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‘The Crown’ star Claire Foy says she had internal parasites for ‘at least five years’

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

By Jack Guy, CNN

(CNN) — Claire Foy has revealed that she had to change her diet after finding out that she was housing some unwanted guests.

Speaking on the “Table Manners” podcast on Wednesday, the “The Crown” star told hosts Jessie and Lennie Ware that she had given up drinking caffeine, before going on to explain why.

“Quite a few years ago, I had parasites. Gross,” she said.

“I kept losing weight and I didn’t know what was going on,” said Foy, 41, who said she thinks she picked up the parasites in Morocco, and had them for “at least five years” before she found out.

“They travel as a pair, I got told by the doctor. Gross, absolutely rank. It’s disgusting,” said Foy, who is best known for playing Queen Elizabeth II in the hit Netflix series “The Crown,” as well as for roles in the BBC dramas “Wolf Hall” and “A Very British Scandal.”

She then made changes to her diet to treat the parasites, she said, as she “didn’t want to take really hardcore antibiotics.”

“I took all this little gross stuff, and part of that was giving up caffeine,” she said, admitting that it wasn’t easy to do so, as someone who used to drink “at least 15 cups of tea a day.”

Foy went on to reveal that she also restricts her diet due to an autoimmune condition.

“This is my big secret, I feel like I’m in ‘The Traitors’ or something, and I’m letting everyone know that I’m related to someone,” she joked.

“I don’t actually eat gluten or sugar … except when I go out for dinner.”

Foy said that she is “very strict but I love falling off the wagon when I’m out for dinner,” adding that she isn’t allergic.

“It doesn’t have an impact on me. It’s just because I have an autoimmune condition, so I should avoid anything which causes more inflammation,” she said.

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Word of the Week: Jeffrey Epstein was obsessed with building a ‘harem’

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“Harem” comes from the Arabic “haram

By Harmeet Kaur, CNN

(CNN) — A day after meeting with Jeffrey Epstein in 2013, billionaire Richard Branson sent Epstein an email gushing about their time together.

“It was really nice seeing you yesterday,” he wrote on September 11 that year. “The boys in Watersports can’t stop speaking about it! Any time you’re in the area would love to see you. As long as you bring your harem!”

Virgin Group, the sprawling business empire that Branson founded, said that Branson was using Epstein’s term for a group of adult women who worked for him, and that if he knew the full picture at the time, he wouldn’t have used the word or been in contact with Epstein. But though Branson’s email exchange has made headlines recently, it’s hardly the only mention of a “harem” in the Epstein files. Epstein, it seems, was obsessed with the idea of building a “harem” — or, at least, what he imagined one to be.

“Harem” comes from the Arabic “haram,” which can mean forbidden, sacred or an inviolable place. In Islamic societies, particularly during the Ottoman Empire, the word described separate living quarters for the female members of a household, which outsiders were prohibited from accessing. Having harems was mostly a custom of the elite, who could afford residences large enough to seclude women from men.

Over time, the word came to refer to both the accommodations and the women living in them. Harems also varied from family to family; while some arrangements were polygamous, other harems were merely private living spaces shared by a man’s female relatives.

Westerners, though, fixated on the former description, especially as it related to the Ottoman sultanate’s harem. First known to be used in English in the mid-1600s, “harem” quickly became a popular term in the West, even if Westerners’ ideas about harems didn’t match up with reality. “Though Europeans were long fascinated by what they could know of the harem, what they could only imagine excited them still more,” the literary critic Ruth Bernard Yeazell wrote in her 2000 book “Harems of the Mind: Passages of Western Art and Literature.”

Western men especially allowed their imaginations to run wild. References to harems appear in the writings of the French playwright Jean Racine and the philosopher Montesquieu, as well as the operas of Mozart and Rossini. The scholar Leila Ahmed wrote in 1982 that the accounts of Western men involved “prurient speculation, often taking the form of downright assertion, about women’s sexual relations with each other within the harem.”

Even as Western women such as Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, and later Edith Wharton, were able to gain access to harems and challenge the fact-free erotic fantasies of their male counterparts, the exoticized image of the harem stuck, and the hyper-sexualized harem girl became a Hollywood stock figure.

“The Western orientalist imagining of a harem as a private brothel where dozens of women loung

DHS withdrawing 700 personnel in Minnesota “immediately,” border czar says

Kraig Pakulski 0 7 Article rating: No rating
White House

By Michael Williams

White House border czar Tom Homan just announced the Department of Homeland Security would be withdrawing 700 personnel from Minneapolis “effective immediately.”

Roughly 3,000 DHS personnel had been deployed to Minneapolis as part of Operation Metro Surge, the immigration crackdown that began in early December. The conduct of those agents has outraged residents and led to the fatal shootings of two US citizens. Homan was deployed to Minneapolis following the killing of Alex Pretti last month.

Homan said the 700 personnel leaving will leave “right around 2,000” remaining in the city.

“My goal, with the support of President Trump, is to achieve a complete drawdown … as soon as we can,” Homan added, “but that is largely contingent upon the end of the illegal and threatening activities against ice and its federal partners that we’re seeing in the community.”

Homan added that a “complete drawdown” would depend on “cooperation” with local and state law enforcement and said that they “want to get back to the original footprint” of immigration enforcement agents in Minnesota.

His comments come despite President Donald Trump’s previous assurances that there would be no drawdown of personnel in the Twin Cities. Asked last Thursday if there were plans to pull officers out, the president responded, “No, no, not at all.”

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Skeletons found in mysterious pit died violent deaths in Anglo-Saxon-era England

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By Issy Ronald, CNN

London (CNN) — In an idyllic corner of an English field, beneath the lush green grass and yellow buttercups sprouting in the sunshine, archaeologists made a grim discovery.

Sifting through the soil, they found a pit dating back around 1,200 years, filled with skeletons — some complete, some dismembered — that bore the signs of horrific, violent death.

“There’s terrible interpersonal violence going on here in whatever form we’re looking at,” said Oscar Aldred, an archaeologist at the University of Cambridge who led the dig last spring and summer at Wandlebury Country Park, about three miles (4.8 kilometers) outside Cambridge, England.

The pit could contain the remnants of a battle or an execution sometime in the 8th or 9th century AD, he hypothesized to CNN, but the evidence either way is still unclear.

One of the bodies was buried face down — “a sign of huge disrespect,” Aldred said — with their arms and legs possibly tied together.

Another was almost certainly beheaded; the first vertebra of their spine was cut and there was a big cut mark on their lower jaw. Only the lower leg bones, feet and kneecaps remain of another body. And they were buried together in a single pit, which was unusual for the time as Christian custom dictated that people, even if they have been executed, were normally buried separately, Aldred said.

The archaeologists didn’t find any artefacts near the bodies, either, Aldred added, suggesting that “these individuals have been stripped of any possessions and buried.”

All these factors represent “good signatures of execution,” he said, but lying on top of the four bodies, and the legs of another body, were six more skulls, suggesting “it’s not a straightforward execution.”

Aldred said he believes the four and a bit bodies were buried at the same time, and that they died after the people whose skulls are in the pit, because the skulls no longer have their lower jaws attached.

This could indicate the skulls “were maybe on display somewhere or, maybe, if it’s to do with battle, they were debris within a battle area,” before being buried in the pit, he said.

Discovering a site like this allows archaeologists to further understand the culture and society of early medieval England, when the country was fragmented into several kingdoms but rulers like Offa were beginning to unify it and Alfred the Great was fighting off Viking invaders.

There is still a lot that the archaeologists hope to uncover about the bodies. They believe they are all men, but more bone analysis will confirm that, and whether they are related.

The team also want to analyze the skeletons’ teeth, which should reveal their diets and where they came from, Aldred said. Crucially, that will help the archaeologists pinpoint whether these are Anglo-Saxon or Viking bodies.

More analysis will date the bodies more precisely, too, allowing the researchers to narrow down some of their theories.

If the bodies date from the 9th century, they are more likely to have been involved in a battle between the Saxons and the Vikings, Aldred said, whereas if they date from the 8th century, before the Viking invasion, it is likely they were killed as some form of justice.

Some striking details, however, are already evident. One body has a large hole in its skull, suggesting the person underwent the ancient surgery of trepanation, which was thought to help migraines, seizures and psychological disorders. The person was also 6 feet 5 inches tall, a remarkable height at a time when the average man

Las 10 contiendas electorales que decidirán el control del Senado de EE.UU.

Kraig Pakulski 0 15 Article rating: No rating

Por Arlette Saenz, CNN

En la lucha por el control del Senado de Estados Unidos, la mayoría podría depender de qué factor tenga más peso: el mapa o el entorno.

Comencemos con el mapa y las matemáticas. Los republicanos actualmente tienen 53 escaños en la cámara, en comparación con los 47 de los demócratas, que incluyen a dos independientes que forman parte del partido. Con el vicepresidente J. D. Vance como posible factor decisivo, esto significa que los demócratas necesitan ganar cuatro escaños para obtener la mayoría, una tarea que se dificulta aún más por un mapa que favorece al Partido Republicano.

De los 35 escaños en juego en noviembre, los demócratas solo tienen un objetivo en un estado que la exvicepresidenta Kamala Harris ganó en 2024 (Maine), mientras que defienden dos en estados clave donde el presidente Donald Trump se impuso (Georgia y Michigan). A partir de ahí, las oportunidades para los demócratas se centran en Carolina del Norte, que no ha elegido a un demócrata para el Senado desde 2008, y que luego se extiende hacia territorio republicano.

Los republicanos creen que un terreno de juego favorable les favorecerá y serán más receptivos a la agenda de Trump, incluyendo la enorme legislación fiscal y de gasto promulgada el año pasado.

En cuanto al clima, los líderes demócratas se sienten alentados por las victorias en el reclutamiento y la amplia victoria del partido en las principales contiendas electorales de noviembre pasado, impulsada en gran medida por el énfasis en la preocupación de los votantes por el costo de la vida. Apuestan a que el deterioro de la confianza de los votantes hacia el presidente, en particular por su gestión de la economía, seguirá siendo un factor clave en las elecciones de este año y ayudará al partido a superar algunos de los desafíos que enfrenta para su propia imagen ante los ojos de muchos estadounidenses.

Si bien ambos partidos coinciden en que la economía y la asequibilidad serán fundamentales para definir el panorama de las elecciones intermedias, existe un consenso sobre la posibilidad de que otros temas influyan en las decisiones de los votantes durante los próximos nueve meses. La gestión de las operaciones de control de inmigración por parte de la administración Trump se ha convertido en un punto de conflicto político tras el tiroteo mortal de dos manifestantes en Minneapolis a manos de agentes federales.

Los demócratas también esperan aprovechar el dinamismo de su base electoral. Una encuesta reciente de CNN muestra que los votantes demócratas registrados están mucho más motivados para votar este año que los republicanos, a pesar del descontento generalizado con los líderes del partido. Mientras tanto, los candidatos republicanos tendrán que lidiar con cómo movilizar a sus bases electorales sin el nombre del presidente en la boleta, algo que ha sido un desafío importante durante la era Trump.

El ciclo de elecciones intermedias comienza el próximo mes con las primarias en Texas y Carolina del Norte. A continuación, un vistazo a la situación de las principales contiendas al Senado a nueve meses del día de las elecciones:

El control del Senado se centra en cuatro estados con las contiendas más competitivas del ciclo: Georgia, Maine, Michigan y Carolina del Norte.

Los demócratas deben mantener el control de Georgia y Michigan y dar la vuelta a los otros dos si el partido tiene la oportunidad de obtener la mayoría. Una derrota en cualquiera de ellos significaría la necesidad de ganar otro escaño en un terreno mucho más favorable para los republicanos.

El senador Jon Ossoff es el único senador demócrata que busca la reelección en un estado que Trump ganó en 2024. Elegido por primera vez en una segunda vuelta en 2021, Ossoff es un gran recaudador de fondos y ha aprovechado la frustración gener

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