Tag Archives: accept

Ryan Gosling Had the Best Reaction to ‘I’m Just Ken’s Critics Choice Win — But Didn’t Accept the Award – Entertainment Tonight

  1. Ryan Gosling Had the Best Reaction to ‘I’m Just Ken’s Critics Choice Win — But Didn’t Accept the Award Entertainment Tonight
  2. Mark Ronson Says ‘I’m Just Ken’ Was So ‘Boys Could Cry’ Too in Barbie PEOPLE
  3. Humble Ryan Gosling Appears Shocked Upon Winning Best Original Song at Critics Choice Awards Just Jared
  4. ‘I’m Just Ken’ and ‘Oppenheimer’ Win Music Awards at 2024 Critics Choice Awards (Full Winners List) Billboard
  5. Ryan Gosling’s hilarious reaction to his Barbie track I’m Just Ken winning Critics Choice Award goes viral: ‘H Daily Mail

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‘We should not accept Qatar as a mediator,’ says Israeli minister – The Jerusalem Post

  1. ‘We should not accept Qatar as a mediator,’ says Israeli minister The Jerusalem Post
  2. In call with Blinken, Qatari PM says Doha committed to truce efforts in Israel-Hamas war The Times of Israel
  3. Secretary Blinken’s Call with Qatari Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Al Thani – United States Department of State Department of State
  4. Israel recalls negotiation team from Qatar, questions over hostages remaining in Gaza WHAS11
  5. ‘Committed to Truce Efforts’: Qatar PM al-Thani Tells Blinken as Both Discuss Hostage Release, Deescalation News18

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House Democrats react to Tlaib’s refusal to accept U.S., Israeli assessment of Gaza hospital blast – Jewish Insider

  1. House Democrats react to Tlaib’s refusal to accept U.S., Israeli assessment of Gaza hospital blast Jewish Insider
  2. Tlaib Still Refuses to Accept Palestinian Responsibility for Hospital Blast, Demands ‘International Investigation’ National Review
  3. A reconstruction of the Al Ahli hospital massacre in Gaza that set the Islamic world on fire EL PAÍS USA
  4. Rashida Tlaib embraces 9/11-style trutherism on Gaza hospital blast New York Post
  5. The World Paid a Stiff Price for Bad Reporting on Gaza Hospital Explosion Newsweek
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UAW boss says workers shouldn’t accept lower wages so ‘greedy people like Elon Musk can build more rocket ships’ – Fortune

  1. UAW boss says workers shouldn’t accept lower wages so ‘greedy people like Elon Musk can build more rocket ships’ Fortune
  2. Wall Street Journal’s Tim Higgins explains why Elon Musk is the winner of the UAW strike CNBC Television
  3. UAW president criticizes Tesla: “Most of these workers in those companies are scraping to get by” TESLARATI
  4. The biggest winner of the UAW strike may be Elon Musk Fortune
  5. Musk’s UAW Jab, Kushner’s Saudi Funding And Schiff’s Inflation Warning: Top Stories From This Weekend You Benzinga
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UK Khalistan protest: EAM Jaishankar says India won’t accept differential standards of security – The Indian Express

  1. UK Khalistan protest: EAM Jaishankar says India won’t accept differential standards of security The Indian Express
  2. UK: Indian Embassy releases proof of Khalistan violence to counter ‘fake news’ over attack Hindustan Times
  3. Not interested in assurances, we want action: MEA on attacks by pro-Khalistani protesters on Indian missions The Tribune India
  4. A familiar, pitiful response by the UK to anti-India crimes Hindustan Times
  5. Indias swift response to the vandalism of its London Mission is a saga of history and assertion of self-confidence Firstpost
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Russia says it ‘cannot accept’ claims that Putin likely approved weapons for Malaysia Airlines shoot-down – Fox News

  1. Russia says it ‘cannot accept’ claims that Putin likely approved weapons for Malaysia Airlines shoot-down Fox News
  2. Probe Finds “Strong Indications” Putin Approved Missiles Used to Down Passenger Jet in 2014 Democracy Now!
  3. MH17 inquiry: ‘Strong indications’ Putin approved missile supply • FRANCE 24 English FRANCE 24 English
  4. Kremlin dismisses claims Putin was involved in MH17 downing Reuters.com
  5. Vladimir Putin’s “fingerprints all over” shooting down of MH17 | The World ABC News (Australia)
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‘It’s hard to accept I’m dying’: Mother diagnosed with cancer after noticing blood in her stool – The Independent

  1. ‘It’s hard to accept I’m dying’: Mother diagnosed with cancer after noticing blood in her stool The Independent
  2. Mum’s shock as kitten helps find lump that turned out to be terminal cancer Express
  3. ‘How do I tell my kids I’m dying of cancer?’ – single mum shares heartbreaking dilemma The Mirror
  4. I’m a single mom of 3 with months to live — I don’t know how to tell my kids New York Post
  5. Bedford mum hoping to raise £100,000 for life-prolonging cancer treatment after devastating diagnosis Bedfordshire Live
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The Apple TV expects you to have an iPhone in order to accept new iCloud terms and conditions

A viral tweet today highlights a somewhat frustrating limitation with the Apple TV software. As of a recent software update, tvOS expects users have access to an iPhone or iPad in order to do things like accept new iCloud terms and conditions, or update their Apple ID settings.

Although most people who use the Apple TV 4K box are deeply ensconced in the Apple ecosystem, this doesn’t apply to everyone. Up until recently, the Apple TV could be used essentially independently. It was assumed to be a standalone device, not an accessory. Not so much, anymore. Moreover, these changes mean Apple TV users who have Macs — but no personal iOS devices — are also left in the lurch.

Most of the Apple TV can be used without needing access to other Apple hardware. You can set up the Apple TV from scratch completely independently, install apps, and make purchases. Typical Apple ID management duties can be performed from a web browser on a PC, if occasionally necessary.

However, there are some tasks — seemingly more prevalent than ever as of tvOS 16 — that the Apple TV expects you to do on an iOS device signed in with the same account.

This viral tweet from @hugelgupf showcases perhaps the most egregious example: accepting new iCloud terms and conditions requires an iOS device.

Rather than allowing users to read and accept the new terms on the Apple TV on television itself, the box says you must use an iOS device to do it. Specifically, an iOS device running iOS 16 or iPadOS 16 or later.

In addition to alienating people who possess no other Apple devices at all, the minimum OS requirement means that someone with a new Apple TV but an old-generation iPad, for example, is also left stranded.

A similar prompt can appear requesting customers ‘update Apple ID settings’ by bringing their iPhone near the Apple TV.

In both cases, these prompts can be temporarily dismissed. But they frequently recur until they have been dealt with. Some system features may not be available until they are resolved. Yet, if you don’t have an iPhone or iPad handy — one that can run the latest OS version that is — there’s simply no way to do that.

Based on these barriers, the Apple TV cannot be considered to be a standalone device anymore, even though a non-zero percentage of people have used it that way for many years up to now.

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Harry and Meghan accept award in New York ahead release of Netflix series



CNN
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The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have said “we know a ripple of hope can turn into a wave of change” after they were honored in New York for their work on racial justice and mental health.

Prince Harry and Meghan were in the Big Apple to receive the 2022 Ripple of Hope award on Tuesday night from the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights organization (RFKHR).

The award honors “exemplary leaders across government, business, advocacy, and entertainment who have demonstrated an unwavering commitment to social change and worked to advance equity, justice, and human rights,” according to organizers.

The couple paused briefly on the blue carpet to pose for photographers before making their way into the event. They did not stop to talk to the media or respond to questions from reporters about their upcoming Netflix docu-series, which is due to release on the streaming platform Thursday.

During the gala event, the Sussexes announced a new collaboration between their own non-profit organization and the RFKHR.

“We are honored to receive the RFK Ripple of Hope Award this year, and to partner with the Kennedy family in the creation of The Archewell Foundation Award for Gender Equity in Student Film,” the pair said in a statement. “Our hope with this award is to inspire a new generation of leadership in the arts, where diverse up and coming talent have a platform to have their voices heard and their stories told.

“The values of RFK Foundation and The Archewell Foundation are aligned in our shared belief of courage over fear, and love over hate. Together we know that a ripple of hope can turn into a wave of change,” they added.

RFKHR President Kerry Kennedy said the organization chose to honor the pair because it was “proud of their work on racial justice and mental health parity and awareness” and for “showing up when people really need them.”

She added: “If you look over the last two years, hospitals, universities, governments, even Hollywood have all grappled with racial justice issues, with gender, with sexual minorities, etc … And I think it’s really great that they’ve gotten us to start talking and normalizing this discussion.”

Later during the gala, Prince Harry joked with the crowd during an onstage Q&A about how he thought the couple had left their kids at home for a “date night.”

“To be honest with you, Kerry, I actually thought we were just going on date night. So I found it quite weird that we’re sharing the room with 1,500 people,” the duke quipped in a short clip provided by the gala’s organizers.

“We don’t get out much because our kids are so small and young, so this is completely unexpected,” he added. “But it’s nice to share date night with all of you.”

As the audience laughed, Meghan chimed in: “Thank you for bringing me on this very special date night.”

Hosted by actor Alec Baldwin, the annual gala also recognized Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky; Frank Baker, co-founder and managing partner of private equity firm Siris; Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan; and Michael Polsky, founder and chief executive of Invenergy. NBA legend and civil rights activist Bill Russell was also posthumously honored.

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Republicans in key battleground races refuse to say they will accept results

Of the 19 GOP candidates questioned by The Washington Post, a dozen declined to answer or refused to commit. Democrats overwhelmingly said they would respect the results.

Supporters wait for Wisconsin Republican gubernatorial nominee Tim Michels at a primary night event on Aug. 9 in Waukesha. Michels did not respond when asked by The Washington Post if he would accept the results of the race. (Joshua Lott/The Washington Post)

A dozen Republican candidates in competitive races for governor and Senate have declined to say whether they would accept the results of their contests, raising the prospect of fresh post-election chaos two years after Donald Trump refused to concede the presidency.

In a survey by The Washington Post of 19 of the most closely watched statewide races in the country, the contrast between Republican and Democratic candidates was stark. While seven GOP nominees committed to accepting the outcomes in their contests, 12 either refused to commit or declined to respond. On the Democratic side, 17 said they would accept the outcome and two did not respond to The Post’s survey.

The reluctance of many GOP candidates to embrace a long-standing tenet of American democracy shows how Trump’s assault on the integrity of U.S. elections has spread far beyond the 2020 presidential race. This year, multiple losing candidates could refuse to accept their defeats.

Trump, who continues to claim without evidence that his loss to Joe Biden in 2020 was rigged, has attacked fellow Republicans who do not agree — making election denialism the price of admission in many GOP primaries. More than half of all Republican nominees for federal and statewide office with powers over election administration have embraced unproven claims that fraud tainted Biden’s win, according to a Washington Post tally.

Acceptance of an electoral outcome — win or lose — was once a virtual certainty in American politics, although there have been exceptions. In 2018, Georgia Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams cited voter suppression as a reason for refusing to concede defeat to Republican opponent Brian Kemp. But unlike Trump, Abrams never sought to overturn the certified result or foment an insurrection.

In competitive races for governor or Senate in Arizona, Florida, Kansas, Michigan, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Texas, GOP candidates declined to say that they would accept this year’s result. All but two — incumbent senators Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Marco Rubio of Florida — have publicly embraced Trump’s false claims about 2020, according to a Post analysis.

The Post asked candidates if they would “accept the result” of their contest this year as well as what circumstances might cause them not to.

Several used the opportunity of The Post’s survey to raise further doubts about the integrity of U.S. elections. Michigan GOP gubernatorial nominee Tudor Dixon answered the question of whether she would be willing to accept the result in November’s race by renewing her unfounded attacks on the Democratic secretary of state for her handling of the last election.

“In 2020, Jocelyn Benson knowingly and willfully broke laws designed to secure our elections, which directly correlates to people’s lack of faith in the integrity of our process,” said Sara Broadwater, a spokeswoman for Dixon, who is challenging Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) and has said repeatedly that the 2020 election was stolen.

No evidence has emerged that Benson, the Michigan secretary of state, broke any laws in 2020. Dixon’s campaign added that if authorities “follow the letter of the law” this year, then “we can all have a reasonable amount of faith in the process.” She pointedly did not say whether she will accept the results.

Whitmer, for her part, responded to The Post’s survey by pledging to accept the outcome and accusing her opponents of “trying to weaken our democracy, undermine trust in American institutions and silence the voice of Michiganders.”

The question of whether elections can be trusted has been central to campaigns from both parties this season, though the substance of their messages has been marked by vivid contrast.

Many Republicans have sought voters’ support — and Trump’s — by repeating his false statements about a stolen election. Democrats have warned that such claims put democracy in peril. Candidates willing to deny the results of a legitimate election, they argue, can’t be trusted to oversee future votes.

Biden, in a speech earlier this month railing against “MAGA Republicans” for their refusal to accept the 2020 result, said: “Democracy cannot survive when one side believes there are only two outcomes to an election: either they win or they were cheated.”

Election results under attack: Here are the facts

In nonpartisan circles, too, democracy advocates and election-law scholars agree that growing mistrust in U.S. elections presents a grave threat to the nation.

“Faith in election integrity is a huge piece of what makes democracy work,” said Paige Alexander, who leads the Atlanta-based Carter Center, a nonpartisan group founded by former president Jimmy Carter that promotes freedom and human rights around the globe.

The organization has monitored elections in foreign nations for many years, often asking candidates to sign pledges that they will accept the certified result of a free and fair contest. With the proliferation of false claims about the 2020 election, Alexander said, the center’s leadership agreed that it was time to circulate a similar pledge among candidates in the United States as well.

The center is focusing on five battleground states this year — Arizona, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina and Michigan — but its pledge welcomes any candidate, former elected official or organization to sign.

“When the integrity of U.S. elections began to be questioned via lawsuits, via media, via misinformation, we realized that one way to gather all the candidates and people who really do respect the election process was around these principles,” she said. She said the center has just begun sending the pledge out to candidates, obtaining commitments so far from Republican and Democratic nominees for Georgia governor and secretary of state.

Dixon was the only candidate who responded to the survey with an explanation of why she would not necessarily commit to accepting the result. The campaign of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) responded that he would have nothing to say. Ten other Republicans did not respond to the survey despite repeated inquiries. And seven pledged to accept the results, including Colorado Senate contender Joe O’Dea.

O’Dea, who is behind in the polls as he attempts to unseat incumbent Colorado Sen. Michael F. Bennet (D), did not reference Trump by name, but used his response to offer notably sharp criticism of candidates who refuse to concede when they lose.

“There’s no polite way to put it. We have become a nation of poor sports and cry babies,” said O’Dea. “We’ll keep a close eye on things, but after the process is done and the votes are counted, I’ll absolutely accept the outcome. If the Senator is up for it, we can certify it over a beer. It’s time for America’s leaders to start acting like adults again. Loser buys.”

Bennet also responded to The Post’s survey by pledging to accept the results of a certified election.

Others who have questioned the 2020 result told The Post that they would nonetheless accept the result in their own races this year.

“Ohio is blessed to have a fantastic Secretary of State who has made election security a top priority — we have no doubt Ohio’s election in 2022 will be run with integrity,” a spokesperson for Ohio Senate contender J.D. Vance wrote in an email. “J.D. encourages other states across the country to follow Ohio’s lead by implementing common-sense measures like voter ID and signature verification.”

A spokeswoman for Abrams, who is challenging Kemp again this year, said she “will acknowledge the victor of the 2022 election” and noted that she “has never failed to do that” — a reference to Abrams’s refusal to concede when Kemp defeated her in 2018. Republicans have accused Abrams of being an election denier much like Trump and his supporters, but the candidate has rejected that comparison, given Trump’s fantastical claims of fraud and the violence that ensued.

“I have never denied that I lost,” Abrams said on a recent appearance on the ABC television show “The View.” “I don’t live in the governor’s mansion. I would have noticed.”

When Abrams ended her campaign in 2018, she acknowledged that Kemp had secured enough votes to claim victory, but she never conceded and she maintained that voter suppression had played a role in denying her victory. She said on a 2018 appearance on “The View” that she “absolutely” stood by that decision because “the election was not fair.”

Exactly what would happen if multiple candidates refused to accept their defeats after Nov. 8 is not clear — and depends on the state. Certainly a flurry of litigation, much like 2020, would be likely.

But absent hard evidence of irregularities, such legal efforts are likely to meet the same fate as the dozens of lawsuits filed two years ago, all of which went nowhere.

In many of the battleground states, election officials who have not embraced Trump’s false claims about widespread election fraud continue to have the power to certify election results — or the power to ask a judge to order a state or local election board to do so. In other places, the potential for chaos is hard to predict because election deniers now hold positions such as county clerk or electoral board member.

If Dixon questioned the result in Michigan, for instance, it is possible that the Board of State Canvassers, a four-person panel made up of two Democrats and two Republicans, would deadlock over whether to certify the results. What might happen next could take the state into uncharted territory.

Benson, the Michigan secretary of state, said in an interview that candidates are entitled to contest a result they believe is inaccurate or tainted, and there are multiple avenues to do so, including recounts and litigation. If those efforts do not produce evidence of inaccuracies, however, Benson said, it is the legal obligation of county and state boards of canvassers to certify the result. If they don’t, she said she would immediately seek an order for them to do so from the state Supreme Court.

It’s a plan she drew up in 2020, when the Board of State Canvassers nearly succumbed to pressure not to certify Biden’s win in the state.

“We have to recognize that the real motivation here is to delay the certification process in such a way to allow more misinformation and cause chaos and confusion around elections,” she said. “That’s what this is all about. We need to make sure their ability to sow seeds of doubt is minimally successful.”

Benson is running for reelection to be the state’s top election official against Kristina Karamo, a Republican who has made unfounded theories about a stolen 2020 contest central to her campaign.

Just because candidates declined to confirm they will accept the results does not mean they will follow Trump’s lead and try to challenge them. Republicans seeking to curry favor with their party’s base may see a benefit in leaving the question open.

Don Bolduc, who won the Republican Senate primary in New Hampshire on Tuesday, ran as a far-right Trump allegiant who embraced the former president’s unfounded claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

During an August primary debate, when asked whether he could “conclusively say who won the 2020 election” the retired brigadier general pointed to an open letter he signed in 2021 that warned, among other things, that “election irregularities” in 2020 were ignored.

“I signed a letter with 120 other generals and admirals saying that Trump won the election, and, damn it, I stand by my letter,” he said. “I’m not switching horses, baby. This is it.”

But days after his win, Bolduc performed a dramatic about-face.

“I’ve done a lot of research on this, and I’ve spent the past couple weeks talking to Granite Staters all over the state from every party, and I have come to the conclusion — and I want to be definitive on this — the election was not stolen,” Bolduc said in an interview on Fox News.

“Elections have consequences, and, unfortunately, President Biden is the legitimate president of this country,” he said.

Bolduc’s campaign is among those that did not respond when asked whether he would accept the results of his own election. The Democratic incumbent, Sen. Maggie Hassan, said in an email that “yes,” she would accept the results of her election and “no,” there were no circumstances that would lead her not to.

More troubling to some democracy advocates than the prospect of election deniers losing and crying foul is what happens if some of them win.

Doug Mastriano, a state senator and the Republican nominee for Pennsylvania governor, led efforts to overturn the 2020 result in his state, organizing a public hearing to air baseless conspiracy theories about election fraud and attending the Jan. 6, 2021, rally at the Ellipse before marching toward the Capitol. Mastriano has said he respected police lines and that he and his wife departed when it became clear the event was no longer peaceful.

Mastriano did not respond to The Post’s survey, and he is widely expected to contest his own result if he does not win. But with a Democratic governor and secretary of state, his power to block certification would be minimal.

Election deniers march toward power in key 2024 battlegrounds

If Mastriano wins, however, he will have the power in future elections, notably the next presidential race in 2024, to make good on his promises to decertify voting machines when he believes results are rigged and to appoint a like-minded ally to be secretary of state, whose responsibilities include certifying election results.

His Democratic opponent, Attorney General Josh Shapiro, has made Mastriano’s election denialism a central argument against the Republican.

“Unlike my opponent, I believe the integrity of our elections must be protected and every eligible vote must be counted,” Shapiro said in an emailed statement. “I will continue working to protect every citizen’s vote — and of course, I will accept the results of the election once the votes are counted and the election is certified, as I always have.”

Matthew Brown in Atlanta and David Weigel in Washington contributed to this report.

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