Trump and truth are not well-acquainted - Greensboro News & Record

Trump and truth are not well-acquainted - Greensboro News & Record


Trump and truth are not well-acquainted - Greensboro News & Record

Posted: 21 Nov 2019 04:45 PM PST

I recently saw a TV show that depicted a pathological liar able to pass a polygraph (lie-detector) test. Since I'm not a psychologist, I rely on experts to define a pathological liar as someone who compulsively tells lies or fabricates information out of habit. They believe in the lies completely. President Trump has told more than 12,000 lies in three years, and he may believe them all.

Trump recently stated he will "strongly consider" testifying live at impeachment hearings regarding Ukraine. While I don't believe that will happen (look at what happened to Bill Clinton when he told a lie under oath over a far less egregious matter), it's possible Trump believes his lies so completely that he might arrogantly do so.

Trump's mistake would be discounting numerous written notes from Ukrainian meetings, verified text messages and depositions under oath from involved personnel. Trump himself has provided some of the fuel that could burn him.

While I am wearied by the ongoing impeachment inquiry proceedings, the thought of continuing this presidential charade for another four years is unthinkable. Let's hope the voters have the courage in 2020 to tell a confirmed liar that they have had enough.

Meredith Millard

Greensboro

Erdoğan Calls US House of Representatives' Resolution on Armenian Genocide 'Slander' - Polygraph.info

Posted: 05 Nov 2019 12:00 AM PST

On October 29, the U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide – the Ottoman Empire's mass murder of ethnic Armenians in 1915-1923.

On October 30, Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan addressed the nation's parliament condemning the U.S. congressional resolution and calling the genocide a "slander against our country."

That claim is false.

The draft U.S. Resolution 296 was introduced in the House of Representatives on April 8, 2019.

The resolution referred to the U.S. record on recognizing the Armenian genocide: "Whereas the United States has officially recognized the Armenian Genocide, through the United States Government's May 28, 1951, written statement to the International Court of Justice regarding the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, through President Ronald Reagan's Proclamation No. 4838 on April 22, 1981, and by House Joint Resolution 148, adopted on April 8, 1975, and House Joint Resolution 247, adopted on September 10, 1984."

The Ottoman Empire's mass atrocities against ethnic Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Syriacs, Arameans, Maronites and other Christians in the early years of the 20th century are a well-documented historic fact. In 1997, the International Association of Genocide Scholars unanimously passed a resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide.

The U.S. Holocaust Museum's archives provide detailed evidence of the systematic mass extermination and expulsion of the ethnic Armenians, with estimates of the number of victims ranging from several hundred thousand to 1.5 million.

US/Armenia - Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II visit the Holocaust Museum in Washington, 06May,2015
US/Armenia - Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II visit the Holocaust Museum in Washington, 06May,2015

Turkey and Azerbaijan deny the Armenian genocide.

According to the Armenian National Institute in Washington, DC, as of 2019, the governments of 29 countries recognized the Armenian genocide, including the United States, Germany, France, Italy, Canada and Russia.

While the governments of Switzerland, Greece, Cyprus and Slovakia adopted laws criminalizing denial of the Armenian genocide, the United Kingdom has refused to recognize the massacre of ethnic Armenians as genocide, saying the 20th century events did not fully meet the conditions of the United Nation's Genocide Convention.

"The massacres were an appalling tragedy, which the British Government of the day condemned. We fully endorse that view. However, neither this Government nor previous British Governments have judged that the evidence is sufficiently unequivocal to persuade us that these events should be categorized as genocide as defined by the 1948 UN Convention on Genocide, a convention which is, in any event, not retrospective in application," the UK said in 2007.

However, the UK's three devolved legislatures – Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales – have recognized the Armenian genocide.

Infographic - Armenian genocide
Infographic - Armenian genocide

Although most of sources list the U.S. among the nations that recognized the Armenian genocide, the question of whether the United States has officially recognized it, as the House resolution states, remains a matter of dispute.

There is no vote scheduled in the Senate on the resolution and the U.S. Senate Historical Office has identified no instance when the upper chamber approved a similar resolution recognizing the genocide.

"There have been a number of resolutions introduced over the years, but it looks like the closest one came to passage was in early 1990 when a resolution introduced by Bob Dole of Kansas made it to the floor for consideration," Assistant Historian Daniel Hold wrote to Polygraph.info. Dole's resolution failed two procedural votes. At the time, Sen. Dole was minority leader in the Senate, as the leading Republican Party member.

Despite President Reagan's use of the term in the 1981 proclamation, the Obama White House never referred to the 1915 Armenian atrocities as "genocide," with the former ambassador to the U.N. now calling the failure a "mistake."

Erdoğan's recent comments are not out of character. During his presidential campaign in 2014, Erdoğan, then Turkey's prime minister, said in interview with the national TV channel NTV: "I was called a Georgian. I apologize for this, but they even said [something] worse: They called me an Armenian," sparking outrage and accusations of racism.

In 2016, reacting to the German Bundestag's recognition of the Armenian genocide, Erdoğan said: "I am addressing the whole world. You may like it, you may not. Our attitude on the Armenian issue has been clear from the beginning. We will never accept the accusations of genocide."

In their October 2006 open letter, the leaders of the International Association of Genocide Scholars said historians who deny the Armenian genocide are pursuing a political agenda.

"Scholars who deny the facts of genocide in the face of the overwhelming scholarly evidence are not engaging in historical debate, but have another agenda. In the case of the Armenian Genocide, the agenda is to absolve Turkey of responsibility for the planned extermination of the Armenians—an agenda consistent with every Turkish ruling party since the time of the Genocide in 1915," the letter said.

Probe into ex-WWL Radio host Seth Dunlap suffers setback as judge denies arrest warrant - NOLA.com

Posted: 08 Nov 2019 12:00 AM PST

A New Orleans police detective went to a judge on Wednesday and applied for a warrant to arrest former WWL Radio sports talk-show host Seth Dunlap on a count of extortion, multiple criminal justice sources say.

According to one of the sources with knowledge of the application, the detective presented evidence to back up his central allegation: that the openly gay radio personality used his phone to launch a homophobic insult at himself via the radio station's Twitter account before demanding nearly $2 million to settle complaints about a hostile workplace.

But Magistrate Commissioner Robert Blackburn rejected the warrant. The sources said Blackburn didn't find the evidence backed up a charge of extortion, which is defined as making threats to a person "with the intention (to) obtain anything of value."

The extent of the threat that Dunlap is accused of making — he allegedly warned he would go "scorched earth" on the station if it didn't accede to his settlement demands — didn't justify the felony charge, Blackburn said.

The Police Department can still pursue an arrest warrant alleging that Dunlap committed a different offense based on the same evidence, or it could renew its request for an extortion charge by bolstering its application with more evidence.

It wasn't immediately clear where the investigation into Dunlap — who has maintained his innocence and has pledged to sue the station over its treatment of him — goes next.

NOPD officials on Friday would say only that the case remained "active and ongoing."

The bizarre case has drawn national media attention since it began nearly two months ago. It gained new notice last week when the station fired Dunlap, 35, following an extended, paid leave of absence.

WWL Radio fires talk-show host Seth Dunlap amid NOPD probe involving homophobic tweet

WWL Radio has fired former talk-show host Seth Dunlap, despite his denying claims by the station that he commandeered its Twitter account to …

Dunlap used his Twitter account Sept. 10 to promote his analysis of a Saints win the previous day. Shortly thereafter, WWL Radio's official Twitter account retweeted Dunlap while referring to him as "a fag."

Though the tweet was quickly deleted, screenshots of it circulated just as rapidly. Many condemned the station and expressed support for Dunlap, who days earlier had published a lengthy post on his personal Facebook page about his challenges as a gay man working in sports media.

Within days, Dunlap announced that he was going on leave to ponder his next steps, including the possibility of filing a suit alleging a hostile workplace.

In the meantime, WWL Radio and its corporate parent, Pennsylvania-based Entercom, hired a digital forensic specialist to identify whoever had sent the insult to Dunlap from the station's Twitter account, which several people could access.

WWL later announced that the forensic probe showed the tweet came from an IP address — a unique number given to cellphones and other pieces of hardware — associated with Dunlap's phone. The station also said it had surveillance video depicting Dunlap opening the door of his office shortly after the offensive tweet went out and showing his phone to a co-worker while appearing to talk about the tweet.

On Sept. 24, WWL Radio's management took the information to the NOPD and filed an extortion complaint, alleging a cash-strapped Dunlap had sent the tweet shortly before demanding $1.8 million from the station to drop plans for a lawsuit against the station.

WWL Radio ended Dunlap's leave on Oct. 31 and terminated his employment that same day.

WWL Radio officials believe the homophobic slur tweeted from the station's official account to talk show host Seth Dunlap earlier this month w…

The criminal justice sources said NOPD investigators obtained additional electronic search warrants before unsuccessfully applying Wednesday for the arrest warrant.

One source said the context of Dunlap's "scorched earth" remark — during talks to potentially settle his workplace issues — factored into Blackburn's decision not to grant the warrant.

The source said Blackburn said that the setting didn't support a criminal charge of extortion, which usually involves someone demanding payment to remain silent about pictures or messages that compromise the people being threatened.

The newspaper was unable to review the warrant application.

Extortion in Louisiana can be punished by up to 15 years in prison.

WWL-TV legal analyst Donald Foret said a couple of state-level computer offenses could fit the case.

Foret, a former prosecutor, said a relatively easy "jump" from extortion would be computer fraud, defined in part as "the accessing of any computer, computer system, computer network, or any part thereof with the intent to … obtain money, property or services by means of false or fraudulent conduct, practices or representations." Computer fraud is punishable by up to five years in prison.

Online impersonation, a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months, could also fit the alleged facts of the case, Foret said. The law prohibits posting messages online under another's identity to threaten, defraud or generally harm others. 

WWL Radio and WWL-TV have different owners and managements. 

Dunlap and his attorney, Megan Kiefer, deny the claims of WWL Radio and Entercom. They say Dunlap passed a lie-detector test which asked if he was responsible for the offensive tweet.

"Mr. Dunlap has maintained from the beginning that he did not send the tweet, and he voluntarily took and passed a polygraph test, the results of which have been released to the public," Kiefer said.

Kiefer said Dunlap's dismissal compounded the damages he had already suffered. She alleges that WWL and Entercom only involved the police to retaliate against Dunlap for not letting them settle his workplace complaints cheaply.

Dunlap began hosting his own weeknight show on WWL Radio, "The Last Lap with Seth Dunlap," in 2017. Before that, he co-hosted a sports show after starting at the station as a sales representative.

NOPD obtains warrant for WWL Radio host Seth Dunlap’s cellphone as tweet probe progresses

New Orleans police on Thursday obtained a search warrant seeking information from WWL Radio talk-show host Seth Dunlap's cellphone, which is …

Kevin Feige to Martin Scorsese: Did You Even Watch ‘Infinity War’? - Vanity Fair

Posted: 11 Nov 2019 12:00 AM PST

The pop-culture debate that simply won't die has found new life once more: After weeks of silence spent presumably living his life in peace, Kevin Feige has responded to Martin Scorsese's recent comments that Marvel films are not cinema, and that, in fact, their existence is aiding in the craft's destruction. "I think that's not true," the Marvel boss told the Hollywood Reporter on Sunday. "I think it's unfortunate. I think myself and everyone who works on these movies loves cinema, loves movies, loves going to the movies, loves to watch a communal experience in a movie theater full of people."

He added, as a point in the franchise's favor, "We killed half of our characters at the end of a movie."

Scorsese initially ignited the debate during an interview with Empire magazine first released in October, when he said he does not watch Marvel films. "I tried, you know? But that's not cinema," Scorsese said at the time. "Honestly, the closest I can think of them, as well made as they are, with actors doing the best they can under the circumstances, is theme parks." The comments were not particularly surprising, coming from an avid cinephile like Scorsese, but nonetheless the director's words ignited a discussion that has continued for weeks, with directors including Francis Ford Coppola and James Gunn chiming in. The discussion seemed to be dying down early this month—until Scorsese reignited it with an op-ed in the New York Times, in which he expanded his explanation, emphasizing what he considers to be one of the films' fatal flaws: "Many of the elements that define cinema as I know it are there in Marvel pictures," he wrote. "What's not there is revelation, mystery, or genuine emotional danger. Nothing is at risk."

During his interview on THR's Awards Chatter podcast, Feige pushed back on the notion that his studio's films are homogenous and primarily commercial products. "I love all types of movies and always have," he said, "which is why we try to blend our films with different genres and take the success that we've had and do different things—which is why we haven't made an Iron Man movie since 2013."

"We did Civil War," Feige continued. "We had our two most popular characters get into a very serious theological and physical altercation. We killed half of our characters at the end of a movie [Avengers: Infinity War]. I think it's fun for us to take our success and use it to take risks and go in different places."

In the end, Feige, who does not know Scorsese personally, reverted back to the old "everyone's entitled to their own opinion" line. And although it seems he really believes that, it is worth noting that the mogul seems a little miffed by how extensively Scorsese has chosen to voice that opinion. "Everybody has a different definition of cinema," Feige said. "Everybody has a different definition of art. Everybody has a different definition of risk, I guess. All I know is that I'm surrounded by people 24 hours a day who live and breathe and love cinema. And some people don't think it's cinema. Everyone is entitled to their opinion. Everyone is entitled to repeat that opinion. Everyone is entitled to write op-eds about that opinion, and I look forward to what will happen next. But in the meantime, we're going to keep making movies."

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