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- Why Trump should wait until after the election to announce a COVID-19 vaccine
- A Texas woman's body caught on fire after she used an 'off-brand' hand sanitizer and lit a candle in her home
- Soldier from Key West killed in military vehicle crash in Texas
- Jessica Krug will not teach this semester, George Washington University says
- California's oldest state park, home to iconic redwoods, expects to close for year due to fires
- Mexico's largest cartel 'arming consumer drones with explosives' in turf war
- Trump's new coronavirus adviser uses made-up statistics and false claims to praise White House pandemic response
- A massive 164-feet deep crater suddenly opened up on Siberia's Arctic tundra and it could be the result of an explosion triggered by climate change, scientists say
- Chris Stirewalt reacts to Biden answering reporter questions: ‘Shamefully embarrassing’
- Pelosi, Mnuchin reach agreement to avert a government shutdown, still at an impasse on COVID-19 deal
- 'Not a white guy named Edison': Biden claims a black man invented the light bulb
- A Ukrainian airline banned a passenger for life after she opened a jet's emergency exit door and walked around on the wing
- Chinese students face increased scrutiny at US airports
- Armed men arrested after traveling from Missouri to Kenosha to 'see for themselves,' FBI says
- A car plowed through Black Lives Matter protesters in Times Square, and the NYPD had to deny accusations it was one of its unmarked vehicles
- World facing 'pandemic era' with barrage of new diseases to come
- Hurricane Center watching 3 systems. But that’s not why Labor Day could bust in Miami
- Judge bans Detroit police tactics against protesters
- Marine wins Democratic primary for Kennedy's US House seat
- No sign of end to Far East anti-Kremlin rallies after nearly two months
- What we know about Nancy Pelosi's visit to the San Francisco hair salon she accused of a 'setup'
- Disabled protester in wheelchair accuses Portland police of trying to ‘break his arms’ while arresting him
- A massive wave capsized a cargo ship loaded with 6,000 cattle off the coast of Japan, said surviving crew member
- China complicit in bypassing UN sanctions to launder North Korean money, report suggests
- Biden lashes out at Trump over reports the president called military service members 'suckers' and 'losers'
- A Florida congresswoman was blocked from visiting two USPS mail sorting facilities amid concerns for delayed mail delivery
- Democrats bash decision to reject Miami Heat’s offer of AA Arena as an early-voting site
- Philippines talking to Pfizer, Russia on COVID-19 vaccine supply
- Texas mom severely burned after hand sanitizer catches fire
- Ohio woman falsely called police on Black man using his phone, said he was carrying a gun
- Labour MP Dawn Butler condemned after praising Extinction Rebellion for 'excellent work'
- Osama bin Laden’s niece claims 9/11-inspired attack could happen if Trump loses the election
- Hundreds of bags of cannabis fell from the sky in Israel, dropped by a 'green drone' on a Tel Aviv square
- If Biden doesn't win election in a landslide will Americans go to war?
- Analysis: China's rise takes the world into uncharted waters
- FBI, spy agencies will not say if attending U.S. House election security briefing
- 11 freshmen at Northeastern were dismissed for violating COVID-19 rules. Their $35,000 tuition won't be reimbursed.
- Lawyer of accused Kenosha shooter has troubled financial past, steps away from defense fund that raised $700K
- 'Get him out of here’: Donald Trump demanded UK ambassador leave US after leaked cables showed diplomat criticising him
- Four Marines Safe After Super Stallion Helicopter Catches Fire Mid-Flight
- Four years later, some Pennsylvania Trump fans still fired up
Why Trump should wait until after the election to announce a COVID-19 vaccine Posted: 04 Sep 2020 02:32 PM PDT |
Posted: 05 Sep 2020 12:22 PM PDT |
Soldier from Key West killed in military vehicle crash in Texas Posted: 04 Sep 2020 12:51 PM PDT |
Jessica Krug will not teach this semester, George Washington University says Posted: 05 Sep 2020 03:51 AM PDT |
California's oldest state park, home to iconic redwoods, expects to close for year due to fires Posted: 04 Sep 2020 06:55 PM PDT |
Mexico's largest cartel 'arming consumer drones with explosives' in turf war Posted: 05 Sep 2020 08:07 AM PDT Mexico's fastest growing drug cartel has developed drones laden with C4 explosives in the latest sign the country is losing control of an escalating cartel warfare. Fears are growing that the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) are morphing into narco terrorism as Mexico deals with a bloody battle for territory and drug supply routes into the US. Mexico's General Attorney's Office reported finding drones and the components needed to weaponise them during a search and seizure operation, and is now pursuing terrorism charges against the fast rising CJNG. CJNG split off from the Sinaloa Cartel, belonging to now-US prisoner Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman, around 2010, and today it has expanded its territorial control over nearly the entire country in an escalating wave of violence with rival organisations. While both Mexico and the United States have actively arrested and extradited hundreds of cartel members and leaders, over the years the strategy has only caused cartels to fragment and regroup in new, often more violent, organisations. El Chapo, who famously broke out of prison twice, on Saturday appealed against his life sentence handed down a year ago by a US court for trafficking hundreds of tons of narcotics into the country. The end of El Chapo far from spelled the end of cartel violence in Mexico. |
Posted: 04 Sep 2020 01:05 PM PDT |
Posted: 05 Sep 2020 06:48 AM PDT |
Chris Stirewalt reacts to Biden answering reporter questions: ‘Shamefully embarrassing’ Posted: 04 Sep 2020 11:38 AM PDT |
Pelosi, Mnuchin reach agreement to avert a government shutdown, still at an impasse on COVID-19 deal Posted: 04 Sep 2020 03:01 AM PDT House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin have reached an informal deal to prevent the federal government from shutting down on Oct. 1, USA Today and Politico report. The agreement would extend existing funding levels until after the Nov. 3 election, probably through mid-December. Mnuchin and Pelosi came to their understanding on Tuesday while talking on the phone about a COVID-19 economic relief bill, USA Today reports. The two sides are still billions of dollars apart on a COVID-19 package.Pelosi and Mnuchin did not "explicitly discuss" folding COVID-19 relief into the continuing resolution and also "did not rule it out," USA Today says. Congress has only a few weeks to pass any legislation before the election, and the compressed time frame might "force lawmakers' hands" on a COVID-19 bill, says George Washington University political scientist Sarah Binder. Either way, "nobody really wants to be blamed" for the "catastrophic blow" of another government shutdown in the middle of a pandemic."When senators return next week, they are expected to vote on the GOP's 'skinny' (i.e. stripped-down) COVID relief bill — they're going to call it 'targeted,' because some think skinny sounds bad," Politico reported Wednesday. ("It would be more appropriate to call it 'emaciated,'" Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said Thursday.) "Remember: This bill is not meant to become law, but rather to serve as a marker for where Senate Republicans stand when negotiations begin in earnest," Politico adds. "Senate Republicans have yet to garner 51 votes for anything, so this is a step in the right direction for them."And things can still go awry with the Pelosi-Mnuchin plan to avert a government shutdown. "There are, at most, 11 days in session for the two sides to pass government funding, and solve the stimulus riddle that's had Pelosi, Mnuchin, and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows tied up for months," Politico notes. "That's not much time."More stories from theweek.com 2020 Kentucky Derby horse names, ranked Fox News journalist Trump wants fired over reports on his alleged U.S. troops insults: 'My sources are unimpeachable' John Bolton 'didn't hear' Trump's reported comments disparaging troops but says they're not out of character |
'Not a white guy named Edison': Biden claims a black man invented the light bulb Posted: 04 Sep 2020 08:37 AM PDT During his visit to Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Thursday, Democratic candidate Joe Biden claimed that a "black guy invented the lightbulb, not a white guy named Edison".Mr Biden made the claim in a section of a speech delivered at the Grace Lutheran Church following his meeting with the family of Jacob Blake, the black man shot seven times by a police officer in August. |
Posted: 04 Sep 2020 08:51 AM PDT |
Chinese students face increased scrutiny at US airports Posted: 04 Sep 2020 04:23 PM PDT |
Posted: 05 Sep 2020 11:46 AM PDT |
Posted: 04 Sep 2020 03:06 AM PDT |
World facing 'pandemic era' with barrage of new diseases to come Posted: 04 Sep 2020 05:26 AM PDT Covid-19 is a sign that humanity has entered a "pandemic era" and is likely to face a cascade of other dangerous diseases, the US government's top infectious disease expert has warned. Human activity is greatly contributing to the emergence of new diseases and scientific advances will not alone be able to stop them, warned Anthony Fauci and epidemiologist David Morens. The emergence of potentially deadly viruses, like SARS in 2002 from a civet cat, MERS in 2012 from a camel, and now Covid-19, is likely to continue. These recent viruses skipping from animals to humans suggests they "are only the latest examples of a deadly barrage of coming coronavirus and other emergences," the authors wrote in Cell, a scientific journal. Pandemics have arisen throughout human history, but as societies get larger and more complicated " we create an endless variety of opportunities for genetically unstable infectious agents to emerge". The authors from National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said while that situation was not new, "we now live in a human-dominated world in which our increasingly extreme alterations of the environment induce increasingly extreme backlashes from nature". The new coronavirus has upended life in the past eight months and killed well over 800,000 people and infected more than 26 million. Those figures are thought to be extensive undercounts, while lockdown precautions to halt its spread put economies into hibernation and caused huge financial losses. A vaccine is thought to be months off, with some health officials saying it is not expected for at least a year. Yet the authors argue that medical advances may not be enough to fend off a coming wave of diseases. "Science will surely bring us many life-saving drugs, vaccines, and diagnostics," the paper said. "However, there is no reason to think that these alone can overcome the threat of ever more frequent and deadly emergences of infectious diseases." The arrival of the pandemic was a reminder that "in a human-dominated world, in which our human activities represent aggressive, damaging, and unbalanced interactions with nature, we will increasingly provoke new disease emergences", the paper said. Dr Fauci has become a household name in the US for his analysis and guidance during the pandemic, but has frequently been at odds with Donald Trump. The paper said that humanity remained at risk for the foreseeable future. "Covid-19 is among the most vivid wake-up calls in over a century. It should force us to begin to think in earnest and collectively about living in more thoughtful and creative harmony with nature, even as we plan for nature's inevitable, and always unexpected, surprises," it concluded. |
Hurricane Center watching 3 systems. But that’s not why Labor Day could bust in Miami Posted: 05 Sep 2020 06:01 AM PDT |
Judge bans Detroit police tactics against protesters Posted: 05 Sep 2020 11:23 AM PDT A federal judge late Friday temporarily barred Detroit police from using tear gas, rubber bullets, batons, shields, chokeholds or sound cannons against peaceful Black Lives Matter protesters after a group accused the city for excessive force. U.S. District Court Judge Laurie Michelson partially granted a temporary restraining order filed Monday by Detroit Will Breathe against the city of Detroit, accusing police of using excessive force to deter protesters from practicing their free speech rights. |
Marine wins Democratic primary for Kennedy's US House seat Posted: 03 Sep 2020 10:33 PM PDT Jake Auchincloss, a city councilor in suburban Boston and a former Marine, won a packed primary to become the Democratic nominee in the race to fill the U.S. House seat being vacated by Rep. Joe Kennedy III in Massachusetts. Auchincloss edged out six other Democratic candidates in the crowded field for the open 4th Congressional District, a contest that took until early Friday to decide because of a deluge of mailed-in ballots that overwhelmed several cities and towns. After graduating from Harvard in 2010, Auchincloss served as a captain in the U.S. Marines. |
No sign of end to Far East anti-Kremlin rallies after nearly two months Posted: 05 Sep 2020 07:08 AM PDT Weekly rallies against the Kremlin in Russia's Far East showed no sign of ending after nearly two months, with around 10,000 people taking to the streets on Saturday in one of the longest-lasting movements of provincial discontent of the Putin era. Residents of Khabarovsk started holding weekly rallies after the July 9 detention of Sergei Furgal, the region's popular governor, over murder charges he denies. |
Posted: 03 Sep 2020 06:33 PM PDT |
Posted: 04 Sep 2020 09:37 AM PDT A disabled protester arrested by Portland police while in his wheelchair, has accused officers of "trying to break" his arms.Dustin Brandon, 35, who is also a comedian and cannabis-rights campaigner, said he was was arrested for the first time this week, despite having attended almost each of the near 100 nights of protests, triggered by the killing by Minneapolis police of George Floyd. |
Posted: 05 Sep 2020 12:26 AM PDT |
China complicit in bypassing UN sanctions to launder North Korean money, report suggests Posted: 03 Sep 2020 10:47 PM PDT A new investigation into companies trading in the Chinese city of Dandong, on the border with North Korea, has shed a spotlight on Pyongyang's global money laundering networks and raised fresh questions about China's complicity in bypassing United Nations sanctions against Kim Jong-un's regime. "The Billion Dollar Border Town," a report published on Friday by the Royal United Services Institute, reveals how companies in Dandong, in China's northeast Liaoning province, have allegedly helped North Korean entities construct complex sanctions evasion networks across various jurisdictions. Data obtained by researchers indicated a small core of 150 companies was involved in $2.9 billion worth of shipments between September 2014 and February 2017, at a time when North Korea was escalating its nuclear and weapons programmes and the UN imposed wide-ranging sanctions in response. As a result, these 150 companies alone could have accounted for around 20 per cent of North Korea's total reported global trade value in that time period. "These include multiple Dandong firms being involved in coal and iron imports even as ever more stringent measures on such commodities were imposed by the UN Security Council in 2016 and 2017," said Joseph Byrne, a research analyst at RUSI's Proliferation and Nuclear Policy Team, and one of the report's authors. |
Posted: 04 Sep 2020 11:53 AM PDT |
Posted: 05 Sep 2020 08:44 AM PDT |
Democrats bash decision to reject Miami Heat’s offer of AA Arena as an early-voting site Posted: 05 Sep 2020 11:30 AM PDT Two of Miami-Dade's leading Democratic candidates stood on a street corner outside the AmericanAirlines Arena on Saturday and denounced Mayor Carlos Gimenez's decision to reject the Miami Heat's offer to use the facility as an early-voting site and instead use a nearby museum with easy access to the city's Metromover system. |
Philippines talking to Pfizer, Russia on COVID-19 vaccine supply Posted: 03 Sep 2020 11:26 PM PDT The Philippine health ministry said on Friday it was due to meet representatives of U.S. drugmaker Pfizer Inc and the Russian embassy, as the Southeast Asian country looks to secure a supply of a COVID-19 vaccine. Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has pledged that the country, which has reported the region's highest number of coronavirus cases, would be "back to normal" by December, pinning his hopes on access to affordable vaccines from countries like China and Russia. Officials of the president's office and ministries of health and foreign affairs would meet with Pfizer on Friday afternoon, then Russian officials later in the day, health undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire said. |
Texas mom severely burned after hand sanitizer catches fire Posted: 04 Sep 2020 03:40 AM PDT |
Ohio woman falsely called police on Black man using his phone, said he was carrying a gun Posted: 05 Sep 2020 08:40 AM PDT |
Labour MP Dawn Butler condemned after praising Extinction Rebellion for 'excellent work' Posted: 05 Sep 2020 04:09 AM PDT A Labour MP has been condemned after praising Extinction Rebellion for 'excellent work' after they blocked the printworks of most of Britain's major newspapers. Dawn Butler, the Member of Parliament for Brent, tweeted applause for the attack on the free press, after the blockade meant many were unable to receive their newspapers, including The Telegraph, this morning. Some questioned whether she would be sanctioned by the Labour leadership for her tweet, which was hastily deleted after she received thousands of angry replies. Conservative MP for Guildford Angela Richardson responded, tweeting: "Anyone who applauds this behaviour genuinely fails to understand the gravity of this action. It's utterly unacceptable." |
Osama bin Laden’s niece claims 9/11-inspired attack could happen if Trump loses the election Posted: 05 Sep 2020 08:26 AM PDT Osama bin Laden's niece has claimed that another 9/11-inspired attack could happen if Joe Biden is elected president, and she says only Donald Trump could prevent it."ISIS proliferated under the Obama/Biden administration, leading to them coming to Europe. Trump has shown he protects America and us by extension from foreign threats by obliterating terrorists at the root and before they get a chance to strike," Noor bin Ladin, 33, told the New York Post in her first-ever interview. |
Posted: 05 Sep 2020 08:46 AM PDT |
If Biden doesn't win election in a landslide will Americans go to war? Posted: 05 Sep 2020 04:46 AM PDT |
Analysis: China's rise takes the world into uncharted waters Posted: 03 Sep 2020 09:25 PM PDT Twice in the 20th century, Japan challenged the West, first in a military-led attempt to become an imperial power and then as an industrial powerhouse. Now it is China's turn to take the global stage. Seventy-five years after Japan's surrender in World War II, and 30 years after its economic bubble popped, the emergence of a 21st century Asian power is shaking up the status quo. |
FBI, spy agencies will not say if attending U.S. House election security briefing Posted: 04 Sep 2020 12:35 PM PDT |
Posted: 04 Sep 2020 05:21 PM PDT |
Posted: 04 Sep 2020 05:16 PM PDT |
Posted: 05 Sep 2020 09:19 AM PDT |
Four Marines Safe After Super Stallion Helicopter Catches Fire Mid-Flight Posted: 05 Sep 2020 07:32 AM PDT |
Four years later, some Pennsylvania Trump fans still fired up Posted: 04 Sep 2020 09:30 AM PDT |
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