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Fact Check: The US vice presidential debate

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by W.G. Dunlop and Arthur MacMillan

Mike Pence and Kamala Harris went head to head in the US vice presidential debate on Wednesday, sparring over issues including the Trump administration’s response to the coronavirus, taxes and health care.

AFP breaks down some of the main topics from the debate below.

– Coronavirus response –
Harris said US President Donald Trump and Pence knew about the dangers of the coronavirus — which has killed more than 211,000 people in America — in late January, but “covered it up” and “minimized the seriousness of it.”

This is supported by tapes of interviews with Trump conducted by investigative journalist Bob Woodward, such as one from March 19 in which the president said: “I wanted to always play it down,” and “I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic.”

Pence — who is in charge of the administration’s coronavirus response — countered that, “From the very first day, President Donald Trump has put the health of America first,” saying he “suspended all travel from China,” and claiming that Biden criticized the move as “xenophobic.”

The vice president’s statement on travel is inaccurate. Rather than barring all travel from China, Trump imposed restrictions that were subject to multiple exemptions. A New York Times analysis found that tens of thousands of travelers entered the US from China in the two months following the restrictions.

Biden has accused Trump of trading in xenophobia in tweets this year, but it is not clear if he was specifically referring to the president’s China travel measures.

– Taxes –
“Joe Biden is going to raise your taxes,” Pence said. This is partly true, but depends on income.

The Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center said Biden’s tax plan would bring in about $4 trillion in revenues over the next 10 years, and that: “Under his plan, the highest-income households would see substantially larger tax increases than households in other income groups, both in dollar amounts and as share of their incomes.”

This echoes Harris’s response to Pence’s claim, in which she pledged: “Joe Biden will not raise taxes on anyone who earns less than $400,000 a year.”

Neither Pence’s claim or Harris’s response, however, can be fully verified, as Congress would have to pass a new tax law to institute Biden’s plan, which would affect both corporate and personal tax liability.

– Pre-existing conditions –
Harris said Trump is “in court right now trying to get rid of the Affordable Care Act, which means you will lose protections if you have pre-existing conditions.” This is accurate.

Trump’s Justice Department has argued in a brief to the US Supreme Court that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) should be struck down, which would, as Harris said, end the protection for people with pre-existing conditions that it currently provides.

Pence responded that, “President Trump and I have a plan to improve health care and protect pre-existing conditions.” No such plan has been presented to Congress.

On September 24, however, Trump signed an executive order stating that it is US policy to “to ensure that Americans with pre-existing conditions can obtain the insurance of their choice at affordable rates.” But legal experts say it is not a replacement for the protection provided by the ACA.

– The Islamic State group –
“President Trump unleashed the American military and our armed forces destroyed the ISIS caliphate and took down their leader al-Baghdadi without one American casualty,” Pence said, referring to the Islamic State (IS) group, which once controlled major portions of Iraq and Syria.

Pence was correct that IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi died in a US raid, but the rest of his statement is inaccurate. It was not the United States but local ground forces in Iraq and Syria that played the decisive role in victories over the jihadists, with America focusing on providing them with air support, equipment and training.

– Fracking and fossil fuels –
Pence said that Biden would ban fracking and abolish fossil fuels, harming jobs in the US energy industry.

This is a longstanding but misleading allegation against Biden stemming from a Democratic Party candidates’ debate last year in which he said he would not grant subsidies to either sector. He has since said he would not shut down existing projects.

In a debate this year, Biden said: “No more. No new fracking.” And during an interview with a Pittsburgh-based television station this year, he was again asked if he intended to stop fracking.

“No I wouldn’t shut down this industry,” Biden answered. His campaign has also denied that there are plans to ban fracking.

wd-adm/je

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

North Korean in Malaysia loses appeal against US extradition

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A North Korean man accused of laundering money lost a legal bid to halt his extradition from Malaysia to the US to face charges Thursday, but will lodge a final appeal.

Mun Chol Myong, who has lived in the Southeast Asian country for a decade with his family, was arrested last year following the extradition request from Washington.

He denies FBI claims that he led a criminal group that violated sanctions by supplying prohibited items to North Korea and laundered funds through front companies, according to his lawyers.

A Malaysian court in December approved his extradition but Mun challenged the move at the Kuala Lumpur High Court.

His lawyers argued his detention was unlawful, as the allegations against him were of a political nature.

But a judge rejected the argument, saying procedures were correctly followed and Mun failed to prove the extradition bid was “politically-charged”.

There was not “sufficient evidence to support this challenge against the backdrop of the money laundering-related indictments,” judge Ahmad Shahrir Mohamad Salleh said.

His lawyer said he would lodge a final appeal at Malaysia’s top court.

Mun, in his 50s, was not in court for the ruling but his wife and North Korean officials were present.

He is accused of four charges of money-laundering and two of conspiracy to launder money, and the allegations relate mainly to his work in neighbouring Singapore, according to his lawyers.

It is not clear what he is accused of supplying, but there have been cases of businesses in the city-state sending luxury items, such as liquor and watches, to the North.

The export to North Korea of some luxury goods has been banned as part of sweeping sanctions imposed on Pyongyang by the United Nations and countries including the United States over its weapons programmes.

jsm-sr/am/rma

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Malaysia’s Anwar to meet king as he seeks to topple govt

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Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim will meet the king next week to prove he has support from MPs to take power, he said Thursday, the latest move in the country’s political crisis.

The Southeast Asian nation has been in turmoil since a reformist government headed by Mahathir Mohamad — which included Anwar — collapsed in February amid bitter infighting.

Muhyiddin Yassin became premier without an election, but his coalition’s support is shaky and critics accuse it of lacking legitimacy.

Anwar announced last month he had sufficient backing from lawmakers to become premier but the king, who appoints the prime minister, delayed meeting him due to ill health.

The 73-year-old — a long-time opposition leader who previously spent years in jail on sodomy charges — said the king, Sultan Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah, had now agreed to an audience on Tuesday.

In a statement, he said he would “present documentation (showing) the strong and convincing majority of MPs” support him.

A candidate to be prime minister must prove to the monarch he commands the support of a majority of Malaysia’s 222 MPs.

It was not clear whether Anwar had the requisite support, as some lawmakers rumoured to be backing him had denied it.

Last month, Muhyiddin’s hold on power was strengthened when his allies won key elections in eastern Sabah state.

James Chin, a Malaysia expert at the University of Tasmania, said major changes were unlikely straight after the meeting as it was merely “the first move on a chessboard”.

The king would probably want to meet Muhyiddin to discuss the opposition chief’s claims, he said. But the prime minister went into self-quarantine earlier this week after a minister contracted Covid-19.

sr/leg

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom’s baby looks like Bloom but has Perry’s blue eyes

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In August, celebrity couple Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom welcomed their baby daughter Daisy Dove and ever since then the proud parents have been enjoying the time spent with her.

Even though the celebrity couple have yet to share any photos of their newborn child, doting father Orlando Bloom appeared on Ellen on Wednesday to share about life with his baby daughter.

“Daisy Dove is my little mini-me/ mini mum/ mini Kate,” Orlando gushed as he spoke about the newborn.

“The eyes look like her, but it was funny because when she first came out she was like me. It was like ‘it’s a mini me’ but fortunately she got those Katy blues which is perfect,” he continued.

“But then she sort of looked like my mum so I got confused because Katy’s breast feeding this mini-me/my mini-mum so it was a bit confusing,” the star joked.

Baby Daisy has been sleeping soundly through the night thanks to her father chanting to her and helping her relax. Orlando Bloom shared that he “chants to soothe the baby” saying that Daisy “loves it” so much so, that he is “winning the daddy points.”

“She is [sleeping through the night] it’s always a process, she’s now sleeping from 9pm-7am which is incredible, it’s a blessing,” the dad-of-two revealed.

It is not the first time being a father for Orlando Bloom. The Pirates of the Caribbean star is father to nine-year-old Flynn who he shares with ex-wife Miranda Kerr. Speaking about Flynn’s bond with his baby sister, Orlando told Ellen:

“He’s very well versed in little babies, his mum has a couple of little bubbas and he’s the best.

“He’s wonderful. We are all doing a lot of schooling remotely and have been at home a lot and there’s been a lot of time for nesting and getting him to help take care of the baby – sort of!”

The Roar hitmaker and Lord of the Rings actor announced Daisy’s arrival via UNICEF. The couple are Goodwill Ambassadors for the charity and they shared a black and white photo of Daisy holding onto her father’s finger.

They said they were “floating with love and wonder from the safe and healthy arrival of our daughter,” adding that they feel “lucky” and “grateful” to have been able to deliver their child so peacefully.

August unemployment rate for citizens, PRs, highest since global financial crisis

Singapore—Manpower Minister Josephine Teo said that the rate of unemployment for Singapore’s citizens and permanent residents (PRs) accelerated faster in August than in July. She also warned that it may follow that the unemployment rate will grow even more swiftly in the months to come.

She said, “We cannot tell at this point in time whether, in the coming months, the unemployment rate will (rise) at a faster rate or will it stay about the same, but nonetheless, we are keeping a very close watch.”

The latest figures from the weekly job situation report from the Ministry of Manpower’s (MOM) revealed that the unemployment rate for Singapore’s citizens and PRs rose by 0.4 percentage points in August to 4.5 per cent.

This is the highest rate it has been since September 2009, when it was at 4.9 per cent after the global financial crisis.

In July, the unemployment rate for citizens and PRs increased by 0.3 percentage points to 4.1 per cent.

Overall, the country’s total unemployment rate (including foreigners) was at 3.4 per cent in August, showing an increase from its rate of three per cent in July.

In September 2009, it had stood at 4.8 per cent.

These remarks were made by the Manpower Minister during stout of construction firm Samwoh Corporation’s laboratory facilities, which she attended with Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat and Trade and Industry Minister Chan Chun Sing.

As for Singapore’s citizens alone, the jobless rate grew from 4.3 per cent to 4.6 per cent from July to August. This is the highest rate of unemployment for the country’s citizens since September 2009, when it was at 4.9 per cent.

Asked to comment on the increase in the resident unemployment rate, DPM Heng said that the problem is global, but that support systems are in place.

“At the moment, what we are faced with is a very sharp cyclical shock, and not just in Singapore but around the entire world.  The Jobs Support Scheme and all the various support schemes take us into March next year. So there will be some degree of structural unemployment that ensues, but a lot of it now is also cyclical shock of a very deep nature.”

Ms Teo also touched on what needs to be done before the Jobs Support Scheme ends next March. “What we can do, however, is to make sure that even the opportunities that are currently available, they continue to be filled as quickly as possible.”

In a Facebook post on October 7, the Manpower Minister wrote about the total number of jobs that have been made available.

“In this week’s Jobs Situation Report (8th Edition), we provided an update on the overall opportunities and placements under the SGUnited Jobs and Skills Package. As at end August, about 117,000 opportunities have been made available – an increase of 25,500 from end July.

Majority are jobs, with the private sector offering more long-term jobs than the public sector. Over 33,000 jobseekers have been placed, an increase of 9,000 compared to a month ago. This is good progress. However, we must press on with efforts to match more jobseekers to these opportunities, as there remains a significant number of unfilled vacancies.”

OVER 33,000 JOBSEEKERS PLACED INTO OPPORTUNITIES UNDER SGUNITED JOBS AND SKILLS PACKAGE In this week’s Jobs Situation…

Posted by Josephine Teo on Wednesday, 7 October 2020

-/TISG

Read also: More Singapore job-seekers open to salary cuts amid Covid-19 pandemic: Survey

More Singapore job-seekers open to salary cuts amid Covid-19 pandemic: Survey

Viral video: S’pore ‘Karen’ accuses deliveryman of being rude, blocks lift from closing to record the incident

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Singapore – A video of a woman blocking the lift with her body to prevent a courier from reaching his destination after allegedly accusing him of being rude has gone viral on social media.

On Wednesday (Oct 7), Facebook page All Singapore Stuff uploaded a video of the incident involving a woman preventing a courier from reaching his floor by blocking the lift door while recording everything on her phone.

The caption reads, “This lady accuse delivery bro of being rude by entering a condo door she had opened. She also blocked the lift to stop him making delivery. The way she talks to other bystanders, really wonder who is the rude one.”

The five-minute video began with the deliveryman informing the audience that he had about 80 more places to deliver parcels to, yet someone was stopping him from doing his duty. “So, you want to be a kiasu person then that’s your problem, but I have places to be. So can you please, I’m asking kindly, move out of the lift so I can do my job” said the deliveryman.

The woman did not reply and simply kept her phone aimed at the man to record the incident. “Hello? Respectful woman, please, move out of the lift. I have places to go,” the man repeated. He tried asking once more before escalating the situation to the authorities.

“I really hope when you order food or anything, never come to you, or it comes spoiled,” said the man. It appears that more passengers were approaching as the woman peeked out to the hallway.

In the video the woman begins talking to an uncle in Chinese while another man delivering food waits to get into the lift. When the delivery personnel asked if the man wanted to get in, the latter replied positively but was told to wait by the auntie.

According to the woman, she is a part of the condominium management and “was in charge.” She advised the man to register first before proceeding with his delivery.

When the individuals she was trying to call earlier appeared at the scene, the woman began explaining what happened.

The woman mentioned that the delivery personnel entered the lift in a rough manner as she was trying to exit and “never registered.” She continued blocking the lift doors from closing and commanded the men to call the authorities to the scene. The woman found fault with the man entering the lift rudely, given she wasn’t opening the door for him in the first place.

The video ends with the man still stuck in the lift and the woman shouting he was very rude for entering the lift when she opened the doors.

With over 275,000 views and 2,000 comments, members from the online community couldn’t understand why the woman needed to block the lift and inconvenience others trying to get in.

Photo: FB screengrab/All Singapore Stuff

Facebook user Dave Koh observed the woman violated a few rules herself as she tried upholding the law.

Photo: FB screengrab/All Singapore Stuff

Others likened the woman to the “Karen” stereotype.

Photo: FB screengrab/All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab/All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab/All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab/All Singapore Stuff

Regarding the issue of not registering before entering the premises, which the woman highlighted, netizens confirmed that condominiums have a system in place where no one is allowed to enter without registering first at the front gate or guardhouse.

Photo: FB screengrab/All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab/All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab/All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab/All Singapore Stuff

Condo management lady blocks lift

This lady accuse delivery bro of being rude by entering a condo door she had opened. She also blocked the lift to stop him making delivery.The way she talks to other bystanders, really wonder who is the rude one<Video: Aliff>

Posted by All Singapore Stuff on Wednesday, 7 October 2020

Read related: Spotted: S’pore ‘Karen’ causing commotion for being told to wear mask and wait in queue

Spotted: S’pore ‘Karen’ causing commotion for being told to wear mask and wait in queue

Drunk Singaporean dances naked in Thailand, upon his arrest police discover he’s overstayed 5 years

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Singapore—A Singaporean national identified as Chow Chung Cheng got drunk, stripped naked, and danced the night away on Sunday (Oct 4) in Korat, Thailand. When he was apprehended by the police, an immigration check revealed that his visa expired on March 15, 2014.

Mr Chow has been charged with overstaying his visa, committing obscene acts in public, being drunk and disorderly, and causing chaos in public, along with some other offences.

He appeared in court on Wednesday (Oct 7).

Police were alerted to a noise complaint on Sunday night, and when they investigated the matter they found Mr Chung in the nude cruising down a street.

The police who arrested him happened to have an extra set of clothes with them, which Mr Chung put on after he was apprehended outside a condominium on Manasilp Road, Nai Mueang Subdistrict, Mueang Nakhon Ratchasima District in Korat.

According to this police website, “He was drunk and walking around with no clothes. After officers performed a thorough search, they discovered he was Singaporean with a visa to stay in Thailand until March 14, 2015.”

Mr Chow is expected to be moved to Nakhon Ratchasima province’s Immigration Bureau, and then after his court appearance, to the Immigration Detention Facility in downtown Bangkok.

Individuals caught overstaying in Thailand are fined 500 baht (S$21.80) per day. The fine, however, has a cap of 20,000 baht (S$871). If they are discovered to have overstayed for longer than five years, they will not be allowed to enter Thailand for 10 years. -/TISG

Read also: Watch out! Man is drunk, so don’t take any risks!

Watch out! Man is drunk, so don’t take any risks!

Is the expat experience in Singapore forever changed by Covid-19?

Singapore—The coronavirus pandemic has had far-reaching effects in Singapore, including perhaps changing the expat situation forever, according to a recent report from Bloomberg, which says that “the appeal of expat life in Singapore has lost much of its shine.”

There certainly are many expatriates who have enjoyed the perks of living in Singapore, which includes the convenience of travel to other parts of Asia and the world, high salaries, safety and other perks and bonuses. Indeed, as Bloomberg points out, over 50 per cent of senior management roles in financial service are occupied by non-Singaporeans.

To be clear, the cushy life of an ‘expat’ is a far cry than the daily experience of immigrant workers, who live lives of far less privilege.

And Singapore has benefited from the expertise of expats as well. The article states that “Singapore’s modus operandi has been to make itself a base camp for global capitalism and the people who make it tick. Lee Kuan Yew, the country’s first leader, laid out the welcome mat for multinational corporations: first for textiles, ship maintenance and petrochemicals, then for electronics, tourism and finance.”

However, Covid-19 may have just signaled the end of the sweet life for expats in Singapore. The current recession and the biggest contraction of the economy in decades has effected the country’s employment rates, and naturally, locals are being given priority, with businesses incentivized to hire and keep them.

The finance industry is now being closely watched to ensure compliance in their hiring practices. And lately, the rules concerning foreigners’ employment visas have gotten stricter, with minimum salaries going up for them not just once but twice in 2020.

And expats themselves have been talking about an increased sense of difficulty and unease in the country. Last week, news and media website Rice Media published an article entitled “Why It Sucks to Be An Expat In Singapore Right Now” by staff writer Edoardo Liotta, which has gained traction online, with many Singaporeans sharing and commenting on it. Netizens have pointed out that amid the unprecedented economic uncertainty of the pandemic, “It sucks to be an expat anywhere in the world.”

Australian Kym Grieve’s observation, quoted in the Rice Media article, that contrary to many people’s thinking, expat packages do not come with the privileges and benefits they did a few decades ago, is echoed by Bloomberg.

“The caricature of the European sipping a gin and tonic under a shady tree with rent and school fees taken care of, pampered by maids, is woefully out of date.”

Bloomberg goes on to say that there are not may companies that pay for tuition and housing of expat employees, and that the global financial crisis over a decade ago did away with “the glory days of the expat packages.” —/TISG

Read also: Netizens unhappy about Rice Media’s article on expats in Singapore

Nas discusses fake news issue with K. Shanmugam in podcast

Singapore—Blogger Nuseir Yassin, known around the world for his Nas Daily videos, uploaded a podcast about fake news with his special guest K Shanmugam, Singapore’s Minister for Home Affairs and Law.

Nas opens the episode by saying, “I hate fake news,” in his signature emphatic style, adding that last week he got “attacked” by “a very well-architectured and well-targeted fake news campaign” that accused him of being a spy for Israel.

The blogger quipped that if this were true, he would have a lot more money.

He said in the introduction to the episode that while a lot of people talk about fake news, not enough is said about the solution to the problem, which led him to introduce Mr Shanmugam, “one of the best lawyers in Asia,” as well as POFMA, the country’s law to counter online falsehoods,  since “in Singapore, they’ve created a law to solve fake news.”

I know Fake News is a big problem.So you should hear this episode on Nas Talks on Spotify.I talked with Singapore's…

Posted by Nas Daily on Tuesday, 6 October 2020

“How exactly are they doing it? Is it against freedom of speech?…And how can your country also get a fake news law…” Nas said, by way of giving listeners a foretaste of the upcoming discussion, underlining how “relevant” the topic is for everyone.

Nas introduces Mr Shanmugam as “the man fixing fake news,” which the minister gently corrects as “the man trying to deal with fake news.”

Playing the “devil’s advocate” Nas then says that “Fact never existed,” quoting Yuval Noah Harari who said we live in a “post-truth society.”

The Law Minister, who calls himself a practical man, answers back, “Vaccines are good for you. When you’re sick, you need medicine… and the earth is not flat…the reality of mathematics and physics are not fake news.”

He then went on to say that the worst thing that fake news can do is cause riots and deaths, as it has done in Sri Lanka.

“It makes people doubt everything in their society,” he sighs.

And when Nas looks for someone to blame, Mr Shanmugam tells him that the target is fake news itself, not the people behind it.

Because fake news is so widespread, it cannot be got rid of. Therefore the solution is to attach a “health label” to it so that “when you…or your mother reads it,” there’s a warning that says this is NOT the truth, as well as a direction to where readers can find the truth.

“The way to protect democracy and to deal with fake news is to give more news and more info…and not to censor, as much as possible,” Mr Shanmugam told Nas.

The minister and the blogger then go through several examples of dealing with fake news, the POFMA way. The opposition to POFMA the Minister adds, is due largely to misperception. It is not censorship or the Government acting as arbiters of truth, he says, but merely a ‘health warning.’

The two also talk about Alex Tan, who has spread fake news against Nas as well as the government. Mr Shanmugam told the blogger that in this case, he can apply POHA, the act protecting people against harassment.

At one point, Nas asks, “What if I say that Covid-19 is perfectly safe?”

Mr Shanmugam laughs and answers “I think we may have to put out a public health warning on you. And people will understand why. People won’t have much sympathy for you.”

The blogger also laughs and answers, “People don’t have much sympathy for me anyway.”

At the end of the episode, Nas thanked Mr Shanmugam and told him, “I’m the guy who wants to double POFMA!,” reiterating his disdain for fake news.

Nas’ podcast with Mr Shamugam can be listened to in full on Spotify. —/TISG

 

Read also: Nas Daily’s girlfriend says she has to serve 14-day SHN ‘because they want money for the hotel’

http://theindependent.sg/nas-dailys-girlfriend-says-she-has-to-serve-14-day-shn-because-they-want-money-for-the-hotel-2/

 

Kim Kardashian on caring for Kanye West when he had COVID-19

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Reality star Kim Kardashian spoke to GRAZIA about caring for her husband Kanye West when he contracted COVID-19. Kim revealed that she had no help at that time and that “changing his sheets with gloves and a face shield was a really scary time.”

According to Kim, “Kanye had it way at the beginning when nobody really knew what was going on. It was so scary and unknown.” The couple were alone in their home with four kids without anyone else to help out. Kim had to take care of Kanye singlehandedly.

“I had to go and change his sheets and help him get out of bed when he wasn’t feeling good,” she said. “It was a challenge because it was so unknown…Changing his sheets with gloves and a face shield was really a scary time.”

The rapper has since recovered from the virus and the couple are working on their relationship. Back in August, a source told People that “Kim still seems focused on making her marriage work. She is pretty quiet about her exact plans for the future, but for now, she seems okay with Kanye living in Wyoming. He is moving ahead with the presidential campaign. This is a decision that no one can change his mind about.”

Kim Kardashian appeared on the cover of GRAZIA. Picture: Instagram

In other news, Kim Kardashian and Kanye West went on a romantic date night last month at a friend’s backyard wedding and this had tongues waggling.

Kim Kardashian took the opportunity to dispel rumours that she was on the verge of divorce with husband Kanye West.

Kim, 39 went on Instagram Stories to share photos and videos of the wedding. She posted photos from the celebration, including a shot of a ‘rare’ cocktail and a photo of her and 43-year-old Kanye’s shoes with the caption, ‘Date night.’

The duo’s romantic night out put to rest the rumours that Kim was facing an impending divorce from her husband of six years. The reality star did not show her husband’s face in the photos but only showed his shoes in her social media postings.