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Amazon Admits Alexa Device Eavesdropped On Portland Family

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Amazon’s Alexa device has a lot of good qualities, but one bad one: It eavesdrops.

A couple in Portland, Oregon, was shocked to discover Alexa recorded a private conversation in their home and then sent it to a random person on their contact list.

Danielle, who asked her last name not be identified, told KIRO TV the revelation brought to life a fear that she and her husband had when they first installed the devices to handle their home’s heat, lights and security system.

“My husband and I would joke and say ‘I’d bet these devices are listening to what we’re saying,’” she said.

Things took a chilling turn into Big Brother territory about two weeks ago when the couple got a phone call from an employee of Danielle’s husband.

The message: “Unplug your Alexa devices right now. You’re being hacked.” 

After the devices were unplugged, the caller told the couple how he received the audio files.

“At first, my husband was, like, ‘no you didn’t!’ And the (recipient of the message) said ‘You sat there talking about hardwood floors,’” Danielle told the station. “And we said, ‘oh gosh, you really did hear us.’”

The couple then contacted Amazon and finally spoke with an Alexa representative that investigated the issue.

The representative “said ‘our engineers went through your logs, and they saw exactly what you told us, they saw exactly what you said happened, and we’re sorry,’” she said. “He apologized like 15 times in a matter of 30 minutes and he said we really appreciate you bringing this to our attention. This is something we need to fix!”

Amazon told CNET.com the eavesdropping occurred after Alexa mistakenly heard the wake word and then mistakenly heard a command to call someone, followed by a third misheard confirmation:

“Echo woke up due to a word in background conversation sounding like ‘Alexa.’ Then, the subsequent conversation was heard as a “send message” request. At which point, Alexa said out loud “To whom?” At which point, the background conversation was interpreted as a name in the customers contact list.

“Alexa then asked out loud, ”[contact name], right?” Alexa then interpreted background conversation as “right”. As unlikely as this string of events is, we are evaluating options to make this case even less likely.”

See KIRO’s report below:


Anna Kournikova Dancing With Her Bouncing Baby Is The Cutest Thing

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Anna Kournikova, pictured in 2012, welcomed twins in December.

Former tennis pro Anna Kournikova doesn’t think much of her dancing ― but one of her 5-month-old twins doesn’t seem to mind.

Check out the two adorably rocking out to “Move To Miami,” a new song by Kournikova’s longtime love, Enrique Iglesias.

“Little one, please don’t inherit my dance moves,” she wrote on Instagram.

Kournikova won Australian Open doubles titles in 1999 and 2002 and reached a No. 8 world singles ranking. But for this bouncing baby, she’s a No. 1 mom.

Kournikova and Iglesias welcomed twins Nicholas and Lucy in December.

The Truth About How Men Behave When You're A Female Solo Traveler

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Climbing in Patagonia with a bunch of strangers during my solo travels around South America. (None of them tried to sleep with me.)

After a 14-hour bus ride to Valparaiso, Chile, I hauled a backpack up the steps to Luigi’s apartment and rang the bell. He cracked the door open, forced a smile, and waved me in.

This dude sure didn’t look like a clown.

Luigi sported a mohawk and was peppered in tattoos, and his apartment was like a frat house if those exist in circuses—cluttered with empty beer cans, top hats, dirty dishes, a unicycle and some juggling pins.

This may sound like a nightmare to some because clowns in North America make us think of IT, child molesters on Law and Order SVU or that doll that terrorized Carol Anne in Poltergeist, but I’ll have you know South American clowns are way cooler.

Inside, a circle of hippie dudes with tattoos, fauxhawks and ironic rat tails sat on the floor smoking a blunt. They spoke virtually no English. But within minutes of plopping down in the circle with them, they started making me balloon animals.

I’d learned from Luigi’s profile on couchsurfing.com that he was a clown. But it never occurred to me I was going to be crashing in a house of clowns. Either way, it seemed like the kind of bizarro random adventure I’d get myself into.

A few of them were already eyeing me like a lion sizing up a juicy steak, so I immediately went into cool big sister mode. Having worked and played in mostly male environments as a raft guide, climber and ski instructor for years, then later as both a comedian and crew member in the New York film industry, I was a master by now at making myself totally unfuckable.

Sit like a man, talk like a man, burp even. Do absolutely no flirting whatsoever and square up when you talk to them like a football player would. Done correctly, this powerful nonverbal message leads to them treating you like one of the boys instead of a hole with legs.

It seemed to work like a charm. Finally, I felt safe and could relax for once.

Two months earlier, I’d landed in Buenos Aires for what would become an 8-month-long solo trip living and working around South America. Like the true adventurer (and dummy) that I am, I hadn’t financially planned well for this jaunt, buying a one-way ticket and assuming I’d figure it out like usual. Using couchsurfing.com is how cheap-ass people like me can sleep for free and meet awesome locals.

It never occurred to me this might be dangerous, though. I’d traveled solo and lived in the back of my truck for years all over America, so I was a confident nomad. But with a truck, you can crash in Walmart parking lots or wilderness areas without worrying too much about getting harassed, lightly fondled, raped or straight up murdered. I had doors and windows to lock boogeymen and rapists out and curtains to hide myself behind.

But now that I’d downsized from a truck to a backpack, I was at the mercy of couchsurfing.com and essentially the kindness of strangers. And some of them had already proved to be a little too kind. Women never hosted me, probably because they don’t generally feel as comfortable as men letting complete strangers into their homes. We have to worry about our safety enough as it is in public spaces. Why bring that stress back home?

I’d been smart enough to steer clear of classic couchsurfing red flags — profile pics of shirtless bros chugging bear, negative reviews or male hosts who only allow female surfers. I mean, why go to the bar and pick a chick up when, instead, you can have a vulnerable, disoriented woman show up at your house, brush her teeth and walk around in her PJ’s in front of you, then pass out in the next room.

Couchsurfing can be an amazing way to meet people. But it can also be the perfect means of entrapment for entitled, lazy or straight up predatory type men. And unlike Airbnb, which is a business with actual consequences for getting bad reviews, the couchsurfing.com police aren’t coming for you if you stick your hand down the pants of some foreign chick passed out on your sofa.

Somewhere in Malta.

But I felt safe in my closet, which is where the clowns put me. It had a gross stained mattress on the floor but after two months of couchsurfing, I was stoked to have a door to close.

At first it was fun, this living with clowns business. They taught me how to ride a unicycle and made me feel less alone. But the clowns were a bit much, too. Like comedians, clowns are exhausting, needy people to be around, always doing these stupid bits. Plus, they partied late every single night and wanted me to, as well. I didn’t drink anymore, so this wasn’t my jam.

One night I went to go watch the “Hunger Games” at a theater, just to get a break from these damn clowns. When I got home super later, they were all waiting for me and seemed to be trying to keep me up. Around 2 a.m., two buff clown friends in muscle man shirts and cargo pants showed up with some beer.

The one who called himself Blue Angel (I’m not even kidding) plopped down next to me and started asking me things in English. He spoke way better English than the other clowns, so we were able to hold a conversation beyond preschool level subjects.

Every time I asked Blue Angel about his clowning, he’d turn the subject to my body. “Your legs are so big!” he said, pretending to squeeze a basketball to further stress his unsolicited opinion about my figure.

“You know, in my culture, that’s a mean thing to say,” I said.

He lured me into the kitchen eventually with promises of some acrobat trick, but when we finally got there, there was no trick. He was just trying to make out with me. I fought him off, told him I was going to bed, then started to walk away.

“Wait! You want learn how walk on stilts?”

Damn, he’s good. I’m a sucker for new experiences. And when was the next time I’d get a chance to learn how to walk on stilts from a clown in Chile? So, I gave in. And — shocker — when I tried to go to bed after our lesson, he began making his case as to why he should give me a massage.

I fought with him on that for a good 15 minutes. But I’d been traveling for months, had no female friends to remind me of my rights, had two cavities, had just gotten over the flu, had an eye infection, was on the rag and had an intestinal parasite. And like a lot of women, after awhile I thought, “To hell with it. It’s easier to just hook up with this dude than to keep fighting.” Plus, my curious-to-a-fault personality reasoned that it would be hilarious to hook up with a clown.

So I did.

And boy did it suck.

Later, as he was wiping his clown jizz off my leg, I made a little joke about how unexpected this turn of events was.

“Well, Luigi say me there is American girl wanting to sex over here.”

I shot up, “Wait — WHAT?!”

He shrugged.

“You mean those clowns set me up?”

As it turns out, they did! Since I wasn’t interested in any of them, they’d whored me out to their clown friend, Blue Angel, down the street. I was livid.

And that’s when I heard my adult-self scream at my kid-self, “What the FUCK are you doing here? And when will you learn?!”

Before staying in this Bozo frat house, I’d already been played one too many times. The old man I’d stayed with Buenos Aires, who was an American friend of a friend, had gotten super weird with me. My host in Bariloche had seduced me and I’d given in. My host in southern Chile ditched me the night I showed up so he could hook up with some girl from Texas. And then the friend of my Chilean buddy had gotten drunk and taken pics of me while I was sleeping… with MY camera. But it wasn’t just couchsurfing around South America.

It was traveling in general as a woman.

All those years people had always told me I’d get raped and murdered eventually by living in my truck. Well, that never happened! In fact, staying alone in my truck was WAY safer than staying with men, whether it be strangers or friends. 

Exploring Spain after moving there alone at the age of 39.

One of my oldest climbing buddies ruined our friendship in one night by seducing me while I was back in town for a wedding without telling me he was dating someone else beforehand. Another guy friend hosted me in Los Angeles during a visit, let me take his bed while he slept on the couch, then tried to spoon and fondle me after he thought I’d passed out. And another one masturbated right next to me after he thought I’d fallen asleep.

At least 99 percent of my nights in the company of platonic male friends or strangers have been totally respectful. But all it takes is one (or six) to make you rethink things. This shit never happens when I stay with women. I was over it. I wanted my safety guaranteed for once.

I moved out that day. And decided to aggressively find women to hang out with in this clown town.

I went on couchsurfing.com and searched the Valparaiso group page. I sent women messages saying, “Hey, I hope this isn’t weird, but you seem cool and I need some good women in my life.” Inez, from Germany, wrote back right away. That night she met me for a drink with an American girl, Beth. The next day the three of us went to the beach and laid out and then that night they invited me to a Girls Night Out with all their Chilean lady friends, who became my tightknit family from that day forward. And through those women, who I trusted, I made some awesome Chilean guy friends, none of whom tried to bone me.

These women went on to be my family. No matter where I go in the world, women (and gay men) often try to take care of me like a bunch of surrogate mothers and sisters. Heterosexual men sometimes do, too. But what I’ve had to learn to accept is that despite thinking I’m one of the boys, I will always experience this world as a woman.

And I was wrong about clowns. South American ones are just as scary as North American ones.

Dog 'Adopts' Nine Abandoned Baby Ducklings And It's Beyond Adorable

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When nine adorable ducklings were left without a mother, a kind-hearted dog stepped up to take on the responsibility.

Fred, a 10-year-old labrador, started to care for the ducklings after staff at Mountfitchet Castle in Essex noticed them wandering around the grounds alone last Thursday. 

Fred belongs to one of the owners of the tourist spot, Jeremy Goldsmith, and has been taking his new parenting role very seriously. 

“We brought the ducklings into the house as they are too young to fend for themselves, and Fred just took them under his paw - rather than his wing,” Jeremy told BBC Essex. “He’s got a lovely nature and has grown up around rescued animals.”

Staff at the castle do not know where the ducklings’ mother has gone and she seems to have disappeared from the site. 

But the little ones are doing well, sleeping alongside Fred in his dog basket,  dutifully following him around the grounds and clambering up on his back and head.

A video of the new family, posted on Facebook by Mountfitchet Castle, shows the ducklings sitting at the pooch’s feet quite contently. 

Could they be any cuter?

14 Ways To Make Family Road Trips Easier, From Parents Who've Been There

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We turned to our HuffPost Parents community to get tips on how to make road trips with kids more manageable. 

Family road trips can be a test for parents on how long they can keep kids occupied in the car before the children reach their breaking point, or more specifically, their tantrum point. 

We asked the HuffPost Parents community about their tips and tricks for keeping kids occupied during those long drives, and we’ve got two words for you: baby wipes. Even if your kids aren’t babies, our readers said.

They also suggested other important items to always have in the car in case of emergencies and a few ways to keep the kids busy and happy. Here are 14 tips from our readers on how to make family road trips more manageable. 

“We move and travel often and I’ve learned a few tricks. If taking a road trip, consider covering your car’s seats with a waterproof cover. It’s much easier to clean, especially if your kids get carsick. It saves the upholstery from all kinds of messes: food, spills, vomit. I also recommend using Ziploc bags for carsick kids. That way you can seal it up and toss it without any spillage. Headphones are a lifesaver! I love Cozy Phones headphones for smaller kids. They are cute and totally wearable. And snacks are a must! Keep it simple and mess-free (or mostly mess-free) with fruit strips, applesauce pouches, jerky, etc. We like to keep a small soft-sided cooler in the car to store Lunchables and Go-Gurts. And no matter how old your kids are, bring baby wipes!” ― Heather Williams

“DVD player, iPad, another tablet, plenty of snacks, drinks and rest breaks for meals like breakfast or dinner. We usually eat sandwiches in the car. I pack an entire cooler full of sandwiches, fruit, cheese, and veggies likes carrot and celery sticks. I pack another cooler of water, juices boxes, tea for myself and Cokes for my husband. I make individual bags with a sandwich, fruit, and cheese. That way each person can grab what they want. My son is very easy to travel with, and as long as he’s not hungry, sick or bored, he’s good to go.” ― Melissa Watson

“I try to space things out, but it’s a mix of each kid having screen time on their tablets, movies on our flip-down screen in the car, and snacks ― lots of them. When we stop for gas/potty breaks, I let the kids get out to pick out a special treat at a gas station, even if it’s candy. On our most recent trip I stocked up a cheap plastic bin with dry-erase boards for each kid with markers, crayons and coloring books. Wipes of any kind, whether baby wipes or Wet Ones in a canister are a huge help to clean messy hands from all the snacking. A full-sized bottle of hand sanitizer with a pump, a roll of paper towels, and box of tissue that I can keep within an arm’s reach in the car, are also always on my necessities list.” ― Charlotte Kennedy

“For road trips we bring toys that are magnetic and a grabber toy... so kids strapped in car seats can often pick up the toys they drop without help from Mom or Dad!” ― Jenn Otto

“We have each kid pack a ‘go bag.’ They have toys, books, headphones, tablets, and coloring books and colored pencils. We also get travel books and games from Usborne Books. We have a travel case for movies and a car DVD player, since we drive eight hours back to our hometown. Snacks and juice pouches are easily accessible, and [we sometimes use] ‘calm-down candy’ as a bribe. I also have a container in the car for travel with Band-Aids, Pedialyte, Tylenol, Tums, wet wipes, and Neosporin.” ― Rachael Grayson

“First we start with car bingo ($1 cards at Target). When that gets boring we move to books, and when all else fails (and it usually does), it’s screen time, baby! Lay on the iPhone, iPad, portable Blu-ray player! Works every time and gets us to where we are going with less bickering than when I was a kiddo.” ― Brianna Freeburn

One of our readers suggested stocking up on comic books, seen here at a flea market, before a long drive.

“I like to visit the local comic book store and get some new comics for my boys. They’re cheap and small enough for travel. They encourage reading and imagination. They also come in so many genres from ‘My Little Pony’ to superheroes to everything Disney to Spongebob. Really can’t go wrong.” ― Shannon Prieto

“We traveled from Ontario to British Columbia in Canada with four kids ages 1 to 7. I brought a bag of toys for each one, which they had finished looking at a half hour into the trip. We discovered they enjoyed looking out the windows most and playing car bingo games, despite them being very active kids. Our success also rode on our timing. We would pack up each morning and be on the road between 5 and 6 a.m., stop for gas, a pee break and to change clothes, then eat breakfast on the road again. We’d stop for lunch at a park, but we’d have finished eight hours of driving by early afternoon, so they had all afternoon and evening to play. It made it not seem like such long days when we got so much driving done while they were groggy!” ― Sarah Devries

“Some favorite toys/books and a couple new ones for emergencies. Lots of snacks. One or two containers of Play-Doh (keep it simple!), activity books and sticker books. Don’t forget to play games. My kids are always distracted by playing I Spy, or when we are in the car finding certain colored cars or houses, or all the letters in the alphabet in order.” ― Amy Kilpatrick

“I pack magazines, coloring books and plain paper for drawing. Word search pads for our 8-year-old, and new coloring pens, as we travel by car a lot. We invested in a travel lap tray that wraps around her that has pockets and good edges so nothing can fall off. Oh, and not forgetting snacks!” ― Cheri Wickers

Magnetic ‘paper’ dolls are pretty cool and fun. They make lots of themes: pirates on a ship, animals on a farm, princess in a castle, etc.” ― Angela Ballard Peene

“With my son, Audible. He can handle long car rides only as long as he has a book to listen to. Works for me!” ― Cat Williams

“Whenever we go on road trips with the kiddos, we pack a portable DVD player, small toys, books, coloring books, drawing paper, and crayons/pencils. Also lots of snacks. I teach them games my brother and I played when we were younger and on the road. We talk about things we see out the windows, and I try to encourage talking about their books and what they mean to them.” ― Breanna Boenicke

“Snacks on snacks on snacks! Did I mention snacks? Also, suckers, Legos, someaction figures that he forgot about having so it’s like a new toy, and colorful pens/crayons to draw with. Play-Doh is nice as a last resort, but proceed with caution.” ― Crystal Michelle

These submissions have been edited and condensed for clarity.

Disney Reveals Opening Seasons For 'Star Wars' Theme Park Lands

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Disney’s “Star Wars”-themed lands at its California and Florida resorts now have opening seasons. 

Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge will open first at Disneyland in Anaheim in the summer of 2019, followed by a late autumn opening for the one at Disney’s Hollywood Studios at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando.

No other details were released. 

The 14-acre themed areas will represent a location on a planet called Batuu, which the company previously called “a remote outpost on the galaxy’s edge that was once a busy crossroads along the old sub-lightspeed trade routes.” 

Disney Imagineer Scott Trowbridge said last year it’s the kind of location that draws “the smugglers, the bounty hunters, the rogue adventurers looking to crew up, the people who don’t want to be found ― basically all the interesting people.”

Guests will be able to interact with characters, work to support either the Resistance or the First Order and develop a “reputation” within the Star Wars environment. 

“An experience might begin on board the Millennium Falcon and follow you right out the door of the attraction and into the local watering hole,” Imagineer Asa Kalama said at a panel discussion last year.

There will be two major attractions. One is a Millennium Falcon ride in which guests will “pilot” Han Solo’s famed ship. The other is a ride in which the company said: “Visitors will find themselves in the middle of a tense battle between stormtroopers and Resistance fighters.”

There will also be “Star Wars” dining and ― of course ― retail options. In addition, the company is planning a “Star Wars”-themed hotel in Florida. 

Anti-Sterlite Protests: Company CEO Says No Plan To Leave Thoothukudi Even As DMK, Congress Stage Dharna

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Amid protests against Sterlite Copper run by Vedanta in Tamil Nadu's Thoothukudi that killed 13 people, the CEO of the plant said that the company has no plans of exiting the town.

P. Ramnath told The Hindu in an interview that despite the controversy surrounding the plant, they were not looking to move out of the state and planned to take the legal course as part of the solution.

This comes even as Reuters reported Thoothukudi collecter Sandeep Nanduri as saying, "The government's position is very clear, it doesn't want the plant to run."

Environmentalists and protesters have long claimed that emissions from the plant was polluting the air and water in the area and was life-threatening for the people of the local area.

However, in the interview Ramnath painted the picture that external elements like "foreign funded NGOs" were involved and not locals. He also said that it was know from the very beginning that protests were going to be violent, while condemning the police firing.

He said in the interview, "We really feel there is some external catalyst, which is adding fuel and ensuring that the fire keeps burning. These are elements that have come in and they are making use of the situation to further their own agenda. It can be NGOs getting foreign funding for destabilising local industries is a common knowledge."

Ramnath's comments come even as another report has found that a panel that was to be set up to asses environmental clearances to the plant have still not been set up.

The Indian Express reported that Ministry of Environment and Forests panel had recommended another sub committee, but that had never been formed.

Meanwhile protests against the plant and the killing of protesters continues in Tamil Nadu. DMK, its ally Congress, DMK, VCK and other parties protested in different parts of the city on Friday.

PTI reported that while security had been beefed up across the state, Chennai faced traffic snarls because of the protest across the city.

And even though Thoothukudi remained tense, there were no reports of fresh violence on Friday.

Blast In Indian Restaurant In Canada Injures More Than A Dozen People

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TORONTO -- Two unidentified men walked into a restaurant on Thursday in the Canadian city of Mississauga and set off a bomb, wounding more than a dozen people, and then fleeing, local police said.

The blast went off in the Bombay Bhel restaurant at about 10:30 p.m local time. Fifteen people were taken to hospital, three of them with critical injuries, the Peel Regional Paramedic Service said in a Tweet.

The two male suspects fled after detonating their improvised explosive device, Peel Regional Police said in a Tweet. No one has claimed responsibility, and the motive for the attack was not known.

Police posted a photograph on Twitter showing two people with dark zip-up hoodies walking into an establishment. One appeared to be carrying an object.

Peel Police said one suspect was in his mid-20s, stocky, and wore dark blue jeans and a dark zip-up hoody pulled over his head, with black cloth covering his face. The second was thin, and wore faded blue jeans, a grey t-shirt and a dark zip-up hoody over his head, also with his face covered.

Roads in the area were closed and a large police presence was at the scene, with heavily armed tactical officers arriving as part of the large emergency response, local media reported.

The attack in Mississauga comes a month after a driver plowed his white Ryder rental van into a lunch-hour crowd in Toronto, killing 10 people and injuring 15 .

Mississauga is Canada's sixth-largest city, with a population of 700,000 people, situated on Lake Ontario about 20 miles (32 km) west of Toronto.


Kairana By-Election: Yogi Adityanath Gives A Clarion Call For Hindus To Unite

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KAIRANA, Uttar Pradesh -- While speaking for about 30 minutes in poll-bound Kairana, Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath raised almost every issue, which, in recent years, have strained relations between Hindus and Muslims in western Uttar Pradesh.

Three times in his address at the R.K. inter-college in Shamli, Adityanath mentioned the lynching of two Hindu men, Gaurav and Sachin, by a Muslim mob in 2013. At least 60 people, mostly Muslims, were killed in the religious violence that had followed. An estimated 60,000 Muslims were displaced in the Muzaffarnagar riots.

"Where were they when Sachin and Gaurav were murdered? Where were they when false cases were being registered (against Hindus)," he said, referring to the Akhilesh Yadav-led Samajwadi Party government in power at the time. "The BJP government will never allow such victimisation (of Hindus), but these people will never improve. They will carry on with appeasement and plunge western UP in riots again."

Earlier this year, the Adityanath government decided to withdraw 131 cases linked to the Muzaffarnagar riots, including 13 cases of murder.

A united opposition

In the face of a united opposition, a grave sugarcane crisis, and no milestones of its own to speak of, the BJP is relying on religious polarisation to win the crucial Lok Sabha by-poll in Kairana.

On Thursday, Adityanath gave a clarion call for all Hindus, irrespective of caste, to unite against the alliance forged by the Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD), the Samajwadi Party (SP), the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and the Congress. The anti-BJP front has fielded SP's Tabassum Hasan, a former parliamentarian and the mother of Nahid Hasan, the current MLA in Kairana. Hasan is contesting on a ticket from the RLD.

"The people who have ruled this state for the past 14-15 years, who have divided the state and fragmented our society on the basis of caste, on the basis of territory and on the basis of family, they are responsible for your problems," the chief minister said.

Kairana's nearly 1.6 million voters are made up of upper caste Hindus, Muslims, Dalits and Other Backward Classes (OBCs) including Jats, Kashyaps, Sainis and Prajapatis.

While the alliance is targeting the votes of Muslims, Dalits and Jats, an estimated 60% of the electorate, the BJP is aiming for the upper caste Hindus, the OBCs, and non-Jatav Dalits, who don't have an ironclad allegiance to the BSP supremo Mayawati.

This is no ordinary election. After losing the by-polls in Phulpur and Gorakhpur, Adityanath's bastion in eastern UP earlier this year, winning Kairana is a matter of prestige for the party.

More importantly, as BJP leaders told the packed rally ground, the outcome of the May 28 election would set the tone for the 2019 general election.

Losing to a united opposition in Kairana would suggest that the BJP would be vulnerable to a joint attack by regional and national parties in the Lok Sabha polls.

In the recently concluded Karnataka election, for instance, the coming together of the Congress and the Janata Dal (Secular) prevented the BJP from forming the government, even thought it had emerged as the single largest party. The swearing in ceremony of JD(S) president H.D. Kumaraswamy turned into a show of strength of opposition parties from different parts of the country.

Repeating a falsehood

The BJP has fielded Mriganka Singh, daughter of the former parliamentarian from Kairana, Hukum Singh, a veteran party leader, who, in 2016, had floated the theory of a Hindu exodus from his constituency.

Singh had released a list of 346 Hindus, who, he claimed, had left due to intimidation and extortion by local Muslim gangsters. Investigative reports by the media did not find evidence of an exodus. Singh, who passed away in February, later admitted that calling it an exodus was a mistake.

Still, Adityanath and other speakers at the BJP rally continue to speak of it.

"This election is clear. On one side, there are people who forced the exodus of traders in Kandhla and Kairana. On the other side, there is the BJP government that stopped the exodus," he said. "I am happy to tell you that the traders and good families that had run away, who were looking for land in Haryana, Uttarakhand and Rajasthan, they are coming back."

One BJP leader, who spoke at the election rally, asked, "Did the Muslims ask their Hindu brothers to stop?"

Did the Muslims ask their Hindu brothers to stop.

Us versus them

Adityanath, in his Thursday address, did not even once use the word 'Muslim' but reinforced the 'us versus them' narrative during the course of his speech.

When he claimed to have vastly improved the law and order situation in UP over the past one year, Adityanath did so in the context of putting an end to the communal riots in UP, protecting the honor of "sisters and daughters" in the region, and bringing back Hindus to Kairana.

"Recall, 12, 14, 15 months ago, the atmosphere in these parts... the danger to our sisters and daughters... the extortion of traders by big criminals," he said. "Have you felt the difference in one year? We have sent the culprits to the right place. Anyone who will threaten national security, who will try to harm our farmers, traders, daughters and sisters, the police will be a threat to their lives."

"We will protect everyone, but we will appease no one," he said.

We will protect everyone, but we will appease no one.

A key tenet of BJP's attack against Muslims has been accusing them of targeting Hindu women and converting them to Islam.

At the rally on Thursday, BJP leaders referred to the case of a "Dalit beti," who, last year, accused a Muslim man of pretending to be Hindu and gang raping her with a friend.

Furthermore, it is mostly Muslims who are believed to at the receiving end of the police encounters being carried out in the name of improving law and order in UP.

Ganna versus Jinnah

The BJP's falling back on Hindutva as a campaign strategy is partially driven by the prevailing sugarcane crisis that has ticked off the Jat farmers who have been been supporting the BJP since the Muzaffarnagar riots.

BJP's promise of withdrawing "false" cases against Jat men has also worked in its favour.

This time around, however, the sugarcane farmers are furious about the lengthy delay in payments from the mills. The RLD has zeroed in on the sore point by asking farmers whether they care about Jinnah or ganna?

Last month, a portrait of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Pakistan's founding father, hanging in the Aligarh Muslim University since 1938, triggered violent protests.

Hitting at that "Jinnah versus Ganna" slogan that is making the rounds, Adityanath promised that he would take care of both.

To thunderous applause, he said, "People will be coming to you, someone with a caste slogan, some with an identity slogan, some with a farmer slogan, some will say Ganna or Jinnah," he said. "We will work for Ganna, but we will also not allow a portrait of Jinnah."

We won't allow a portrait of Jinnah.

Promise to kanwarias

Adityanath devoted the last few minutes of his speech to the kanwarias, who, while making their annual pilgrimage to Haridwar, pass through communally sensitive areas in western UP.

While accusing the previous SP government of trying to rein in the kanwarias, Adityanath promised to improve arrangements for the pilgrims, which would include helicopters to monitor the security situation and even shower them with flowers.

In a veiled reference to the call for prayer in Islam, the chief minister said, "If some people don't like us celebrating our festivals then do we like celebrating the festivals of other people? If they cannot respect our rituals, then why should we respect them."

"Mike bhi bajega, shankh bhi bajega, ghanta bhi bajega," he said.

Mike bhi bajega, shankh bhi bajega, ghanta bhi bajega.

Cobrapost Exposé: We Got A Direct Call From The PMO To Share Personal Data Of Our Users, Paytm VP Ajay Shekhar Allegedly Says In Video

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In a shocking sting operation, Cobrapost, a news website known for its investigative journalism and sting operations, has allegedly found that mobile wallet company Paytm provided personal data of its users to a political party on the request from PMO during stone pelting protests in Jammu and Kashmir.

Senior Vice President of the company Ajay Shekhar is purportedly shown in a sting operation video telling Cobrapost that the PMO wanted personal data of Paytm's users to find out if some of the users were those who pelted stones during protests in Kashmir last year. However, HuffPost India could not independently verify the authenticity of the video.

It must noted that government action against stone pelters in Kashmir with pellet guns had drawn severe criticism from all quarters including the United Nations. Many had been killed and further more and been blinded and maimed by pellet guns used by the armed forces.

"When the stone-pelting stopped there in J&K, I personally got a phone call from the PMO. They told us to give them data saying maybe some of the stone-pelters are Paytm users," Shekhar alledly told the under cover journalist.

This revelation is in direct violation of the Paytm privacy policy that states:

We will not sell, share or rent your personal information to any 3rd party or use your email address/mobile number for unsolicited emails and/or SMS. Any emails and/or SMS sent by Paytm will only be in connection with the provision of agreed services & products and this Privacy Policy.

Periodically, we may reveal general statistical information about Paytm & its users, such as number of visitors, number and type of goods and services purchased, etc.

We reserve the right to communicate your personal information to any third party that makes a legally-compliant request for its disclosure.

Shekhar reportedly told this to the under cover journalist when he met him and other senior officials on the pretext of being sent by the Sangathan (RSS) "to fulfill the assignment received directly from the Sangathan under a "gupt vyavastha" or secret arrangement".

During their meeting the top bosses of Paytm also allegedly spoke about their personal relations with the RSS.

He is alleged to have said during the video, "RSS is in my blood, I have attended RSS shakhas too."

It was reported by Tech Crunch last year that Paytm had 230 million users in India. A registered user has to complete their KYC with providing two government ids (Aadhaar, Passport, PAN card, Ration Card) for them to be able to use the app and make transfers to other people.

While Paytm promises to keep such data secure, Shekhar's alleged comments have revealed that users are at the risk of being targeted and their data like Aadhaar and bank account numbers being shared.

Watch the video where Shekhar is purpotedly speaking about his affiliations and also about sharing Paytm user date with the PMO:

This exposé is a part of Operation 136 that appear to show how the top bosses of prominent media houses including the Times of India, India Today, Hindustan Times, Zee News, Network 18, Star India, ABP News, Dainik Jagaran, Radio One, Red FM, Lokmat, ABN Andhra Jyothy, TV5, Dinamalar, Big FM, K News, India Voice, The New Indian Express, MVTV and Open magazine were ready to run a campaign that had the potential to cause communal disharmony and turn public favour towards the ruling BJP.

Cobrapost has published video recordings of the big bosses of the above mentioned media houses who reportedly agreed to run the campaign.

However, according to the Cobrapost report, the Dainik Bhaskar Group got an injunction from the Delhi High Court stopping Cobrapost from publishing its investigations on the organisation.

Cobrapost's exposé raises questions about how the BJP and its parent Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh are furthering their agenda of Hindutva politics and trying to create a polarisation in a way that can be harmful to the society and influence the upcoming elections in 2019.

Read the entire story about the sting operation by Cobrapost here.

Ireland Abortion Referendum Exit Polls Signal Emphatic 'Yes' Vote To Repeal Eighth Amendment

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A woman lays flowers next to a mural of Savita Halappanavar in Dublin, as Ireland went to the polls. Savita lost her life after a miscarriage in a Galway hospital.

Ireland’s historic referendum on liberalising its abortion laws is on course to be a landslide for the ‘Yes’ campaign, according to two exit polls.

Voting ended at 10pm, and minutes later the Irish Times published an exit poll projecting that ‘Yes’ was on course to get 68% of the vote, and ‘No’ just 32%.

An hour later, an exit poll conducted on behalf of Ireland’s national broadcaster, RTE, also suggested victory for those campaigning to reform the state’s abortion laws, with 69.4% voting in favour.

A final result anywhere close to those would see the repeal of the Eighth Amendment of the state’s constitution - which prohibits terminations unless a mother’s life is in danger - pass convincingly. 

Counting does not begin until Saturday morning, with the official result expected later in the day.

Four thousand voters were interviewed by Ipsos/MRBI for the Irish Times as they left polling stations on Friday.

Sampling began at 7am and was conducted at 160 locations across every constituency throughout the day. The margin of error is estimated at +/- 1.5%, the newspaper said.

The Irish Times poll suggested a huge difference in the views held by young and old voters.

According to the paper, 87% of people aged 18 to 24 voted Yes, while 83% of those aged 25 to 34 also voted to repeal.

In stark contrast, the over 65 age group voted No – by 60% to 40%.

The Behaviour & Attitudes poll for RTE surveyed 3,800 people at 175 polling stations across the country.

With a margin of error of +/- 1.6%, 69.4% voted to repeal the contentious Eighth Amendment of the constitution while 30.6% voted No.

Soon after the second exit poll came out, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, who supported the campaign to liberalise Ireland’s abortion laws, said: “It’s looking like we will make history tomorrow.”

He tweeted: “Thank you to everyone who voted today. Democracy in action.”

At the headquarters for the official campaign for ‘Yes’, Together For Yes, there was “barely a dry eye”. 

Ireland’s deputy premier, Simon Coveney, another Yes campaigner, tweeted: “Thank you to everybody who voted today – democracy can be so powerful on days like today – looks like a stunning result that will bring about a fundamental change for the better. Proud to be Irish tonight. Thank u to all at @Together4yes”

Senator Catherine Noone, chairwoman of an Oireachtas committee which recommended the abortion law changes, tweeted: “I’m feeling very emotional tonight – we are a great, compassionate people. So proud of us! #8thref #repealthe8th”

UK Minister for Women and Equalities Penny Mordaunt said it was a “historic & great day for Ireland, & a hopeful one for Northern Ireland”.

She tweeted: “That hope must be met. #HomeToVote stories are a powerful and moving testimony as to why this had to happen and that understanding & empathy exists between generations. #trustwomen”

A breakdown of the Irish Times poll suggested ‘Yes’ was set for victory by most measures.

Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon tweeted that the exit poll projected 68% had voted to repeal the Eighth Amendment, adding: “Hope this is right. #RepealThe8th”

Earlier Varadkar, a proponent of liberalising Ireland’s strict abortion regime, predicted a high turnout would be good for those campaigning for change.

Thousands of Irish citizens living overseas have travelled home in droves to exercise their democratic right on the emotive issue.

Ireland’s president and political leaders were among 3 million people expected to vote, with 6,500 polling stations open across the country.

The specific question people were asked was whether they wanted to see the Eighth Amendment replaced with wording in the constitution that would hand politicians the responsibility to set future laws on abortion, unhindered by constitutional strictures.

If the Yes vote is confirmed, the Irish Government intends to legislate by the end of the year to make it relatively easy for a woman to obtain the procedure in early pregnancy.

Ministers have promised to allow terminations within the first 12 weeks, subject to medical advice and a cooling-off period, and between 12 and 24 weeks in exceptional circumstances.

Muslim Man Beaten Up For Failing To Name PM, Forced To Say 'Bharat Mata Ki Jai'

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A Muslim man named Jamal Momin, a migrant laborer, was allegedly assaulted by four men in a moving train in West Bengal after he failed to answer their questions about Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the national anthem.

Momin was forced to say, "Bharat Mata Ki Jai."

His co-passengers did nothing to help him.

The man was reportedly on a moving train, on his way to Kaliachak in Malda district from Howrah on May 14, when he was assaulted, the Press Trust of India reported today.

The men asked him questions about Modi, the national anthem, and Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee. "Who is the Prime Minister of India? Who is the chief minister of Bengal? What is our national anthem?," they asked, The Times of Indiareported.

When he could not reply, the four men asked, "Who is Nawaz Sharif?"

Then, they asked him, "Do you offer namaz?"

When he replied in the affirmative, they said, "Shame on you. You offer namaz every day at a mosque but you don't know the national anthem."

The Muslim man was forced to say, "Bharat Mata Ki Jai" before the four men disembarked at Bandel.

Jamal was reportedly so scared that he did not even tell his wife about the incident. Five days later, on May 19, he left for Gujarat.

A local NGO, Bangla Sankriti Mancha, has used the videos taken by other passengers in the train to file a complaint at the Kaliachak Police Station and an investigation is underway.

Momin, who is now in Gujarat, told TOI, "I was not feeling well that day. So, I sat beside the window. But they forced me to leave that seat. I accepted it. The four youths then threw a volley of questions at me. I could answer some, but most I didn't know."

"They began to abuse me, my family and my religion. No one in the compartment objected to the abuse," the labourer said. "They roughed me up several times. I was reduced to tears. This went on till they got down at Bandel," he said.

Ireland Abortion Referendum Result: Country Votes 'Yes' To Legalisation

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The Irish public have voted overwhelmingly in favour of repealing the country’s ban on abortion. 

The final results from the referendum - which was held on Friday - revealed that 66.4% of voters cast their ballot in favour of repealing Ireland’s Eighth Amendment, which effectively makes abortion illegal by giving pregnant women and foetuses the same right to life. 

Referendum returning officer Barry Ryan announced that the ‘Yes’ campaign won the referendum with a majority of 706,349 votes.  

The announcement sparked huge cheers from crowds gathered at Dublin Castle, with ‘Yes’ campaigners popping bottles of champagne at the news. 

Turnout for the referendum was confirmed at 64.5% - three points higher than the historic gay marriage referendum in 2015 and a record for such a vote in Ireland. 

Donegal was the only constituency to vote ‘No’, with 51.87% against and 48.13% for, the results revealed.

The decision paves the way for the Irish government to introduce new legislation that is likely to allow women to seek a termination within 12 weeks of pregnancy. 

Exit polls had suggested a landslide victory for the ‘Yes’ camp, suggesting that 69% of voters had backed the repeal campaign. 

Irish prime minister Leo Varadkar referendum result marked “the day Ireland stepped out from under the last of our shadows and into the light”.

It was “the day we came of age as a country” and “the day we took our place among the nations of the world”, he said. 

“Today, we have a modern constitution for a modern people.” 

Referencing the poet Maya Angelou’s words that history “cannot be unlived” but “if faced with courage, need not be lived again”, Varadkar said: “The wrenching pain of decades of mistreatment of Irish women cannot be unlived.

“However, today we have ensured that it does not have to be lived again.”

The official results come hours after the Save the 8th campaign conceded defeat.

Communications director John McGuirk said that the ‘No’ campaign would oppose forthcoming laws to allow abortion in Ireland. 

“The unborn child no longer has a right to life recognised by the Irish state,” he said in a statement. “Shortly legislation will be introduced that will allow babies to be killed in our country.  

“Every time an unborn child has his or her life ended in Ireland, we will oppose that, and make our voices known,” McGuirk added. 

But the head of the Irish opposition, Michael Martin, said his party would not stand in the way of relaxing the laws. 

Pundits had suggested his party’s supporters were almost evenly split between Yes and No, and many of his party members in the Dail parliament advocated a No vote. He said the Dail would honour the will of the people.

Ireland’s Health Minister Simon Harris told crowds at Dublin Castle, where the result was announced: “Thank you so much to everybody who voted, to everybody who came out, the men, the women, the voters in rural Ireland and urban Ireland, who thought long and hard about this question and they said we want to live in a more compassionate country where we look after our women.”

Meanwhile, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn called the result a “fantastic victory for women’s rights”, congratulating everyone who took part in the “inspiring campaign” to repeal the Eighth Amendment. 

The success of the ‘Yes’ campaign has renewed calls that abortion should be de-criminalised in Northern Ireland.

Despite being part of the UK, Northern Ireland has banned terminations in almost every instance, including when the mother is the victim of rape or incest, and when the unborn child has an abnormality that means it would not survive outside of the womb. 

Speaking from Dublin Castle, Northern Irish women Claire Donaldson and Ellie Evans told HuffPost UK they were “absolutely elated” by the result and “so excited for what it means for Northern Ireland”. 

“Today we celebrate - tomorrow we fight back,” they said. 

Claire Donaldson and Ellie Evans from Northern Ireland said they were 'so excited' about what the result means for women north of the border 

Grainne Teggart, Northern Ireland Campaigns Manager for Amnesty International, said it must not be forgotten that women in Northern Ireland “are still persecuted by a Victorian-era abortion ban”. 

Calling it “hypocritical, degrading and insulting” that Northern Irish women cannot access vital healthcare services at home, Teggart added: “The UK Government can no longer turn a blind eye and deny us equality.

“We cannot be left behind in a corner of the UK and on the island of Ireland as second-class citizens.”

But any move to relax laws around abortion in Northern Ireland is likely to inspire a backlash from the DUP.  

DUP MP Ian Paisley wrote on Twitter that the country “should not be bullied into accepting abortion on demand”. 

“NI did not have a constitutional imperative on abortion it is governed by laws that can be changed,” he said. “The settled will of the people has been to afford protections to the unborn life and protect the life of the mother.” 

This is a breaking news story and will be updated. Check back for the fullest version. Follow HuffPost UK on Twitter here, and on Facebook here.

Man Faces Charges After Pulling Knife, Stun Gun On Muslim Students At McDonald's

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A man is facing criminal charges after threatening Muslim students with a knife and stun gun this week while they were eating outside a McDonald’s in St. Augustine, Florida.

John Jay Smith, 60, is facing two third-degree felony charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, a first-degree felony charge of burglary with assault or battery and a third-degree felony charge of trespassing, according to a police report.

Officers arrested Smith at the McDonald’s on Wednesday at 2:30 a.m. after he used a switchblade-style knife to threaten the students, who were in a parked car outside the restaurant, according to First Coast News.

One of the victims, Omar Abdelmoaty, told The Washington Post that he and four other Egyptian exchange students, all of them Muslim, were simply eating burgers and fries when Smith came at them.

“Get the f**k out of here, you don’t deserve American food,” Smith reportedly said.

At that point, Smith reportedly pulled out a stun gun and reached inside the car with it. The driver, likely very scared, accidentally backed the car into a pole.

“We thought we were going to die,” Abdelmoaty told the Post.

John Jay Smith, 60, faces multiple felony charges for threatening Muslim students with weapons while they were eating outside a McDonald's in Florida.

The police report indicates Smith might have been intoxicated at the time of the attack, and that he may have been motivated by the victims’ religion.

Smith could face hate crime charges because he “approached the victims due to their purported religion or ethnic background,” said Chuck Mulligan, a spokesperson for the St. Johns County Sheriff’s office, according to First Coast News.

The State Attorney’s Office will decide whether Smith will face hate crime charges, Mulligan said.

Smith reportedly defended his attack by telling deputies, “they killed my son” and “my son was a Marine.” Smith said his son was killed in combat in Afghanistan, First Coast News reported.

McDonald’s did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s request for comment on the incident.

“We didn’t do anything to anybody. We’re just students,” Abdelmoaty told The Post. “The basic idea that he charged us and attacked us for this, for our religion, for our home country and background, it’s kind of scary. In the first place, we’re just human beings — names and descriptions came afterward. We don’t hate him for what he did. We’re just sad.”

America does not do a good job of tracking incidents of hate and bias. We need your help to create a database of such incidents across the country, so we all know what’s going on. Tell us your story.

Hugh Grant Marries For The First Time At Age 57

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Love actually turned to matrimony for Hugh Grant.

The 57-year-old actor married his longtime girlfriend, Anna Eberstein, in London on Friday, according to reports.

The couple was photographed celebrating with friends and family outside the Chelsea Register Office after a civil ceremony. Their intent to wed had already been posted in a public notice.

Eberstein, a 39-year-old Swedish TV producer, and Grant have three young children together ranging in age from 5 to a few months old.

It is the first marriage for Grant, who had a long-term romance with actress Elizabeth Hurley. The “About A Boy” and “Notting Hill” star also had a relationship with Tinglan Hong that produced a son and a daughter, ages 5 and 6.

Grant’s official vows may surprise some, given his public stance on marriage.

I think there’s something unromantic about marriage. You’re closing yourself off,” he said on “The Howard Stern Show” in 2016.

However, he also conceded that “there’s lovely aspects of it sometimes, if you marry exactly the right person, your best friend, and it’s cozy and it’s lovely.”


With Its Way Of Life At Risk, This Remote Oyster-Growing Region Called In Robots

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Maxime Daigle and Allain Savoie represent a new generation of shellfish processing entrepreneurs at La Maison BeauSoleil.

NEGUAC, Canada ― When the harbors aren’t frozen, Maxime Daigle and his older brother Jean-Francois often take to the cold waters off New Brunswick in one of their family’s flat-bottomed boats to harvest oysters. The siblings are among hundreds of producers along this rocky coast who grow oysters for La Maison BeauSoleil in the company’s distinctive floating bags.

For the Daigles this is a family business. Maxime’s father, Maurice, co-owns La Maison BeauSoleil, an oyster grower, packer and distributor that he runs with his business partner, Amédée Savoie, whose son, Allain Savoie, also works in the company.

When the business started growing and selling oysters from the coastal village of Neguac, at the southern end of the Acadian Peninsula, each wooden box was painstakingly packed by hand.

That was 18 years ago. La Maison BeauSoleil ― called simply BeauSoleil within the seafood business ― has since become Canada’s largest producer of cocktail-sized oysters. Demand for its tasty, teardrop-shaped product is at an all-time high. While the company is working hard to keep up, business as usual isn’t cutting it. 

So a new generation of robots is coming.

While details are still closely guarded, the company is developing a state-of-the-art automated sorting and packing line that will revolutionize its business. Software-controlled robots,able to mimic the small, complicated movements of human oyster pickers, will give the company a new competitive edge, says Savoie, and allow them to double production.

This is the type of investment and technology that has often been missing from this country’s traditional fishing economy. Many of Atlantic Canada’s rural coastal communities have been treading water since overfishing caused cod to collapse in the 1990s, and falling further behind could signal the end for the region’s historic way of life.

But this is a family business, and the co-owners are trying to build a legacy for their children in this remote region.

Amédée Savoie owns and runs La Maison BeauSoleil, Canada's largest producer of cocktail-sized oysters.

According to a recent report from Ryerson University’s Brookfield Institute, 62 percent of resource-sector jobs, including those in the fisheries, are vulnerable to automation. While profoundly needed by most production-oriented industries, that isn’t always a good news story in a small town like Neguac, says Creig Lamb, a study co-author.

“There’s an understanding that automation is happening and you either adapt or perish,” he says. “The danger is that the people who either don’t want to or can’t acquire the new skills that are required, they’re the most vulnerable.”

Helping these workers, like BeauSoleil’s oyster packers, can be a major challenge, he says. But while many fear losing jobs to technological change, many industry observers ― including the Daigles and Savoies ― say a revolution can’t come soon enough. 

Creepy Robots

Shellfish is not an easy sector to automate, particularly in a region like New Brunswick where fisheries harvest a hugely diverse range of species. While the same robot can be used to manufacture different types of cars or computers, for example, the physical differences between a crab and a lobster, or a shrimp and a scallop, mean the processing equipment needed is often radically different.

But innovation is happening. A few years ago, a short, slightly grainy video with the creepy vibe of a horror film was quietly posted online by a mechanical engineer. The video shows a robot methodically picking up a leggy snow crab by its central shell and depositing it into a clamp. With eerie precision, a round, spinning blade descends and rapidly dismembers the animal’s leg sections from its body.

That robot is now in commercial testing. It was developed by the St. John’s, Newfoundland-based Canadian Centre for Fisheries Innovation, a nonprofit organization owned by Memorial University. Managing Director Robert Verge says this type of device has been badly needed by processors in the region for a long time.

Another issue the shellfish industry faces is the seasonality of Canada’s fisheries. A million-dollar robot doesn’t provide great return on investment if it’s only used a couple of months a year.

Leola Plourde is over 60 years old and belongs to an older cohort of shellfish packers.

In coastal New Brunswick, like many rural Atlantic communities long kept afloat by seasonal employment in fish processing plants or on boats, demographics are becoming increasingly dire. Young people “vote with their feet,” as Verge says, by moving west and to more urban communities. The workforce is plummeting as demand for Canadian seafood spikes. Between 2011 and 2016, the region saw the biggest decline in the proportion of people aged 15 to 64 since 1871, according to Statistics Canada, and the largest increase in the proportion of seniors.

This sounds familiar to BeauSoleil’s Savoie, who says fish plant work often requires long days and physically demanding, repetitive tasks. Right now, two of his best oyster packers are over 60 years old.

“[They] have all said to their children, ‘Don’t do what we do, go for something else,’ and I don’t blame them,” he says. He’s concerned about finding enough workers, as well as competition on price and consistency from overseas producers.

“If industry doesn’t [adapt] in the next 10 years, there’ll be bigger problems,” Savoie says.

Anything You Can Do, It Can Do Better (Maybe) 

Back when BeauSoleil first hit the North American market, oysters were typically sold by weight, so number counts didn’t matter. But as the company made a name selling its bite-sized, individually priced oysters into a seemingly insatiable market, the importance of getting the right number in each box became increasingly important. It invested in cutting-edge optical sorting machines from France in 2005 and was the first Canadian company to adapt the technology for use with oysters.

In 2004, the company sold 25 tons of oysters; in 2017, it sold 800 tons. The company currently employs about 50 people, says Savoie, and spends the equivalent of about $776,000 on wages every year. Without new so-called “pick and place” automation on its processing line, capable of packing boxes like a human worker, they’re at the point where growth is nearly impossible.

Plus, robots don’t make errors the way humans often do. “Human beings aren’t able to judge [precise measurements] perfectly,” software developer Michel Caissie says in French. He owns Infraprotech, the company contracted by BeauSoleil to program its new robots.

For 18 years, La Maison BeauSoleil has packed its oysters in blue-stamped, handmade wooden boxes.

Three years ago, when this project with BeauSoleil started, Caissie’s devices identified a whopping 29 individual human movements in the packing process, including picking an oyster up, measuring it, looking at it and eventually placing it in the box.

“Just to pick one oyster takes three-quarters of a second,” Savoie says. “That times 12 million oysters [the number they ship each year] ― that’s a lot of time.”

Then there’s the cost to human bodies. Automating the simplest, yet most straining tasks done by humans can dramatically reduce risk of workplace injury, says Caissie, whose software calculates where the most acute dangers are.

“We can’t continue working this way. The process isn’t adapted to human beings,” Caissie says. “That’s why people don’t like this work.”

Still, robots are fallible, and Savoie has been careful to build in workstations where humans can still pack boxes of oysters ― just in case the robots break down.

Not A Fear Of Change; Fear Of Loss Of Control 

At a recent international seafood show in Boston, BeauSoleil bought a $7,000 waterproof remotely operated vehicle that can be used to locate oyster bags sunk to the ocean bottom for winter storage and help the company drill more accurately into the rocky seabed.

Maxime Daigle used it a couple of weeks ago and was thrilled to discover a cache of oysters that had drifted away from its GPS marker. He’s excited by the potential that technological advances, including automation, have for his industry.

Maxime Daigle often takes to the cold waters off New Brunswick in one of his family's flat-bottomed boats to harvest oysters.

“I think it makes my job way more interesting. When you’re sorting oysters by hand it’s the most boring thing,” he says. “With automation it goes by way faster, you’re able to focus on other things. It makes my job a bit more specialized.”

Currently the company’s youngest employee at 26, Daigle says it’s important for the company to be able to supply the demand for its product.

“You want to be able to face the future,” he says. “Particularly with the population of labor here in New Brunswick, which is dying a bit.” 

Automation definitely scares some members of his community, says Savoie, but he’s emphatic that the company’s goal is to increase production, not to cut jobs. Yet, in the face of all this change, there’s at least one thing BeauSoleil says it won’t be automating: its blue-stamped, handmade wooden oyster box, which is manufactured year-round locally.

Verge, who spent much of his career helping businesses in financial trouble, says that Atlantic Canadians aren’t necessarily afraid of change.

“They’re afraid of being changed without any involvement or input or opportunity to direct their destiny,” he says. “The fishery, for a long time, was considered an employer of last resort.”

He says the region’s industry needs to be more efficient and humane, and technologies could help.

“We’ve got to reinvent this industry for the future, not perpetuate a model that really didn’t work that well in the past,” Verge says. “If we can do that, there’s tremendous opportunity.”

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Twitter #PutStarWarsInOtherFilms And It Was Universally Entertaining

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“Solo: A Star Wars Story” hits this weekend and even though that film is struggling a bit at the box office, Twitter would prefer if we could add “Star Wars” to every film. That might be a little overdoing it, but the end result of the Twitter game #PutStarWarsInOtherFilms makes a good argument.

On Friday, the internet forced the galaxy far, far away into the rest of our cinematic universe and, based on the early reviews of “Solo,” it may be our only hope for good “Star Wars” related entertainment this weekend.

Here are some of the best tweets from #PutStarWarsInOtherFilms:

How Drones Expand The War On Terror

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This article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To receive TomDispatch in your inbox three times a week, click here.

By Rebecca Gordon

They are like the camel’s nose, lifting a corner of the tent. Don’t be fooled, though. It won’t take long until the whole animal is sitting inside, sipping your tea and eating your sweets. In countries around the world ― in the Middle East, Asia Minor, Central Asia, Africa, even the Philippines ― the appearance of U.S. drones in the sky (and on the ground) is often Washington’s equivalent of the camel’s nose entering a new theater of operations in this country’s forever war against “terror.” Sometimes, however, the drones are more like the camel’s tail, arriving after less visible U.S. military forces have been in an area for a while.

Scrambling for Africa

AFRICOM, the Pentagon’s Africa Command, is building Air Base 201 in Agadez, a town in the nation of Niger. The $110 million installation, which officially opens later this year, will be able to house both C-17 transport planes and MQ-9 Reaper armed drones. It will soon become the new centerpiece in an undeclared U.S. war in West Africa. Even before the base opens, armed U.S. drones are already flying from Niger’s capital, Niamey, having received permission from the Nigerien government to do so last November.

Despite crucial reporting by Nick Turse and others, most people in this country only learned of U.S. military activities in Niger in 2017 (and had no idea that about 800 U.S. military personnel were already stationed in the country) when news broke that four U.S. soldiers had died in an October ambush there. It turns out, however, that they weren’t the only U.S soldiers involved in firefights in Niger. This March, the Pentagon acknowledged that another clash took place last December between Green Berets and a previously unknown group identified as ISIS-West Africa. For those keeping score at home on the ever-expanding enemies list in Washington’s war on terror, this is a different group from the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS), responsible for the October ambush. Across Africa, there have been at least eight other incidents, most of them in Somalia.

What are U.S. forces doing in Niger? Ostensibly, they are training Nigerien soldiers to fight the insurgent groups rapidly multiplying in and around their country. Apart from the uranium that accounts for over 70% of Niger’s exports, there’s little of economic interest to the United States there. The real appeal is location, location, location. Landlocked Niger sits in the middle of Africa’s Sahel region, bordered by Mali and Burkina Faso on the west, Chad on the east, Algeria and Libya to the north, and Benin and Nigeria to the south. In other words, Niger has the misfortune to straddle a part of Africa of increasing strategic interest to the United States.

In addition to ISIS-West Africa and ISGS, actual or potential U.S. targets there include Boko Haram (born in Nigeria and now spread to Mali and Chad), ISIS and al-Qaeda in the Lands of the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) in Libya, and Al Mourabitoun, based primarily in Mali.

At the moment, for instance, U.S. drone strikes on Libya, which have increased under the Trump administration, are generally launched from a base in Sicily. However, drones at the new air base in Agadez will be able to strike targets in all these countries.

Suppose a missile happens to kill some Nigerien civilians by mistake (not exactly uncommon for U.S. drone strikes elsewhere)? Not to worry: AFRICOM is covered. A U.S.-Niger Status of Forces Agreement guarantees that there won’t be any repercussions. In fact, according to the agreement, “The Parties waive any and all claims... against each other for damage to, loss, or destruction of the other’s property or injury or death to personnel of either Party’s armed forces or their civilian personnel.” In other words, the United States will not be held responsible for any “collateral damage” from Niger drone strikes. Another clause in the agreement shields U.S. soldiers and civilian contractors from any charges under Nigerien law.

The introduction of armed drones to target insurgent groups is part of AFRICOM’s expansion of the U.S. footprint on a continent of increasing strategic interest to Washington. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, European nations engaged in the “scramble for Africa,” a period of intense and destructive competition for colonial possessions on the continent. In the post-colonial 1960s and 1970s, the United States and the Soviet Union vied for influence in African countries as diverse as Egypt and what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

Today, despite AFRICOM’s focus on the war on terror, the real jockeying for influence and power on the continent is undoubtedly between this country and the People’s Republic of China. According to the Council on Foreign Relations, “China surpassed the United States as Africa’s largest trade partner in 2009” and has never looked back. “Beijing has steadily diversified its business interests in Africa,” the Council’s 2017 backgrounder continues, noting that from Angola to Kenya,

“China has participated in energy, mining, and telecommunications industries and financed the construction of roads, railways, ports, airports, hospitals, schools, and stadiums. Investment from a mixture of state and private funds has also set up tobacco, rubber, sugar, and sisal plantations... Chinese investment in Africa also fits into Chinese President Xi Jinping’s development framework, ‘One Belt, One Road.’”

For example, in a bid to corner the DRC’s cobalt and copper reserves (part of an estimated $24 trillion in mineral wealth there), two Chinese companies have formed Sicomines, a partnership with the Congolese government’s national mining company. The Pulitzer Center reports that Sicomines is expected “to extract 6.8 million tons of copper and 427,000 tons of cobalt over the next 25 years.” Cobalt is essential in the manufacture of today’s electronic devices ― from cell phones to drones ― and more than half of the world’s supply lies underground in the DRC.

Even before breaking ground on Air Base 201 in Niger, the United States already had a major drone base in Africa, in the tiny country of Djibouti in the Horn of Africa, across the Gulf of Aden from Yemen. From there, the Pentagon has been directing strikes against targets in Yemen and Somalia. As AFRICOM commander Gen. Thomas Waldhauser told Congress in March, “Djibouti is a very strategic location for us.” Camp Lemonnier, as the base is known, occupies almost 500 acres near the Djibouti-Ambouli International Airport. U.S. Central Command, Special Operations Command, European Command, and Transportation Command all use the base. At present, however, it appears that U.S. drones stationed in Djibouti and bound for Yemen and Somalia take off from nearby Chabelley Airfield, as Bard College’s Center for the Study of the Drone reports.

To the discomfort of the U.S. military, the Chinese have recently established their first base in Africa, also in Djibouti, quite close to Camp Lemonnier. That country is also horning in on potential U.S. sales of drones to other countries. IndonesiaSaudi Arabia, and the United Arab emirates are among U.S. allies known to have purchased advanced Chinese drones.

The Means Justify the End?

From the beginning, the CIA’s armed drones have been used primarily to kill specific individuals. The Bush administration launched its global drone assassination program in October 2001 in Afghanistan, expanded it in 2002 to Yemen, and later to other countries. Under President Barack Obama, White House oversight of such assassinations only gained momentum (with an official “kill list” and regular “terror Tuesday” meetings to pick targets). The use of drones expanded 10-fold, with growing numbers of attacks in Pakistan, Yemen, Libya, and Somalia, as well as in the Afghan, Iraqi, and Syrian war zones. Early on, targets were generally people identified as al-Qaeda leaders or “lieutenants.” In later years, the kill lists grew to include supposed leaders or members of a variety of other terror organizations, and eventually even unidentified people engaged in activities that were to bear the “signature” of terrorist activity.

But those CIA drones, destructive as they were (leaving civilian dead, including children, in their wake) were just the camel’s nose ― a way to smuggle in a major change in U.S. policy. We’ve grown so used to murder by drone in the last 17 years that we’ve lost sight of an important fact: such assassinations represented a fundamental (and unlawful) change in U.S. military strategy. Because unpiloted airplanes eliminate the physical risk to American personnel, the United States has embraced a strategy of global extrajudicial executions: presidential assassinations on foreign soil.

It’s a case of the means justifying the end. The drones work so well at so little cost (to us) that it must be all right to kill people with them.

Successive administrations have implemented this strategic change with little public discussion. Critiques of the drone program tend to focus ― not unreasonably ― on the many additional people (like family members) who are injured or die along with the intended targets, and on civilians who should never have been targets in the first place. But few critics point out that executing foreign nationals without trial in other countries is itself wrong and illegal under U.S. law, as well as that of other countries where some of the attacks have taken place, and of course, international law.

How have the Bush, Obama, and now Trump administrations justified such killings? The same way they justified the expansion of the war on terror itself to new battle zones around the world ― through Congress’s September 2001 Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF). That law permitted the president

“to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.”

Given that many of the organizations the United States is targeting with drones today didn’t even exist when that AUMF was enacted and so could hardly have “authorized” or “aided” in the 9/11 attacks, it offers, at best, the thinnest of coverage indeed for such a worldwide program.

Droning On and On

George W. Bush launched the CIA’s drone assassination program and that was just the beginning. Even as Barack Obama attempted to reduce the number of U.S. ground troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, he ramped up the use of drones, famously taking personal responsibility for targeting decisions. By some estimates, he approved 10 times as many drone attacks as Bush.

In 2013, the Obama administration introduced new guidelines for drone strikes, supposedly designed to guarantee with “near certainty” the safety of civilians. Administration officials also attempted to transfer most of the operational responsibility for drone attacks from the CIA to the military’s only-slightly-less-secretive Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC). Although the number of CIA strikes did drop, the Agency remained in a position to rev up its program at any time, as the Washington Post reported in 2016:

“U.S. officials emphasized that the CIA has not been ordered to disarm its fleet of drones, and that its aircraft remain deeply involved in counterterrorism surveillance missions in Yemen and Syria even when they are not unleashing munitions.”

It’s indicative of how easily drone killings have become standard operating procedure that, in all the coverage of the confirmation hearings for the CIA’s new director, Gina Haspel, there was copious discussion of the Agency’s torture program, but not a public mention of, let alone a serious question about, its drone assassination campaign. It’s possible the Senate Intelligence Committee discussed it in their classified hearing, but the general public has no way of knowing Haspel’s views on the subject.

However, it shouldn’t be too hard to guess. It’s clear, for instance, that President Trump has no qualms about the CIA’s involvement in drone killings. When he visited the Agency’s headquarters in Langley, Virginia, the day after his inauguration, says the Post, “Trump urged the CIA to start arming its drones in Syria. ‘If you can do it in 10 days, get it done,’ he said.” At that same meeting, CIA officials played a tape of a drone strike for him, showing how they’d held off until the target had stepped far enough away from the house that the missile would miss it (and so its occupants). His only question: “Why did you wait?”

You may recall that, while campaigning, the president told Fox News that the U.S. should actually be targeting certain civilians. “The other thing with the terrorists,” he said, “is you have to take out their families, when you get these terrorists, you have to take out their families. They care about their lives, don’t kid yourself. When they say they don’t care about their lives, you have to take out their families.” In other words, he seemed eager to make himself a future murderer-in-chief.

How, then, has U.S. drone policy fared under Trump? The New York Times has reported major changes to Obama-era policies. Both the CIA’s and the military’s “kill lists” will no longer be limited to key insurgent leaders, but expanded to include “foot-soldier jihadists with no special skills or leadership roles.” The Times points out that this “new approach would appear to remove some obstacles for possible strikes in countries where Qaeda- or Islamic State-linked militants are operating, from Nigeria to the Philippines.” And no longer will attack decisions only be made at the highest levels of government. The requirement for having a “near certainty” of avoiding civilian casualties ― always something of a fiction ― officially remains in place for now, but we know how seriously Trump takes such constraints.

He’s already overseen the expansion of the drone wars in other ways. In general, that “near certainty” constraint doesn’t apply to officially designated war zones (“areas of active hostility”), where the lower standard of merely avoiding unnecessary civilian casualties prevails. In March 2017, Trump approved a Pentagon request to identify large parts of Yemen and Somalia as areas of “active hostility,” allowing leeway for far less carefully targeted strikes in both places. At the time, however, AFRICOM head General Thomas D. Waldhauser said he would maintain the “near certainty” standard in Somalia for now (which, as it happens, hasn’t stopped Somali civilians from dying by drone strike).

Another change affects the use of drones in Pakistan and potentially elsewhere. Past drone strikes in Pakistan officially targeted people believed to be “high value” al-Qaeda figures, on the grounds that they (like all al-Qaeda leaders) represented an “imminent threat” to the United States. However, as a 2011 Justice Department paper explained, imminence is in the eye of the beholder: “With respect to al-Qaeda leaders who are continually planning attacks, the United States is likely to have only a limited window of opportunity within which to defend Americans.” In other words, once identified as an al-Qaeda leader or the leader of an allied group, you are by definition “continually planning attacks” and always represent an imminent danger, making you a permanent legitimate target.

Under Trump, however, U.S. drones are not only going after those al-Qaeda targets permitted under the 2001 AUMF, but also targeting Afghan Taliban across the border in Pakistan. In other words, these drone strikes are not a continuation of counterterrorism as envisioned under the AUMF, but rather an extension of a revitalized U.S. war in Afghanistan. In general, the law of war allows attacks on a neutral country’s territory only if soldiers chase an enemy across the border in “hot pursuit.” So the use of drones to attack insurgent groups inside Pakistan represents an unacknowledged escalation of the U.S. Afghan War. Another corner of the tent lifted by the camel’s nose?

Transparency about U.S. wars in general, and airstrikes in particular, has also suffered under Trump. The administration, for instance, announced in March that it had used a drone to kill “Musa Abu Dawud, a high-ranking official in al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb,” as the New York Times reported. However, the Times continued, “questions about whether the American military, under the Trump administration, is blurring the scope of operations in Africa were raised... when it was revealed that the U.S. had carried out four airstrikes in Libya from September to January that the Africa Command did not disclose at the time.”

Similarly, the administration has been less than forthcoming about its activities in Yemen. As the Business Insiderreports (in a story updated from the Long War Journal), the U.S. has attacked al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) there repeatedly, but “of the more than 114 strikes against AQAP in Yemen, CENTCOM has only provided details on four, all of which involved high value targets.” Because Trump has loosened the targeting restrictions for Yemen, it’s likely that the other strikes involved low-level targets, whose identity we won’t know.

Just Security, an online roundtable based at New York University, reports the total number of airstrikes there in 2017 as 120. They investigated eight of these and “found that U.S. operations were responsible for the deaths of at least 32 civilians ― including 16 children and six women ― and injured 10 others, including five children.” Yemeni civilians had a suggestion for how the United States could help them avoid becoming collateral damage: give them “a list of wanted individuals. A list that is clear and available to the public so that they can avoid targeted individuals, protect their children, and not allow U.S. targets to have a presence in their areas.”

A 2016 executive order requires that the federal director of national intelligence issue an annual report by May 1st on the previous year’s civilian deaths caused by U.S. airstrikes outside designated “active hostility” zones. As yet, the Trump administration has not filed the 2017 report.

Bigger and Better Camels Coming Soon to a Tent Near You

This March, a jubilant Fox News reported that the Marine Corps is planning to build a fancy new drone, called the MUX, for Marine Air Ground Task Force Unmanned Aircraft System-Expeditionary. This baby will sport quite a set of bells and whistles, as Fox marveled:

“The MUX will terrify enemies of the United States, and with good reason. The aircraft won’t be just big and powerful: it will also be ultra-smart. This could be a heavily armed drone that takes off, flies, avoids obstacles, adapts and lands by itself ― all without a human piloting it.”

In other words, “the MUX will be a drone that can truly run vital missions all by itself.”

Between pulling out of the Iran agreement and moving the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, Trump has made it clear that ― despite his base’s chants of “Nobel! Nobel!” ― he has no interest whatsoever in peace. It looks like the future of the still spreading war on terror under Trump is as clear as MUX.

Rebecca Gordon, a TomDispatch regular, teaches at the University of San Francisco. She is the author of American Nuremberg: The U.S. Officials Who Should Stand Trial for Post-9/11 War Crimes. Her previous books include Mainstreaming Torture: Ethical Approaches in the Post-9/11 United Statesand Letters from Nicaragua.

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Tom Engelhardt’s A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy’s In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power, John Dower’s The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War II, John Feffer’s dystopian novel Splinterlands, and Nick Turse’s Next Time They’ll Come to Count the Dead.

Copyright 2018 Rebecca Gordon

Weird Father's Day Gifts Your Dad Doesn't Know He Wants (But He Does)

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As a dad, I take Father’s Day seriously ― but not the gifts.

My kids know that I don’t wear ties, don’t need cufflinks and have no interest in shirts that make fun of my grumpiness.

Dads spend all year providing for their kids, so usually all they want on Father’s Day is something that will make them laugh and let them know that their kids understand them as people, not just parents.

As a public service, HuffPost Weird News is offering our annual Weird Father’s Day Gift Guide to help kids find a gift that only their dad will appreciate.

Whether that means a shark hat or an app that lets Dad stare at his sperm is up to you.

Shark Hat

Does your dad go crazy during Shark Week? Well, he can turn it into a year-round event with this knit cap designed to look like a hungry shark. He may want to be careful when he goes into rooms with low ceilings. Just saying.

TheApolloBox.com

App That Lets Dad Stare At His Sperm

Apps are really nuts these days: Case in point, this male fertility test that allows Dad to stare at his sperm. Hopefully, your dad won’t show you the little swimmers and say, “Look at your siblings!” HealthTestExpress.com

Beer Holder Hat/Mullet Wig

Efficiency is the key to this combination hat, beer holder and mullet wig. It allows him to drink beer, shade his head and share his appreciation of unfortunate hairstyles all at once. WearYourBeer.com

Paisley Face Mask

Life’s not easy for a stylish germophobe. Frankly, most face masks just aren’t stylish, but this paisley face mask will send the signal that your dad is both fashionable and fearful of getting sick — a winning combination in our book.

MyAirMask.com

Beard Charms

Beards used to be a way for a guy to stand out in a crowd, but that’s hard to do when everyone has one. The solution comes in the form of these beard charms designed to stick on a man’s facial hair. They’re sure to be conversation starters. 
“Hey, you have spittle on your beard. Oh, sorry, it’s just a piece of plastic.” Shapeways.com

Pizza In A Bag

Pizza is a wonderful food, but the carbs can be bad if Dad is trying to lose weight. Now there’s Pizza in a Bag, a pizza-flavored beef jerky that will undoubtedly inspire reactions both cheesy and saucy. SuperSnackTime.com

The Sinkie

Maybe the best Father’s Day gift you can give is the gift of relatively decent personal hygiene. The Sinkie is designed to clean the underparts of a man when he’s on the go and doesn’t have time to take a shower and doesn’t want to risk a plumbing disaster by sitting on a sink. What a considerate fellow. SmallBallsAndLarry.com

Book About A Guy Who Broke His Penis

Does Dad like to curl up with a good book? He’ll love Broken Bananah, a heartwrenching true-life drama about a man who broke his penis. If the best art is made from suffering, this book is a surefire best-seller. Ross Asdourian

Giant Flask

You drove your dad to drink. Now make sure he won’t run out of booze with this giant flask.

Oldies.com

Party Leopard Meggings

At some point, even the most stylish dad just gives up and starts wearing pretty much anything he can grab from the drawer. If he happens to grab these party leopard leggings, you know it’s on like Donkey Kong. KapowMeggings.com/

Size Matters Mug

Does Dad have a problem finding coffee that measures up to his high standards? This ruler-themed coffee cup declares the bigger, the better, at least where caffeine is concerned. Oldies.com

Boob Vases

Dad would have to be a blooming idiot not to appreciate these totally classy vases that to some people look slightly like a woman’s breasts. If your mom has a flat expression on her face when she sees them, don’t worry: She just appreciates your thoughtful gesture so much that she has forgotten to put a smile on her face. It happens. Tictail.com

Pizza Towel

If your dad is a real pizza work, it’s worth spending the dough on this pizza towel. If he doesn’t appreciate it, he’s all wet (especially if there are no other towels). FindMeAGift.co.uk

Cannabis Humidor

If your dad is one of the many older people rediscovering marijuana now that it’s legal in some areas, he’ll probably love this humidor that keeps cannabis in pristine condition. You’ll be best buds for sure!

Cannador.com

Boozy Bass Bottle Holder

Does your dad drink like a fish? Now he has companyHouzz.com

Giant Beer Pong (Without The Beer)

This supersize version of Beer Pong will surely remind Dad of his heroic days in college — but on a much larger scale. Warning: If you actually try using beer with these, someone’s going to get hammered. WickedBigPong.com

BB8 Pool Raft

To paraphrase Obi-Wan Kenobi: This is the droid pool raft you’re looking for. Funcom

Tabasco-flavored Whiskey

This bottle of Tabasco-flavored George Dickel whiskey is like the adult version of a Reese’s: Two great tastes that go great together. Make sure he knows it’s for sipping and not for dipping chips. GeorgeDickel.com

Pitch-n-Puff

This golfing novelty for pot smokers is a stroke of genius: The fake golf ball holds marijuana, and the tee is actually a pipe. Don’t be surprised if Dad purposely hits balls into the trees so he can sneak a toke. VapeWorld.com

Bacon Trophy

Dad may think he already has all the World’s Greatest Father trophies a man needs. Guess again: Nothing says, “Dad, I appreciate you” than an award showing a fake frying pan cooking fake baconFarOutAwards.com

Woofie

Dog-loving dads know how difficult it is to get a dog to pose for a selfie. Make things easier for him with the Woofie, a clip that fits on a smartphone and holds a dog treat. Apparently, this is supposed to get the dog to focus on the camera. No, this won’t work with cats. Thanks for asking. ModelCitizenPet.com

Testicle Plush Toys

Giving Dad a plush toy seems ballsy, but he’ll go nuts when he realizes you’re giving him testicles. Even better: These testes don’t hurt when you punch them. IHeartGuts.com

Han Solo Leather jacket

If your Dad is a “Star Wars” geek, he will surely love this leather jacket designed to look like one worn by Han Solo. If he’s single, he won’t be solo for long once people see him wearing it. FJacketscom/

Taco Truck

There is not a dad in the world who doesn’t get excited by the words “taco truck.” Even though this truck-shaped taco holder isn’t as big as the real thing, Pop won’t complain. We promise. Houzz.com

Bottle Opener Made From AK-47 Magazine

Think assault rifles have no real purpose with civilians? Maybe, but when you have a bunch of beer bottles, this converted AK-47 magazine turned opener sure seems necessary.  SpiceTac.com

Cannabis Shatter

Aging hippie dads who want to try the new wave of cannabis products may want to get high on Shatter, a very very potent form of concentrated marijuana. The product, available in states where pot is legal, is so strong that it’s possible Dad might take a very long nap after sampling it. Which is probably OK, since Dad would probably like nothing more for Father’s Day than a long slumber. GrownRogue.com

11 Instagram-Worthy Swimsuit Brands You Haven’t Already Seen Everywhere

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For the past few years, swimwear label Solid & Striped has pretty much become the standard for chic one-pieces and bikinis.

The brand even has plenty of celebrity fans, including Taylor Swift and her posse of famous friends. (Ever since the singer and her squad wore matching Solid & Striped swimsuits over Fourth of July 2016, the brand’s many styles have saturated our Instagram feeds.)

But you know what they say: There are plenty of fish in the sea ... and plenty of cool swimwear labels out there making equally Instagrammable one-pieces and bikinis for all your trips to the beach.

Don’t get us wrong, there’s nothing wrong with Solid & Striped ― but we want to share some of our other favorite swim labels making stylish, sexy, cool swimsuits to get you through summer. 

A post shared by KAOHS SWIM (@kaohs_swim) on

1. Kaohs Swim

Kaohs swimsuits -- made in Los Angeles -- are definitely on the sexy side. If high-cut, cheeky bikini bottoms are your thing, this might be the brand for you. We will note, however, that they are on the pricier side, with full bikini sets and one-pieces ringing in just under $200. 

You can check out the collection here.

A post shared by Frankies (@frankiesbikinis) on

2. Frankie's Bikinis

If you're looking for bold, bright swimsuits that can be both sporty and sexy, Frankie's Bikinis has you covered. The swimsuits, which will also run you around $200, are made in Los Angeles and Bali. Model Candace Swanepoel and Kylie Jenner are fans. 

Check out the swimwear here.

A post shared by J.Crew (@jcrew) on

3. J.Crew Playa

Earlier this year, J.Crew launched its "very colorful, very mix-and-matchable swim collection" Playa. The line includes plenty of bright swimsuits (in some very Solid & Striped-inspired cuts and color palettes) at affordable prices. The best part? Pieces start at $22.50. 

Check out the Playa swimsuits here.

A post shared by LIVELY (@wearlively) on

4. Lively

Lively (which also makes intimates) has some great swimsuit options, ranging from "active-inspired to vintage vibes." Everything is pretty affordable, too -- one-pieces are $65, and separates are $45 each, but you do get a discount if you order two pieces. 

Check out Lively's swimwear here.

A post shared by summersalt (@gosummersalt) on

5. Summersalt

What we love most about Summersalt swimsuits is the fact that they're eco-friendly and all under $100. The brand offers a number of modern cuts and styles in both bright colors and classic black and white, and their website has plenty of helpful info for sizing and butt coverage (which is very important). 

Check out Summersalt's collection here.

6. Lonely

New Zealand-based label Lonely offers dreamy swimwear in unique fabrics and vintage-inspired shapes. What we love most about the brand as a whole is their Lonely Girls Project, on ongoing journal series featuring photos of women of all shapes and sizes from around their world wearing their swimwear (and lingerie). 

Check out what Lonely has to offer here

A post shared by Andie (@andieswim) on

7. Andie

Andie is an online-only, direct-to-consumer swimwear brand that offers risk-free shopping for customers. You can order a few sizes and colors, and send back whatever you don't like or doesn't fit. The brand initially launched with three basic one-piece styles, but has since added a bunch of new colors and styles. Plus, everything is under $100. 

Check out Andie's suits here.

8. Minnow

Minnow is a Canadian swimwear label based in Toronto that offers basic swim styles in solid colors and unique prints. Each suit is handmade to order, which makes them a little pricier -- but a dollar from each sale is donated to the Ocean Conservancy. 

Check out Minnow's collection here.

9. Strait Swim

Inspired by the islands of the Torres Strait in northern Australia, StraitSwim offers triangle bikinis and simple one-pieces in a variety of floral prints and colors, with prices ranging from $90 to $180. 

Check out StraitSwim's styles here.

A post shared by FAE (@faeswim) on

10. Fae Swim

Eco-friendly label Fae Swim has become a favorite of Bella Hadid's, and it's unsurprising, considering the ultra-sexy cuts they offer. If you're looking for classic triangle tops and tie-up bottoms or even something a little more bondage-inspired, Fae has plenty to choose from. The pieces range from about $65 to $150. 

Check out Fae's offerings here.

11. Sidway

Sidway was founded by Sarah Sidway Godshaw, the woman who launched Nasty Gal's swimwear line, so she knows a thing or two about cool-girl swimsuits. Her line is very '90s-inspired, yet still looks modern and fresh. One-pieces will run you about $150, while sets run closer to $200. 

You can check out Sidway's suits here.

HuffPost may receive a share from purchases made via links on this page.

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