Thanksgiving, Net Neutrality, Ratko Mladic
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[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Wednesday, November 22, 2017
[NYTimes.com »](
[Your Wednesday Evening Briefing](
By KAREN ZRAICK AND DAVID SCULL
Good evening. Hereâs the latest.
Scott Olson/Getty Images
1. Families who have suffered [through the yearâs wildfires, hurricanes and mass shootings]( face an almost impossible question: How does one give thanks after losing so much?
Sherri Pomeroy, above center, the wife of the pastor at the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Tex., lost her 14-year-old daughter in the massacre there. But she will get up on Thanksgiving and cook for the shattered congregation.
âI just know that Iâm not going to dishonor them by giving up,â she said. âBecause then their lives would be in vain. Or their deaths would be in vain.â
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Al Drago for The New York Times
2. President Trump is at his resort in Florida for the Thanksgiving holiday, but he was up early, [railing against a college basketball playerâs father]( (âungrateful fool!â) for failing to recognize Mr. Trumpâs role in securing his sonâs release from China.
And the Trump Organization announced that it would walk away [from its long-troubled SoHo hotel in New York]( which has had to drop prices to fill rooms.
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Brandon Thibodeaux for The New York Times
3. How much market power should big companies be allowed to have? The Trump administration showed this week that it disagrees with itself on the answer.
The Justice Department suit to block AT&Tâs proposed takeover of Time Warner was a brake on power. (Above, AT&Tâs headquarters in Dallas.) But the F.C.C.âs plan to end net neutrality would empower, and enrich, internet providers. (Hereâs [how that could affect you](
According to Tim Wu, the Columbia professor who coined the term net neutrality, there is a common theme: Both moves are â[defense strategies against Silicon Valley]( offering help to old-school media.
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Kenneth Abbate/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
4. U.S. and Japanese naval forces were searching for three people still missing after a U.S. Navy aircraft carrying [11 people crashed southeast of Okinawa]( Japan. Eight were rescued and said to be in good condition. The plane was on its way to the aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan, above.
It was the fifth accident this year for the Seventh Fleet, the Navyâs largest overseas fleet. âThis year needs to be over already,â one service member wrote on Facebook, adding, â7th fleet canât handle any more curse.â
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Dimitar Dilkoff/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
5. Europe closed one of its most shameful chapters of bloodletting since World War II.
After a trial that lasted years, [the Bosnian Serb warlord Ratko Mladic]( was sentenced to life in prison by a U.N. tribunal. He was convicted in the slaughter of Bosnian Muslims during the breakup of Yugoslavia, including the mass executions of 8,000 men and boys in Srebrenica. Above, people there celebrated the verdict.
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Andrew Testa for The New York Times
6. Seventeen months after Britain voted to leave the European Union, many Europeans are leaving Britain â some 122,000 as of March. And thousands are doctors and nurses whose departures are damaging the treasured national health care system.
Our correspondent [spoke to some of them for our âLosing Londonâ series]( which looks at whether Brexit will sink a great global city.
âPsychologically Brexit has had a huge impact,â said Cyril Noël, a French doctor, above. âYou feel rejected as a group.â
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Wael Hamzeh/European Pressphoto Agency
7. Saad Hariri is back home in Lebanon â and [now says heâs delaying his resignation]( as prime minister. Above, he greeted supporters outside his home.
Itâs a surprise turn in a weekslong international mystery. On Nov. 4, while in Saudi Arabia, Mr. Hariri abruptly announced that he was stepping down. Speculation that the Saudis had forced his hand ran rife, especially when he dropped out of view.
He attended a military parade in Beirut for Lebanonâs Independence Day on Wednesday.
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Robert Leon for The New York Times
8. We crunched the numbers about the [jobs youâre most likely to inherit from your parents](. Sara Genn, above, followed in her fatherâs footsteps and became a painter.
Our data analysis was one of the first to look at mothers and daughters in addition to fathers and sons. We found that working fathers and sons are 2.7 times as likely as the rest of the population to have the same job. The numbers are slightly lower for women.
Some of the jobs most likely to be passed down include steelworker, legislator, baker, lawyer and doctor. How dynastic is your field? Find out using the interactive feature in our article.
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Doug Benc/Getty Images
9. The list of candidates for the Pro Football Hall of Fame is down to 27, including first appearances for Ray Lewis and Randy Moss, above. So whose names will be announced this summer? [Our sports desk has some theories](.
The [Thanksgiving Day N.F.L. matchups]( are: Vikings vs. Lions, Chargers vs. Cowboys and Giants vs. Redskins.
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Brian Stauffer
10. Finally, Stephen Colbert addressed the [recurring themes of one-sided nudity and robes]( that have emerged in the recent flood of sexual misconduct charges.
âWhat is it with the robes?â he asked. âFirst Cosby, then Weinstein, now Charlie Rose. Whoâs next, Yoda? âHmm, tense you seem. Shoulders I will rub. Reported to H.R. I am.ââ
But donât laugh too hard: Our critic says [the comedy market is oversaturated]( â and, for his part, he canât wait for the crash.
The Evening Briefing will be off on Thursday.
Happy Thanksgiving!
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