Thursday 29 September 2016

Thursday's Headlines: Darkness, fear grip Aleppo as stepped-up bombing increases horrors of war

Congress thwarts Obama on 9/11 lawsuits against Saudi Arabia; Awkward questions for Clinton as Trump campaign airs husband's infidelities; Donald Trump’s weight problem: He can't stop talking about ‘fat’ people;
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
Karam Al-Masri / AFP/Getty Images
Darkness, fear grip Aleppo as stepped-up bombing increases horrors of war
The rebel-held portion of the Syrian city had gotten used to airstrikes over the years, but it hadn't seen anything like the past week, when a massive increase in bombing swamped hospitals and overwhelmed rescuers — and left no escape.
Congress thwarts Obama on 9/11 lawsuits against Saudi Arabia
In a sharp setback for the Saudi government, the first veto override of Obama's presidency clears the way for families of the victims of the Sept. 11 attacks to file claims against Saudi Arabia over the kingdom's long-rumored but unproven links to the attackers.
 
Awkward questions for Clinton as Trump campaign airs husband's infidelities
Hillary Clinton's detractors say that over the years she has unfairly lashed out at women involved in her husband's indiscretions. Her responses have forced her to walk a fine line during the campaign, even as she builds strong political support among female voters.
 
Donald Trump’s weight problem: He can't stop talking about ‘fat’ people
Trump's comments about weight, along with a long line of other incendiary comments about women, present another serious challenge for him in attracting female voters in November.
 
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Opinions
 
Donald Trump's rise reflects American conservatism's decay
 
Steve Case: Why I'm voting for Hillary Clinton
 
Republicans want to tame Trump, but he may be their doom
 
Trump is unfit, unserious and unprepared on national security
 
Putin is making a mistake in Syria — and Russia will pay the price
 
The Greatest Generation's rebuke of Trump
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More News
 
France and Britain begin building a border wall intended to impede migrants
Construction of the roughly mile-long concrete barrier is designed to separate a sprawling camp of more than 7,000 migrants from the tunnels that offer passage to Britain.
Obama faces tough questions from military and veterans
They challenged him, often aggressively, during a CNN town hall Wednesday.
Scientists confirm a key new source of greenhouse gases: Man-made reservoirs
Researchers say dammed reservoirs may be contributing as much as a billion tons of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions per year or 1.3 percent of the global total.
Michelle Obama tears into Donald Trump
The first lady described the GOP nominee's birther campaign against her husband this way: "Hurtful, deceitful questions deliberately designed to undermine his presidency, questions that cannot be blamed on others or swept under the rug by an insincere sentence uttered at a press conference."
Gary Johnson has another 'Aleppo moment' when asked to name his favorite foreign leader
The Libertarian nominee for president, who had been pilloried for blanking on the relevance of the Syrian city in another MSNBC interview, whiffed his way through an even easier foreign policy question.
Trump's defense of not paying taxes is remarkable
During an appearance on Fox News with Bill O'Reilly last night, Donald Trump didn't say whether he has paid income taxes over the past several decades. But he did say that someone who avoids paying them is what the country needs.
What they said, what they meant
Sign up to have The Fix's Aaron Blake text you the highlights of each debate as it unfolds.
The raging debate over the American sailor who refused to salute during the national anthem
"I feel like a hypocrite singing about the 'land of the free' when I know that only applies to some Americans," Petty Officer 2nd Class Janaye Ervin wrote on Facebook.
Government shutdown is averted after Congress passes spending bill
The bill extends current government funding levels until early December, giving appropriators time to negotiate 2017 spending measures.
Critics say Wells Fargo CEO should forfeit more than $41 million after sales scandal
Wells Fargo's move to strip John Stumpf of millions in compensation did little to temper criticism, as he'll still have more than $100 million in company stock and millions in salary he earned as his bank was setting up millions of unauthorized accounts customers didn't ask for.
Memo to Obama aides: Don’t prank Trump or Clinton on your way out
Did you know Al Gore accidentally took a bust of Abraham Lincoln home, only to return it after Dick Cheney made a fuss? Now you do.
 
     
 
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