Yahoo! News: World News
Yahoo! News: World News |
- Even at Starbucks? A conversation grows about hidden racial bias
- Why Bob Corker is bucking GOP tribalism, in a Tennessee tradition
- Moon shot for peace between the Koreas
- In Kim story, a likely ratings boost for diplomatic repairman designee Pompeo
Even at Starbucks? A conversation grows about hidden racial bias Posted: 18 Apr 2018 02:30 PM PDT Videos of two black men leaving a Starbucks in handcuffs last week has confronted many Americans with one of the nation's most troubling and divisive questions: How deep does racism still run? Half a century after lunch counter sit-ins that cemented the civil rights movement, the similarities between the images then and those from a downtown Philadelphia Starbucks were jarring: police officers escorting two stone-faced black individuals from a storefront after they had insisted on equal treatment. In this case, two black men were waiting for a friend, but not making a purchase, in one of the most overtly progressive corporations in the nation. |
Why Bob Corker is bucking GOP tribalism, in a Tennessee tradition Posted: 18 Apr 2018 01:06 PM PDT |
Moon shot for peace between the Koreas Posted: 18 Apr 2018 01:02 PM PDT In coming weeks, the world's most heavily armed border, or the line between North and South Korea, could soon be the scene of the greatest peacemaking in 2018. On April 27, Kim Jong-un is expected to cross the 2.5-mile-wide demilitarized zone and become the first North Korean leader to set foot inside South Korea. Then, if all goes well at that historic meeting, President Trump could, either in May or June, fly to a yet-unknown country and become the first sitting president of the United States to meet a North Korean leader. |
In Kim story, a likely ratings boost for diplomatic repairman designee Pompeo Posted: 18 Apr 2018 12:52 PM PDT For a year, Mr. Trump's short-lived first secretary of State, Rex Tillerson, isolated himself on the State Department's storied seventh floor to pursue a slash-and-burn department reorganization. With one Republican and a rising number of Democrats on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee already saying they will vote against confirmation, the former Kansas congressman looks unlikely to get an affirmative committee vote and faces an uncertain outcome in a full Senate vote later this month. |
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