Sunday, April 30, 2017

Trump's Supporters Are Just As Frustrated As He Is About Not Getting Things Done

Alex Wong / Getty Images

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Throughout President Donald Trump’s first 100 days in office, there’s been a deluge of bad press.

From the start, there were issues with the size of Trump’s inauguration. He said it was the largest, the media showed otherwise. There was the resignation of now-former national security advisor Mike Flynn, a huge blow to Trump at the time, especially considering Flynn had only been on the job a mere 24 days.

There was the failure of his health care bill, which Trump said throughout his campaign would be enacted within his first 100 days in office to replace the Affordable Care Act. It didn’t happen.

Before that, there were issues with his travel ban, which was blocked by more than one federal judge, even after it was revised. And who can count all of the snafus White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer has endured? All of this is part of a long list of losses the administration has endured in its first 100 days, and the people who voted for the president have taken notice.

On Saturday evening, Trump held a rally here in Harrisburg and thousands flocked to the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex & Expo Center to show their unwavering support.

One of those people was Michelle Raifsnider, 47, who hails from Chambersburg, Pa., She wore a snapback which covered her nearly waist-length long, brown hair and donned an “adorable deplorable” T-shirt. Raifsnider said she loves how “transparent” Trump is and that, in her opinion, the nation hasn’t seen a president who was truly open with people like he's been.

While Raifsnider spoke, Lisa, a 48-year-old woman from New Jersey who did not want to use her last name, interjected, saying, “I agree with her." Trump has been "very transparent and very open to Twitter and letting us know what’s going on. He is trying, he is trying within his 100 days … He is trying, he is trying to uphold his promises but the Democrats are blocking him,” she told BuzzFeed News.

Supporters cheer for Trump at the rally Saturday in Harrisburg.

Patrick Semansky / AP

Both women agreed that the primary reason Trump was having difficulty fulfilling campaign promises was because of the other major political party, even through Republicans currently hold both the House and Senate. The pair were adamant that people are giving the president a hard time for “any real reason other than they don’t like" him.

President Trump has also faced opposition from outside the political arena in the form of protesters, like the millions of people who took to the streets during the International Women’s March the day after his inauguration.

“They say, 'Trump’s racist, Trump’s misogynist.' I think it’s all taken out of context,” Raifsnider said. “And as a woman, I’m more offended by the pussy hats and the people walking around with vagina costumes, like seriously, that’s your women’s march?”

Lisa followed, “I've never seen a bunch of cruel and self-entitled women as I have on Facebook and on Twitter. The things that they are saying go against the exact thing that they’re for.”

At the core of their arguments was the feeling that someone or something has been keeping Trump from doing his job, like the federal judges who blocked his travel ban. Lisa stated the courts should be “disbanded” because “we did not elect them [the judges], we elected Trump.”

Raifsnider added that “one man should not override the president and the people,” ignoring the fact that the US has three branches of government, all of which have separate but equal power.

Though some have come to expect certain stock responses from Trump supporters, like “Lock her up” or “Build that wall,” both Raifsnider and Lisa expressed more compassionate sides when asked about misconceptions people have about Trump supporters.

“We’re tired of hearing that we’re the alt-right, we’re tired of hearing that, because we’re not what we're being labeled as,” Raifsnider said. Lisa was also more compassionate when it came to travel ban-related issues, saying, “I know a lot of people who are Muslim, who are great people and they want to protect their children the same way that we do." She added that her main concern was border protection and having people properly vetted before entering the country.

While thousands waited for entry into the complex to hear Trump's speech, a man named Darry Troup — also known as Minister 50 — played classic Motown tunes while selling what he humorously called “Trump phones." The devices are aimed at helping the economically disadvantaged gain access to smartphones. Troup, a 57-year-old Harrisburg community activist, said he wasn’t a Trump supporter, but offered his thoughts on why the current president has been running into so much trouble with making good on his promises.

“I think a lot of his attempts to get things done have been stopped because of self-afflicted lack of preparation,” he said. “He has to stop vilifying and blaming everyone but himself for things that don’t go right, and once he learns that, that’ll help him understand what his predecessors went through in trying to get things done.”



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Saturday, April 29, 2017

Here Are The 10 Best Jokes Trump Missed At The White House Correspondents' Dinner

President Trump didn’t show up to the White House Correspondents’ Dinner Saturday, but that didn’t mean he was off limits for The Daily Show’s Hasan Minhaj.

Hasan Minhaj, a correspondent for The Daily Show, performed at the White House Correspondents' Dinner on Saturday and, while President Trump didn't attend, there were plenty of laughs at his expense.

Hasan Minhaj, a correspondent for The Daily Show, performed at the White House Correspondents' Dinner on Saturday and, while President Trump didn't attend, there were plenty of laughs at his expense.

Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

10. "No one wanted to do this. So of course it lands in the hands of an immigrant, that is how it plays out. Don Rickles died just so you wouldn't ask him to do this gig."

10. "No one wanted to do this. So of course it lands in the hands of an immigrant, that is how it plays out. Don Rickles died just so you wouldn't ask him to do this gig."

CSPAN

9. "We have to address the elephant that's not in the room. The leader of our country is not here. And that’s because he lives in Moscow, it’s a very long flight. It would be very hard for Vlad to make it. Vlad cant just make it on a Saturday, it’s a Saturday! As for the other guy I think he’s in Pennsylvania because he can't take a joke."

9. "We have to address the elephant that's not in the room. The leader of our country is not here. And that’s because he lives in Moscow, it’s a very long flight. It would be very hard for Vlad to make it. Vlad cant just make it on a Saturday, it’s a Saturday! As for the other guy I think he’s in Pennsylvania because he can't take a joke."

Cliff Owen / AP


View Entire List ›



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Trump Read "The Snake" On His 100th Day As President As A Metaphor For Immigrants

Carolyn Kaster / AP

On his 100th day as president, Donald Trump reverted back to his days on the campaign trail to recite the lyrics of a soul song titled The Snake to supporters gathered in Pennsylvania, comparing the song's traitorous reptile to immigrants.

It was a song Trump read repeatedly during the campaign, where his speeches resembled one another with few exceptions. During those days, he used the lyrics, which describe a charitable woman taking in a freezing snake, only to have it kill her with a venomous bite, as a metaphor for radical Islamic terrorists that he claimed were trying to enter the US as refugees.

On Saturday during a rally in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, to mark his 100th day in office, Trump recited the song for the first time as president, this time directly tying the poem to undocumented immigrants, which he has repeatedly tried to link with rising crime rates.

"So let's dedicate this to [Secretary of Homeland Security John] Kelly, the Border Patrol, and the ICE agents for doing such an incredible job. All right?" Trump said as he began the dramatic reading.

Despite the president and his administration's attempts to link crime with undocumented immigrants, multiple studies have found the assertion to be incorrect, including the Libertarian think-tank, the Cato Institute.

Documents obtained by BuzzFeed News also show that despite Trump's claims that deportations have been aimed at dangerous undocumented criminals, more than half of those arrested by ICE in raids during his first 100 days in office had no criminal record.

That hasn't stopped Trump from repeating the claim and, on Saturday, comparing immigrants to the song's "vicious snake."

"'The poor thing,' she cried, 'I'll take you in, and I'll take care of you,'" Trump said as he read the words of the song's "tender woman" to the ailing reptile. The president then paused and said, "the border," to note that the woman's home was a metaphor for the US.

"Does that explain it folks?" he concluded.

Here's the full text and video of Trump's recitation of The Snake.

Okay. So let's dedicate this to General Kelly, the Border Patrol, and the ICE agents for doing such an incredible job. All right? This was written by Al Wilson, a long time ago. And I thought of it having to do with our borders and people coming in and we know what we're going to have. We're going to have problems. We have to very, very carefully vet. We have to be smart. We have to be vigilant. So here it is, "The Snake." It's called "The Snake."

On her way to work one morning down the path along the lake a tender hearted woman saw a poor, half frozen snake. His pretty colored skin had been all frosted with the dew. 'The poor thing,' she cried, 'I'll take you in, and I'll take care of you.'

The border.

Take me in oh, tender woman, take me in, oh, tender woman, sighs the vicious snake. She wrapped him up all cozy in a comforter of silk, and laid him by her fire side with some honey and some milk. She hurried home from work that night and as soon as she arrived she found that pretty snake she'd taken in had been revived. Take me in, oh, tender woman. Take me in for heaven's sake. Take me in oh, tender woman, sighed that vicious snake. She clutched him to her bosom, you're so beautiful, she cried. But if I hadn't brought you in by now, oh, heavens, you would have died. She stroked his pretty skin again and kissed him and held him tight. But instead of saying thank you, that snake gave her a vicious bite! Take me he in oh, tender woman, take me in for heaven's sake. Take me in, oh, tender woman, sighed the vicious snake. I have saved you cried the woman. And now I'm going to die. Oh, shut up, silly woman said the reptile with a grin. You knew damn well I was a snake before you took me in.

View Video ›

CNN




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More Than Half Of Immigrants Arrested In ICE Raids Had No Criminal Record Or Traffic Convictions

Bryan Cox / U.S. Immigration and Customs Enf

More than half of the 683 immigrants arrested in raids shortly after President Trump took office either had no criminal convictions or had traffic violations as their most serious crimes, according to federal data obtained by BuzzFeed News.

The report by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) showed 176 immigrants arrested during the raids had not been convicted of a crime. The largest group of immigrants with convictions, 205, committed traffic offenses, of which 161 had been convicted of driving under the influence. The second largest number in the group, 33, had been convicted of another traffic offense.

Two people arrested during the raids had been convicted of a homicide, 18 had assault records, and three were arrested for dangerous drugs. Another three had rape convictions and six had sexual assault records, according to the report provided by a congressional staffer. While far fewer, these convictions were featured prominently in ICE statements about the raids, dubbed Operation Cross Check.

Charles Reed / U.S. Immigration and Customs Enf

The figures were first reported by The Washington Post, but included slightly different data. ICE did not return BuzzFeed News requests for comment on the report.

The nationwide raids sent chills through the country's immigrant community and came shortly after Trump took office after running on an anti-immigration platform that promised to deport millions of undocumented immigrants.

The operations took place in major cities like Los Angeles, Atlanta, New York, and Chicago. At the time, officials said the operations were planned before the executive orders detailing new deportation priorities.

From the day Trump took office until March 13, ICE has taken 21,362 immigrants into custody. During the same time period, the Obama administration arrested 29,238 immigrants in 2014, 18,031 in 2015, and 16,104 in 2016.

The raids under Trump have upset activists who say that while the operations were similar to ones conducted under Obama, there were far more collateral arrests of undocumented immigrants with no criminal records.

Read the full report here:

LINK: Immigration Enforcement Raids Sweep Across US



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A Man On A Bus Was Spotted With A 30 Gallon Tub Of Cinnabon Frosting And People Have Questions

“I want to see this heist movie.”

It was a normal Friday evening on the bus in Toronto until...wait, what's that?

It was a normal Friday evening on the bus in Toronto until...wait, what's that?

Craig Calhoun

Let's take a closer look...

Let's take a closer look...

Craig Calhoun


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This Jimmy John's Employee Was Chill AF When A Thief Pointed A Gun In His Face

“I was thinking, fuck this guy, dude. Because he did it like a bitch.”

On Wednesday night in Kansas City, Missouri, a Jimmy John's employee was robbed at gunpoint — and was somehow chill AF through the whole thing.

The robber pretended to order food and didn't pull out the gun until Tuker Murray, the 24-year-old Jimmy John's assistant manager who was behind the counter, starting ringing him up.

The area manager, who is partially visible in the beginning of the video, quickly called the police. Two other employees ran to the back of the store and hid in the freezer, Murray told BuzzFeed News.

youtube.com

Meanwhile, Murray took his damn time pulling off his gloves, slowly opening the cash register, and looking like he doesn't get paid nearly enough for this crap.

Meanwhile, Murray took his damn time pulling off his gloves, slowly opening the cash register, and looking like he doesn't get paid nearly enough for this crap.

Murray told BuzzFeed News he "did not get the feeling" the robber would actually shoot, so he wasn't scared — but he was pissed off.

"I was thinking, fuck this guy, dude," Murray said. "Because he did it like a bitch."

youtube.com

On Friday, police arrested 54-year-old Terry K. Rayford and charged him with being a felon in possession of a firearm.

On Friday, police arrested 54-year-old Terry K. Rayford and charged him with being a felon in possession of a firearm.

According to the Western District of Missouri Department of Justice, Rayford was on parole and had multiple felony convictions for first degree armed robbery.

Kansas City Missouri Police Department

In the end, no shots were fired in the Jimmy John's — unless you count this one.

In the end, no shots were fired in the Jimmy John's — unless you count this one.

Murray said he was "actually fine" after the robbery, and it was "business as usual" after that. He even finished out his shift for the night.

And the reason Murray acted so chill is simple — he really is just a chill kind of guy, he said.

"This probably takes it to the next level though," he said.

youtube.com


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The Far Left And Far Right Are Set To Clash In Rural Kentucky Today. Here's Why That Matters.

A white supremacist rally set for Saturday, and the expected left-wing response, has the town of Pikeville, Kentucky, population 7,038, under lockdown in anticipation of violence.

The rally, organized by Neo-Nazi groups National Socialist Movement, the Traditionalist Workers Party, and the National Front is scheduled for 2 p.m. ET Saturday. Left-wing groups from across the South are assembling a militant response.

Both the Far Left and the Far Right have issued calls online to gather in Pikeville and oppose the enemy with force.

Anarchist activist Lacy Macauley told BuzzFeed News that she estimates a large number of militant Leftist activists — who identify as anarchist "antifa," short for anti-fascists — are heading to Pikeville.

Kentucky is an Open Carry state, which elevates the possibility of lethal violence above that of gun-shy Berkeley, CA, where similar clashes have taken place.

Macauley said that many Leftists are keeping guns in the trunks of their cars (though she is not, she said) because they expect the other side to be doing the same.

"I’m hoping that we all make it. We’re all very worried," she said. "If I owned a bulletproof vest, I’d be wearing it. I’ve got a megaphone and a flag with a sturdy pole."

Though the Far Right and Far Left have clashed repeatedly in Berkeley, California, and in Washington, the forces coming together in Pikeville signal an expansion of the violent culture wars enflamed by Donald Trump's election beyond universities and liberal towns into deeply conservative counties (Pike county voted 80% for Trump).

The key players are also different than those who clashed in Berkeley or Washington.

The groups that organized the original gathering are old guard white supremacists, more akin to the Ku Klux Klan than the so-called alt-right, the loose online coalition of white nationalists, libertarians, and internet trolls that support Donald Trump. The National Socialist Movement, National Front, and Traditionalist Workers Party openly and collectively campaign for white power. By contrast, many within the alt-right balk at the generalization that everyone within the movement is a white nationalist, though prominent individuals like Richard Spencer are avowedly so.

Similarly, the Leftists converging on Pikeville are different from those in Berkeley and the San Francisco Bay Area, where radical movements have flourished since the 1960s and where the populace at large leans left.

According to Macauley, those in Pikeville are antifa from across the South — liberal enclaves like Asheville, North Carlina, or Atlanta, and from rural areas — where there are noticeably fewer people on the Far Left than in Berkeley.

Macauley herself drove to Pikeville from Washington, DC. She said that groups she's affiliated with saw a spike in membership after the election and the inauguration because more people than ever before "felt the call to rise up against this tide of white supremacy that’s been rising in this country."

youtube.com

To Macauley and to a number of her antifa comrades, the protest in Pikeville is symbolic because it will be one of the first major confrontations in the South, a place where extremist groups like the KKK have long held sway and where the majority of people voted for Donald Trump. The KKK and other hate groups have been emboldened by Trump's election in some places in the South.

Pikeville is scrambling to adjust to its newfound place in the culture wars and prevent violence on Saturday.

According to the Louisville Courier-Journal, the city has banned masks for the day, likely to counteract Black Bloc protesting tactics. Businesses downtown are closing for the day. An event organized to counter the white supremacist rally, the Rally for Equality for American Values, has been canceled over fears of violence. The Kentucky State Police will be there to reinforce local law enforcement, and the Kentucky National Guard has been briefed about the possible clash as well, according to the newspaper.

The University of Pikeville is also shutting down for the day to keep students safe. The school's president has told students to leave town. He opened a warning letter by saying, "Usually, Pikeville is a quiet and safe town in the heart of the Appalachian Mountains. This weekend could be different. Very different." A state senator representing the area has also advised his constituents to avoid downtown, the Courier-Journal reported.

Even the neighboring town of Coal Run, less than five miles away, has advised citizens to avoid their own downtown. Many Coal Run businesses will be closed Saturday. "There's certainly anxiety in the air," Coal Run Mayor Andrew H. Scott told BuzzFeed News. "It's gonna be a long day.

In a last ditch effort to maintain calm, the Twitter account Pikeville Project, @MMPikeville, sent out several desperate messages on Friday imploring residents, ralliers, and protesters to keep the peace, using the hashtag #PrayersForPikeville



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Friday, April 28, 2017

The EPA Just Scrubbed The Climate Change Section Of Its Website To Reflect Trump's Views

President Trump wears a coal miners hard hat during a rally in West Virginia on May 5, 2016.

Steve Helber / AP

The Environmental Protection Agency has removed the climate change section from its website as part of the agency's "new direction under President Donald Trump."

The removal came Friday as the EPA announced changes and "updates" that are "intended to ensure that the public can use the website to understand the agency's current efforts." The announcement states that "content related to climate and regulation is also being reviewed."

Would-be visitors to the EPA's climate page — which previously included information on why and how the climate is changing — are now redirected to a page that mentions the updates but has no information about climate change. In its place, the page now has a link to a "snapshot" of the site in January, when the climate information was still available.

EPA

In a statement Friday, EPA spokesman JP Freire explained the changes by saying "we want to eliminate confusion by removing outdated language first and making room to discuss how we’re protecting the environment and human health by partnering with states and working within the law.”

The takedown of the EPA's climate change page is the latest in a series of website alterations by the Trump administration, which has placed a new focus on oil drilling and coal mining.

Perhaps most notably, the Bureau of Land Management — which is part of the Department of the Interior overseen by Trump appointee Ryan Zinke — changed the feature image on its website from a family hiking in the wilderness to a massive coal seam.

BLM

The change immediately raised questions about the administration's intentions and prompted a response from the agency that it planned to rotate through different images showing the various offerings of the country's public lands. As of Friday, the site displayed an image of a sheep rancher.

But that wasn't the only change.

Starting last month, the BLM began uploading photos of oil drills, coal mining operations, and other heavy machinery to its Flickr page.

An image recently uploaded to the BLM's Flicker page shows a oil drill on public land.

BLM

In the past, the page had been mostly used to share picturesque scenes from national parks, a Valentine-themed series of wild animals, and other comparatively innocuous snaps of public land.

BLM

Information about climate change has also apparently been removed from the website of the State Department, while details about renewable energy were modified on the Department of Energy's website.

Before Friday's changes, the EPA website had already been the subject of other alterations by the Trump administration. In January, the White House reportedly instructed the agency to remove its climate change page. While that didn't happen immediately, in February some climate content on the site had been removed, according to a report by the Environmental Data & Governance Initiative, which has been tracking the changes and archiving the deleted content.

In response to the latest changes to the site, David Doniger, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's climate and clean air program, tweeted that a "cleansing has begun."

Several unnamed EPA employees also spoke to the Washington Post, saying they had not been consulted about changes to the agency's website and that they weren't pleased.

“People are obviously unhappy,” one employee told the Post. “It is, in my opinion, the best climate education website out there.”

LINK: Trump’s New EPA Chief Promises To Pull Back Environment Rules In First Agency Speech




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The Man Behind Fyre Festival Comes With A List Of Expensive, Unfulfilled Promises

Facebook / Via Facebook: billy.mcfarland.9

Billy McFarland's company promised two luxurious weekends of music in the Bahamas, lush accommodations, and delectable food. What they got was the fiasco people now know as the Fyre Festival, where they were instead given disaster relief tents and lunches served in styrofoam boxes.

"It's a very, very tough day for all of us," McFarland told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview Friday.

McFarland described what he said was an ambitious project that quickly grew to be bigger than what the 300-person staff could handle on the island of Exumas.

But the college dropout from New Jersey has a knack for promising lavish and luxurious services aimed at rich and elite clientele, often falling short on what was pledged.

Three years before the disastrous Fyre Festival, McFarland launched a credit card company and private club dubbed Magnises, taking cues from the exclusive American Express black card. But with wealthy young socialites years away from the spending power of the black AmEx, the Magnises card was aimed at a younger audience.

The card, launched in 2014, promised tickets for hard-to-get-in-to shows, clubs, and events with the social elite for a $250 annual fee, but members told Business Insider the company often delivered tickets late, for the wrong date, or not at all. Credit card statements would show up with unwanted charges that took months to fix, members said.

Prior to launching Magnises, McFarland started a content sharing and networking site called Spling, receiving $400,000 in funding in 2011, TechCrunch reported. The website now sits apparently abandoned.

On Friday, McFarland again found himself at the helm of a project that customers said failed to deliver on the lavish services it promised.

"The festival become large and we needed more manpower than the 300 person team we had," McFarland told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview.

But before discussing what went wrong with the Fyre Festival, which lured people into spending thousands of dollars to see headliners like Blink 182, McFarland wanted to talk about how the idea for the festival came about following a harrowing flight from New York to the Bahamas with the rapper Ja Rule.

After nearly running out of gas, McFarland said, they unexpectedly landed on the island of Exumas.

"I was a computer programmer and, after computers, the two things I love most are the ocean and, for some reason, rap music," he said. "So these three hobbies of mine somehow led me to meeting my partner, Ja Rule. Together we became friends and business partners."

McFarland retold the story nearly word-for-word in another interview with Rolling Stone magazine Friday.

But McFarland's tale of serendipity instead turned to chaos for people who paid up to $250,000 to attend what was billed as a posh music festival on an island once owned by Colombian drug kingpin Pablo Escobar.

View Video ›

Facebook: video.php

"I think the festival took on a life of its own, bringing more guests than we expected," he said. "We quickly learned that the infrastructure here in the island was not what we were used to."

McFarland said basic services were not available and the company had to "literally build our own city."

The Bahamas Ministry of Tourism, however, laid blame on the organizers, saying in a statement Friday "clearly they did not have the capacity to execute an event of this scale."

McFarland didn't deny that was true, stating, "it was very ambitious in our part."

Still, there are indications that early in the planning stages of the festival, party-goers headed to the Bahamas were not going to be getting the affluent accommodations they expected.

The beach-side tents set up for guests were the same ones that have been used by the United Nations and FEMA to quickly accommodate victims of natural disasters that struck Haiti, Venezuela, and Nepal.

Screenshot / Via relieftents.com

McFarland denied the "eco-friendly, geodesic domes" were purchased from a disaster relief firm and said the tents were obtained from Eventstar, a company that has provided shelter for high-end concerts like what Fyre Festival was billed to be.

However, a reporter for BuzzFeed News in Exumas confirmed the tents were in fact provided by Shelter Systems, a company that provides tents for natural disasters and notes their product is cheap and easy to build.

An employee at the company said he could not confirm whether or not the tents were from Shelter Systems, adding only that, "we have not worked with them directly."

Other employees who worked for the company say the festival appeared to be headed for disaster early on.

Chloe Gordon, a talent producer for the Fyre Festival, published a column with New York Magazine Friday where she said basic elements of the festival, such as venders and stages were put in place late in the planning.

Musicians and bands that had been slated to perform had not been paid, she wrote.

McFarland, however, denied there were early signs the festival was headed toward disaster.

"Unfortunately some of the last minute challenges arose, and we didn't see it coming," he said.

The New York Post reported signs of the pending fiasco led the festival's top organizers, including Ja Rule and McFarland, to warn A-listers not to go to the island.

"They were just like, 'Oh, come next weekend when all the kinks have been worked out.' This was before the chaos started," a source told the Post.

McFarland denied the claim to BuzzFeed News, saying A-listers and workers for the company were not given such a warning. Fyre, he said, plans to hold a free concert next year to make it up to the people who bought tickets for this year's now-cancelled festival.

The beachside concert in 2018 will be held in a yet-to-be-announced city and the company will donate $1 for each ticket sold to the Bahamas Red Cross, he said.

But the failed promise of the luxury music, art, and food festival was reminiscent of McFarland's troubles with the credit card firm he launched years prior.

In an interview with the New York Post, McFarland explained the name, Magnises, which he said is, "Latin for absolutely nothing."

"The name is made up," the told the paper. "But it sounds grand, doesn't it?"

LINK: Fyre Festival Descended Into Utter Chaos And The People Who Paid Serious Cash For It Are Livid

LINK: Meet The College Dropout Who Started An Elite Credit Card That You’re Probably Not Cool Enough To Own



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A Trump Supporter Allegedly Attacked Students At A Kentucky University With A Machete

Leigh Searcy / Via Twitter: @LSearcLex

A former student of Kentucky's Transylvania University was arrested Friday after he allegedly stormed a campus café with a machete and a bag of knives, quizzed students on their political affiliations, and injured two women.

Mitchell W. Adkins allegedly entered the cafe on the Lexington campus shortly before 9 a.m. local time before threatening patrons and employees, the Lexington Police Department said in a statement.

Two women suffered non-life threatening injuries. One was taken to a hospital, while the other was treated and released at the scene.

Mitchell W. Adkins.

Facebook

Witnesses told local media the suspect shouted "The day of reckoning is here!" as he began his attack.

"He asked the first girl if she was a Democrat or a Republican. She said Republican. He said okay, then asked some other girl," Michael Soder told Lex18. "By that time, some of my friends were running out and yelling for us to leave, and I tried to stay behind to see if — I mean I didn't know what to do, I wanted to help, but I knew I should get out of there."

"He asked somebody what their political affiliation was, they said ‘Republican’ and the guy said, 'You are safe,'" campus newspaper editor-in-chief Tristan Reynolds told the Lexington Herald-Leader. "And then I realized what was going on and started getting people out.”

“We started to scatter and then very, very quickly campus security was getting everybody sheltered and secure,” Reynolds said. “They were very on it.”

Michele Sparks, the university's vice president for marketing and communications, told BuzzFeed News the cafe is a "popular gathering spot" that was packed with around 30 people at the time of the incident.

She said a staffer at the café quickly pushed a silent alarm, triggering an immediate response from the university's department of public safety.

"Our DPS staff was on site within minutes and apprehended the suspect very rapidly," she said. "He actually cooperated with our DPS at first. When they came into the room, he dropped his weapon pretty quickly, but then there was a minor struggle and he was taken to the ground and handcuffed."

Leigh Searcy / Via Twitter: @LSearcLex

Sparks said the university had recently held a "refresher" on a campus shooter drill, which she credited for the swift official response.

"It could have been a lot worse," she said. "We are so proud of our police force. They saved a lot of lives today."

Lexington police said Adkins was taken to a hospital to be treated for self-inflicted injuries.

Adkins has been charged with assault in the first and fourth degrees, and three counts of wanton endangerment in the first degree.

"Investigators are still working to determine what led up to the attack and what may have motivated Adkins," police said.

Adkins was a former Transylvania student who withdrew from the university in 2015, according to Sparks.

In 2015, after BuzzFeed staffer and Transylvania alumna Tracy Clayton wrote a viral post detailing her experiences with racism at the university, Adkins wrote a post on this website as a community contributor. (Any member of the public can create a BuzzFeed account and generate what are known as community posts.)

In the post, "Discrimination Of Conservatives In Liberal Arts," Adkins wrote of making "several enemies" because he is a "proud Republican."

"It's amazing to me that when I listen to someone's political opinion and then give my own, I'm the one who's lashed out at for being a 'racist' or 'bigot,' some even go as far as saying 'bane of society' or 'fascist Nazi,'" he wrote.

Adkins discussed losing friends because of his opinions on gay marriage and Caitlyn Jenner, and detailed his unhappiness with the student newspaper urging students not to wear racially insensitive costumes for Halloween.

Facebook

"I am proud of who I am, but this school has shown me that it's not okay to be a Republican anymore," he concluded. "All of these people who are all about non-discrimination and against bullies and all for equality, are more than happy to turn around and scream at someone for being different, kick him to the ground, and leave him there. I am not the bigot at this school, it is those who go back on their beliefs in order to encourage them."

In a postscript, Adkins said he had later dropped out of college.

"The constant bullying and lack of friends drove me to an overdose, a trip to the hospital, and two trips to a mental hospital," he wrote. "The constant thought of knowing I'd never fit in was too much for me to bear."

On his Facebook page, on which he first shared his BuzzFeed post, Adkins has written and shared a number of posts about his support for President Trump, his views on gun control, and his views on attacks committed by Muslims.

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This Teen Had An Amazingly Petty Response When Her Ex Asked For His Prom Money Back

“Here’s every cent of your $95.”

Maria, a high school senior from Colorado, had been dating her now-ex-boyfriend for about a year. Last Friday, he called and broke up with her about a week before her prom.

Maria, a high school senior from Colorado, had been dating her now-ex-boyfriend for about a year. Last Friday, he called and broke up with her about a week before her prom.

Twitter: @panchal_maria

"He had to go on a basketball trip, and called me and said, 'This isn't working out,'" Maria told BuzzFeed News.

Maria said she later found out her ex was attending another prom with a different girl. Around the same time, he asked her if he could have $95 back he spent on prom expenses.

Maria said she later found out her ex was attending another prom with a different girl. Around the same time, he asked her if he could have $95 back he spent on prom expenses.

Twitter: @panchal_maria

Maria said that when she was chatting with friends about the situation, she began brainstorming ways to pay her ex back, but also be "petty."

"Guys, let's do something funny, let's mess with him," Maria recalled telling them.

She added that she didn't want to hurt her ex, but just do something "harmless" to mess with him a little.


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People Are Dragging Ja Rule For The Tropical Shitshow That Is Fyre Festival

“When you go to Fyre Festival expecting Ja Rule, but it turns out to be Ashanti town.”


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People Are Dragging Kendall Jenner And Other Models Who Promoted The Disaster That Is Fyre Festival

“Time to fyre your agent, Kendall.”

Last year, the Fyre Festival roped in Kendall Jenner, Bella Hadid and other supermodels/Instagram celebs to act as "influencers" for the event.

Instagram: @bellahadid

A bunch of Victoria's Secret models including Jenner, Hadid, Alessandra Ambrosio, Emily Rajatkowski and Hailey Baldwin were flown in a tiny plane to Fyre Cay — a private island in the Bahamas — "to give feedback" for the launch of the Fyre Festival.

The organizers, Ja Rule and entrepreneur Billy McFarland, personally invited 400 influencers from various fields to post the festival's symbol — an orange square — to Instagram, Vanity Fair reported. These influencers included surfers, football players, and of course, shitloads of models.

BuzzFeed News reached out to Jenner, Rajatkowski, Ambrosio and Baldwin for a comment.

Instagram: @haileybaldwin


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Here Are 25 Simply Incredible Tweets Dragging The People At The Fyre Festival

“CUT MY TRUST FUND INTO PIECES. I WAS PROMISED A RESORT.”


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Fyre Festival Has Turned Into A Total Shitshow And The Rich People There Are Livid

And the rest of us are totally soaking this up.

Fyre Festival — organized by Ja Rule and billed as a luxury music, art, and food event on a private island in the Bahamas and hyped heavily by celebrities and ~influencers~ like Kendall Jenner — is actually a hot hot hot mess.

instagram.com

According to its website, the festival promised that attendees will be “be flown roundtrip on a custom, VIP-configured Boeing 737 aircraft between Miami International Airport and Exuma International Airport on Great Exuma.” (Exuma is a district in the Bahamas.) Tickets for the event reportedly ranged from $2,000-$12,000.

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Facebook: fyrefestival


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Trump Says He Thought Being President Would Be Easier Than His Life As A Businessman

Carlos Barria / Reuters

President Donald Trump said the job of the presidency has been more work than his previous life as a property mogul in an interview with Reuters published Friday morning.

"I loved my previous life, I had so many things going," Trump told Reuters. "I actually think this is more work than my previous life, I thought this would be easier."

"I am a details-oriented person... but I do miss my old life. I like to work — so that's not a problem — but this is actually more work."

Despite stating he was used to having little privacy from his pre-politics existence, he added that he was getting used to the constraints placed on him by the presidency, including 24-hour Secret Service protection.

"You're really into your own little cocoon," he said, "because you have such massive protection that you really can't go anywhere... I like to drive, I can't drive any more."

Carlos Barria / Reuters

The interview also touched on a broad range of domestic and foreign policy issues. However, during a discussion about China's President Xi, he changed topic to hand out copies of the latest 2016 electoral map to the three journalists in the room, Reuters said.

"Here, you can take that, that's the final map of the numbers," he said, "the red is obviously us."

He also addressed the escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula, saying that the situation with North Korea is "certainly" his biggest worry at the moment.

"There's a chance that we could end up having a major, major, conflict with North Korea, absolutely," Trump said.

He said that China's Xi was a "good man" who he believed was trying to help with the North Korea situation. "We'll see how it all works out. I know he would like to be able to do something. Perhaps it's possible that he can't. But I think he'd like to be able to do something," he said.

He did, however, say that he believed South Korea should pay the US a billion dollars for the THAAD missile defense system, and that he planned to renegotiate or terminate the "horrible" trade deal with the country.

LINK: Here Are 100 Lies And False Statements From Trump’s First 100 Days




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Thursday, April 27, 2017

Several Protesters Arrested At Berkeley After Ann Coulter Cancels Speech

Stephen Lam / Reuters

After days of widespread fear of riots in Berkeley over a planned visit from conservative commentator Ann Coulter, Thursday came and went with just a handful of arrests, little chaos, and no Coulter.

Though Coulter never showed — she canceled her appearance Wednesday — several hundred people congregated on and near the campus of the University of California, Berkeley. The crowd included members of the alt-right, Trump supporters, and people on the political left who showed up to protest against the commentator and her supporters.

A man holds a sign showing Pepe, a frog meme that has been seized upon by the far right, during Thursday's gathering in Berkeley.

Stephen Lam / Reuters

By 6 p.m., four people had been arrested, according to the Berkeley Police Department. The university police also made two arrests earlier in the day, bringing the total to at least six arrests.

Several of the arrests were captured on video by reporters at the scene. In one instance, police could be seen handcuffing a man on the sidewalk.

Other arrests happened as people congregated in the street and police moved to corral the crowds.

Police detain a person as they work to keep opposing protesters apart Thursday in Berkeley.

Stephen Lam / Reuters

But despite the handful of arrests, the gathering remained mostly peaceful. Though some attendees shouted at each other and journalists at the scene reported seeing a few threats of fighting, most of the crowd spent the afternoon listening to a series of speeches, milling around, and finally dispersing.

Police also maintained a significant presence at the gathering, with officers in riot gear forming lines to keep various groups separate.

Police in riot gear Thursday.

Stephen Lam / Reuters

The scene stood in stark contrast to other recent gatherings in Berkeley, which have erupted into violence and rioting. Just last week, for example, demonstrators from both the far right and the far left clashed in a large street brawl.

And in February, a visit from conservative provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos prompted demonstrations that ended with far left protesters smashing windows, vandalizing buildings, and setting multiple fires.

Many had feared a similar outcome during Coulter's visit. Coulter is a frequent talking head on Fox News, has long supported President Trump, and is famous for making incendiary right-wing comments.

Demonstrators with opposing views argue Thursday in Berkeley.

Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP

In the days leading up to Coulter's scheduled visit, UC Berkeley cited safety concerns and canceled the speech. Coulter, however, remained defiant and the school eventually reversed itself and said she could come. Finally, on Wednesday, Coulter said she would not speak at the school after all.

After Coulter's announcement, some groups that had planned protests remained steadfast. Organizers of one Facebook event, for example, promised to "stand against xenophobic, bigoted language" whether Coulter appeared or not.

Stephen Lam / Reuters

Others, from the political right, also showed up, holding pro-Trump signs, waving American flags, in some cases wearing helmets and other improvised riot gear. The crowds eventually swelled to several hundreds people, Berkeleyside reported. Significant violence never ultimately erupted, and some attendees expressed regret that Coulter never appeared.

“I am disappointed that she (Coulter) caved in,” Carrie Fleming told Berkeleyside. “We were going to protect her.”

LINK: Ann Coulter Says She's Not Speaking At Berkeley And No One Knows Who To Blame




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A Man Died After Being Denied Water For 7 Days At A Jail Run By A Major Trump Supporter

WISN 12 / Via youtube.com

Jail staff pointed fingers about what happened before inmate Terrill Thomas died of dehydration during an inquest on Thursday, a blame game that may have been avoided had surveillance video been saved.

But in the weeks following Terrill's death, it wasn't downloaded and turned over to police. And though a supervisor in the jail watched it, he didn't immediately tell police either — a move that amounted to deception and was "unconscionable," the Milwaukee Police Department's Lt. Eric Donaldson told a jury.

Testimony began on Monday regarding Thomas' death, what lead up to it, and how the investigation was handled. The 38-year-old man, who had a history of medical and psychological issues, died in April 2016 after being denied water at Milwaukee County Jail — a facility under Sheriff David Clarke, a fervent supporter of President Trump and increasingly vocal figure in national politics.

Terrill Thomas

Milwaukee County Jail

Thomas had been placed in a solitary cell, where he was locked up 24 hours a day, after acting "irate," one jail lieutenant testified. His water was turned off, and seven days later, he was found dead.

Initially, jail officials believed there was nothing suspicious about Thomas' death, according to their testimony. But other inmates had seen his pleas for water over days, then in his final hours, his body lying naked and unmoving.

It wasn't until the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel began asking questions that jail staff downloaded the surveillance video, the newspaper reported. But by that time, footage showing what happened on the day Thomas' water was turned off had been overwritten. Video showing only Thomas' final three days remained.

“It’s unconscionable,” Donaldson said, according to the Journal Sentinel's report. “It’s like you’re hiding something.”

The inquest is expected to last into next week, then the jury will recommend to prosecutors whether anyone should face criminal charges. In a separate lawsuit, Thomas' family has sued Clarke and other leaders over a pattern of poor treatment of inmates that in this case they say amounted to torture and death.

TMJ4 / Via youtube.com

Already, jurors have toured the jail where Thomas died and watched what remains of the surveillance video. In the video, another inmate can be seen checking on Thomas, then bringing over a corrections officer. Thomas was not given any water at that time.

In a recorded jailhouse phone conversation, the inmate tells his mother about his concerns over Thomas' treatment.

"Seven days he didn't drink any water," he said. "They refused to turn on his water."

Jail Lt. Kashka Meadors on Thursday testified that she gave the order to turn off Thomas' water temporarily because he was acting irate and had previously caused flooding in the jail mental health unit.

"I said, for right now, get rid of his mattress, turn off his toilet water cause we don't want him to flood, and we'll put him in a cell," she said.

youtube.com

She added that she then went to deal with other inmates, but her colleagues told her before she left that Thomas had been taken care of.

"I don't know if I could have prevented it," she said, according to TMJ 4. "I think if I wasn't so busy that day, that if I would have had time, I probably would have gone back."

Corrections officer James Ramsey-Guy carried out Meadors' order and on Thursday, he testified that he had turned off the toilet water and cold water — leaving the hot water on. Investigators later found all water to the cell turned off, Fox 6 reported.

"I was given a direct order to turn that water off and that’s what I did," Ramsey-Guy said, according to Fox 6.

Ramsey-Guy said he believed another corrections officer, James Weber, should have documented the water shut-off, the Journal Sentinel reported. Weber testified that he hadn't known who gave the order or shut off the water, the Journal Sentinel reported.

Another corrections officer declined to testify, citing his right to not incriminate himself.

As for the supervisor who watched the video, Capt. George Gold testified he reported what he had seen — a corrections officer entering the closet where the water controls are — to the jail's commander, the Journal Sentinel reported. Maj. Nancy Evans then testified that he had told her there was nothing suspicious in the video, but she denied that she failed to tell him to report the video or share information.

LINK: Baby Born In Milwaukee Jail Dies After Staff Ignored Labor, Mother Says



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Trump Has A Red Button On The Oval Office Desk To Order A Coke

No, Pepsi is not OK.

President Trump can order himself a Coke with the simple push of a red button installed at his desk because he's president and he can.

President Trump can order himself a Coke with the simple push of a red button installed at his desk because he's president and he can.

Andrew Harnik / AP

Because, I mean, there's got to be perks when you're the leader of the free world, right?

Because, I mean, there's got to be perks when you're the leader of the free world, right?

Carlos Barria / Reuters


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Armed Standoff Leader Claims He's Been Strip Searched "Hundreds Of Times" In Jail While Awaiting Trial

Ryan Bundy at Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon on Jan. 7, 2016.

Rick Bowmer / AP

A leader of two armed standoffs with the federal government has filed a lawsuit claiming he has been repeatedly strip searched against his will in jail while awaiting trial.

In the suit filed Monday, Ryan Bundy says he has been forced to "undergo oppressive, intrusive, and unlawful body cavity searches multiple times per day" while housed at the Southern Nevada Detention Center. The searches, which required him to remove his clothing and expose himself to jail personnel, were "nonconsensual intrusions" against his Constitutional rights.

Bundy "has been forced and threatened to bend over and expose his anus by spreading his buttock checks wide open" while jailers "peer" into his body cavity "hundreds of times," the lawsuit states. Bundy also alleges there have been 40 "highly intrusive strip/body cavity searches."

The son of Cliven Bundy, the patriarch of a southern Nevada family that led an armed standoff with federal agents in 2014, 44-year-old Ryan Bundy has been jailed in a Pahrump, Nevada, since December on charges stemming from the confrontation.

Eric Parker, a participant in the 2014 Nevada standoff, aims a rifle from a bridge.

Jim Urquhart / Reuters

Though the 2014 standoff ultimately resolved without significant violence, Ryan Bundy and his brother Ammon went on to lead another armed confrontation with federal agents in Oregon in 2016. That standoff ended after another participant, LaVoy Finicum, was killed and the Bundys and their supporters were arrested.

Ryan and Ammon were both acquitted last year on charges from the 2016 Oregon standoff. However, both brothers and their father Cliven are now awaiting trial on charges resulting from the 2014 Nevada standoff. Both incidents drew increased attention to long-simmering tensions over land use across the West.

Ryan Bundy, left, Cliven Bundy, center, and Ammon Bundy.

/ AP

Ryan Bundy's lawsuit does not list a lawyer and he could not immediately be reached Thursday.

The Southern Nevada Detention Center is operated by a publicly traded company called CCA. Bundy's lawsuit lists the company, the warden, various unnamed CCA employees, and US Marshals personnel as defendants.

CCA did not immediately respond to BuzzFeed News' request for comment.

According to the suit, Bundy refused to undergo any more searches in March and was "punished" by being put into "disciplinary segregation" 24 hours at a time for about 100 days.

It also argues that neither government authorities nor the jail operators have "credible evidence" supporting the need to do strip searches. However, the US Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that authorities are allowed to conduct strip searches even if they have no reason to suspect that they'll find contraband.

Bundy concludes the suit by asking for $35 million in damages.

LINK: How The Shooting Of A Cowboy Created A Martyr For An Anti-Government Movement

LINK: The Oregon Standoff Is The Latest In A Long Line Of Revolts Over Western Land




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"The Avengers" Director Made Fun Of Child Cancer Survivors While Trolling Paul Ryan

While trolling Paul Ryan on Twitter, Joss Whedon, who directed The Avengers, made fun of a group of teen cancer survivors.

Joss Whedon, who directed The Avengers and created the TV series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, is also a liberal activist and really not a fan of the Trump administration.

Joss Whedon, who directed The Avengers and created the TV series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, is also a liberal activist and really not a fan of the Trump administration.

Jordan Strauss / AP


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I Must Know The Identity Of This Very Cool Pug In A Car Wearing Goggles

An inves-dog-ation.

This world is full of mysteries. Who stole the great Hope Diamond? Where did we come from?

This world is full of mysteries. Who stole the great Hope Diamond? Where did we come from?

Cartoon Network

But there exists one mystery so vexing, so imperative, that I shan't go on without solving it. Please, dear readers, free me from this labyrinth.

But there exists one mystery so vexing, so imperative, that I shan't go on without solving it. Please, dear readers, free me from this labyrinth.

FX

Who is this pug?

Who is this pug?

Twitter: @Gabwiiela


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