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Fiona Hill’s Testimony Is a Warning for Democrats, Too

(Bloomberg Opinion) — Fiona Hill was in some ways an ideal witness for the Democrats in Thursday’s impeachment hearings.In her opening statement, the former Russia director of the National Security Council warned Republicans: “I refuse to be part of a…

Who will take over for Jimmie Johnson in the No. 48 car in 2021? – NBC Sports – Misc.

Who will take over for Jimmie Johnson in the No. 48 car in 2021?  NBC Sports – Misc.

Tom Spurgeon, Who Surveyed the Comic Book World, Dies at 50

A reporter, editor and author, he co-wrote a biography of Stan Lee, oversaw a comics festival and started an award-winning website.

Infecting Mosquitoes With Bacteria Could Have A Big Payoff

Scientists are trying to flip the script on mosquito control in an effort to combat dengue fever. Instead of trying to wipe them out, they’re infecting them with bacteria.

Fiona Hill’s gender critique during public impeachment testimony gets applause online

During Fiona Hill’s testimony at President Trump’s impeachment hearing on Thursday, she faced a situation that hits close to home with many women in everyday circumstances. Hill, an accomplished scholar, was asked to explain an instance when she was “…

Mark Stoops impressed by J.J. Weaver’s play at Vanderbilt

Kentucky football coach Mark Stoops was impressed by the play of freshman outside linebacker J.J. Weaver at Vanderbilt

       

The area’s top defenders get their time to shine in this Friday’s football playoff games

Male will take a stingy defense into its matchup with St. Xavier in the third round of the Class 6A playoffs

       

Utah Woman Charged With Lewdness After Being Topless In Her Own Home

The case is the latest legal battle amid a broader “free the nipple” campaign that seeks to normalize the exposure of female nipples.

A Rare Meteor Shower May Grace The Skies Tonight

Some scientists predict the Alpha Monocerotids meteor shower will be visible at 11:50 p.m. ET. However, one NASA expert is skeptical of the forecast.

Fiona Hill was the Democrats’ best impeachment witness yet

Fiona Hill was the Democrats' best impeachment witness yetAs far as I am aware, not a single important piece of new information emerged out of Thursday’s fourth day of impeachment testimony before the House intelligence committee. What began at a remove of several persons from both the infamous July 25 phone call and the persons of Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelensky moved closer to relevant events and individuals and passed them by again.That does not mean that this (so far anyway) final round was free of either substance or interest. Whether Chairman Adam Schiff realized it or not, he saved his best witness for last. Lt. Colonel Alexander Vindman was a self-important stooge. George Kent was a minor character from a Booth Tarkington novel. Gordon Sondland was a cornered weasel. What a relief it was to hear from Fiona Hill, the former director for European and Russian affairs on the National Security Council, easily the cleverest person to appear on Capitol Hill this week.What Hill managed to do was to bring into focus the increasingly blurry outline of the events discussed by all the previous witnesses. With grace, quiet intelligence, and more than occasional humor, she gave a detailed account of the emergence of a private side-channel meant to operate outside the official limits of American diplomatic efforts in Ukraine. Out of the trees she finally gave us a view of the forest.Hill was able to do this for the not-so-complicated reason that, unlike her predecessors, she seemed to be totally in command of her facts, her chronology, and her opinions concerning them. She anticipated lines of questioning — especially when they were skeptical — and was not afraid to give substantive answers that went beyond the narrow limits of the queries posed to her, but without pompous editorializing. At one point she was asked for her opinion on, of all things, negative coverage of fracking in the online publication formerly known as Russia Today. She responded with an interesting anecdote about how at a conference she once heard Vladimir Putin lamenting America’s resurgence in the global oil industry. For the first time in these proceedings I felt certain that the witness was someone who was actually qualified for her former position.Even more striking was the total absence in Hill’s testimony of slavish deference toward the Democratic majority and its agenda shown by all of the other witnesses, including David Holmes, the former Ukrainian embassy staffer who appeared alongside her. When Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.) asked whether she had been the target of a conspiracy theory launched by the “convicted felon Roger Stone,” she rather politely observed that at the time that he made the allegations in question — on Infowars, naturally — Mr. Stone was not yet a felon. When she went out of her way to praise Rick Perry, the former energy secretary whom she herself asked to travel to Ukraine in order to promote American interests, I could not but smile at the thought of the former Texas governor being considered an ace diplomat by such a stolid professional. Her refusal to play along did not, I think, betray any special fondness for the GOP. Indeed, I suspect that if she had been asked which candidate she would have preferred to come out on top in November 2016, no one would be surprised by the answer.But, astonishing as it might seem in 2019, there are certain persons for whom there are more important things than partisanship. Not only large abstract concerns like honor and duty, but simple human ones, like courtesy and decency. I was especially struck by Hill’s story about a meeting in which she was forced to ask her Ukrainian counterparts to step out into the hallway, an unfortunately necessary bit of rudeness that clearly pains her even now.One thing that came up late in the afternoon that had nothing to do with Ukraine or impeachment confirms these impressions of he character. When Hill was 11 years old, a boy lit her pigtails on fire while she was taking a test. She calmly extinguished the flames and continued taking the test. The unfortunate result was that she was given a bowl cut, which left her bearing, as she put it, more than a slight resemblance to Richard III. It was difficult for me not to see in some of Hill’s interlocutors the sort of ratlike face you would expect to find on a pigtail arsonist. No matter how many times they repeated their antics, she kept going with her test.This is why by the end of the day Republicans had nothing to ask Hill, or at least nothing that they would have been happy to have her answer. Instead, Ohio Reps. Michael Turner and Brad Wenstrup made speeches that touched upon everything from Saddam Hussein to the shooting attack on members of the congressional baseball team that nearly killed their colleague Steve Scalise. She responded to this by telling them that their stories were all very moving. Jim Jordan repeated nearly word-for-word a speech he had given on Tuesday about Robert Mueller’s special counsel investigation and Nancy Pelosi. She said nothing in response.Was all of this this enough to close the feedback loop that the Democrats’ case for impeachment has become in the last two weeks? I doubt it. On the fourth afternoon of these hearings it might well have been too late for Hill or any other witness to make any impression on the voters Democrats would like most to reach.Oh well. I have made no secret of my own contempt for these proceedings and my view that Trump’s apparent actions were, if not justifiable, of very little consequence. That doesn’t mean you should let Devin Nunes set your pigtails on fire.Want more essential commentary and analysis like this delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for The Week’s “Today’s best articles” newsletter here.More stories from theweek.com Republicans are throwing Rudy Giuliani under the bus Fiona Hill testifies Sondland got involved in a ‘domestic political errand’ and she told him ‘this is all going to blow up’ Austria is turning site of Hitler’s birth into a police station to repel neo-Nazis

2,200 Miles And 4 Months Later, Runner Finishes Trek Across Australia

Katie Visco said it was a “pinch” that drove her to undertake such an ambitious task with her husband in support. “I had been dreaming about this for a while,” she tells NPR.

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