Latest news with #Indiana-born


Elle
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- Elle
Susan Choi Recommends a Book So Engrossing It Made Her (Almost) Lose Her Luggage
Welcome to Shelf Life, What began as a short story in The New Yorker is now Susan Choi's sixth and latest novel, The Indiana-born, Texas-raised, New York-based bestselling author studied literature at Yale University; was once The New Yorker and co-edited Likes: theater; Dislikes: Good at: rocking her Bad at: cleaning menorahs; coming up with Scroll through the reads she recommends below. The book that…: …made me miss a train stop: It's not exactly a missed-the-train moment, but I was re-reading …made me weep uncontrollably: Philip Roth's …I recommend over and over again: Jenny Erpenbeck's …I swear I'll finish one day: All of Proust. Or even just some decent amount of Proust. I love the prose but also find it so exquisite it's almost unbearable to continue reading for any length of time, at least for me, which makes me feel like a total failure as a reader. I might have to set aside a year of my life just to read Proust. ...I read in one sitting; it was that good: Sarah Moss's …currently sits on my nightstand: …made me laugh out loud: Paul Beatty's …has a sex scene that will make you blush: In Francisco Goldman's ...I've re-read the most: ...makes me feel seen: looking at me, like it knew exactly who I was. The protagonist has, like me, a real culture-clash background, and up to the point in my life when I read the book—the '90s—I'd never encountered that in fiction, so it was very emotional when I finally did. ...everyone should read: ...I could only have discovered at ...fills me with hope: Everything by elating observer of us humans and the strange things we do. Bonus questions: If I could live in any library or bookstore in the world, it would be: The literary organization/charity I support: Read Susan Choi's Book Recommendations Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov Now 24% Off Credit: Vintage Everyman by Philip Roth Now 12% Off Credit: Vintage Visitation by Jenny Erpenbeck Now 66% Off Credit: New Directions Ghost Wall by Sarah Moss Now 50% Off Credit: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Real Americans by Rachel Khong Now 32% Off Credit: Vintage The Sellout by Paul Beatty Credit: Farrar, Straus and Giroux The Ordinary Seamen by Francisco Goldman Credit: Grove Press The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald Now 30% Off Credit: Charles Scribner's Sons A Feather on the Breath of God by Sigrid Nunez Now 36% Off Credit: Picador Paper Home Fire by Kamila Shamsie Credit: Riverhead Books
Yahoo
08-05-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Opinion - Trump's legal strategy: If you can't win in court, threaten the judge
President Trump's savaging of the judiciary goes back far and deep. This despicable approach starts with his mentor in legal evil, Roy Cohn. When an associate reported to Cohn that the law was against their client, Cohn famously retorted, 'F— the law, who's the judge? Cohn saw judges not as prelates of a logical system of ethical ideals, nor as keepers of our sacred right to justice, but as politicians in robes — vulnerable to coercion, denunciation and threats. Trump was well-schooled in how to do it at the feet of the master. Remember Judge Gonzalo Curiel? He was the Obama-appointed federal judge in California who oversaw the Trump University fraud case, which Trump settled for $25 million in 2016 just 10 days after his election. Trump launched a $1 million counterclaim for defamation (a favorite Cohn gambit) to pressure the plaintiff class representative to go away. Under a state law that aims to protect individuals from lawsuits intended to silence or intimidate them for exercising their rights to free speech, Curiel dismissed the counterclaim and awarded the plaintiff $1 million for her trouble. Curiel went on to certify the class, which had alleged that Trump University was a fraudulent endeavor, then denied Trump summary judgment and ordered the case to trial. Trump retaliated with a series of racist attacks on Curiel. He told Fox News that Curiel was personally biased against him because he wanted to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexican border. Trump told the Wall Street Journal that the Indiana-born Curiel could not preside because of his 'Mexican heritage.' He said he had a judge who was a 'hater of Donald Trump, a hater' and referred to Curiel— a graduate of the same law school as Mike Pence — as a 'Mexican.' He further suggested taking some action against the judge. Vintage Roy Cohn! Trump's despicable attacks on the judiciary have persisted during the first 100 days of Trump 2.0. He has oozed the bile of pure hatred towards judges who have ruled against him, calling for their impeachment. House Republicans are following his lead, seeking to impeach at least six judges who have ruled against parts of Trump's agenda. Trump's statements earned him a shocking rebuke from Chief Justice Roberts. Without mentioning him by name, Roberts thundered in March that 'for more than two centuries, it has been established that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision. The normal appellate review process exists for that purpose.' The rare statement from the Chief Justice came just hours after a social media post from Trump, who described District Judge James E. Boasberg as an unelected 'troublemaker and agitator,' and a 'radical left lunatic' after Boasberg had blocked deportation flights that Trump claimed were authorized in wartime by the 18th-century Alien Enemies Act. Top Trump advisor Stephen Miller has also railed against a cabal of 'Communist' judges who are determined to keep 'terrorists' in the country, while Elon Musk in a post on X said judges who defy the president should be impeached. The threats have also been delivered through physical means. Several judges have faced a slew of 'intimidation tactics' sending the message that their home addresses are publicly known. A New Jersey judge, for example, received a pizza addressed to her murdered son. Earlier this month, a Wisconsin County Court judge was arrested by the FBI in her own courthouse and led away in manacles after allegedly helping an undocumented immigrant evade arrest. Other judges who defied the administration have faced bomb threats and threats of physical violence. One Supreme Court justice is now speaking out more forcefully. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson received a standing ovation at a conference of judges in Puerto Rico last week after denouncing the administration's 'relentless attacks' on federal judges, seeing in them a threat to the rule of law (but again without mentioning Trump by name). Jackson said, 'Across the nation, judges are facing increased threats of not only physical violence, but also professional retaliation just for doing our jobs … And the attacks are not random. They seem designed to intimidate those of us who serve in this critical capacity.' 'The attacks are also not isolated incidents,' Jackson told the assembled judges. 'That is, they impact more than just individual judges who are being targeted. Rather, the threats and harassment are attacks on our democracy, on our system of government and they ultimately risk undermining our Constitution and the rule of law.' 'A society in which judges are routinely made to fear for their own safety or their own livelihood due to their decisions is one that has substantially departed from the norms of behavior that govern a democratic system,' she stated. 'Attacks on judicial independence is how countries that are not free, not fair and not rule-of-law oriented, operate.' 'Other judges have faced challenges like the ones we face today, and have prevailed,' she said, pointing to similar attacks on judges who issued controversial rulings during the Civil Rights Movement and the Watergate scandal. Her 18-minute denunciation is the strongest statement yet by any member of the Supreme Court during Trump's second term. It is hard to believe that her prepared remarks were not approved by the Chief Justice. Judges have few avenues to fight back ethically against unprincipled personal attacks. Lawyers are supposed to speak out on their behalf, but we now know that Big Law is afraid of reprisals from Trump that might affect their billion-dollar revenues. Judge Curiel mildly jabbed at Trump in court papers stating his derogatory comments about him had 'placed the integrity of these court proceedings at issue.' He was forbidden from further public comment because of ethical rules about commenting extrajudicially on pending cases. Roy Cohn knew this, and so does Trump. Bullies lash out at the defenseless. We are living in trying times. James D. Zirin, author and legal analyst, is a former federal prosecutor in New York's Southern District. He is also the host of the public television talk show and podcast Conversations with Jim Zirin. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


The Hill
08-05-2025
- Politics
- The Hill
Trump's legal strategy: If you can't win in court, threaten the judge
President Trump's savaging of the judiciary goes back far and deep. This despicable approach starts with his mentor in legal evil, Roy Cohn. When an associate reported to Cohn that the law was against their client, Cohn famously retorted, 'F— the law, who's the judge? Cohn saw judges not as prelates of a logical system of ethical ideals, nor as keepers of our sacred right to justice, but as politicians in robes — vulnerable to coercion, denunciation and threats. Trump was well-schooled in how to do it at the feet of the master. Remember Judge Gonzalo Curiel? He was the Obama-appointed federal judge in California who oversaw the Trump University fraud case, which Trump settled for $25 million in 2016 just 10 days after his election. Trump launched a $1 million counterclaim for defamation (a favorite Cohn gambit) to pressure the plaintiff class representative to go away. Under a state law that aims to protect individuals from lawsuits intended to silence or intimidate them for exercising their rights to free speech, Curiel dismissed the counterclaim and awarded the plaintiff $1 million for her trouble. Curiel went on to certify the class, which had alleged that Trump University was a fraudulent endeavor, then denied Trump summary judgment and ordered the case to trial. Trump retaliated with a series of racist attacks on Curiel. He told Fox News that Curiel was personally biased against him because he wanted to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexican border. Trump told the Wall Street Journal that the Indiana-born Curiel could not preside because of his 'Mexican heritage.' He said he had a judge who was a 'hater of Donald Trump, a hater' and referred to Curiel— a graduate of the same law school as Mike Pence — as a 'Mexican.' He further suggested taking some action against the judge. Vintage Roy Cohn! Trump's despicable attacks on the judiciary have persisted during the first 100 days of Trump 2.0. He has oozed the bile of pure hatred towards judges who have ruled against him, calling for their impeachment. House Republicans are following his lead, seeking to impeach at least six judges who have ruled against parts of Trump's agenda. Trump's statements earned him a shocking rebuke from Chief Justice Roberts. Without mentioning him by name, Roberts thundered in March that 'for more than two centuries, it has been established that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision. The normal appellate review process exists for that purpose.' The rare statement from the Chief Justice came just hours after a social media post from Trump, who described District Judge James E. Boasberg as an unelected 'troublemaker and agitator,' and a 'radical left lunatic' after Boasberg had blocked deportation flights that Trump claimed were authorized in wartime by the 18th-century Alien Enemies Act. Top Trump advisor Stephen Miller has also railed against a cabal of 'Communist' judges who are determined to keep 'terrorists' in the country, while Elon Musk in a post on X said judges who defy the president should be impeached. The threats have also been delivered through physical means. Several judges have faced a slew of 'intimidation tactics' sending the message that their home addresses are publicly known. A New Jersey judge, for example, received a pizza addressed to her murdered son. Earlier this month, a Wisconsin County Court judge was arrested by the FBI in her own courthouse and led away in manacles after allegedly helping an undocumented immigrant evade arrest. Other judges who defied the administration have faced bomb threats and threats of physical violence. One Supreme Court justice is now speaking out more forcefully. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson received a standing ovation at a conference of judges in Puerto Rico last week after denouncing the administration's 'relentless attacks' on federal judges, seeing in them a threat to the rule of law (but again without mentioning Trump by name). Jackson said, 'Across the nation, judges are facing increased threats of not only physical violence, but also professional retaliation just for doing our jobs … And the attacks are not random. They seem designed to intimidate those of us who serve in this critical capacity.' 'The attacks are also not isolated incidents,' Jackson told the assembled judges. 'That is, they impact more than just individual judges who are being targeted. Rather, the threats and harassment are attacks on our democracy, on our system of government and they ultimately risk undermining our Constitution and the rule of law.' 'A society in which judges are routinely made to fear for their own safety or their own livelihood due to their decisions is one that has substantially departed from the norms of behavior that govern a democratic system,' she stated. 'Attacks on judicial independence is how countries that are not free, not fair and not rule-of-law oriented, operate.' 'Other judges have faced challenges like the ones we face today, and have prevailed,' she said, pointing to similar attacks on judges who issued controversial rulings during the Civil Rights Movement and the Watergate scandal. Her 18-minute denunciation is the strongest statement yet by any member of the Supreme Court during Trump's second term. It is hard to believe that her prepared remarks were not approved by the Chief Justice. Judges have few avenues to fight back ethically against unprincipled personal attacks. Lawyers are supposed to speak out on their behalf, but we now know that Big Law is afraid of reprisals from Trump that might affect their billion-dollar revenues. Judge Curiel mildly jabbed at Trump in court papers stating his derogatory comments about him had 'placed the integrity of these court proceedings at issue.' He was forbidden from further public comment because of ethical rules about commenting extrajudicially on pending cases. Roy Cohn knew this, and so does Trump. Bullies lash out at the defenseless. We are living in trying times. James D. Zirin, author and legal analyst, is a former federal prosecutor in New York's Southern District. He is also the host of the public television talk show and podcast Conversations with Jim Zirin.


Miami Herald
21-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Miami Herald
Kai Trump gets the tea from Hanna Cavinder about her breakup. Watch the bombshell video
Juicy gossip coming in hot. Kai Trump inadvertently got, like, the most awesome tea while shooting her vlog at the UFC 314 in downtown Miami last weekend. At one point backstage at the Kaseya Center last Saturday night, Donald Trump's granddaughter was chit chatting in the VIP section with the Cavinder twins as a camera rolled. The three athletes share one major in common: The University of Miami. Hanna and Haley are stars on the Hurricanes women's basketball teams; Trump will be headed there to play golf in the fall. But the ladies weren't talking sports. The topic was Hanna's famous ex, Carson Beck, though the Hurricanes QB's name was never mentioned. The twins, 24, wanted Kai to know that the reason for the highly publicized split wasn't cheating, which is what was trolls assumed. The Indiana-born sisters' major beef? Beck was on his phone too much and driven by 'ego.' 'Nobody likes him!' Hanna says, adding the football player has no friends. 'He [always] wanted people to stop him for a picture,' Haley chimes in. 'We were at the bar and I'd be like very embarrassed,' agrees Hanna, adding, 'I didn't break up with him because of cheating. I broke up with him because of who he was.' 'When you know you know,' Haley tells Kai of her twin intuition that something was off with her sister's relationship. '1,000 percent,' Trump responds. We reached out to Beck for comment and did not immediately hear back, so we cannot confirm or deny if he is always scrolling or asking randoms to take pics with him. But if you were rooting for this couple to get to the end zone, this BTS video pretty much solidifies that is not going to happen. EVER. As for how the cheating rumors started in the first place? Beck was apparently Snapchatting with another (female) user and those messages got leaked. Though the Jacksonville native's Instagram account was set to private when the breakup news hit a fever pitch, he's back among the living. On the 22-year-old's latest Stories, a cryptic quote appears: 'Hard times show you the true colors of those around you.' Sounds like he is going through something right now. Commenters under Kai's vlog post were shooketh by the bombshell. 'Damn, gossip and drama city!' 'Oh boy.' 'Being a celebrity and dating is hell. You can't do s--t. Everything gonna get aired.' At least a few folks stood up for the elephant who wasn't in the room. 'When will women learn that trashing some dude right after you date him also reflects very poorly on you... This person had your stamp of approval for months and then you're trashing him to millions of people. It makes you look just as bad as it makes him look.'