Satellite images show ‘bomb cyclone’ churning off California coast

Just In | The Hill 

Story at a glance

The National Weather Service is warning Californians of a powerful atmospheric river set to bring flooding, mud slides, wind gusts topping 50 mph and “extremely heavy snow rates” to the mountains.

The atmospheric river is connected to a rapidly intensifying low pressure system that will grow strong enough to be classified as a “bomb cyclone.”

Satellite imagery shows the beginnings of a “bomb cyclone” formation over the Pacific Ocean and an atmospheric river swirling toward the San Francisco Bay Area.

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — The National Weather Service is warning Californians Wednesday of a powerful atmospheric river set to bring flooding, mud slides, wind gusts topping 50 mph and “extremely heavy snow rates” to the mountains.

The atmospheric river is connected to a rapidly intensifying low pressure system that will grow strong enough to be classified as a “bomb cyclone.”


What is a ‘bomb cyclone?’

“As we prepare for the incoming weather, lets take a moment to pause and look at the visible imagery and marvel at what Mother Nature is sending our way,” the National Weather Service Bay Area wrote Tuesday afternoon.

Satellite imagery shows the beginnings of a “bomb cyclone” formation over the Pacific Ocean and an atmospheric river swirling toward the San Francisco Bay Area.

UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain said, thankfully, the system will remain far offshore.

A satellite image shows a bomb cyclone over the Pacific Ocean on Jan. 3, 2023. (Image courtesy NOAA)

“A rapidly deepening surface low — i.e., meteorological ‘bomb cyclone’ — will remain well offshore, but the associated warm and cold fronts will bring widespread heavy rain and strong winds to NorCal later Wednesday,” Swain wrote.

(Image courtesy NWS Bay Area)

“This low will generate a strong cold front (associated with another very moist atmospheric river). In fact, this storm will also have an unusually well-defined warm front (at least by California standards),” Swain wrote.

The brunt of the storm will pummel the San Francisco Bay Area on Wednesday. “The storm will rage across the entire Bay Area. Rain will become very, very heavy in mid-afternoon,” KRON4 Meteorologist Lawrence Karnow said.


Here’s when the next atmospheric river will flood SF Bay Area

“We haven’t seen anything like this in quite some time,” Karnow said.

The National Weather Service issued Flood Watches and High Wind Warnings that will be in effect between 4 a.m. Wednesday through 10 a.m. Thursday.

The newest storm in California’s “parade of storms” should not be underestimated, a NWS forecaster wrote. Wednesday will be brutal.


‘Bomb cyclone’ to dump inches of rain on Southern California; evacuation warnings issued

“This will likely be one of the most impactful systems on a widespread scale that this meteorologist has seen in a long while,” wrote one NWS forecaster. “The impacts will include widespread flooding, roads washing out, hillside collapsing, trees down, widespread power outages, immediate disruption to commerce and the worst of all, likely loss of human life.”

Wind gusts are forecast to blow between 20 and 70 mph. People should avoid being outside in forested areas and around trees when the storm hits, officials with the National Weather Service Bay Area said.

The NWS wrote, “Damaging winds will blow down trees and power lines. Saturated soils will allow for trees to topple more easily during this prolonged wind event. The strongest winds will be during the cold frontal passage late Wednesday afternoon through early Thursday morning.”

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Biden says it’s his ‘intention’ to visit US-Mexico border amid historic crisis

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

President Biden says it’s his “intention” to visit the U.S-Mexico border amid a record high number of border crossings, according to a report.

Biden made the comments on Wednesday at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, saying that it’s his “intention” to visit the border during his trip to the North American Leaders’ Summit on Jan. 9-10, which will include meetings with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

The visit would mark Biden’s first trip to the border during his presidency.

People familiar with discussions surrounding the potential visit told the WSJ that Biden will not be making a policy announcement if he visits the border.

BORDER ENCOUNTERS EXCEED 617,000 SO FAR IN FISCAL YEAR 2023, A RECORD HIGH

The potential trip comes amid a record-breaking crisis at the southern border, with 617, 250 total migrant encounters occurring so far in FY 2023 as of Dec. 29, 2022, according to Customs and Border Protection sources, adding that there’s an average of 6,858 encounters per day.

In FY 2022, migrant encounters reached 2.3 million.

On Dec. 6, Biden said that “there are more important things going on” when asked why he’d visit a border state but not the U.S. -Mexico border itself.

The Biden administration has pushed for Title 42 – the pandemic-era policy which allows immigration officers to quickly remove migrants from the country on the basis of public health – to be lifted.

WHITE HOUSE CLAIMS PRESIDENT BIDEN HAS BEEN TO THE BORDER DESPITE NO RECORD OF ANY VISIT

After U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan ruled in favor of immigration advocates and gave Title 42 an end date of Dec. 21, the Supreme Court temporarily halted the policy’s termination.

Without providing evidence, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in November that Biden has been to the border.

“We know the president’s never been down to the border. The possible next speaker says that he wants [Biden] to go with him. So, is he going to?” Fox News’ Peter Doocy asked. 

“He’s been there. He’s been to the border. And since he took office…,” Jean-Pierre said. 

“When did he go to the border?,” Doocy responded, which led to Jean-Pierre attempting to evade the question and blame Republicans for their alleged unwillingness to work with Biden on the issue.

“They’re doing political stunts. That’s what they want to do. That’s how they want to take care of the situation,” Jean-Pierre said. 

Fox News’ Bradford Betz, Griff Jenkins, Chris Pandolfo, Paul Best, Adam Shaw, and Greg Wehner contributed to this report.

 

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Southwest is giving 25,000 frequent flier points worth $300 to passengers impacted by the airline’s holiday travel meltdown

Business Insider 

Passengers line up at the Southwest ticket desk at San Francisco International Airport on December 26, amid widespread delays and cancellations for the airline.

A Bank of America analyst estimates Southwest’s flight debacle will cost the airline up to $700 million, CNBC reports.
The airline is currently offering affected passengers 25,000 frequent flier points valued at over $300.
The offer has caused long wait times for some passengers trying to claim points, reports say.

As Southwest Airlines continues to address its costly holiday travel meltdown, qualifying passengers are being offered 25,000 frequent flier points in addition to refunds, reimbursements, and vouchers.

Passengers whose flights were disrupted between Dec. 24 and Jan. 2 received an email on Tuesday from Southwest CEO Bob Jordan apologizing for the airline’s widespread flight cancellations and offering 25,000 Rapid Rewards points valued at over $300, the Wall Street Journal reported

“On behalf of Southwest, I want to let you know we’re so sorry,” Jordan wrote in the letter. “I know that no amount of apologies can undo your experience.”

It will cost Southwest more than frequent flier points to correct the mistakes made during December 2022, which left thousands stranded at airports over the holidays thanks to winter storms and the airline’s outdated scheduling technology that thwarted staffing. 

The company could end up paying between $600 million and $700 million, Bank of America airline stock analyst Andrew Didora told CNBC. The estimate includes both lost revenue from refunds and reimbursements for expenses like hotels and rental cars, CNBC reported. 

According to Jordan’s email, the points are being offered as a “gesture of goodwill” and are also available to passengers who requested a refund or travel reimbursement.

The Points Guy reporter Zach Griff tweeted on Tuesday that he was among those who received the email, noting that the points will come in addition to nearly $500 he already received in compensation in the form of refunds, reimbursements, and vouchers. 

Although it’s unclear exactly how many travelers experienced significant delays or cancellations during the meltdown, those hoping to claim points were put on a virtual waitlist on Tuesday due to a high volume of traffic, according to Griff.

—Zach Griff (@_ZachGriff) January 3, 2023

While Griff reported a 15-minute wait to receive points, another traveler told WSJ he had an estimated wait time of over an hour to redeem the 75,000 points offered to his party of three.

In the email, Jordan reminded recipients that Rapid Rewards points don’t expire, have no blackout dates, and can be used on Southwest gift cards.

 

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Vietnamese boy, 10, dead after falling into 115-foot concrete hole

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Vietnamese authorities announced Wednesday that the 10-year-old boy trapped down a 115-foot deep concrete hole since New Year’s Eve is dead, according to reports. 

The boy, identified as Thai Ly Hao Nam, initially was heard crying for help when he slipped through a 10-inch diameter shaft at a bridge construction site in the Dong Thap province Saturday morning while searching for scrap metal with friends. 

Despite oxygen being pumped down into the hole amid efforts to reach him, the boy stopped interacting with rescuers Monday. Crews lowered down a camera to try to pinpoint his location. 

The BBC reported Wednesday the boy was cut while rescuers were trying to raise the pillar. 

VIETNAM RESCUERS RACE TO SAVE BOY TRAPPED DOWN 115-FOOT CONCRETE HOLE SINCE NEW YEAR’S EVE 

Doan Tan Buu, deputy chief of the southern Vietnam province, also said not enough oxygen could reach the 10-year-old, who had already suffered multiple injuries. 

“We had prioritized the rescue of the boy. However, the conditions mean it is impossible the boy has survived,” he said.

The official said he consulted with medical experts before declaring the boy’s death Wednesday, but crews would still work to recover the 10-year-old’s body as soon as possible for proper burial, AFP reported. The official added that doing so would be a “very difficult task.” 

Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh on Monday tapped federal rescuers to join local authorities’ efforts to save the boy, AFP reported. 

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Hundreds of soldiers and engineering experts were mobilized Tuesday to try to save him, according to the BBC. Crews tried drilling to soften the soil surrounding the pillar to attempt to bring the pillar upward out of the ground. They also lowered down a 62-foot pipe to try to remove mud and water to soften pressure around the pillar.

 

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Accusations of Hidden Fees Cost Grubhub $3.5M to Settle Lawsuit

TheStreet 

A Grubhub spokesperson said the settlement was ‘in the best interest of our business.’

No one likes being lured in by the prospect of cheap burrito and $0 delivery only to start ringing up one’s order and find a $4 “service fee,” $2 “small order fee” and $1 “bag fee” tacked on to one’s final order.

The practice is common not just on food delivery apps but everything from plane, bus and amusement park ticket-booking platforms to cable bills and car rentals. Last fall, President Joe Biden promised to crack down on hidden ‘junk fees’ and ordered the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to issue new guidance for banks in particular.

The push for disclosure of the total price of whatever it is one’s buying to be more transparent is already starting to take effect. Even before Biden’s initiative, Marriott  (MAR) – Get Free Report became the first major hotel chain to agree to disclose the final cost of stays upfront amid threat of a lawsuit from the office of the Pennsylvania Attorney General.

A $3.5 Million Settlement For Grubhub

The latest company to land in hot water over hidden fees is food delivery platform Grubhub. Last week, the app agreed to pay $3.5 million to settle a consumer protection lawsuit accusing it of deceiving customers over the final cost of food orders.

Filed in the District of Columbia last March, the lawsuit took particular aim at Grubhub promising some customers in its subscription tier “free” delivery and then taking on service and small-order fees.

“Grubhub used every trick in the book to manipulate customers into paying far more than they owed,” D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine said in a statement of the lawsuit. “Grubhub’s hidden fees and misleading marketing tactics were designed to get the company an extra buck at the expense of D.C. residents — but we’re not letting them get away with it.”

When it comes to the $3.5 settlement, $2.7 million will go toward customers affected by the hidden fees (depending on frequency of platform use, one will get either $4.50, $7 or $10 deposited into one’s account as a spending credit) while the remaining $800,000 is a civil penalty paid to the district.

The settlement also requires Grubhub to “significantly change its business practices” so that any additional fees are seen not just at check-out but when customers are picking out dishes. 

Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images

The Fight Against Hidden Fees Is Just Beginning

At least for orders made in D.C., taxes and service fees also need to be clearly itemized so that customers can see upfront how much it costs them to use the platform instead of picking it up themselves. The platform also needs to stop advertising “free delivery” to Grubhub+ subscribers if it only applies to certain restaurants or orders.

Back in November, Grubhub agreed to a much smaller $125,000 settlement with the Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General over similar accusations.

While a Grubhub spokesperson has been telling media outlets that the “matter is now resolved” because “settling this lawsuit is in the best interest of our business,” the large settlement for D.C. users is likely to ignite similar accusations across the industry as both regulator and public anger over extra fees reaches a head during a looming recession.

“These so called ‘junk fees’ are not just an irritant — they can weaken market competition, raise costs for consumers and businesses, and hit the most vulnerable Americans the hardest,” Biden’s office said at the time of its October crackdown.

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US reopens visa, consular services at Cuban embassy for first time since ‘Havana Syndrome’ incidents

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

The U.S. Embassy in Cuba has resumed offering visa and consular services Wednesday for the first time in five years following a series of unexplained health incidents tied to an illness dubbed the “Havana Syndrome.” 

The embassy confirmed this week it will begin processing immigrant visas, with a priority placed on permits to reunite Cubans with family in the U.S., and others like the diversity visa lottery. 

The resumption comes amid the greatest migratory flight from Cuba in decades, which has placed pressure on the Biden administration to open more legal pathways to Cubans and start a dialogue with the Cuban government, despite a historically tense relationship. 

In late December, U.S. authorities reported stopping Cubans 34,675 times along the Mexico border in November, up 21% from 28,848 times in October. 

FLORIDA SEES HUNDREDS OF MIGRANTS IN BOAT LANDINGS OVER WEEKEND, SHERIFF CALLS IT ‘MASS MIGRATION CRISIS’ 

Visa and consular services were closed on the island in 2017 after embassy staff were afflicted in a series of health incidents, alleged sonic attacks that remain largely unexplained. 

CUBAN EXODUS TO THE UNITED STATES IS THE LARGEST IN HISTORY AMID ECONOMIC CRISIS, GOVERNMENT CRACKDOWNS 

The FBI in 2021 called the illness, dubbed the “Havana Syndrome,” a “top priority” as around 200 U.S. diplomats, officials and family members overseas have suffered from the series of “anomalous health incidents.”

A government-commissioned report released by the National Academies of Sciences in 2020, said the illness is “most likely” the result of direct microwave radiation. 

The working theory, established by a committee of 19 experts in medical and related fields, pinpointed “directed, pulsed radio frequency energy” as “the most plausible mechanism” to have triggered the wave of maladies. 

Fox News’ Peter Aitken and Hollie McKay and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

 

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Biden administration launches global strategy to boost women’s access to work, education

International | The Hill 

The Biden administration on Wednesday introduced its first-ever strategy on global women’s economic security, an effort to boost women’s participation in the workforce across the world.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who helped announce the strategy at the State Department, said the administration’s effort is aimed at breaking down barriers that stand in the way of women’s full economic participation. 

It comes at a time when Afghan women are coming under some of the most repressive restrictions by the ruling Taliban, which has barred women from work and school based on their conservative, Islamic-fundamentalist views.

“We’re committed to standing up for women wherever their rights are threatened, including in Afghanistan as, unfortunately, we continue to see deepen, and get worse,” Blinken said. 

The strategy was devised between 12 U.S. government departments and agencies, the secretary said, and was informed by consultations with more than 200 civil society actors and external stakeholders from more than 30 countries. 

Among four priority areas of work include efforts to “dismantle” societal, legal and regulatory barriers that prohibit or limit women’s participation in the work force, Blinken said. 

“The strategy that we put in place is focused on supporting women and girls in all of their diversity, including the women who most often face the greatest and highest barriers such as those from marginalized backgrounds, from religious minorities, those with disabilities, LGBTQ+ persons,” the secretary said. 

Blinken cited data from the World Bank that only 12 countries have legal protections in place that give women equal economic standing with men, including through equal pay and legal protection in the workplace.  

“So there is a huge amount of work to be done there,” he said.

“We’ll encourage countries to repeal discriminatory laws; we’ll advocate for reforms that promote gender equality, in part by showing the opportunity posed by closing these gender gaps.” 

Other priorities in the strategy include supporting access to and the funding for child care and elder care, promoting mentorship and training programs for women to encourage entrepreneurship and working to increase women’s representation in industry leadership positions, including as CEOs and board members. 

Jennifer Klein, assistant to the president and director of the White House Gender Policy Council, said that dismantling barriers for women to enter the workforce could benefit 2.4 billion working-age women. 

“Studies show that closing gender gaps in the workforce would add between $12 [trillion] and $28 trillion in global GDP over a decade,” she said. 

“And expanding women’s access to markets and finance fosters entrepreneurship and innovation, with estimates suggesting that gender parity and entrepreneurship could add between $5 [trillion] to $6 trillion in net value to the global economy.”

Klein was appointed to her role when President Biden established the Gender Policy Council by executive order in March 2021.

She said the strategy announced on Wednesday builds on $300 million commitments the administration made to the Gender Equity and Equality Action Fund, announced at the United Nations Generation Equality Forum in Paris in July 2021. 

“Women’s full participation in the economy is essential to economic growth and the realization of human rights and fundamental freedoms for half the population,” Klein said. 

 

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Israeli ultranationalist minister visits Jerusalem holy site

JERUSALEM (AP) — An ultranationalist Israeli Cabinet minister on Tuesday visited a flashpoint Jerusalem holy site for the first time since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s new far-right government took office last week. The visit drew fierce condemnation from across the Muslim world and a strong rebuke from the United States.

The visit fueled fears of unrest as Palestinian militant groups threatened to act in response. On Tuesday evening, the Israeli military said Gaza militants tried to fire a rocket into southern Israel but the projectile fell short and hit in the Hamas-controlled territory.

Netanyahu attempted to play down the incident, saying it was in line with longstanding understandings at the disputed holy site. But the visit by National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir unnerved both enemies and allies that have expressed strong misgivings about the far-right makeup of the new government.

Ben-Gvir, a West Bank settler leader who draws inspiration from a racist rabbi, entered the site known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary flanked by a large contingent of police officers. His plans to visit, announced earlier in the week, had drawn threats from Gaza’s Hamas militant group.

“The Israeli government won’t surrender to a murderous organization, to a vile terrorist organization,” Ben-Gvir, known for his anti-Arab rhetoric and provocative stunts, said in a video clip taken during the visit.

Describing the Temple Mount as “the most important place for the Jewish people,” he decried what he called “racist discrimination” against Jewish visits to the site. With the Dome of the Rock in the background and waving his fingers at the camera, he said the visits would continue.

The site is the holiest site in Judaism, home to the ancient biblical Temples. Today, it houses the Al Aqsa Mosque, the third-holiest site in Islam. Since Israel captured the site in 1967, Jews have been allowed to visit but not pray there.

Ben-Gvir has long called for greater Jewish access to the holy site. Palestinians consider the mosque a national symbol and view such visits as provocative and as a potential precursor to Israel seizing control over the compound. Most rabbis forbid Jews from praying on the site, but there has been a growing movement in recent years of Jews who support worship there.

The site has been the scene of frequent clashes between Palestinian protesters and Israeli security forces, most recently in April last year.

Although Tuesday’s visit passed without incident, U.S. Ambassador Tom Nides said he “has been very clear in conversations with the Israeli government on the issue of preserving the status quo in Jerusalem’s holy sites. Actions that prevent that are unacceptable.”

The United Arab Emirates, which established full diplomatic ties with Israel in 2020, “strongly condemned the storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque courtyard by an Israeli minister under the protection of Israeli forces.” It called on Israel to “halt serious and provocative violations taking place there.”

Bahrain, which also recognized Israel at the same time, did not immediately acknowledge the incident.

Saudi Arabia, a powerful Arab country with which Netanyahu hopes to establish similar ties, condemned the Israeli minister’s action, as did statements from Kuwait and Qatar. None of the three countries have official diplomatic ties with Israel.

Turkey, which only recently re-established full diplomatic ties with Israel, condemned what it said was “the provocative action” by Ben-Gvir. It urged Israel “to act responsibly,” saying such visits could “cause an escalation in the region.”

Israel’s neighbor Jordan, which acts as custodian of the contested shrine, condemned Ben-Gvir’s visit “in the strongest terms” and summoned Israel’s ambassador to lodge a protest.

Egypt, another key Arab ally of Israel’s, warned against “negative repercussions of such measures on security and stability in the occupied territories and the region, and on the future of the peace process.”

Tensions at the disputed compound have fueled past rounds of violence. A visit by then-opposition leader Ariel Sharon in September 2000 helped spark clashes that became the second Palestinian uprising. Clashes between Israeli security forces and Palestinian demonstrators in and around the site fueled an 11-day war with Hamas in 2021.

Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem said Ben-Gvir’s visit was “a continuation of the Zionist’s occupation aggression on our sacred places and war on our Arab identity.”

“Our Palestinian people will continue defending their holy places and Al Aqsa Mosque,” he said.

Lebanon’s Hezbollah group, which fought Israel in a monthlong war in 2006, said the visit threatened to “blow up the region.”

Responding to the outcry, Netanyahu late Tuesday said Israel remains committed to “strictly maintaining the status quo” at the site. “The claim that a change has been made in the status quo is without foundation.”

Netanyahu returned to office last week for his sixth term as prime minister, leading the most religious, right-wing government in the country’s history. Its goals include expanding West Bank settlements and annexing the occupied territory.

Israel captured the Old City of Jerusalem, with its holy sites to three monotheistic faiths, along with the rest of east Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinians seek those territories for a future independent state, with east Jerusalem as capital. Israel annexed east Jerusalem in a move unrecognized by most of the international community and considers the city its undivided, eternal capital.

The competing claims to the site lie at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Ben-Gvir is head of the ultranationalist religious Jewish Power faction and has a history of inflammatory remarks and actions against Palestinians. He was once convicted of incitement and supporting a Jewish terrorist group, but in his new job now commands Israel’s police force.

A day earlier, opposition leader Yair Lapid, who until last week was Israel’s prime minister, warned that Ben-Gvir’s intended visit would “lead to violence that will endanger human lives and cost human lives.”

His visit came following months of mounting tensions between Israelis and Palestinians.

Early on Tuesday, Palestinian officials said a 15-year-old boy was killed by Israeli army fire near the occupied West Bank city of Bethlehem. The Israeli military said its forces had shot at people throwing firebombs toward troops.

On Monday, the Israeli rights group B’Tselem said 2022 was the deadliest year for Palestinians since 2004, a period of intense violence that came during a Palestinian uprising. It said nearly 150 Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire in the West Bank and east Jerusalem.

The Israeli military has been conducting near-daily raids into Palestinian cities and towns since a spate of Palestinian attacks against Israelis killed 19 last spring. A fresh wave of attacks killed at least another nine Israelis in the fall.

The Israeli army says most of the Palestinians killed have been militants. But stone-throwing youths protesting the incursions and others not involved in confrontations have also been killed.

___

Associated Press writers Jon Gambrell in Rome, Bassem Mroue in Beirut and Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey, contributed to this report.

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Nelson Mandela’s granddaughter defends Prince Harry, Meghan Markle’s use of legend’s quotes in new docuseries

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Nelson Mandela’s granddaughter Ndileka Mandela isn’t sure why people are “making a mountain out of a mole hill” over Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s use of the late social justice activist’s quotes.

Prince Harry and Markle released their second project with Netflix Dec. 31. “Live to Lead” profiles several social justice leaders, including U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, climate activist Greta Thunberg, Gloria Steinem and lawyer Bryan Stevenson.

However, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex credited Nelson Mandela as the inspiration for the docuseries.

Fox News Digital can confirm that Ndileka hasn’t criticized Markle or Harry for the use of her grandfather in the opening to the show.

MEGHAN MARKLE, PRINCE HARRY’S DOC SLAMMED BY EXPERTS: THEY’RE ‘ONLY GIVEN A PLATFORM’ DUE TO PRINCE’S DNA

“I’ve watched the first two episodes of this ‘Live to Lead,’” Ndileka told Fox News Digital. “I honestly don’t find anything wrong with them using that opening thing inspirational with a quote of granddad.

“I just think that people are making a … mountain out of a mole hill, and they’re wanting to persecute Meghan and Harry for no reason, honestly,” she added. “I mean, Meghan has always been an activist, and this is in her activism work which my grandfather was, he was, a social justice activist through and through.”

Ndileka emphasized that Nelson Mandela launched his political career through “social activism” and compared the journey to Prince Harry and Markle’s.

“And his enter point into politics was through social activism, which is exactly what Meghan and Harry are doing. Like I said early on, a lot of people use granddad’s quotes, and nobody has been made such a big rah-rah as they are making out of Harry and Meghan using this quotation.”

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Netflix dropped its first docuseries with the Duke and Duchess of Sussex Dec. 8.

“Harry & Meghan” is a six-part series that told the couple’s story as working royals and explained why they decided to step back from their senior roles.

Markle became a working royal after marrying Harry in 2018, and they announced they were stepping back from their royal roles in January 2020. Buckingham Palace later confirmed the couple was resigning as working royals in February 2021.

“The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have confirmed to Her Majesty The Queen that they will not be returning as working members of The Royal Family,” the palace said at the time.

 

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James ‘Buster’ Corley of Dave & Buster’s chain dead at 72

US Top News and Analysis 

In this article

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Signage is displayed in the middle of a air hockey table at a Dave & Buster’s Entertainment location in Pelham, New York.
Timothy Fadek | Bloomberg | Getty Images

James “Buster” Corley, a co-founder of the restaurant and entertainment chain Dave & Buster’s, has died. He was 72.

Corley died Monday in a Dallas hospital after police were called to his home in the Texas city, according to his family and police. Dave & Buster’s announced Corley’s death in a statement on Twitter on Wednesday, but its cause and manner were still being reviewed by local authorities.

The idea for Dave & Buster’s was born in the late 1970s when Corley was running a restaurant in Dallas near a business operated by David Corriveau that offered entertainment and games for adults, according to the company’s website. The pair teamed up to open their first establishment offering dining and games in 1982 and the business has since grown to have scores of locations across the United States.

Police say officers responded to a shooting call at Corley’s home in east Dallas Monday and found a man with “an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound” who was taken to the hospital and later died.

The Dallas Police Department declined to name the victim in the shooting, citing a policy against identifying people who may have died by suicide. Officers are continuing to investigate the death.

Corley’s daughter, Kate Corley, confirmed his death to WFAA-TV but asked for privacy for her family. She told the broadcaster that Corley recently suffered a stroke that “caused severe damage to the communication and personality part of his brain.”

The Dallas County Medical Examiner’s Office did not immediately respond to questions about Corley’s death Wednesday. The office told the Dallas Morning News Tuesday evening that his death is still being examined.

Corriveau died in 2015 at the age of 63.

If you or someone you know is in crisis, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255.

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