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- Sarah Sanders Asks Press To Say What They're Thankful For Before Questions
- Trump says he’s declaring North Korea a terrorism sponsor
- Apologizing For Predatory Behavior Requires More Than Saying 'I'm Sorry'
- 102-year-old Holocaust survivor who thought his entire family died meets nephew he didn't know existed
- Argentina's navy says fresh noises are not from missing submarine
- Black Friday tech deals from Samsung and Google
- Fox News Should Shut the Hell Up About NASA Faking the Moon Landing
- Off-Duty Officer Fatally Shoots Robbers While Holding His Baby
- Allegations Against Al Franken Could Cost Democrats A Progressive Fighter In The Senate
- 19 Crazy Delicious Ways To Roast Sweet Potatoes
- Elizabeth Warren: Donald Trump's 'Racist Slurs' Won't Shut Me Up
- Police: Woman confessed to putting babies in concrete in 90s
- Former Texas Cheerleader Killed When Driver Crashed Into Her Car While Using Breathalyzer: Cops
- Whitefish Shuts Down Operations In Puerto Rico, Claims It's Owed $83 Million
- U.S. airman killed in Texas plane crash
- Venezuela arrests six top executives from PDVSA's US subsidiary Citgo
- Footage shows African migrants being sold as slaves at auction for as little as £300 each
- Obama Wishes Joe Biden A Happy Birthday With An Adorable Meme
- "I remember feeling really scared that he could be around any corner, because we weren’t sure exactly where he was."
- Iran, Lebanon reject Arab League criticism as tensions mount
- Kate Steinle: Victim of Deadly 'Russian Roulette' or a Tragic Accident?
- Donald Trump’s Pricey New Christmas Hat Gets Exactly The Reception You’d Expect
- Turkish lira hits record low against dollar
- In 1991, America Stopped Building the Ultimate Submarine Russia or China Still Can't Beat
- Meghan McCain and Ben Domenech Are Married
- 12 Ways To Eat Sushi You Haven't Thought Of Yet
- 10 Ways To Know You're Having A Southern Thanksgiving
- Power struggle shakes breakaway republic in eastern Ukraine as armed men seize Luhansk
- A Timeline Of Charles Manson’s Path To Infamy
- American Mother Held Hostage by Taliban Details 'Intolerable' Situation for Her Children
- Watch This High Schooler Demand Answers From Her Congressman On DACA
- US strike in Somalia kills more than 100 Shabaab fighters
- France’s Monstrous Char B1 Tank Ate Hitler's Best Tanks for Breakfast
- What 3 Creepy Meetings With Charlie Rose Taught Me About Toxic Sexism And Blurred Lines
- 15 Tweets That Accurately Describe Thanksgiving After Marriage
- This idyllic Swiss village wants to pay you more than £50,000 to move there
- Driver arrested, manhunt continues in deadly police shooting
- Brielmaier lawn mowers are changing the landscaping game
- Neil Cavuto Shreds Trump: 'You're The President... Why Don’t You Act Like It?'
- Hezbollah says ready to pull forces from Iraq after IS defeat
- Elderly couple suing police alleging excessive force after hibiscus plants mistaken for marijuana
- Russia Wants the Strangest of All Weapons: An 'Underwater ICBM'
- How Harvey Weinstein Used Elaborate Nondisclosure Agreements To Silence Accusers
- 33 Hearty Soups That'll Feed A Hungry Crowd
- As World Turns More Slowly, We Face Earthquake Boom, Scientists Warn
- Bounty offered for beheadings of Bollywood director, actress
Sarah Sanders Asks Press To Say What They're Thankful For Before Questions Posted: 20 Nov 2017 05:13 PM PST |
Trump says he’s declaring North Korea a terrorism sponsor Posted: 20 Nov 2017 09:46 AM PST |
Apologizing For Predatory Behavior Requires More Than Saying 'I'm Sorry' Posted: 21 Nov 2017 09:44 AM PST |
Posted: 21 Nov 2017 09:26 AM PST |
Argentina's navy says fresh noises are not from missing submarine Posted: 20 Nov 2017 05:06 PM PST Argentina's navy has said sounds detected from the bottom of the ocean are not from the submarine which has been missing in rough seas for five days with 44 crew on board. Spokesman Enrique Balbi said "a biological source" was behind the noises which were picked up by two Argentinian navy ships searching for ARA San Juan and by sonar buoys dropped by a US P8 surveillance plane. |
Black Friday tech deals from Samsung and Google Posted: 20 Nov 2017 11:33 AM PST |
Fox News Should Shut the Hell Up About NASA Faking the Moon Landing Posted: 20 Nov 2017 11:30 AM PST |
Off-Duty Officer Fatally Shoots Robbers While Holding His Baby Posted: 20 Nov 2017 05:06 PM PST |
Allegations Against Al Franken Could Cost Democrats A Progressive Fighter In The Senate Posted: 20 Nov 2017 03:36 PM PST |
19 Crazy Delicious Ways To Roast Sweet Potatoes Posted: 21 Nov 2017 01:46 PM PST |
Elizabeth Warren: Donald Trump's 'Racist Slurs' Won't Shut Me Up Posted: 21 Nov 2017 01:47 AM PST |
Police: Woman confessed to putting babies in concrete in 90s Posted: 20 Nov 2017 11:10 PM PST |
Former Texas Cheerleader Killed When Driver Crashed Into Her Car While Using Breathalyzer: Cops Posted: 20 Nov 2017 03:51 PM PST |
Whitefish Shuts Down Operations In Puerto Rico, Claims It's Owed $83 Million Posted: 21 Nov 2017 03:02 PM PST |
U.S. airman killed in Texas plane crash Posted: 20 Nov 2017 07:32 PM PST |
Venezuela arrests six top executives from PDVSA's US subsidiary Citgo Posted: 21 Nov 2017 01:57 PM PST Venezuela on Tuesday arrested the acting president and five other top executives in charge of Citgo, the US refinery subsidiary of troubled state oil company PDVSA, on corruption charges. "Six senior executives have been arrested," said chief prosecutor Tarek William Saab, adding that the charges included embezzlement, bid rigging, money laundering and criminal association. The Citgo chief, Jose Angel Pereira, was arrested in Caracas. |
Footage shows African migrants being sold as slaves at auction for as little as £300 each Posted: 20 Nov 2017 08:18 AM PST The Libyan government is to investigate allegations that African migrants are being sold as slaves at auctions. Tens of thousands of migrants, many of them from West Africa but also Bangladesh, Somalia, Sudan and Eritrea, are being held in camps and warehouses on the Libyan coast, hoping to reach Europe. When the warehouses become overcrowded, or if migrants are unable to pay traffickers for the boat journey towards Italy – where many are rescued by NGO-operated vessels – they are sold. The existence of modern-day slave markets has been known for months, with testimony from the International Organisation for Migration and other humanitarian agencies, but last week CNN obtained video footage of one such auction. In scenes reminiscent of the 19th century, when the slave trade was rife, auctioneers advertised a group of West African migrants as "big strong boys for farm work." The auctioneers referred to the migrants in Arabic as "merchandise". The CNN footage showed buyers bidding for the migrants, who were sold off for as little as $400 each. One West African man told the television network: "Sure, I was sold". Others recounted how they were beaten by their "owners" as they put to work. Ahmed Metig, the deputy prime minister of the UN-backed Government of National Accord in Tripoli, said the allegations would be investigated. He said he would establish a "commission to investigate these reports in order to apprehend and bring those responsible to justice." Migrants sit in a detention centre run by the interior ministry of Libya's eastern-based government, in Benghazi Credit: Reuters Alpha Conde, the president of Guinea and chairman of the African Union, where many migrants come from, called for an inquiry and prosecutions relating to what he termed a "despicable trade... from another era". The Senegalese government called the apparent slave market a "blight on the conscience of humanity". The IOM reported the existence of slave markets in April. "The reports of 'slave markets' for migrants can be added to a long list of outrages [in Libya]," said Mohammed Abdiker, IOM's head of operation and emergencies. "The situation is dire. The more IOM engages inside Libya, the more we learn that it is a vale of tears for all too many migrants." Migrants who are rescued at sea and brought to Italy have told how they are beaten, tortured and in some cases raped by traffickers in Libya. Many young women end up as prostitutes on the streets of Italy, with Nigerian girls as young as 13 forced to sell themselves for as little as 10 euros (£8.90) a time, terrified into submission by gang rape and voodoo curses. It is estimated that 80 per cent of Nigerian teenage girls and young women who make it to Italy are forced into the sex trade. |
Obama Wishes Joe Biden A Happy Birthday With An Adorable Meme Posted: 20 Nov 2017 01:04 PM PST |
Posted: 21 Nov 2017 11:09 AM PST Chelsea Sobolik had just come off a double shift at a Red Robin restaurant when she decided, at the last minute, to join a group of friends for a midnight screening of "The Dark Knight Rises" in Aurora, Colorado. After the shooting, Sobolik took a year off to rest and recover, something that would not have been possible without Red Robin's Giving Fund ― a charitable donation her colleagues made with every check to support workers during tough times. Between this fund, the free mental health care she received from the Aurora Mental Health Center and help from her family and friends, Sobolik feels grateful for all the support that has helped her cope, but she considers recovery a lifelong process. |
Iran, Lebanon reject Arab League criticism as tensions mount Posted: 20 Nov 2017 06:38 AM PST |
Kate Steinle: Victim of Deadly 'Russian Roulette' or a Tragic Accident? Posted: 20 Nov 2017 06:56 PM PST |
Donald Trump’s Pricey New Christmas Hat Gets Exactly The Reception You’d Expect Posted: 21 Nov 2017 12:48 AM PST |
Turkish lira hits record low against dollar Posted: 21 Nov 2017 06:44 AM PST The embattled Turkish lira hit record lows against the dollar on Tuesday as investors took fright over an impending trial in the United States and changes to banking regulations. The Turkish lira lost over one percent in value to trade at 3.97 to the dollar late morning, testing the never-before-reached 4.0 ceiling, before rallying slightly to 3.95 in the early evening. The latest drop followed the delay on Monday of a scheduled trial in the United States of Turkish-Iranian gold trader Reza Zarrab and Mehmet Hakan Atilla, the deputy chief executive of Turkish lender Halkbank, accused of defying US sanctions on Iran. |
In 1991, America Stopped Building the Ultimate Submarine Russia or China Still Can't Beat Posted: 21 Nov 2017 04:25 AM PST The extreme quietness of the Seawolf class gave the Navy the idea of modifying the last submarine, USS Jimmy Carter, to support clandestine operations. The MMP gives Carter the ability to send and recover Remotely Operated Vehicles/Unmanned Underwater Vehicles and SEALs and diving teams while submerged. The Seawolf-class submarines were envisioned as the best submarines ever built. |
Meghan McCain and Ben Domenech Are Married Posted: 21 Nov 2017 03:23 PM PST |
12 Ways To Eat Sushi You Haven't Thought Of Yet Posted: 21 Nov 2017 05:02 PM PST |
10 Ways To Know You're Having A Southern Thanksgiving Posted: 21 Nov 2017 08:12 AM PST |
Power struggle shakes breakaway republic in eastern Ukraine as armed men seize Luhansk Posted: 21 Nov 2017 08:31 AM PST Armed men seized the capital of a Russia-backed separatist republic in eastern Ukraine amid a power struggle between two top officials. The takeover of Luhansk on Tuesday followed a decision by Igor Plotnitsky, the head of the breakaway Luhansk People's Republic, to fire interior minister Igor Kornet the night before. Luhansk state television showed masked men with assault rifles and heavy machine guns blocking the entrances of administrative buildings and streets in the centre of Luhansk on Tuesday, reportedly on the orders of the interior ministry. One of them wore the blue uniform the interior ministry's Berkut unit, a police force specialising in putting down riots. The armed men had ignored Plotnitsky's command to leave, Russian independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta reported. A video on Tuesday evening showed what appeared to be dozens of military vehicles entering Luhansk from the direction of the neighbouring Donetsk separatist republic, although a Donetsk official denied it was intervening. Igor Plotnitsky, head of the self-proclaimed Lugansk People's Republic, salutes during Victory Day military parade. Credit: Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters In a video on Tuesday Kornet said he wanted to "dispel rumours" of his dismissal and said his forces had captured Ukrainian saboteurs who were attempting terrorist attacks in the republic. He also claimed that Plotnitsky's chief of staff and the head of the security service had been implicated in a coup attempt last year and arrested on Plotnitsky's orders, along with the general director of the state television company. But Plotnitsky later said in a statement on his website that Kornet had indeed been fired and the actions of interior ministry forces "crossed all acceptable lines". He said the "attempts of certain people to remain in power" were futile and "will be completely neutralised in the near future". The outcome of the power struggle remained unclear on Tuesday. Novaya Gazeta reported that the republic's state security ministry, military headquarters and people's militia were "not participating in the conflict between Plotnitsky and Kornet". Interior minister Igor Kornet visits a penal colony near Luhansk in 2016. Credit: Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters Separatists seized control of much of the Luhansk and Donetsk regions in April 2014 following the establishment of a pro-Western government in Kiev and Russia's annexation of Crimea. The ensuing conflict between the rebels, who have received military assistance from neighbouring Russia, and government forces has claimed more than 10,000 lives. A ceasefire agreed in Minsk in 2015 has been regularly violated, and a Ukrainian soldier died in a mortar strike on Monday. Several top separatist commanders have been assassinated since the start of the conflict. |
A Timeline Of Charles Manson’s Path To Infamy Posted: 20 Nov 2017 02:47 PM PST |
American Mother Held Hostage by Taliban Details 'Intolerable' Situation for Her Children Posted: 20 Nov 2017 08:40 AM PST |
Watch This High Schooler Demand Answers From Her Congressman On DACA Posted: 20 Nov 2017 12:21 PM PST |
US strike in Somalia kills more than 100 Shabaab fighters Posted: 21 Nov 2017 09:35 AM PST US forces conducted an air strike against the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Shabaab group in Somalia on Tuesday, killing more than 100 jihadists, military officials said. "In coordination with the Federal Government of Somalia, US forces conducted an air strike in Somalia against an al-Shabaab camp on Tuesday, November 21 at approximately 10:30 am local Somalia time (0730 GMT), killing more than 100 militants," the US Africa Command said in a statement. |
France’s Monstrous Char B1 Tank Ate Hitler's Best Tanks for Breakfast Posted: 20 Nov 2017 04:26 AM PST Once he had destroyed the entire company—11 Panzer IIIs and two Panzer IVs in all—Billotte continued his advance and added two 37-millimeter anti-tank guns to the tally. By 7:00 A.M., Stonne was back under French control and would remain so for the rest of the day. The same day, the tank Riquewhir would charge into a column of enemy infantry, its blood-stained tracks causing the German 64th Schutzen Regiment to panic and flee an entire sector of Stonne. |
What 3 Creepy Meetings With Charlie Rose Taught Me About Toxic Sexism And Blurred Lines Posted: 21 Nov 2017 01:49 PM PST |
15 Tweets That Accurately Describe Thanksgiving After Marriage Posted: 20 Nov 2017 11:30 AM PST |
This idyllic Swiss village wants to pay you more than £50,000 to move there Posted: 21 Nov 2017 07:27 AM PST If it's ever been a distant dream of yours to wind up in a tiny and beautiful mountain village, consider this. The Swiss town of Albinen, located in the scenic canton of Valais, wants to pay people 25,000 Swiss francs (£18,900) each to move there. The council will soon be voting on the new initiative, which aims to repopulate a community that has dwindled to just 240 residents, reports The Local. Under the scheme, each new adult resident will be paid the fee, with an additional 10,000 Swiss francs (£7,600) per child. For a family of four, that's more than £53,000. Most of the previous residents who have left the village have been families with children, according to Swiss news agency ATS, with the last three departures leading to the closure of Albinen's school. It should be noted, however, that this was never exactly a thriving neighbourhood. Its highest ever number of inhabitants on record was 380, back in 1900. What's the catch? There are certain conditions attached to the proposed offer. New residents must be under the age of 45, and are required to build or purchase a property to live in full time, not used as a holiday home, worth at least 200,000 Swiss francs (£151,900). You'll also have to remain in residence there for at least 10 years, or forfeit the fee. Officials hope that Albinen's flailing economy will benefit from an influx of new homeowners through taxes, building contracts and the purchase of local produce. Switzerland has a high level of immigration from EU countries What does Albinen have to offer? Six square miles of Alpine land makes up the municipality of Albinen, huddled at an altitude of 4,300 ft in the south-west of Switzerland and dwarfed by its surrounding mountains. Most of Albinen is farmland and forest, with its settled area of buildings and roads accounting for little over three per cent of it. Only 240 residents live here, surrounded by forest and farmland Credit: Wikipedia Commons Xenos There's little going on in the town's centre, save for its narrow cobbled turns, centuries-old houses, a church and a shop. And you'll need to learn German, the region's first language. But hop in the car and it's less than four miles to Leukerbad, home to one of Europe's largest medical wellness, beauty and thermal baths complex. Charlie Chaplin, Tolstoy and Goethe were among those who travelled to the village to bathe in the calcium- and sulphate-rich thermal waters. Switzerland tours Prefer to live in Italy? This is far from the first time a shrinking town in Europe has offered to pay people to move there, most commonly in Italy. Just last month, the Italian town of Candela in Puglia announced it would hand out up to €2,000 (£1,792) for new residents. They must live permanently in the village, rent a house, and have a salary of at least €7,500 (£6,723). Earlier this year, Italy also said it was giving away 103 of its historic buildings for free, with one catch - all takers will need to commit to transforming the properties into tourist facilities including hotels, restaurants or spas. |
Driver arrested, manhunt continues in deadly police shooting Posted: 20 Nov 2017 02:06 PM PST |
Brielmaier lawn mowers are changing the landscaping game Posted: 21 Nov 2017 08:00 AM PST |
Neil Cavuto Shreds Trump: 'You're The President... Why Don’t You Act Like It?' Posted: 20 Nov 2017 07:58 PM PST |
Hezbollah says ready to pull forces from Iraq after IS defeat Posted: 20 Nov 2017 09:07 AM PST Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah said Monday he was prepared to pull his forces from Iraq, after the Islamic State group lost control over its last urban stronghold in the country. In a televised address on Monday evening, Nasrallah said the Lebanese movement had deployed "large numbers of our commanders and cadres" to Iraq to fight IS. Once that official declaration came, Hezbollah would reassess its presence in Iraq and may pull its members out. |
Elderly couple suing police alleging excessive force after hibiscus plants mistaken for marijuana Posted: 20 Nov 2017 05:21 AM PST An elderly couple in Pennsylvania is suing their insurance company and their local police after they were allegedly arrested and mistreated after their hibiscus plants were wrongly reported as marijuana plants. Edward Cramer, 69, and his wife Audrey, 66, from Buffalo Township, allege they were handcuffed and forced to sit in a hot police car for hours last month aft arrived looking for drugs. The couple are suing the Buffalo Township police and the Nationwide Insurance Company over the incident, claiming excessive force, false arrest, false imprisonment, invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional stress over the incident, according to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. |
Russia Wants the Strangest of All Weapons: An 'Underwater ICBM' Posted: 21 Nov 2017 07:01 AM PST Before the U.S. spends trillions on developing on strategic anti-torpedo defense, let's take a close look at the alleged Russian super-weapon. Except that a real ICBM can reach targets on the other side of the world because missiles zoom into open sky, into outer space, and then down again through more open sky. |
How Harvey Weinstein Used Elaborate Nondisclosure Agreements To Silence Accusers Posted: 21 Nov 2017 07:49 AM PST |
33 Hearty Soups That'll Feed A Hungry Crowd Posted: 21 Nov 2017 12:29 PM PST |
As World Turns More Slowly, We Face Earthquake Boom, Scientists Warn Posted: 20 Nov 2017 09:15 PM PST |
Bounty offered for beheadings of Bollywood director, actress Posted: 20 Nov 2017 04:48 PM PST |
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