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- Two more Isil brides stripped of British citizenship
- A Deal, Soft Brexit or Reversal: Theresa May's Uncertain Endgame
- Jaguar attacks woman taking selfie at Arizona zoo
- See Every Angle of the 2020 Porsche 911 Cabriolet
- US-backed Syrian fighters resume attack on Islamic State
- Thirty injured as turbulence hits Turkish Airlines flight to New York
- Smollett's lawyer cites 'overkill' after actor indicted on 16 counts of lying to police
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- U.S. presses India to stop buying oil from Venezuela's Maduro: envoy
- Biden and Sanders Lead Iowa Poll of 2020 Democratic Field
- Maga hat boy’s lawyer to sue CNN over ‘vicious attacks’
- The Price of Catholic Unity
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- Push to retake last IS scrap on hold as civilian exodus slows
- Timeline of the deadly Ethiopian Airlines crash
- Stormy Daniels arrest not motivated by politics but still improper, investigation finds
- Thousands of protesters take to the streets of Caracas amid nationwide Venezuela power outage
- Factbox: Deal, no deal or delay - How will UK parliament decide on Brexit?
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Two more Isil brides stripped of British citizenship Posted: 09 Mar 2019 12:13 PM PST Two more jihadi brides who joined Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant are believed to have been stripped of their UK citizenship while living in a refugee camp in Syria. The disclosure came as a row intensified over the death of a three-week-old baby whose mother Shamima Begum had been stripped of her British citizenship. Reema Iqbal, 30, along with her sister Zara Iqbal, 28, are mothers of five children between them, and are also in a camp. Legal sources told the Sunday Times that the sisters have had their citizenship removed after marrying into a terror cell linked to the execution of western hostages. A decision to remove their citizenship will fuel fears over what happens to the children of jihadi brides. The two women left Newham in London in 2013 for the co-called Isil caliphate. At least one of their sons was born in the UK and was taken to Syria. The women's parents are originally from Pakistan, and the Home Office could pursue the argument that they are Pakistani nationals. Last month Reema Iqbal told The Telegraph she was hopeful of returning to the UK. She said: "The security services came to speak to me and I was honest, I told them my whole story so now it's up to them to judge. I don't know if my Mum ever got me a Pakistani passport or not, I've never been to Pakistan. "There's not enough food for bigger families. It's a prison here, but we're serving no sentence. If I face court, fine, but take me back to the UK, that's where I'm from." Sajid Javid, the home secretary, was facing cross-party criticism after Kurdish officials confirmed that the three-week-old baby of Shamima Begum, 19, had died this week. Shamima Begum Credit: MetropolitanPpolice Diane Abbott, the shadow home secretary, blamed Mr Javid's decision to remove Ms Begum's citizenship for the child's death, accusing him of breaking international law and condemning the decision as "callous and inhumane". Phillip Lee, a Tory MP said the decision had been driven by populism and that the British government had failed in its moral responsibility to both mother and child. "I was just troubled by the decision. It seemed driven by a sort of populism, not any principle I recognise," he told the BBC's Today programme. The news of the death came as Ms Begum's father Ahmed Ali offered an apology to the British public for his daughter's decision to flee the country and join the terror group. Speaking from his home in the village of Dovroy, in north-eastern Bangladesh, he told the BBC: "She has done wrong, I apologise to everyone as her father, to the British people, I am sorry for Shamima's doing. I request to the British people, please forgive her." Mr Ali said added he only visited London three or four months at a time and had no idea how his daughter had become radicalised. He urged the British government and public to "take her back and punish her if she had done any mistake". |
A Deal, Soft Brexit or Reversal: Theresa May's Uncertain Endgame Posted: 08 Mar 2019 09:00 PM PST It's unlikely she will have secured enough concessions from Brussels to win over lawmakers, leaving her with just one strong card to play: If they vote down her deal, Brexit could be abandoned in all but name -- or even altogether. May has promised that if members of Parliament reject her divorce treaty, they will then get a vote on whether to take the country out of the European Union into legal limbo -- an option previous ballots have shown they will reject. Whatever is agreed must convince the pro-Brexit faction of the Conservative Party and also the proudly obstinate Northern Irish lawmakers who prop up her government. |
Jaguar attacks woman taking selfie at Arizona zoo Posted: 10 Mar 2019 06:15 AM PDT |
See Every Angle of the 2020 Porsche 911 Cabriolet Posted: 09 Mar 2019 02:40 PM PST |
US-backed Syrian fighters resume attack on Islamic State Posted: 10 Mar 2019 12:30 PM PDT |
Thirty injured as turbulence hits Turkish Airlines flight to New York Posted: 09 Mar 2019 08:42 PM PST A Turkish Airlines passenger jet traveling from Istanbul to New York hit severe turbulence Saturday as it approached its destination, with 30 people suffering injuries before it landed safely, officials said. The injured were taken from New York's John F Kennedy International Airport to local hospitals, mainly for treatment of bumps, cuts and bruises. One flight attendant suffered a broken leg, according to Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the area's airports, bus terminals, bridges and tunnels. |
Posted: 08 Mar 2019 06:47 PM PST |
'F-22 Raptor' of Stealth Submarines: Meet the U.S. Navy's Seawolf-Class Posted: 10 Mar 2019 06:00 AM PDT |
U.S. presses India to stop buying oil from Venezuela's Maduro: envoy Posted: 10 Mar 2019 09:16 AM PDT You should be on the side of the Venezuelan people," Elliott Abrams told Reuters in an interview. The Trump administration has given the same message to other governments, Abrams said, and has made a similar argument to foreign banks and companies doing business with Maduro. Abrams described the U.S. approach as "arguing, cajoling, urging." The talks with India come as the United States and its regional allies, who back Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido, threaten more sanctions to cut off revenue streams to Maduro's government and force him to step down. |
Biden and Sanders Lead Iowa Poll of 2020 Democratic Field Posted: 09 Mar 2019 06:07 PM PST |
Maga hat boy’s lawyer to sue CNN over ‘vicious attacks’ Posted: 10 Mar 2019 07:00 AM PDT Lawyer L Lin Wood, representing Covington Catholic High School pupil Nick Sandmann, announced during an interview with Fox News that the lawsuit was being launched. The latest litigation comes just weeks after the 16-year-old's legal team filed a lawsuit in federal court against major US daily newspaper The Washington Post. "CNN was probably more vicious in its direct attacks on Nicholas than The Washington Post, and CNN goes into millions of individuals' homes," Mr Wood told Fox News host Mark Levin. |
Posted: 10 Mar 2019 03:30 AM PDT For Love of My People I Will Not Remain Silent: On the Situation of the Church in China, published in English this year, is a series of eight lectures by Joseph Cardinal Zen. Cardinal Zen delivered the lectures in Hong Kong in 2017. The lectures are an account of the state of the relationship between the Church within and the Church outside China from 2000 to 2017, focusing on a letter written by Pope Benedict to Chinese Catholics in 2007 and on diplomatic relations between the Vatican and the Church in China.Though the plight of faithful in China may currently be overshadowed by the many high-profile sexual-abuse scandals within the Church, the persecution faced by Catholics in the avowedly atheist country should not be disregarded. But it is not the Chinese government's oppression of religious minorities that Zen focuses on. In his lectures he details the incompetence and corruption of Church officials in their handling of the complex and tense relationship between Vatican officials and diplomats, the state-run Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association (PCA), and the underground Catholic Church in China.The PCA has historically operated under the auspices of the ruling Communist party rather than Rome, appointing its own bishops without Vatican approval and thereby rendering those bishops latae sententiae excommunicants. Pope Benedict XVI in 2006 formally excommunicated two PCA-appointed bishops and the two bishops who had ordained them. The underground Catholic Church in China is in good standing and full communion with Rome but lacks the approval of the Chinese government and therefore suffers persecution.Some Chinese Catholics loathe the state-run Church as an empty apparatus intended for control rather than sincere devotion, some believers trust only the state-sanctioned Church, and some do not bother to distinguish between the two, since the difference is not in rite or theology but in ecclesiological administration. Zen, who is still outspoken in his disapproval of the provisional agreement signed on September 22 of last year, criticizes the prevarications of the Vatican in its dealings with the Church in China in For Love of My People. He condemns the strategy of "compromise and surrender" and says that the "Curia has always tried to please the Chinese government."In 1988, the Vatican issued eight points on Catholicism in China. The provisional agreement signed last year is in discord with them. In the eight points, the Vatican's Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples decreed that PCA ordinations were valid but not licit. But under the agreement, in what Pope Francis has claimed is an attempt to foster healing and unity among Chinese Catholics, the distinction between PCA and Catholic bishops has been erased. Francis has recognized eight bishops (one deceased) appointed by the PCA in Beijing as in full ecclesial communion with Rome, even though they were appointed with flagrant disregard for the Vatican and, in some cases, had been previously excommunicated.While the agreement is a step toward repairing the rift within the Chinese Church, it has left Catholics who have long fought for the underground Church in China feeling subverted and betrayed. Pope Francis has admitted that the agreement will not necessarily end the suffering of Chinese Catholics. The pope has also lamented "the suffering for those who don't understand, or who have so many years behind them of living clandestinely." Catholics such as Cardinal Zen who have long encouraged opposition to the PCA suddenly find the Vatican itself seeking common ground with the organization.Unity of believers is a worthy and principal goal, but proper form and the authority of the Church should not be sacrificed in achieving it. Zen decried the agreement before and after it was signed, seeing it as an attempt by the Church to ingratiate itself with China's ruling party rather than defend true believers. Zen rightly notes of Vatican officials that "if today they go along with the regime, tomorrow our Church will not be welcome for the rebuilding of the new China."Zen discusses myriad examples of the incompetence that plagues the Church. One is that Pietro Parolin, the secretary of state appointed by Francis, has allowed the Catholic commission for the Church in China to lapse, no longer facilitating its meetings. Zen also mentions that Father Federico Lombardi, the former director of the Press Office of the Holy See, allowed himself to be interviewed by Phoenix Television, one of the few private television networks officially permitted by Hong Kong's government. Zen suggests that Phoenix is not a neutral outlet. The channel has come under criticism in recent years for the government influence in its programming. In 2016, the channel suspended airing of several popular political-commentary shows because of "ideological mistakes" by the hosts.Zen also tells of Bishop Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo, who at a Vatican symposium on organ transplants invited as a guest of honor Dr. Huang Jiefu, China's former deputy health minister. Huang has publicly taken credit for a decade-long reform effort in the Chinese medical community. In 2005, as vice health minister, he admitted that over 90 percent of the transplant organs in China were harvested from executed prisoners, but he promised reform of the medical system.His high rhetoric notwithstanding, Huang did not seem to effect much change. In June 2016, the U.S. Congress unanimously condemned China's "state-sanctioned forced organ harvesting," in a resolution alleging that the Chinese Communist Party was continuing the practice in secret and that it was killing "non-consenting prisoners of conscience," including religious and ethnic minorities.Zen is a dedicated, orthodox Catholic and he indicates no disobedience to the pope by his criticisms. In his last lecture, Zen says, "I will never lead a rebellion against the Pope" if he signs an agreement with the Chinese government. "I will quietly withdraw to the monastic life of prayer and penance." But a weak and feckless Church that is not willing to fight brazenly for the truth will not inspire many future witnesses like Zen. A Church that does not devote itself to its own teachings is an empty institution.Zen does not leave us without hope for the Church, or for the Church in China. He is our hope. He is the voice crying out in the desert, refusing to be satisfied with half-truths or cowardly deference. Like Christians in other countries hostile to Christianity, Zen in his unwavering dedication to God is an example and testament to all Christians.Zen concedes that there is true belief in both the underground and the official state Church in China. "We came to realize that our categories were too sharply divisive," he says, "when in reality there were so many healthy forces."He does not hesitate to point out the failure of the Church to communicate adequately with Chinese Catholics. In 2007, Pope Benedict wrote a letter intended to provide clarity to the Church in China. The letter was meant to be ready by Easter, Zen says, but the final copy was not published until the end of June. Moreover, the final Chinese copy had mistakes and sentences mistranslated. "What a shame that a letter addressed precisely to the people of China had so many errors in the Chinese translation," Zen laments.In the last of his eight lectures, given on June 28, 2017, Zen, compares being a Catholic in China to living in a cage. He says that the provisional agreement between China and the pope, which was not yet signed at the time of his writing, will further stifle Chinese Catholics in their ability to worship: "To us, a terrifying scenario is unfolding, the sellout of the Church! Not reconstituted unity, but a forced cohabitation in the cage. From the point of view of the faith, we cannot see any gain."If Catholics have learned anything from the recent crimes propagated in the Church, it should be that there is no mercy without justice. Passivity and capitulation among clerics in the face of injustice or persecution should not be tolerated; and no government or institution, including the tangled bureaucracy of the Catholic hierarchy, is above reproach.These criticisms of the Church's entreaties to China come not from an aggrieved anti-cleric but from a cardinal in good standing. Zen's lectures are not a condemnation of authority but rather a call for the Church to act as a strong authority and an uncompromising garrison of virtue. Clerics should not shy away from their commitment to Christian teaching. They should be fortified by it.Hope for Catholicism in China lies in the hands of Cardinal Zen and those who, like him, are willing to defend the faith even without strong support from the Vatican. The Church on Earth will be preserved not by equivocations and incompetent bureaucracy but by the Church Militant. Zen reminds us that it is the Catholics who are steadfast in their devotion to the sacraments and doctrine who will preserve the Church, and that nothing less than martyrdom, be it red or white, is the seed of the Church. |
Southern storms, apparent tornadoes cause damages; none hurt Posted: 09 Mar 2019 05:50 PM PST |
Push to retake last IS scrap on hold as civilian exodus slows Posted: 09 Mar 2019 04:45 PM PST US-backed Syrian forces awaited orders Sunday to relaunch their push against the Islamic State group's final scrap of territory as an earlier exodus of civilians from the redoubt slowed to a trickle. The Syrian Democratic Forces renewed their offensive against the jihadists on March 1 after a weeks-long pause to empty the bombed-out bastion of non-combattants. "Yesterday only about 100 people left, including three Chinese Uighurs and three Moroccan women," SDF spokesman Mustefa Bali told AFP. |
Timeline of the deadly Ethiopian Airlines crash Posted: 10 Mar 2019 11:13 AM PDT ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — The news shattered more than two years of relative calm in Africa's skies. As millions on the continent headed to church on Sunday morning, an Ethiopian Airlines plane took off on a routine flight from Addis Ababa for Nairobi and quickly lost control. Six minutes later, all contact was lost. All 157 people aboard were killed, representing a staggering 35 countries. Here is a timeline of how the day unfolded. All times local. |
Stormy Daniels arrest not motivated by politics but still improper, investigation finds Posted: 09 Mar 2019 07:35 AM PST |
Thousands of protesters take to the streets of Caracas amid nationwide Venezuela power outage Posted: 09 Mar 2019 04:31 PM PST Thousands of people took to the streets of Caracas on Saturday amid a nationwide power cut that has plunged crisis-hit Venezuela into further chaos and desperation for two days. The capital bristled with the security forces of Nicolás Maduro as supporters of Juan Guaidó, the National Assembly leader recognised as the legitimate interim president by more than 50 countries, poured into the city centre. It was a daring move by opponents of the Maduro government, both for the march's unusual proximity to state installations and for it taking place amid the blackout that has almost entirely brought down the country's communications. The National Guard and riot police were out in force across the city, in some areas blocking the demonstrators' passage. The Telegraph counted eight army trucks full of soldiers and nine armoured vehicles and tanks in a convoy approaching the protest route. A supporter of Venezuelan opposition leader and self-proclaimed acting president Juan Guaido, holds a policeman's face during a demonstration in Caracas Credit: AFP On Avenida Victoria, the march's destination, protesters faced off with riot police before the rally even officially began, following an early morning confrontation that had seen security forces fire tear gas at locals as they tried to detain those erecting a platform for speeches. The atmosphere simmered as protesters, their anger heightened by the blackout, shouted at riot police with their shields raised. "You are killers!" one woman shouted. "There is still no electricity, people are dying, and you are going to pay for this!" "Soldiers, friends, the fight depends on you!" chanted others in the crowd, urging the security forces to come over to their side. Once again, it was almost impossible to communicate in Caracas or across most of the country. Power had been restored in some areas of the capital and elsewhere for a few hours on Friday afternoon, before cutting out in the early evening. The grid began to partially function again on Saturday morning, but by midday the blackout had resumed. Mr Maduro and his ministers have pinned the outage on "sabotage" at the Guri hydroelectric dam, accusing the US of waging an "electric war" against Venezuela. Jorge Rodriguez, the communications minister, has singled out Florida senator Marco Rubio for blame. A police officer tries to put out a fire during a demonstration in Caracas Credit: AFP But at the march in support of Mr Guaidó, such claims were ridiculed. "They always have an excuse to blame others," Miguel Useche, a 72-year-old pensioner, told The Telegraph. "They have taken everything, I don't know how many millions of millions they have looted," he said, attributing the electrical collapse to corruption and lack of maintenance. The outage has brought further hardship to a country where many are already struggling to survive amid punishing shortages of food and medicine. As well as communications, water pumps have failed, food is rotting in fridges, businesses are shuttered and transport is virtually non existent. Petrol stations and grocery shops are running dry, with huge queues snaking around the few still operating. At hospitals across the country, back up generators have failed or been insufficient to power life saving equipment. At a number, medical staff have been left ventilating premature babies or patients in critical condition by hand. On Saturday an NGO reported that fifteen Venezuelans with advanced kidney disease had died after being unable to get dialysis during the country's extended power outage. "Between yesterday and today, there were 15 deaths for lack of dialysis," said Francisco Valencia, director of the Codevida health rights group. Carmen Yagres, a 38-year-old engineer, said Mr Maduro's government must go. "We are here because people are dying," she told the Telegraph. "It seems it doesn't matter to them." She implored the US to intervene to end the crisis. "We need international help," she told The Telegraph. Mr Maduro, too, called supporters to the streets of Caracas on Saturday. The hardcore militants of his Socialist PSUV turned out, chanting patriotic slogans in defence of the fatherland against "imperialist aggression". But away from the rank and file, the mood was subdued, the thronging crowds of fervent supporters he has in the past commanded nowhere to be seen. |
Factbox: Deal, no deal or delay - How will UK parliament decide on Brexit? Posted: 10 Mar 2019 10:42 AM PDT Lawmakers will this week decide how and when Britain should leave the European Union in a series of votes that could determine the country's prosperity for decades to come. With Britain due to leave the EU on March 29, and no agreed direction for the world's fifth-largest economy to take, Prime Minister Theresa May will ask lawmakers to vote on up to three possible outcomes. If the deal is rejected, lawmakers will vote on Wednesday on whether the government should pursue a no-deal exit. |
Democracy, DPRK style: North Korea holds election Posted: 10 Mar 2019 10:07 AM PDT North Koreans went to the polls Sunday for an election in which there could be only one winner. Leader Kim Jong Un's ruling Workers' Party has an iron grip on the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, as the isolated, nuclear-armed country is officially known. Every five years it holds an election for the rubber stamp legislature, known as the Supreme People's Assembly. |
Ocasio-Cortez Blasts Capitalism as an ‘Irredeemable’ System Posted: 09 Mar 2019 05:31 PM PST The 29-year-old, first-term U.S. House member from New York and self-described democratic socialist addressed an enthusiastic crowd Saturday at the South by Southwest conference in Austin, Texas, about issues that resonate with her fellow millennials, from universal healthcare to combating climate change. "Capitalism is an ideology of capital –- the most important thing is the concentration of capital and to seek and maximize profit," Ocasio-Cortez said. |
Surprise sale slashes the two most popular Instant Pots to their lowest prices of 2019 Posted: 09 Mar 2019 07:32 AM PST Well what do we have here, bargain hunters!? It looks like Amazon is feeling particularly generous this weekend because out of the blue, it slashed the prices of the two most popular Instant Pot models on the planet to 2019 lows. Well, technically the Instant Pot DUO60 6 Qt 7-in-1 Multi-Use Programmable Pressure Cooker is within $2 of its 2019 low, but that's close enough for us -- clip the $18 coupon on the Amazon page and you'll snag this incredible $100 Instant Pot for only $71.99. If you have a big family and you need more capacity, the $140 Instant Pot DUO80 8 Qt 7-in-1 Multi- Use Programmable Pressure Cooker is down to just $89.99 today, which is this great model's lowest price since Black Friday. What are you waiting for!?Here are the key details from the product page: * Duo, the number 1 selling multi-cooker, combines 7 kitchen appliances in 1, Pressure Cooker, Slow Cooker, Rice Cooker, Steamer, Saute, Yogurt Marker and Warmer, prepares dishes up to 70% faster to support your busy lifestyle * Features 14 Smart Programs - Soup, Meat/Stew, Bean/Chili, Poultry, Saute/Simmer, Rice, Multigrain, Porridge, Steam, Slow Cook, Keep Warm, Yogurt, Manual, and Pressure Cook. Now, your favorite dishes are as easy as pressing a button * Healthy, stainless steel (18/8) inner cooking pot made from food grade 304, no chemical coating, 3-ply bottom for even heat distribution, fully sealed environment traps the flavours, nutrients and aromas within the food * Built with the latest 3rd generation technology, the microprocessor monitors pressure, temperature, keeps time, and adjusts heating intensity and duration to achieve your desired results every time.Product Dimensions: 14.17 x 14.84 x 13.31 inches * UL and ULC certified with 10 safety mechanisms to provide you with added assurance, designed to eliminate many common errors. * Power supply: 120V - 60Hz |
No survivors in crash of Ethiopian Airlines flight en route to Kenya Posted: 10 Mar 2019 07:21 AM PDT |
Utah teacher forces student to wash off Ash Wednesday cross Posted: 08 Mar 2019 05:59 PM PST |
The internet can't stop editing live cats into the 'Captain Marvel' poster Posted: 09 Mar 2019 01:31 PM PST If you need a reminder of how amazing the internet is, look no further than the trending hashtag for Captain Marvel's cuddly cat -- sorry, I mean Flerken -- named Goose.Following the release of Disney's latest superhero blockbuster in South Korea, the hashtag for Goose, "캡틴마블_우리집구스," started trending. But whereas most Twitter hashtags are usually filled with text, this one quickly turned into a gallery of cute kitty overload.SEE ALSO: Everything you need to know about Captain Marvel's catSpotted by Twitter user @doryheartsbooks, the hashtag is filled with images of peoples' cats Photoshopped into a Captain Marvel background.Awww, too cute:> YA-ONG캡틴마블_우리집구스 pic.twitter.com/QbxS8tuGHH> > -- 레몬 (@dayrhyme) March 9, 2019OK, and this one's adorable as well...> 캡틴마블_우리집구스 > 먀옹!! pic.twitter.com/6o86hVdRZZ> > -- 먀옹 (@wtIdreamedtoday) March 9, 2019Arghh, they're all too darn cute...> 캡틴마블_우리집구스 > > 우리 보리 최고야 귀여워 완벽해! pic.twitter.com/YffWQSlwvW> > -- 서율 (@marron_dInde) March 9, 2019But the most hilarious ones are the tweets parodying the fan creations...like this one made of Nanoblocks:> 반려묘로 캡마 포스터 합성하는 이벤트 하길래 우리 집 해상도 낮은 반려묘들로 합성해 봄... 캡틴마블_우리집구스 pic.twitter.com/qwIwM3OGVQ> > -- 눅쓰 (@Nuxtyle) March 9, 2019And this savage kitty:> 나니야 > 다부숴캡틴마블_우리집구스 pic.twitter.com/zxKTVYZNJe> > -- 나니 (@Super_Mangnani) March 9, 2019Not to be left out, even people who don't own a cat got in on the fun. Check out that gallery with the dogs and the parrot!> This is gold omg I hope Daniel know this. > I'm camping on this hastag until future notice.캡틴마블_우리집구스 pic.twitter.com/TNNq955aaO> > -- .. (@sweveniel) March 9, 2019But really, goose or Goose? > 캡틴마블_우리집구스 GOOSE N GOOSE pic.twitter.com/yUn0RzKIpj> > -- 1101 (@NNOJ8) March 9, 2019If you own a cat, you have a civic duty as a person who uses the internet to Photoshop your furry friend into a Captain Marvel background and overload everyone with cuteness. What are you waiting for? Get 'shoppin. WATCH: Brie Larson says 'Captain Marvel' has already changed her life |
Iran's Zarif in Iraq ahead of president's visit Posted: 10 Mar 2019 01:53 PM PDT Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has arrived in Baghdad to prepare the ground for his country's president, Hassan Rouhani, who will begin his first official visit to Iraq on Monday. Baghdad has been under pressure from Washington to limit ties with its neighbour, particularly after the United States withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal and hit Tehran with sanctions. Speaking in a joint press conference with Iraq's top diplomat Mohammed Ali al-Hakim, Zarif said Sunday they had held "very good discussions". |
Vietnam says investigating cause of boat's sinking in contested waters Posted: 09 Mar 2019 04:01 AM PST Vietnam is seeking clarification of how a fishing boat came to sink this week in the contested South China Sea, the Foreign Ministry said on Saturday, days after a local rescue agency said it was rammed by a Chinese vessel. Vietnam and China have long been embroiled in maritime disputes in the potentially energy-rich stretch of water, called East Sea by Vietnam. It said all five fishermen on board were rescued by another Vietnamese fishing boat. |
Where the investigations related to President Trump stand Posted: 09 Mar 2019 09:16 PM PST |
Warren Says Breaking Up Tech Giants Will Keep Market Competitive Posted: 09 Mar 2019 01:23 PM PST The Massachusetts senator spoke Saturday at the annual South by Southwest cultural festival in Austin, Texas, a day after proposing to take steps to break up companies like Facebook Inc. and Alphabet Co.'s Google if she's elected. On Friday she called for legislation that would designate large technology companies as "platform utilities," and for the appointment of regulators who'd unwind technology mergers that undermine competition and harm innovation and small businesses. |
Taxes 2019: How long should I keep my tax returns? Posted: 10 Mar 2019 11:33 AM PDT |
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez claims capitalism is ‘irredeemable’ Posted: 10 Mar 2019 02:47 PM PDT Democratic congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says that she thinks capitalism is "irredeemable". Ms Ocasio-Cortez made the comment during an interview at South by Southwest in Austin, where she said that the US should be "scared" that corporations had taken over the country. "Capitalism is an ideology of capital — the most important thing is the concentration of capital and to seek and maximise profit," Ms Ocasio-Cortez said during a question and answer session with Bloomberg News. |
Posted: 10 Mar 2019 05:29 AM PDT Before you slink down into your couch to enjoy a nice relaxing Sunday, check out our roundup of the best daily deals on the web. Highlights include Anker's best fast wireless charger for just $16.79 (the lowest price ever), a $20 discount on the hottest new Nintendo Switch game out there, $30 off Amazon's waterproof Kindle Paperwhite, Anker's Eufy Lumos smart LED bulbs for just $13 each, blazing-fast Samsung EVO 128GB microSD cards for $21 a piece, two killer Instant Pot deals, $40 off the best-selling DNA test on Amazon, Alexa and Google enabled smart plugs for $7.99 a piece when you buy a 4-pack, and more. See all of today's best deals below. |
FAA seeks a truce in dispute between Southwest and key union Posted: 08 Mar 2019 05:05 PM PST |
T-Mobile’s latest pitch for Sprint merger: Taking on cable internet and TV Posted: 10 Mar 2019 01:11 PM PDT |
Iran demands Pakistan acts 'decisively against terrorists' Posted: 10 Mar 2019 03:07 AM PDT Iran's President Hassan Rouhani has demanded Pakistan act "decisively against anti-Iranian terrorists" in a phone call with the country's premier, Tehran said, a month after a bloody attack on security forces. Iran says a Pakistani suicide bomber was behind the February 13 attack that killed 27 Revolutionary Guards in its volatile southeastern province of Sistan-Baluchistan. A Sunni jihadist group, Jaish al-Adl (Army of Justice), which Tehran says operates mostly out of bases in neighbouring Pakistan, claimed responsibility for the blast. |
Abbas picks loyalist Shtayyeh as Palestinian prime minister Posted: 10 Mar 2019 08:21 AM PDT The appointment was announced six weeks after Rami al-Hamdallah tendered his resignation from the post and the resignation of his unity government to President Mahmoud Abbas, underscoring the failure of Hamas and Fatah to implement a power-sharing deal. Speaking to Palestine Television, Shtayyeh said he would immediately begin consultations with factions belonging to the Palestine Liberation Organization, which Abbas heads, on forming a new cabinet. Hamas, which has controlled Gaza since seizing the enclave from Fatah in 2007, is not a member of the PLO. |
Trump signed Bibles. Heresy? Many religious leaders say no Posted: 09 Mar 2019 08:50 PM PST |
Google sifting through one billion health questions each day Posted: 10 Mar 2019 11:01 AM PDT Google wants to harness the billion health-related questions people ask it every day to provide better healthcare, despite criticism that the Search giant has played a role in spreading dangerous misinformation about measles vaccinations. Google Health boss David Feinberg said that around 7 per cent of Google's daily searches were health related, equivalent to 70,000 every minute. "People are asking us about conditions, medication, symptoms and insurance questions," he said during a technology conference in Austin, Texas. "In this case we are organising the world's health information and making it accessible to everyone." The former chief executive of major American healthcare provider, Geisinger Health, said that Google was trying to correct its fake news problem and "teams" of doctors and nurses analysing search results following public uproar over the appearance of conspiracy theories relating vaccinations to health problems. "If you Google 'how am I going to kill myself', the first thing that comes up is a suicide prevention note...If you Google 'holocaust' and 'myth' the information that comes up is authoritative advice. If you Google 'vaccines and autism' it comes up with the original study that says [the study] was flawed and not appropriate," he insisted. Some of the company's most popular services, like YouTube or Maps, have more than one billion users per day. Mr Feinberg said Google hopes that the same will be true of its health products. "We can streamline care, and the purpose for that is we want your nurse to look you in the eye and not at the computer," he said. "We want the person on the end of the phone to say 'we have been expecting you'. We want to know everything about you". Technology intelligence - newsletter promo - EOA GPs have for years warned against "Dr Google", claiming that patients checking symptoms online has increased pressure on already stretched doctors in the National Health Service. Google has made some impressive moves in healthcare, applying artificial intelligence to traditional roles of radiologists to diagnose. DeepMind, part of Google parent company Alphabet, introduced a Streams app to the Royal Free London hospital in January 2017, which could diagnose acute kidney injuries - which can lead to a patient depending on dialysis - in 14 minutes, almost four hours quicker than a human doctor. When it used complex algorithms to crunch the patient data, it was able to predict injury two days prior. I feel this urgency this need to move fast," added Mr Feinberg. "But then we have to be super careful because we do not want to erode trust if people stop coming to Google it is game over. At the same time, we have tools to make care better and we need to get them out." Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, Chair of the Royal College of GPs, said: "The internet is a key source of information for many people who want to find out more about their health - but it's important for everyone to be aware that there is a huge amount of fake or dubious health news out there, so it's encouraging to hear that senior representatives at Google now recognise this and want to address it. "It's a good thing for patients to take an interest in their health, but we would recommend that they use reputable, unbiased UK websites, such as NHS.uk, as a source of safe reliable health advice." |
Nvidia offers bid for Israeli chip firm Mellanox: report Posted: 10 Mar 2019 03:27 AM PDT Nvidia Corp has submitted an offer to buy Israeli chip designer Mellanox, the Calcalist financial news website said on Sunday. Nvidia is competing for Mellanox with Intel Corp, which has already offered $6 billion for the Israeli company, Calcalist said. It cited estimates that Nvidia would pay at least 10 percent more than the price offered by Intel. |
Google Assistant is getting an update that makes it easier to talk to Posted: 08 Mar 2019 06:03 PM PST Having a conversation that feels natural with a digital assistant is still not in the same league as a person-to-person interaction, but there are certainly some assistive technologies that do a reasonably good job of mimicking it. We'd put Google Assistant in that category, thanks to the natural-sounding voice and the assistant's ability to understand a wide range of the complexities of human conversation.Still, that's not to say certain things can't be improved, which is why Google is starting to add support for its "Continued Conversation" feature to smart displays like the Google Home Hub. Basically, it's a way to not have to keep prompting the assistant with a "Hey, Google" trigger so that you can keep a conversation going.According to Google Assistant product manager Bibo Xu, this is an optional setting that can be turned on to enable you to have a more natural back-and-forth exchange with the assistant. "After you initially trigger the Assistant with a request, the Assistant will stay active for long enough to respond to follow up questions so you don't have to say 'Hey Google' as often," Bibo explains in a Google blog post.The feature can be turned on within the Google Assistant app by going to Settings, then Preferences, then Continued Conversation where you just hit the toggle.Meantime, Google is also taking this opportunity to actually add a number of other related enhancements to smart displays, such as "Interpreter mode." Say you have family members or some friends who speak different languages. With this new mode that's now available, all you have to do is say "Hey Google, be my French interpreter," and you can have a natural, easy-flowing conversation in dozens of languages.Other fun additions and improvements include some small touches that are still useful, like making it easier to dismiss some cards on the display's home screen when you no longer need them (just swipe up). It's also easier to manage multi-room audio with the displays, as well.Google's new update means you can add your smart display to a speaker group, and play music throughout the house. There are also new controls for adjusting the volume of any device in the group. All you have to do is tap on the group name of the player on the screen, and that will get things started. |
Decline in readers, ads leads hundreds of newspapers to fold Posted: 10 Mar 2019 01:44 PM PDT |
Jana Kramer to daughter: No 'drunken, one-night-stand first-time sex' Posted: 10 Mar 2019 02:11 PM PDT |
Netanyahu warns Hamas after Gaza unrest Posted: 09 Mar 2019 04:21 PM PST Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Hamas Sunday that Israel would not hesitate to launch a "large-scale operation" in Gaza, as daily exchanges with the Palestinian territory threatened a wider escalation. Speaking ahead of the weekly cabinet meeting, Netanyahu noted that while "rogue factions" were behind the recent Gaza "provocations", it "did not exempt Hamas", the enclave's Islamist rulers, of responsibility. "I've heard people in Gaza saying that since we're in an election campaign, a large-scale operation is out of the question," he further said, referring to April 9 Israeli polls. |
Keeping the Peace in South Asia Posted: 10 Mar 2019 05:00 AM PDT As India looks ahead to its approaching election, the world's biggest democracy should take care to draw the right lessons from the crisis. The great temptation for Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be to exploit and even inflame the country's mood of militant nationalism. Modi, leader of the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, has boasted that a tough "new India" won't be bullied. |
'He said, he said' - Who can you trust in Cohen-Trump saga? Posted: 08 Mar 2019 11:15 PM PST |
10 killer deals you don’t want to miss on Saturday Posted: 09 Mar 2019 05:22 AM PST Welcome to a special weekend addition of our series that rounds up all the best deals of the day. Before you head out to the theater this weekend to see Marvel's latest blockbuster Captain Marvel, why not be your own hero and save a ton of cash on the most popular products around? Highlights from Saturday's roundup include a new all-time low of just $16.79 for Anker's best fast wireless charger, just $21 for Samsung's lightning-fast EVO 128GB microSD card, a 4-pack of Alexa and Google enabled smart plugs that cuts the price to just $7.99 per plug, Eufy Lumos smart LED bulbs for only $13 each, a very popular $150 air fryer for just $85, the Exploding Kittens card game for only $14, a huge $50 discount on Microsoft Office Home and Student 2019, $40 off Amazon's best-selling DNA test kit, $18 for a 30W USB-C power adapter that will let you charge your iPhone from 0% to 80% in under one hour (you'll need a USB-C to Lightning cable, too), $30 off Amazon's waterproof Kindle Paperwhite, and more. Check out all of today's best deals below.UPDATE: It looks like we've got two bonus deals for you today, because the insanely popular Instant Pot DUO60 and Instant Pot DUO80 are both down to their lowest prices of 2019! Clip the $18 coupon on the DUO60 page to get it for $71.99, and the DUO80 is down to $89.99 with no coupon needed. |
Victim of Aurora Workplace Shooting Sues Illinois State Police Posted: 08 Mar 2019 07:33 PM PST |
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