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- Hillary Clinton to Trump on a 2020 rerun: 'Don't tempt me. Do your job.'
- Evidence from ex-Dallas cop's murder trial fuels mistrust
- A family found more than half a million dollars in cocaine on the beach during their vacation
- Francis Currey, one of the last surviving World War II Medal of Honor recipients, dies at 94
- No, Betsy DeVos is not going to jail
- Xinjiang: The making of China's far west police state
- 10 Cheapest New Cars for 2020
- Victor the eagle's bird's eye view of the Alps raises climate change awareness
- Seven misleading arguments against impeachment by Trump and his allies
- California eases mandatory sentences, restricts body cameras
- US meth lab strikes in Afghanistan killed at least 30 civilians says UN
- Details emerge about people taken to hospital after Disney World Skyliner incident
- German Interior Minister: Yom Kippur Shooting was Anti-Semitic Attack
- Hong Kong 'won't rule out' Chinese help over protests: leader
- Chevy Colorado Will Look a Little Cooler for 2021
- Yes, America Probably Has Secret Stealth Drones Around Iran
- Minneapolis mayor responds to Trump: I don't have time to be 'tweeting garbage out'
- Justice Department investigating potentially serious allegations against Robert Mueller
- Florida man accused of giving beer to an alligator
- Shooting in Germany was anti-Semitic attack - interior minister
- EPA: Our goal is to improve California’s air quality
- Mayor in Mexico tied to a truck and dragged through streets for ‘failing to fulfill campaign promises’
- Expert: America Could Defeat China's Anti-Ship Missiles
- U.S. arrested nearly 1 million migrants at border in past 12 months
- The Rich Really Do Pay Lower Taxes than You
- Politician charged in human trafficking adoption scheme
- View Photos of the 2020 Dodge Charger Widebody
- Wealthy couple gets prison terms for U.S. college admissions scam
- Almost 2 million Californians will be without power through Thursday in shutdown to reduce wildfire risk
- U.S. Confirms Killing of Al-Qaeda’s South Asia Chief
- 'I'm Spartacus': Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani performs bizarre impression of Cory Booker live on Fox News
- During the Vietnam War, Commandos Sunk a U.S. Aircraft Carrier
- 'They told me that I was going to die': The US says El Salvador is safe for migrants, but transgender women living there fear for their lives
- 'We good now, China? South Park 'apologises' after being banned by Communist Party
- Teacher at Elite Boarding School Used Nightly ‘Check-In’ System to Molest Sleeping Students, Cops Say
- Egypt denounces Ethiopia for moving ahead with Nile dam amid water: shortage fears
- Back from the dead: Some corals regrow after 'fatal' warming
- 11 elephants died in plunge from waterfall while trying to save drowned calf
- AP FACT CHECK: Trump misfires on economy, Syria, impeachment
- Defeat: In 1979, Vietnam Gave China's Army a Beating
- New book says Homeland Security acting head Kevin McAleenan pushed family separation policy for migrants
- Police bust multi-billion pound drug smuggling gang after 50 tonnes of product are brought into the UK
Hillary Clinton to Trump on a 2020 rerun: 'Don't tempt me. Do your job.' Posted: 08 Oct 2019 02:51 PM PDT |
Evidence from ex-Dallas cop's murder trial fuels mistrust Posted: 09 Oct 2019 04:04 PM PDT Evidence from the trial of a former Dallas police officer convicted of killing her neighbor has fueled new questions about whether accused officers are treated differently than other suspects, including testimony that a camera in the cruiser where the officer sat after the shooting was flipped off and that her sexual text messages with her partner were deleted. It also has led Dallas Police Chief U. Reneé Hall to announce the internal affairs department would look into the deleted texts and deactivated camera. The Dallas County District Attorney's Office declined to comment Wednesday on whether it is also investigating. |
A family found more than half a million dollars in cocaine on the beach during their vacation Posted: 08 Oct 2019 07:55 PM PDT |
Francis Currey, one of the last surviving World War II Medal of Honor recipients, dies at 94 Posted: 08 Oct 2019 10:09 PM PDT Francis Currey, one of three living World War II Medal of Honor recipients, died on Tuesday, NEWS10 reports. He was 94.Currey, from Selkirk, New York, joined the U.S. Army at 17, and was a technical sergeant. He was in Belgium during the Battle of the Bulge, and because he wasn't given proper winter gear, was suffering from frostbite. On Dec. 21, 1944, German tanks approached Currey and his company while they were guarding a bridge crossing. A rifleman, Currey exposed himself to enemy fire as he shot and killed several Germans. During the intense fighting, he also used anti-tank grenades and a bazooka against the Germans, and was able to rescue five Americans who were taking fire inside a building.Currey received the Silver Star, Purple Heart, and Medal of Honor, the highest decoration of valor. In 1998, his likeness was used to create the Medal of Honor G.I. Joe. |
No, Betsy DeVos is not going to jail Posted: 08 Oct 2019 09:28 PM PDT |
Xinjiang: The making of China's far west police state Posted: 08 Oct 2019 11:14 PM PDT China's all-encompassing security crackdown in Xinjiang has turned the northwest region -- home to most of the country's ethnic Uighur population -- into a place activists describe as an open air prison. Upwards of one million mostly Muslim ethnic minorities in the region are held in re-education camps, according to estimates cited by a UN panel in 2018. The United States blacklisted 28 Chinese entities this week over their alleged roles in rights violations in Xinjiang and said it would also curb visas for officials involved in "detention or abuse" of minorities. |
Posted: 09 Oct 2019 02:05 PM PDT |
Victor the eagle's bird's eye view of the Alps raises climate change awareness Posted: 09 Oct 2019 07:13 AM PDT Victor, a nine-year old white-tailed eagle, set off this week on a mission to raise awareness of climate change in the Alps, which have already been hard hit by the rise in global temperatures. Equipped with a 360-degree camera mounted on his back, Victor soared above Mont Blanc and was set to take in five countries in five days, filming some of the world's most spectacular scenery. Victor is part of the Alpine Eagle Race project, which aims to raise awareness of melting glaciers and other effects of global warming through the combined eyes of the eagle, a photographer and a scientist. |
Seven misleading arguments against impeachment by Trump and his allies Posted: 09 Oct 2019 03:36 PM PDT |
California eases mandatory sentences, restricts body cameras Posted: 08 Oct 2019 10:12 PM PDT California will soon end some mandatory sentences, make it easier to expunge old criminal records, bar charging inmates for medical care and ban police from using facial recognition software on body cameras under more than two dozen criminal justice bills that freshman Gov. Gavin Newsom announced signing into law late Tuesday. The measures continue the state's march away from get-tough measures that once clogged California prisons, prompting a federal court-ordered population cap. Among the measures are two that remove mandatory sentences. |
US meth lab strikes in Afghanistan killed at least 30 civilians says UN Posted: 09 Oct 2019 02:36 AM PDT An American blitz on dozens of Taliban drug factories in Western Afghanistan killed at least 30 civilians and may have left dozens more dead, a United Nations report has found. United States aircraft struck more than 60 methamphetamine labs earlier this year during a one-day onslaught to deny Taliban insurgents income from the lucrative drug trade. The raids killed at least 30 civilians according to a UN investigation and may have killed a further 30. The UN also said the raids broke international law because drugs workers are not considered a legitimate military target. American forces in Afghanistan immediately disputed the reports findings, saying they disagreed with the UN's methods, analysis and "narrow definition" of legitimate targets. A spokesman said the labs had been under lengthy surveillance before they were struck and "extraordinary measures" had been taken to avoid killing civilians. Col Sonny Leggett said he was "deeply concerned" by the UN's methods and findings. Taliban insurgents have long been accused of obtaining huge sums from the country's extensive opium trade, as militants tax production and levy protection money. Methamphetamine production has recently been added to the country's drugs business, with UN officials earlier this year warning seizures were growing exponentially. The May 5 raids in Farah and Nimroz province were carried out after "comprehensive intelligence confirmed that all personnel inside of the laboratories were Taliban combatants", the US told investigators. Investigators verified 30 civilians killed and nine injured, including 14 children, but said they were investigating "reliable and credible information" another 30 civilians were also killed, the UN said. The UN in its report contended the drug facilities were owned and operated by criminal groups, so "did not meet the definition of legitimate military objectives under international law." The factories and workers inside "may not be lawfully made the target of attack based on their possible economic or financial contribution to the war effort of a party to a conflict," it concluded. The US, however, insisted the labs were run and owned by the Taliban, who used revenue to "fund ongoing indiscriminate violence against innocent Afghans". |
Details emerge about people taken to hospital after Disney World Skyliner incident Posted: 08 Oct 2019 01:43 PM PDT |
German Interior Minister: Yom Kippur Shooting was Anti-Semitic Attack Posted: 09 Oct 2019 03:41 PM PDT German officials called a live-streamed shooting at a synagogue Wednesday in the city of Halle an anti-Semitic attack after the gunman denied the Holocaust and denounced Jews on the stream before embarking. Two people have been killed and another two are seriously injured, according to Reuters, and a suspect is in custody. The gunman attempted to force his way into the synagogue, but was unsuccessful after finding the gates shut. The man then went on a shooting spree, killing a woman outside and a man in a nearby kabob shop.Max Privorozki, Halle's Jewish community chairman, told the Stuttgarter Zeitung newspaper that approximately 75 people were in the synagogue observing Yom Kippur, known as the Day of Atonement which is the holiest day of the Jewish year and is marked by fasting and solemn prayer."We saw via the camera system at our synagogue that a heavily armed perpetrator with a steel helmet and a gun tried to shoot open our doors," he said. "We barricaded the doors from inside and waited for the police."The attack was streamed on Twitch, an online streaming service popular with gamers and a subsidiary of Amazon's. An Amazon spokeswoman said that the platform "worked with urgency to remove this content and will permanently suspend any accounts found to be posting or reposting content of this abhorrent act."In the aftermath of the attack, German Chancellor Angela Merkel visited a Berlin synagogue where a vigil was being held outside. Merkel's spokesman tweeted: "We must oppose any form of anti-Semitism."Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tweeted condolences to families of the victims and called on Germany to fight anti-Semitism."The terrorist attack against the community in Halle in Germany on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of our nation, is yet another expression that anti-Semitism is growing in Europe," he said. |
Hong Kong 'won't rule out' Chinese help over protests: leader Posted: 08 Oct 2019 11:43 AM PDT Hong Kong's under-fire leader Carrie Lam on Tuesday said China intervening to end months of pro-democracy protests is an option following a particularly violent week of unrest that paralysed the city. Hong Kong was virtually locked down over the three-day holiday weekend, with the majority of subway stops closed. It is also the position of the central government (in Beijing) that Hong Kong should tackle the problem on her own. |
Chevy Colorado Will Look a Little Cooler for 2021 Posted: 08 Oct 2019 03:45 PM PDT |
Yes, America Probably Has Secret Stealth Drones Around Iran Posted: 09 Oct 2019 01:00 PM PDT |
Minneapolis mayor responds to Trump: I don't have time to be 'tweeting garbage out' Posted: 08 Oct 2019 02:27 PM PDT |
Justice Department investigating potentially serious allegations against Robert Mueller Posted: 08 Oct 2019 03:09 PM PDT |
Florida man accused of giving beer to an alligator Posted: 08 Oct 2019 05:06 PM PDT |
Shooting in Germany was anti-Semitic attack - interior minister Posted: 09 Oct 2019 10:00 AM PDT German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said on Wednesday that a shooting in eastern Germany was anti-Semitic, adding that federal prosecutors who have taken on the investigation thought there were signs that it could be a right-wing extremist attack. According to the federal prosecutors' office, there are enough indications that it was possibly a right-wing extremist motive. |
EPA: Our goal is to improve California’s air quality Posted: 09 Oct 2019 01:14 PM PDT |
Posted: 09 Oct 2019 08:28 AM PDT |
Expert: America Could Defeat China's Anti-Ship Missiles Posted: 08 Oct 2019 08:00 PM PDT |
U.S. arrested nearly 1 million migrants at border in past 12 months Posted: 08 Oct 2019 06:35 PM PDT |
The Rich Really Do Pay Lower Taxes than You Posted: 08 Oct 2019 12:24 PM PDT Almost a decade ago, Warren Buffett made a claim that would become famous. He said that he paid a lower tax rate than his secretary, thanks to the many loopholes and deductions that benefit the wealthy.His claim sparked a debate about the fairness of the tax system. In the end, the expert consensus was that, whatever Buffett's specific situation, most wealthy Americans did not actually pay a lower tax rate than the middle class. "Is it the norm?" fact-checking outfit PolitiFact asked. "No."Time for an update: It's the norm now.For the first time on record, the 400 wealthiest Americans last year paid a lower total tax rate -- spanning federal, state and local taxes -- than any other income group, according to newly released data.The overall tax rate on the richest 400 households last year was only 23%, meaning that their combined tax payments equaled less than one quarter of their total income. That was down from 70% in 1950 and 47% in 1980.For middle-class and poor families, the picture is different. Federal income taxes have also declined modestly, but these families haven't benefited much, if at all, from the decline in the corporate tax or estate tax. And they now pay more in payroll taxes (which finance Medicare and Social Security) than in the past. Overall, their taxes have remained fairly flat.The combined result is that over the last 75 years the U.S. tax system has become radically less progressive.The data here come from the most important book on government policy that I've read in a long time -- called "The Triumph of Injustice," to be released next week. The authors are Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, both professors at the University of California, Berkeley, who have done pathbreaking work on taxes. Saez has won the award that goes to the top academic economist under age 40, and Zucman was recently profiled on the cover of BusinessWeek magazine as "the wealth detective."They have constructed a historical database that shows how much households at different points along the income spectrum have paid in taxes going back to 1913, when the federal income tax began. The story they tell is maddening -- and yet ultimately energizing."Many people have the view that nothing can be done," Zucman told me. "Our case is, 'No, that's wrong. Look at history.' " As they write in the book: "Societies can choose whatever level of tax progressivity they want." When the United States has raised tax rates on the wealthy and made rigorous efforts to collect taxes, it has succeeded in doing so. And it can succeed again.Saez and Zucman portray the history of U.S. taxes as a struggle between people who want to tax the rich and those who want to protect the fortunes of the rich. The story starts in the 17th century, when northern colonies created more progressive tax systems than Europe had. Massachusetts even enacted a wealth tax, which covered land, ships, jewelry livestock and more.The southern colonies, by contrast, were hostile to taxation. Southern plantation owners worried that taxes could undermine slavery, as historian Robin Einhorn has explained, and made sure to keep tax rates low and tax collection ineffective. (The hostility to taxes ultimately hampered the Confederacy's ability to raise money and fight the Civil War.)By the middle of the 20th century, the high-tax advocates had prevailed. The United States had arguably the world's most progressive tax code, with a top income-tax rate of 91% and a corporate tax rate above 50%.But the second half of the 20th century was mostly a victory for the low-tax side. Companies found ways to take more deductions and dodge taxes. Politicians cut every tax that fell mostly on the wealthy: high-end income taxes, investment taxes, the estate tax and the corporate tax. The justification for doing so was usually that the economy as a whole would benefit.The justification turned out to be wrong. The U.S. economy has not fared better when tax rates are lower. Lower taxes on the wealthy instead end up benefiting the wealthy, not society as a whole. The great decline in high-end taxation has happened over the same period that economic growth has been disappointing and middle-class income growth even worse.That's the maddening part of the story. The energizing part are the solutions that Saez and Zucman propose. They call for a set of policies that would raise the overall tax rate on the wealthiest Americans to about 60% (still not as high as in 1950). Doing so would bring in about $750 billion a year, or 4% of GDP, enough to pay for universal pre-K, an infrastructure program, medical research, clean energy and more. Those are the kinds of policies that really do lift economic growth.One crucial part of the agenda is a minimum global corporate tax of at least 25%. A company would have to pay the tax on its U.S. operations even if it set up headquarters in Ireland or Bermuda. Saez and Zucman also favor a wealth tax; Elizabeth Warren's version is based on their work. And they call for the creation of a Public Protection Bureau, to help the IRS crack down on tax dodging.I already know what the critics will say about these arguments -- that the rich will always figure out a way to avoid taxes. That's simply not the case. True, they will always be able to avoid some taxes. But history shows that serious attempts to collect more taxes usually succeed.Ask yourself this: If efforts to tax the superrich were really doomed to fail, why would so many of the superrich be fighting so hard to defeat those efforts?This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2019 The New York Times Company |
Politician charged in human trafficking adoption scheme Posted: 09 Oct 2019 05:26 PM PDT An Arizona elected official ran a human smuggling scheme that promised pregnant women thousands of dollars to lure them from a Pacific Island nation to the U.S., where they were crammed into houses to wait to give birth, sometimes with little to no prenatal care, prosecutors allege. Paul Petersen, the Republican assessor of Arizona's most populous county, was charged in Utah, Arizona and Arkansas with counts including human smuggling, sale of a child, fraud, forgery and conspiracy to commit money laundering. Investigators also found eight pregnant women from the Marshall Islands in raids of his properties outside Phoenix, and several more are waiting to give birth in Utah, authorities said. |
View Photos of the 2020 Dodge Charger Widebody Posted: 09 Oct 2019 08:12 AM PDT |
Wealthy couple gets prison terms for U.S. college admissions scam Posted: 08 Oct 2019 01:56 PM PDT The founder of a food and beverage packaging company and his wife were each sentenced to one month in prison on Tuesday for their roles in what prosecutors say is the largest college admissions scam uncovered in the United States. Gregory and Marcia Abbott received lighter sentences than the eight-month terms sought by federal prosecutors in Boston after they admitted to paying $125,000 to have a corrupt test proctor secretly correct their daughter's answers on college entrance exams. The couple's sentence by U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani also includes a requirement that they each pay a $45,000 fine. |
Posted: 09 Oct 2019 05:02 PM PDT |
U.S. Confirms Killing of Al-Qaeda’s South Asia Chief Posted: 08 Oct 2019 10:32 AM PDT U.S. officials confirmed Tuesday that a joint U.S.-Afghanistan commando raid on Sept. 23 killed Asim Omar, the head of Al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS), along with six other Al-Qaeda members in the southern Helmand province. News of the raid was first reported by Afghanistan's intelligence agency.Special forces struck a compound in the Musa Qala district, a Taliban stronghold, and took out Omar and six other Al-Qaeda fighters, including a courier for Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri. Umar, a Pakistani, headed AQIS from its inception in September 2014. Along with the initial statement, the Afghan National Directorate of Security (NDS) shared pictures showing Umar both alive and dead. > 1/2: BREAKING: NDS can now confirm the death of Asim Omar, leader of Al_Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS), in a joint US-Afghan raid on a Taliban compound in Musa Qala district of Helmand province on Sep. 23. pic.twitter.com/sFKi38M6MC> > -- NDS Afghanistan (@NDSAfghanistan) October 8, 2019U.S. air strikes from an Air Force AC-130 gunship followed the raid to level the compound, but resulted in collateral damage, with Afghan officials telling the Associated Press that 40 people attending a wedding party in the area were killed. The operation also killed 22 Taliban fighters, the ADF reported. 14 people were arrested, including five Pakistani nationals and one Bangladeshi. The statement said a large warehouse of supplies and equipment was also destroyed.News of Omar's death comes on the 18th anniversary of the first American airstrikes in Afghanistan, and several weeks after President Trump confirmed the death of Osama bin Laden's son Hamza in September. U.S.-Taliban peace talks are currently tabled. |
Posted: 09 Oct 2019 08:23 AM PDT Rudy Giuliani launched a peculiar attack on New Jersey mayor Cory Booker during a televised interview, in his latest bizarre contribution to Fox News following the move by Democrats to impeach the president.Mr Giuliani has become increasingly embroiled in scandal surrounding Donald Trump over his dealings with Ukraine, after he was found to have been involved in interactions between Kiev and Washington despite not holding a diplomatic role in the president's administration. |
During the Vietnam War, Commandos Sunk a U.S. Aircraft Carrier Posted: 09 Oct 2019 12:05 AM PDT |
Posted: 08 Oct 2019 06:35 AM PDT |
'We good now, China? South Park 'apologises' after being banned by Communist Party Posted: 08 Oct 2019 01:37 AM PDT The creators of South Park have issued an irreverent mock apology to the Chinese government after reports that the show has been censored on Chinese streaming services and social media. The statement from Trey Parker and Matt Stone made fun of censorship of comparisons of Xi Jinping, the Chinese President, with Winnie the Pooh, and called out the National Basketball Association (NBA) for apologising over the support expressed by one of its officials for the Hong Kong protest movement. "Like the NBA, we welcome the Chinese censors into our homes and into our hearts. We too love money more than freedom and democracy. Xi doesn't look just like Winnie the Pooh at all," read a statement issued by the South Park Twitter account. "Tune into our 300th episode this Wednesday at 10! Long live the Great Communist Party of China! May this autumn's sorghum harvest be bountiful! We good now China?" The American satirical animation series, famed for taking swipes at global events and society without fear or favour, reportedly incurred the wrath of China's fierce censors over a recent episode "Band in China" which critiques the way Hollywood allegedly tries to mould its content to avoid offending Beijing. The NBA backs "freedom of expression," its commissioner Adam Silver insisted earlier this week Credit: GLYN KIRK/AFP The plot of the episode sees three of the characters forming a metal band which is so popular that a film is made about it. However, the script keeps changing so that it can be safely distributed in China. "Now I know how Hollywood writers feel," says Stan, a band member, as he rejigs his work under the careful eye of a Chinese guard. The episode also features a story line where South Park dad, Randy Marsh, gets caught trying to sell weed in China and is sent to a work camp, similar to the mass internment camps in Xinjiang, where an estimated one million people, including Uighur Muslims, are being held. The South Park row comes as China's state broadcaster said on Tuesday that it would stop showing NBA games as a backlash intensified against the league over a tweet that expressed support for Hong Kong's pro-democracy protesters. Houston Rockets' manager Daryl Morey ignited controversy on Friday by re-tweeting an image which was captioned: "Fight for Freedom. Stand with Hong Kong," in reference to the pro-democracy protests that have rocked the global financial hub for four months. Basketball is hugely popular in China, and Mr Morey's tweet caused outrage on Chinese social media even after he deleted it. The Chinese Basketball Association said it was suspending cooperation with the team, and the Chinese consulate in Houston issued a statement expressing anger. The Chinese market is highly profitable for the NBA, the sport's governing body, and on Sunday night, the NBA described Mr Morey's statement as "regrettable" in having "deeply offended many of our friends and fans in China." Adam Silver, the NBA's commissioner, said on Monday that the league backs "freedom of expression". "There is no doubt, the economic impact is already clear," Mr Silver told Japan's Kyodo News agency ahead of an NBA London Game 2019 basketball match between Washington Wizards and New York Knicks at the O2 Arena in London. |
Posted: 09 Oct 2019 11:01 AM PDT Nelson Almeida/GettyA teacher at an elite boarding school in New Jersey used his position as a dorm "duty master"—who is responsible for nightly check-ins with students—to molest two teens while they slept, police said.Dominic Brown, a 23-year-old history teacher and water polo coach at The Lawrenceville School, was charged with endangering the welfare of a child and two counts of aggravated criminal sexual contact, the Mercer County Prosecutor's Office said in a Monday press release.But an affidavit filed by the prosecutor's office and obtained by NJ.com shines more light on the allegations. Brown used his position as "duty master" to enter a 15-year-old student's room around 3 a.m. and touch the sleeping teen, who awoke to see Brown trying "to fall to the floor to hide from me," according to the affidavit. Police Officer Told Victim That Men's College Doesn't 'Generally' Expel or Suspend Rapists, Lawsuit ClaimsThe teacher also allegedly claimed that the teen hadn't checked in to the dorm that night, and he was making sure he was in his room. (The Lawrenceville School student handbook stipulates that students must report in person to the "duty master" each night before bed.)About an hour later, a 14-year-old boy was similarly awakened by hands touching his body, and he found Brown "crouching partially under the side of his bed," the affidavit alleges. Though Brown reportedly left the room after the student confronted him, the teen told police that he peered back inside a short time later. The students, who were reportedly in a group Snapchat message together, relayed their similar experiences and then told campus security, who notified police.Brown has since been fired, NJ.com reported. Prosecutors said he will remain in jail until a Thursday morning detention hearing. Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Egypt denounces Ethiopia for moving ahead with Nile dam amid water: shortage fears Posted: 09 Oct 2019 08:04 AM PDT Egypt denounced Ethiopia on Wednesday for moving forward with building and operating a hyropower dam on the Nile, which Cairo worries will threaten already scarce water supplies. Ethiopia, the source of the Blue Nile which joins the White Nile in Khartoum and runs on to Egypt, says the dam will not disrupt the river's flow and hopes the project will transform it into a power hub for the electricity-hungry region. Egypt relies on the Nile for up to 90% of its fresh water, and fears the dam, which is being built in Ethiopia close to the border with Sudan, will restrict already scarce supplies. |
Back from the dead: Some corals regrow after 'fatal' warming Posted: 09 Oct 2019 11:16 AM PDT For the first time ever, scientists have found corals that were thought to have been killed by heat stress have recovered, a glimmer of hope for the world's climate change-threatened reefs. The chance discovery, made by Diego K. Kersting from the Freie University of Berlin and the University of Barcelona during diving expeditions in the Spanish Mediterranean, was reported in the journal Science Advances on Wednesday. Kersting and co-author Cristina Linares have been carrying out long-term monitoring of 243 colonies of the endangered reef-builder coral Cladocora caespitosa since 2002, allowing them to describe in previous papers recurring warming-related mass mortalities. |
11 elephants died in plunge from waterfall while trying to save drowned calf Posted: 08 Oct 2019 11:43 AM PDT |
AP FACT CHECK: Trump misfires on economy, Syria, impeachment Posted: 08 Oct 2019 01:59 PM PDT Battling an impeachment inquiry, President Donald Trump is misrepresenting facts as he blasts his investigators and seeks to highlight the administration's efforts to fulfill campaign pledges on the economy and war in the Middle East . In tweets and public remarks, the president minimized the risk of withdrawing U.S. support for Kurdish fighters in Syria, suggesting that most of the foreign fighters captured in the U.S.-led campaign against the Islamic State group and being held by the Kurds are from European countries that can reclaim them. Trump made a groundless assertion that the Democratic leaders heading the impeachment inquiry , House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Adam Schiff, should be impeached, not him. |
Defeat: In 1979, Vietnam Gave China's Army a Beating Posted: 09 Oct 2019 12:27 AM PDT |
Posted: 08 Oct 2019 04:33 PM PDT Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan was one of the drivers of the Trump administration's now abandoned policy of separating migrant families at the southern border — a position he has since disavowed as "not worth" the ensuing public relations disaster — according to a new book on the Trump administration's immigration policies. |
Posted: 08 Oct 2019 11:37 AM PDT Britain's biggest ever drug smuggling gang has been smashed after billions of pounds worth of narcotics was brought into the UK, the National Crime Agency believes. Officers arrested 13 men aged between 24 and 59 on Tuesday across the country in dawn raids. The NCA seized 351 kilos of cocaine, 92 kilos of heroin, 250 kilos of cannabis and 1,850 kilos of hemp/hashish, with a total street value of more than £38 million, in three consignments in September 2018. Investigators believe more than 50 tonnes of drugs worth billions of pounds were imported from the Netherlands, between February 2017 and October 2018, hidden in lorries carrying vegetables and juice. Jayne Lloyd, NCA Regional Head of Investigations, said: "We suspect these men were involved in an industrial-scale operation - the biggest ever uncovered in the UK - bringing in tonnes of deadly drugs that were distributed to crime groups throughout the country. "By working closely with partners here and overseas, in particular the Dutch National Police, we believe we have dismantled a well-established drug supply route." The gang are believed to have imported billions of pounds worth of drugs Credit: AFP The arrests were made in London, Manchester, Stockport, St Helens, Warrington, Bolton, Dewsbury, and Leeds. Four men and two women from the Netherlands, who were arrested in April this year as part of the same investigation, are awaiting extradition to the UK. "We have got the top people in the group," said Ms Lloyd. "We believe it's probably the biggest conspiracy that's been seen in the UK." Investigators believe the arrests have disrupted the flow of drugs into the UK to be sold on by "county lines" gangs, who often use children as dealers. "Taking out this suspected organised crime group... will make, hopefully, a huge impact in relation to protecting the public and the economy," said Ms Lloyd. "You can see from where they've been arrested that the potential was that significant amounts of drugs coming into the UK would go to various areas in the UK. "We would be looking at vulnerable individuals who would then supply the commodity on behalf of other organised crime groups." The investigation is linked to an earlier NCA operation where 13 people were jailed after the seizure of more than 100kg of heroin in 2015. |
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