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- Recent developments surrounding the South China Sea
- Kentucky Catholic School Considers Expelling Boys Who Taunted Native Americans
- Mexico probes negligence in pipeline blast that killed 91
- New video sheds light on viral confrontation between Kentucky Catholic high school student and Native American
- Airlines already canceling flights into Monday from Winter Storm Harper
- Giuliani says Trump pursued Moscow tower throughout '16, raising questions
- Google hit with $57 million GDPR fine, the first for a US tech company
- Florida police run over couple lying in the road to watch lunar eclipse
- The Entry-Level 2019 Porsche Cayenne Deserves Your Attention
- Bomb blasts rock Syria's Damascus and Afrin
- China population growth slows despite abolition of the one-child policy
- Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Reacts to Aaron Sorkin's Comments That Congress Members Need to Grow Up
- Reports: Ice storm creates treacherous travel in New England as temperatures plummet across snow-covered Northeast
- Kamala Harris Seeks to Make History With 2020 Presidential Run
- 10 percent of TSA workers call in sick as government shutdown drags on
- Mexico fuel pipeline blast kills 73, witnesses describe horror
- World's oldest man, 113, dies at his home in northern Japan
- Ex-diplomats, scholars urge China to release Canadians
- Model who alleged Russian meddling in US election tells Moscow court she will not publish Deripaska recordings
- ‘Fox & Friends’ mistakenly airs Ruth Bader Ginsburg obituary graphic
- The Latest: Man rescued from New York river island
- Top US senator urges meeting between Trump and Khan
- Video shows Florida toddler walking towards police with hands up during her father's arrest
- Greeks Marching as Storm Grows Over Tsipras's Macedonia Deal
- China's population growth slows despite two-child policy
- Elon Musk gets green light to deliver Tesla Model 3 cars in Europe
- How to Use a Smart Speaker as Your Smart Home Hub
- Chile earthquake: Magnitude 6.7 quake rocks north of country
- Where the investigations related to President Trump stand
- Israel says strikes Iranian targets in Syria after rocket
- Enbridge gas pipeline explosion causes fireball in Ohio
- United Airlines passengers stranded over 15 hours at frigid Canadian military base
- 'We Are All Stakeholders of Our Global Future': Klaus Schwab, Founder of the World Economic Forum, Talks Change and Progress
- Flash freeze of melting snowstorm seen icing over U.S. Northeast
- Trump confuses weather with climate change again: 'Wouldn’t be bad to have a little good old fashioned Global Warming right now!'
- Suicide attack on Kurdish-US convoy in Syria 'kills 5'
- Suspect arrested in beating of 88-year-old woman in San Francisco's Visitacion Valley
- British Airway is giving one of its Boeing 747s a 1960s-era paint scheme
- Students in 'MAGA' hats 'mock Native American' at Lincoln Memorial
- Ex-Nissan chairman Ghosn asks for bail, promises not to flee
- Dream Match: Could an Old F-14 Tomcat Kill a Stealth F-22?
Recent developments surrounding the South China Sea Posted: 20 Jan 2019 08:22 PM PST |
Kentucky Catholic School Considers Expelling Boys Who Taunted Native Americans Posted: 20 Jan 2019 11:40 AM PST |
Mexico probes negligence in pipeline blast that killed 91 Posted: 21 Jan 2019 04:18 PM PST Mexico has opened an investigation into what caused a deadly pipeline explosion, including possible negligence by authorities, the attorney general said Monday, as the death toll rose to 91 people. It is still unclear exactly how events unfolded leading up to the Friday blast, which occurred as hundreds of people rushed to collect fuel in buckets and jerrycans from a geyser of gasoline that was spouting from an illegal pipeline tap near the town of Tlahuelilpan, in the central state of Hidalgo. Attorney General Alejandro Gertz said investigators were trying to determine who tapped the pipeline -- whether locals acting alone or one of the criminal gangs that have turned fuel theft into a booming industry in Mexico. |
Posted: 21 Jan 2019 06:37 AM PST |
Airlines already canceling flights into Monday from Winter Storm Harper Posted: 20 Jan 2019 06:52 AM PST |
Giuliani says Trump pursued Moscow tower throughout '16, raising questions Posted: 20 Jan 2019 11:33 AM PST U.S. President Donald Trump pursued a business deal to erect a tower bearing his name in Moscow throughout 2016, his attorney said on Sunday, raising new questions for congressional investigators looking into possible ties between the president and Russia. Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani said he may have continued to pursue the project and had discussions about it with his former personal attorney, Michael Cohen, until as late as October or November 2016, when Trump was closing in on his election victory against Democrat Hillary Clinton. The Moscow deal ultimately did not materialize but Giuliani's remarks suggest that Trump's discussions about the project with Cohen may have dragged on months longer than had been publicly known. |
Google hit with $57 million GDPR fine, the first for a US tech company Posted: 21 Jan 2019 12:02 PM PST Google has kicked off 2019 by getting hit with yet another multimillion-dollar fine from a European regulator. Stemming from an investigation that began in May -- the day after Europe's strict new data privacy rules known as GDPR went into effect -- France's data protection authority has announced a $57 million fine against Google in the first such GDPR penalty levied against a US technology company. In a statement explaining the action, the French agency known as the CNIL noted that the fine is a result of deficiencies that include Google not being clear enough about the way user data is handled to present personalized ads. The CNIL's statement goes on to note that "the infringements observed deprive the users of essential guarantees regarding processing operations that can reveal important parts of their private life since they are based on a huge amount of data, a wide variety of services and almost unlimited possible combinations." The penalty is also connected to the way the French agency sees Google as not being clear enough in a broad sense about how user data is collected and how it's subsequently used. Google released a statement saying it hasn't decided yet whether to appeal this punishment, which certainly didn't come as a surprise. Once the General Data Protection Regulation, known as GDPR for short, went into effect in Europe last year, it was regarded as only a matter of time before regulators there would use the stricter privacy framework to push back on tech giants in a way that's not happening in the US. The CNIL statement goes on to provide context for the fine against Google by noting that "This is the first time that the CNIL applies the new sanction limits provided by the GDPR. The amount decided, and the publicity of the fine, are justified by the severity of the infringements observed regarding the essential principles of the GDPR -- transparency, information and consent." Google, for its part, acknowledged that "high standards" of transparency and control are expected of the company by the public and that Google is "committed to meeting those expectations and the consent requirements of the GDPR." The new fine, however, is yet another example of European-led pushback against the search giant, which has also come under fire from EU officials over antitrust concerns. Along those lines, the EU hit Google with a record-setting $5 billion fine last year for antitrust issues related to its Android mobile operating system. |
Florida police run over couple lying in the road to watch lunar eclipse Posted: 21 Jan 2019 02:43 PM PST |
The Entry-Level 2019 Porsche Cayenne Deserves Your Attention Posted: 21 Jan 2019 08:10 AM PST |
Bomb blasts rock Syria's Damascus and Afrin Posted: 20 Jan 2019 10:24 AM PST A bomb blast hit Damascus on Sunday, in a rare attack in the Syrian capital that has been largely insulated from violence during nearly eight years of war. The explosion came as another bomb in the northern city of Afrin killed three people and wounded nine others, according to a war monitor, on the first anniversary of a Turkish offensive on the Kurdish-majority region. Also on Sunday Israel said it intercepted a rocket fired from Syria after Damascus accused the Jewish state of carrying out air raids on the south of the country. |
China population growth slows despite abolition of the one-child policy Posted: 21 Jan 2019 12:43 AM PST China's population grew at a slower rate last year despite the abolition of the one-child policy, official data showed Monday, raising fears an ageing society will pile further pressure on an already slowing economy. There were 15.23 million live births in 2018, a drop of two million from the year before, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed. With 9.93 million deaths, this led to a growth rate of 3.81 per thousand in 2018, a dip from 5.32 per thousand the previous year. NBS commissioner Ning Jize said population growth had peaked, but said the country still had huge potential. "China's labour participation rate is not considered low worldwide, more than 700 million of our 900 million people (of working age) are employed, and there is still room (for growth)," he said. Signs of China's falling population growth had emerged when data released by some local authorities indicated a significant drop in births last year. In Qingdao, a city in eastern Shandong province - one of China's most populous regions - births between January and November decreased by 21 percent to just over 81,000 compared to the previous year. Top 10 | Largest countries by population Still, China's total population rose by 5.3 million in 2018 to 1.395 billion people, retaining its title as the world's most populous nation. China for decades limited most families to one child - often enforcing this policy through hefty financial penalties - in a bid to control population growth. This was relaxed in 2016 when couples were allowed two children in response to concerns about an ageing society and shrinking workforce. China's workforce - those aged between 16 and 59 - was 897.3 million last year, a 4.7 million drop from 2017, NBS data showed. The workforce is on track to decline by as much as 23 percent by 2050. |
Posted: 21 Jan 2019 07:46 AM PST |
Posted: 20 Jan 2019 03:30 AM PST |
Kamala Harris Seeks to Make History With 2020 Presidential Run Posted: 21 Jan 2019 09:31 AM PST Harris, a daughter of a Jamaican-born father and Indian immigrant mother, would be the first black woman as well as the first Indian-American in the Oval Office. The backing of African Americans, who dominate the Democratic electorate in early primaries like South Carolina, which is expected to hold its primary in late February 2020, followed by other Southern states in the first half of March, would make her formidable. |
10 percent of TSA workers call in sick as government shutdown drags on Posted: 21 Jan 2019 01:47 PM PST |
Mexico fuel pipeline blast kills 73, witnesses describe horror Posted: 19 Jan 2019 05:50 PM PST Forensic experts filled body bags with charred human remains in the field where the explosion occurred on Friday evening by the town of Tlahuelilpan in the state of Hidalgo, in one of the deadliest incidents to hit Mexico's troubled oil infrastructure in years. A number of people at the scene told Reuters that local shortages in gasoline supply since Lopez Obrador launched a drive to stamp out fuel theft had encouraged the rush to the gushing pipeline. "Everyone came to see if they could get a bit of gasoline for their car, there isn't any in the gas stations," said farmer Isaias Garcia, 50. |
World's oldest man, 113, dies at his home in northern Japan Posted: 20 Jan 2019 06:35 AM PST |
Ex-diplomats, scholars urge China to release Canadians Posted: 21 Jan 2019 02:40 PM PST A group of former diplomats and academics have signed an open letter to Chinese President Xi Jinping calling for the release of two Canadians who have been detained on allegations of espionage. Former diplomat Michael Kovrig and businessman Michael Spavor were last month arrested in China for activities that "endanger China's security" -- a phrase often used by Beijing when alleging espionage. The letter said both Kovrig and Spavor worked to improve understanding of China and to promote better relations with the world. |
Posted: 21 Jan 2019 02:23 AM PST Anastasia Vashukevich, the model who recorded a former employer of Paul Manafort allegedly discussing US relations with a Russian deputy prime minister during the 2016 election, has promised in a Moscow court not to release any further recordings. Ms Vashukevich previously claimed to have evidence of Russian interference in the US election from a fling with Oleg Deripaska, the metals magnate to whom Donald Trump's campaign manager Manafort reportedly promised private briefings, something Deripaska always denied. Video she uploaded to Instagram showed Mr Deripaska speaking on a yacht in 2016 with Sergei Prikhodko, a deputy prime minister and long-time aide to Vladimir Putin. In a separate audio recording, Mr Deripaska is heard discussing Russia's "bad relations with America". The pair talked about the "issue with America," Ms Vashukevich had claimed. After her Instagram posts were discovered in February 2018, Ms Vashukevich was arrested while leading a sex training seminar in Thailand, and Mr Deripaska successfully sued Ms Vashukevich for violating his right to privacy with her photographs and recordings. A Russian court ordered her to delete the posts and pay him £5,800 in emotional damages. She and her partner from the sex training received a suspended sentence for soliciting and conspiracy last week and deported to Belarus, their native country. On her way there, they were arrested in a Moscow airport on Thursday. They face prostitution charges carrying up to six years in prison. After being led by bailiffs into a glass defendant's cage on Saturday, Ms Vashukevich asked Mr Deripaska's forgiveness and promised no more revelations. Ms Vashukevich was deported by Thailand and arrested at Moscow airport Credit: Vasily Maximov/AFP "There won't be any more audio recordings about Oleg Deripaska," she told journalists from a glass defendant's cage. "I won't compromise him anymore, so he can relax, really, I've had enough." She claimed that she was now subject to "fabricated" criminal cases in Thailand, Russia and Belarus. Ms Vashukevich declined to comment when asked by The Telegraph if the prostitution charges against her were related to claims of Russian election interference. The court delayed a hearing on her confinement until Tuesday after investigators said they didn't have enough evidence to make their arguments. Mr Deripaska has denied interference and said he never received an offer of private briefings. He is under US sanctions, but sanctions against some of his companies are set to be lifted this week despite controversy in congress. Mr Deripaska is seen speaking to Mr Prikhodko in footage posted by Ms Vashukevich Credit: Instagram The meeting on the yacht took place in August 2016 off the coast of Norway, according to an investigation by opposition activist Alexei Navalny. A private jet linked to Mr Deripaska had flown between New York and Moscow and then to Norway in the previous days, Mr Navalny found. Manafort, who has pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges and agreed to cooperate with Robert Mueller's investigation into election interference, told a Russian acquaintance he could offer private briefings to Mr Deripaska the month before, according to emails seen by The Atlantic and other publications. Russia ordered YouTube to take down Mr Navalny's video investigation, but it is still available and has more than 8 million views. While in jail in Thailand, Ms Vashukevich claimed to have more than 16 hours of audio recordings and photographs providing evidence of Russian interference in the US election. She promised to provide the evidence if the United States gave her asylum. Miss Vashukevich in detention in Thailand Credit: JORGE SILVA/REUTERS Ms Vashukevich told CNN she witnessed Mr Deripaska meeting three Americans in 2016 and 2017 and said "they had a plan for the election". She said she had photographs of one of the Americans with Mr Deripaska, but refused to name any of the men. CNN also reported FBI agents had unsuccessfully tried to see her in Thailand. |
‘Fox & Friends’ mistakenly airs Ruth Bader Ginsburg obituary graphic Posted: 21 Jan 2019 02:05 PM PST |
The Latest: Man rescued from New York river island Posted: 21 Jan 2019 11:59 AM PST |
Top US senator urges meeting between Trump and Khan Posted: 20 Jan 2019 07:06 AM PST Leading US Senator Lindsey Graham vowed Sunday to urge President Donald Trump to meet Imran Khan to boost Washington's Afghanistan peace efforts, calling the Pakistani prime minister an "agent of change". The Republican -- an influential ally of Trump -- made the comments in Islamabad after meeting with the Pakistani leader, saying Khan was a "new partner" who could potentially help with a peace deal in Afghanistan. |
Video shows Florida toddler walking towards police with hands up during her father's arrest Posted: 21 Jan 2019 10:02 AM PST |
Greeks Marching as Storm Grows Over Tsipras's Macedonia Deal Posted: 20 Jan 2019 05:55 AM PST Protesters, some wearing traditional army suits, chanted slogans like "Macedonia is Greek," and asking the government to hold a referendum for the issue, while police used tear gas to keep demonstrators away from parliament. Under the so-called Prespes agreement, Greece's neighbor will change its name to Republic of North Macedonia in exchange for the Greeks ending opposition to its bid to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the European Union. Many Greeks say Macedonia should only be used to refer to their country's northern region of that name -- the birthplace of Alexander -- and see any use as an attempt to steal their cultural heritage. |
China's population growth slows despite two-child policy Posted: 21 Jan 2019 02:06 AM PST China's population grew at a slower rate last year despite the abolition of the one-child policy, official data showed Monday, raising fears an ageing society will pile further pressure on an already slowing economy. China's government raised the limit to two children in 2016 to rejuvenate the world's most populous country, which has nearly 1.4 billion people, and experts say it may remove the cap next year. "Decades-long social and economic transformations have prepared an entirely new generation in China, for whom marriage and childbearing no longer have the importance as they once did for their parents generation," said Wang Feng, a sociology professor at University of California, Irving. |
Elon Musk gets green light to deliver Tesla Model 3 cars in Europe Posted: 21 Jan 2019 05:36 AM PST Tesla has secured approval from regulators to sell its Model 3 cars in Europe, in a move that will bring it in direct competition with the likes of BMW, Volkswagen and Peugeot in their home market. Dutch vehicle authority RDW approved Tesla's request to sell the most affordable of its electric cars on Monday, meaning that British customers can order the car from next month. Production of right hand driving vehicles, the standard in the UK, is not due to start until mid 2019. The announcement comes days after chief executive Elon Musk issued a letter to all of his employees, describing 2018 as "the most challenging in Tesla's history". In the same letter, Musk said he had "no choice" but to reduce full time employee headcount by 7pc and retain only the most critical temps and contractors. "There isn't any other way," he said. Workers will now focus on producing a cheaper version of the Model 3 in an attempt to boost sales. Shipments of Model 3 vehicles to Europe and Asia are expected to generate a profit for the company in future, Musk said. Tesla's Model 3 is currently priced at over $35,000 (£27,200), has a range of 220 miles and a top speed of 130 mph. The model first went on sale at the end of 2018. Tesla was forced to push back its production targets last year when it failed to hit the 5,000 vehicle a week target by the end of 2017. |
How to Use a Smart Speaker as Your Smart Home Hub Posted: 21 Jan 2019 03:00 AM PST |
Chile earthquake: Magnitude 6.7 quake rocks north of country Posted: 20 Jan 2019 04:35 AM PST A magnitude- 6.7 earthquake hit the coast of north Chile, causing buildings to shake and fears of a possible tsunami. It reportedly caused homes to rattle, as well as minor damage to old buildings and power outages in the nearby coastal city of La Serena – a popular beach town about 250 miles north of Santiago. Chilean mining group Antofagasta Plc said operations were continuing as normal at its Los Pelambres copper mine following the nearby earthquake. |
Where the investigations related to President Trump stand Posted: 20 Jan 2019 11:31 AM PST |
Israel says strikes Iranian targets in Syria after rocket Posted: 21 Jan 2019 07:35 AM PST Israel struck what it said were Iranian targets in Syria on Monday in response to missile fire it blamed on Iran, sparking concerns of an escalation after a report that 11 fighters were killed. Israel announced the strikes against facilities it said belonged to the Iranian Revolutionary Guards' Quds Force as they were occurring, continuing its recent practice of speaking more openly about such raids. It said the strikes were in response to a medium-range, surface-to-surface missile the Quds Force fired from Syria at the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights on Sunday, which Israeli air defences intercepted. |
Enbridge gas pipeline explosion causes fireball in Ohio Posted: 21 Jan 2019 02:23 PM PST |
United Airlines passengers stranded over 15 hours at frigid Canadian military base Posted: 21 Jan 2019 05:29 AM PST |
Posted: 20 Jan 2019 09:57 AM PST |
Flash freeze of melting snowstorm seen icing over U.S. Northeast Posted: 20 Jan 2019 05:26 PM PST Plunging temperatures after a wet winter storm dumped more than a foot of snow on parts of the U.S. Northeast were expected to flash freeze much of the region on Sunday and make travel dicey during the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday on Monday. "Any water that remains on the road will freeze into a sheet of ice and make conditions quite hazardous," said Rich Otto, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service (NWS). Sub-zero temperatures tied to gusting winds prompted the NWS to issue wind chill advisories and warnings for more than 10 states, from North Dakota and other parts of the central United States to East Coast metropolitan centers including Washington, New York and Boston. |
Posted: 20 Jan 2019 05:46 AM PST Donald Trump has again confused weather with climate change, suggesting the US would benefit from "a little of that good old fashioned Global Warming right now" amid forecasts of snow and cold conditions. Large parts of the Country are suffering from tremendous amounts of snow and near record setting cold. In November, Mr Trump conflated seasonal weather with climate change, suggesting chilly conditions meant global warming wasn't real. |
Suicide attack on Kurdish-US convoy in Syria 'kills 5' Posted: 21 Jan 2019 12:23 PM PST A suicide bomber attacked a convoy of US troops and their allies in Syria on Monday, killing five members of a Kurdish-led force fighting the Islamic State group, a monitor said. The assault, claimed by IS jihadists, came less than a week after another deadly attack on US forces in Syria, and a month after Washington announced a US troop pullout from the war-torn country. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said five fighters from the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces were killed in the blast on a road in northeastern Hasakeh province. |
Suspect arrested in beating of 88-year-old woman in San Francisco's Visitacion Valley Posted: 21 Jan 2019 10:48 AM PST |
British Airway is giving one of its Boeing 747s a 1960s-era paint scheme Posted: 21 Jan 2019 08:14 AM PST |
Students in 'MAGA' hats 'mock Native American' at Lincoln Memorial Posted: 19 Jan 2019 06:42 PM PST A diocese in Kentucky apologised Saturday after videos emerged showing students from a Catholic boys' high school appearing to mock Native Americans outside the Lincoln Memorial after a rally in Washington. The Indigenous Peoples March in Washington on Friday coincided with the March for Life, which drew thousands of anti-abortion protesters, including a group from Covington Catholic High School in Park Hills. Videos circulating online show a youth staring at and standing extremely close to Nathan Phillips, a 64-year-old Native American man singing and playing a drum. Other students, some wearing Covington clothing and many wearing "Make America Great Again" hats and sweatshirts, surrounded them, chanting, laughing and jeering. In a joint statement , the Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington and Covington Catholic High School apologised to Phillips. Officials said they are investigating and will take "appropriate action, up to and including expulsion." A teenager wearing a "Make America Great Again" hat stands in front of an elderly Native American singing and playing a drum in Washington Credit: Survival Media Agency "We extend our deepest apologies to Mr Phillips," the statement read. "This behavior is opposed to the Church's teachings on the dignity and respect of the human person." The teen at the centre of the confrontation has said he did nothing to provoke anyone and sought to calm the situation. He said the students were waiting at the Lincoln Memorial for buses to return to Kentucky on Friday when four African-American protesters there began insulting them, and that the students began yelling "school spirit chants" to drown out the protesters and he did not hear students chant anything "hateful or racist at any time." According to the "Indian Country Today" website, Phillips is an Omaha elder and Vietnam veteran who holds an annual ceremony honoring Native American veterans at Arlington National Cemetery. "When I was there singing, I heard them saying 'Build that wall, build that wall,'" Phillips said, as he wiped away tears in a video posted on Instagram. "This is indigenous lands. We're not supposed to have walls here. We never did." He told The Washington Post that while he was drumming, he thought about his wife, Shoshana, who died of bone marrow cancer nearly four years ago, and the threats that indigenous communities around the world are facing. "I felt like the spirit was talking through me," Phillips told the newspaper. The amount of disrespect.... TO THIS DAY. #SMH #ipmdc19 #ipmdc #indigenousunited #indigenouspeoplesmarch #indigenouspeoplesmarch2019 A post shared by KC�������� (@ka_ya11) on Jan 18, 2019 at 4:33pm PST State Representative Ruth Buffalo, a North Dakota state lawmaker and member of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, said she was saddened to see students showing disrespect to an elder who is also a US military veteran at what was supposed to be a celebration of all cultures. "The behavior shown in that video is just a snapshot of what indigenous people have faced and are continuing to face," Buffalo said. She said she hoped it would lead to some kind of meeting with the students to provide education on issues facing Native Americans. The videos prompted a torrent of outrage online. Actress and activist Alyssa Milano tweeted that the footage "brought me to tears," while actor Chris Evans tweeted that the students' actions were "appalling" and "shameful." This is Trump's America. And it brought me to tears. What are we teaching our young people? Why is this ok? How is this ok? Please help me understand. Because right now I feel like my heart is living outside of my body. https://t.co/QMxMDxNjvr— Alyssa Milano (@Alyssa_Milano) January 19, 2019 US Representative Deb Haaland, D-New Mexico, who is a member of the Pueblo of Laguna and had been at the rally earlier in the day, used Twitter to sharply criticize what she called a "heartbreaking" display of "blatant hate, disrespect, and intolerance." Haaland, who is also Catholic, told The Associated Press she was particularly saddened to see the boys mocking an elder, who is revered in Native American culture. She placed some of the blame on President Donald Trump, who has used Indian names like Pocahontas as an insult. "It is sad that we have a president who uses Native American women's names as racial slurs and that's an example that these kids are clearly following considering the fact that they had their 'Make America Great Again' hats on," Haaland said. "He's really brought out the worst in people." |
Ex-Nissan chairman Ghosn asks for bail, promises not to flee Posted: 20 Jan 2019 09:21 PM PST |
Dream Match: Could an Old F-14 Tomcat Kill a Stealth F-22? Posted: 20 Jan 2019 04:00 AM PST |
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