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Florida Cop Fired for Singing "Let the Killing Begin" With Death Metal Band

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This week, Sanford, Florida police officer Andrew Ricks was fired from the department for hopping onstage in uniform and singing along with the death metal band Vital Remains as they performed their song “Let the Killing Begin.” Hey, at least it wasn’t Vital Remains’ other big hit, “Born to Rape the World.”

“An incident of this nature erodes the thin fibers of trust which already exist between the community and the police, and it will not be tolerated within the Sanford Police Department,” police chief Cecil Smith said of his decision. Other officers who may have eroded the thin fibers of trust in Sanford: Ned Golden, who sent “racially inappropriate” messages from his department computer in 2010 and was not fired, but suspended for two weeks, before going on to falsely accuse a man of attempted murder; or the cops who failed to arrest George Zimmerman for killing Trayvon Martin.

Ricks probably shouldn’t have gone onstage in uniform—especially if he had his gun on his hip—but officers in Sanford and elsewhere have done a lot worse than that for less punishment. In most circumstances I’d advise him to wait for a tune that doesn’t involve violence and death, but a brief search through Vital Remains’ catalog shows they didn’t leave him with many friendly options.


Contact the author at andy@gawker.com.


Journalists: Send Us the Most Useless Opposition Research You Have

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Journalists: Send Us the Most Useless Opposition Research You Have

In the course of a political campaign, reporters will often be leaked what is called opposition research—dirt, or potential dirt, compiled by campaign staffs (or affiliated nonprofits) to use against their opponents. Oppo research can be useful to journalists. Maybe a campaign has uncovered the existence of a rumor too salacious for the candidate herself to touch, leaving its secret dissemination to a reporter as their only recourse.

Well, we don’t want that stuff. (Okay, we do, but not for this. Please email tips@gawker.com with your good oppo research.) What we want is the other stuff. The frequently useless, absurd, and pathetic oppo research that campaigns desperately leak in their lowest moments. You know, something like “Jeb Bush dropped some gravy on the floor of a VFW in Iowa and DIDN’T clean it up.”

If you are a campaign reporter who has been fed oppo research so dumb that all you can do is laugh about it over drinks at a musty New Hampshire Marriott, we want to publish it. Nothing is too stupid!

You can email me at jordan@gawker.com. We will keep you anonymous.

[image of The Insider via YouTube]


Contact the author at jordan@gawker.com.

Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

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Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

Here are the best of today’s deals. Get every great deal every day on Kinja Deals, follow us on Facebook and Twitter to never miss a deal, join us on Kinja Gear to read about great products, and on Kinja Co-Op to help us find the best.


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Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

Anker makes some of the best and most popular charging gear in the world, and a huge assortment of it is on sale today on Amazon. These battery packs, USB chargers, and kevlar-wrapped Lightning cables would all make great gifts for the holidays, so stock up while they’re cheap.

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Anker PowerCore+ 13400 Premium Aluminum Portable Charger (Black) ($28) | Amazon | Promo code QSONC9X7

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Anker PowerCore+ 13400 Premium Aluminum Portable Charger (Silver) ($28) | Amazon | Promo code 4PUHJLQY

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Anker PowerCore 10400 Portable Charger (White) ($16) | Amazon | Promo code 9CF24K3Z

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Anker PowerCore 15600 Portable Charger (White) ($23) | Amazon | Promo code QXLGHFGY

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Anker PowerCore mini Ultra-Compact Portable Phone Charger ($6) | Amazon | Promo code JK6DHEID

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Anker PowerPort 6 (60W 6-Port USB Charging Hub) + Anker [6-Pack] PowerLine Micro USB ($30) | Amazon | Add both to cart and use code SBTQY3UM

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Anker PowerLine Kevlar Lightning Cable ($7) | Amazon | Promo code NYGHCGQZ

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Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

Pet owners looking to get a gift for their furry roommates should check out today’s Amazon Gold Box, which is packed with gear to make pet ownership just a little bit easier.

The highlights here include several automatic water dispensers, a timer-based meal dispensary, and a couple of food-centric cat toys. I’m not saying you could leave your pets alone for a long weekend with only these products, but if you’re going to be getting home later than usual, it’d be nice to know that they won’t go hungry or thirsty. [Pet Gear Gold Box]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

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Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

If you were planning on buying a soundbar during Black Friday, Amazon went ahead and preemptively price-matched Best Buy’s planned deal on this Samsung model with wireless subwoofer. No need to wait! [Samsung HW-J450 2.1 Channel 300 Watt Wireless Audio Soundbar, $148]

http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-HW-J45...


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

Your newly-mented favorite portable hard drive is down to just $50 for a terabyte today. [WD My Passport Ultra 1TB, $50]

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http://www.ebay.com/itm/WD-My-Pass...

Need more space? Here’s a 2TB option for $70. [Toshiba Canvio Connect 2TB Portable Hard Drive, $70]

http://www.ebay.com/itm/3219064213...


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

Logitech’s UE Mini Boom Bluetooth speaker earned a Wirecutter recommendation as the best portable Bluetooth speaker, and you can score a refurb from Woot today for $40 shipped. [Refurb Logitech UE Mini Boom Bluetooth Speaker, $40]

http://electronics.woot.com/offers/logitec...


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

I’m not sure what the market is for tablets that aren’t iPads or $50 Amazon screens these days, but Amazon has preemptively price-matched a pair of advertised Black Friday deals on Samsung Galaxy Tabs.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 (7-Inch, Black) ($120) | Amazon | Black Friday price match

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00J8DL6UI/...

Samsung Galaxy Tab A 9.7-Inch Tablet (16 GB, SMOKY Titanium) ($230) | Amazon | Black Friday price match

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00V49LQZ4/...


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

If you travel with any regularity, this versatile little gadget may just be your new best friend. They call it the RAVPower Wireless Hard Drive Companion, but that name doesn’t do it justice, because it’s really three gadgets in one:

  • Wireless Bridge: Turn an authenticated hotel Wi-Fi network into a standard network that multiple devices (including Chromecasts and other streaming boxes) can connect to.
  • 3,000mAh USB Battery Pack: Keep your phone charged during a long day away from any power outlets.
  • File Hub: Transfer files and wirelessly stream content from an SD card, hard drive, or flash drive to all of your devices. That allows you to transfer photos from your camera to your phone with ease, or even host movie files that wouldn’t fit on your tablet’s built-in storage for a long plane ride.

Today on Amazon, you can knock $10 off the price of the device with promo code OC7KWLK7. We aren’t sure how many they have in stock, or how long the promo code will last, so I’d act fast if you’re interested. [RAVPower Wireless Hard Drive Companion, $30 with code OC7KWLK7]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00AQUMZRA/...


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

We’ve all had to throw away leftovers or cuts of meat and cheese that spent a little too much time in the fridge or freezer, but vacuum sealing your foods can keep them safe from freezer burn pretty much indefinitely, and dramatically extend their shelf life everywhere else.

It sounds like an expensive proposition, but today only, Amazon’s selling the well-reviewed FoodSaver Starter Kit for just $57, complete with everything you need to get started. Of course you can use this to store meats in the freezer for a long time, but it can also keep cheese from molding, lettuce from wilting, or cookies from going stale, just to name a few examples. Think about how much food you throw away, and you’ll get a sense of just how quickly this purchase could pay for itself. [FoodSaver V2244 Vacuum Sealing System, $57]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0044XDA3S/...


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

The Philips Norelco Multigroom 5100 is actually seven different grooming tools rolled up into one device, and you can own one for an all-time low $25 today on Amazon. [Philips Norelco Multigroom 5100 Grooming Kit, $25 after $5 Off Coupon]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...


This thing is silly and unnecessary, but for $17, I want it. It’d also make a nice little gift for people who enjoy desk toys. [Hoverkraft Levitating Construction Challenge, $17]

http://www.thinkgeek.com/product/1531/?...


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

Guitar Hero Live isn’t even a month old, but you can already save $30 on your copy, complete with a guitar controller. [Guitar Hero Live, $70]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00VEPK97Y/...

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Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

If you somehow still haven’t played GTA V, Amazon’s marked it down to $34 on PS4 and Xbox One today, an all-time low. [Grand Theft Auto V, $34]

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Still hanging on to a last-gen console? You can get a copy for $24.


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

The UE Boom Bluetooth speaker is the best you can buy, according to Gizmodo, and Amazon and Best Buy have marked it down to $100 today, the best price we’ve ever seen by a solid margin. [UE Boom, $100. Multiple colors available]

http://www.amazon.com/UE-BOOM-Wirele...

http://gizmodo.com/the-best-bluet...


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

It’s 2015, and your headphones shouldn’t need wires anymore. Luckily, Amazon’s taking half off the usual price of these 4.5 star-rated Sony on-ears, the best price we’ve ever seen. [Sony MDRXB950BT/B Extra Bass Bluetooth Headset, $98]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00MCHE38O/...


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

Dorco makes some of the best razors on the market, including the ones you get every month in your Dollar Shave Club box. If you don’t mind buying in bulk though, you can save even more in their early Black Friday sale. Plus, if you spend $10, your order ships for free. [Dorco Early Black Friday Sale]

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Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

Raise your hand if you knew that Amazon sold their own custom-branded resistance bands. No? 10 standing biceps curls for you. These are cheaper than ever as part of Amazon’s early Black Friday promotion, and a staple for any home gym. [AmazonBasics Resistance Band Set, $17]

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Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

This isn’t the first time Amazon’s had a sale like this, but if your car’s wiper blades are a little worn down, you can replace them both for just $22 today.

All you have to do is add any two Valeo frameless wiper blades (shipped and sold by Amazon) to your cart, and their total price will automatically drop to $22 at checkout. If you can’t remember what sizes your car requires, Amazon has a built-in tool at the top of the page to filter the options. [Buy Any Two Valeo Wiper Blades For $22]


Today's Best Deals: Anker Chargers, Pet Supplies, Fresher Food, and More

If you need to refresh your Star Wars knowledge before you see The Force Awakens, both trilogies are on sale for $35 today on Blu-ray. Just let it in.

Star Wars Trilogy Episodes IV-VI ($35) | Amazon

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Star Wars Trilogy Episodes I-III ($35) | Amazon

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Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker

Now available for rent in Manhattan: a 360-square-foot “micro-apartment” for $2,750 a month.

Nun Abuse: How My Mother, a Former Nun, Suffered at the Hands of 'The Good Sisters'

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Nun Abuse: How My Mother, a Former Nun, Suffered at the Hands of 'The Good Sisters'

Catholic priests have become synonymous with “abuse” in recent years, but they’ve never been the only people of the cloth guilty of inflicting physical and emotional pain on innocent victims. Seldom talked about are the rarely maligned women of the Church: sisters who intentionally abused fellow nuns behind convent walls. Nun abuse is that other dirty little secret of the Catholic Church—and it’s a secret that affected, and crushed, the spirits of scores of young women. My mother was one of them.

My mother entered the convent in the fall of 1957 at the age of 21, determined to save the world through her faith. She left nearly a decade later, beaten down physically and mentally, emaciated and fragile. On the early morning in which she finally exited, her head was bald in patches, owing to the hatchet-job-style haircuts the convent had subjected her to for years. She had no civilian clothes to wear—having given all of her worldly possessions up upon entering the convent—and so was forced by a pair of presiding nuns to wear ill-fitting clothing that she said smelled and a pair of mismatched shoes. She shook uncontrollably. Worst of all were her eyes. Her large brown eyes, wide and excited when she’d entered the convent, went listless and flat. In the words of my uncle, my mother’s youngest brother, who was horrified at the sight of her the morning she returned to their childhood home, “She looked like a mangy dog. A beat-up, mangy dog.”

“It was those nuns,” my uncle said, growing angry. “They were supposed to protect her, but they did just the opposite.”


Nun abuse remains little talked about in the church. There are a few studies that have been conducted, including one in 1996 that reported that as many as 40 percent of Catholic nuns in the United States (or around 34,000 sisters at that time) claimed to have been sexually abused in some capacity and that “all nuns who claimed repeated sexual exploitation reported that they were pressured by religious superiors for sexual favors.”

Nun Abuse: How My Mother, a Former Nun, Suffered at the Hands of 'The Good Sisters'

But most cases of the variety of nun abuse my mother was subjected to—emotional pain and physical tolls intentionally inflected upon nuns by nuns in positions of power—have gone unreported. In cases like my mother’s, the tales of abuse were passed along in hushed whispers, first in psychiatrists’ offices, then, later, to family members. In many instances, sisters suffered in silence, resigned to their fate, afraid to come forward. Nuns take vows of obedience. Historically, there were few, if any, means of reporting wrongdoing without breaking strict and rather ancient rules of church hierarchy. Consequently, there’s been little to no accountability. Young sisters, in particular, have been particularly vulnerable, as they’ve always been the lowest on the totem pole and expected to be the most obedient.

In my mother’s case, the stories of abuse came out in bits and pieces over the decades, mostly in the wake of two nervous breakdowns. Her hesitation to come forward was twofold. First, she, like so many victims of abuse—within or without the Church—felt as if it was her fault and that no one would believe her. Who, she wondered, would believe that “good sisters” could be so mean? Second, she worried that speaking up meant going against the Church she continued to love and believe in, even after she left the convent.

My mother had gone to live at a convent in Indiana just three months after graduating from college. She’d graduated with honors, and with an impressive resume. As a teenager, she’d met privately with President Harry S. Truman in the White House’s Rose Garden after being recognized for her work in student government. But it was a life of prayer—not politics—that most appealed to her. And so she sought out the “good sisters” of her convent. Her goal was to use her degree to educate and feed the poor.

When men become priests, they get to keep their names, cars, even bank accounts. Not nuns. When my mother entered the convent, she gave up virtually everything. And by everything, I mean everything. When my mother became a sister, she surrendered all of her belongings as part of her vow of poverty. That meant that her poodle skirts and saddle shoes, even the stories and plays she’d written in high school, were destroyed. She also lost her name. She entered the convent as Anne Virginia Diener and was promptly renamed Sister Aurelia Mary. She had no say in its selection; it was decided upon by presiding nuns.

Visits home for a young nun were forbidden. Visits from family members were closely supervised. Incoming mail was censored, often seized. Letters from my her old college boyfriend? None of them ever reached my mother. They were intercepted by the presiding Mother Superior, as were packages from doting grandparents deemed “too excessive.”

My mother was at peace with her new name and surrendering her privacy. But soon came more invasive controls. There was the hair. Even though my mother’s brown curls could easily have been covered by the enormous habit she wore (her veil was like something out of The Flying Nun and could have covered any hair length), she was forced to have it cut off by the presiding sisters. The goal of the closely-shorn head, explained my mother’s younger sister, who also became a nun in the 1950s, was “to make everyone forget that we were women.”

Then there was the food, or lack thereof. Sisters were expected to fast for hours, sometime entire days, in a bid to show their faith. Those with low blood sugar, like my mother, passed out during peak fasting times. They were considered “unfaithful.” Instead of being given food to prevent additional fainting spells, they were told to pray harder. My mother did so, but passed out again. Her punishment? Longer periods of enforced fasting.

Even worse than food deprivation, my mother would later recount, was the lack of medical care. Sisters who complained of medical maladies were told to “pray it off.”

“Sisters who said they were sick were treated like they were making things up to get attention,” my mother’s friend Marian, who was also a sister at her convent in the 1950s, told me.

Even when my mother doubled over in physical agony, owing to abdominal cramps, and was scarcely capable of moving, she was ordered to get out of bed. Her pleas for medical care fell on deaf ears. It was a priest affiliated with the religious academy in which she taught who ultimately insisted upon getting her treatment, ordering a pair of nuns to take her to the doctor. The doctor on duty was appalled at her appearance, calling her a “bag of bones” before sending her on to the hospital, where doctors performed emergency surgery on her tipped uterus. She was additionally diagnosed with myasthenia gravis, an autoimmune neuromuscular disorder, which explained her extreme fatigue.

My mother was fortunate on a pair of levels. First, someone had intervened on her behalf—someone who held the most power in her convent community: a man of the cloth. His actions enabled my mother to circumvent the system. Sisters were property of the Catholic Church, and it was the presiding group of nuns who determined when, and if, any sister ventured out to receive anything, even medical care, from the outside world. “No sister was allowed to seek medical care on her own,” Marian told me. “Always she had to have at least one escort to any doctor’s appointment. If an appointment was allowed.”

Nun Abuse: How My Mother, a Former Nun, Suffered at the Hands of 'The Good Sisters'

Second, my mother’s treatment came in time. Other sisters in her convent weren’t so lucky, like one of her fellow nuns who complained repeatedly of a bad headache. “She complained for weeks, months,” Marian remembered. “By the time she finally got them to take her to the hospital, it was too late. They took a biopsy from the roof of her mouth and discovered cancer. It was everywhere. A big portion of her brain and a large section of her face had to be removed. It was horrible.”

My mother’s growing friendship with the priest who had helped save her—coupled with her popularity in the classroom with her young students—did not go over well with the nuns in command. She was removed from the classroom, with no opportunity to say goodbye to her young students, then demoted and assigned to the tasks of scrubbing floors and sorting convent correspondence. Pleas to re-enter the classroom resulted in more reprimands, more periods of enforced silence. That’s when the tears started, and didn’t stop.

In an effort to silence my mother and what the convent called her “nervous habits,” the punishments grew, my mother would tell me, “more severe.” It’s hard to gauge what exactly she meant, but family members report there were unexplained bruises. And my father has suspected that sexual abuse was a factor, owing to her later behavior in their marriage, but she never explicitly told him about inappropriate sexual contact. What is clear is that a piece of my mother died behind those convent walls.

My mother ultimately left the convent at the encouragement of the priest who had worked to get her medical care. It was the 1960s, and, he told her, with the coming of Vatican II and the growing women’s movement, there were new opportunities for women like my mother to lead a meaningful life and serve the Church as a layperson.

My mother was among the first in her “class” of nuns to muster the courage to leave. But she was hardly the last. Scores more would follow. Today, the once burgeoning population of nuns at her convent—some 800—has dwindled to a few dozen. Nationally, the population has similarly plummeted. In the 1960s, when my mother last wore her habit, there were 180,000 American nuns. Today, the figure has dropped by more than 75 percent, to just over 40,000, with new convents shuttering every year, owing to a depletion of funds, and interest. A 2008 study found only eight percent of Millennials have “ever” considered becoming a nun.

Many Catholics wring their hands over “the nun shortage,” lamenting the end of an era. I remain Catholic and my husband and I are sending our children to Catholic school, and so I understand, to a degree, the feelings of nostalgia. Good nuns and good convents can and do exist. And when they do, both are special things. But I understand something more. In my family, convents are not synonymous with warm, fuzzy places in which all is good and holy. In my family, a convent is known as the place that killed the spirit of my mother and the spirit of countless other young women.


Mary Pflum Peterson is a multi-Emmy-Award-winning producer for ABC News/ Good Morning America. She chronicles her mother’s time in the convent, and the story of three generations of women in a decidedly complicated Catholic family, in her new memoir, White Dresses: A Memoir of Love and Secrets, Mothers and Daughter.

http://www.amazon.com/White-Dresses-...

Illustration by Tara Jacoby. Photos courtesy of the author.

"Does Islam Really Say It’s Okay To Kill People Or Is That Just One Interpretation?"

Newark Airport Earl of Sandwich Patrons Completely Unfazed By Presence of Carly Fiorina [UPDATED]

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Newark Airport Earl of Sandwich Patrons Completely Unfazed By Presence of Carly Fiorina [UPDATED]

“Carly Fiorina Spotted At Newark Airport,” wrote NBC News today, which is funny because “spotted” is actually the exact opposite of what happened.

Presidential candidate Carly Fiorina was spotted in the security line at the Newark airport. She was traveling to Oklahoma City for a private event and then to Iowa to attend the Family Leader Foundation Presidential Family Forum Friday night.

Like everyone else, Fiorina took her shoes off as she went through the security line. No one approached her as she moved through the security check or after at the terminal’s sole sit-down restaurant, Earl of Sandwich, where she ate.

Carly Fiorina eating without disruption at Earl of Sandwich in Newark Liberty is either the most depressing or most heartening image of the presidential campaign thus far, depending on how good that sandwich was.

UPDATE: Orlando Montagu—descendant of both the 4th Earl of Sandwich, who is said to have popularized the sandwich in the 18th century, and the 11th Earl of Sandwich, who merely started the sandwich chain Earl of Sandwich—has emailed me to claim that Carly Fiorina will win the presidency. Let’s hope not!!!

Orlando Montagu
5:19 PM (13 minutes ago)
to me

“...how good the sandwich was?” Like Obelix’s magic potion, she’s now unbeatable!!
Best Orlando
Thanks for coverage!

Hon Orlando Montagu
John, 11th Earl of Sandwich
Founders, Earl of Sandwich

[image via Getty]


Contact the author at jordan@gawker.com.

500 Days of Kristin, Day 300: Any Day Now....

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500 Days of Kristin, Day 300: Any Day Now....

Kristin Cavallari is expecting her third child—a girl to be named after a dog—“any day now....[pink bow emoji][pink hearts emoji].” If you don’t believe that, please see the following photo of Kristin making a heart over her belly with her hands:

There are no updates about Kristin’s forthcoming book at this time.


This has been 500 Days of Kristin.

[Photo via Getty]


Political Correctness Keeps Us From Talking Honestly About the Refugees

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Political Correctness Keeps Us From Talking Honestly About the Refugees

The proposal to create a federal department of Judeo-Christian values is only a symbolic proposal. It’s useful to remember this. The politician who put it forward, John Kasich, is not considered to have any realistic chance of becoming the next president. He is an unrealistic presidential candidate because he is, at the moment, viewed as being too conventional and moderate to make an interesting impression with the public.

The same day this week that Kasich told NBC about his plans, a more realistic or interesting candidate, Ben Carson—No. 2 in recent polling of public preferences in the Republican primary field—published a piece on the Time magazine website to “call on the American people to stop viewing Islamic extremism through the lens of political correctness.” Carson wrote that “the U.S. simply cannot, should not and must not accept any Syrian refugees” and reiterated his previous announcement that “I personally would not support having a Muslim president in the White House if he or she had not renounced Islamic extremism, Sharia law or the tenets and practices of Islam that are in conflict with the Constitution.”

If you’ve bothered to read to the third paragraph here, you are fully capable of drawing a little arrow back up from Carson’s “in conflict with the Constitution” to Kasich’s desire to have the federal government officially promoting Judaism (or at least a prefix’s worth of Judaism) and Christianity around the world. Probably also you can connect that to the expressed point of view of the ISIS terrorists—who gave Kasich and Carson the occasion for expressing their thoughts—that the whole world is a theater of battle between the devout and ruthless forces of jihad and the wicked, Muslim-hating Crusaders of the West.

But what do we do with those connections? What’s the point of making them? Alex Pareene, this month’s editor of Gawker.com, wrote to the staff this week that the site “shouldn’t exist in an echo chamber and it shouldn’t preach to the choir.”

And how. I am bored by my own opinions about Syria and ISIS and especially the Syrian refugees. Of course this country owes the refugees shelter. Of course it is morally and practically self-destructive to argue otherwise, to announce to the world—at the very moment it is most disgusted by ISIS’s brutality and slaughter—that we despise the entire Middle East, down to its helpless children. Of course, 14 years into a military intervention that failed on its own terms, it would be insane to listen to the same people who ruined the region making the same arguments that created the ruin in the first place.

I can get this already from smart people on Twitter, expressed forcefully and well:

Meanwhile, the United States House of Representatives has voted, by a 152-vote margin, to block Syrian refugees. Meanwhile a majority of state governors have announced that they will try to block any effort to settle Syrian refugees in their states. Meanwhile, the Daily Mail is directly reproducing Nazi cartoon imagery of refugees as invading rats.

Meanwhile mainstream centrist publications are writing passages of analysis like this (headline: “On Terror, We’re All Right-Wingers Now”):

The new axis of opinion in the U.S. and Western European countries is plainly going to be harsher, more interventionist and less tolerant of, well, tolerance. Americans were already beginning to lose their post-Iraq war squeamishness about intervening overseas: a November Quinnipiac University poll found that American voters, by a 54-38 percent margin, backed sending U.S. troops to fight the Islamic State in Iraq. It’s safe to assume we’re about to grow more even more interventionist in mood, and Obama, as is his wont, may well follow the public temper, stepping up the minimalist approach he’s taken to countering Islamic State in Iraq and Syria so far.

(If you have bothered to read this far, you are probably someone who knows that the “minimalist approach” President Obama has been following in Syria has involved a busy program of bombing.)

It is widely taken for granted that public discourse is in the grip of a stultifying liberal or leftist consensus. Ben Carson—a man whose worldview betrays very few signs of his having spent time in any liberal echo chamber—made a point of this when he urged Time’s online readership to reject the “lens of political correctness.”

Who is looking through this lens, exactly? If we take “political correctness” here to mean “the opposite of what Ben Carson stands for”—pacifism, or at least skepticism about the effectiveness of the use of military force; the belief that a regional neo-medieval death cult is not synonymous with the global Muslim population; a basic familiarity with what the United States has tried to do in the Middle East for the past generation and what the results have been—what evidence is there that this is a dominant, or even an influential, public point of view?

The real argument seems to be running entirely the other way. Or rather the presumed real argument is. The striking thing about the governors and Congress standing up to block Syrian refugees was that they were staging a preemptive performance, pandering to what they calculated the public opinion would be. Why? Are they facing recall elections next week, in which a public panic could sweep them from office? What would it have cost the politicians to say nothing, or to wait to say something?

At this point, public opinion on ISIS-related matters is essentially insane, anyway:

But it is very wrong to tell the public that it is being insane (or dumb). This is one thing you could find proper-minded liberals saying this week: Just because one side of the refugee question is obviously correct, and the other side is wrong and crazy and evil and unconstitutional, you can’t disparage the wrong side. Here’s Kevin Drum in Mother Jones:

It validates all the worst stereotypes about liberals that we put political correctness ahead of national security. It doesn’t matter if that’s right or wrong. Ordinary people see the refugees as a common sense thing to be concerned about. We shouldn’t respond by essentially calling them idiots. That way lies electoral disaster.

And maybe it does. But being afraid to express your basic positions—out of fear that the public (“right or wrong”) will find them unacceptable—doesn’t sound much like the path to electoral success, either. It sounds more like a surrender to some overarching set of political rules, in which certain ideas are rejected simply for being incorrect.

Image via Getty. Contact the author at scocca@gawker.com.

Chipotle Is Still Serving Burritos Laced With New Secret Ingredient: E. Coli

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Chipotle Is Still Serving Burritos Laced With New Secret Ingredient: E. Coli

The country’s favorite burrito chain is at it yet again — serving their signature carnitas with a side of diarrhea.

Chipotle’s E. coli outbreak has spread to six states, according to federal officials, after it started out earlier this month in just two states. More than 40 people have fallen ill, according to Reuters.

The outbreak began with a few dozen cases in Oregon and Washington, after which the company shuttered several stores. Now, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Chipotle restaurants in California, Ohio, New York and Minnesota are in on the game, though the company has no plans to close them.

What’s more, the outbreak, referred to as E. coli O26 outbreak strain, is pretty much confined to Chipotle’s food. A total of 45 people have gotten sick from the strain — 43 of those people had recently eaten a tasty, non-GMO, sustainably sourced (sometimes), E. coli-laced burrito from Chipotle.

In a statement, Steve Ells, chairman and co-CEO of Chipotle, offered his “sincerest apologies to those who have been affected,”and said the the company is changing food preparation procedures, testing ingredients and conducting deep cleanings at restaurants linked to the outbreak.

Still, the outbreak hasn’t been traced to a particular source. Seattle attorney Bill Marler, who is representing nearly three dozen people affected by the outbreak, told Reuters that he’s on the hunt for “a common supplier with a common food item.”

Meanwhile, Chipotle’s stock is tanking. Shares fell 12.3 percent to $536.19 on Friday, marking an 18-month low for the chain. I guess that’s what happens when you serve potentially life-threatening food to your customers.

[Image via Getty]


Contact the author at melissa.cronin@gawker.com.

Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

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Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

Here are the best of today’s deals. Get every great deal every day on Kinja Deals, follow us on Facebook and Twitter to never miss a deal, join us on Kinja Gear to read about great products, and on Kinja Co-Op to help us find the best.


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

Audio Technica’s venerable ATH-M50x took home the crown in a recent Kinja Co-Op for best headphones, and Amazon will sell you a pair for $120 today in black or white. There was a $115 deal earlier this week from BuyDig, but if you missed out on that, this is still a great price. [Audio-Technica ATH-M50x Professional Studio Monitor Headphones, $120]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://co-op.kinja.com/the-best-headp...


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

Unlike many Qualcomm-certified Quick Charge 2.0 car chargers, both USB ports on this model support the faster standard, meaning your passenger won’t have to settle for a slowly-charging battery. [Aukey Quick Charge 2.0 36W 2 Port USB Car Charger Adapter, $10 with code GRJPPFM6]

http://www.amazon.com/Aukey-Charge-c...


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

There’s no need to wait for next week if you’re in the market for a new TV; several confirmed Black Friday deals are already live.


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

The same goes for home theater sound bars.


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

Are your sneakers getting a little worn down? Pick up a new pair of Adidas, starting at just $33 (or $15 for sandals), today only on Amazon [Up to 50% off Adidas Sneakers]


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

You can turn your entire house into a Pinterest-induced fever dream with these cheap chalkboard label stickers. Put them on spice jars, cabinets, pets...anything, really. Chalk not included. [Attmu 48 Chalkboard Label Stickers, $6 code TYLJMMVL]

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Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

If you’re dreading the thought of shoveling your driveway this winter, treat yourself to an electric snow thrower for just $119, today only. [GreenWorks 2600502 13 Amp 20” Corded Snow Thrower, $119]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00YYPR9F6/...


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

The best commemorative Blu-ray box set ever assembled is cheaper than ever today. Can I get a “yeah bitch?” [Breaking Bad: The Complete Series 2014 Barrel, $100]

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If you don’t care about the goodies, and just want a hit of of that show inside, the standard Blu-ray is also available for $70.

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Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

Anker makes some of the best and most popular charging gear in the world, and a huge assortment of it is on sale today on Amazon. These battery packs, USB chargers, and kevlar-wrapped Lightning cables would all make great gifts for the holidays, so stock up while they’re cheap.

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Anker PowerCore+ 13400 Premium Aluminum Portable Charger (Black) ($28) | Amazon | Promo code QSONC9X7

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Anker PowerCore+ 13400 Premium Aluminum Portable Charger (Silver) ($28) | Amazon | Promo code 4PUHJLQY

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Anker PowerCore 10400 Portable Charger (White) ($16) | Amazon | Promo code 9CF24K3Z

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Anker PowerCore 15600 Portable Charger (White) ($23) | Amazon | Promo code QXLGHFGY

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Anker PowerPort 6 (60W 6-Port USB Charging Hub) + Anker [6-Pack] PowerLine Micro USB ($30) | Amazon | Add both to cart and use code SBTQY3UM

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Anker PowerLine Kevlar Lightning Cable ($7) | Amazon | Promo code NYGHCGQZ

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Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

Most gaming mice look like futuristic EMP grenades or robotic pets, but Razer’s DeathAdder became one of your favorite gaming mice by keeping things clean and simple. Want to try one out, or buy it for the gamer in your life this holiday season? Amazon’s marked it down to $40 today, the best price we’ve ever seen. [Razer DeathAdder, $40]

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http://www.amazon.com/Razer-DeathAdd...


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

Your newly-mented favorite portable hard drive is down to just $50 for a terabyte today. [WD My Passport Ultra 1TB, $50]

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http://www.ebay.com/itm/WD-My-Pass...

Need more space? Here’s a 2TB option for $70. [Toshiba Canvio Connect 2TB Portable Hard Drive, $70]

http://www.ebay.com/itm/3219064213...


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

If you travel with any regularity, this versatile little gadget may just be your new best friend. They call it the RAVPower Wireless Hard Drive Companion, but that name doesn’t do it justice, because it’s really three gadgets in one:

  • Wireless Bridge: Turn an authenticated hotel Wi-Fi network into a standard network that multiple devices (including Chromecasts and other streaming boxes) can connect to.
  • 3,000mAh USB Battery Pack: Keep your phone charged during a long day away from any power outlets.
  • File Hub: Transfer files and wirelessly stream content from an SD card, hard drive, or flash drive to all of your devices. That allows you to transfer photos from your camera to your phone with ease, or even host movie files that wouldn’t fit on your tablet’s built-in storage for a long plane ride.

Today on Amazon, you can knock $10 off the price of the device with promo code OC7KWLK7. We aren’t sure how many they have in stock, or how long the promo code will last, so I’d act fast if you’re interested. [RAVPower Wireless Hard Drive Companion, $30 with code OC7KWLK7]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00AQUMZRA/...


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

The Philips Norelco Multigroom 5100 is actually seven different grooming tools rolled up into one device, and you can own one for an all-time low $25 today on Amazon. [Philips Norelco Multigroom 5100 Grooming Kit, $25 after $5 Off Coupon]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

Guitar Hero Live’s standard bundle dropped to its $70 Black Friday price yesterday, but if you were holding out for a similar deal on the 2-pack bundle, it just dropped $30 as well on PS4 and Xbox One. [Guitar Hero Live 2-Pack, $120]

http://www.amazon.com/Guitar-Hero-Li...

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00ZQB740C


Saturday's Best Deals: Early Black Friday Sales, Your Favorite Headphones, and More

If you somehow still haven’t played GTA V, Amazon’s marked it down to $34 on PS4 and Xbox One today, an all-time low. [Grand Theft Auto V, $34]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

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Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more. We want your feedback.Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker

Manhattan Dentist Arrested on Horrific List of Charges Including Child Pornography, Drugs and Willfully Trying To Spread HIV 

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Manhattan Dentist Arrested on Horrific List of Charges Including Child Pornography, Drugs and Willfully Trying To Spread HIV 

A popular Manhattan dentist and AIDS activist was arrested Friday on a series of bizarre and disturbing charges that run the gamut from child pornography to sexual intercourse with animals to trading dental work for drugs.

Dr. John Wolf, who practices in Chelsea, was arrested at his home in the West Village, according to The New York Times, where agents discovered a cache of methamphetamine and a flash drive with 246 files, mostly containing child pornography.

A criminal complaint released by prosecutors also reports that Wolf, who is living with HIV, allegedly poked holes in condoms in an “intentional attempt” to transmit the virus to his sexual partners.

The case is made even more bizarre by Wolf’s history as an advocate for gay rights and AIDS awareness. A well known figure in Chelsea, Wolf won a lawsuit in the 1980s prominent lawsuit against his landlord, who had demanded that Wolf not treat patients who were living with HIV. Wolf discussed the case on the show “People Are Talking” in 1988:

Here’s another video of Wolf in the 1980s, discussing homophobia and his AIDS advocacy work:

Wolf was arrested after a drug dealer told authorities that he’d swapped amphetamines for dental work. The dealer also said that Wolf had showed him footage “of infants and toddlers being sexually abused by adults.” Acting in tandem with the FBI, the dealer secretly recorded conversations with Wolf, in which the dentist claimed that he regularly attended and took part in parties in Brooklyn in which “participants would engage in sexual intercourse with animals,” that he had drugged a man with ketamine before assaulting him, poked holes in condoms, and referenced abusing children — all testimony that led to Wolf’s Friday arrest.

“Drug investigations have taken us down dark roads before, but nothing darker than the office practices of Dr. Wolf,” James J. Hunt, special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s New York division, said in a statement.

It’s unclear so far what kind of sentencing Wolf will get if convicted — in New York, maximum sentences for possession of child pornography alone range from 10 years to life imprisonment. One thing that’s already clear is that his career is officially over: Wolf’s Yelp page is already filled with a torrent of outraged reviews.

[Image via Google Plus]


Contact the author at melissa.cronin@gawker.com.

Eagle-Punching Menace Arrested In London Suburb

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Eagle-Punching Menace Arrested In London Suburb

The bald eagle is one of the most majestic creatures to grace our Earth, a beautiful bird that humankind has come to interpret as a symbol of freedom and defiance. According to Defenders Of Wildlife, there are some 70,000 bald eagles left in North America, which is the happy ending to a remarkable recovery story that saw them removed from the List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife in 2007.

But not everyone feels so strongly about this regal bird. An English man was arrested yesterday for attempting to punch Kayla, who is the mascot and talisman for Crystal Palace FC, at a September 23 game between Palace and Charlton Athletic. The Croydon Advertiser has the initial report, and these details:

The 34-year-old from Welling was arrested this morning (Friday) on suspicion of violent disorder and attempted criminal damage.

He remains in custody at a south London police station.

Earlier this week six people were arrested following raids across London and Kent as part of an investigation into violent disorder during and after the match.

Kayla has flown around Selhurst Park for palace since 2010. To the man who attempted to punch this beautiful bird I say: eat shit.

Photo via AP

Brussels Under Highest Security Alert As Officials Search for Suspect in Paris Attacks

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Brussels Under Highest Security Alert As Officials Search for Suspect in Paris Attacks

Belgium’s capital was put on high alert Saturday morning, after the country’s government warned of an attack on Brussels in the wake of those in Paris last week.

According to the Associated Press, the government issued the highest-possible level of alert, closing subways and stores while authorities search for at least one suspect from the deadly Paris attacks, believed to be hiding in Belgium.

Prime Minister Charles Michel said the move was “based on quite precise information about the risk of an attack like the one that happened in Paris ... where several individuals with arms and explosives launch actions, perhaps even in several places at the same time.”

Brussels, once home to the suspected organizer of the attacks, Abdelhamid Abaaoud, is now being patrolled by heavily-armed security forces, and residents are being told to avoid crowded places.

Meanwhile in Turkey, a 26-year-old man was detained by police who believe that he scouted out the target sites for Islamic State, according to the Guardian. Two other men, both Syrian citizens, were also detained by Turkish police on suspicions that they were connected to the man.

The wave of alerts and arrests comes after a series of attacks that were more deadly than any in Paris for decades. On Friday, Prime Minister of France Manuel Valls announced that the death toll had risen to 130.

[Image via AP]


Contact the author at melissa.cronin@gawker.com.

McDonald's Fined $355,000 For Allegedly Being Consistently Shitty to Immigrants

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McDonald's Fined $355,000 For Allegedly Being Consistently Shitty to Immigrants

McDonald’s allegedly did a shitty thing? McDonald’s allegedly did a shitty thing!

Via the Chicago Tribune, the US Justice Department has ordered McDonald’s to pay $355,000 to current and former immigrant employees. While we await conservatives inevitably getting their AR50-print undies in a twist about “THEM DAMN ILLEGALS WHAT SHOULD JUST GO BACK TO GUACAMOLE,” though, it’s important to note that this actually applies only to legal US residents. According to the Department (which got on the case thanks to an anonymous tip), McDonald’s had a “longstanding practice” of making permanent legal residents show the company a new green card after their original expired. The ruling states that if a worker could not provide the new documentation, they were held out of work, and many were ultimately fired. Companies are not legally allowed to do any of that, because “IHRE PAPEIRE, BITTE” is not typically a way in which we’d like corporations to operate in our country. Doesn’t really fit in great with the stated American ethos (even if it’s closer to the one on which we actually do operate).

Employees who lost their jobs as a result of this policy are to receive $1600, and those who lost work time will be compensated at an assumed rate of $8.88/hour. McDonald’s has also agreed to train its employees on anti-discrimination policies, and undergo Justice Department monitoring for the next 20 months.

The interminable bleating from McDonald’s about how the company could not possibly be held accountable for the numerous wage violations committed by the franchisees acting under their auspice makes it especially ironic that this ruling specifically targets the 10% of restaurants that are corporate locations. If the US Justice Department is to be believed, it would appear the rotten branch of McDonald’s franchises grows from a similarly-afflicted tree.

McDonald’s, for their part, had this to say to the Tribune:

“We deny any wrongdoing in this matter, but in order to avoid further expense, and to cooperate with the (Justice Department’s) Office of Special Counsel, we reached a settlement,” McDonald’s said in an email.

Translation: *hair flip* Whatehhhvar. It always cracks me up when a company adamantly denies any wrongdoing but then immediately pays the fines levied against them. Sure, guys. Great look for you, there.

Image via Ken Wolter/Shutterstock.


Contact the author at WilyUbertrout@gmail.com, or on Twitter @EyePatchGuy. If you’d like to see him say more mean things about potential corporate ad partners, you can find him on Wonkette starting on November 30.


Southwest Airlines Is Allowing Its Racist Passengers To Kick Muslim Passengers off Their Flights

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Southwest Airlines Is Allowing Its Racist Passengers To Kick Muslim Passengers off Their Flights

“You Are Now Free To Move About The Country” became a wildly outdated slogan for Southwest Airlines as of this week. Perhaps the addition of the phrase “If Not A Minority” would help.

The world’s largest low-cost airline carrier allowed a few racist passengers to oust Arabic-speaking and Muslim passengers on two separate flights this week, quickly becoming the official airline for the country’s bigots.

Two men, 29-year-old Maher Khalil and 28-year-old Anas Ayyad, who both moved to Philadelphia 15 years ago from Palestine, were speaking Arabic before their flight in the terminal this week, reports NBC Philadelphia. After overhearing them, another passenger on their flight approached the gate agent, demanding they be removed from the flight. The agent acquiesced, telling the pair that they wouldn’t be allowed to board because a passenger was afraid to fly with them.

Not knowing what else to do, Khalil called 911, telling police that he’d been racially profiled.

“If that person doesn’t feel safe, let them take the bus,” Khalil, who owns two pizza parlors in Philadelphia, said to a Southwest Airlines gate agent, according to NBC Philadelphia. “We’re American citizens just like everybody else.”

After a delay and questioning, the men were allowed to board the flight. But this wasn’t the only instance of Southwest allowing racist passengers to pick the flight roster. Passengers on a second Southwest flight from Chicago to Houston Wednesday refused to allow six Muslims on the flight, causing the Muslim passengers to have to be rebooked on another flight.

In response to the events, the company issued the following statement:

Safety is our primary focus, and our Employees are trained to make decisions to ensure that safety, and to safeguard the security of our Crews and Customers on every flight.

Southwest did not respond to Gawker’s request for comment by press time. We will update this post when we hear back.

[Image via Getty]


Contact the author at melissa.cronin@gawker.com.

The Secret History of Silicon Valley and the Toxic Remnants of the First Computers 

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The Secret History of Silicon Valley and the Toxic Remnants of the First Computers 

Today, Silicon Valley is a dreamy officescape, a place where ideas and networks are currency. But in the 1960s and 70s, Silicon Valley proper manufactured hardware–and this industrial boom created one of the most polluted places in America.

If you live in Silicon Valley, this is probably not news to you. Maybe you even attended this month’s EPA-led community meeting about the latest remediation news. Journalists have written about the side effects of Silicon Valley, too. In 2001, writing in Salon, Jim Fisher investigated toxic soil and high rates of cancer among workers at IBM. In 2013, Alexis Madrigal published a wonderful essay about the region’s oft-forgotten history: “It has as much in common with a coal mine or the Port of Oakland as it does with Levittown or Google’s campus,” he wrote.

For a region of the world where an incredible amount of capital is spent to develop real estate, this aspect of Silicon Valley’s history remains surprisingly unknown to many people outside the region. As it’s Secret History Week at Gizmodo, it’s worth looking at the hidden history of California’s high-tech corner.

The Chip-Washers

This week, a semiconductor maker based in Phoenix bought another semiconductor maker called Fairchild for a few billion dollars. It might not be a familiar name like Apple, but Fairchild, along with several other small startups, pioneered the technology that powers all of our electronics–all the way back in the 1950s.

The silicon chip manufacturing technology developed at these companies turned a quiet agricultural region of Northern California into the industrial manufacturing center better known as Silicon Valley. In a BBC documentary about the brilliant integrated circuit inventor and Fairchild co-founder Robert Noyce, the writer Michael Malone called Fairchild “the most amazing gathering of entrepreneurial talent in business history.”

It was a fascinating time to be an inventor or engineer. For example, the process of making the earliest silicon computer chips reads like modern-day alchemy to anyone without a working knowledge of chemistry, even today.

It started with an ingot of super-pure silicon, created by pulling a “seed crystal” through a vat of molten silicon until it formed a thick, multi-layered “ingot,” like the one seen in a Fairchild promotional video from 1967 above, or the one in a Raytheon lab below.

The Secret History of Silicon Valley and the Toxic Remnants of the First Computers 

Growing a silicon ingot at Raytheon in 1956. Wikimedia.

The sausage-shaped ingots were then shaved into thin wafers, and polished using a number of chemicals. After that came the process of printing transistors into the chips–which required degreasers and solvents, including the sweet-smelling trichloroethylene (TCE), which was only classified as a carcinogen by the EPA in 2005 and would later be found in groundwater around Silicon Valley after leaking from dozens of different manufacturing sites. TCE, which was first made in the US in the 1920s, has been used at various points in history as an engine parts degreaser and as an alternative to chloroform.

Meanwhile, the speed with which chip technology was developing was staggering. In the late 1950s, Fairchild developed the first integrated circuit–a silicon chip where all of the components of a circuit could be created on a single wafer of silicon without having to painstakingly piece them together by hand. The process gave birth to modern computer chips, and the “clean rooms” where these sensitive components were built and prepared. Again, using chemicals like trichloroethylene–the health affects of which were unknown at the time.

The Secret History of Silicon Valley and the Toxic Remnants of the First Computers 

A silicon wafer is scribed to break it into individual circuits.

Over the next two decades, as Silicon Valley grew, chip technology developed with incredible speed. In 1965, Fairchild co-founder and Intel founder Gordon Moore coined the term Moore’s Law to describe the idea that the number of transistors that could fit on a single circuit will double every two years. Intel would invent the first single-chip CPU, the Intel 4004, in 1971. Dozens of other companies popped up, competing to build the world’s computer chips.

Farmland to Superfund in 30 Years

Yet the incredible industrial processes pioneered in Silicon Valley would have unintended consequences for the region. Chip-makers, including Intel, Raytheon, and Fairchild, ended up leaking thousands of gallons of water contaminated with volatile organic compounds into the soil in Mountain View for two decades through leaky tanks and other infrastructure. And in the 1980s, people found out.

The leaking habit created a toxic groundwater plume that was only discovered after high rates of cancer emerged. “We did not think these tanks would leak,” a spokesman for the company told The New York Times in 1982. The Mayor of San Jose elaborated: “When I first became Mayor and we embarked on an economic development program, there was no doubt in my mind that this was a clean industry. We now know we are definitely in the midst of a chemical revolution.” The director of the Semiconductor Industry Association at the time said the group was doing whatever it could to help the subsequent investigation: “For God’s sake, we drink the water, too.”

The investigation led to the creation of the Middlefield-Ellis-Whisman (MEW) Study Area, one of many EPA-funded cleanup sites that sit below the most valuable and active real estate in Silicon Valley, and arguably the one that has received the most attention. It includes Fairchild, Raytheon, Intel, and Moffett Field sites where TCE and other chemicals had leaked into the groundwater, creating a toxic plume that reared its ugly head both through the water and through a process called “vapor intrusion,” where the chemicals circulate through a building’s ventilation system.

The Secret History of Silicon Valley and the Toxic Remnants of the First Computers 

MEW is not the only remediation site in the area. For example, the Android Statue Garden sits across the freeway from a Superfund site where the remains of a 1980s chip-making company called CTS Printex, Inc. are being mitigated. In 2013, one thousand Google workers in office buildings near the site were exposed to “excessive” levels of trichloroethene in the air over two months.

The Secret History of Silicon Valley and the Toxic Remnants of the First Computers 

Image: EPA

Meanwhile, another Superfund site sits across the street from 19111 Pruneridge Avenue, the site where Apple is building its new campus: Intersil Inc./Siemens Components, a 15 acre site where the companies manufactured semiconductors in the 1980s. “Twenty-three soil vapor extraction wells have been built, along with a carbon adsorption treatment facility,” the EPA reports. “Groundwater is being extracted, treated by air stripping, and discharged into Calabazas Creek.”

In less than 30 years, this patch of soil had gone from farmland, to the site of a technological revolution, to a massive cluster of Superfund cleanup sites.

How This Waste Winds Up Across the US

The process of cleaning these solvents from the groundwater and soil will take decades or longer, in some cases. But the story of how Silicon Valley is being remediated gets stranger.

In 2014, the Center for Investigative Reporting and The Guardian published an incredible report that tracked the process of removing toxic waste from the Middlefield-Ellis-Whisman Study Area. The vapor containing the chip-washing chemical TCE and other toxins goes on a long journey after it’s filtered by pumps above the Superfund sites.

This toxic waste is shipped to dozens of different treatment plants around the country, where it can be treated in several different stages. These journeys aren’t regulated by the EPA. They create massive amounts of new waste, in addition to the contaminated water. The process, which often involves super-heating the waste, creates dangerous dioxins that can travel thousands of miles from their source. They are all around us, and this so-called “toxic trail” might not actually be doing much good:

A CIR analysis of the past decade’s worth of data found that cleanup isn’t improving the situation. There are more than 500 wells at the Mountain View site for which monitoring data exists. At the majority of them, chemical concentrations remained stable or, in a small number of cases, increased.

The CFIR showed that material from the MEW site ends up all over the country. In a strange way, the distribution of the waste in trucks on highways is not unlike the distribution of the radios, phones, and computers that were once produced and distributed here, just a few decades ago.


The incredible technological development that this region gave birth to has its own alternate history–a history that will keep emerging over the coming decades and centuries.

The chemicals and industrial techniques used to push innovation forward simply haven’t been studied enough to understand the possible danger to humans. Writing 14 years ago, Jim Fisher put it best in his Salon piece:

If anything, the experience of the semiconductor industry should be sobering — the complexity of the chemical cocktails at use in modern high-tech industrial manufacturing is mind-boggling, and it is always getting more so. There is little chance, warn these experts, of ever catching up with the public health challenges inherent in new advances in technology, especially when the rate of change continues to accelerate.

It’s a sobering tale that touches on the genuine geniuses that invented modern computers and the unforeseen side effects of the industry that made them. It’s also cautionary–as the rate of technological progress speeds up, it seems nearly impossible to identify the dangers inherent in making those new technologies.


Contact the author at kelsey@Gizmodo.com.

Reports: Fire Rages on 50th Floor of John Hancock Skyscraper in Chicago [Updated]

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Reports: Fire Rages on 50th Floor of John Hancock Skyscraper in Chicago [Updated]

A fire is being reported at the John Hancock Center in Chicago, a 100-story skyscraper and the seventh-tallest building in the U.S.

Tourists and onlookers have been posting images of the blaze on social media, with some users reporting that the fire is on the 50th floor.

We have reached out to the building’s management and will update this post when we hear back.

Update 4:37 p.m.

According to Chicago’s WGN TV, firefighters have extinguished the fire. At least one person was injured, and has been taken to Northwestern hospital. The cause of the fire has not yet been announced.

[Image via Instagram]


Contact the author at melissa.cronin@gawker.com.

Texas Gov. Orders Humanitarian Nonprofits To Ignore Syrian Refugees in Need of Help

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Texas Gov. Orders Humanitarian Nonprofits To Ignore Syrian Refugees in Need of Help

After Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced that his state was not accepting people fleeing war and violence, he’s now ordered humanitarians to stop doing their jobs, too.

Gov. Abbott announced last Monday that he, like dozens of other xenophobic governors, would stop efforts to allow Syrian refugees into his state in the wake of the deadly attacks in Paris. Part of the governor’s announcement included the sending of a letter from the Texas Health and Human Services Commission to local non-profits, demanding that they comply with the Governor’s request by Friday afternoon.

The state could forseeably choose not to accept federal funding for the organizations that don’t comply, according to immigration attorney Gordon Quan.

“It puts them in a situation that I think is very uncomfortable,” Quan told local KHOU News. “This is basically saying, ‘Don’t do resettlement. If you do resettlement of these Syrian refugees, you may be endangering the whole program that you have’.”

As Friday came and went, some agencies that work with refugees in Texas balked at the directive, arguing that because resettlement is a federal responsibility, Gov. Abbott does not have the authority to make such a directive.

Bee Moorhead, executive director of Texas Impact, which works closely with resettlement agencies, wrote in a letter to the state that the move “constitutes an unprecedented attempt on the part of a state agency to pressure private, nonprofit organizations to violate federal law and their federal contractual obligations.”

The letter asks the state to meet with resettlement agencies and federal authorities to decide whether Abbott actually has the authority to tell organizations to ignore the pleas of homeless people.

[Image via Getty]


Contact the author at melissa.cronin@gawker.com.

500 Days of Kristin, Day 301: Did the Trigger Points Really Work? 

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500 Days of Kristin, Day 301: Did the Trigger Points Really Work? 

Kristin Cavallari, a woman powerless to ignore any and all “natural lifestyle” tips she finds on the Internet, did something with her feet yesterday in an attempt to induce labor.

Did it really work?

Seems like no, so far.


This has been 500 Days of Kristin.

[Photo via Getty]

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