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RFK Jr.’s daughter-in-law meets with Trump’s chosen CIA director about possible job

At least she has some qualifications:

Amaryllis Fox Kennedy — a former undercover CIA operative who managed her father-in-law Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s presidential campaign — met this week in Washington with President-elect Donald Trump’s choice for CIA director, John Ratcliffe, and others about a possible job as deputy director of the spy agency, according to people briefed on the discussions.


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Trump has privately voiced support for appointing Fox Kennedy to a job in national security, including the deputy director post at the CIA, according to multiple people familiar with the comments, who like others spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private conversations.
But her quest has run into opposition from Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Arkansas), who is expected to take the gavel next year as chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, and some former members of the intelligence community, according to multiple people briefed on the conversations. A person familiar with the situation said Fox Kennedy had offered to meet with Cotton to discuss his concerns.

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Fox Kennedy posted a broadside Thursday on X describing her unnamed opponents for a position at the CIA as being complicit in a system that had weakened U.S. intelligence collection abilities.
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“A Kennedy at CIA, they fret. No more weaponization of our intelligence services, they complain. She opposes censorship, they whine. She doesn’t believe in arming terrorists, they moan. She thinks coups and wars should be avoided, they cry. She believes in the President, they despair. A DJT [Donald J. Trump] loyalist at Langley, they wail. She must be stopped at all costs!” she wrote. “These same ‘concerned’ leaders have overseen the greatest degradation of our humint capabilities in CIA’s history. On their watch, the world has erupted into violence.”
Cotton’s office did not respond to a request for comment.





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Trump has repeatedly told others he has been impressed with Fox Kennedy, whom he got to know better after the election at his Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida, where she has attended personnel meetings and dined while assisting her father-in-law, who has been named by Trump to lead the Department of Health and Human Services.
“President-Elect Trump is making decisions on who will serve in his second Administration. Those decisions will be announced when they are made,” Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoman for the Trump transition team, said in a statement.
Trump has given Ratcliffe broad leeway to choose his own team, according to a person briefed on the preparations. Other roles, including a post at the National Security Council or at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, have been discussed for Fox Kennedy, a second person briefed on the process said.
Fox Kennedy married Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s son, Bobby Kennedy III, in 2018. She started working on her father-in-law’s presidential campaign as an adviser in 2023. She took over as campaign manager later in the year and played a role in early discussions this summer about merging the Kennedy campaign with Trump’s operation with a focus on improving the nation’s health-care system.


Since the election, Fox Kennedy has stepped back from day-to-day management of her father-in-law’s efforts, but she has continued to advise him ahead of a coming trip to Washington to meet with senators about his planned nomination to Health and Human Services. The elder Kennedy has spoken highly of Fox Kennedy’s talents and supports her appointment, according to people involved in the discussions.


In recent months, Fox Kennedy has spoken with former intelligence officials about her desire to refocus the agency back on intelligence collection. The discussions have tapped into frustrations among some former intelligence officials about bureaucratic changes to how the agency operates in recent decades.
“I’ve spent a lot of time with her. She knows what she is doing,” said John Maguire, a former deputy chief of training in the CIA’s Directorate of Operations who helped train Fox Kennedy and has spoken with her more recently. “The officer corps of doer officers in the system and outside the system is fully supportive of bringing her in.”
“The people who are resisting her are the mattress mice,” he added, a reference to parts of the agency’s bureaucracy who operate with low risk tolerance from desk jobs. “You need a clandestine service that works. And putting analytical people in charge of operations overseas is a reckless move.”


She has been a critic of the agency leadership, writing a memoir called “Life Undercover: Coming of Age in the CIA” that detailed her work overseas gathering intelligence, including a description of posing as an art dealer to gather information. Fox Kennedy, who says she left the CIA in 2010, also has a close relationship with Tulsi Gabbard, a former Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii whom Trump has tapped to be director of national intelligence.
In a recent interview with Tucker Carlson — the former Fox News host and podcaster who is also critical of the intelligence leadership and who has spent time recently at Mar-a-Lago — she was critical of the CIA’s historic role in shaping news coverage and intervening in foreign affairs.
“Where they get into tremendous trouble … is when rather than going in and actually reporting what is happening in every corner of the world, they are making it happen,” Fox Kennedy said about the CIA on Carlson’s podcast. “Rather than reporting that a coup is about to take place, you know for absolute sure it is about to take place. And that has not worked out in 100 percent of cases, as far as I can tell.”


During his first term, Trump suggested that he would release remaining classified files about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Trump later said former secretary of state and CIA director Mike Pompeo cautioned him against the release. Again this year, Trump committed to releasing the information, a move that has been supported by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Fox Kennedy.
“If I win I’m just going to open them up,” Trump told podcaster Joe Rogan weeks before winning reelection this year.
Other former intelligence officials have been dismissive of Fox Kennedy’s qualifications and critical of her decision to publish her memoir despite ongoing disputes with the CIA about whether information should be publicly disclosed. “It would be very hard for the agencies to enforce their long-standing and appropriate rules on writings — books, articles, anything you publish if the deputy CIA director was someone who flaunted the rules,” said another former senior intelligence official.

About that "mandate." Trump will win the EC by about 750k votes

Which is to say, if ~375k voters switched their votes from Trump to Harris in the swing states, Harris wins.
Further, Trump's popular vote win will be by a similar margin as Hillary's popular vote win (maybe even less), and of course she didn't even win the EC.

Far cry from any mandate.
And the "where did 16 million votes go" crowd from last week continue to look like conspiracy nuts as the vote counting continues.

US Olympic and Paralympic officials put coach on leave after AP reports sexual abuse allegations

The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee placed an employee on administrative leave Thursday after The Associated Press reported that one of its coaches was accused of sexually abusing a young biathlete, causing her so much distress that she attempted suicide.

Rocky Harris, USOPC chief of sport and athlete services, sent an email to U.S. Biathlon national team members to address the “concerning allegations of abuse” raised by several biathletes in the AP report.

“We want to commend these athletes for their immense courage and strength in coming forward,” the email said. “Effective immediately, we have placed a USOPC staff member on administrative leave pending an internal investigation.”

Harris did not name the employee, but Gary Colliander was the only USOPC coach named in the AP report. Jon Mason, a USOPC spokesperson, told the AP that no additional information would be released while the inquiry is underway.

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CBS Sports grade

Here’s what CBS Sports has to say about Iowa’s 2024 season, and I generally agree:
https://www.cbssports.com/college-football/teams/IOWA/iowa-hawkeyes/
“Iowa was just kind of there this season. It wasn't a bad year by any stretch, as the Hawkeyes won eight games and Kaleb Johnson had one of the best seasons by any running back. But it wasn't a good year, either, as this is a program that sees eight wins as its floor began the season ranked but fell out of the major polls after its second game, never to be seen again. The best news is the Hawkeyes won three of their rivalry games, but the one they lost was to their in-state rival who went on to have the best season in their program's history. Also, you know, there was the whole having to play a billion different QBs again thing. Grade: C+”

HBOTers GF Airing Dirty Laundry On Reddit?

I continue to be amazed by how much Covid ruined so many people. There isn’t a clam on this planet worth this kind of nonsense. Which one of you has this ball and chain?

————

My relationship has been 10+ years and the only thing we really disagree about is covid.

Currently, if my partner wants to do some risk taking activity like go to bars, etc. we sleep in separate rooms for 5 days.

At first, we did that and both wore n95s in our common living area. Then he didn’t want to and wore KN95s. Then he didn’t want to and doesn’t mask. We sleep in separate rooms and I wear an n95.

Now, he wants me to not mask at all. And do indoor dining. I don’t feel comfortable with that and would prefer outdoor activities.

We went to couples therapy virtually (a therapist who understood COVID cautions) about this and I feel like he just said what the therapist wanted him to say/went through the motions.

Then, it blew up later.

He just wants to “get back to normal” and “live life” and I want to feel safe.

Now he wants to do couples counseling again with a different therapist that he’s picked out but in person and does not want to wear a mask in the therapy sessions. The therapist wouldn’t be masked either.

He also brought up living separately but he also said if he goes into office (he said he’s not going to mask) it will be pointless because I will never see him (if I wait 5 days from his last exposure). He said that is not a real relationship. Currently, we wfh.

I don’t stop him from doing anything he wants. He’s free to do what he wants and I wear a mask after that. But he wants me to stop masking on my side and join him. I want my half of protecting myself.

He knows the risks of covid and has gotten it multiple times and feels “fine”. I’ve had some difficult health issues that seemed like long covid. I’ve never tested positive. (I know it still could be LC).

His patience/tolerance for me taking COVID precautions has run out. He said “It’s become a problem.”

I’m also neurodivergent and I don’t think I will ever stop taking COVID mitigations unless COVID literally stops. I want to protect myself. He’s neurotypical and wants to do what everyone else is doing. (He said that.)

How are other people handling this situation?

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Lions fan finds out he's not actually part of the game

Dumbass. Got what he deserved for trying to make himself part of it, when he wasn't.

"The Lions have revoked the season tickets of the fan who had a heated verbal altercation with Packers head coach Matt LaFleur during last Thursday’s game between the teams.

Fahad Yousif told the Detroit News that the Lions informed him of the decision via an email. Yousif was on the field before the game to hold part of on oversized flag during the national anthem and had to be separated from LaFleur, who said Yousef “was talking junk to our players, giving them the throat slash sign.”

“The biggest gut punch, man,” Yousif said. “Just waking up and seeing that email and not being able to talk to somebody in person, it was a terrible feeling. I don’t have my chance to give my side of the story or anything.”

Yousef was asked to leave the game by the Lions before halftime and said at the time that he “got caught up” in the moment. He told the newspaper that he was “devastated” by the team’s decision and admitted that the entire incident “definitely could have been avoided” on his end, but his lack of self-control in the moment proved to be costly."

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Dembele?

Obviously I'm missing his value as a starter to the team. Help me understand why Fran starts him?
Stats:
(6'8", 255 lbs; 3.9 ppg, 4.0 rpg; 0.9 apg; 36.8 FG%; 30.8 3FG%)

His ball handling isn't sharp, he's a poor shooter, defense isn't bad but gets lots of fouls. Everytime he starts or plays major minutes I think Fran is making a mistake.
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Classical Music Anyone?

From exquisite Elgar to razor-sharp Cage: our classical recordings of the year

A piano prodigy burst onto the scene, studio opera recordings were few and far between – and the year’s most rewarding discs were the ones that ventured beyond the mainstream

Andrew Clements’ top 10 recordings of the year

1. Elgar: Violin Concerto (Vilde Frang/Deutsches SO Berlin/Ticciati)
“From first note to last Frang never puts a foot wrong … Her playing has a thrilling authority and confidence in what is technically one of the most demanding concertos in the violin repertory.” Read the full review

2. Chopin: Études (Yunchan Lim)
“Enjoy the brilliance of Lim’s playing, whether in the breathtaking evenness of the A minor study Op 10 no 2, the sheer delicacy of Op 25 no 6 in G sharp minor, or in the fresh details he consistently reveals.” Read the full review

3. Linda Catlin Smith: Flower of Emptiness (Apartment House)
“Hers is a compositional voice that never shouts, never draws undue attention to itself, yet creates music of compelling beauty.” Read the full review

4. Bruckner: Symphony No 7 (Berlin RSO/Jurowski)
“This special performance has a natural flow, in which nothing is forced, and nothing over-manicured; there’s never any sense that Jurowski has any agenda other than to present the symphony as it is laid out in the score.” Read the full review


5. Cage2: Bertrand Chamayou
“Every one of these pieces is a brightly coloured gem… Chamayou’s performance of all of them, each complex rhythm razor sharp, every phrase perfectly articulated, is exemplary.” Read the full review

6. Contemplation: Huw Montague Rendall/Opéra Orchestre Normandie Rouen/Glassberg
“Hamlet’s soliloquy from Ambroise Thomas’s opera – velvet-toned, nuanced, with beautifully floated high notes – sets the tone for an eclectic programme on themes of self-discovery. You can almost hear the orchestra’s thoughts as he holds the final note: who is this guy? Does he ever need to breathe?” Read the full review

7. Lang: Composition as Explanation (Eighth Blackbird)
“The wonderfully compelling musical journey that Lang has created takes the listener through moments of chiming, crystalline beauty, stomping free-for-alls, vertiginous instrumental solos and insistent minimalist repetitions.” Read the full review

8. Bertin: Fausto (Les Talens Lyriques/Rousset)
“The full score of Louise Bertin’s Fausto was only rediscovered a few years ago, but this first recording, conducted with missionary zeal by Christophe Rousset and superbly played by the period instruments of Les Talens Lyriques, suggests that it deserves more than occasional performances.” Read the full review

9. Brahms: Piano Pieces Op 116-119 (Igor Levit)
“Levit’s accounts are utterly compelling. Each piece is perfectly shaped, its subtly varied emotional charge instantly identified. It’s hard to think of many better recordings of these 20 gems.” Read the full review

10. Schumann: Works for Oboe (Daniel/Drake)
“Pure delight from first note to last.” Read the full review

Iowa women 9-1 with only 4 home games; a couple of big wins like last night

The Tenn game showed a weakness against that press and quickness. But overall, after losing Clark, the team is doing very well. They do need to shore up some ball handling.

A lot of the top teams play a lot of non conf games at home, the hawks are invited to play in tourneys and on the road and they go do it.

Ogrady and Heiden at center are very positive from the highlights and game segments I have watched. Hannah is adapting and playing well facing the basket and dribbling more.

They play some good defense overall. I havent looked at their team stats for shooting and FT %, turnover and rebounding numbers especially compared to the opponent but I assume they are above avg.
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