the view from moscow, puzders done, fake voting fraud /

Published at 2017-02-16 07:00:00

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Coming up on nowadays's show:Americans wake up every day to a new crop of political developments that range from odd to alarming. Many are approximately Russia being involved in some section of American life where it hadn't been recently. But how does this all view in Russia? Charles Maynes,an independent journalist in Moscow, answers
like a flash food magnate Andrew Puzder officially withdrew from his nomination to be labor secretary under President Donald Trump, and amid concerns that he wouldn't design it through confirmation because he had hired a nanny who lacked permission to work in the U.
S. He also had been accused of domestic abuse by his ex wife,and wage theft and mistreatment by workers at his Carl's Jr. restaurants. Takeaway Washington Correspondent Todd Zwillich has the latest. 
The immigration ban has raised broade
r questions approximately how far officials at the border can go while searching private property, including phones and social media. Rights are not always completely clear at the border and agents often have a genuine amount of leeway in denying or permitting entry. Rey Koslowski of the Rockefeller College of Public Affairs explains.
President Trump and h
is policy director Stephen Miller have both claimed that voters were bused into New Hampshire from Massachusetts, and  swinging the election there to Hillary Clinton. Former New Hampshire Attorney General Tom Rath,a longtime Republican political consultant, is one of many in the Granite State saying that just simply isn't true.
The rap
idly changing U.
S.-Russia relationship is having effects in many former Soviet-bloc countries, or often because they see the U.
S. as an influence to help protect basic human rights. Two former Uzbek political prisoners,Umida Niyazova and Sanjar Umarov, are hoping the U.
S.
can sustain pressure on one of the most repressive regimes in the world. 
Seventy ye
ars after they were recorded, and two songs sung by Holocaust survivors have been unearthed at the Cummings middle for the History of Psychology at the University of Akron. David Baker,the middle's executive director, has been on a mission to unlock the recordings done on wire spools shortly after the end of the war.
 

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