Suburban Detroit school settles lawsuit with Palestinian student over Pledge of Allegiance dispute

DETROIT (AP) — A suburban Detroit school district has agreed to give First Amendment training to staff tosettle a lawsuitby a teenager who said a teacher humiliated her for refusing to stand for the Pledge of Allegiance in protest of U.S. support of Israel's war in Gaza.

Associated Press

The agreement with Danielle Khalaf and her father also includes a $10,000 payment by an insurance company on behalf of the teacher, according to a court filing.

The Plymouth-Canton district did not admit liability. But Superintendent Monica Merritt praised Danielle for "showing courage and speaking up about the incident."

"Our mission is to foster a school environment that is safe, respectful and welcoming for all," Merritt said Friday.

Danielle, whose family is of Palestinian descent, declined to recite the pledge at her school over three days in January 2025. The lawsuit says her teacher admonished her and told her she was being disrespectful.

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"Since you live in this country and enjoy its freedom, if you don't like it, you should go back to your country," the teacher said, according to the lawsuit.

Danielle suffered emotional injuries, including nightmares and strained friendships, the lawsuit said.

"It was terrifying at times, scary to face a teacher and overwhelming with the attention that came with the publicity. But it taught me the importance of speaking up for what I believe is right," Danielle said Thursday in a statement released by the American Civil Liberties Union and Arab American Civil Rights League.

Michigan has more than 300,000 residents of Middle Eastern or North African descent, second in the U.S. behind California, according to theCensus Bureau.

The school district will remove anything from Danielle's file that suggests her actions violated school policy, according to the settlement.

Suburban Detroit school settles lawsuit with Palestinian student over Pledge of Allegiance dispute

DETROIT (AP) — A suburban Detroit school district has agreed to give First Amendment training to staff tosettle a lawsuit...
How risky would a US assault on Iran's Kharg Island be — and why might Trump consider it

Even as US PresidentDonald Trumphas declared the "war has been won" with Iran, amphibious warships, landing craft and thousands of Marines and sailors are being deployed to the region.

CNN Satellite view of Kharg Island off the coast of Iran. - Gallo Images/Orbital Horizon/Copernicus Sentinel Data 2024/Getty Images

The deployment has caused speculation to swirl over whether the US plans to captureKharg Island, a coral outcrop off Iran's coast and an economic lifeline for Tehran that handles roughly 90% of the country's crude oil exports.

Even if Washington successfully took the tiny butstrategic island, experts have questioned whether this would give the US enough leverage to force Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz amid a spiraling global energy crisis.

Here's what we know about the potential ground operation, and its risks.

What is Kharg Island?

Kharg Island is a five-mile stretch of land off the Iranian coast around a third of the size of Manhattan, described by US officials as the "nexus for all the Iranian oil supply."

Its long jetties jutt into waters that are deep enough to accommodate oil supertankers, making the island a critical site for oil distribution.

The island has long been key to Iran's economy. A declassified CIA document from 1984 published online said the facilities are "the most vital in Iran's oil system, and their continued operation is essential to Iran's economic well-being."

Alternativeexport routesthat bypass the Strait of Hormuz exist, but they are limited and have not been robustly tested on a large scale, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).

For example, in 2021, Iran inaugurated the Jask oil terminal, allowing crude oil to be transported to Jask on the Gulf of Oman just east of the strait, but the terminal is not considered a viable export option for Iranian crude, the IEA said.

Storage capacity on Kharg is estimated at roughly 30 million barrels and, according to trade intelligence firm Kpler, about 18 million barrels of crude are currently stored there, Reuters reported.

Earlier this month, Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid said destroying the terminal would "cripple Iran's economy and topple the regime." He declared that Israel "must destroy all of Iran's oil fields and energy industry on Kharg Island."

How risky would a US ground attack be?

Two Marine Expeditionary Units (MEU), which specialize in rapid-response amphibious landings, raids and assault missions from Navy amphibious ships, have recently deployed to the Middle East.

Previous military exercises involving MEU have seen the spectacle of attack helicopters in the skies, troops on the beach and huge assault ships in the water.

James Stavridis, NATO's former supreme allied commander, said Tuesday the ships of a MEU "pack a lot of combat capability."

But he cautioned that before any ground operation, they would have to pass through the Strait of Hormuz and to the northern part of the gulf, contending with Iranian drones, ballistic missiles and mines in the waterway, Stavridis wrote in aBloomberg article.

"Once in position off Kharg, the Marines would need ironclad air and sea superiority over at least 100 miles around the island," Stavridis said.

One significant risk is that Iran could strike the amphibious ships. Another concern is the fate of the island's population – estimated to be in the thousands and almost all oil workers – who would need to be "contained" or evacuated, Stavridis added.

Stavridis also questioned the strategic leverage that such an operation would give Washington. "If the idea is to then bargain with Tehran for an opening of the Strait of Hormuz, it is unclear that the remaining leaders of the regime would be cowed by the threat of losing Kharg," Stavridis said.

"They might balk at agreeing to give up anything for Kharg," he added.

Alongside potential US casualties, Richard Haass, former president of the Council on Foreign Relations think tank, said last week any mission on Kharg would likely "further erode US missile stockpiles."

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The exact reason why the US is weighing seizing Kharg is unclear, but Haass said it would "likely be seen by many there and around the world as a US attempt to seize Iranian oil," he wrote on hisSubstack page.

Satellite image showing an oil terminal on Kharg Island, Iran on February 25. - 2026 Planet Labs PBC/Reuters

Has Iran been preparing for a potential US attack?

Iran's Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said on Wednesday that "Iran's enemies, with the support of one of the regional countries" are preparing to occupy one of the country's islands, without directing naming the island.

"All enemy movements are under the full surveillance of our armed forces. If they step out of line, all the vital infrastructure of that regional country will, without restriction, become the target of relentless attacks," Ghalibaf posted on X on Wednesday.

Earlier Wednesday, Ghalibaf said, "We are closely monitoring all US movements in the region, especially troop deployments."

Iran has been laying traps and moving additional military personnel and air defenses to Kharg Island in recent weeks in preparation for a possible US operation to take control of the island, according to multiple people familiar with US intelligence reporting on the issue.

The island already has layered defenses, and the Iranians have moved additional shoulder-fired, surface-to-air guided missile systems known as MANPADs there in recent weeks, the sources said.

Iran has also been laying traps including anti-personnel and anti-armor mines around the island, the sources said, including on the shoreline.

Has the US attacked the island before?

Yes. Earlier this month, Trump said the US had bombed "every military target" on the island and threatened to attack its oil infrastructure if Iran continued blocking ships from traversing the Strait of Hormuz.

Video posted to Truth Social and geolocated by CNN showed US strikes on the island's airport facilities, with large explosions and black smoke visible throughout the footage.

Trump said on the same day that Kharg was "not high on the list, but it's one of so many different things, and I can change my mind in seconds."

But as far back as 1988, decades before he was elected, Trump has talked about invading the island.

"One bullet shot at one of our men or ships and I'd do a number on Kharg Island. I'd go in and take it," he told The Guardian in an interview at the time.

White House officials believe taking Kharg Island would "totally bankrupt" Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, according to one official, and could potentially lead to a swift end of the war.

But many inside the administration are wary of such a move, particularly given it would require a significant number of ground troops to achieve.

A general view of Kharg Island's oil terminal port. - Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

How are regional players reacting?

Gulf alliesare privately urging the Trump administration against prolonging the war by putting boots on the ground to occupy Kharg Island, a senior gulf official said.

The concern is that occupying the island with US troops would result in high casualties, likely triggering Iranian retaliation against gulf countries' infrastructure and prolonging the conflict, the senior gulf official said.

Iranian officials have warned as much.

Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy chief, Alireza Tangsiri – who Israel claimed to have killed on Thursday – said last November that Iran's islands across the Persian Gulf are "fortified strongholds."

"If an enemy makes a mistake, it will receive a decisive response there," Tangsiri said.

CNN's Kit Maher, Kevin Liptak, Sarah Ferris, Helen Regan, Laura Sharman, Natasha Bertrand, Zachary Cohen, Kylie Atwood, Tal Shalev and Isaac Yee contributed reporting.

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How risky would a US assault on Iran’s Kharg Island be — and why might Trump consider it

Even as US PresidentDonald Trumphas declared the "war has been won" with Iran, amphibious warships, landing cra...
Plot to firebomb Palestinian activist's home disrupted by NYPD undercover operation, authorities say

NEW YORK (AP) — A man accused of planning to firebomb the home of a prominent Palestinian activist has been arrested following a weekslong undercover operation led by the New York City Police Department, officials said Friday.

Associated Press

The target of the plot was Nerdeen Kiswani, who frequently leads protests in New York against Israel and the war in Gaza through the organization Within Our Lifetime.

Kiswani, 31, said law enforcement officials informed her late Thursday that they had disrupted "a threat on my life that was about to take place."

Federal authorities said they arrested Alexander Heifler on Thursday at his home in Hoboken, New Jersey, as he was assembling Molotov cocktails that he planned to throw at Kiswani's home. For weeks, he had discussed the plot with an undercover NYPD detective who had infiltrated a group chat used by Heifler, according to a police department spokesperson.

An official who was briefed on the investigation said Heifler, 26, identified as a member of the JDL 613 Brotherhood, a New Jersey-based group founded in 2024 that describes its membership as "Jewish warriors" fighting back against rising antisemitism.

A website for the group says they are inspired by the original Jewish Defense League, a group linked to numerous bombings and attempted assassinations of Arab American political activists in the 1970s and 1980s.

Heifler planned to flee to Israel following the attack, according to the official, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the details of an ongoing investigation.

An email inquiry sent to the JDL 613 was not returned.

Kiswani, who lives in Brooklyn with her infant son and husband, said the plot would not deter her continued activism.

"I feel very blessed that they were able to thwart this, but it's something that is a constant possibility for people who speak up on behalf of Palestine," she said.

Heifler was charged in a criminal complaint with separate counts of making and possessing destructive devices, which each carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. A message left with his attorney was not returned. He made an initial appearance in New Jersey federal court on Friday afternoon.

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"Let me be clear: We will not tolerate violent extremism in our city," New York City MayorZohran Mamdanisaid in a statement. "No one should face violence for their political beliefs or their advocacy. I am relieved that Nerdeen is safe."

According to a court filing written by an FBI agent, Heifler spoke on a video call in February with a group that included an undercover detective about his interest in training for "self-defense" and wanting space where he could throw Molotov cocktails.

The next day, he met with the undercover detective in person and discussed his plan to use them against Kiswani and flee the country, according to the complaint. "We have (Kiswani's) address," Heifler allegedly told the undercover. "So it's like that, that would be easier if you'd be more comfortable with that."

Heifler and the undercover detective drove to Kiswani's residence on March 4 to "conduct surveillance" and discussed making a dozen Molotov cocktails to throw at her home and two cars parked outside, the complaint said.

On Thursday, the undercover detective met Heifler at his Hoboken residence, where Heifler had assembled components to make the Molotov cocktails, including a large bottle of Everclear, a highly flammable alcohol, the complaint said. Law enforcement officers then executed a search warrant at the residence and recovered the eight Molotov cocktails, the complaint said.

Kiswani co-founded the group Within Our Lifetime, which frequently organizes protests against Israel that draw hundreds of participants and often end in arrests. The group's calls to "abolish Zionism" and support for "all forms of struggle," including violence, has drawn fierce criticism. Kiswani denies that her criticism of Israel amounts to antisemitism.

Kiswani has been a frequent target of online vitriol. Earlier this year, U.S. Rep. Randy Fine, a Florida Republican,sparked backlash after writingin a social media post that "the choice between dogs and Muslims is not a difficult one." The post was a response to a message Kiswani shared about dog owners, which she said was a light joke.

"That hate against Palestinians has been bolstered by public officials, by Zionist organizations, who are never held accountable," she said. "This is the inevitable result of that."

The operation was carried out by the Racially and Ethnically Motivated Extremism unit within the NYPD's counterterrorism bureau, a police spokesperson said.

"This is exactly how our intelligence and counterterrorism operation is designed to work — a sophisticated apparatus built to detect danger early and prevent violence before it reaches our streets," Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said.

This story has been corrected to reflect that the defendant's first name is Alexander, not Andrew.

Plot to firebomb Palestinian activist's home disrupted by NYPD undercover operation, authorities say

NEW YORK (AP) — A man accused of planning to firebomb the home of a prominent Palestinian activist has been arrested foll...
NFLPA Issues Warning to Players About Fake Adult Film Star Involved in Fraud and Sex Trafficking Scheme

The NFL Players Association (NFLPA) issued a statement to players warning them about a man allegedly scamming athletes out of personal information

People NFLPA logoCredit: Rich Graessle/PPI/Icon Sportswire via Getty

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  • The man allegedly "lured athletes into having sex with an adult female OnlyFans creator, being filmed without their knowledge or consent," the memo said, according to NBC Sports

  • The Department of Justice said Ford "allegedly obtained login credentials for Apple accounts belonging to NBA and NFL players"

The NFL Players Association (NFLPA) issued a warning to players about a man who has been allegedly scamming athletes while posing as a female adult film star.

According toNBC Sports, the memo was sent via email on Thursday, March 26, informing players, "The FBI has advised that Kwamaine Jerell Ford, posing as a female adult film star, lured athletes into providing sensitive information."

Ford, 34, allegedly "lured athletes into having sex with an adult female OnlyFans creator, being filmed without their knowledge or consent," and "was supposedly able to access many athletes' iCloud accounts and stole victim information including credit cards," the email to players said, according to NBC.

NFL logoCredit: Kevin Sabitus/Getty

On March 13, Ford pleaded not guilty to nine counts of wire fraud, seven counts of computer fraud, one count of access device fraud, four counts of aggravated identity theft and one count of sex trafficking, according to a March 16press releasefrom the Department of Justice.

U.S. attorney Theodore S. Hertzberg said in astatementvia the Department of Justice on March 16, "While serving time for stealing credit card numbers from athletes and celebrities to fund his lifestyle, Ford allegedly engaged in the same conduct again. Disturbingly, the indictment alleges that Ford went even further and used a fraudulent online persona to traffic a young woman and coerce her to produce hidden camera videos of commercial sex acts with unknowing individuals."

The DOJ's press release said that Ford "allegedly obtained login credentials for Apple accounts belonging to NBA and NFL players through a two-pronged approach."

The scammer allegedly "posed online as a well-known adult film star and offered to send sexually explicit videos to the athletes," according to the release.

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"At the same time, Ford spoofed legitimate Apple customer service accounts, posed as an Apple customer support representative, and requested, via text messages, that the victims send their username, password, and/or Multi-Factor Authentication codes in order to access the videos that this fraudulent adult film star persona was purportedly trying to send the victims," the release stated.

Additionally, Ford was using the credit and debit card information of "dozens of victims" to "pay for thousands of dollars in personal spending," the DOJ said.

NFL locker room on Oct., 12, 2017Credit: Raymond Boyd/Getty

In 2021, Ford allegedly "posed as the adult film star and recruited, tricked, and coerced a female victim into engaging in commercial sex acts with the professional athletes based on false promises that the film star would advance the victim's modeling career," according to the DOJ's release.

"Ford advertised the victim to the athletes, coordinated the victim's travel to the athletes, and negotiated payments from the athletes for the purpose of purchasing sex with the victim," the release continued, adding that Ford, who allegedly posed as "Teanna Trump" during the scam, "used additional fraudulent personas to threaten the victim and maintain her continued involvement in commercial sex acts with the athletes."

"Using false personas, Ford obtained a financial cut from the commercial sex acts, many of which Ford allegedly coerced his victim into filming without the athletes' knowledge or consent," the DOJ said.

According to NBC, the FBI is currently trying to identify all of the victims Ford scammed, and is urging any player who thinks he may have been targeted to contact his agent or the NFLPA.

Read the original article onPeople

NFLPA Issues Warning to Players About Fake Adult Film Star Involved in Fraud and Sex Trafficking Scheme

The NFL Players Association (NFLPA) issued a statement to players warning them about a man allegedly scamming athletes ou...
Barret Robbins, who disappeared before Super Bowl, dies at 52, Raiders confirm

Former Oakland Raiders center Barret Robbins died, theLas Vegas Raidersconfirmed Friday, March 27. He was 52. No cause of death was immediately known.

USA TODAY Sports OAKLAND, CA - SEPTEMBER 28: Center Barret Robbins #63 of the Oakland Raiders, playing in his first game since leaving team just before the Super Bowl, prepares to snap the ball to quarterback Rich Gannon #12 against the San Diego Chargers on September 28, 2003 at Network Associates Coliseum in Oakland, California. The Raiders defeated the Chargers 34-31 in overtime. (Photo by Stephen Dunn/Getty Images)

"The Raiders Family is deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Barret Robbins. ... The thought and condolences of the entire Raider Nation are with Barret's family and friends during this difficult time," the Raiders said in a statement.

Robbins famously went missing from the team in the days leading up to Super Bowl 37, which Oakland lost to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 48-21.

Eventually diagnosed with bipolar disorder, Robbins went missing the day before Super Sunday on Jan. 26, 2003. He returned to the team in time but was deemed unable to play. Robbins later told ESPN that he'd convinced himself the Raiders already won and that he was celebrating; he even reached Tijuana, Mexico, although he could not recall why he went there. Super Bowl 37 was played in San Diego.

"I mean, this was the biggest game of my life," Robbins told ESPN months later. "This was everything I had worked for as a child, as a young man, as a collegiate athlete and going into the pros, this is everything I had worked for and … it's unbelievable to me."

Robbins completed a 30-day stint in rehab, where he was treated for bipolar disorder and alcohol abuse after the episode before, returning to the team. Robbins later told HBO's Real Sports he would enter manic episodes for weeks at a time.

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During that 2002 season, Robbins made the Pro Bowl and was named first-team All-Pro. He played nine games the next season in what was his final NFL campaign.

The Raiders selected Robbins in the second round of the 1995 draft (49th overall) out of Texas Christian University. He started 105 contests for the Silver and Black and played 121 regular-season games total.

The pre-Super Bowl episode was one of many mental-health-related incidents involving Robbins. A brawl with police in Miami Beach in 2005 led to him being shot three times, and he pleaded guilty to five charges from the incident, including attempted murder. Robbins was charged with assaulting a woman and her daughter outside a Florida hotel in 2016. In 2020, he was arrested three times in the span of a month in south Florida.

Raiders teammates Rich Gannon and Tim Brown posted on social media about Robbins' death, with Brown writing that Robbins' wife, Marissa, told him that Robbins passed peacefully in his sleep.

"Please pray for their girls, his family and tons of teammates who will be affected by this!" Brown wrote. "It's unfortunate that his life was never the same after he was not allowed to play in the Super Bowl! Rest Peacefully BR, you deserve it!"

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Barret Robbins, Raiders center who disappeared before Super Bowl, dies

Barret Robbins, who disappeared before Super Bowl, dies at 52, Raiders confirm

Former Oakland Raiders center Barret Robbins died, theLas Vegas Raidersconfirmed Friday, March 27. He was 52. No cause of...
Yankees' Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton hit home runs in same game for 60th time

New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge shook off a rough Opening Night by hitting his first home run of the 2026 MLB seasonin Friday's 3-0 winversus the San Francisco Giants.

Yahoo Sports

The two-run blast off Giants pitcher Robbie Ray came after the three-time American League MVPwent 0-for-5with four strikeouts inthe Yankees' season-opening 7-0 winover San Francisco on Wednesday night.

Two batters later, Giancarlo Stanton hit his first home run of the season off José Buttó, brought in to replace Ray in the sixth inning, giving the Yankees a 3-0 lead. That was all the Yankees needed as they closed out the victory to stay unbeaten this season.

That was also the 60th time that Judge and Stanton homered in the same game, the sixth-highest total among teammates in MLB history,according to MLB.com's Sarah Langs.

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By the end of the season, Judge and Stanton could very well tie or surpass the third-highest total of 68, currently held by Willie McCovey and Willie Mays, along with Duke Snider and Gil Hodges. That would put the current Yankees sluggers behind one of the team's legendary duos in Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, who hit home runs in the same game 75 times.

Making his season debut for the Giants, Ray allowed two runs and five hits over 5 1/3 innings. He struck out four batters and walked none. He was outmatched by Yankees starter Cam Schlittler, who pitched 5 1/3 scoreless innings with eight strikeouts, allowing only one hit.

Yankees pitching has looked exceptional against the Giants, who haven't scored a run and only managed four hits in their first two games of the season. Schlittler and Max Fried combined for 11 2/3 scoreless innings, three hits allowed and 12 strikeouts. Six Yankees relievers have yet to allow a run either, with Camilo Doval making two appearances in two games.

Yankees' Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton hit home runs in same game for 60th time

New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge shook off a rough Opening Night by hitting his first home run of the 2026 MLB season...
Did

The finale of FX'sLove Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessetteended the only way it could have — by depicting thefatal plane crashthat ended the lives of JFK Jr., his wife Carolyn, and Carolyn's sister Lauren on July 16, 1999.

Entertainment Weekly Paul Anthony Kelly as John F. Kennedy Jr. and Sarah Pidgeon as Carolyn Bessette in FX's 'Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette' finaleCredit: FX

But the crash occurred roughly halfway through the episode, leaving the back half to explore how the Kennedy family grieved alongside the world. For many, JFK Jr.'s death was yet another example of the "Kennedy curse," a myth born out of the sudden tragic deaths that have haunted the political dynasty for more than 80 years.

In addition to the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy and Senator Robert F. Kennedy, the family has endured drug overdoses, infant mortalities, terminal illnesses, and freak accidents, such as the 1997 death of Michael LeMoyne Kennedy, who died after skiing into a tree.

Numerous Kennedys have died in plane crashes, including Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. in 1944, Kathleen Kennedy in 1948, the parents of Ethel Kennedy in 1955, and, of course, JFK Jr. in 1999. Ted Kennedy, too, survived a 1964 plane crash that killed two others.

In 1969, after theChappaquiddick incidentderailed his presidential hopes, a 37-year-old Ted, then the senator of Massachusetts,spoke at a press conferenceabout whether "some awful curse did actually hang over all the Kennedys." JFK Jr.'s death, too, gave way to dozens of op-eds over which the idea of a Kennedy curse hung like a storm cloud.

While nobody specifically mentions a "curse" onLove Story, the tragedies of the Kennedy dynasty are directly addressed in the final episode. Below, we dig into how it's explored — and what the Kennedys have said about it since JFK Jr.'s death.

How does theLove Storyfinale address the Kennedy curse?

Grace Gummer as Caroline Kennedy in FX's 'Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette' finaleCredit: FX

Following the crash, JFK Jr.'s older sister Caroline Kennedy (Grace Gummer) meets with Ann Marie Messina (Constance Zimmer), the mother of Carolyn andLauren Bessette.

As Ann laments the existential agony of losing her daughters, she asks, "How do you live in a world that doesn't make any sense? How do you even get out of bed?"

This prompts Caroline to tell the true story of a 1975 incident in which shenearly died in an explosionwhile staying at the home of a member of Parliament. She was 17 at the time, and a bomb exploded under a car in which she was meant to depart.

As Caroline tells it inLove Story, the only reason she and the M.P. survived was because they were running late. "I agonized over that for so many years. I couldn't understand why so many bad things had happened to people in my family, but for whatever reason I was spared that day a bomb went off," she says, addressing her family's tragic history.

"The only thing I really gleaned from that experience was that there is no rhyme or reason as to why some of us get to stay here a little longer. All we know is that time doesn't belong to us. Nothing is promised."

She goes on to explain that she's "not someone who lets people in very easily," saying, "I don't know if it's because I question their motives, or maybe it's because I have this feeling that the less people I know, the less people I'll inevitably have to grieve."

Later, Caroline finds some comfort in Ethel Kennedy (Jessica Harper), who recalls the death of her own parents in a plane crash before sharing some words of wisdom about persevering through grief.

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"I know I'm not a Kennedy by blood, but you and I are alike in a lot of ways," she tells Caroline. "We take pride in our resolve and our independence. It's why we're so averse to pity in all its forms. It's not enough we have to survive all this loss. We have to ensure we're not defined by it. It's exhausting."

Ethel continues, "I understand the urge to retreat even further, to get away from the prying eyes and the concerned whispers. But privacy doesn't always ensure peace. If it did, I'd have vanished a long time ago. We are Kennedy women, and we're still here. And that can't be for nothing."

How have the Kennedys addressed the curse in real life?

Paul Anthony Kelly as John F. Kennedy Jr. and Sarah Pidgeon as Carolyn Bessette in FX's 'Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette' finaleCredit: FX

It's exceedingly rare for members of the Kennedy family to address the curse publicly, but Ted's sons Ted Jr. and Patrick rejected the idea in a2009 interview onLarry King Live, which was conducted in the aftermath of Ted's death from brain cancer.

"You don't buy the idea of a curse?" King asked.

"No. No," Patrick replied. "Obviously my dad had a sense of spirituality that transcended his ability to face these problems, you know, in a way that would have otherwise paralyzed the normal person."

"The Kennedy family has had to endure these things in a very open way," added Ted Jr. "But our family is just like... every other family in America in many ways."

In 2019'sThe Kennedy Heirs,author J. Randy Taraborrelliquotes Eunice Shriver, a sister of John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy, as saying, "I've come to believe that it's not what has happened to our family that has been cursed as much as it's the fact that we've never been able to deal with it privately. There's little dignity found in living your life in so public a fashion, and that's especially true of our children. However, this burden is one we Kennedys have carried for generations. If there's a curse, it's surely it's that."

Taraborrelli discussed the curse in a2019 interview with PEOPLE. "Generally, [the Kennedys] did not believe in the curse," he said. "It was Ted Kennedy who came up with the concept of the curse after Chappaquiddick... And after that, the Kennedy curse became this sort of wide-ranging explanation for a lot of things that were happening. But when things got rough for them, I think they slipped into wondering if maybe there really was some kind of curse."

Steve Gillon, a Kennedy historian,said "there's no such thing as a Kennedy curse" in RoseMarie Terenzio and Liz McNeil's bookJFK Jr.: An Intimate Oral Biography.

"They take risks that most other people would not take," he said. "John's uncle Joe took on what was a suicide mission in World War II. His aunt Kathleen flew into a thunderstorm. His father rejected the advice of the Secret Service and refused to put a bubble top on his car. Robert, without any Secret Service protection, plunged into crowds during the sixties when there are already three leaders assassinated, including his brother. John was a risk-taker."

He continued, "John is solely responsible for the death of his wife and her sister. He bears the responsibilities of his recklessness that night — it was his poor judgement."

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Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Did “Love Story ”just address the infamous 'Kennedy curse'?

The finale of FX'sLove Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessetteended the only way it could have — by depicti...

 

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