First Thing: Texas governor signs bill allowing police to arrest migrants entering US illegally | US news | The Guardian

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The Texas governor, Greg Abbott, yesterday signed a bill giving all police in the state sweeping new powers to arrest migrants deemed to have entered the US illegally as well as empowering local judges to order their expulsion back across the US-Mexico border.

The hard-right Republican’s actions represent a brazen challenge to the federal government’s authority over the enforcement of US immigration law.

The law passed the Republican-dominated Texas legislature last month, over the angry objections of Democratic lawmakers.

Legal experts have previously said the legislation defies US law – and Abbott can almost certainly expect a court challenge from the federal authorities. The law is due to take effect next March.

UN delays vote calling for Gaza ceasefire as US objects to resolution wording

The results of a draft resolution vote displayed on a screen as the UN general assembly held an emergency special session on the Israel-Hamas war on 12 December, in New York City. Photograph: Michael M Santiago/Getty Images

The UN security council has postponed a vote calling for a sustainable cessation of hostilities in Gaza to give more time for diplomats to meet US objections to the wording of the draft resolution.

The vote had been due yesterday in New York but the US said it could not support a reference to a “cessation of hostilities” but may accept a call for a “suspension of hostilities”.

The Arab countries negotiating the text said they had been encouraged to see that the White House was apparently trying to find wording that it could support – as opposed simply to vetoing resolutions, the position it adopted on the call for a humanitarian pause on 18 October and for an urgent humanitarian ceasefire on 9 December.

Divisions within the US administration have been growing, with some officials saying the US is misunderstanding the scale of disillusionment in the global south over its perceived hypocrisy in calling out Russian war crimes in Ukraine, but finding a multitude of reasons to justify the large-scale killing of Palestinians in Gaza.

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In other news …

The eruption of a volcano on the Reykjanes peninsula began after a series of small earthquakes. Photograph: Icelandic Department of Civil Protection and Emergency Management/AFP/Getty Images

Stat of the day: Google agrees to pay $700m after antitrust settlement with consumers and US states

The Google sign is displayed over an entrance to the company’s building in New York. The tech firm has agreed to pay $700m according to the terms of an antitrust settlement. Photograph: Peter Morgan/AP

Google has agreed to pay $700m and to allow for greater competition in its Play app store, according to the terms of an antitrust settlement with US states and consumers disclosed in a San Francisco federal court. Google was accused of overcharging consumers through unlawful restrictions on the distribution of apps on Android devices and unnecessary fees for in-app transactions. It did not admit wrongdoing. The company will pay $630m into a settlement fund for consumers and $70m into a fund that will be used by states, according to the settlement, which still requires a judge’s final approval.

Don’t miss this: ‘It’s totally unhinged’ – is the book world turning against Goodreads?

‘Everything’s a tool and Goodreads, the way it is built and used now, can allow someone to use it in a very unhealthy way.’ Photograph: Funky-data/Getty Images

For Bethany Baptiste, Molly X Chang, KM Enright, Thea Guanzon, Danielle L Jensen, Akure Phénix, RM Virtues and Frances White, it must have been brutal reading. All received scathing reviews on Goodreads, an online platform that reputedly has the power to make or break new authors. But the verdicts were not delivered by an esteemed literary critic. They were the work of Cait Corrain, a debut author who used fake accounts to “review bomb” her perceived rivals. The literary scandal led to Corrain posting an apology, being dropped by her agent and having her book deal cancelled. It also uncovered deeper questions about Goodreads, arguably the most popular site on which readers post book reviews, and its outsized impact on the publishing industry.

… or this: ‘I’m not a toy’ – how an antiquated tradition of forced marriage wrecked one girl’s life

A bride holding hands with her new sister-in-law in Pakistan. Photograph: Tauseef Mustafa/AFP/Getty Images

Despite a ban on ghag forced marriages, a man laid claim to Inteha Bibi when she was 12 years old. Although Bibi and her family rejected his proposal when she was a child, she cannot marry anyone else, according to the custom. Now she lives in fear as her family fights for her right to marry the man of her choice.

“I have no life,” says Bibi. “I am traumatised, I have anxiety and can’t sleep without medication. I am a human, and I have all rights to get engaged and married to whoever I want. I am a woman, not a toy, and I don’t want to be married to someone forcibly.”

Last Thing: What does it mean to be likable – and who has to abide by those rules?

This trait is one society demands of some people – women and people of color – more than others. Illustration: Guardian Design

Being liked is core to some of our most central fears. We want to feel like we belong and are accepted. But likability is hardly an objective measure. It’s a vague idea at best, mired in all sorts of gendered, racialized and political connotations. In a society still full of myriad disparities, likability is a trait we demand of some people – women and people of color – more than others. And the effort to meet those expectations of likability can be taxing and unfruitful.

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https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/dec/19/first-thing-texas-governor-signs-bill-allowing-police-to-arrest-migrants-entering-us-illegally