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- The blame game: Should Democrats worry about Trump letting Obamacare fail?
- Guatemala fire death toll rises to 36 amid calls for change
- Twitter has a field day with Sean Spicer’s upside-down flag pin
- Cruise ship crashes into one of the most biodiverse coral reefs in the world
- January raid in Yemen killed 4 to 12 civilians: US
- Silicon Valley Questions WikiLeaks Founder’s Russia Ties
- Watch Monkeys Tease Their Newest Addition at Zoo
- Asked about the ‘deep state,’ White House says Obama allies ‘burrowed into government’ to enact their own agenda
- U.S. doctors in training to work longer hours under new guidelines
- Alexa May Soon Start Talking to You Out of Nowhere
- Five electric-car questions to worry about this year
- Parents question school's slave auction poster assignment
- The Bible and the belt: Inside a camp for gay youth
- Dutch polls campaign hits fever pitch amid row with Turkey
- Trump chooses Gottlieb to run FDA; Pharma breathes sigh of relief
- .africa joins the internet
- Buried treasure: huge statue of Egyptian king unearthed in Cairo neighborhood
- Niger puts 1,000 'Boko Haram fighters' on trial
- Muhammad Ali Jr. Detained At Airport For Second Time
- Rescued Sea Otter Settles Into New Home, Plays with Toys and Still Needs a Name
- Psychiatrists say mom understood she was killing kids in tub
- UN accuses Turkey of 'serious' abuses in Kurdish region
- Helicopter with business executives crashes in Istanbul, killing all aboard
- Photos of the day - March 10, 2017
- What Does IIFYM Mean?
- Vandals target Seattle synagogue, spray-paint with graffiti
- Samsung Galaxy S7 And Galaxy S8 Price And Specs Comparison
- In China, you can hire someone to persuade mistresses into ending affairs
- Guatemala fire death toll rises to 37 amid calls for change
- German trade surplus rises alongside US tensions
- Photos of the day - March 11, 2017
- Examining child marriage around the globe
- Two Ukrainian soldiers killed, 16 wounded in fresh fighting
- Boston St. Patrick's parade organizers deny banning gay marchers
- THAAD Deployment Will Affect Regional Stability, Russia Warns
- Amateur historian 'blew open locked doors' by exposing Irish babies' mass grave
- When It Comes to Manual Transmissions, Porsche Is Crazy
- Prosecutors: Pay our bills or delay Texas AG's fraud trial
- UN office urges Turkey to probe 2,000 reported killings
- A US state speeds up executions, scheduling eight in 10 days
- T-Mobile adds more data to its unlimited plan before it starts throttling you
- Boston St. Patrick's parade to allow gay veterans to return
The blame game: Should Democrats worry about Trump letting Obamacare fail? Posted: 10 Mar 2017 10:10 AM PST President Trump speaks in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on March 10 during a meeting on health care. WASHINGTON — President Trump reportedly has a backup plan if congressional Republicans are unable to pass repeal-and-replace legislation for Obamacare: blame Democrats. In a closed-door meeting earlier this week with conservative lawmakers and groups who have raised objections to the controversial replace plan, Trump said that Democrats would take the blame if the GOP cannot reach an agreement on it and the bill fails, according to CNN. |
Guatemala fire death toll rises to 36 amid calls for change Posted: 10 Mar 2017 12:50 PM PST |
Twitter has a field day with Sean Spicer’s upside-down flag pin Posted: 10 Mar 2017 12:01 PM PST |
Cruise ship crashes into one of the most biodiverse coral reefs in the world Posted: 10 Mar 2017 05:31 PM PST The dreamy beauty of a coral reef in Southeast Asia has been partially damaged by a massive, 4,290-ton cruise ship called the Caledonian Sky. On Saturday, the ship crashed into a popular diving site called Crossover Reef, which holds some of the most biodiverse coral reefs in the world, located in West Papua province, environmental news outlet Mongabay reports. SEE ALSO: Royal Caribbean takes cruise passengers into rough seas forecast days before It reportedly managed to smash some 17,000 square feet of coral in an area previously pristine enough to be considered as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and it's expected it'll take nearly 10 years for a full recovery from the incident. Now local officials want the British-owned cruise ship company to pay for the damage. The Caledonian Sky — operated by British tourism company Noble Caledonia — found itself caught in a low tide before plowing into the reefs located along the Indonesian island chain of Raja Ampat. Raja Ampat is filled with colorful coral reefs like this. Image: Michael Rubenstein via flickr From there, a boat was brought in to help refloat the cruise ship, which actually just made things worse, according to Ricardo Tapilatu, head of the Research Center for Pacific Marine Resources at the University of Papua. Tapilatu helped investigate the incident to estimate damages. "A tugboat from Sorong city was deployed to help refloat the cruise ship, which is something that shouldn't have happened because it damaged the reef even worse," Tapilatu told Mongabay. "They should've waited for high tide." Other locals were also critical of the ship's inability to avoid damaging the reefs. Tourism group Stay Raja Ampat wrote a post on Facebook asking if there was a 12-year-old at the wheel, saying, "How can this happen?" The environmental damage affected eight different coral groups in an area that's known to have some of the richest biodiversity in the world, with 10 times as many coral species as in the Caribbean. And coral reefs in general are often thought to be the most biodiverse of any ecosystems on earth. After local authorities sent in a team to investigate, it was estimated the total damage runs anywhere from $1.28 million to $1.92 million, according to Tapilatu. Despite wreaking havoc on those precious reefs, the 102-passenger ship saw very minimal damage and was able to sail away with all its passengers and 79 crew members safe. Noble Caledonia expressed regret over the incident, saying in a statement the whole thing was "unfortunate." "Noble Caledonia is firmly committed to protection of the environment, which is why it is imperative that the reasons for it are fully investigated, understood and any lessons learned incorporated in operating procedures," the company wrote. WATCH: 'Ancient Earth' series brings rare and wonderful dinosaurs back to life |
January raid in Yemen killed 4 to 12 civilians: US Posted: 09 Mar 2017 06:44 PM PST Up to a dozen civilians died during a controversial January raid against Al Qaeda in Yemen, but an investigation did not uncover "bad judgment" during the operation, the head of US forces in the Middle East said. Speaking before the Senate Armed Services Committee, General Joe Votel said "somewhere between four and 12 casualties" resulted from the US raid, which was authorized by US President Donald Trump a few days after his inauguration. The January 29 raid -- the first authorized by Trump -- saw US special operations forces enter the Yakla region of Baida province and target a compound occupied by Al-Qaeda in the Arabic Peninsula (AQAP) operatives. |
Silicon Valley Questions WikiLeaks Founder’s Russia Ties Posted: 10 Mar 2017 01:11 PM PST |
Watch Monkeys Tease Their Newest Addition at Zoo Posted: 10 Mar 2017 11:39 AM PST |
Posted: 10 Mar 2017 12:29 PM PST White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Friday that there's "no question" there are allies of former President Barack Obama who are "burrowed into government" and working to push a liberal "agenda." Spicer's comments came after Yahoo News asked if the White House believes there's a "deep state" that is actively working to undermine President Trump. "Well, I think that there's no question when you have eight years of one party in office that there are people who stay in government … and continue to espouse the agenda of the previous administration," Spicer said. |
U.S. doctors in training to work longer hours under new guidelines Posted: 10 Mar 2017 06:07 AM PST Beginning July 1, doctors in their first year of training after medical school may once again care for patients for up to 24 hours at a time and work a total of 80 hours per week, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) announced on Friday. In 2011, the group restricted these first-year residents to 16 hours at a stretch over concerns that patient care could suffer if trainees were overly tired. Opponents at the time argued the restrictions did not protect patients and limited educational opportunities for trainees. |
Alexa May Soon Start Talking to You Out of Nowhere Posted: 10 Mar 2017 10:12 AM PST Talking to Amazon's Alexa may soon seem a little less like a one-way conversation. Instead of you having to say "Alexa..." to start a dialogue, Amazon's voice assistant may initiate conversations itself. For example, Alexa could alert you when your laundry is done, or if your security camera spotted someone. |
Five electric-car questions to worry about this year Posted: 10 Mar 2017 05:45 AM PST It seems fair to say that the new presidential administration may have increased the generalized level of worry among many Americans, not to mention the rest of the world. Among the things to worry about are the future of incentives, infrastructure, and legislation encouraging the adoption of zero-emission vehicles, primarily electric cars. Yesterday, EPA administrator Scott Pruitt said carbon dioxide released by human activity is not a major cause of climate change, directly contradicting the scientific consensus. |
Parents question school's slave auction poster assignment Posted: 10 Mar 2017 01:09 PM PST |
The Bible and the belt: Inside a camp for gay youth Posted: 10 Mar 2017 05:29 PM PST |
Dutch polls campaign hits fever pitch amid row with Turkey Posted: 11 Mar 2017 08:41 AM PST Dutch political leaders hit the campaign trail Saturday, criss-crossing the country to woo voters ahead of next week's elections now overshadowed by a bitter row with Turkey. On the final weekend before Wednesday's elections, the leaders of six of the top political parties were converging on the southern city of Eindhoven for a key televised debate. Notable by his absence was far-right MP Geert Wilders, whose Freedom Party (PVV) is within a whisker of topping the polls even though he has largely eschewed traditional campaign events. |
Trump chooses Gottlieb to run FDA; Pharma breathes sigh of relief Posted: 10 Mar 2017 05:04 PM PST By Toni Clarke WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump has chosen Dr. Scott Gottlieb, a conservative health policy expert with deep ties to the pharmaceutical industry, to lead the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the White House said on Friday. If confirmed by the Senate, Gottlieb would be in charge of implementing Trump's plan to dramatically cut regulations governing food, drugs, cosmetics, dietary supplements and tobacco. Gottlieb is well known on Capitol Hill, where he has testified multiple times on hot-button health issues, including complex drug pricing matters, and is viewed favorably by drug companies and pharmaceutical investors. |
Posted: 10 Mar 2017 08:59 AM PST In the beginning was .com, followed by a host of other .somethings, but on Friday, 32 years after the world's first domain name was registered, the African Union has launched .africa for the continent. Africans who want to register a website will be able to apply for a .africa domain name in the coming months, which outgoing AU commission chair Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma said would allow the continent's people and businesses to better reach the world. |
Buried treasure: huge statue of Egyptian king unearthed in Cairo neighborhood Posted: 10 Mar 2017 11:51 AM PST A team of Egyptian and German archaeologists has discovered a towering 26-foot statue in a Cairo slum, a presumed depiction of Pharaoh Ramses II, Reuters reports on Thursday. The colossus found submerged in mud in where the ancient city of Heliopolis once stood is "one of the most important discoveries ever," according to the Egyptian Antiquities Ministry. The massive quartzite figure is "most probably Ramses II," Antiquities Minister Khaled al-Anani told Reuters on Thursday at the site of the statue's unveiling, adding that the identity would have to be later confirmed once more of the statue is uncovered. |
Niger puts 1,000 'Boko Haram fighters' on trial Posted: 10 Mar 2017 06:03 AM PST Niger has begun the trials behind closed doors of about 1,000 suspected fighters from the Boko Haram jihadist movement, officials said Friday. Chief prosecutor Chaibou Samna told AFP that the trials, on charges of terrorist links, had begun on March 2. Some of the suspects were "captured during combat" in southern Niger across the border from Boko Haram's stronghold in Nigeria, a security source said. |
Muhammad Ali Jr. Detained At Airport For Second Time Posted: 10 Mar 2017 12:51 PM PST |
Rescued Sea Otter Settles Into New Home, Plays with Toys and Still Needs a Name Posted: 10 Mar 2017 09:32 AM PST |
Psychiatrists say mom understood she was killing kids in tub Posted: 10 Mar 2017 12:05 PM PST PITTSBURGH (AP) — A Pennsylvania woman tried to be an "ideal Christian, loyal mother" but felt overwhelmed by her husband's desire for more children and his religious stance that they avoid birth control before she drowned their two youngest sons in a bathtub, a psychiatrist testified in her defense Friday. |
UN accuses Turkey of 'serious' abuses in Kurdish region Posted: 10 Mar 2017 07:20 AM PST The UN on Friday accused Turkish security forces of committing serious abuses during operations against Kurdish militants in the southeast after a ceasefire collapsed in July 2015. "Government security operations" have targeted more than 30 towns and displaced 355,000 to half a million people, mostly Kurds, the report said. According to statistics given by Ankara to the UN, the unrest in the southeast has claimed some 2,000 lives over the last year and half. |
Helicopter with business executives crashes in Istanbul, killing all aboard Posted: 10 Mar 2017 07:01 AM PST By Tuvan Gumrukcu ISTANBUL (Reuters) - A helicopter carrying an executive of the Turkish Eczabicasi group and four Russians, including the firm's Russian operations chief, crashed in Istanbul on Friday, killing all seven people on board, the city's mayor was quoted as saying. Bulent Eczacibasi, chairman of the company with interests in pharmaceuticals and home products, and the governor of Istanbul had initially said five of the seven on board had been killed. Istanbul mayor Kadir Topbas was quoted by broadcaster NTV and other media as saying all five passengers and two crew had died. |
Photos of the day - March 10, 2017 Posted: 09 Mar 2017 10:29 PM PST A displaced Iraqi girl cries before entering Hamam al-Alil camp, as Iraqi forces battle with Islamic State militants south of Mosul, Iraq; members of the Tibetan Youth Congress and supporters gather to mark the 58th anniversary of the Tibetan uprising while protesting against Chinese rule in Tibet on the eve of Tibetan Uprising Day, Bangalore, India; and the sun sets over the Maha-ThaKyarYanThi Buddhist Temple in Nyaypyitaw, Myanmar. These are some of the photos of the day. (AP/EPA/Getty/Reuters/Zuma) |
Posted: 10 Mar 2017 02:58 AM PST You may have noticed #FlexibleDieting -- also known as "if it fits your macros" or #IIFYM -- showing up on Instagram photos of everything from Pop-Tarts and cupcakes to rib-eyes and protein shakes. The flexible dieting approach started among bodybuilders, but has become increasingly popular over the last few years as people use it to achieve their health goals without feeling deprived. Fans of flexible dieting say that as long as you eat the right proportion of carbohydrates, protein and fat, it doesn't matter what foods those nutrients come from. |
Vandals target Seattle synagogue, spray-paint with graffiti Posted: 10 Mar 2017 05:09 PM PST |
Samsung Galaxy S7 And Galaxy S8 Price And Specs Comparison Posted: 10 Mar 2017 08:28 AM PST |
In China, you can hire someone to persuade mistresses into ending affairs Posted: 10 Mar 2017 02:56 AM PST People say that happiness is only real when shared. But what if your spouse wanted to share it with another person? Desperate spouses in China who are seeking an amicable end to their partners' transgressions are hiring "mistress hunters" — trained professionals that are sent undercover to "accidentally" meet and dissuade the third party in a marriage to put an end to an affair, The Paper reported (link in Chinese). SEE ALSO: Flame-throwing drones make for badass trash removers The "mistress hunters" — like those employed by Shanghai Weiqing Network Technology — can charge hourly rates from 800 to 1,000 yuan ($115.74 to $144.67), and they are private investigators and marriage counselors combined. The company's founder, 49-year-old former journalist Shu Xin, earns up to 3,000 yuan ($433.91) per hour. Cases that Shu Xin takes under his wing would typically cost upwards of 300,000 yuan ($43,391), while regular "solutions" will cost around 50,000 yuan ($7,231). Therapists evaluate the crises within the marriage and work out a way to maintain it, while "mistress hunters" — mostly women psychology, sociology or law graduates — use psychological methods to persuade third parties to end affairs. Shanghai Weiqing Network Technology has made it big in China, where it has filed to list its shares on China's over-the-counter stock market, the National Equities Exchange and Quotations (NEEQ). The company claims to have salvaged 350,000 marriages, and separated 168,500 third parties, with a total revenue of 17.7 million yuan (about $2.6 million) in the first ten months of last year. "Weiqing" — which means "defending love" in Chinese — has 59 offices across China. "Mistress hunting" takes up nearly 87 percent of the company's revenue, according to documents it submitted to the NEEQ, which The Paper — a state-run news outlet — picked up on last month. Shanghai Weiqing's top five clients have paid up to to 3.6 million yuan ($520,697) to salvage their marriages, according to company filings. In an interview with AFP, Shu Xin said that his goal was to prevent divorce. "Mistresses are global. But specifically in China, they are kept women: the husbands, often rich, pay for luxury apartments, cars and luxury products," he said. "If we fail, then we repay the entire amount." Shanghai Weiqing's rise comes as divorce rates in China rose for 12 consecutive years — as Chinese couples increasingly use chat apps like WeChat and dating apps like Momo to seek an extramarital affair. Over 3 million couples divorced in 2015, according to the Chinese Ministry of Civil Affairs. WATCH: This might be the world's quietest library |
Guatemala fire death toll rises to 37 amid calls for change Posted: 10 Mar 2017 07:20 PM PST |
German trade surplus rises alongside US tensions Posted: 10 Mar 2017 12:53 AM PST Germany's trade surplus ticked upwards in January, official data showed Friday, as attacks from the Trump White House over the nation's export strength intensify. Europe's largest economy exported 18.5 billion euros ($19.6 billion) more than it imported, according to preliminary data adjusted for seasonal and calendar effects from federal statistics office Destatis. Expanding surpluses for Germany are unlikely to calm rhetoric from the White House, which has promised to act on President Donald Trump's complaints about seeing more German cars on American roads than American cars in Germany. |
Photos of the day - March 11, 2017 Posted: 11 Mar 2017 01:53 PM PST Seppe Smits of Belgium competes during the Women's Slopestyle Final in the FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboard World Championships 2017, in Sierra Nevada, Spain; Katie McCloughlin lies with Topsy, her English setter, during the Crufts dog show in Birmingham, Britain; displaced Iraqi get on a truck to be carried to a safe place, as Iraqi forces battle with Islamic State militants in western Mosul, Iraq. These are some of the photos of the day. (AP/EPA/Getty/Reuters) |
Examining child marriage around the globe Posted: 11 Mar 2017 05:00 AM PST |
Two Ukrainian soldiers killed, 16 wounded in fresh fighting Posted: 11 Mar 2017 05:47 AM PST Ukraine's army reported Saturday two soldiers killed in clashes with Russian-backed rebels, in a new uptick in violence across eastern Ukraine. Ukrainian military spokesman Andriy Lysenko told reporters that two servicemen were killed and another 16 wounded in the past 24 hours, accusing insurgents of using heavy weapons against government troops. The latest casualties along eastern Ukraine's volatile frontline come despite the warring sides announcing a truce deal in February that has failed to stop the violence entirely. |
Boston St. Patrick's parade organizers deny banning gay marchers Posted: 10 Mar 2017 05:31 AM PST By Scott Malone BOSTON (Reuters) - Organizers of Boston's St. Patrick's Day Parade denied on Thursday that they told a gay veterans' group its members could not march openly in one of the largest U.S. celebrations of the holiday and accused the group of breaking parade rules. The veterans' group, OUTVETS, said late on Tuesday it had been informed by parade organizers it would be excluded from this year's parade, rekindling a decades-long fight over inclusion that had looked settled in 2015 when the group was first allowed to march. "OUTVETS has not been officially notified that they will not be allowed to march in the Parade," the Allied War Veterans Council, which organizes the 116-year-old event honoring Ireland's patron saint, said in a statement posted to its website on Thursday. |
THAAD Deployment Will Affect Regional Stability, Russia Warns Posted: 09 Mar 2017 09:16 PM PST |
Amateur historian 'blew open locked doors' by exposing Irish babies' mass grave Posted: 10 Mar 2017 02:07 AM PST By Estelle Shirbon TUAM, Ireland (Reuters) - Catherine Corless has been haunted all her life by childhood memories of the skinny children from the local Catholic home for unmarried mothers and their babies in the small cathedral town of Tuam in the west of Ireland. Some of them attended the same school as Corless, but they were kept apart from the other children. It was only later I thought 'that poor child never got a sweet, they would have loved a sweet'," Corless told Reuters in an interview at her home in the countryside outside Tuam. |
When It Comes to Manual Transmissions, Porsche Is Crazy Posted: 10 Mar 2017 10:09 AM PST |
Prosecutors: Pay our bills or delay Texas AG's fraud trial Posted: 09 Mar 2017 07:52 PM PST |
UN office urges Turkey to probe 2,000 reported killings Posted: 10 Mar 2017 05:05 AM PST |
A US state speeds up executions, scheduling eight in 10 days Posted: 10 Mar 2017 12:12 PM PST The US state of Arkansas is racing to execute eight death row inmates in 10 days next month to beat the expiration date on a hard-to-get drug used in lethal injections. Under a decree signed by Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, the first two prisoners will be put to death on April 17, followed by two more on April 20, another two on April 24 and the last pair on April 27. According to the Death Penalty Information Center, an independent organization, no state has ever carried out eight executions in 10 days. |
T-Mobile adds more data to its unlimited plan before it starts throttling you Posted: 11 Mar 2017 12:03 PM PST So far, 2017 has seen more changes to cellphone plans than the last five years before. In the space of a couple of weeks, all the big carriers suddenly started offering unlimited data plans for reasonable prices. AT&T even removed its ridiculous triple-play requirement for unlimited customers, which was generous. For T-Mobile, which started the unlimited data trend last year, it didn't seem like things could get much better. But the entry of Verizon and AT&T forced it to remove the last real restrictions on the data plan, meaning that you can use hotspot data or watch HD video. ' But one thing all the unlimited plans have in common is a soft cap. Once you go over a monthly threshold of data usage, you're subject to being throttled at peak times. It's a "soft cap" rather than a data limit, because you aren't cut off from data, and there's no overage charge. Whichever way you slice it, though, it's still a limit of some kind. For T-Mobile customers, that limit just went up. The threshold for throttling used to be 28GB per month, and that's now been raised to 30GB. If you hit that level of data usage in a month, you will be "deprioritized" at peak times. That means other customers will be given priority, and in crowded locations, that's going to mean your data slows way down. The 2GB increase might not sound like much, but it moves T-Mobile way into first place for total data allowance. AT&T and Verizon put their cap at 22GB, while Sprint's at 23GB. Those are still generous allowances, and you're not guaranteed to have permanently slow internet after hitting the cap, but it's worth thinking about for particularly heavy data users. |
Boston St. Patrick's parade to allow gay veterans to return Posted: 10 Mar 2017 08:35 PM PST A group of gay veterans of the U.S. military can march in this year's Boston's St. Patrick's Day Parade, parade organizers said on Friday after an earlier move to exclude them sparked outrage and boycott threats in the liberal city. The parade, one of the United States' largest honoring Irish-American heritage, had long excluded openly gay participants, saying that admitting them would conflict with organizers' Roman Catholic beliefs. In 2015 organizers agreed to allow the gay veterans' group, OUTVETS, to march in the face of pressure from city officials and sponsors who pulled their financing. |
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