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Sullivan Talks to Indian Counterpart Days After Indian PM Modi’s Russia Visit – U.S. News & World Report


Sullivan Talks to Indian Counterpart Days After Indian PM Modi’s Russia Visit  U.S. News & World Report

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Austin speaks on phone with Russian Defense Minister Belousov for second time in month


On Friday, July 12, Pentagon Chief Lloyd Austin had a second phone conversation with Russian Defense Minister Andrei Belousov.

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@BillEvanina: Evil Putin trying to upstage the US and NATO is nothing new. India and Modi, however, is surprising, classless, and calculated. Now we know Modi’s hierarchy of needs and priorities. The administration/congress need to make this decision and hug hurt. washingtonpost.com/national-secur…


Evil Putin trying to upstage the US and NATO is nothing new. India and Modi, however, is surprising, classless, and calculated. Now we know Modi’s hierarchy of needs and priorities. The administration/congress need to make this decision and hug hurt. https://t.co/KEEc7bm1lu

— William Evanina (@BillEvanina) July 12, 2024


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U.S. politicians’ playing Xizang card a losing game: Tibetologist-Xinhua


The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) even played a role in plotting the revolt in Xizang, helped the Dalai Lama escape to India, and later …

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Russia has nuclear advances for an AI era, top arms control diplomat says – WKZO


Russia has nuclear advances for an AI era, top arms control diplomat says  WKZO

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@Robert4787: The good news is that the CIA and NSA have turned Black Hat Hackers into good guys and gals who wear White Hats! How do they do it? osintdaily.blogspot.com/2024/06/the-da… #hacking #hackers #NSA #CIA #cybersecurity #USA


The good news is that the CIA and NSA have turned Black Hat Hackers into good guys and gals who wear White Hats! How do they do it? https://t.co/IUdGTneDEp #hacking #hackers #NSA #CIA #cybersecurity #USA pic.twitter.com/wpNnnWzK5F

— Robert Morton (@Robert4787) July 12, 2024


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Slip Of The Tongue ‘Misnaming’: Why Your Mom Sometimes Calls You By Your Brother’s Name


Family on beach

The phenomenon of “misnaming,” or calling someone by the wrong name, is more common than we think. Pexels, Public Domain

This has happened to us all: We’re eating dinner at the family table when our parents turn to us, open their mouths, and call us by our sister’s, brother’s, our dog’s name, or all three before they get it right. While it’s easy to assume they have favorites, we shouldn’t take offense since such “misnamings” occur more often than we think. According to a recent study published in the journal Memory and Cognition, we tend to call people by the wrong name when they’re either part of the same social group, or if their name is phonetically similar.

“It’s a cognitive mistake we make, which reveals something about who we consider to be in our group,” said David Rubin, study author and professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke University, in a statement. “It’s not just random.”

Previous research has found these Freudian slips occur when people lose track of who they are interacting with, but still remember how they are interacting. For example, parents are more likely to mix up their children’s names. These slips are more common than sending an email to the wrong person.

Rubin and his colleagues sought to investigate the prevalence of this phenomenon by analyzing data from five studies including over 1,700 participants to identify factors which may explain why these mistakes occur. They asked questions of both those who were misnamed and those referring to someone using the wrong name. In all instances, the participants in the study knew the person they were misnaming well, or were misnamed by someone they knew well.

The findings revealed saying or being called the incorrect name often took place within the same social group. For example, family members called other relatives by a wrong name that belonged to someone in the family. So, this would be similar if our mom called us by all of our siblings’ names before getting to our actual name. Similarly, friends belonging to the same social circle called each other by the name of another friend within the group.

In addition, phonetic similarities between names also led to more mix-ups. Names with the same beginning or ending sounds, such as Michael and Mitchell or Joey and Mikey, were more likely to be swapped. Names that shared phonemes, or sounds, such as John and Bob, were also likely to be interchanged, because they share the same vowel sound.

Notably, the physical appearance of a person and age, were less likely to influence people’s tendency to call them the wrong name.

Samantha Deffler, lead author of the study, and a Ph.D student at Duke, was surprised by one pattern — study participants frequently called other family members by the name of the family pet. However, this was only when the pet was a dog. Owners of cats or other pets didn’t commit such Freudian slips.

“I’ll preface this by saying I have cats and I love them,” said Deffler, in a statement. “But our study does seem to add to evidence about the special relationship between people and dogs.”

Typically, dogs will respond to their names much more than cats, so those names are used more often, and committed to memory. Perhaps, Deffler hypothesizes, this is why the dog’s name seems to become more integrated with people’s perceptions of their families.

She is no stranger to misnaming either. “I’m graduating in two weeks and my siblings will all be there,” she said. “I know my mom will make mistakes.”

Overall, misnaming of close individuals is driven by the relationship we have between the misnamer, misnamed, and the named, according to the authors.

So, although we understand the dynamics of these slips of the lips, they can still be embarrassing. The best way to recover from them? Smile and move along.

Source: Deffler SA, Fox C, Ogle CM et al. All my children: The roles of semantic category and phonetic similarity in the misnaming of familiar individuals. Memory & Cognition. 2016.

Published by Medicaldaily.com


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Biden fails to quiet calls to step aside in 2024 race – posted 1h ago via reuters.com – Saved Web Pages Review – The News And Times – TheNewsAndTimes.com


Five Takeaways From Biden's News Conference - The New York TimesFive Takeaways From Biden's News Conference - The New York Times

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Saved Web Pages Review – The News And Times – TheNewsAndTimes.com

WASHINGTON, July 12 (Reuters) – President Joe Biden got a boost on Friday from an influential Democrat in Congress, Representative James Clyburn, who said the 81-year-old incumbent should not drop his reelection bid following a high-profile press conference.”I am all in. I’m riding with Biden no matter which direction he goes,” Clyburn said on NBC’s…
posted 1h ago via reuters.com
 

Two recent polls show Vice President Kamala Harris beating Donald Trump in a hypothetical 2024 matchup.On Friday, an NPR/PBS News/Marist poll of 1,174 registered voters suggests Harris, considered the best-placed person to replace President Joe Biden as the Democrat’s 2024 nominee should he drop out of the race, would narrowly beat Trump in November’s…
posted 1h ago via newsweek.com
 

SKIP ADVERTISEMENTMore representatives called for the president to end his re-election bid after a session with reporters, while others highlighted his firm grasp of foreign policy after a NATO summit.Representative Jim Himes, a moderate Democrat from Connecticut, called for President Biden to drop out of his re-election campaign.Credit…Haiyun Jiang…
posted 6h ago via nytimes.com
 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Joe Biden faced a test Thursday that he had avoided so far this year — a solo news conference with questions from the White House press corps.The news conference was meant to reassure a disheartened group of Democratic lawmakers, allies and persuadable voters in this year’s election that Biden still has the strength and stamina to…
posted 7h ago via apnews.com
 

Former president Barack Obama may be quietly supporting — or at least not objecting to — the Democratic push to oust Joe Biden, according to multiple reports.On the Thursday morning broadcast of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” — a personal favorite show of Biden’s — host Joe Scarborough said that the Biden team believes Obama is supporting the Democratic revolt…
posted 22h ago via businessinsider.com
 
Skip to contentSkip to site indexPresident Biden will speak at a closely watched news conference Thursday as he faces mounting pressuring over the future of his candidacy. The news conference, scheduled for 6:30 p.m. in Washington after a day of meetings with NATO leaders, comes as the president faced a fresh wave of calls for him to end his re-election…
posted 1d ago via nytimes.com
 

President Biden, who in the past has batted away questions about his advanced age by telling skeptics to “watch me,” will have one of the most consequential audiences of his political career as he steps to the lectern in Washington and faces a horde of journalists on Thursday. Members of Congress, Democratic donors, party strategists, voters, foreign…
posted 1d ago via washingtonpost.com
 

President Biden is holding a solo press conference today — his first since November — to conclude the NATO summit in Washington, D.C., Thursday evening. It will be one of his biggest public tests since last month’s unsteady debate performance, which caused alarm among Democrats on Capitol Hill and raised questions about whether he should be the party’s…
posted 1d ago via cbsnews.com
 

Prominent figures, including actor George Clooney and Senator Peter Welch (D-Vt.), are calling for President Joe Biden to step aside in the upcoming presidential race, advocating for a new Democratic nominee. These calls for change come as Biden concludes a three-day NATO summit, following what many perceived as a lackluster performance in his debate…
posted 1d ago via finance.yahoo.com
 

President Biden faces yet another high-profile public test of whether he’s sharp enough to campaign for a second term when he takes questions from reporters on Thursday. It comes as Biden wraps up a summit of NATO leaders in Washington, D.C.,…
posted 1d ago via npr.org
 

President Joe Biden in Washington on Tuesday. During last week’s debate, Biden looked like a child lost in the mall in a city that did not speak his language, writes Vinay Menon. Evan Vucci/AP
posted 1d ago via thestar.com
 

Republican presidents and presidential candidates have used their leadership at critical moments to set a tone for society to live up to. Mr. Reagan faced down totalitarianism in the 1980s, appointed the first woman to the Supreme Court and worked with Democrats on bipartisan tax and immigration reforms. George H.W. Bush signed the Americans With Disabilities…
posted 1d ago via nytimes.com
 

Not only does the Times denounce Trump as an individual, it places Trump and the Republican Party as one in the same ahead of the upcoming convention. “A once great political party now serves the interests of one man, a man as demonstrably unsuited for the office of president as any to run in the long history of the Republic, a man whose values, temperament,…
posted 1d ago via politico.com
 

U.S.WorldBusinessArtsLifestyleOpinionAudioGamesCookingWirecutterThe AthleticSKIP ADVERTISEMENTJuly 11, 2024, 5:04 a.m. ETCredit…Damon Winter/The New York TimesBy Ezra KleinWhat I am hearing from congressional Democrats about President Biden is this: He has done little to nothing to allay their fears. But his defiance — and his fury — has been enough…
posted 1d ago via nytimes.com
 

Carlos Slim, the Mexican billionaire who this week paid £400m for a 3% stake in BT, has traversed some of life’s highest peaks and lowest ebbs.He claims that in 1997, aged 57, he was briefly declared dead after suffering a massive haemorrhage on the operating table at the Texas Heart Institute during surgery to replace a faulty heart valve.Thirteen…
posted 1d ago via theguardian.com
 

This audio is created with AI assistance Support independent journalism in Ukraine. Join us in this fight. Russia plans information campaigns to sow division in the U.S. society and undermine support for Ukraine in swing states during the upcoming presidential race, American intelligence officials told journalists on July 9.When asked whether Moscow…
posted 1d ago via kyivindependent.com
 

WASHINGTON, July 9 (Reuters) – The U.S. has not seen Russia shift on its preference from previous U.S. presidential elections on who it prefers to win this year, a U.S. intelligence official said on Tuesday, indicating that Moscow again favors Republican Donald Trump.The official, briefing reporters on U.S. election security, did not name the former…
posted 2d ago via reuters.com
 

WASHINGTON, July 9 (Reuters) – U.S. President Joe Biden pledged to forcefully defend Ukraine against Russia’s invasion at the NATO summit in Washington on Tuesday, using the global stage to try to show allies at home and abroad that he can still lead.Biden, 81, has endured 12 days of withering questions about his fitness for office as some of his fellow…
posted 2d ago via reuters.com
 

BRUSSELS — In late May, the Biden administration announced a major policy change: Washington would now let Ukrainian forces fire American-provided weapons into Russia — though only around one region in the northeast.This had long been a bright red line in the administration’s support for Kyiv, fearing an expanded war.It took only a few days for Ukraine…
posted 2d ago via defensenews.com
 

Published: 13:12 BST, 10 July 2024 | Updated: 14:46 BST, 10 July 2024 The Justice Department is claiming a win after announcing the shutting down of a Kremlin-backed bot farm that was set up in order to spread discord across the US regarding Russia’s foreign policy. According to a press release from the DOJ, the bot farm ran close 1,000 accounts…
posted 2d ago via dailymail.co.uk
 
The News And Times Information Network – Blogs By Michael Novakhov – thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com

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Five Takeaways From Biden’s News Conference


In a nearly hourlong news conference, the president defended his decision to stay in the race amid questions about his age and mental acuity, but also showed a command of foreign policy.

President Joe Biden, wearing a dark suit and blue tie, stands in front of a microphone at a lectern. An American flag is behind him.

President Biden at a news conference in Washington on Thursday night.Credit…Eric Lee/The New York Times

President Biden on Thursday answered questions from reporters about foreign policy, whether he is up to defeating former President Donald J. Trump and why he is resisting calls from Democrats to end his candidacy, as he sought to recover from a crisis of confidence that has engulfed his campaign.

With a growing number of Democratic lawmakers, donors and elected officials urging Mr. Biden to drop out of the race after a disastrous debate performance last month, the closing news conference of a NATO summit in Washington became a high-stakes chance for the president to quiet concerns about his candidacy. The results were mixed.

Mr. Biden stumbled early but remained defiant in the face of questions about his fitness to continue his campaign. He struggled to articulate a cohesive case for his candidacy, even as he gave a forceful defense of his record and showed a strong command over foreign policy.

Here are five takeaways:

Mr. Biden vowed to stay in the presidential race. “I’m determined on running,” Mr. Biden said. He dismissed polling showing him losing to Mr. Trump and insisted, “I think I’m the best qualified person to do the job.” But he also acknowledged that the schedule of the presidency had become challenging. “I just got to, just, pace myself a little more,” Mr. Biden said.

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“There has been reporting that you’ve acknowledged that you need to go to bed earlier, end your evening around 8.” “That’s not true. Look, what I said was, instead of my every day starting at 7 and going to bed at midnight, it’d be smarter for me to pace myself a little more. And I said, for example, the 8, 7, 6 stuff, instead of starting a fundraiser at 9 o‘clock, start at 8 o‘clock. People get to go home by 10 o‘clock. That’s what I’m talking about.”

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Before the debate, he said, his schedule was “full-bore” and he made the “stupid mistake” of too much travel and too many late nights before the debate. Mr. Biden also blamed his staff for the packed days. “I love my staff,” Mr. Biden said. “But they add things. They add things all the time at the very end.”

Mr. Biden’s response to the first question contained the kind of fumble that has caused Democrats anxiety. Asked about the ability of Vice President Kamala Harris to defeat Mr. Trump, Mr. Biden said that he “wouldn’t have picked Vice President Trump to be vice president did I think she was not qualified to be president.”

Video

”What concerns do you have about Vice President Harris’s ability to beat Donald Trump if she were at the top of the ticket?“ ”Look, I wouldn’t have picked Vice President Trump to be vice president did I think she was not qualified to be president. So let’s start there.“

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He also slipped while answering a question about military assistance to Ukraine, saying he follows the advice of his “commander in chief” — which is the president — before correcting himself and mentioning his senior military commanders. For the most part, though, he avoided the kinds of prolonged, painful moments he experienced during the debate in which he was unable to complete a thought, even as he meandered at times in his answers.

In the face of questions over his mental acuity, Mr. Biden showed he still had a strong grasp on substance when it came to global affairs. He gave long, detailed answers on various foreign policy matters, including when he said he was prepared to interrupt the relationship between China and Russia. “We have to make sure that Xi understands that there’s a price to pay,” Mr. Biden said, referring to President Xi Jinping of China.

Video

Xi believes that China is a large enough market that they can entice any country, including European countries, to invest there in return for commitments from Europe to do A, B, C or D or not to do certain things. China has to understand that if they are supplying Russia with information and capacity, along with working with North Korea and others to help Russia in armament, that they’re not going to benefit economically. We have to make sure that Xi understands there’s a price to pay for undercutting both the Pacific Basin as well as Europe and as it relates to Russia and dealing with Ukraine.

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He reiterated his longstanding position that Ukraine should not be allowed to use American weapons to strike deep into Russia, including Moscow and the Kremlin. And he detailed his efforts to get humanitarian aid into Gaza, noting that Israel “occasionally” was “less than cooperative.” He also made the case for the global stakes of the election, saying fellow world leaders had told him that “you’ve got to win” because Mr. Trump would be a disaster for their countries.

Mr. Biden rambled while making the case for his candidacy, launching long-winded recitations of what he has accomplished as president and maintaining that he should have the chance to continue, but never landing on a concise message for why he is the best person to do so.

“I’m determined on running,” he said. “But I think it’s important that I real — I allay fears. I’ve seen — let them see me out there, let me see them out, you know — for the longest time, it was, you know, ‘Biden’s not prepared to sit with us unscripted; Biden is not prepared to’ — and anyway.”

He then began ticking through statistics about the reach of his re-election campaign, and suggested that all the work would be for nothing if he left the race, saying, “It’s awful hard to replace in the near term.” He then veered into talking about his record in the Senate, adding, “Anyway, I’m going to be going around making the case of the things that I think we have to finish and how we can’t afford to lose what we’ve done.”

He said polls showed he was the strongest candidate to beat Mr. Trump, but also conceded for the first time that other Democrats could also do so. “I believe I’m the best qualified to govern and I think I’m the best qualified to win, but there are other people who could beat Trump, too,” he said. “But it’s awful to start from scratch.”

While he vowed to stay in the race, Mr. Biden also on multiple occasions defended the credentials of his vice president. He commended her work defending abortion rights and “her ability to handle almost any issue on the board.” But he also made clear that any polling showing Ms. Harris faring better in a matchup against Mr. Trump would not compel him to step down. “Unless they came back and said there’s no way you can win,” Mr. Biden said. “No one’s saying that.”

Video

“You earlier explained confidence in your vice president.“ ”Yes.“ ”If your team came back and showed you data that she would fare better against former President Donald Trump, would you reconsider your decision to stay in the race?“ “No, unless they came back and said, ‘There’s no way you can win.’ Me. No one’s saying that. No poll says that.“

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Attack on veteran in Dnipro with Tyshchenko’s participation: ex-police officer involved in case is placed under house arrest – media


On July 11, 2024, the Pecherskyi District Court of Kyiv imposed a pre-trial restraint on former police officer Bohdan Pysarenko, who is suspected of involvement in the attack on ex-Kraken soldier Dmytro Pavlov (Son) in Dnipro.