TIME

Why Mitt Romney Won’t Win (Again)

Will this iteration of the two-time presidential candidate come equipped with a backbone?

It is always wonderful to see a twice-failed politician suck it up and sort of announce he’s going to be running for President again. Mitt Romney’s allies say he will be different this time. There is talk of a new personal style that was really his old personal style—as seen in the Netflix documentary Mitt—but was brutally suppressed by his … political consultants, most of whom seem back on board. There is talk of Romney emphasizing the eradication of poverty as one of his three campaign pillars. There is talk about his being less gaffe-prone this time. (Translation of last two sentences: he will try to act like a rich guy who cares for the 47%.) He will “position” himself just to the right of Jeb Bush.

These are the things politicians and horse-race reporters talk about.

What they don’t talk about is whether this iteration of Romney will come equipped with a backbone. The last two certainly didn’t, to the point of embarrassment. In neither campaign did Romney take a position that was even vaguely controversial with his party’s rabid base. He was disgraceful on immigration, “self-deporting” himself to Dantean circles of chicanery. He was craven on fiscal sanity, opposing in one debate—along with all his fellow candidates—a budget proposal that would include 90% cuts and 10% revenue increases. Worst of all, he self-lobotomized on the subject of health care, dumbing himself down egregiously, denying that his (successful) universal-health-coverage program in Massachusetts was the exact same thing as Barack Obama’s (increasingly successful) national version. He never expressed a real emotion—not anger, not sadness, not unscripted laughter. His manner was as slick as his hair.

That was why he lost. Not because of gaffes or because he wasn’t conservative enough (as extreme conservatives claim) or because he was just too rich. He lost because he seemed computer-animated. There was nothing real to him. He was “positioned.” And so he was deemed untrustworthy by the crucial sliver of attention-paying voters in the middle of the spectrum who decide most elections.

So now he’s back and will be successful this time—his backers say—because he’ll be even slicker. No more gaffes. He’ll also be more personal—although it has yet to be determined whether he’ll be an actual person (many market tests to come before such a crucial decision is made). He will try to compete in the moderate primary along with Jeb Bush and Chris Christie, and perhaps a few others. This will be difficult. His only competition to the left of Attila the Hun last time was Jon Huntsman, who spoke Chinese in one of the debates—not a wise choice in a party of xenophobes—and presented a credible plan for the “too big to fail” Wall Street banks to be dismantled … in the party of bankers.

Bush is immediately more credible than Romney. He opposed his party’s positions on immigration and educational testing. He is also bilingual—Spanish!—and seems a man who has actually existed in the America of the past quarter-century, suffering family problems along with the rest of us. We still don’t know all that much about him. He was a very good governor. I’ve found him to be a smart and bold policy wonk when we’ve spoken one-on-one. (Tragically, I felt the same way about Romney—in the days before his advisers prohibited one-on-ones.) The biggest question about Bush in my mind is whether he returns to his father’s brilliantly sophisticated foreign policy or to his brother’s disastrous Cheney-dominated first term in office, or to George W.’s more reasonable second term, marked by realistic aides like National Security Adviser Steve Hadley and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. Does he think strategically or tactically?

As for Christie, who may be left behind in the high-powered race to come, his greatest appeal is that he is the exact opposite of Mitt Romney. No political consultant could make him up. As a human being from the greater New York metropolitan area, I will enjoy every moment of his campaign if he doesn’t try to Romnify himself.

Does this mean Mitt is pretoasted? I wouldn’t say that. He could surprise us all and come out in favor of breaking up the big banks—ending “moral hazard”—and for reforms that would take the tax advantages away from the financial sector (including his own self). In fact, I suspect that if he had done that in 2012, he might be President today. But think of the speech he could give …

 

TIME Security

Here’s How Obama Wants to Protect the U.S. Against Hackers

President Obama Delivers Remarks On Cyber Security
U.S. President Barack Obama delivers remarks at the National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center (NCCIC) on January 13, 2015 in Arlington, Virginia. Getty Images

Information sharing and better prosecution of hackers

President Obama unveiled a new proposal Tuesday aimed at protecting businesses and the government from hackers. The President’s plan would encourage public and private sector information sharing as well as expand law enforcement’s authority to prosecute digital criminals.

The proposal, announced at the National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center in Arlington, Virginia, comes in the wake of high-profile hacks against Sony, Home Depot, J.P. Morgan and other companies over the past year. A wide array of businesses and police groups have been calling on Congress to pass new cybersecurity legislation as a response to those incidents.

On the corporate side, Obama’s plan would require businesses to notify consumers if their personal information has been exposed to hackers, as in the case of the Target and J.P. Morgan hacks, for instance. Additionally, companies would be protected from liability for sharing digital threats with the Department of Homeland Security, which would then share those threats in databases accessed by the private sector.

For prosecutors, the White House’s package would let them better target the sale of identity theft software and computer networks used by hackers. It would also criminalize the overseas sale of U.S. financial information.

Both government representatives and private companies have long demanded many of the steps highlighted in Obama’s proposal. Just last week, Admiral Michael S. Rogers, director of the NSA and commander of U.S. Cyber Command, said Congress should pass legislation that improves coordination between U.S. intelligence and the private sector.

“We have got to create partnerships that bridge the divide between the private sector and the government,” Rogers said at a conference in New York City. “I don’t think it’s realistic for the private sector to deal with [cyber threats] all by themselves.”

A coalition of businesses, meanwhile, has already voiced support for the new plan.

“Collaboration between industry and government to share threat information is crucial in the fight against sophisticated and persistent cyber criminals,” said Nicholas Ahrens, vice president for cybersecurity and data privacy at the Retail Industry Leaders Association. A number of RILA members, including Walgreen, Target, Nike and JCPenney, began sharing data on cyber threats last May.

It’s unclear, however, if an Obama-backed cybersecurity bill will make it through the Republican-controlled Congress, which has in recent years failed to pass similar measures.

TIME 2016 Election

Rand: Romney Is ‘Yesterday’s News’

Sen. Rand Paul Speaks To The Detroit Economic Club
Sen. Rand Paul speaks with the news media after delivering a speech at the Detroit Economic Club on Dec. 6, 2013 in Detroit, Michigan. Bill Pugliano—Getty Images

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul is not pulling his punches over former Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, who has indicated to donors and allies he is considering another bid for the White House in 2016.

In an interview with radio host John Gibson on Fox News Radio, the libertarian lawmaker called the former Massachusetts governor “yesterday’s news,” adding he doesn’t believe there’s room for a third act in politics.

“Well if he runs to the right of Jeb Bush he will still be to the left of the rest of the party, so it may be a difficult spot to occupy,” Paul told Gibson Tuesday, in a one-two punch in reference to reports Romney would seek to cast himself as the conservative alternative to the former Florida governor. “Look I like Gov. Romney. I like him personally, I think he’s a good person, I think he’s a great businessman. But, you know, that’s yesterday’s news. He’s tried twice. I don’t really think that there is a third time out there.”

Paul, who has all-but-officially declared a presidential campaign, said the Republican Party needs to focus on growing its base of supporters, an area where Romney did not excel in 2012.

“I think he did a lot of right,” Paul continued. “But in the end you’ve got to have a bigger constituency, you’ve got to get new people, you’ve got to get new people to win. And I think it’s just time that probably the party is going to be looking for someone fresh and new.”

TIME 2016 Election

Rand Paul Makes a Pragmatic Case Against Rivals

Georgia Senate Candidate David Perdue Campaigns With Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY)
Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) speaks to an audience of supporters of Georgia Senate candidate David Perdue during a campaign stop in McDonough, Ga. on Oct. 24, 2014. Jessica McGowan—Getty Images

He’s not officially running for president yet, but that’s not stopping Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul from taking a few shots at his presumptive competition in the Republican primary.

The latest target: former presidential nominee Mitt Romney. And as he’s done with other potential rivals, Paul argued that Romney simply can’t win.

In an interview with Fox News Radio Monday, Paul said that Romney was “a good person” and “a great businessman,” but politically speaking he argued he’s “yesterday’s news.”

“He’s tried twice — I don’t really think that there is a third time out there,” he said. “I think he did a lot of things right, but in the end you got to have a bigger constituency, you got to get new people, you got to attract new people to win and I think it’s time that probably the party is going to be looking for something fresh and new.”

Paul has also taken aim at other potential presidential candidates, using similarly pragmatic language.

• In December, he argued on Fox News that former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush was out of practice. “He’s been out of this for a while,” he said. “So maybe he needs to get back in and practice up a bit.”

• In November, he argued on CBS’ “Face the Nation” that New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie had the wrong attitude. “I think this sort of bully demeanor may go over well in certain places,” he said, adding that he learned to be more polite growing up in the South.

In a more indirect way, Paul has also criticized his opponents by arguing that they are out of step with public opinion polls.

When criticizing Sen. Marco Rubio’s support for continuing the Cuban embargo, Paul cited an NPR poll that showed the majority of Cuban Americans back normalizing relations with the country. And in a midsummer back-and-forth with Texas Gov. Rick Perry, he noted that polls showed that most Americans are opposed to sending troops back to Iraq—a position Perry has supported.

Paul’s hardly the only one taking shots. Rubio’s fired at him over Cuba, while former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum has criticized Paul, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee. But his pragmatic focus is more unusual.

TIME 2016 Election

Christie’s State of the State Focused More on the Nation

Chris Christie
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie delivers his State Of The State address on Jan. 13, 2015, in Trenton, N.J. Julio Cortez—AP

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie delivered his fifth State of the State address Tuesday, but it sounded more like a presidential announcement.

Less than two years away from Election Day, Christie sent his firmest signal yet that he intends to run for the White House in 2016, with a decidedly national theme, coming off a 2014 spent traveling the country on behalf of Republican gubernatorial candidates. “We need a New Jersey renewal and we need an American renewal,” Christie declared several months before he is expected to make his candidacy official.

The speech comes a day after Christie secured the backing of former Republican National Committee Finance Chair Ray Washburne for his future presidential campaign and a day before Christie is scheduled to attend a meet-and-greet with donors in South Carolina, a presidential early state.

Teasing at a possible presidential campaign theme, Christie says what he saw across the country during his travels was “a nation beset by anxiety.”

“It is understandable,” Christie said, delivering an implicit critique of the Obama administration. “Economic growth is low by post-war recovery standards. America’s leadership in the world is called into question because of a pattern of indecision and inconsistency.”

“We need to address this anxiety head on,” he continued. “We need to renew the spirit and the hopes of our state, our country and our people.”

Christie’s remarks contrast his leadership of New Jersey with the “Washington way,” hailing his own conservative record of opposing tax increases and holding up his leadership of the state as a model for the nation.

The governor devoted much of his address to highlighting his efforts to tackle drug addiction and mental health in the state, announcing the creation of a statewide call number to allow those in need with a one-stop access to services. He also marked a longstanding effort to turn around the long-blighted city of Camden, which has seen a surge in public and private investment under Christie after decades of decline.

The address coincides with a drop in Christie’s approval rating in the state as he eyes higher office. Christie sought to cast his state’s economic progress in a positive light, pointing to a declining unemployment rate and balanced budget, even as its reality is far murkier. The governor avoided discussing efforts to confront fiscal turmoil in Atlantic City and avoided specifics on dealing with mounting pension costs that have caused repeated credit downgrades.

The presidential hopeful briefly alluded to the ongoing drama surrounding the politically-motivated closure of approach lanes to the George Washington Bridge by Christie aides in 2013. Christie has denied wrongdoing, but a federal probe into the incident continues. “In a year with plenty of politics from some overly partisan corners of this chamber, New Jersey has made progress,” Christie said.

Illustrating the out-of-state focus of the speech, Christie met off the record with national reporters before his address, leaving out members of his state press corps.

In a web video posted Tuesday to coincide with the address, the Democratic National Committee mocked Christie’s record and presidential ambitions.

TIME 2016 Election

7 Things You Need To Know About Kamala Harris

2014 Variety Power Of Women Presented By Lifetime - Show
Kamala Harris is the current attorney general of California. Jason Merritt—Getty Images

Kamala Harris will launch her campaign Tuesday for the Senate seat from California, making her the first candidate in a large potential pool to officially step forward to replace retiring Sen. Barbara Boxer. (California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Monday that he won’t be running.)

Here are 7 important things to know about the current Attorney General of California:

1. As the daughter of an African-American father and an Indian mother, Harris is the first female, first African-American and first Asian-American Attorney General in California’s history.

2. President Obama once called her “the best-looking attorney-general in the country” – and was then forced to apologize for being sexist.

3. When she worked in the Alameda County District Attorney’s office for eight years after law school, Harris specialized in prosecuting child sexual assault cases.

4. She got her undergraduate degree from Howard University, a historically black college in Washington, D.C.

5. She worked on Jesse Jackson’s campaign for President in the 1980s and had a “Jesse Jackson For President” bumper sticker on her car.

6. She was floated as a possible Supreme Court nominee if another seat opened up during Obama’s time in office.

7. Her name means “lotus flower” in Sanskrit.

TIME 2016 Election

Huckabee Knocks the Obamas for Encouraging Their Daughters to Like Beyoncé

Mike Huckabee speaks at the Freedom Summit on April 12, 2014 in New Hampshire. Darren McCollester—Getty Images

Parenting advice and criticism from a potential 2016 presidential candidate

First, it was Beyoncé and Jay Z up for scolding by conservative Republican Mike Huckabee. Now it’s Barack and Michelle Obama‘s turn.

In an interview about his new book, God, Guns, Grits and Gravy, Huckabee tells PEOPLE he doesn’t get how the Obamas can encourage their daughters’ love for Beyoncé. Especially, the former Arkansas governor and Baptist minister says, if the president and first lady ever actually listened to the lyrics to – or seen a performance of Beyoncé’s steamy “Drunk in Love.”

The Obamas “are excellent and exemplary parents in many ways,” Huckabee says.

“That’s the whole point. I don’t understand how on one hand they can be such doting parents and so careful about the intake of everything – how much broccoli they eat and where they go to school and making sure they’re kind of sheltered and shielded from so many things – and yet they don’t see anything that might not be suitable for either a preteen or a teen in some of the lyrical content and choreography of Beyoncé, who has sort of a regular key to the door” of the White House.

Beyoncé, Jay Z and their daughter, Blue Ivy, were at the White House last January for Mrs. Obama’s exclusive 50th birthday bash and the first lady has taken her girls to several Beyoncé concerts.

The singer, criticized in Huckabee’s book for “obnoxious and toxic mental poison in the form of song lyrics” and dance moves “best left for the privacy of her bedroom,” was also featured prominently at the president’s second Inauguration in 2013.

The first lady’s office had no response to Huckabee’s comments.

This article originally appeared on People.com, read the whole story at People.

TIME Immigration

House Republicans Go Big on Immigration Fight

Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-OH) answers questions during a press conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Jan. 7, 2015.
Speaker of the House John Boehner answers questions during a press conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Jan. 7, 2015. Win McNamee—Getty Images

In a series of votes this week, the House GOP will protest nearly every major immigration executive action by President Obama in the past few years, threatening millions of immigrants who came to the country illegally with deportation.

The plan has no chance of passage; enough Democratic and moderate Republican senators have stated their opposition and the White House threatened to veto the bill on Monday. But a week after two-dozen Republicans voted to oust House Speaker John Boehner from his perch, the House GOP leadership has earned a respite of praise from conservatives and its rank-and-file for its approach in opposing the President and funding the Department of Homeland Security past its February 27 deadline.

“Clearly this is where we want to be,” said Florida Republican Rep. Tom Rooney, a member of the Appropriations Committee. “I want [Obama] to veto what we send up there so at least there is a clear distinction between what we think our constituents want to do versus what the president’s willing to do. Who’s responsibility is it now if DHS gets shut down? Is it the person who just vetoed it or is it the Republicans in the House who amended it to take his executive order out? I’d like to have that fight.”

“I voted for Boehner—and I haven’t been a big fan—but to his credit they’ve been reaching out,” said Arizona Republican Rep. Matt Salmon, noting that the 12 vote “toe-hold” another candidate for Speaker received was not due to his conservatives bona fides, but his message of inclusivity. “I think it’s symbolic of where we’re going to be…I think it’s very emblematic of the fact that leadership is actually listening to what we’re saying.”

The House GOP package, expected to be voted on Wednesday, would stop more than Obama’s most recent immigration executive actions temporarily delaying deportations for up to five million undocumented immigrants, including parents of U.S. citizen or legal permanent resident children for at least five years, by rolling back 2011 memos that expanded what immigration officials should consider in deferring deportations. Another amendment would defund a 2012 program that provides similar protection to hundreds of thousands of immigrants brought here illegally as children.

The strategy goes way beyond what was expected—simply, directly challenging the November White House actions—and is more likely to fail. But by voting on the package this week, the GOP leadership has given its members enough time to be on the record with their ultimate pipedream before having to recalibrate. It also may shift the House conservatives’ blame from their leadership to conservatives in the Senate.

“This is an opportunity for some of the people on the Senate side who are itching for a fight, like [Texas Republican Senator] Ted Cruz and others, to show what they can do,” says Salmon. When reminded that it’s clear the new GOP-controlled Senate can’t reach the requisite 60 votes, Rooney replied that it “kind of ticks me off, to be honest with you.”

The moves could further alienate Republicans from a Hispanic population that had been frustrated with a president who delayed his promises last year and oversaw a high level of deportation in his first six-years. However, House and even Senate Republicans have little political incentive to act on issues of Hispanic importance: The party would “probably” have held onto the House even if they lost every Hispanic voter in the midterms, according to a New York Times election analysis, and still have had a “real chance” to take over the Senate. Of course, it’s another story in taking back the White House, which would allow Republicans to roll back Obama’s executive actions with the stroke of a pen.

Boehner said on Tuesday morning that the debate over how to fund DHS is not about immigration, but about the president “acting lawlessly” and violating the “Constitution itself.” He also declined to tip his hand on whether or not he would allow a vote on a DHS funding bill without the aforementioned amendments before the February deadline.

“Our goal here is to fund the Department of Homeland Security,” said Boehner. “Our second goal is to stop the president’s executive overreach.”

Democrats ripped the Republicans’ package as poor policy and politics, noting that it was only a year ago when the House GOP announced its immigration principles, including legal residence and citizenship for children illegally brought to American “through no fault of their own.”

“I mean how do you go from that to this,” said Illinois Democrat Rep. Louis Gutierrez, a vocal immigration reform advocate. “It is much more extreme than anything I expected—and I expect almost anything from Republicans when it comes to immigration,” he added, before wondering aloud how “such a small band of Republicans” could “jeopardize” the party’s national positioning for a bill that wouldn’t become law.

TIME Terrorism

What Those Pentagon Twitter Hackers Posted

The Pentagon
Getty Images

An avalanche of almost-classified info sows confusion

The Pentagon held its breath Monday when Islamic State sympathizers hacked into U.S. Central Command’s Twitter and YouTube accounts and began posting internal U.S. military documents on the Twitter feed.

Could this be another Snowden job? Was any of the material classified? After all, they were posting the names, addresses and phone numbers of senior U.S. military officers.

Within an hour, the Pentagon’s sigh was audible. While there was a lot of official-looking, internal documents posted before both social-media accounts were shut down, none of it appears to have been classified.

 

"FOUO" can be found on many released Pentagon documents
“FOUO” can be found on many released Pentagon documents

Many sported the officious-sounding but non-classified For Official Use Only label.

Monday’s bullet-dodging highlights the U.S. government’s preoccupation with secrecy, and its downside: when nearly everything is classified, it can be harder to protect real secrets.

 

Central Command’s feed was back in operation Tuesday. Twitter

Think of the government’s penchant for secrecy like an iceberg: what’s showing above the water line is that tiny share that’s classified Confidential, Secret and Top Secret.

But underwater—where, strangely, you can’t see—are more than 100 different designations that boil down to “Don’t let the public see this.”

…but its feed still featured the CyberCaliphate avatar. YouTube

For example, the non-profit Project on Government Oversight grumbled last year about the Pentagon inspector general’s routine requirement that any member of the public wishing to see some of its more interesting reports file a formal Freedom of Information Act request. “As anyone familiar with the FOIA process knows, turnaround on a request can take anywhere from a few weeks to a few years,” POGO’s Neil Gordon noted. “So, it’s reasonable to assume that the DoD IG is indeed trying to bury the report to spare the Pentagon and … its … contractors the embarrassing publicity.”

The varying labels—and each agency’s rules for releasing non-classified information—is confusing, as the Obama Administration itself conceded in 2010:

At present, executive departments and agencies (agencies) employ ad hoc, agency-specific policies, procedures, and markings to safeguard and control this information, such as information that involves privacy, security, proprietary business interests, and law enforcement investigations. This inefficient, confusing patchwork has resulted in inconsistent marking and safeguarding of documents, led to unclear or unnecessarily restrictive dissemination policies, and created impediments to authorized information sharing. The fact that these agency-specific policies are often hidden from public view has only aggravated these issues.

That’s why it wants to toss all those agency-specific labels into the trash and designate them all as Controlled Unclassified Information. Perhaps the reduced profusion of almost-classified labels will help reduce confusion like Monday’s (the Pentagon, of course, has its own process underway for all its non-classified technical data). And having the word Unclassified in the designation should make it clear to even cable-news anchors what’s up.

The Administration plans to issue a proposed regulation to funnel all the labels into that single Controlled Unclassified Information designation this spring. It’s slated to be fully operational in 2018.

Obviously, in addition to craving secrecy, the government abhors alacrity.

Read next: Twitter Hacking Gives Pentagon a Black Eye

Listen to the most important stories of the day.

TIME Morning Must Reads

Morning Must Reads: January 13

Capitol
The early morning sun rises behind the US Capitol Building in Washington, DC. Mark Wilson—Getty Images

Paris Attacker Violence-Obsessed

Chérif Kouachi, one of the brothers responsible for the deadly attack on Charlie Hebdo, was obsessed with violence, his mentor has revealed. Farid Benyettou said the pair last spoke two months ago to discuss previous attacks, and called Kouachi “guided by ignorance”

Facebook Predicts Your Personality

Researchers studied how Facebook Likes matched up with people’s own answers on personality tests — as well as those of their family and friends

Hackers Hit the Pentagon

The latest cyberwar skirmish involves an embarrassing breach of U.S. Central Command’s social-media accounts by alleged Islamist hackers

Watch the New Avengers: Age of Ultron Trailer

The second trailer for Marvel’s eagerly awaited Avengers: Age of Ultron has been released, and it’s more sinister than ever. Robert Downey, Jr., Scarlett Johansson, and Samuel L. Jackson, among others, star in the superhero blockbuster, which hits theaters on May 1

Ohio State Wins 1st Playoff-Era Title, Upsetting Oregon 42-20

Ohio State can add the newest version of the national-championship trophy to a case that already has a bunch of the old ones. The Buckeyes’ Cardale Jones led Ohio State past Marcus Mariota and the Ducks 42-20 on Monday nightie Arlington, Texas

Divers Retrieve 2nd Black Box From AirAsia Crash

Divers have retrieved the crashed AirAsia plane’s second black box from the bottom of the Java Sea, giving investigators the essential tools they need to start piecing together what brought Flight 8501 down

1 Person Dies After Smoke Empties D.C. Metro Station

A spokeswoman for the metro system in Washington, D.C., says one person has died after smoke forced the evacuation of the L’Enfant Plaza station on Monday. At least six others were taken to the hospital with injuriesDogs Came to Americas Thousands of Years after Humans

They may be man’s best friend, but new research indicates that dogs arrived in the Americas thousands of years after humans did. According to a recent study, dogs only came to the region about 10,000 years ago

Ford Reveals Stunning New GT

After a nine-year hiatus, the iconic American automobile manufacturer unveiled the latest installation of the prized GT to ecstatic car aficionados at the 2015 North American International Auto Show in Detroit on Monday

Pakistan Executes 7 Militants During John Kerry’s Visit

Pakistani officials oversaw the execution of seven convicted militants across the country on Tuesday morning as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry began the second day of his trip to the South Asian nation aimed at ramping up security and intelligence cooperation

Apatow to Cosby: ‘Go in Your Mansion and Disappear’

The director has mostly kept his criticisms of comedian Bill Cosby, whom dozens of women have accused of sexual assault, to a 140-character minimum. But he elaborated recently to say, among other beliefs, “I absolutely would like to see him in jail”

A Plane from New York to London Almost Went Supersonic

A British Airways flight traveling from New York to London made the trip in just 5 hours and 16 minutes at ground speeds of up to 1,200 km/h (745 mph)—just short of the sonic barrier—thanks to unusually strong winds

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