Marjorie Taylor Greene says she will vote 'NO' on proposed NDAA, blasts foreign aid spending











German leader says there is ‘no need for the Americans to want to save democracy in Europe’
Oh, and a little warning shot from EU’s Kallas:
“If we go into the fight [of] pointing fingers, I mean, we can also point a lot of fingers [on] what is wrong in America, but this is not the way we work, we are not going to meddle with the internal affairs of other countries.”
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© Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Press Office/UPI/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Press Office/UPI/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Press Office/UPI/Shutterstock
The administration is offloading gems of US architecture while redesigning the city to match the president’s values
While the original architect of Donald Trump’s ever-expanding ballroom steps down and preservationists panic over the fate of New Deal murals inside the Social Security Administration building, the president gushes about painting the granite Eisenhower Executive Office Building white, “fixing” the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, and erecting his own Arc de Triomphe.
To peruse the plans for a Trump-era capital district alongside the General Services Administration’s list of assets identified for accelerated disposition – the federal buildings slated for off-loading – is to discern a diagram of Trump’s values.
Judith Levine is a Brooklyn-based journalist, essayist and author of five books. Her Substack is Today in Fascism
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© Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images
Bing Liu’s film is an unflinching portrait of an undocumented Uyghur immigrant and a traumatised US veteran whose fragile connection is strained by their pasts
Chinese-American film-maker Bing Liu made an impression with the poignant documentary Minding the Gap about people from his home town in Illinois; now he pivots to features with this sad and sombre study of romance and life choices among those on the margins of US society, adapted from the prize-winning novel of the same name by Atticus Lish.
The scene is the no-questions-asked world of New York’s Chinatown; newcomer Sebiye Behtiyar plays Aishe, a Chinese Uyghur Muslim undocumented immigrant. One day she catches the eye of Skinner, played by Fred Hechinger, a young military veteran who impulsively starts to talk to her. There is a spark between them and then something more.
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© Photograph: Jaclyn Martinez

© Photograph: Jaclyn Martinez

© Photograph: Jaclyn Martinez
There are apparently breakthroughs on the way for those with sleep disorders – which sent me down a rabbit hole of research...
I met a guy in pharmaceuticals who told me about a bunch of cool breakthroughs in sleep meds: mainly, we may be on the brink of a new Wegovy, but in this case it’s a drug to cure narcolepsy. I suggested the two things are not quite the same, given that obesity is a global epidemic and narcolepsy is fairly rare. He countered that the way the drug works might also have applications for insomnia; similar to the Post-it note having been invented by someone trying to create the world’s strongest glue.
Anyway, in the course of this, I discovered the test for type 1 narcolepsy, which is that you’re put in a room with zero stimulation – nothing to read, no one to chat to, perfect silence, perfect temperature – and timed on how long it takes you to fall asleep. If it’s under eight minutes, you’re narcoleptic. But the average, for a person with no complaints in that area at all, is 22 minutes. I was completely incredulous. This is a grip on consciousness more or less the same as a house cat. Bored? Go to sleep. Even a dog will have a quick look for something to eat first.
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© Photograph: Posed by model; Westend61/Getty Images

© Photograph: Posed by model; Westend61/Getty Images

© Photograph: Posed by model; Westend61/Getty Images

© Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

















