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- Himes: Memo is transparent political hit job
- Former USA Gymnastics Doctor Larry Nassar Has 'Over 265 Identified Victims'
- Nashville Mayor Megan Barry admits affair with head of her security detail
- Truck Driver Blamed For Damaging Ancient Nazca Lines
- Robert Wagner a 'person of interest' in Natalie Wood's death
- Russia says U.S. 'hunting' for Russians to arrest around the world
- Manson corpse case on ice for another month in heirs dispute
- The U.N. Human Rights Office Has Identified 206 Companies Linked to Israeli Settlements
- Trump falsely claims his SOTU TV viewership was 'highest' in history
- Flu Vaccine About 30% Effective Against Predominate Strain: CDC
- Olympic Committee was told in 2015 of suspected abuse by Larry Nassar
- U.S. agency says will keep providing water, other essentials in Puerto Rico
- The Best New Product Launches This Week
- Marines see Afghan forces improve in Helmand battles
- 'Slender Man' case: Moms on visiting daughters who tried to kill classmate
- Trump Accuses His Justice Department, FBI Of Favoring Democrats
- Vatican's delicate China mission runs into trouble
- Kate Middleton's Hair Stylist Just Revealed The Surprisingly Affordable Products She Uses
- Finsbury Park terror attack: Father of four guilty of carrying out murderous attack on Muslims
- These Kids Are Catching the Attention of Football Recruiters Even Before High School
- Pence, Manchin square off in Twitter battle over tax vote
- Cuba state media: Fidel Castro's son has killed himself
- Syrian opposition will work with Sochi proposal under U.N. auspices: chief negotiator
- Correction: GOP Train Accident story
- Trump Says He 'Really Didn't Care' About Drilling Arctic Refuge. Then A Friend Called.
- California School Shooting: 2 Students Shot at Sal Castro Middle School, 12-Year-Old Girl in Custody
- Dwayne Johnson Opens Up About His Mother's Suicide Attempt
- Check out the new images from 'Red Dead Redemption 2'
- Mass Graves Suggest Systematic Killing Of Rohingya In Myanmar
- We saw this deadly 'Hong Kong' flu coming, but no one could prevent its spread
- Instagram model Jen Selter removed from American Airlines flight after 'humiliating' row
- Taiwan says China air route dispute will determine future ties
- Polish PM cites shared Nazi horrors to ease speech law anger
- Virginia Tech student busted for possession of assault rifle
- Why The GOP Has Followed Trump Off The Deep End
- LA school shooting: Unclear where 12-year-old got gun
- Parents Shared The Creepiest Things Their Kids Have Ever Said
- Hong Kong's 'Umbrella Movement' Has Been Nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize
- Vast network of hidden Maya cities discovered under Guatemala jungle
- Isaiah Canaan's Ankle Injury Is So Horrible, Fellow Players Can't Look
- Kurdish militant attacks near Iraq border kill three Turkish soldiers: army
- The Union Has A Climate Crisis, And Activists Are Ready To Work Around Trump
- Harley Davidson to offer electric motorcycle within 18 months, says CEO
- Florida lawmaker: Law that OKs child marriage well-crafted
Himes: Memo is transparent political hit job Posted: 01 Feb 2018 12:19 PM PST |
Former USA Gymnastics Doctor Larry Nassar Has 'Over 265 Identified Victims' Posted: 01 Feb 2018 08:01 AM PST |
Nashville Mayor Megan Barry admits affair with head of her security detail Posted: 01 Feb 2018 06:41 AM PST |
Truck Driver Blamed For Damaging Ancient Nazca Lines Posted: 01 Feb 2018 03:30 PM PST |
Robert Wagner a 'person of interest' in Natalie Wood's death Posted: 01 Feb 2018 08:03 AM PST |
Russia says U.S. 'hunting' for Russians to arrest around the world Posted: 02 Feb 2018 04:06 AM PST Russia has issued a travel warning recommending its citizens think twice before traveling abroad, saying the United States was hunting for Russians to arrest around the world. The Foreign Ministry statement warns Russian citizens that when abroad they face a serious threat of arrest by other countries at Washington's request, after which they could be extradited to the United States. "Despite our calls to improve cooperation between the relevant U.S. and Russian authorities ... U.S. special services have effectively continued "hunting" for Russians around the world," the travel warning said. |
Manson corpse case on ice for another month in heirs dispute Posted: 31 Jan 2018 06:33 PM PST |
The U.N. Human Rights Office Has Identified 206 Companies Linked to Israeli Settlements Posted: 31 Jan 2018 06:14 PM PST |
Trump falsely claims his SOTU TV viewership was 'highest' in history Posted: 01 Feb 2018 05:54 AM PST |
Flu Vaccine About 30% Effective Against Predominate Strain: CDC Posted: 31 Jan 2018 09:00 PM PST |
Olympic Committee was told in 2015 of suspected abuse by Larry Nassar Posted: 01 Feb 2018 07:53 AM PST |
U.S. agency says will keep providing water, other essentials in Puerto Rico Posted: 31 Jan 2018 06:55 PM PST By Nick Brown NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency said on Wednesday it would continue providing water, meals and other essentials to hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico despite earlier reports its humanitarian mission in the U.S. territory would end on Wednesday. "There was never, and is not now, a decision to stop distributing commodities on the island," FEMA said in a written statement on Wednesday evening. Puerto Rico is struggling to recover from Hurricane Maria, which hit on Sept. 20. |
The Best New Product Launches This Week Posted: 02 Feb 2018 02:41 PM PST |
Marines see Afghan forces improve in Helmand battles Posted: 01 Feb 2018 02:47 PM PST WASHINGTON (AP) — Afghan forces backed by U.S. troops in Afghanistan's turbulent Helmand Province have gained ground in recent months, but the Taliban still maintains control over roughly half the province, according to the senior Marine commander who just returned from a nine-month deployment to the region. |
'Slender Man' case: Moms on visiting daughters who tried to kill classmate Posted: 01 Feb 2018 08:51 AM PST |
Trump Accuses His Justice Department, FBI Of Favoring Democrats Posted: 02 Feb 2018 04:09 AM PST |
Vatican's delicate China mission runs into trouble Posted: 01 Feb 2018 08:51 PM PST Pope Francis is facing a complex row over the Vatican's warming ties with Communist China, which have sparked a new war of words with a Hong Kong cardinal and growing bitterness among some Chinese faithful. Beijing and the Vatican severed diplomatic relations in 1951, and although ties have improved in recent years as China's Catholic population has grown, they remain at odds over which side has the authority to ordain bishops. The Vatican relaunched long-stalled negotiations three years ago and now seems to be nearing concrete steps towards solving the major stumbling bloc of how to designate bishops. |
Kate Middleton's Hair Stylist Just Revealed The Surprisingly Affordable Products She Uses Posted: 01 Feb 2018 11:37 AM PST |
Finsbury Park terror attack: Father of four guilty of carrying out murderous attack on Muslims Posted: 01 Feb 2018 08:01 AM PST A father of four from Cardiff, who became brainwashed against Muslims after watching a BBC drama on the Rochdale grooming scandal, has been found guilty of carrying out the Finsbury Park terror attack. Darren Osborne was convicted of murdering 51-year-old Makram Ali and attempting to murder others, when he deliberately ploughed a hire van into a group of worshippers who had just left a mosque in the Finsbury Park area of north London last June. Osborne, 48, a lone wolf attacker, had tried to claim that the driver had been another man called "Dave", who then mysteriously vanished from the van. Darren Osborne has been found guilty of murder and attempted murder But he was found guilty after the jury spent just less than hour deliberating its verdict. Osborne, who had denied both charges, nodded and looked around the courtroom as the verdicts were delivered on Thursday afternoon. Makram Ali, who died in the attack, leaves a wife and six children Credit: PA He will be sentenced on Friday morning and the judge will be asked to take account of the fact this was a terrorist act when deciding on the length of the prison term. Woolwich Crown Court had heard how unemployed Osborne, 48, became a "ticking time bomb" after watching Three Girls, a drama based on events in Rochdale, where young girls were raped and abused by a group of predominately British Pakistani men. Video: Moment Darren Osborne ploughed into worshippers He was then "radicalised" within three weeks, after viewing extreme right-wing material online, including social media posts by Tommy Robinson, the former leader of the English Defence League, and Jayda Fransen, the co-founder of the Britain First group. On Sunday 17 June last year, Osborne drove a Citroen Luton hire van from his home in south Wales to London, where he spent several hours scouring the capital for a target. Finsbury Park van attack - How it unfolded Just after midnight, he spotted a group of Muslim men who had gathered on Seven Sisters Road in Finsbury Park to help Mr Ali, who had collapsed after taking ill. Osborne accelerated into the group, driving over Mr Ali and killing him and injuring 12 others. In the van police found a note in which Osborne expressed his extreme racist views and also railed against politicians, referring to Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, as a "terrorist sympathiser" and calling London Mayor, Sadiq Khan, a "disgrace". Osborne was detained by the crowd and handed to police after carrying out the attack During the trial, Osborne's estranged partner, Sarah Andrews, described how he become radicalised by extremist material he had been viewing online. She said: "The first thing that started it was when we watched Three Girls . I think this may have caused Darren to go on the Internet to research this subject further. Darren has always been very unpredictable man in terms of his temperament and I think the feelings he had after watching has fuelled his unpredictability." Osborne just moments after the terror attack Credit: PA Other family members, including Osborne's mixed race nephew, Ellis Osborne, said there had been no sign of racism prior to last summer. Speaking about the investigation, Commander Dean Haydon, head of the Met's counter terrorism unit, said the speed in which Osborne had been radicalised by material online was extremely worrying. He said: "He has become radicalised in a period of three to four weeks. He was certainly not interested in extreme right wing up until that stage." The scene of the murderous attack in Finsbury Park Credit: Geoff Pugh He added: "My view around Osborne is that he is a troubled, vile and hate filled individual. If you go back 30-years, he has a history of violence, a history of alcoholism and drugs abuse, depression, a dysfunctional family background. "Taking all that into account, the first trigger for him on the path to radicalisation was that TV drama documentary. That was the catalyst for him having a hatred for the Muslim community. "From thereafter he accessed extreme right wing material. He then became obsessed with that material and that sent him into a further spiral of him wishing to carry out an attack." Mohammed Mahmoud, won praise for his actions after the attack Credit: PA After carrying out the attack, Osborne leapt from the van and tried to escape, but was detained by some of the crowd he had targeted. Some of the group began attacking him, but Imam from the nearby Muslim Welfare House, protected him from further attack and handed him over to the police. Darren Osborne was found guilty of murder and attempted murder Credit: Elizabeth Cook/PA Sue Hemming from the CPS said: "Darren Osborne planned and carried out this attack because of his hatred of Muslims. "He later invented an unconvincing story to counter the overwhelming weight of evidence but the jury has convicted him. "We have been clear throughout that this was a terrorist attack, and he must now face the consequences of his actions." One person was killed and another 12 injured in the attack Credit: Neil Hall/Reuters Commenting on the verdict, HOPE not hate's chief executive, Nick Lowles, said: "This case highlights the pernicious nature and danger of online hate and sadly confirms the threat from right-wing extremism, which we have long warned about." Harun Khan, secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain said: "The scenes we witnessed last summer were the most violent manifestation of Islamophobia yet in our country. We cannot be complacent and regard this as a one-off terrorist incident. "We heard during the trial how Osborne was motivated by anti-Muslim groups and Islamophobic tropes not only prevalent in far right circles, but also made acceptable in our mainstream. "The case tells us that we must all exercise caution when tempted to stigmatise any group of people, regardless of colour, creed or community." |
These Kids Are Catching the Attention of Football Recruiters Even Before High School Posted: 01 Feb 2018 09:00 PM PST |
Pence, Manchin square off in Twitter battle over tax vote Posted: 01 Feb 2018 07:24 AM PST |
Cuba state media: Fidel Castro's son has killed himself Posted: 01 Feb 2018 08:27 PM PST |
Syrian opposition will work with Sochi proposal under U.N. auspices: chief negotiator Posted: 01 Feb 2018 08:36 AM PST Syria's opposition will cooperate with proposals made at a Russia-hosted conference this week to rewrite the country's constitution as long as the process remains under U.N. auspices, the chief opposition negotiator said on Thursday. Participants at Tuesday's meeting in the Black Sea resort of Sochi in Russia - which is a powerful supporter of President Bashar al-Assad - agreed to set up a committee to change the Syrian constitution, and called for democratic elections. The main Syrian opposition negotiating group had boycotted the gathering, while the United States, Britain and France also stayed away because of what they said was the Syrian government's refusal to properly engage. |
Correction: GOP Train Accident story Posted: 31 Jan 2018 09:42 PM PST |
Posted: 01 Feb 2018 12:06 PM PST |
California School Shooting: 2 Students Shot at Sal Castro Middle School, 12-Year-Old Girl in Custody Posted: 01 Feb 2018 10:06 AM PST |
Dwayne Johnson Opens Up About His Mother's Suicide Attempt Posted: 01 Feb 2018 07:48 AM PST |
Check out the new images from 'Red Dead Redemption 2' Posted: 02 Feb 2018 05:07 AM PST |
Mass Graves Suggest Systematic Killing Of Rohingya In Myanmar Posted: 01 Feb 2018 11:30 AM PST |
We saw this deadly 'Hong Kong' flu coming, but no one could prevent its spread Posted: 01 Feb 2018 01:04 PM PST In 1968, scientists discovered a new strain of flu circulating around Hong Kong. The virus, though, didn't stay put. It soon left Asia and turned into a proper pandemic, traveling around the globe and killing one million people worldwide, including 100,000 in the United States that season. The deadly virus struck in the U.S. when it usually does, during winter. That year, "kids didn't care about when Santa came," remembers Susan Donelan, who is now a medical director and assistant professor of infectious disease at Stony Brook University's School of Medicine. SEE ALSO: This year's flu shot might not stop the virus, but it can fend off the worst symptoms Fifty years later, the Hong Kong flu, known more formally as H3N2, still exists, periodically popping up from year to year. "Now it's considered one of our seasonal viruses," said Donelan, in an interview. The Hong Kong flu influenza viruses, magnified 100,000 times.Image: wikimedia imagesBut the Hong Kong flu is an especially infectious strain of the virus. It has the ability to mutate both during and between flu seasons (more so than other strains), rendering our preventative vaccines less effective. "By the time we're ready for the flu season, the strain has kind of changed itself," Neha Nanda, a hospital epidemiologist and medical director of infection prevention at Keck Medicine of the University of Southern California, said in an interview. "That's why it's a nasty strain." And like most years, scientists knew the Hong Kong flu would make an unwelcome appearance during the 2017-2018 flu season. Doctors predict what flu will hit the U.S., and accordingly, what vaccines to produce, based upon what influenza has been dominant in the Southern Hemisphere — places like Australia. "Every year we look at the Southern Hemisphere," Shane Speights, dean and associate professor of Medicine at New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine at Arkansas State University, said in an interview. "The Southern Hemisphere dictates what goes into our vaccine." So, by watching events unfold in Australia in 2017, where the Hong Kong flu was dominant, doctors knew what to expect and prepared as best as they could. But in this strain's typical fashion, it has likely mutated, rendering our vaccines less effective and resulting in the Hong Kong flu's remarkable 2018 spread. #Flu activity continues to increase nationally in the United States. CDC recommends flu vaccination, even if you've already been sick, and early antiviral treatment for people who are very ill OR those who have flu and are at high risk of complications. https://t.co/KHXucF48vi pic.twitter.com/7oJK4qbUp8 — CDC (@CDCgov) January 26, 2018 "The number of people impacted by it [the flu] has been huge," said Nanda. The CDC, as of January 20, reports "widespread" flu activity around the country, including the deaths of 37 children. Even though some of us may have been exposed to H3N2 in previous seasons (for example, the CDC identified six variants of H3N2 during the 2015-2016 season), the exterior of the virus — home to a variety of specific proteins — may have mutated too dramatically for us to have any substantive immunity from this earlier exposure. "The surface proteins change," said Nanda. "Our body may not remember what we experienced two seasons back." While scientists seasonally do a pretty good job of predicting what will hit the U.S., much less is understood about why strains like the Hong Kong flu wreak havoc for a season or two and then become less dominant or disappear, only to return once again. "We need a crystal ball," mused Nanda. WATCH: Paris is flooding and rats are taking cover |
Instagram model Jen Selter removed from American Airlines flight after 'humiliating' row Posted: 02 Feb 2018 03:56 AM PST An Instagram fitness model was "humiliated" after being removed from an American Airlines flight following a row with staff. Jen Selter, who has 11 million followers on Instagram, posted footage of her arguing with a pilot and a flight attendant on the delayed flight from Miami to New York on 27 January. "I did nothing wrong but got kicked off the plane," she wrote, adding she had the "worst experience" following a delay which left the aircraft stuck on the runway for two hours. The 24-year-old claims she and her sister were told to leave the aircraft following a disagreement with a male attendant when she got up to put her coat away and stretch her legs. She argues that two other passengers had been allowed to go to the bathroom when she stood up, adding she was being sarcastic after responding "yeah" when asked by the attendant, "Do you want to get kicked off the plane?" Current situation @AmericanAir .. insane. pic.twitter.com/kIOh3VysnU— Jen Selter (@JenSelter) January 28, 2018 Ms Selter says the attendant told her to sit down and they began arguing resulting in the pilot calling the police who then arrived on board. "The crew is asking for you guys to be removed off the plane," the pilot tells them in one clip. Just like that, 5 cops coming at me. Worst experience American Air ✌�� pic.twitter.com/1LY1NrAQ3k— Jen Selter (@JenSelter) January 28, 2018 In another video, a police officer tells the sisters: "American Airlines calls the shots. They don't want you to fly on their plane today." Ms Selter told the New York Post: "It was humiliating. They made me feel like a terrible person, and I did nothing wrong." A spokesperson for American Airlines said in a statement: "Ms. Selter was asked to leave the aircraft after a disagreement occurred Saturday night at Miami International Airport (MIA). "American offered her hotel accommodations and transportation, which she declined. She flew on American Sunday morning back to New York (LGA) – arriving around 8:30 a.m. ET yesterday morning." Ms Selter has vowed "to never fly American Airlines again". |
Taiwan says China air route dispute will determine future ties Posted: 31 Jan 2018 08:04 PM PST A dispute with China over its opening of new air routes near Taiwan will determine future relations between Taipei and Beijing, Taiwan's government said amid a deepening disagreement that could strand thousands over an important holiday. The spat has become increasingly bitter, with both sides trading accusations after two Chinese airlines canceled extra flights to Taiwan over the Lunar New Year, the most important holiday in the Chinese calendar, potentially leaving thousands of Taiwanese without tickets to go home. Whether this disputed issue can be resolved is an important indicator of how Taiwan people will view the future direction of relations between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait," Taiwan's China-policy making Mainland Affairs Council said in a statement late Wednesday. |
Polish PM cites shared Nazi horrors to ease speech law anger Posted: 01 Feb 2018 02:06 PM PST |
Virginia Tech student busted for possession of assault rifle Posted: 31 Jan 2018 09:03 PM PST |
Why The GOP Has Followed Trump Off The Deep End Posted: 02 Feb 2018 02:45 AM PST |
LA school shooting: Unclear where 12-year-old got gun Posted: 02 Feb 2018 03:26 PM PST |
Parents Shared The Creepiest Things Their Kids Have Ever Said Posted: 01 Feb 2018 02:47 PM PST |
Hong Kong's 'Umbrella Movement' Has Been Nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize Posted: 01 Feb 2018 07:00 AM PST |
Vast network of hidden Maya cities discovered under Guatemala jungle Posted: 02 Feb 2018 08:39 AM PST A vast network of lost Maya cities discovered deep in the jungles of northern Guatemala could rewrite the history of the ancient civilisation, experts say. Researchers found more than 60,000 previously unknown structures including pyramids, royal tombs, palaces, roadways and defensive fortifications hidden deep beneath the dense rainforest canopy. Pioneering lidar (Light Detection and Ranging) laser scanning technology was used to map 800 square miles from the air, revealing a "treasure map" of the Maya ruins. The research, led by the PACUNAM Foundation -a Guatemalan non-profit heritage organisation - suggests an advanced civilisation of 10-15 million people lived in the region at its peak 1,200 years ago. "The lidar revealed an incredible number of new sites and structures," Thomas Garrison, an archaeologist at Ithaca College told the Telegraph. "The vast majority of these 60,000+ new features are ruined mounds of Maya houses. However, there are also large new cities with pyramids and palaces in the data as well. "Perhaps more exciting are the more subtle features that we may have never found: causeways between sites that follow ridgelines and run for many kilometres, huge expanses of wetland agricultural fields that funneled water through dug out grids to provide food for this dense population, and, a preoccupation with warfare and defence, including complex fortresses, isolated refuges, and networks of watchtowers." Maya civilization Stephen Houston, Professor of Archaeology and Anthropology at Brown University, said the findings were "beyond stupendous". "I think this is one of the greatest advances in over 150 years of Maya archaeology," he said. "The lidar completely changes the way we see the Maya. For the first time I have seen unsuspected fortresses, entire cities, settlements that are now doubled or tripled in size". The famous Maya site of Tikal is just a fraction of an immense hidden metropolis Credit: Wild Blue Media/Channel 4 Researchers believe the immense hidden metropolis extends far beyond the famous Maya site of Tikal, spreading across the country. Discoveries in the more remote areas of northern Guatemala reveal networks of roadways, complex systems of agriculture and water management. "This is sophisticated engineering of all available terrain that was carried out by a very advanced civilisation," says Garrison. Deep in the jungles of Guatemala, archaeologists have uncovered ground-breaking discoveries Credit: Wild Blue Media/Channel 4 Kathryn Reese-Taylor, a University of Calgary archaeologist and Maya specialist who has conducted surveys in the rainforest for 30 years, told the Telegraph such findings change "our perception of the Classic Maya at one fell swoop". "In Guatemala, lidar was used to scan large swaths of what is arguably one of the most populated regions of the world during, what Europeans term, the Middle Ages," she said. The Maya are known for their magnificent ancient cities that stand like sentinels in the dense jungles of Central America Credit: Wild Blue Media/Channel 4 "While archaeologists always suspected that the Maya had enormous interconnected cities, this lidar survey revealed a complex, interlocked network of cities, towns, villages, and hamlets, which was spread throughout a vast landscape that was completely modified by the Maya for agriculture, water management, transportation, resource exploitation, and other activities necessary to sustain large populations. No square metre was untouched." Dr.Reese-Taylor adds that the research in Guatemala, along with lidar from Belize and Mexico, shows us that the Maya "were on the level of highly complex ancient civilisations in Europe, Asia and Africa". 14 Maya ruins you must see in your lifetime "Their population density and civic achievements may have surpassed contemporaneous European societies," she explains. "This is exciting because the rainforest is so dense, that the extent of the cities and the sale of modification, even in the countryside, was difficult to see." She added the scale of the PACUNAM initiative is "extraordinary", explaining: "Not only does it cover a region where many of the largest Maya cities were built, the sheer amount of area that was covered by the survey is enormous. "This collaboration of scholars from many different countries, no doubt, will advance Maya studies exponentially in the upcoming years." A view over the Guatemalan rainforest Credit: Getty Garrison believes many more lost cities will be found in the coming years. "What you are seeing is just phase one of a three-year program to document most of northern Guatemala's Maya Biosphere Reserve," he says. "This data will ensure that there is archaeological research in Guatemala for centuries to come." The Maya civilisation collapsed in mysterious circumstances AD 900, the reason for their decline remains unclear. A Channel 4 documentary, the Lost Cities of the Maya: Revealed, will be aired on Sunday 11 February at 8pm. |
Isaiah Canaan's Ankle Injury Is So Horrible, Fellow Players Can't Look Posted: 01 Feb 2018 04:03 AM PST |
Kurdish militant attacks near Iraq border kill three Turkish soldiers: army Posted: 01 Feb 2018 08:04 AM PST Three Turkish soldiers were killed and seven wounded on Thursday in separate attacks carried out by Kurdish militants targeting troops stationed in the southeastern Turkish province of Hakkari and in northern Iraq, the army said. Militants from the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) attacked troops positioned in northern Iraq, killing two soldiers and wounding two, the military said. A third soldier was killed and five wounded in the Cukurca district of Hakkari when militants attacked a military base, it said. |
The Union Has A Climate Crisis, And Activists Are Ready To Work Around Trump Posted: 31 Jan 2018 06:14 PM PST |
Harley Davidson to offer electric motorcycle within 18 months, says CEO Posted: 01 Feb 2018 06:15 AM PST Clearly the its Livewire Project, shown in the U.S. in 2014 and Europe in 2015, gave Harley the positive feedback it needed to dedicate resources to developing an electric motorcycle for production. While this may be surprising news to many—it came during a routine earnings call—it 's in line with what Harley Davidson has said for several years. In June 2016, Sean Cummings, the company's senior vice president of global demand, told the Milwaukee Business Journal (subscription required) that Harley-Davidson planned to produce an electric motorcycle within five years. |
Florida lawmaker: Law that OKs child marriage well-crafted Posted: 01 Feb 2018 11:33 AM PST |
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