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But with tens of millions of Americans traveling abroad every year, the likelihood is that you’ll encounter us wherever you are in the world. So, here are my top 10 tips on how you can avoid the “stupid American” stereotype and become a “Smart American” abroad. However, when I’m traveling abroad, I’m always careful to keep it to, what feels like, a quiet whisper. As a result, many Americans often have little to no knowledge of what’s going on around the world, thus unfairly adding to the “stupid American” stereotype. Beat them to the punch with humorMy biggest secret weapon against being called a “stupid American” is calling myself a “stupid American” first and laughing about it.
Persons: Emily, It’s, we’ve, I’ve, tingle, it’s, You’ll, , they’d, Don’t, I’m, you’re, , it’ll, Judy, pedro emanuel pereira, iStock, don’t, Linh Pham, ” “, you’ll, Adene Sanchez, Kim Davis, Kim @kimdavisreal Organizations: CNN, Uber, Local Locations: Paris, , American, Europe, Yorker, New York, Rome, America, United States, Vegas, Swedish, London, Britain, Gothenburg, Sweden
CNN —Steve Bannon, a former Donald Trump White House strategist, is set to report to a federal prison in Danbury, Connecticut, on Monday to begin a four-month sentence for defying a congressional subpoena. ‘More powerful in prison’The MAGA media firebrand was keeping a busy schedule in the days before his prison sentence. “I’m going to be more powerful in prison than I am now,” Bannon said last week. Those in custody at Danbury can send emails without attachments, but they pass through a monitored system, on a delay. For now, though, Bannon is poised to go through an intake process on Monday that’s familiar to inmates at Danbury.
Persons: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, Bannon, Peter Navarro, Trump’s, podcaster, Trump, firebrand, “ I’m, ” Bannon, — unbothered, I’m, ’ ” Bannon, , , he’ll, He’ll Organizations: CNN, House, Trump, Justice Department, Federal Bureau of Prisons, Trump White House Locations: Danbury , Connecticut, Washington ,, Danbury, He’ll, acclimate
The Supreme Court’s decision on Monday about executive immunity makes it all but certain that former President Donald J. Trump will not stand trial on charges of seeking to overturn the last election before voters decide whether to send him back to the White House in the next one. But the ruling also opened the door for prosecutors to detail much of their evidence against Mr. Trump in front of a federal judge — and the public — at an expansive fact-finding hearing, perhaps before Election Day. It remains unclear when the hearing, which was ordered as part of the court’s decision, might take place or how long it would last. But it will address the big question that the justices kicked back to the trial court, which is how much of Mr. Trump’s indictment can survive the ruling that former presidents enjoy immunity for official actions they take in office. And it will be held in Federal District Court in Washington in front of the judge, Tanya S. Chutkan, who was handling the case before it was frozen more than six months ago as a series of courts considered his immunity claims.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, , Tanya S, Chutkan Organizations: White, Court Locations: Washington
But Congress may not criminalize the President’s conduct in carrying out the responsibilities of the Executive Branch under the Constitution. Juries can’t even consider official acts in terms of a prosecution, according to the Supreme Court. This case poses a question of lasting significance: When may a former President be prosecuted for official acts taken during his Presidency? She said they could easily have expressed that some of Trump’s conduct was unofficial. Sorting private from official conduct sometimes will be difficult—but not always.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Trump, John Roberts, Here’s Roberts, , Roberts, , , Jack Smith’s, John Sauer, Amy Coney Barrett, Barrett, Mike Pence, Pence, they’re, George Washington’s, Smith, Clarence Thomas, , , Sonia Sotomayor, Trump’s, Sotomayor Organizations: CNN, Trump, Branch, Capitol, Supreme, Government, Founders Locations: Washington ,, Washington, United States
The Supreme Court ruled on Monday that former President Donald J. Trump is entitled to substantial immunity from prosecution, delivering a major statement on the scope of presidential power. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., writing for the majority, said Mr. Trump had at least presumptive immunity for his official acts. He added that the trial judge must undertake an intensive factual review to separate official and unofficial conduct and to assess whether prosecutors can overcome the presumption protecting Mr. Trump for his official conduct. If Mr. Trump prevails at the polls, he could order the Justice Department to drop the charges. The majority said protecting all presidents from having to second-guess their actions for fear of possible prosecution was a vital constitutional command.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, John G, Roberts Organizations: Justice Department
CNN —A video-gaming Italian teenager will become the Catholic Church’s first millennial saint after his cause for canonization was approved by church authorities. Often depicted wearing jeans and trainers, his story is seen as helpful for the Catholic Church as it seeks to better connect with the younger generation in a digital age, and he’s become popular with Catholic youth groups. In May, a second miracle attributed to Acutis was recognized by Pope Francis, a decision which paved the way for him to be declared a saint. He was reportedly healed after his mother said she prayed to Acutis to intercede and help heal her son. Her mother said she prayed for her daughter’s recovery at the tomb of Acutis in Assisi.
Persons: Carlo Acutis, , Acutis, he’s, Pope Francis, ” Acutis, Matteo Berlenga, Reuters Acutis, , Mario, Pokémon, Antonia Salzano, , Salzano Organizations: CNN, Catholic, Vatican, Catholic Church, Reuters, PlayStation Locations: Catholic, St Peter’s, Vatican City, London, United Kingdom, Milan, Costa Rica, Florence, Italy, Assisi
He seemed to believe a windowless shower in a windowless bathroom offered his best chance of surviving the shrieking terror that was raining down from the night sky outside. Did he think the fireworks, with their window-rattling booms, were the work of some cosmic predator big enough to eat him whole? Did he think they were gunshots, or claps of thunder spreading out from inexplicable lightning bolts tearing open the sky above our house? We have friends whose terrified dog spent one Fourth of July fruitlessly trying to outrun the explosions. Other friends came home from watching the fireworks to discover that their own dog had bolted in terror from their fenced backyard and been killed by a car.
Persons: Clark,
Donald Trump didn’t sound any different, not really, during the debate than the way everyone knows him to be. He didn’t sound any different on Friday afternoon, either, at his post-debate rally in Chesapeake, Va. The world around him convulses and Mr. Trump pretty much stays the same. With Mr. Trump specifically, the way people talk about him like he’s the sly fox, there’s a version of this post-debate rally where he really deviated from the norm — went shorter, did something slightly different, to shape how people viewed last week. In politics, there’s a rule about not getting in the way of an opponent’s crisis, but in that parallel version of Friday’s rally, perhaps Mr. Trump would pursue some news-making surprise to press the advantage.
Persons: Donald Trump, convulses, Trump, there’s, Joe Biden, — Mr Locations: Chesapeake , Va
President Biden’s son Hunter Biden sued Fox News on Sunday, arguing that a mini-series produced by the company broke the law by sharing explicit photos and videos of him without his permission. The program, “The Trial of Hunter Biden,” which first appeared in 2022 on Fox Nation, the network’s streaming service, presented a dramatized version of a criminal trial of Mr. Biden, with fictional charges. The mini-series integrated real-life images of Mr. Biden in the nude and engaged in sex acts, imagery that was discovered on a laptop that Mr. Biden abandoned at a computer repair shop in Delaware. The law allows people to sue anyone who shares their sexually explicit photos and videos without permission. “Fox published and disseminated these intimate images to its vast audience of millions as part of an entertainment program in order to humiliate, harass, annoy and alarm Mr. Biden and to tarnish his reputation,” the lawsuit states.
Persons: Biden’s son Hunter Biden, Hunter Biden, , Mr, Biden, Fox, “ Fox Organizations: Fox News, Fox Nation, New York Supreme Locations: Delaware, New York, Manhattan, New York State
The Supreme Court’s three Democratic appointees railed in dissent against the conservative majority’s ruling that former President Donald J. Trump has some immunity for his official actions, declaring that their colleagues had made the president into “a king above the law.”Writing that the majority was “deeply wrong,” Justice Sonia Sotomayor added that beyond its consequences for the bid to prosecute Mr. Trump for his attempt to subvert the outcome of the 2020 election, it would have “stark” long-term consequences for the future of American democracy. “The court effectively creates a law-free zone around the president, upsetting the status quo that has existed since the founding,” she wrote, in an opinion joined by the other two Democratic appointees, Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson. Insulating the president of the United States — the most powerful person in the country and possibly the world, she noted — from criminal prosecution when he uses his official powers will allow him to freely use his official power to violate the law, exploit the trappings of his office for personal gain, or other “evil ends.”
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Sonia Sotomayor, Mr, , Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson Organizations: Democratic, United Locations: , United States
Democratic Party grandees, meanwhile, crowded onto Sunday talk shows to try to turn attention away from Biden’s confused and painful debate showing and to put the spotlight back on Trump. But any set of bad polls showing an already-tough reelection bid was seriously damaged by the debate could trigger panic again. The ferocious counterattack by Biden’s campaign, however, is not answering fundamental questions posed in the aftermath of a debate that shattered confidence in Biden’s capacity to beat Trump for many of his fellow Democrats. Voters saw Biden’s reduced and poignant state with their own eyes. Biden campaign manager Jennifer O’Malley Dillon even blamed any poor forthcoming polls on the media and not the president.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, Donald Trump, Biden’s, Democratic Party grandees, Nancy Pelosi, CNN’s Dana, , James Clyburn, Bash, CNN’s MJ Lee, Jeff Zeleny, Putin, Xi, Doug Burgum, “ Joe Biden, Wes Moore, it’s, Trump, he’s, , , Biden —, Jamie Raskin, ” Raskin, ” Biden’s, Jennifer O’Malley Dillon, Barack Obama’s, Utah Sen, Mitt Romney, Obama, alienates, Rob Flaherty, ” Flaherty Organizations: CNN, Camp David, Democratic, Democratic Party, Trump, Union, ” South Carolina Rep, Biden, North Dakota Gov, Press, Top Democrats, Maryland Democratic Gov, CBS, Maryland, MSNBC, , Trump . Voters Locations: Camp, “ State, , Russia, China, Iran, New Jersey, Atlanta, Chicago, North Carolina, Washington, Utah
Ismail Kadare, the Albanian novelist and poet who single-handedly wrote his isolated Balkan homeland onto the map of world literature, creating often dark, allegorical works that obliquely criticized the country’s totalitarian state, died in Tirana, Albania, on Monday. In a literary career that spanned half a century, Mr. Kadare (pronounced kah-dah-RAY) wrote scores of books, including novels and collections of poems, short stories and essays. He shot to international fame in 1970 when his first novel, “The General of the Dead Army,” was translated into French. Mr. Kadare’s name was floated several times for the Nobel Prize, but the honor eluded him. In 2005, he received the inaugural Man Booker International Prize (now the International Booker Prize), awarded to a living writer of any nationality for overall achievement in fiction.
Persons: Ismail Kadare, Bujar Hudhri, Kadare, RAY, , Man Booker, International Booker, Gabriel García Márquez, Philip Roth Organizations: Onufri Publishing House, Dead Army, Man, International Locations: Albanian, Tirana, Albania
The alleys are cast in permanent semidarkness, covered by black nylon tarpaulins to hide the Palestinian fighters there from Israeli drones overhead. This is not Gaza or a traditional Hamas stronghold. It is a refugee camp in Tulkarm, a town in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where the relatively moderate Palestinian faction of Fatah had long held sway. One of Israel’s most wanted men, he and other fighters like him say they have switched allegiances from the relatively moderate Fatah faction, which dominates the Israeli-occupied West Bank, to more radical groups like Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad since the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7. Asked what lesson he had taken from the war in Gaza, Mr. Jaber paused for a moment to think.
Persons: Fatah, Muhammad Jaber, Jaber, Patience, Organizations: Hamas, West Bank, Fatah Locations: Gaza, Tulkarm, Jihad, Israel
Over the past few years, many people have told me I should stop making Biden-is-old jokes because “it just helps Trump” — as if voters wouldn’t have noticed his age otherwise. As Joe Biden himself would say, “Here’s the deal”: What happened at the debate last week wasn’t a tragedy, it was a blessing in disguise. I called on Mr. Biden to step aside almost a year ago, warning that he would be forever known as “Ruth Bader Biden” if he didn’t. And far from being some kind of disaster for the Democratic Party, it plays right into what works best in 21-century American culture. And he didn’t have an endlessly long record to pick over.
Persons: Trump, I’m, Joe Biden, Biden, “ Ruth Bader Biden ”, it’s, Barack Obama, hadn’t Organizations: Biden, Democratic Party
The transcripts show that the grand jury heard testimony that Epstein, who was then in his 40s, had raped teenage girls as young as 14 at his Palm Beach mansion. He was sentenced to one and a half years in the Palm Beach County jail system, followed by a year of house arrest. According to the transcripts, Palm Beach Police Det. When she brought over a 23-year-old friend, Epstein told her that the friend was too old. “The more you did, the more money you made,” the detective said the teen told him.
Persons: Jeffrey Epstein, Ron DeSantis, Luis Delgado, Epstein, ” Delgado, , Joe Recarey, ” Recarey, Recarey, , Madame Heidi Fleiss, , ” Epstein, Delgado, “ Epstein Organizations: Gov, South, Palm Beach Police, New York —, Miami Herald Locations: Fort Lauderdale , Florida, Florida, South Florida, Palm Beach County, Palm Beach, New York, New York City, Palm
Jonathan Kaye was arrested on assault charges after a video of him punching a woman went viral. Banker Kaye resigned from Moelis last week after it said it was conducting an investigation. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementA senior banker who resigned from Moelis last week after a viral video showed him punching a woman was arrested on assault charges Monday morning. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: Jonathan Kaye, Kaye, Banker Kaye, , Perry Organizations: Moelis, Service, New York Police Department, Brooklyn District, Business
The tension and sense of anticipation was palpable inside the Supreme Court on Monday morning, as the justices delivered the remaining opinions and some of the most eagerly awaited decisions of the term. It was indeed not the case that most observers inside and outside the court were counting down to: on the scope and limits of presidential immunity. In the audience was Michael Dreeben, a former solicitor general who argued for the government in that case. Mr. Dreeben was greeted by several people before proceedings began, and as the justices spoke on the immunity case, he took notes on a small pad and occasionally twiddled his pen. But he showed little emotion as Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. delivered the majority opinion, effectively ruling against him in deciding that presidents have some immunity from criminal prosecution.
Persons: Amy Coney Barrett, Michael Dreeben, Dreeben, John G, Roberts Jr
You can opt-out at any time by visiting our Preferences page or by clicking "unsubscribe" at the bottom of the email. download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewSome Democrats working for President Joe Biden believe he would only step aside for another candidate if he was afforded a "dignified way out," according to The New York Times. Related storiesAnother anonymous source told The Times that Biden's son, Hunter Biden, recently convicted of three felony charges, was among the strongest voices encouraging his father to stay in the race. Klain, however, told The Times that it was certain that Biden would stay in the race.
Persons: , Joe Biden, Biden, Donald Trump, David, Hunter Biden, Jill Biden, Anita Dunn, Bob Bauer, Ron Klain, Klain Organizations: Service, The New York Times, Times, Business, The Times, Trump, White House, Democratic, CBS
CNN —Portugal advanced to the quarterfinals of Euro 2024 after beating Slovenia in a penalty shootout on Monday in a game where Cristiano Ronaldo was reduced to tears after missing a spot-kick in extra-time. Ronaldo had his penalty superbly saved by Jan Oblak after a frustrating evening for the striker. Ronaldo takes his penalty during extra-time which was saved by Jan Oblak of Slovenia. Having entered Monday’s game without a goal at Euro 2024, it was more of the same at the Frankfurt Arena for Ronaldo. He has had also the most shots of any player in his four games at Euro 2024 – 20 – with no goals to his name.
Persons: Cristiano Ronaldo, Ronaldo, Jan Oblak, Diogo Costa, Costa, Bernardo Silva slotting, Benjamin Šeško, Pepe, Robbie Jay Barratt, Ronaldo’s, Diogo Jota, Oblak, Šeško, he’s, Kirill Kudryavtsev, Peter Shilton Organizations: CNN, Slovenia, Portugal, Frankfurt Arena, Ronaldo, Slovenian, Saudi, European, Manchester United, Real Madrid, Juventus, Portugal’s, Getty, France Locations: Portugal, France, Slovenia, Oblak, Saudi Arabian, Greece, AFP
Read previewJoe Biden's debate performance last week was, by most accounts, a disaster. But First Lady Jill Biden — possibly the only person who could convince the president to call it quits — is standing beside him. "After last night's debate, he said, 'You know, Jill, I don't know what happened. I didn't feel that great,'" Jill Biden continued, according to the Post. AdvertisementUnless Jill Biden changes her tune or Joe Biden is offered a dignified way out, it doesn't seem likely that the president will back down.
Persons: , Joe, Jill Biden —, bungled, Thomas Friedman, Joe Biden, Biden, Hank Sheinkopf, Jill Biden, Jill, he's, David, Hunter Biden, Democratic National Convention —, there's Organizations: Service, Trump, Biden, Business, The New York Times, Times, DNC, Minneapolis, Facebook, Politico, Democratic, Guardian, The Washington Post, Vogue, Democratic National Convention Locations: Manhattan
Read previewIn the privacy of Camp David, members of President Joe Biden's family have criticized his top aides for his poor debate showing on Thursday, Politico reports. There, his family members blamed his political advisors and argued they should be demoted or fired, three anonymous sources told Politico. AdvertisementBauer played the role of Trump during mock debates at Camp David, while Klain led the debate prep, Politico reported. Increasing pressure to step asideFollowing Thursday's debate, Biden has faced increasingly urgent calls to step down. Related storiesDavid Axelrod, an Obama-era White House senior advisor, said on CNN after the debate that there was a "sense of shock" around Biden's debate performance.
Persons: , Camp David, Joe Biden's, Donald Trump, Biden's, Anita Dunn, Bob Bauer, Ron Klain, Bauer, Klain, Biden, Kevin Munoz, Munoz, David Axelrod, Obama, Axelrod, Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom, Gretchen Whitmer, Sen, Amy Klobuchar, Harris, CNN's Anderson Cooper, Cooper, Gov . Newsom, Newsom Organizations: Service, Politico, Business, Biden, Trump, Camp, White House, CNN, Gov, Democratic, MSNBC, Business Insider Locations: Maryland, California, Michigan, Minnesota, United States, North Carolina
Israel released the chief of the Gaza Strip’s largest hospital on Monday after more than seven months of detention, Palestinian health officials said, a move that drew an immediate outcry in Israel even though no charges against him have been made public. Mohammad Abu Salmiya, the director of Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, was taken into custody in late November as he took part in an effort to evacuate patients from the hospital, which at the time was under siege by the Israeli military. The military said he was taken for questioning about Hamas operations at the hospital. Reaction to Dr. Abu Salmiya’s release underlined divergent views of the war both inside and outside Israel. Speaking at a news conference at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis after his release, Dr. Abu Salmiya, visibly frail, said that he had been released and returned to Gaza along with nearly 50 other Palestinian detainees, including other doctors and health ministry staff members.
Persons: Israel, Mohammad Abu Salmiya, Abu Salmiya’s, Benjamin Netanyahu’s, Khan Younis, Abu Salmiya Organizations: Al, Shifa, Nasser Hospital Locations: Gaza, Israel, Gaza City, Khan
With Monday’s Supreme Court presidential immunity ruling likely preventing a trial in the federal election subversion case before the election, Trump is poised to avoid pre-election trials in the three most significant criminal prosecutions he faces. It will determine Trump’s legal fate. A Supreme Court ruling that hamstrings the DC federal subversion caseThe charges by special counsel Jack Smith alleging Trump subverted the 2020 election was the second to last of the four cases brought. “You can’t charge a former president for a crime for the first time in history without going to Supreme Court,” Cobb said. But the new Supreme Court immunity standard jeopardizes the use of much of that conduct in the case.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, won’t, , Ty Cobb, , ” Cobb, pardoning, Fani Willis, Paul Rosenzweig, Bill Clinton, Jamie Raskin, ” Raskin, Jack Smith, Tanya Chutkan’s, Smith, Smith’s, Cobb, John Roberts, Rosenzweig, Aileen Cannon, Cannon, She’s, she’s, she’d, Willis, Nathan Wade, it’s, Wade, Nathan Wade's, Kaitlan Collins, Fulton, Scott McAfee, Michael Moore, Moore, Barack Obama, ” Moore, CNN’s Lauren Fox, Zachary Cohen Organizations: CNN, Republican White House, Trump, Fulton, Department of Homeland Security, Maryland Democrat, DC, DC Circuit, White, Justice Department Locations: Manhattan, Russia, Georgia, Florida, , Fulton County
The Supreme Court heard two other cases this term concerning the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., writing for the majority, said Mr. Trump had immunity for his official acts. Two of the four charges against Mr. Trump are based on that law. After the appeals court ruled against Mr. Trump, he asked the Supreme Court to intervene. At the argument, several of the conservative justices did not seem inclined to examine the details of the charges against Mr. Trump.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, John G, Roberts, , Sonia Sotomayor, Tom Brenner, Tanya S, Jack Smith, Smith’s, Neil M, Gorsuch Organizations: Capitol, , The New York Times, Justice Department, Federal, Court, U.S ., Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit, Trump, Mr Locations: Washington, United States
Stephen K. Bannon, the longtime adviser to former President Donald J. Trump, has reported for a four-month sentence in federal prison on Monday after hosting the two final hours of his podcast from just outside the low-security facility in Danbury, Conn.“We’ll be as close to the prison as we can possibly get,” said Mr. Bannon in a high-spirited interview over the weekend. And when the taping, which he cast as an unsubtle troll pointed at the Justice Department, is concluded, “I’ll walk across the street and surrender.”He surrendered shortly after noon Eastern time. As a result, the very public figure will remain out of view — and off the air — until just a few days before the Nov. 5 election. But the right wing firebrand insists that swapping his studio mic for a prison job, and his trademark double-collared shirts for government khakis, will have little impact on his influential “War Room” podcast. In fact, he claims, it will “only get bigger and more powerful” while he’s in custody.
Persons: Stephen K, Bannon, Donald J, Trump, , , khakis Organizations: Justice Department Locations: Danbury, Conn
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