Saturday, August 12, 2017

Saturday's Headlines: Calls for U.S.-North Korea diplomacy vie with fresh threats

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
Calls for U.S.-North Korea diplomacy vie with fresh threats
With little sense of what strategy would prevail in Washington or Pyongyang or which leader would blink first, U.S. friends and foes could only watch, wait and hold their breath. "Nobody loves a peaceful solution more than President Trump," Trump told reporters, but "we could also have a bad solution."
In call with Trump, Chinese President Xi Jinping urges restraint over North Korea
During a phone call with President Trump, Chinese President Xi Jinping urged both sides not to do anything that will aggravate tensions, Chinese state media reported. 
 
Trump predicts 'tenfold' boost in tourism for Guam in wake of North Korea threat
In a phone call with the governor of Guam, President Trump told him the White House is "with you 1,000 percent" in the face of a threat from North Korea. Trump also said Gov. Eddie Baza Calvo is becoming famous and predicted the attention would boost tourism "tenfold" in the U.S. territory.
 
Despite Trump's threats, U.S. military doesn't appear to be on a new wartime footing
The military posture has effectively remained unchanged, with few if any additional military forces moved into the region and the Pentagon chief emphasizing diplomacy over bloodshed.
 
Trump won't 'rule out a military option' in Venezuela
As the crisis in the South American country deepens, the U.S. president suggested getting involved: "We have many options for Venezuela, including a possible military option, if necessary."
 
As opioids devastate coal country, some look to marijuana as a savior
Johnsie Gooslin's passion for growing marijuana got him arrested and eventually led to the loss of his home in West Virginia. But a state that has become ground zero for one of the worst drug crises in American history has taken some tentative steps toward loosening marijuana restrictions.
 
Big Tobacco's new cigarette is sleek and smokeless, but is it any better for you?
Philip Morris says that by gently heating instead of burning tobacco, its innovation eradicates 90 to 95 percent of toxic compounds in cigarette smoke. But experts doubt the motive and the science behind the new technology.
 
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Opinions
 
The Bernie Bros and sisters are coming to Republicans' rescue
 
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The Google memo isn't the interesting part of the story
 
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Who's benefiting from affirmative action? White men.
 
There are only two ways forward on North Korea
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Judge throws out radio DJ's case against Taylor Swift in groping trial
One day after the pop star took the stand in federal court to defend herself against allegations that she got a Denver radio DJ fired over false accusations that he groped her, a judge threw out the DJ's claims, citing insufficient evidence.
 
 
Patients dependent on unprofitable drugs scramble for alternatives when companies stop making them
The dilemma faced by parents whose children use products such as the epilepsy drug Potiga highlights the limitations of drug companies' business model.
 
White nationalist march at University of Virginia ends in skirmishes
Several hundred white nationalists and white supremacists carrying torches marched in a parade through the University of Virginia campus ahead of Saturday's Unite the Right rally.
 
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Google employees face fear, uncertainty in aftermath of divisive memo
They are waiting for the company's next response after a town hall meeting to address the controversy was canceled because of concerns over employee safety.
 
How the NFL decided to punish Cowboys star Ezekiel Elliott after reports of incidents with women
Acknowledging the league erred in its handling of previous domestic violence cases, a source familiar with the NFL's investigation revealed a lengthy process that culminated in a six-game suspension for the Dallas running back.
 
Hot, still, silent: Paris is a ghost town in August
French workers are entitled to five weeks of paid vacation every year. This is why — and how — certain businesses can close for essentially an entire month, a reality that never fails to mystify Americans.
 
     
 
 
 
 

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