Tag Archives: pits

First Total War: Warhammer 3 Throne Of Decay trailer pits maggots against airships – Rock Paper Shotgun

  1. First Total War: Warhammer 3 Throne Of Decay trailer pits maggots against airships Rock Paper Shotgun
  2. Huge Total War Warhammer 3 DLC Thrones of Decay will come with new, free content for every single player PCGamesN
  3. Total War: Warhammer 3 Thrones of Decay DLC finally gives the Dwarfs a flying Thunderbarge gunship and more Windows Central
  4. Total War: Warhammer 3’s upcoming Thrones of Decay expansion gets huge pricing change Rock Paper Shotgun
  5. The three parts of Total War: Warhammer 3’s next DLC, Thrones of Decay, will be available individually Yahoo! Voices

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Pedro Pascal Asked Kieran Culkin To Smell His Pits – BuzzFeed

  1. Pedro Pascal Asked Kieran Culkin To Smell His Pits BuzzFeed
  2. SAG Awards 2024 Red Carpet: Photos WWD
  3. Ted Lasso Stars Wear Matching Tracksuits at 2024 SAG Awards Afterparty to Celebrate Last Awards Together PEOPLE
  4. Pedro Pascal Says ‘I’m a Little Drunk’ During Teary-Eyed SAG Awards Acceptance Speech: ‘I Thought I Could Get Drunk! I’m Making a Fool of Myself’ Variety
  5. SAG Awards: Pedro Pascal and Elizabeth Debicki Surprise With Wins Over ‘Succession’ Stars as ‘Barbie’ Is Shut Out Hollywood Reporter

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‘The Continental’ Trailer: ‘John Wick’ Prequel Series Pits a Young Winston Against Mel Gibson’s Kingpin – Variety

  1. ‘The Continental’ Trailer: ‘John Wick’ Prequel Series Pits a Young Winston Against Mel Gibson’s Kingpin Variety
  2. Go Back in Time to the Early Days of ‘The Continental’ in New Teaser Collider
  3. Mel Gibson Joins the John Wick Universe in Action-Packed Trailer for Prequel Series ‘The Continental’ PEOPLE
  4. ‘The Continental’ Trailer: Colin Woodell Kills in ‘John Wick’ Prequel – IndieWire IndieWire
  5. ‘The Continental’: Colin Woodell’s Winston Scott Dives Into The Criminal Underbelly Of New York City In Trailer For Peacock Series Deadline
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Explained: The controversial Delhi ordinance that pits the Centre against AAP – Times of India

  1. Explained: The controversial Delhi ordinance that pits the Centre against AAP Times of India
  2. Key Changes Made To Centre’s Bill On Control Of Services In Delhi NDTV
  3. Delhi Bill Fireworks In Parliament: Owaisi, Raghav Chadha Train Guns At Modi Govt | Watch Hindustan Times
  4. Delhi News Live Updates: CM Kejriwal to call on LG amid suspense over Centre bringing in Ordinance as Bill in Lok Sabha; Rouse Avenue Court sends notice to ED over Sisodia’s plea The Indian Express
  5. Delhi Ordinance Bill | Bill Likely To Be Tabled Today, Unlikely To Be Discussed In Parliament CNN-News18
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Putin’s commanders ‘forcing troops into caged pits for being drunk or refusing to fight’ – The Independent

  1. Putin’s commanders ‘forcing troops into caged pits for being drunk or refusing to fight’ The Independent
  2. Russian commanders put troops in ‘holes’ in ground as punishment: UK intel Business Insider
  3. Russia Reported to Be Punishing Soldiers in Medieval Zindans Newsweek
  4. Intelligence Reveals Kremlin Commanders Punishing Russian Troops in Underground Prisons The Daily Beast
  5. Russia-Ukraine news – live: Putin ‘orders drunk soldiers to be kept in holes in the ground as punishment’ Yahoo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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The La Brea Tar Pits are full of mysteries. Here are three of the most puzzling

The lake pit in front of the La Brea Tar Pits Museum is left over from asphalt mining that took place in the nineteenth century. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Last year, we began inviting readers to send us their pressing questions about Los Angeles and California.

Every few weeks, we put the questions to a vote, asking readers to decide which question they would like to see answered in story form.

This question, posed by Ricky Fulton, was included in one of our latest reader polls: What are the La Brea Tar Pits? Is it a bunch of bubbling tar with dinosaur bones sticking out?

You can vote in our next reader question poll here. Catch up on previous stories written as part of this project here.

There’s more than meets the eye — and nose — at the La Brea Tar Pits.

For those who don’t know, the La Brea Tar Pits is an internationally recognized geological heritage site, located in the middle of Los Angeles. The site is known for its many fossil quarries (referred to as “pits”), where animals, plants and insects have gotten stuck and preserved in asphalt over the last 50,000 years.

To scientists, they’re a priceless, unique treasure trove of information that allows us to better understand what ancient life was like in present-day Los Angeles.

“The type of science that you can do at La Brea Tar Pits is stuff that you can’t really do it other any other paleontological site in the world, just because we have so many fossils, and they’re so well preserved,” said Emily Lindsey, associate curator and excavation site director.

Within the odorous goo — a curiosity for locals, tourists and schoolchildren on field trips — more than 3.5 million fossils have been discovered.

To answer Fulton’s question right off the bat, here’s one thing they haven’t found in the pits: dinosaurs.

That’s right — this is an Ice Age fossil site, and experts haven’t uncovered any remains of T. rexes, triceratops or other non-avian dinosaurs.

While the La Brea Tar Pits are short on dinosaur fossils, they’re chock full of fossils from legendary Ice Age animals. The two most commonly found large mammals? Dire wolves (shout out to all the “Game of Thronesfans) and saber-toothed cats.

Columbian mammoths and mastodons once called Los Angeles home. Today, their remains can be seen at the La Brea Tar Pits and Museum. (Mel Melcon/Los Angeles Times)

Despite the scientists’ groundbreaking findings, mysteries continue to swirl in the oozing pits.

Sometimes, Lindsey said, the things that scientists don’t find in the tar pits fascinate as much as the bones and other items they uncover.

Lindsey described puzzles posed by the tar pits that remain to be solved.

Here are three of the most tantalizing:

Why are the remains of some native species — such as mountain lions — largely missing from the tar pits?

Something odd: scientists have uncovered relatively few mountain lion remains in the tar pits.

P-22’s Hollywood celebrity status aside, it might seem weird to worry about the absence of some mountain lion fossils when the tar pits have revealed the remains of extinct mammoths, dire wolves and giant ground sloths.

Still, it’s odd that mountain lions — which existed in the Los Angeles area during the Ice Age — make up such a small percentage of the scientists’ findings in the tar pits. The Tar Pits have remains from at least seven different mountain lions, while its saber-toothed cats number somewhere between 2,500 and 3,000.

And it’s not only mountain lions missing from the tar pits.

“We have very few mountain lions, very few deer…and only one raccoon,” she said. Aside from coyotes, scientists have found “very few of these [large mammal] ‘survivors of the Ice Age,’ which is an interesting thing.”

Why might mountain lions be missing from the tar pits?

The answer could help scientists paint a more detailed picture of what life in prehistoric Los Angeles was like.

Lindsey and her colleagues have a few ideas. Among other potential explanations, it’s possible that – true to their name – mountain lions have always preferred to be in the highlands, not the flatter areas of present-day Los Angeles near the tar pits.

Or, it might have been that mountain lions were afraid to hunt in the same areas as saber toothed cats. “A mountain lion looks like a house-cat next to a saber-toothed cat – [it’s possible] they wanted to stay away and not be around all these big scary things.”

Where is the evidence of human life?

Mountain lions, raccoons and deer aren’t the only mammals missing from the tar pits. There’s also a conspicuous lack of human remains.

Humans were here, but why don’t we find any evidence of them at the La Brea Tar pits?” Lindsey asked. “We have one human skeleton, and then we have some artifacts that are probably all from the Holocene (our current geological epoch), but we have no evidence of humans overlapping with or interacting with the megafauna” via hunting.

This is puzzling, because “many — perhaps even most — scientists think that the major cause of the extinctions of the megafauna was human activity,” Lindsey explains.

Similar to the mountain lions, Lindsey notes that the absence of ancient humans could point to their reticence at hunting nearby saber-toothed cats and other dangerous animals.

People watch a demonstration at the Fossil Lab at the La Brea Tar Pits and Museum. (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)

“It might have been that the culture that was here was coastally adapted and didn’t need to brave, for example, a pack of dire wolves to go hunt a horse or a camel,” she said. “They could stay near the shore and pick shellfish.”

Why did large mammals start disappearing — and what does that tell us about our future?

Once upon a time, giant mammals roamed great swaths of the earth.

“There were giant wombats in Australia, there were giant lemurs in Madagascar, there were giant sloths and armadillos in South America,” Lindsey said.

So, Lindsey asks, why don’t we have saber-toothed cats and mammoths and giant ground sloths wandering around Wilshire Boulevard today?

A dramatic change occurred. “At the end of the Ice Age, something happened, and it wiped off the top end of the body size distribution everywhere except for Africa,” she said. “That’s the biggest extinction event since the 66 million-year-ago dinosaur extinction event.”

Even more chilling, the loss of the giant mammals is coming to be recognized as “the first pulse in the biodiversity crisis that we’re in today,” she said.

Why did this extinction event happen? “Most scientists think that humans must have had a pretty significant role in this extinction. But the other thing that was happening was we were coming out of the Ice Age – the last major episode of global warming,” she said.

“Understanding kind of the interplay between climate change and human activities, how that impacts ecosystems and how those two processes can intersect to drive extinctions is incredibly important.”

The La Brea Tar Pits are positioned to help solve the mystery of why precisely the giant mammals died out, due to the size and scope of its findings, which can be radiocarbon-dated and matched with known shifts that happened simultaneously with humans and the climate.

Two volunteers excavate fossils at the La Brea Tar Pits. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

On the opposite side of the coin, 90% of the species found at the tar pits have not gone extinct. “We have tons of rabbits, rodents, lizards, insects, and songbirds in our record that still live in the L.A. area today,” Lindsey said via email.

“We’re a record of survival and resilience,” she said, which begs a few questions. “What made mountain lions successful? What made coyotes so successful? What made oak trees successful?”

As the climate crisis worsens today, the answers to these mysteries could chart a path for the future.

“The next several decades to several centuries are going to be one of really extreme global change,” Lindsey said. “How can we use that information to help life succeed going forward?”

This existential question should give you something to ponder the next time you pass the Tar Pits’ iconic (and heartrending) mammoth statues off Wilshire Boulevard.

This story was written directly in response to a reader’s question about the La Brea Tar Pits. Do you have a question about life in Los Angeles or California? Ask us!

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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Glut of Fake LinkedIn Profiles Pits HR Against the Bots – Krebs on Security

A recent proliferation of phony executive profiles on LinkedIn is creating something of an identity crisis for the business networking site, and for companies that rely on it to hire and screen prospective employees. The fabricated LinkedIn identities — which pair AI-generated profile photos with text lifted from legitimate accounts — are creating major headaches for corporate HR departments and for those managing invite-only LinkedIn groups.

Some of the fake profiles flagged by the co-administrator of a popular sustainability group on LinkedIn.

Last week, KrebsOnSecurity examined a flood of inauthentic LinkedIn profiles all claiming Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) roles at various Fortune 500 companies, including Biogen, Chevron, ExxonMobil, and Hewlett Packard.

Since then, the response from LinkedIn users and readers has made clear that these phony profiles are showing up en masse for virtually all executive roles — but particularly for jobs and industries that are adjacent to recent global events and news trends.

Hamish Taylor runs the Sustainability Professionals group on LinkedIn, which has more than 300,000 members. Together with the group’s co-owner, Taylor said they’ve blocked more than 12,700 suspected fake profiles so far this year, including dozens of recent accounts that Taylor describes as “cynical attempts to exploit Humanitarian Relief and Crisis Relief experts.”

“We receive over 500 fake profile requests to join on a weekly basis,” Taylor said. “It’s hit like hell since about January of this year. Prior to that we did not get the swarms of fakes that we now experience.”

The opening slide for a plea by Taylor’s group to LinkedIn.

Taylor recently posted an entry on LinkedIn titled, “The Fake ID Crisis on LinkedIn,” which lampooned the “60 Least Wanted ‘Crisis Relief Experts’ — fake profiles that claimed to be experts in disaster recovery efforts in the wake of recent hurricanes. The images above and below show just one such swarm of profiles the group flagged as inauthentic. Virtually all of these profiles were removed from LinkedIn after KrebsOnSecurity tweeted about them last week.

Another “swarm” of LinkedIn bot accounts flagged by Taylor’s group.

Mark Miller is the owner of the DevOps group on LinkedIn, and says he deals with fake profiles on a daily basis — often hundreds per day. What Taylor called “swarms” of fake accounts Miller described instead as “waves” of incoming requests from phony accounts.

“When a bot tries to infiltrate the group, it does so in waves,” Miller said. “We’ll see 20-30 requests come in with the same type of information in the profiles.”

After screenshotting the waves of suspected fake profile requests, Miller started sending the images to LinkedIn’s abuse teams, which told him they would review his request but that he may never be notified of any action taken.

Some of the bot profiles identified by Mark Miller that were seeking access to his DevOps LinkedIn group. Miller said these profiles are all listed in the order they appeared.

Miller said that after months of complaining and sharing fake profile information with LinkedIn, the social media network appeared to do something which caused the volume of group membership requests from phony accounts to drop precipitously.

“I wrote our LinkedIn rep and said we were considering closing the group down the bots were so bad,” Miller said. “I said, ‘You guys should be doing something on the backend to block this.”

Jason Lathrop is vice president of technology and operations at ISOutsource, a Seattle-based consulting firm with roughly 100 employees. Like Miller, Lathrop’s experience in fighting bot profiles on LinkedIn suggests the social networking giant will eventually respond to complaints about inauthentic accounts. That is, if affected users complain loudly enough (posting about it publicly on LinkedIn seems to help).

Lathrop said that about two months ago his employer noticed waves of new followers, and identified more than 3,000 followers that all shared various elements, such as profile photos or text descriptions.

“Then I noticed that they all claim to work for us at some random title within the organization,” Lathrop said in an interview with KrebsOnSecurity. “When we complained to LinkedIn, they’d tell us these profiles didn’t violate their community guidelines. But like heck they don’t! These people don’t exist, and they’re claiming they work for us!”

Lathrop said that after his company’s third complaint, a LinkedIn representative responded by asking ISOutsource to send a spreadsheet listing every legitimate employee in the company, and their corresponding profile links.

Not long after that, the phony profiles that were not on the company’s list were deleted from LinkedIn. Lathrop said he’s still not sure how they’re going to handle getting new employees allowed into their company on LinkedIn going forward.

It remains unclear why LinkedIn has been flooded with so many fake profiles lately, or how the phony profile photos are sourced. Random testing of the profile photos shows they resemble but do not match other photos posted online. Several readers pointed out one likely source — the website thispersondoesnotexist.com, which makes using artificial intelligence to create unique headshots a point-and-click exercise.

Cybersecurity firm Mandiant (recently acquired by Google) told Bloomberg that hackers working for the North Korean government have been copying resumes and profiles from leading job listing platforms LinkedIn and Indeed, as part of an elaborate scheme to land jobs at cryptocurrency firms.

Fake profiles also may be tied to so-called “pig butchering” scams, wherein people are lured by flirtatious strangers online into investing in cryptocurrency trading platforms that eventually seize any funds when victims try to cash out.

In addition, identity thieves have been known to masquerade on LinkedIn as job recruiters, collecting personal and financial information from people who fall for employment scams.

But the Sustainability Group administrator Taylor said the bots he’s tracked strangely don’t respond to messages, nor do they appear to try to post content.

“Clearly they are not monitored,” Taylor assessed. “Or they’re just created and then left to fester.”

This experience was shared by the DevOp group admin Miller, who said he’s also tried baiting the phony profiles with messages referencing their fakeness. Miller says he’s worried someone is creating a massive social network of bots for some future attack in which the automated accounts may be used to amplify false information online, or at least muddle the truth.

“It’s almost like someone is setting up a huge bot network so that when there’s a big message that needs to go out they can just mass post with all these fake profiles,” Miller said.

In last week’s story on this topic, I suggested LinkedIn could take one simple step that would make it far easier for people to make informed decisions about whether to trust a given profile: Add a “created on” date for every profile. Twitter does this, and it’s enormously helpful for filtering out a great deal of noise and unwanted communications.

Many of our readers on Twitter said LinkedIn needs to give employers more tools — perhaps some kind of application programming interface (API) — that would allow them to quickly remove profiles that falsely claim to be employed at their organizations.

Another reader suggested LinkedIn also could experiment with offering something akin to Twitter’s verified mark to users who chose to validate that they can respond to email at the domain associated with their stated current employer.

In response to questions from KrebsOnSecurity, LinkedIn said it was considering the domain verification idea.

“This is an ongoing challenge and we’re constantly improving our systems to stop fakes before they come online,” LinkedIn said in a written statement. “We do stop the vast majority of fraudulent activity we detect in our community – around 96% of fake accounts and around 99.1% of spam and scams. We’re also exploring new ways to protect our members such as expanding email domain verification. Our community is all about authentic people having meaningful conversations and to always increase the legitimacy and quality of our community.”

In a story published Wednesday, Bloomberg noted that LinkedIn has largely so far avoided the scandals about bots that have plagued networks like Facebook and Twitter. But that shine is starting to come off, as more users are forced to waste more of their time fighting off inauthentic accounts.

“What’s clear is that LinkedIn’s cachet as being the social network for serious professionals makes it the perfect platform for lulling members into a false sense of security,” Bloomberg’s Tim Cuplan wrote. “Exacerbating the security risk is the vast amount of data that LinkedIn collates and publishes, and which underpins its whole business model but which lacks any robust verification mechanisms.”

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PACT Act: Biden signs bill expanding health care benefits for veterans exposed to toxic burn pits

The bill is a major bipartisan victory for Congress and addresses an issue that is personal to the President. Biden has said he believes there may have been a connection between the brain cancer that killed his 46-year-old son, Beau Biden, and the burn pits Beau was exposed to during his military service.

Burn pits were commonly used to burn waste — including trash, munitions, hazardous material and chemical compounds — at military sites throughout Iraq and Afghanistan until about 2010. These massive open-air burn pits, which were often operated at or near military bases, released dangerous toxins into the air that, upon exposure, may have caused short- and long-term health conditions, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs.

“Toxic smoke, thick with poison spreading through the air and into the lungs of our troops. When they came home many of the fittest and best warriors that we sent to war were not the same. Headaches, numbness, dizziness, cancer. My son Beau was one of them,” Biden said.

Beau Biden was an Iraq war veteran who served as the attorney general of Delaware and died of brain cancer in 2015.

The bill adds conditions related to burn pit and toxic exposure, including hypertension, to the Department of Veterans Affairs list of illnesses that have been incurred or exacerbated during military service, removing the burden for veterans to prove that their toxic exposure resulted in these conditions. It could provide coverage for up to 3.5 million toxic-exposed veterans.

“I was going to get this done come Hell or high water,” Biden said, calling the legislation “the most significant law our nation has ever passed to help millions of veterans who are exposed to toxic substances during their military services.”

The President said, “We have many obligations and only one truly sacred obligation: To equip those we send into harm’s way and to care for them and their families when they come home.”

Biden was introduced on Wednesday by Danielle Robinson, the wife of Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson, whom the legislation is named after. Her daughter, Brielle Robinson, was by her side. Danielle Robinson was first lady Jill Biden’s guest at Biden’s State of the Union address when he called on Congress to pass burn pits legislation.

“To us and to many of you in the room, if not all of you, it’s personal. Personal for so many people like Danielle and Brielle. Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson, just 39 years old. … They held his hand for the last time at age 39,” Biden said.

Biden thanked comedian and political activist Jon Stewart, who has been a lead advocate for veterans on the issue and was at the White House for the bill signing.

“You refused to let anybody forget. You refused to let them forget. And we owe you big, man. We owe you big,” Biden said.

The Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis McDonough and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas were scheduled to attend the bill signing at the White House.

The White House is hailing the legislation, known as the PACT Act, as the most significant expansion of benefits and services for veterans exposed to toxins in more than 30 years.

The bipartisan bill passed Congress last week after Republicans, who had previously supported the measure, temporarily blocked the bill from advancing while they sought to add cost-controlling amendments to the package. Republicans’ surprise move sparked swift backlash among veterans and veterans’ groups, and advocates for the measure protested on the US Capitol steps for days.

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Biden Signs Bill to Help Veterans Exposed to Toxic Burn Pits

WASHINGTON — President Biden on Wednesday signed into law a bill that expands medical benefits for veterans who were exposed to toxins from burning pits of trash on military bases, ending a yearslong quest for support by veterans and their families.

The issue is deeply personal for the president, who has long speculated that his son Beau developed brain cancer because of exposure to burn pits when he served in Iraq as a member of the Delaware National Guard. Before signing the legislation, Mr. Biden described the lingering effects of the exposures.

“Toxic smoke, thick with poisons, spreading through the air and into the lungs of our troops,” he said. “When they came home, many of the fittest and best warriors that we sent to war were not the same. Headaches, numbness, dizziness, cancer. My son, Beau, was one of them.”

In a ceremony packed with veterans and their families in the East Room of the White House, Mr. Biden called the new law progress toward fulfilling “a sacred obligation” to those who defended the nation and their families. The law passed despite a last-minute delay by Republican senators, who blocked its passage but backed down after an intense backlash.

“This is the most significant law our nation has ever passed to help millions of veterans who are exposed to toxic substances during their military services,” Mr. Biden said, adding a few minutes later: “This law is long overdue. We finally got it done, together.”

The legislation addresses the effects that some veterans have suffered after sleeping and working in proximity to large fires on military bases where trash — including tires, jet fuel, chemicals and other equipment — was burned, creating large clouds of smoke. Research suggests that toxins in the smoke may be responsible for a series of ailments suffered by veterans, including cancer, bronchial asthma, allergic rhinitis, sleep apnea, bronchitis and sinusitis.

The new law, known as the PACT Act, makes it easier for veterans who believe they were exposed to toxins during their service to apply for medical benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs. The law creates a $280 billion stream of federal funding, making it one of the largest expansions of veterans benefits in American history.

In his remarks, Mr. Biden praised the many years of work by family members and activists, singling out Jon Stewart, the comedian, for his impassioned and sometimes angry demands that politicians pass the bill.

“What you’ve done, Jon, matters, and you know it does,” Mr. Biden said to Mr. Stewart, who was in the room for the signing ceremony. “You should know. It really, really matters. You refused to let anybody forget. Refused to let them forget, and we owe you big, man.”

Mr. Stewart, who has been lobbying for the bill for years, was particularly vocal last month, when Republican senators abruptly refused to support the measure, citing concerns that it was structured in a way that could create a costly new entitlement. The legislation had passed with overwhelming bipartisan support in the House, and the Republican senators who objected had voiced their firm support only weeks earlier.

Appearing on CNN after the Republicans blocked the bill, Mr. Stewart was livid, helping to spur an intense reaction that led to the bill’s final passage days later.

“I’m used to lies. I’m used to hypocrisy. I’m used to their cowardice,” Mr. Stewart told Jake Tapper on CNN’s “The Lead” program. “I’m not used to the cruelty, the casual cruelty.”

In his remarks on Wednesday, Mr. Biden did not mention the Republican obstruction. Instead, he focused on the bipartisan nature of the agreement, citing its passage as evidence that he has made good on his promise to bridge ideological divides in the nation’s capital to get things done.

“I don’t want to hear the press tell me Democrats, Republicans can’t work together,” he said. “We got it done, and we got it done together.”

Danielle Robinson, the wife of Sgt. Heath Robinson, who died of lung cancer after serving in Iraq, spent years helping to lead the fight for the new veterans benefits. The legislation was named after her husband.

In her own remarks at the White House, Ms. Robinson described how her husband developed cancer a decade after returning from combat. She thanked Mr. Biden and the other activists for pushing lawmakers to pass legislation that will make it easier to receive medical treatment and benefits after similar exposures.

“So many veterans are still battling burn pit illnesses today,” she said. “Too many have succumbed to those illnesses as well. And I’m honored to be with the father of another military family that understands the ultimate sacrifice like we do — our commander in chief, President Joe Biden.”

Beau Biden died of brain cancer in 2015.

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Senate passes long-sought bill to help veterans affected by burn pits

Passage of the bill marks the end of a lengthy fight to get the legislation through Congress, as veterans and their advocates had been demonstrating on Capitol Hill for days. Many veterans were allowed into the Senate gallery to watch the final vote on Tuesday evening.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced after reaching the deal with Republicans who had blocked the bill from advancing last week while they sought to add cost-controlling amendment votes to the package.

“I have some good news, the minority leader and I have come to an agreement to vote on the PACT Act this evening,” Schumer said on the Senate floor. “I’m very optimistic that this bill will pass so our veterans across America can breathe a sigh of relief.”

The bill widely expands health care resources and benefits to those exposed to burn pits and could provide coverage for up to 3.5 million toxic-exposed veterans. It adds conditions related to burn pit and toxic exposure, including hypertension, to the Department of Veterans Affair’s list of illnesses that have been incurred or exacerbated during military service.

The legislation had been held up in the chamber since last week when more than two dozen Republicans, who previously supported the measure, temporarily blocked it from advancing.
Sen. Pat Toomey, a Pennsylvania Republican, rallied fellow Republicans to hold up the legislation in exchange for amendment votes, specifically an amendment that would change an accounting provision. Toomey had previously said he wanted an amendment vote with a 50-vote threshold.

Tuesday’s final vote followed votes on three amendments with a 60-vote threshold. Toomey’s amendment, which would have made a change to a budget component of the legislation, failed as expected, in a vote of 47-48.

Last week’s surprise move by Republicans led to a swift backlash among veterans and veterans’ groups, including protests on the US Capitol steps over the weekend and early this week. Comedian and political activist Jon Stewart — a lead advocate for veterans on the issue — took individual GOP senators to task for holding up a bill that had garnered wide bipartisan support in earlier votes.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell defended his party’s handling of the legislation at a news conference on Tuesday.

“Look, these kind of back and forths happen all the time in the legislative process, you’ve observed that over the years,” he said. “I think in the end, the veterans service organizations will be pleased with the final result.”

This story and headline have been updated with additional developments Tuesday.

CNN’s Manu Raju and Morgan Rimmer contributed to this report.

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