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Should you lock your luggage when traveling? Plus, must-know restaurant insights

Should you lock your luggage when traveling? Plus, must-know restaurant insights

Fox News2 days ago

BAGGAGE BLUES: With tightened airport security, experts are warning of luggage risks like theft and mishandling by travelers.
SACRED GROUND: Tourists recently found historically significant remains on a beach in South Carolina.
TABLE TALK: A restaurant consultant reveals common dining mistakes, such as lingering too long after meals.
THINKING OF DAD – Celebrate your Dad's love of food this Father's Day with these 10 foodie gifts, from cutting boards to pizza ovens and steak subscriptions. Continue reading…
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Selfishness Is Not a Virtue
Selfishness Is Not a Virtue

New York Times

time42 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Selfishness Is Not a Virtue

When Christianity goes wrong, it goes wrong in a familiar way. Last Friday, at a town hall meeting in Butler County, Iowa, Senator Joni Ernst delivered a grim message to her constituents. In the midst of an exchange over Medicaid cuts in President Trump's 'big, beautiful bill,' someone in the crowd shouted at Ernst, 'People are going to die!' Ernst's immediate response was bizarre. 'Well, we all are going to die,' she said. True enough, but that's irrelevant to the question at hand. Yes, we're all going to die, but it matters a great deal when, how and why. There's a tremendous difference between dying after living a long and full life that's enabled at least in part by access to decent health care, and dying a premature and perhaps needlessly painful death because you can't afford the care you need. All of this should be too obvious to explain, and it would cost Ernst — who occupies a relatively safe seat in an increasingly red state — virtually nothing to apologize and move on. In fact, just after her flippant comment, she did emphasize that she wanted to protect vulnerable people. The full answer was more complicated than the headline-generating quip. By the standards of 2025, Ernst's comment would have been little more than a micro-scandal, gone by the end of the day. And if we lived even in the relatively recent past, demonstrating humility could have worked to her benefit. It can be inspiring to watch a person genuinely apologize. But we're in a new normal now. That means no apologies. That means doubling down. And that can also mean tying your cruelty to the Christian cross. And so, the next day Ernst posted an apology video — filmed, incredibly enough, in what appears to be a cemetery. It began well. 'I would like to take this opportunity,' she said, 'to sincerely apologize for a statement I made yesterday at my town hall.' But her statement devolved from there. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Ken Jennings: Trivia and ‘Jeopardy!' Could Save Our Republic
Ken Jennings: Trivia and ‘Jeopardy!' Could Save Our Republic

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Ken Jennings: Trivia and ‘Jeopardy!' Could Save Our Republic

When I first stepped behind the host lectern on the quiz show 'Jeopardy!,' I was intimidated for two reasons. Most obviously, I had the hopeless task of filling the very large shoes of Alex Trebek, the legendary broadcaster and pitch-perfect host who'd been synonymous with the show since 1984. But I was also keenly aware that the show was one of TV's great institutions, almost a public trust. Since I was 10 years old, I'd watched Alex Trebek carve out a safe space for people to know things, where viewers get a steady diet of 61 accurate (and hopefully even interesting) facts every game. And I wondered: Even if 'Jeopardy!' could survive the loss in 2020 of its peerless host, could it survive the conspiracy theories and fake news of our post-fact era? Facts may seem faintly old-timey in the 21st century, remnants of the rote learning style that went out of fashion in classrooms (and that the internet search made obsolete) decades ago. But societies are built on facts, as we can see more clearly when institutions built on knowledge teeter. Inaccurate facts make for less informed decisions. Less informed decisions make for bad policy. Garbage in, garbage out. I've always hated the fact that 'trivia,' really our only word in English for general-knowledge facts and games, is the same word we use to mean 'things of no importance.' So unfair! Etymologically, the word is linked to the trivium of medieval universities, the three fundamental courses of grammar, rhetoric and logic. And much of today's so-called trivia still deals with subjects that are fundamentally academic. Watch a game of 'Jeopardy!' tonight, or head down to your local pub quiz, and you're sure to be asked about scientific breakthroughs, milestones of history and masterpieces of art. Trivia, maybe — but far from trivial. There might also be questions about pop lyrics and sports statistics, but even those are markers of cultural literacy, the kind of shared knowledge that used to tie society together: the proposition that factual questions could be answered correctly or not, that those answers matter, and that we largely agreed on the authorities and experts who could confirm them. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Trump travel ban felt in Las Vegas Eritrean community
Trump travel ban felt in Las Vegas Eritrean community

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Trump travel ban felt in Las Vegas Eritrean community

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — The Trump administration's travel ban against 12 countries hit close to home for the Las Vegas Eritrean community, which is facing new obstacles to connect with their family. During a memorial for a minister, around 50 neighbors gathered at the Eritrean Cultural & Civic Center to enjoy freshly baked coffee and traditional himbasha. The gathering was interrupted by news their home country was included in the new U.S. travel ban. 'Unfortunately, it's not good, because our community just serves our Eritrean community here in Las Vegas,' Binyam Semereab, a member at the Eritrean Cultural & Civic Center, said. 'People who are born here, and then some of them are being here, and then they have a cultural change at the same time with language barriers, and we try to help them.' Semereab thought of the impact it would have on his parents and younger families in Las Vegas—reducing their access to see each other. 'It's very difficult seeing it because I don't have right now my parents who want to come to visit me because of my age,' he said. 'But just there are a lot of younger people who wants to see their parents come and visit them. So that's an unfortunate situation.' The Las Vegas Eritrean community has been recognized at the city, state, and national levels, according to Semereab. 'I want the American people to know about is just an Eritrea is just about five to 6 million people, and we fight for 30 years plus for our independence,' he said. 'And we are very peaceful people. Just we want to get our independence. Definitely, we don't interfere in somebody's internal affairs. And definitely our policy also self-reliance and then not interfering any other political issues on the other countries.' The new travel restrictions come after security concerns raised by the Trump administration following antisemitic attacks across the country. No direct explanation was given as to why Eritrea was connected to the ban during Trump's address. However, the president did cite an overall concern with countries without reliable migration vetting and screening processes. 'Very simply we cannot have open migration from any country where we cannot safely and reliably vet and screen those who seek to enter the United States,' Trump said. Banned from US travel Afghanistan Chad Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Haiti Iran Libya Myanmar Republic of the Congo Somalia Sudan Yemen Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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