some features even impact both games at once. Two games mean plenty of chances to win, and there’s a great video intro to get you excited, too.

dirty dancing patrick swayze images8. Dirty Dancing

Put on your dancing shoes and get ready to roll with this brand new tie in to an 80s classic. There’s plenty of dance-themed action going on here, with a soundtrack that’s delightfully everything you’d want it to be. It’s an interactive video feature, with neat touches like the Dancing Wilds feature which sets Baby and Johnny off dancing across the reels. She’ll make plenty of appearances during the game, but always handle her with care. Remember: Nobody puts Baby in the corner!

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Halloween

9. Halloween

There are great rewards in this game for anyone who’s brave enough to go looking for them! “Halloween” is a brilliantly atmospheric online slot, well worthy of the license, that will have you on edge the whole time you’re playing. The legendary soundtrack from the film pricks your nerves as it plays in the background, and if you keep your eyes peeled, Michael Myers prowls around the background, ready to pounce. Players who can keep their focus can potentially win prizes up to ten times their cash bet.

As long as technology continues to involve, movies continue to be made, and people still enjoy a gamble now and then, we can expect more great tie-ins to occur in the future. Keep an eye out for new releases, but until then, have fun with these. Remember – always gamble responsibly!

Tamara Jenkins talks ‘Private Life’ and that 11 year absence

It can take long enough to make a film, but the search to find the next right one can take even longer as filmmaker Tamara Jenkins realized after completing “Private Life,” which premieres on Netflix Friday.

Tamara Jenkins has had time to consider why there have been such long stretches between her movies. Her latest, “Private Life,” starring Kathryn Hahn and Paul Giamatti as a New York couple struggling with infertility treatments, comes 11 years after her last one, the Oscar-nominated “The Savages.”

For Jenkins’ fans, such prolonged absences (it was nine years following her 1998 debut, “The Slums of Beverly Hills”) are a disappointment. For others, it’s a prime example of how the movie industry doesn’t value its female filmmakers like its male ones. For Jenkins, it’s more complicated.

private life movie netflix

“When you’re in it, you’re like: Is it me or is it them? What makes that problem, in terms of myself?” Jenkins wonders. “When I was at Sundance people kept asking me that question. I kept saying, ‘Yeah, I know. I’m a loser. How is it possible 11 years went by?’ And then I looked around and I realized Patty Jenkins (‘Wonder Woman’) hadn’t made a movie and Debra Granik (‘Leave No Trace’) hadn’t made a feature for years. So I’m not alone.”

Still, Jenkins adds, there are other factors, too. She and her husband, Jim Taylor (Alexander Payne’s frequent writing partner), had a kid in that time period — the experience of which eventually led her to write “Private Life.” And then she’s meticulous — “novel-y,” she says — in her writing process; she estimates it took two years to write “Private Life,” some of that time spent at the upstate New York artists’ colony Yadoo (which also figures into the film).

“It’s also a desire to not necessarily make any old thing. There are a lot of things out there that might be makeable but aren’t good. There are a lot of really bad movies,” Jenkins said in a recent interview. “And I never have had an easy time trying to get these things made. Like ‘The Savages,’ which took place in a nursing home, nobody wants to make that movie. This is different but, still, it doesn’t sound sexy on paper.”

“Private Life,” which premieres on Netflix and in select theaters Friday, is indeed more than its synopsis. Hahn and Giamatti play downtown New York creatives reaching middle age and going through one fertility trial after another. But in Jenkins’ hands, “Private Life” is a caustically funny, painfully intimate, medicalized examination of, as she says, “a marriage in the middle.” Though much of the plot follows a struggle to conceive, it’s ultimately centered on the couple; Giamatti compares it to “Waiting for Godot.”

“People ask me what it’s about and I say it’s a movie about marriage,” says Jenkins. “It’s obviously on a very specific journey that they’re on. But there was something so existential about that problem for them. It’s so primal.”

As an on-screen couple, Hahn and Giamatti are remarkably attuned to each other, especially considering they didn’t know each other before the film. Jenkins set up a meeting at Giamatti’s Brooklyn home for the two to meet and get acquainted.

“I feel something about this movie that I don’t feel about many things I’ve been in. I really love it, and a lot of it is those two women I got to work with,” Giamatti said by phone during a break from shooting “Billions.”

“I wish Tamara was able to be more prolific. I don’t know how much it is her wanting to take that much time with something. I don’t think so. I think she’d like to be more prolific,” Giamatti adds. “But she’s incredibly devoted to the very singular thing she wants to do.”

Hahn says that Jenkins during shooting is as passionate about a scene being acted as she was when writing it.

“Tamara, as a director, she’s a channeler. She’s definitely feeling whatever you’re feeling at the same amount of intensity. She can’t help it. She will feel alongside of you,” Hahn says. “We both understood (Hahn’s character) Rachel on a pretty deep level. We kind of mind-melded.”

Both Hahn and Giamatti have won raves for their soulful, connected performances, though numerous critics have called Hahn’s disarmingly naked performance her best yet.

“It’s not lost on me that I feel most seen as a performer and as an artist by women filmmakers. That is for damn sure,” says Hahn, who’s currently prepping an HBO series directed by Nicole Holofcener.

Jenkins, 56, has regularly turned pieces from her life into her films. “The Slums of Beverly Hills,” about a transient, lower-middle-class Jewish family in Beverly Hills, was inspired by her own 1970s youth. “The Savages,” which starred Laura Linney (she was Oscar-nominated, as was Jenkins’ script) and Philip Seymour Hoffman, chronicled two siblings dealing with an elderly parent with dementia. It too was partly autobiographical.

Jenkins initially dismissed her own trials having a kid as decent movie fodder (“I was like: No way! I’ll never do that! Gross!“) only to eventually see the dramatic possibilities of a very common experience.

“There’s the sort of famous thing that people say: Why don’t you just adopt? — ‘just’ in italics, like adopting is such an easy thing to do, like you can just walk out and get one of those kids over there,” says Jenkins. “If you’re trying to have a kid and it’s not happening the old-fashioned, regular way, all of the routes of having a kid are really complicated, morally and emotionally and economically and socially. It’s all very complicated.”

One complication Jenkins would rather not encounter: another long wait until her next film.

“The older you get, if you keep waiting 11 years until your next movie, it’s going to get really complicated with the walker and the back problem,” she says, laughing. “So I would like to pick up the pace in my own middle age.”

Donald Trump facing possible tax fines

Donald Trump resisted claiming ‘fake news’ when it came to The New York Times investigation into how he actually made his fortune, but instead, said it was ‘old news.’ Old news or not, the IRS doesn’t take kindly to cheaters and could slap tens of millions of dollars in civil fines on the president.

Trump insists he did nothing wrong on his taxes, but experts say he could be on the hook for tens of millions of dollars in civil fines if state and federal authorities substantiate a New York Times report that found he and his family cheated the IRS for decades.

The statute of limitations for bringing criminal charges has long run out, but civil cases have no such limits, and the financial penalties could be staggering. Civil fraud charges for intentionally underpaying taxes, as the Times alleged the Trump family did, could include a penalty of up to 75 percent of the unpaid federal taxes and double the unpaid state amount, experts said.

donald trump hit with new york times tax story

The penalties “could be substantial, and if the allegations are proven in court, they should be levied,” said Norman Eisen, chairman of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington and former chief ethics counsel in the Obama administration.

The New York tax department said it is studying the Times’ 15,000-word report and “vigorously pursuing all appropriate avenues of investigation.” New York City also said it would investigate. A spokesman for the Internal Revenue Service declined to comment.

Trump tweeted that the newspaper did “a very old, boring and often told hit piece on me.”

The White House dismissed the report as a “misleading attack against the Trump family by the failing New York Times,” but spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the newspaper got one thing right: Trump’s father not only did deals with his son but heaped praise on him by saying “everything he touched turned to gold.”

A lawyer for Trump, Charles J. Harder, told the Times that there was no “fraud or tax evasion” and that parts of the report were “extremely inaccurate.”

The Times said Trump received at least $413 million from his father over the decades, much of that through dubious tax maneuvers, including outright fraud. The report contradicts Trump’s portrayal of himself as a self-made billionaire who started with just a $1 million loan from his father.

Tax law experts expressed skepticism that the IRS would mount any civil investigation. The main reason, they said, is that the Times account says IRS officials have already conducted extensive audits of the estate left by Trump’s parents.

“That ship has sailed,” said Mark W. Everson, who was IRS commissioner during President George W. Bush’s second term and is now vice chairman of AlliantGroup, a Houston-based corporate tax advisory firm. He added: “I would be concerned were the service to reach back that far in time, given that it could only be doing so because of the person’s current position.”

In addition to maneuvers aimed at avoiding estate taxes, the Times reported that the president’s father, Fred Trump, paid no federal gift taxes on seven buildings that were transferred to Donald Trump and his siblings.

That opens another possible avenue of investigation, said Beth Shapiro Kaufman, a Caplin & Drysdale tax lawyer, and a former Treasury official.

There is typically a three-year statute of limitations on federal gift inquiries, but that doesn’t apply when a gift is made without being reported to the government. And if the donor is dead, the IRS would have the ability to go after the beneficiary of the gift for unpaid taxes, Kaufman said.

In New York, tax officials had already been looking into whether Trump or his charitable foundation misrepresented their tax liability. State law would allow them to seek civil penalties if they can show someone intentionally sought to evade taxes, even decades ago. Those who lose such cases are often required to pay their back taxes along with penalties.

In August, the state subpoenaed former Trump attorney and “fixer” Michael Cohen as part of the probe.

The state investigation follows Democratic state Attorney General Barbara Underwood’s lawsuit alleging Trump illegally tapped his Trump Foundation to settle legal disputes, help his campaign for president and cover personal and business expenses, including the purchase of a 6-foot portrait of himself for $10,000.

Eisen said that if Democrats win the House in November, they will have the investigative muscle and subpoena power to scour Trump’s latter-day tax records and see whether the tax schemes alleged by the Times have continued.

Former IRS Deputy Commissioner Mark E. Matthews cautioned that the IRS would not be obligated to conduct an investigation if Congress turned up new evidence of continuing tax maneuvers, but added: “The agency knows where its bread is buttered. If it gets to the point of a full committee report with new evidence, somebody at the IRS will take a hard look. But there’s no guarantee they’d go beyond a look.”

The federal tax code’s statute of limitations for criminal cases is typically no more than six years, legal experts said. To bring criminal charges, investigators would have to find a continuing tax fraud conspiracy that stretched into recent years, they said.

Building such a case — similar to the charges that former Trump presidential campaign chairman Paul Manafort pleaded guilty to last month — would require overwhelming recent evidence, buttressed by new documents and strong testimony from Trump insiders, the experts said.

Cristiano Ronaldo fights for his reputation on Twitter, Instagram

Portuguese Juventus soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo took to Twitter and Instagram to deny accusations of rape against him, saying Wednesday that he had a “clear conscience” as he awaits the conclusions of an investigation.

The 33-year-old Ronaldo has been accused of rape by Kathryn Mayorga. She has said the soccer great raped her in Las Vegas in 2009.

“I firmly deny the accusations being issued against me. Rape is an abominable crime that goes against everything that I am and believe in. Keen as I may be to clear my name, I refuse to feed the media spectacle created by people seeking to promote themselves at my expense,” Ronaldo said in a statement.

“My clear conscience will thereby allow me to await with tranquility the results of any and all investigations.”

Ronaldo sent the messages in both Portuguese, his native language, and English on Twitter.

Mayorga filed a civil lawsuit in Nevada last week seeking monetary damages from Ronaldo, according to lawyer Larissa Drohobyczer.

We do not typically identify alleged victims of sexual assault, but Drohobyczer said Mayorga gave permission for her name to be used.

The civil lawsuit filed in state court in Las Vegas alleges Ronaldo raped Mayorga, who was then 24, in his penthouse suite at a Las Vegas hotel and hired a team of what the document called “fixers” to shape the monetary settlement, obstruct a police criminal investigation and trick Mayorga into taking $375,000 to keep quiet.

kathryn mayorga accses christiano ronaldo of rape payoff

Drohobyczer said Tuesday that Mayorga, now 34, was “emotionally fragile” and agreed to an out-of-court financial settlement nine years ago because she never wanted her name made public.

In an Instagram video posted hours after the suit was filed, Ronaldo appeared to deny the allegations.

“Fake. Fake news,” said the five-time world player of the year. “You want to promote by my name. It’s normal. They want to be famous, to say my name. But it is part of the job. I am a happy man and all good.”

Mayorga met Ronaldo at a nightclub, according to the lawsuit, and went with him and other people to his suite, where the alleged attack took place in a bedroom.

On Tuesday, Las Vegas police spokesman Aden OcampoGomez said that because the investigation is open, the department would not make public a police report that Mayorga filed the day of the alleged attack. The lawsuit said Mayorga also went to a hospital, where a sexual assault medical examination was conducted.

However, Mayorga refused to tell police the location of the alleged attack or to identify a suspect other than to say he was a European soccer player, OcampoGomez said.

Leslie Stovall, Mayorga’s co-counsel, was not immediately available to provide a response to Ronaldo’s tweets.

On Tuesday, Stovall said Mayorga’s complaint and her “psychological” injuries, as well as the physical evidence, the settlement and Ronaldo’s alleged answers to questions about the assault, are not fake news.

Las Vegas police have re-opened the rape complaint made by Mayorga against Ronaldo. Her lawyer is holding a media conference later in Las Vegas.

Ronaldo, who is a Portuguese citizen, went from Manchester United to Real Madrid in 2009 for a then-record sum of 94 million euros, or about $130 million. He now plays for Italian club Juventus.

The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages of at least $200,000. It makes 11 accusations against Ronaldo or those working for him, including conspiracy, defamation, abusing a vulnerable person, battery, infliction of emotional distress, coercion and fraud, racketeering and conspiracy, breach of contract, abuse of process and negligence for allowing details of the confidential settlement to become public.

Ronaldo is next due to play for Juventus against Udinese on Saturday. He missed Tuesday’s Champions League victory over Young Boys following his red card against Valencia.

Halloween Inspired Whole Food Healthy Smoothies: Dairy Free

Fruit smoothies can be an excellent source of nutrition. They can also be a simple way to get a delicious tasting delivery of nutrients, minerals, and vitamins. Unfortunately, a lot of smoothies are made with milk, which won’t be found on a whole foods grocery list. This means coming up with inventive and alternative ways to making cool and refreshing smoothies for Halloween.

Since a widely accepted definition of a smoothie is a cool, thick drink containing fresh fruit and puréed with yogurt, ice cream or milk, you have to create that creamy, thick consistency with something else. One easy way to replace the cold thickness and creaminess of traditional smoothies is to use frozen fruit in your recipes. Here are a few Halloween inspired smoothies that’ll let you stick to your whole food diet, while also allowing you to enjoy a little Halloween spirit.

If you’re looking for a great smoothie blender that will last forever, I can’t recommend the Nutribullet highly enough. I’ve had mine for nearly ten years now, and it makes the perfect smoothie or iced coffee frappa you ever had.

Also, check out our whole food decadent cupcake ideas for Halloween.

blood of dracula smoothie orange cherry halloween healthy

The Blood of Dracula Smoothie:

Ingredients

  • 1 cup of juice from blood oranges
  • 1 cup frozen cherries

Directions

  • Add all ingredients to your blender and start blending away.
  • Blend for a couple of minutes until you have a smooth consistency.
  • Pour into one large or two small glasses and enjoy the blood of Dracula!

halloween pumpkin smoothie whole food healthy

Halloween Pumpkin Smoothie:

The carotenoids in pumpkin are known as cancer fighters, and they also help keep your vision top-notch. Potassium is found in high levels in pumpkin, and this means healthy blood pressure maintenance. There is some evidence that canned pumpkin is better for you than fresh pumpkin, so if you go the canned route, make sure there are no preservatives or sugars added.

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup ice cubes
  • 1/2 cup green apples
  • 1/2 cup juice from apples
  • 3 ounces pumpkin, fresh or canned
  • 1 tablespoon fresh ginger

Directions

  • Smoothies are super simple because you often just add the ingredients and blend, and that is the formula to follow here. Make sure you blend long enough to get all ingredients mixed evenly. This is a low-carbohydrate, low-calorie, high-nutrition treat that pumpkin lovers will enjoy. If you’re watching your blood sugar this is a great one to enjoy without worrying about that insulin level spiking.

The “Tastes Like a Pumpkin Pie” Smoothie:

There is no doubt that when you think of Halloween, you eventually think about pumpkins. Starbucks every year rolls out their pumpkin flavored coffees and smoothies that are all the rage during late September and October, and pumpkin-flavored everything appears on menu boards in the fall. If you want to create a healthy Halloween smoothie that tastes just like your grandmother’s famous pumpkin pie, here you go.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup of canned pumpkin
  • 1 teaspoon of powdered cinnamon
  • 1 or 2 tablespoons of raw honey, to taste
  • 6 cubes of ice
  • 1/4 teaspoon of ground nutmeg (you can substitute Pumpkin Pie spice if you have that)
  • 1 egg (optional)

Directions

  • Blend all ingredients, heating and slowly adding the honey after blending other ingredients.
  • As with a typical smoothie recipe, blend until you get the consistency you are looking for. Some people like thicker smoothies while some tend to prefer the watery consistency. You can experiment with this recipe by adding or reducing pumpkin, cinnamon, honey, and nutmeg; you can create a chilled Halloween treat that rivals the best pumpkin pie you have ever eaten.

When you combine whole food ingredients, you can get a variety of different flavors and textures in your smoothie. Once you start to get a grasp on making smoothies, you will find there is no limit to the drinks that you can make. They are great for boosting your metabolism while also helping in weight loss.

Top 4 hottest tips for staying whole and healthy during Halloween

Halloween may just be one night, but people usually start getting into the costume-wearing spirit days, or even weeks, before Halloween night. Parties are planned and attended, and offices begin to fill with sugary treats such as frosted cupcakes, candy corn, soft drinks, and candy bars. This can make it tough for the whole food eater to stay true to their healthy eating habits.

Check out our whole food healthy chocolate treat recipes that are decadent without the guilt.

Before we give you some proven tips for staying whole during Halloween, let’s define the term “whole food.”

The following is a simple definition for whole food:

“Whole food – a natural food and especially an unprocessed one, such as a vegetable or fruit.”

whole food diet tips for halloween

That definition comes directly from the Merriam-Webster dictionary, a trusted source since 1828. But the Forks Over Knives definition of whole foods tends to give the best explanation:

“A whole food diet is plant-based and centered on unrefined, whole or minimally refined plants. It is based on vegetables, fruits, tubers, and legumes and minimizes or entirely excludes eggs and dairy products, meat, chicken and fish, and refined sugar, refined flour, and oils.”

Looking at both of those definitions, you see that candy corn, sugary treats, candy bars, carbonated beverages and other traditional Halloween foods are not listed. This is because processed sugar and flour, along with the other nutritional nightmare ingredients that are in most conventional Halloween foods, are directly related to chronic disease. And it’s more than just a grocery store!

whole food eating one ingredient foods

Stay Simple … Choose 1-Ingredient Foods

This means that keeping things simple around Halloween is going to be the best way to stay healthy. Eat a lot of 1-ingredient items, such as an apple, banana, an orange, a steak from an animal that was grass-fed, a piece of wild-caught salmon or a lobster. At their most nutritious, whole foods are 1-ingredient items that have been unprocessed and minimally heated or cooked. Staying simple with your meals can help you avoid processed foods around Halloween.

Bring Your Own Whole Food Meals, Snacks, and Entrées

The pumpkin is the unofficial mascot of Halloween. Pumpkin happens to be a whole food, when it is not processed, sweetened with sugar or otherwise made unhealthy. That means whole food pumpkin casseroles, pumpkin muffins and carved out pumpkin bowls deliver an opportunity to stay whole, while still enjoying a Halloween theme.

top 4 hottest tips sexy couple eating before going out to halloween party diet tips

Eat Before You Go Out:

Are you headed to a Halloween party where there will be predominantly non-whole foods? One way to keep from indulging in tempting but unhealthy Halloween favorites is to eat before you leave your home. It just makes sense that a full belly will lead to less bad-food consumption. Prepare a nice whole foods Halloween dinner and get your fill before you don your Halloween costume and hit the party train.

Keep Some Healthy Snacks on Hand:

Celery sticks, carrot sticks, apple slices, grapes, nuts and seeds, beef jerky and dried fruits all make healthy, whole food-compliant treats that are highly portable. This means you can keep some on hand, popping a handful whenever you get tempted to bombard your body with traditionally unhealthy Halloween fare.

Correcting Donald Trump’s false healthcare plan claims

Of the over 5,000 false claims reported by The Washington Post that Donald Trump has made, healthcare has been a very persistent one.  He’s determined to strip away everything that was created in ObamaCare aka Affordable Healthcare Act, but he’s promising his voters to keep all the things they like about it now. See where’s he on the mark and off in his claims.

President Trump isn’t playing it straight when it comes to his campaign pledge not to undercut health coverage for people with pre-existing medical conditions.

Five weeks before midterm elections, he is telling voters that those provisions “are safe,” even as his Justice Department is arguing in court that those protections in the Affordable Care Act should fall. The short-term health plans Trump often promotes as a bargain alternative to “Obamacare” offer no guarantee of covering pre-existing conditions.

On the economy, the president exaggerates his role in boosting jobs for black Americans and falsely claims a retooled trade agreement with South Korea will help U.S. farmers. He offers a head-scratching response after the Federal Reserve acted to raise interest rates. Reliving the 2016 election, yet again, Trump also wrongly states he won the women’s vote.

The misrepresentations came in a memorable week in which all eyes were on Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and his accuser.

In the strange mix of Senate posturing and a prosecutor’s dispassionate questioning, Kavanaugh and his Senate supporters jumped to the conclusion that was not supported by the testimony over whether he sexually assaulted Christine Blasey Ford when she was 15 and he was 17. They said, accurately, that Ford has not produced witnesses who corroborate her allegations. They also said, wrongly, that witness statements entered into the record exonerated him.

A look at the rhetoric and the facts behind it:

PRE-EXISTING CONDITIONS

TRUMP: “I will always fight for and always protect patients with pre-existing conditions … We’ll do it the right way, too. Pre-existing conditions are safe, OK? Just remember that.” — West Virginia rally Saturday.

THE FACTS: That’s not what his Justice Department says. Government attorneys told a court in June that they will no longer defend key parts of Obamacare, including provisions that guarantee access to health insurance regardless of any medical conditions. Attorney General Jeff Sessions explained in a letter to Congress that Trump, who campaigned on repealing the law and nearly did so his first year in office, approved the legal strategy.

The decision was a rare departure from DOJ’s custom of defending federal laws in court, even if the administration in power does not like them. It came after Texas and other Republican-led states sued to strike down the entire law because Congress repealed a provision that people without health insurance must pay a fine. Texas says that without the fine in place the individual mandate is unconstitutional and that the entire law should be struck down.

The Trump administration said it wouldn’t defend the individual mandate or provisions shielding people with medical conditions from being denied coverage or charged higher premiums. But it said the rest of the law, including Medicaid expansion, can remain.

Obamacare requires insurers to take all applicants, regardless of medical history, and patients with health problems pay the same standard premiums as healthy ones. Bills supported last year by Trump and congressional Republicans to repeal the law could have pushed up costs for people with pre-existing conditions.

BLACK UNEMPLOYMENT

TRUMP: “So if African-American unemployment is now at the lowest number in history, median income the highest, and you then add all of the other things I have done, how do Democrats, who have done NOTHING for African-Americans but TALK, win the Black Vote? And it will only get better!” — tweet Sunday.

THE FACTS: Trump is taking credit he doesn’t deserve for job growth. He’s also wrong to say Democrats have done “NOTHING” to improve the economic situation for African-Americans.

Black unemployment did reach a record low, 5.9 percent, in May. But that figure is volatile on a monthly basis. That rate has since edged up to 6.3 percent in August. Meanwhile, the median income last year for an African-American household was $40,258, according to the Census Bureau. That’s below a 2000 peak of $42,348.

Many economists view the continued economic growth since the middle of 2009, when Democratic President Barack Obama was in office, as the primary explanation for recent hiring. More important, there are multiple signs that the racial wealth gap is now worsening and the administration appears to have done little, if anything, to specifically address this challenge.

The most dramatic drop in black unemployment came under Obama, when it fell from a recession high of 16.8 percent in March 2010 to 7.8 percent in January 2017.

INTEREST RATES

TRUMP: “Unfortunately, they just raised interest rates a little bit, because we are doing so well. … I am not happy about it. I’d rather pay down debt or do other things, create more jobs. So I’m worried about the fact that they seem to like raising interest rates. We can do other things with the money.” — news conference Wednesday.

TRUMP: “(Obama) was playing with zero-interest money. He was playing with funny money, that’s easy. I’m playing with fairly expensive money — so when he does that the people that benefit are people that actually, in their whole life they would save 10, 15, 20 percent of their salary — those people got killed. Because they put their money in the bank they’re going to live off the interest, and there was no interest.” — news conference Wednesday.

THE FACTS: This is an odd and contradictory assessment of the Fed and interest rates.

He decried the Fed’s rate increase, yet several minutes later criticized the near-zero rates from 2008 to 2015 as hurting people with savings accounts.

What does seem clear is that Trump misrepresented the Fed’s basic mission of keeping prices stable.

With the unemployment rate at a low 3.9 percent, Fed officials voted unanimously on Wednesday to increase a key short term rate for the third time this year. They did so to limit the risk that inflation could accelerate to levels that would destabilize the economy and cause a downturn. The president didn’t directly acknowledge this risk.

Trump said he’d rather the Fed spur job growth or pay down the debt, though these options were not fundamental choices before the U.S. central bank.

Fed officials don’t see a rate increase as imperiling job growth. Despite previous increases, “job gains have been strong, on average,” they said in a statement. Trump has repeated similar claims at his rallies about solid job growth.

Trump also suggested that the Fed could somehow reduce the national debt. It’s not clear how it would’ve done so Wednesday. Budget deficits come from the fiscal policy set by Congress and the president. A president who wants to reduce debt could cut spending or raise taxes. Trump has done neither and the Congressional Budget Office expects government debt loads to climb.

The Fed can buy Treasury notes, which it did after the 2008 financial crisis, to reduce borrowing costs for the government, companies and consumers, and to spur growth. The risk is that higher inflation could occur given the relative health of the economy. In fact, congressional Republicans said in a 2010 letter that Fed policies would sink the economy through surging inflation. That didn’t happen, in part because the unemployment rate was then 9.8 percent and the economy still showed signs of needing a boost.

Did the low rates hurt savers? Probably some. But that case is probably overstated.

In 2017 congressional testimony, Harvard University economist Karen Dynan, a former Treasury Department official, said savings accounts, checking accounts and similar holdings are just 5 percent of overall household assets. More people’s net worth depends on homeownership and the stock market, both of which benefited from the lower Fed rates.

SEXUAL MISCONDUCT ALLEGATIONS

KAVANAUGH: “Dr. Ford’s allegations are not merely uncorroborated, it’s refuted by the very people she says were there.” — Senate testimony Thursday.

REPUBLICAN SEN. CHUCK GRASSLEY, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, contending the sum of statements by three witnesses “refutes Dr. Ford’s version of the facts.” — Friday.

REPUBLICAN SEN. TED CRUZ of Texas: “All three of those fact witnesses have stated on the record under penalty of perjury that they do not recall what she is alleging happening. They have not only not, not corroborated her charges, they have explicitly refuted her charges.” — hearing Thursday.

THE FACTS: The witness statements in question do not refute Ford’s allegations that Kavanaugh assaulted her at a party when they were in their teenagers. They leave open the possibility that people at the gathering forgot about it or were not in position to witness an assault.

Even Mark Judge, who Ford says was in the bedroom when Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her, has not denied that such an episode took place. His statement to the committee says “I have no memory of this alleged incident,” ″do not recall the party” and “never saw Brett act in the manner Dr. Ford describes.”

In another statement, Patrick J. Smyth, identified by Ford as being among those downstairs at the party, says “I have no knowledge of the party in question; nor do I have any knowledge of the allegations of improper conduct she has leveled against Brett Kavanaugh.’”

The lawyer for Ford’s friend Leland Ingham Keyser said in a statement: “Ms. Keyser does not know Mr. Kavanaugh and she has no recollection of ever being at a party or gathering where he was present, with, without, Dr. Ford.”

Those statements, by people who were not summoned to answer questions, are not helpful to Ford’s case. But they don’t disprove it.

Despite saying she hadn’t met Kavanaugh and doesn’t remember the party, Keyser told The Washington Post she believes Ford.

TRUMP: “I was accused by four or five women who got paid a lot of money to make up stories about me…There were four women, and maybe more.” — news conference Wednesday.

THE FACTS: Actually, more than a dozen women came forward during the 2016 presidential campaign, claiming they were assaulted, groped or kissed without consent by Trump. There is no evidence most were paid.

He was also caught on tape in 2005 boasting of grabbing women by their genitals and kissing them without permission.

TRADE DEALS

TRUMP, on signing a trade agreement with South Korea: “These outcomes give the finest American-made automobiles, innovative medicines, and agricultural crops much better access to Korean markets. I think our farmers are going to be extremely happy. It was very limited as to what they could do and what they could send. And now it’s (an) open market, and they’re going to be sending a lot more farm products.” — remarks Sept. 24.

THE FACTS: He’s wrong in regards to the effect on U.S. farmers. The revamped free trade agreement that Trump signed Monday did nothing to further open the South Korean agricultural market, focusing instead on auto manufacturing, pharmaceuticals and other industries. “Agriculture was excluded from the talks at South Korea’s insistence,” said Troy Stangarone, senior director of congressional affairs and trade at the Korea Economic Institute of America.

The National Pork Producers Council, in fact, expressed relief that the new deal would have “little impact on agriculture.” The council noted that the original 2012 U.S.-South Korea trade agreement — the one Trump insisted on rewriting — had eliminated most South Korean tariffs on pork.

TRUMP: “We have also secured increased access to America’s auto industry. South Korea will double the annual number of American cars sold within. In other words, we used to sell a maximum of 25 (he meant 25,000), and we wouldn’t even get to that number, and now we’re going to 50,000. We’re doubling it, per manufacturer… So that’s a doubling of the cars per manufacturer that can enter its market, meeting U.S. safety standards.” — remarks Sept. 24.

THE FACTS: He’s glossing over the limited impact. Analysts aren’t expecting any surge in U.S. auto exports to South Korea. The new agreement does double to 50,000 the number of cars each U.S. automaker can export annually to South Korea under U.S. safety standards that are less stringent than South Korea’s. But, as Trump said, the car makers weren’t using up the 25,000 annual quotas anyway; altogether, the United States last year exported fewer than 53,000 cars and light trucks to South Korea.

JUDGES

TRUMP: “I have 145 judges I will be picking by the end of a fairly short period of time, because President Obama wasn’t big on picking judges. When I got there I said, how is this possible? I have 145, including Court of Appeals judges. And they just didn’t do it, you know why? They got tired, they got complacent — something happened.” — news conference Wednesday.

THE FACTS: Trump does have a stronger record than Obama so far in picking federal judges, but it isn’t because the Obama administration got “tired” and “complacent.” Instead, lack of action by the Republican-controlled Senate on Obama’s judicial nominees in his last two years in office left Trump more vacancies to fill.

Of the 71 people whom Obama nominated to the district courts and courts of appeals in 2015 and 2016, only 20 were voted on and confirmed, said Russell Wheeler, an expert on judicial nominees at the Brookings Institution. Trump entered office in January 2017 with more than 100 vacancies on the federal bench, about double the number Obama had in 2009.

2016 ELECTION

TRUMP: “You know, I got 52 percent with women. Everyone said, ‘This couldn’t happen — 52 percent.’” — news conference Wednesday.

THE FACTS: No, Trump did not win the women’s vote in the 2016 presidential election. About 54 percent nationally voted for Democrat Hillary Clinton, according to exit polls, compared with Trump’s 41 percent. He won 52 percent of white women, according to those polls.

Comedy rules box office with Kevin Hart’s ‘Night School’

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Pure comedy won the top spot at the box office with Kevin Hart and Tiffany Haddish’s “Night School” for the first time in two years. It was able to beat out Warner Bros. animated musical “Smallfoot” which was loaded with star voices like Common, Channing Tatum, and Zendaya.

“Night School” debuted with $28 million in ticket sales, according to estimates Sunday. The film was starred Tiffany Haddish as a teacher and Kevin Hart as one of her adult students.

The race for the weekend top spot was, in the end, a laugher. Warner Bros.′ animated release “Smallfoot,” which cost about $80 million to make, trailed in second with $23 million.

Not since Melissa McCarthy’s “The Boss” topped the box office in April 2016 has a comedy that didn’t mix other genre elements been No. 1. The romantic comedy “Crazy Rich Asians” was a huge success, leading the box office for four straight weeks, and Tyler Perry’s two horror-comedies — “Boo! A Madea Halloween” and its sequel — both opened at the top.

But big-screen comedy has been in a tailspin for years. It took two of comedy’s biggest names teaming up to push Universal’s “Night School” to the year’s best comedy opening.

“We’ve been very consistent in this genre,” said Jim Orr, distribution chief for Universal. “When you get in business with people like Kevin Hart and Tiffany Haddish who are just on fire, and then really extraordinary filmmakers like (producer) Will Packer, that’s how you get good results.”

“Night School” is the latest film from the director Malcolm D. Lee, whose 2017 comedy “Girls Trip” (also featuring Ms. Haddish) made history as the first film with an all-black creative team on both sides of the camera to earn $100 million at the box office. (That film took in about $31 million domestically during its opening weekend.) The cast for Mr. Lee’s new film also includes Romany Malco, Fat Joe, Rob Riggle, Mary Lynn Rajskub, Megalyn Echikunwoke, and Taran Killam.

More than most studios, Universal has stuck by comedy. This year, it also released the prom-night farce “Blockers” ($60.1 million worldwide on a $21 million budget) and the comic musical “Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again” ($390.1 million worldwide on a $75 million budget).

It’s the second straight No. 1 for Universal, which last week led ticket sales with the Amblin Entertainment-produced fantasy “The House With a Clock in Its Walls.” It earned $12.5 million in its second weekend.

“We have a very diverse approach to our slate,” Orr said. “We’re not just superhero movies or anything else like that. When you see these kinds of results, you know that that’s the right thing to do, that it pays off.”

Frights not laughs have become the hotter attraction at the movies, but for one weekend at least, horror and comedy switched roles. Lionsgate’s Halloween-themed “Hell Fest” debuted meekly with $5.1 million.

“Over the last few years, comedy has just taken a real roller coaster ride with audiences either not locking into the premise or not vibing with the stars,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst or comScore. “The quality, or at least the perceived quality of many of the movies, especially the R-rated comedies, has been so bad that time after time people got disenchanted by the genre.”

“Night School,” in which Hart plays a man who returns to his high school to get his GED certificate (Haddish plays his teacher), fared poorly with critics, earning a 30 percent “fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes. But the draw of Hart and Haddish was enough to supersede bad reviews. This is Hart’s 11th No. 1 film.

It also helped that “Night School” reteamed Haddish with director Malcolm D. Lee. Their “Girls’ Trip” was 2017′s biggest comedy hit, making $140.4 million globally. “Night School” drew a diverse audience: 37 percent white, 30 percent African-American and 24 percent Hispanic.

David Lowery’s “The Old Man & the Gun,” which Robert Redford has said will be his final film as an actor (though he’s wavered on that), opened in five theaters, scoring a strong per-screen average of $30,000. Redford plays an aged bank robber in the heist film co-starring Sissy Spacek and Casey Affleck.

And “Free Solo,” National Geographic’s documentary about rock climber Alex Honnold’s ropeless ascent of Yosemite’s El Capitan, grossed $300,804 in four theaters. The per-screen average of $75,201, the company said, is the best screen-average opening ever for a documentary.

National Geographic debuted E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin’s film not just in the usual limited-release cities of New York and Los Angeles, but in climbing capitals Denver and Boulder, Colorado.

The “Night School”-led weekend — up 15.5 percent compared with last year — helped Hollywood score the second-best September at the box office. It follows September 2017, when “It” set records. Warner Bros.′ horror spinoff “The Nun” ($330 million worldwide) was this month’s top film.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to comScore. Where available, the latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday also are included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

  1. “Night School,” $28 million ($5.5 million international).
  2. “Smallfoot,” $23 million ($14 million international).
  3. “The House With a Clock in Its Walls,” $12.5 million ($9.4 million international).
  4. “A Simple Favor,” $6.6 million ($7.1 million international).
  5. “The Nun,” $5.4 million ($16.2 million international).
  6. “Hell Fest,” $5.1 million.
  7. “Crazy Rich Asians,” $4.2 million ($3.2 million international).
  8. “The Predator,” $3.7 million ($7 million international).
  9. “White Boy Rick,” $2.4 million.
  10. “Peppermint,” $1.8 million ($1.3 million international).

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada), according to comScore:

  1. “The Nun,” $16.2 million.
  2. “Johnny English Strikes Again,” $14.2 million.
  3. “Smallfoot,” $14 million.
  4. “Incredibles 2,” $11.9 million.
  5. “The House With a Clock in Its Walls,” $9.4 million.
  6. “Cry Me a Sad River,” $7.9 million
  7. “The Great Battle,” $7.3 million.
  8. “A Simple Favor,” $7.1 million.
  9. “Golden Job,” $7.1 million.
  10. “The Predator,” $7 million.

Digital map apps not always dependable

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Many of us don’t even remember how to get places without that handy GPS in either their car or smartphone. We’ve gotten so used to them; we don’t even consider that they could sometime be wrong. With hacking and security breaches so common, digital maps have fallen victim to pranks.

For centuries, people have relied on maps to figure out where they are and where they’re going. But today’s digital maps — seemingly more precise than ever —aren’t always as dependable as they appear.

At the end of August, for instance, Snapchat users woke up early to find the app’s internal map had renamed New York City with the anti-Semitic label “Jewtropolis.” In Washington, D.C., Google Maps incorrectly renamed a Senate office building after the late Sen. John McCain a few days after his death on Aug. 25. Researchers have found numerous fake business listings in Google Maps for plumbers and hotels — apparent attempts to game search results and juice referral traffic.

Digital maps are a modern uber-convenience, capable of pinpointing nearby landmarks, shops, and restaurants, highlighting traffic jams and navigating you to destinations across the country. Google, Apple and a variety of lesser-known companies constantly update these real-world representations using a variety of sophisticated tools, from satellites in orbit to the phone in your hand.

But there’s another important input: crowdsourced data submitted by ordinary people, which can make today’s maps more like Wikipedia than Rand McNally. When the navigation app Waze flags a highway accident, for instance, it’s because drivers further down the road have reported it. Other unpaid volunteers submit information on new business locations, landmarks and even new roads.

All that is a bet that the wisdom of the crowd eventually ends up getting it right. But “eventually” can take a while, and in the meantime, pesky humans can still muck things up but good.

Take, for instance, the morning of Aug. 30, when users of Snapchat found New York City hatefully rebranded in the app’s map. In addition to the “Jewtropolis” label, prominent city landmarks bore ugly new names such as “Pedophile Bridge,” ″Zionist Cannibal Drive,” and “Adolph Hitler Memorial Tunnel.”

Snapchat and other apps such as The Weather Channel and Runkeeper rely on a company called Mapbox for their maps. Mapbox CEO Eric Gundersen said the company uses more than 130 sources of data. One of them is an open-source project similar to Wikipedia called OpenStreetMap.

There, a user made more than 80 anti-Semitic label changes in a “tirade” across New York and other places in early August; records of those changes show the anonymous user also abusively renamed London streets and dubbed Russia “Commieland.” The changes were reverted in OpenStreetMap less than two hours later by another contributor, other records show.

At Mapbox, however, the anti-Semitic changes remained in a pipeline of map edits where they languished for 20 days until human reviewers cleared a backlog. While Gunderson said that a Mapbox artificial-intelligence tool flagged the problem when it showed up and quarantined the abusive changes, a reviewer then mistakenly pushed through one of the edits anyway, overwriting correct data.

digital maps not so dependable 2018 images
Greg Psitos showing how Google Maps can be fooled.

The OpenStreetMap Foundation, a not-for-profit group based in Cambridge, England, said in a blog post that the changes were reversed so quickly that no one noticed them until Mapbox served up the vandalized OpenStreetMap data to thousands of apps and websites.

“The vast majority of editors want to come together to build something great, and these massively outnumber the few bad apples,” the foundation said.

The king of digital cartography, Google Maps, doesn’t rely on far-flung contributors to the same extent as OpenStreetMaps. But it can still suffer fraudulent edits.

Much of Google Maps’ data gathering, such as satellite images or traffic information, is automated. But at the local level, some listings rely on labels suggested by users themselves. Those are vulnerable to attack, and Google has been fighting the problem for many years.

On Aug. 29, someone suggested the Russell Senate Office Building be renamed the “McCain Senate Office Building” on Google Maps, short-circuiting a change senators had been contemplating at the time. The change got past Google’s automated and human screens, although it was reverted after it drew press attention. (Renaming talk has since died down in the real world as well.)

Google said in a statement to media outlets that over the years it has reduced fraud “to a very low incidence” and that “we’re always working on new and better ways to fight this type of behavior.”

Sam Hind, a researcher at the University of Siegen in Germany who studies navigation technology, said mapping developers have come to realize that their users collectively have better up-to-date local knowledge than their own teams can collect.

“Of course, this comes with a catch — that you can rely on the veracity of the knowledge, and that you can somehow verify this,” he said.

That’s an issue for business listings on Google Maps. The company makes it easy to add new business listings to its map, in part to entice small business owners into advertising with Google to attract nearby customers.

That opens the door to abuse. Just ask Greg Psitos, a 33-year-old florist in Queens, New York. In February, someone hijacked his Google Maps listing and changed his hours to “closed” on Valentine’s Day — what should have been one of his busiest days of the year.

“Someone had controlled that listing for four years, and I didn’t know any better,” Psitos said, adding that it took months to reclaim it.

Since then, he’s been on a crusade to draw attention to the problem. In one stunt, he fooled Google Maps into believing his flower shop is home to both news network CNN and Trump Palace. Both of these listings were still present and searchable on Google Maps when this article was published.

“I’m a florist,” Psitos said. “Now I’m a Google Maps savant.”

In a Google study of the problem, Princeton postdoc researcher Danny Yuxing Huang used data on hundreds of thousands of business listings Google identified as fraudulent. A large number were for on-call contractors such as locksmiths and plumbers, who created listings in different neighborhoods to drum up business. In one technique, fraudsters would set up multiple listings from a single address, then move their map pins to new locations.

Detecting such problems is a challenge, Huang said, since it makes sense to let legitimate owners correct data issues from faulty mapping. “I personally think it’s quite difficult to balance this,” he said.