Month: November 2019

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Contesting the U.S.-Saudi Bromance With 1,000 Cuts

November 14, 2019 | News | No Comments

On September 8, Senators Rand Paul (R-KY), Chris Murphy (D-CT), Mike Lee (R-UT), and Al Franken (D-MN) introduced a bipartisan resolution, SJ Res 39, to disapprove the $1.15 billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia notified to Congress on August 8. New Mexico Senator Martin Heinrich joined SJ Res 39 as a co-sponsor on September 13.

A Senate vote on this resolution is currently expected this week, as early as Tuesday. A broad coalition of human rights and peace advocates, including Oxfam, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the Friends Committee on National Legislation, and the Win Without War coalition (of which Just Foreign Policy is a member) is lobbying senators to vote in favor of the resolution of disapproval. Some of these groups sent a joint letter to Congress urging rejection of the arms deal.

These groups are united in their concern that the United States is supporting a war that has caused a humanitarian catastrophe in Yemen. Moreover, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have documented violations of U.S. arms export controls concerning the targeting of civilians and violations of international humanitarian law. The arms deal would, in part, replace Saudi tanks destroyed in the war in Yemen. But this vote is also happening in the context of other concerns about the U.S.-Saudi relationship, in particular, about Saudi Arabia’s support of anti-American extremism.

Guaranteeing a Floor Vote

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This vote is happening this week because of an important provision of the Arms Control Export Act (ACEA). The ACEA says not only that Congress can vote to disapprove an arms sale, but that a resolution to do so within 30 days of the administration’s notification to Congress cannot be buried in a hostile committee against the will of the resolution’s sponsors. If the sponsors insist—as Senators Paul and Murphy are now insisting—such a resolution is guaranteed a floor vote.

This provision of the AECA for privileged consideration of a resolution of disapproval of an arms deal is similar to the crucial provisions of the War Powers Resolution that aim to ensure that a resolution to withdraw U.S. forces from a conflict that Congress hasn’t authorized can’t be buried in committee.

The expected Senate vote is the third significant public engagement effort this year to challenge U.S. weapons exports to Saudi Arabia in Congress in the context of the war in Yemen. On June 16, the House of Representatives narrowly failed, 204-216, to pass an amendment offered by Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) to bar the transfer of U.S.-produced cluster bombs to Saudi Arabia. On August 30, during the congressional recess, 64 members of the House signed a bipartisan letter to the administration urging it to postpone the Saudi arms deal so that Congress could fully consider it.

Four Reasons for Working to Stop the Deal

Although fundamental reform in the U.S.-Saudi relationship is a desirable long-run goal, the priority now is to save lives and prevent much unnecessary suffering in Yemen. Not long ago, there was a ceasefire in Yemen. Though imperfect, the ceasefire resulted in less violence and more humanitarian aid was able to get through. Therefore, a completely different U.S.-Saudi relationship isn’t necessary in order to negotiate a life-saving cease-fire. In part because of the perception of congressional pressure, diplomatic and political talks are happening right now towards a political resolution in Yemen, and the U.S. diplomatic stance in these talks has moved from a total embrace of claimed Saudi interests towards a somewhat more realistic and balanced view. More congressional pressure could generate more effective U.S. diplomacy and a new ceasefire. And for many Yemenis, that could be the difference between life and death.

Second, fundamental reform in the U.S.-Saudi relationship will likely not be achieved with a single blow. The challenges include more than a half-century of bipartisan foreign policy inertia, the Pentagon-industrial-congressional complex, and the assumptions of bipartisan military Keynesianism. The status quo of the U.S.-Saudi relationship has many self-perceived beneficiaries. It will likely take many challenges to reform this relationship.

Third, it takes time to mobilize and engage public opinion in a new way. Peace advocates are used to the idea of opposing an authorization for the use of military force. They aren’t accustomed to the idea of opposing an arms deal on human rights and peace grounds. Each battle educates and engages more people; each partial success convinces more people that future and more vigorous efforts on this front are justified.

Fourth, Congress, the media, advocacy groups, and public opinion are a feedback loop. Media and advocacy groups and public opinion influence Congress. Congressional action—or inaction—in turn helps the media and advocacy groups and public opinion to determine which issues to prioritize. When the war in Yemen started, there was no congressional action, minimal media reporting, and little public engagement. That was a vicious circle.

Creating Positive Feedback

Each congressional battle is an opportunity to start a new, positive feedback loop. When members of Congress speak up, then more media report, more advocacy groups engage, and more members of the public express their opinions, which pushes even more members of Congress to speak up, thus convincing more people to pay attention.

The more people win, the more they believe they can win. The more senators vote for the resolution of disapproval of the Saudi arms deal, the more controversial the Saudi war in Yemen—and the more controversial the U.S.-Saudi relationship in general—will appear to be in Congress. That will put more pressure on the administration and the Saudis to negotiate realistically for peace in Yemen. And that could save many lives.

The contested vote will also set a broader positive precedent. Constituents who care about peace and human rights will find out how their senators voted and will praise them or criticize them for it. That will change the perception among members of Congress that arms deals are the exclusive political turf of the Pentagon-industrial complex. In the future, there will be more congressional awareness that other interests, such as human rights and peace, have to be taken into account.

Robert Naiman is Policy Director at Just Foreign Policy. Naiman has worked as a policy analyst and researcher at the Center for Economic and Policy Research and Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch. He has masters degrees in economics and mathematics from the University of Illinois and has studied and worked in the Middle East. You can contact him here.

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Americans are arrogant and greedy, according to people both within and outside the country. And, while Americans may believe themselves tolerant, that’s not the opinion of many across the globe.

Those are some of the takeaways from a Pew Research Center poll released Wednesday, which surveyed over 20,000 respondents in 16 nations.

Respondents were read a list of six traits—optimistic, hardworking, tolerant, arrogant, greedy, and violent—and asked whether they associated that quality with Americans.

Half or more of the respondents in 10 of the countries associated arrogance with people in the U.S. That opinion was held most widely in Greece, where 72 percent of respondents felt that way. Sixty-nine percent in Australia and Canada also made that trait association, while the country where the fewest people (34 percent) associated that characteristic with Americans was Poland.

In seven of the countries the majorities viewed Americans as greedy. Greece was where that association was felt most strongly (68 percent), while just 21 percent made that association in Italy.

Looking at the median of all countries, 54 percent associated arrogance with Americans, and 52 percent attributed greed to the population. A median of  48 percent think Americans are violent.

The majority of Americans also viewed themselves as arrogant (55 percent ) and greedy (57 percent).

In six of the countries—Greece, Australia, Canada, the UK, Spain, and China—the majority associated Americans with being violent. Fewer than half—42 percent—of those within the U.S. said Americans are violent, though a partisan divide is clear. Democrats were far more likely to say Americans are violent (50 percent ) compared to Republicans (29 percent).

Here’s how the positive qualities played out: Americans overwhelming considered themselves optimistic (74 percent) and hardworking (80 percent), and those abroad generally agreed with that depiction. Half or more of those in 14 out of the remaining 16 nations agreed that Americans are optimistic, and the majorities of those in 13 of the other 16 countries agreed that Americans are hardworking.

While 65 percent of Americans think of themselves as tolerant, that opinion is shared to a far lesser degree outside the nation. In only four other countries—Poland, Italy, Germany, and Japan—did the majorities consider Americans tolerant.

The new poll also found higher international ratings for Obama than for his predecessor, George W. Bush. Looking at the current presidential candidates, 59 percent of Europeans have confidence Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton will do the right thing in terms of world affairs, and 27 percent no such confidence. Views on Republican presumptive nominee Donald Trump, in contrast, were far less favorable, with 85 percent lacking such confidence.

The survey conducted in the U.S., Australia, Canada, China, Germany, France, Greece, Hungary, India, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden, and the UK took place April 4 to May 29, 2016.

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It was a case of life imitating art Saturday night at Miss Tina Lawson’s inaugural Wearable Art Gala at the California African American Museum in Los Angeles. 

Beyoncé, who did not walk the carpet, did make a statement-making entrance, as is her M.O. The expectant mother of twins looked nothing short of stunning in a form-fitting red Michael Costello gown with a plunging neckline and ruching detail over her growing belly. Bey kept her long locks loose and sultry, pairing it with a shimmery, neutral makeup palette. Oh yeah, and she topped it all off with Lorraine Schwartz jewels and an ornamental floral Leticia M Studio headpiece not entirely out of sync with her epic pregnancy announcement shoot. Just another day.

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Beyonce.com

RELATED: Behold: Beyoncé’s Treasure Trove of 2017 Maternity Looks

Jay Z and Blue Ivy were also in attendance at the event, as were Beyoncé’s former Destiny’s Child bandmates, Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams.

Earth Overshoot Day—the day on which people worldwide have officially used up more natural resources like air, food, and water than the planet can regenerate in a year—has come early.

The 2016 threshold was hit on Monday, making it the fastest pace yet, according to a new report by the Global Footprint Network, which measures the dubious milestone every year.

That’s five days earlier than last year, about five weeks earlier than in 2003, and months earlier than it was in 1987, when it fell on December 19. In 1961, the global population didn’t even use up 100 percent of the world’s natural resources, according to the network. But the next decade propelled the planet into an era of overconsumption, the group said.

“This is possible because we emit more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than our oceans and forests can absorb, and we deplete fisheries and harvest forests more quickly than they can reproduce and regrow,” Global Footprint Network said in a statement.

To figure out the annual date, the group analyzes United Nations statistics on thousands of economic areas like fisheries, forests, and energy production, among others. The group’s co-founder Mathis Wackernagel told Deutsche Welle on Monday that there is a clear climate villain in the midst—fossil fuels.

“Currently the carbon footprint makes up more than 60 percent of humanity’s ecological footprint. Our economy is built very heavily on fossil fuels, and that’s the challenge we face. We have agreed that moving over 2 degrees Celsius is an unacceptable target for humanity. That translates into very clear physical constraints,” he said.

“That means we cannot have more than 20 years at current emissions levels. That means, in a very short time frame, we will have to move out of fossil fuel use,” he explained.

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Rihanna Teases Her Sexy Valerian Role on Instagram

November 14, 2019 | News | No Comments

World, meet Bubble.

Rihanna brought the shape-shifting alien from Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets to life on Sunday when she offered fans a behind-the-scenes look at her mysteriously sexy character.

“I can’t believe it’s already that time!!! JULY is here and that means #VALERIAN is too!!!!” the Barbadian beauty captioned the clip, which features snippets of her speaking about director Luc Besson, burlesque dancing, and shots of herself wearing a motion capture suit.

She continued: “My first time working with film icon @lucbesson ! So grateful and I can’t wait for y’all to #MeetBUBBLE.”

In the clip, RiRi, who recently opened up about her Oscar aspirations, explained how she got involved in the film after being approached by Besson.

“Luc reached out to my manager and I, and I saw how much he cared about this project. Everybody who loves film is a fan of Luc Besson’s work,” she said. “He’s created this incredible world. I’m so blessed to be having this experience.”

We then see the “Wild Thoughts” songstress encapsulate the sultry entertainer in a variety of stunning beauty looks, including a blonde wig and slick black bob.

RELATED: Rihanna Wants to Win an Oscar

You can officially meet Bubble when Valerian heads to theaters on July 21.

Joan Smalls may have walked in a number of lingerie shows in her modeling career, but she’ll be taking a behind-the-scenes role in her next project.

The Victoria’s Secret model is creating a new line of swimwear and lingerie for Walmart that’ll hit stores in the spring. The collection—appropriately called Smart & Sexy—will be the first intimates design collab for Smalls.

Smalls has starred as the Smart & Sexy campaign star before, but this will be her first time designing for the line. The Smart & Sexy founder and chief executive Ariela Balk said she’s excited to work with Smalls.

“[Smalls] has a great eye for fashion,” said Balk to the Business of Fashion. “She understands that you have to make women of all shapes look beautiful. She also shares that philosophy that you don’t just make an item because it was on the runway and it’s the trend item of the moment.”

VIDEO: 7 Sizzling Lingerie Pieces for Big Busts

It seems like the love between the brand and the model is mutual.

“I fell in love with the brand and the fact that they cater to women of all sizes at affordable pricing,” said Smalls to the Business of Fashion. “Ariela Balk really impressed me and I found a great admiration for her as a businesswoman. When it comes to design, we agree in many aspects and we both are super excited about the collaboration.”

RELATED: What Joan Smalls Eats Before the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show

Needless to say, if Smalls is as skilled a designer as she is a model, we’re in for a real treat.

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In the twilight of the Unicorn Frappuccino craze, many people attempted to force new mythical creatures onto coffee drinks.

There was the Dragon Frappuccino, which turned out to be a Green Tea Frappuccino, shot through with bright purple “berry swirl.” Next up, the Pink Pegasus. Made from white mocha and raspberry frap ingredients, it supposedly tastes like strawberry shortcake. That one was exclusive to the Downtown Disney Store in Anaheim, California, though it was spotted elsewhere. Inevitably, a barista, desperate to keep the trend alive, created a Mermaid Frappuccino, but, perhaps due to a lack of neon ingredients, it looks exactly the same as the dragon version, but includes toasted coconut and matcha powder. All these were – incredibly — invented within a week of each other.

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You may be thinking that by now, surely, the trend is exhausted. There couldn’t possibly be any more clever combos of brightly colored syrups available to blend together. Not so! You can now add Narwhal Frappuccino to the list of trendy drinks Starbucks offers on it’s not-so-secret-anymore menu.

Here’s the thing: While narwhals certainly do have a long horn attached to their foreheads, which does have some associations with Unicorns, they are very real. Also, they are not pink.

When USA Today went in to their local Starbucks to order this trio, the Narwhal version turned out to be strawberry lemonade combined with vanilla bean powder with whipped cream on top. Nothing about this screams Narwhal, although to be fair, the point of this whole trend is probably not to create a realistic rendering of fictional animals.

Even so, at this point baristas are probably making these recipes up and slapping names on them that will keep feeding the millennial beast that wants more, more, more fantasy content. Maybe we don’t really care about these mythical creatures, after all. Maybe all we really want are pretty colors that look good on Instagram.

RELATED: Anthony Bourdain Calls Unicorn Frappuccino the “Perfect Nexus of Awfulness”

That’s definitely what it is.

This is paws-itively the cutest: Liam Payne reveals the story behind his son’s name, Bear!

“It was like an internal battle,” the One Direction member, 23, recalled to Total Access about how he and girlfriend Cheryl, 33, decided on what to call their first child.

“I wanted a more traditional name and she wanted a name that was more unusual. And the reason she chose Bear in the end was because Bear is a name that when you leave a room, you won’t forget. And I like that.”

In March, the couple shared a picture of their newborn and revealed that Bear was born on March 22, and weighed 7 lbs., 9 oz.

Mark Milan/GC Images

“When I look at him, he’s just Bear. At first I wasn’t really having it. I was like, ‘I’m not really sure. I don’t really understand.’ Now I look at him and he’s Bear. You become your name as you get older anyway,” Payne added in his recent interview.

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Earlier this month, Payne tweeted to Bear Grylls, seemingly confirming his son’s name by writing, “Thanks man hope he grows with an ounce of your courage! [You’re] a boss” in response to “love & blessings” from the Man vs. Wild star.

News that the One Direction alum and former Girls Aloud member were expecting their first child was confirmed by PEOPLE in November, with Cheryl officially announcing her pregnancy in February via a stunning maternity photo shoot.

“She is a wonderful, wonderful person and it’s amazing to have someone who can relate to so much of things—someone who’s taken greater steps than me,” Payne told U.K.’s Rollacoaster magazine in March of Cheryl.

RELATED: Liam Payne Takes a Break from Caring for His Newborn Son to Bring Smiles to Kids at Boston Children’s Hospital

He added, “She’s been my dream girl since I was younger. She’s so ace.”

Payne’s first solo song, “Strip That Down,” premieres on Friday.

If you’re a celeb or fashion junkie, than you’re probably aware that last night was the 2017 Met Gala in New York City. It was an evening when our favorite entertainers could flex their style and creativity muscles, and we are here for every minute of it.

And amidst the fabulous fashion, we spied Jennifer Lopez busting a move inside the Met Gala (while date Alex Rodriguez stayed totally seated) and we just found it so…relatable. J-Lo liked the music, wanted to dance, and…did. Regardless of whether anyone else felt like joining in. Oh, and she did it in a Valentino dress and Giuseppe Zanotti shoes. NBD.

Take a look at this mundane, yet fabulous, moment.

GO GIRL! Because when you wanna dance, YOU SHOULD DANCE.

We know you want a better look at that gorgeous, light-blue Valentino gown, and we’ve got you covered.

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RELATED: See the 2017 Met Gala After-Party Looks

So stunning it hurts.

This year’s Met Gala theme was “Rei Kawakubo/Comme des Garçons: Art of the In-Between.” According to NYT.com, Rei Kawakubo is an iconic designer who has never subscribed to the “rules” of fashion — aka, “that clothes need to be flattering, for example, or that they need to have armholes. Instead, she is interested in challenging our ideas about what defines beauty, identity and gender.”

She is also only the second designer to ever have a solo show featured at the Met (the first was Yves Saint Laurent in 1983). Basically, it was a worthy evening for a worthy designer, and we loved every moment of it.

Oh, and J-Lo — never stop. Just, never.

Khloé Kardashian is ready for a bodysuit battle.

The reality star has hired renowned attorney Marty Singer as she considers her legal options after designer Destiney Bleu accused her of knocking off her crystal-covered bodysuit designs.

On June 2, Bleu quote tweeted Kardashian’s Good American promotional video, writing, “When someone buys 1 of everything on your site, has you make them custom @dbleudazzled work, never posts it or wears it, then copies it.”

Then last week, Bleu’s lawyer released a 27-page letter reiterating her claim that Kardashian and her design team at Good American copied a number of her bedazzled bodysuit styles in their latest collection. The letter included emails and text correspondences between Bleu and Kardashian’s then-stylist Monica Rose as well as Kardashian’s assistant Alexa Okyle, asking that certain designs from Debleudazzed be sent to Kardashian.

On June 13, Singer sent a seven-page legal letter to Destiney Bleu’s lawyer calling the designer’s accusations an “absolute lie” and demanding that Bleu stops defaming Kardashian and Good American or further legal action will be pursued.

“In order for your client Destiney Bleu to get her 15 minutes of fame, you and your client outrageously defamed Good American and Mr. Kardashian by falsely stating that my clients stole or copied your client’s bodysuit designs,” Singer wrote in the letter obtained by People. “Your client has also brazenly misappropriated Ms. Kardashian’s name and photograph — including photographs she has taken from Mr. Kardashian’s Instagram account without authorization which your client freely admits as generated ‘a ton of sales.’”

And it turns out it was a catsuit (not a bodysuit) that started the whole catfight.

The letter includes a photo of a catsuit covered in crystals (with long sleeves and full pants), a completely different style than the bodysuits featured in the upcoming Good American launch.

“Although, the stylist Monica Rose requested catsuits from your client for Ms. Kardashian on December 2016, the catsuits that were provided to Mrs. Rose for Ms. Kardashian are completely different from the catsuit deputized in you client’s June 2, 2017 Tweet which she falsely claims was copied by Good American,” the letter from Singer states. “The catsuits requested are full-bodied, long-sleeved and lined with crystals distributed evenly all over the garments.”

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The catsuit in the photo was the one used in Bleu’s original Tweet calling out Kardashian for copyright infringement, which Singer writes was included to “mislead the public.”

Singer concludes that Bleu’s “brazen commercial exploitation of Ms. Kardashian’s name and photograph on her social media accounts in order to create publicity and generate sales of her merchandise expose her to substantial liability for misappropriation of Ms. Kardashian’s valuable rights of publicity. Accordingly, we demand your client immediately delete the false and defamatory statements about my clients from her social media posts and that she issue a retraction and a sincere apology to my clients. Should she refuse to do so, my clients intent to take all necessary and appropriate actions to enforce their frights. If this matter is not resolved to my clients’ satisfaction, then your clients proceed at their peril.”

Over the phone, Singer told People in an exclusive statement: “We may absolutely take them to court because she absolutely defamed Khloé. She actually said she stole it from me. She ripped us off. And Khloé had no idea.”

For her part, Bleu is not backing down.

In the  27-page letter issued by her team on June 8, her lawyer explains, “Destiney has a constitutionally-protected right to inform others that Khloé Kardashian has copied her designs. She will not silently abdicate that right in response to a frivolous, two-bit email from you threatening legal action. If Khloé wants to continue stealing designs from indie creators and mass produce them with no credit, then Khloé will rightly face judgment in the court of public opinion.”

The designer, whose clients include Beyoncé, Lady Gaga, Lil Wayne, and Cirque du Soleil performers, told WWD that her Debleudazzed business started on Etsy and now has grown to a six-person team with an annual sales income of $685,000.

She added that stylists recently confronted her to say they spotted her designs on the set of Good American photo shoots.

“I was just hurt when I found that out,” she told WWD. “I was like, ‘Oh man, I don’t want to have to go through this.’ I speak up for myself. I’ve been doing this by myself and figuring this out for a long time,” she said. “It might not affect my sales or it might. It’s frustrating that it makes me feel a way toward people that they might do this — especially the Nipple Burst design. It’s just frustrating that someone of that caliber is going to implement them into their line where I thought they were a fan of my brand.”

After Bleu’s initial Tweet, the denim brand was quick to respond to the allegations, posting three images in a row on Instagram of Cher, Diana Ross, and Britney Spears all wearing sheer, glittery bodysuits, with the caption, “Important to know your fashion history #nofrauds.”

Singer echoes that sentiment in his letter to Bleu’s attorney, writing: “The embellished bodysuits which your client falsely claims were copied from your client’s designs are part of a line of 11 pieces that were inspired by the 1980’s and 1990’s styles, including the iconic black sequined catsuit first worn by Cher 25 years ago, and are meant to complement Good American jeans.”

In response to Bleu’s lawyer’s claims, the denim brand released the following statement to People:

“Ms Bleu’s claim that Good American and Khloé Kardashian copied or stole her designs is flagrantly false and little more than a cheap publicity stunt and an attempt by Ms Bleu to get her 15 minutes of fame. Ms. Bleu did not create the concept or design of a bodysuit with crystals—a fashion style that has been around for decades as evidenced by the fact that Cher has been wearing these styles for over 25 years. The Good American design team designed a range of eleven bodysuits and had never heard of Ms. Bleu or seen her designs.

RELATED: Khloé Kardashian’s Nutritionist Reveals Why She Eats 7 Meals a Day

The letter from her lawyer sent to the press for no legitimate reason—is outrageous, defamatory and misleading in the extreme. Good American will absolutely not stand for anyone trying to damage its reputation and plans to deal with this through the proper legal channels.”