The New York Times: Οι τελευταίες ημέρες των εκλογών στις ΗΠΑ και οι τελευταίες από τον πόλεμο στη Γάζα – Μην θυμώνετε τα κοράκια – Θα μπορούσαν τα ρατσιστικά σχόλια σε μια συγκέντρωση του Τραμπ να βλάψουν την εκστρατεία του; – Το Ισραήλ κινείται να απαγορεύσει την υπηρεσία του ΟΗΕ που βοηθά τους κατοίκους της Γάζας – Τα στρατεύματα της Βόρειας Κορέας βρίσκονται τώρα στη Ρωσία – Κλιματική κρίση: Η Βρετανία δοκιμάζει «μηδενικούς λογαριασμούς» στέγασης, ειδοποιήσεις για περιόδους φθηνής ενέργειας και άλλα πειράματα, καθώς η χώρα στοχεύει να μετατοπίσει την ηλεκτρική ενέργεια της χώρας σύστημα μακριά από τα ορυκτά καύσιμα έως το 2030 – Ο Jasveen Sangha έτριψε τους αγκώνες με διασημότητες και ταξίδεψε στην Ισπανία, την Κίνα και τα Ηνωμένα Αραβικά Εμιράτα. Όμως, στο απίθανο σπίτι της στο Βόρειο Χόλιγουντ, λένε οι εισαγγελείς, κατασκεύαζε, αποθήκευε και διένειμε παράνομα ναρκωτικά, συμπεριλαμβανομένης της κεταμίνης που συνδέεται με τον θάνατο του Μάθιου Πέρι. Η Sangha είναι τώρα στη φυλακή εν αναμονή της δίκης – Μην θυμώνετε τα κοράκια

A man in a suit holds his right fist up as he stands on a stage in front of Trump supporters.
The comedian Tony Hinchcliffe has a history of racist jokes. Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

Could racist comments at a Trump rally hurt his campaign?

In the closing days of the 2024 campaign, Donald Trump and his allies have sought to tamp down criticism of inflammatory, racist remarks by speakers at a Trump rally at Madison Square Garden in New York City, including a comedian’s reference to Puerto Rico as “a floating island of garbage.”

In a statement, a senior adviser to the campaign disavowed that comment — a rare break from the typical Trump ethos of never apologizing, never admitting error and trying to ignore controversy. (Trump did not, for instance, distance himself from other remarks about Black people, Latinos, Jews, Palestinians and women.)

It is one of a few signs that the Trump campaign is worried that their opponents’ descriptions of him as a racist and a fascist may be breaking through to segments of voters. In comments to reporters, Vice President Kamala Harris seized on the remarks. Trump, she said, “fans the fuel of hate and division, and that’s why people are exhausted with him.”

The view from Democrats: Harris campaign aides and close allies are growing cautiously optimistic about her chances of victory, saying the race is shifting in her favor.

Related: As Trump’s rhetoric grows more extreme, prominent Democrats like Michelle Obama say that Harris is being held to a double standard by voters and the media.

Three soldiers stand near a large metal security gate, which has its top half covered in barbed wire on the opposite side.
Israeli soldiers closing a gate after trucks carrying humanitarian aid entered the Gaza Strip. Tsafrir Abayov/Associated Press

Israel moves to ban the U.N. agency that helps Gazans

The Israeli Parliament approved a bill yesterday that would ban UNRWA, the main U.N. agency aiding Palestinians, from operating in the country. It was not immediately clear how or when the bill would be applied, if at all.

Allies including the U.S., Britain, France and Germany have urged Israel not to ban the agency, saying that it does vital work in running schools and hospitals and in distributing food and vaccines in the Gaza Strip, which is in the midst of a humanitarian disaster.

UNRWA has long been criticized by Israeli officials, but that disapproval has intensified. Israel’s government said that 19 employees participated in the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack last year; U.N. investigators later cleared 10 employees and fired nine others because of possible involvement.

U.S. response: “If UNWRA goes away, you will see civilians — including children, including babies — not be able to get access to food and water and medicine that they need to live,” a State Department spokesman said. “And we find that, frankly, unacceptable.”

Related: The U.N. human rights chief said last week that Israel’s conduct in the Gaza Strip might amount to crimes against humanity.

In other news from the region:

Envoys from Israel, Egypt, the U.S. and Qatar renewed cease-fire talks in Qatar. Little progress was expected before the U.S. election.More than 50 people were killed and more than 100 wounded in Israeli strikes on Lebanon’s Baalbek district.Experts say that Israel is increasingly dictating events in the Middle East, with the U.S. relegated to the role of support act.More than 55 Israel soldiers have been killed in the Gaza Strip this month, the deadliest month of this year for the military.The Israeli military said that its forces had withdrawn from a hospital in Gaza after a three-day raid during which Palestinian health officials said that health workers were detained and two children died.
A military vehicle drives on a road between destroyed buildings under a sky with scattered clouds.
A Ukrainian military vehicle in the Kursk region, in August.  David Guttenfelder for The New York Times

North Korean troops are now in Russia

The U.S. warned that North Korean soldiers were moving toward Russia’s western Kursk region, which Ukraine invaded in August, as Ukrainian forces braced for what they said could be imminent assaults involving the new troops. The Pentagon said that North Korea had now sent about 10,000 soldiers to train in eastern Russia.

Bombs against cities: Russian forces have deployed glide bombs to pound Ukrainian frontline positions during the war. But now, major cities that were seen as out of reach of the weapons are increasingly being struck.

MORE TOP NEWS
In the foreground a person shovels dirt in a small garden, while in the distance rows of power-plant cooling towers stand against a silver-blue sky.
Andrew Testa for The New York Times
Climate crisis: Britain is trying “zero bills” housing, alerts on periods of cheap energy and other experiments as the country aims to shift the nation’s electricity system away from fossil fuels by 2030.
Philippines: Former President Rodrigo Duterte said he took “full legal responsibility” for his so-called war on drugs that left thousands dead.
Japan: After the Liberal Democratic Party lost its majority in parliamentary elections, questions are being raised about its economic policies.
Auto industry: Volkswagen could shut down as many as three factories in Germany, as it seeks to regain an edge amid increased competition from China.
Nature: More than a third of the world’s tree species are threatened with extinction, according to a comprehensive assessment.

News From Europe

France: Gérard Depardieu’s trial on charges of sexual assault has been postponed until March, because of his ill health.
Hard right: Tommy Robinson, the British anti-immigrant agitator, was sentenced to 18 months in jail for ignoring a court order to stop making false claims about a Syrian refugee.
Italy: Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is battling a court ruling that has upended her plan to send migrants to a detention center in Albania.
Britain: The Labour Party suspended a lawmaker after a video appeared to show him hitting a man repeatedly.
SPORTS NEWS
SoccerErik ten Hag has been fired as Manchester United manager.
Tennis: Maria Sharapova will be inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame, a selection that comes with controversy.
Formula 1Carlos Sainz’s Mexico Grand Prix win pushes Ferrari closer to a “perfect goodbye.”
MORNING READ
Jasveen Sangha, with blond hair, poses for a photo with a red fur coat.
Jojo Korsh/BFA.com/Shutterstock

Jasveen Sangha rubbed elbows with celebrities and traveled to Spain, China and the United Arab Emirates. But at her unglamorous home in North Hollywood, prosecutors say, she manufactured, stored and distributed illegal drugs, including the ketamine linked to the death of Matthew Perry. Sangha is now in jail awaiting trial. Read more about the case.

ARTS AND IDEAS
Crows sit on lines. The background is dark.
Alana Paterson for The New York Times

Don’t anger the crows

Crows are ferociously intelligent. They can mimic human speech, use tools and gather for what seem to be funeral rites when another crow dies or is killed. They can identify and remember faces, even among large crowds.

And crows can also harbor resentment for longer than you might expect. When a murder (or group) of crows singles out a person as dangerous, its wrath can be passed along well beyond an individual crow’s life span — creating, in short, multigenerational grudges.

Gene Carter, a computer specialist in Seattle, saw crows encroaching on a robin’s nest in his backyard and launched a rake into the air. For the better part of a year, he said, the crows would scream at him or divebomb him. Eventually, they even learned to identify his bus — and to wait for him at the bus stop. (The harassment stopped only when he moved.)

Read more about the fury of crows.

RECOMMENDATIONS
A bowl of short, tubular pasta covered in a green sauce, like a pesto. A fork sits under the bowl.
Gentl and Hyers for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero.

Cook: This blended kale pasta sauce is luxurious and near creamy

Antonis Tsagronis
Antonis Tsagronis
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