Andy Borowitz | Americans Would Feel Safer If a Huge Caravan of Angry White Men Left the Country





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02 November 18
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Andy Borowitz | Americans Would Feel Safer If a Huge Caravan of Angry White Men Left the Country 
Trump supporters. (photo: Mark Peterson/The New Yorker)
Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker
Borowitz writes: "A vast majority of Americans would feel significantly safer if an enormous caravan consisting of angry white men left the country, a new poll indicates."
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Royce Reeves, Sr., has been driving a limousine borrowed from a funeral parlor to take poor or unmotivated residents of Cordele, Georgia, to the polls to vote early. (photo: Charles Bethea)
Royce Reeves, Sr., has been driving a limousine borrowed from a funeral parlor to take poor or unmotivated residents of Cordele, Georgia, to the polls to vote early. (photo: Charles Bethea)

Charles Bethea | Are Police Targeting Get-Out-the-Vote Efforts in Georgia?
Charles Bethea, The New Yorker
Bethea writes: "Serious claims of voter suppression have been made against Brian Kemp, the Republican candidate for governor. As secretary of state, Kemp is in charge of elections and voter registration, which puts him in a position to referee his own contest."
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Danye Jones' mother, a Ferguson activist, says her son was lynched on October 17. (photo: CNS)
Danye Jones' mother, a Ferguson activist, says her son was lynched on October 17. (photo: CNS)

Danye Jones’ Mother Says He Was Lynched. His Death Is Reminiscent of Another Troubling Case.
Kay Wicker, ThinkProgress
Wicker writes: "Police are investigating Danye Jones' death as a suicide, despite his family's skepticism and a slew of suspicious details."
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A demonstrator holds a poster picturing Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi and a lightened candle during a gathering outside the Saudi Arabia consulate in Istanbul on Thursday. (photo: Yasin Akgul/AFP)
A demonstrator holds a poster picturing Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi and a lightened candle during a gathering outside the Saudi Arabia consulate in Istanbul on Thursday. (photo: Yasin Akgul/AFP)


Jamal Khashoggi’s Body Cut Into Pieces and Dissolved After His Murder in Saudi Consulate, Turkey Says
Borzou Daragahi, The Independent
Daragahi writes: "Saudi government operatives 'dissolved' Jamal Khashoggi’s body after murdering and dismembering him, an adviser to Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is also a friend of the slain Washington Post columnist, said on Friday."
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Members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria gesture during a march to demand the release of their Nigerian Shiite leader, Ibrahim Zakzaky. (photo: Paul Carsten/Reuters)
Members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria gesture during a march to demand the release of their Nigerian Shiite leader, Ibrahim Zakzaky. (photo: Paul Carsten/Reuters)

Trump's Rhetoric Used to Justify Shooting Protesters in Nigeria
Matthew Champion, BuzzFeed
Champion writes: "The Nigerian army posted a video of Trump after it was accused of killing 45 demonstrators."
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A caravan of migrants moves north after crossing the border from Honduras into Guatemala on October 15, 2018 in Esquipulas, Guatemala. (photo: John Moore/Getty)
A caravan of migrants moves north after crossing the border from Honduras into Guatemala on October 15, 2018 in Esquipulas, Guatemala. (photo: John Moore/Getty)

The Debt We Owe Central America
Miles Culpepper, Jacobin
Culpepper writes: "More than two decades after the Cold War, American empire still looms large in Central America — and it isn’t just because of Trump."
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At David Wildy's soybean fields in Arkansas, soybean plants planted in April 2017 (left) show signs of being impacted by dicamba. Soybean plants planted later in the season (right) stand taller. (photo: The Washington Post)
At David Wildy's soybean fields in Arkansas, soybean plants planted in April 2017 (left) show signs of being impacted by dicamba. Soybean plants planted later in the season (right) stand taller. (photo: The Washington Post)

Trump's EPA Sides With Monsanto, Extends Dicamba​ 2 More Years
Olivia Rosane, EcoWatch
Rosane writes: "The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced Wednesday that it would allow farmers to continue spraying the controversial pesticide dicamba for the next two years."
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