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  • Hurricane Ida traps Louisianans, leaves the grid a shambles

    Updated Sep 2, 2021

    Rebecca Santana, Kevin McGill and Janet McConnaughey The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS (AP) – Rescuers set out in hundreds of boats and helicopters to reach people trapped by floodwaters and utility crews mobilized Monday, Aug. 30, after a furious Hurricane Ida swamped the Louisiana coast and made a shambles of the electrical grid in New Orleans and beyond in the sweltering, late-summer heat. One of the most powerful hurricanes ever to hit the U.S. mainland weakened into a trop... Full story

  • US military flies out evacuees in waning hours of withdrawal

    Updated Sep 2, 2021

    Lolita C. Baldor and Robert Burns The Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) – America's 20-year war in Afghanistan entered its final hours Monday with the last Americans seeking to be evacuated and the U.S. military preparing to end its airlift and depart the Taliban-controlled capital. "Obviously we are reaching the end of our prescribed mission," Maj. Gen. Hank Taylor of the Pentagon's Joint Staff told reporters, adding that details of the final evacuation movements were being k... Full story

  • Crews search for missing in Tennessee deluge that killed 22

    Updated Aug 26, 2021

    WAVERLY, Tenn. (AP) – Search crews worked through shattered homes and tangled debris Monday, looking for about a dozen people still missing after record-breaking rain sent floodwaters surging through Middle, Tennessee, killing at least 22 people. Saturday's flooding took out roads, cellphone towers and telephone lines, leaving people uncertain about whether family and friends survived the unprecedented deluge, with rainfall that more than tripled forecasts and shattered the s...

  • As Cuomo exits, Hochul to take office minus 'distractions'

    Updated Aug 26, 2021

    Marina Villeneuve The Associated Press ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) – Andrew Cuomo neared the end of his decade as New York's governor Monday, Aug. 23, as he prepared to relinquish his tight grip on government to Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul in a midnight power transfer that will break another glass ceiling for women in state politics. Cuomo, a Democrat, was set to end his term at 11:59 p.m., just under two weeks after he announced he would resign rather than face a likely impeachment battle o...

  • Henri's lazy remnants hinder cleanup, threaten inland floods

    Updated Aug 26, 2021

    David Porter and Dave Collins The Associated Press The slow and sprawling storm system named Henri drenched much of the inland Northeast with rain Monday, Aug. 23, hampering cleanup efforts and threatening further flooding in areas with ground already saturated from a wet summer. Rains from the storm, which spared coastal areas of New York and New England major damage when its center made landfall Sunday, Aug. 22, in Rhode Island as a tropical storm, deluged areas from New...

  • US probing Autopilot problems on 765,000 Tesla vehicles

    Updated Aug 20, 2021

    Tom Krisher The Associated Press DETROIT (AP) – The U.S. government has opened a formal investigation into Tesla's Autopilot partially automated driving system after a series of collisions with parked emergency vehicles. The investigation covers 765,000 vehicles, almost everything that Tesla has sold in the U.S. since the start of the 2014 model year. Of the crashes identified by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration as part of the probe, 17 people were injured a...

  • Food stamp benefits to increase by more than 25% in October

    Updated Aug 20, 2021

    Ashraf Khalil and Josh Boak WASHINGTON (AP) – President Joe Biden's administration has approved a significant and permanent increase in the levels of food aid available to needy families – the largest single increase in the program's history. Starting in October, average benefits for food stamps – officially known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP – will rise more than 25% above pre-pandemic levels. The increased assistance will be available indefin...

  • U.S. Troops shot at, return fire at Kabul Airport and kill 'armed individuals,' Pentagon says

    Updated Aug 20, 2021

    Kim Harris Managing Editor American soldiers deployed at the Kabul airport have been shot at and were forced to return fire, killing two, said Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said Monday, April 16. The news of the attacks came shortly before President Joe Biden addressed the nation regarding his decision to withdraw U.S. forces from Afghanistan and the subsequent collapse of the Afghan government. A defiant Biden said that he was faced with a choice between sticking to a...

  • New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo resigning over sexual harassment allegations

    Updated Aug 18, 2021

    MARINA VILLENEUVE The Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) – Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced his resignation Tuesday over a barrage of sexual harassment allegations in a fall from grace a year after he was widely hailed nationally for his detailed daily briefings and leadership during some of the darkest days of the COVID-19 pandemic. In a televised address, the 63-year-old Democrat emphatically denied intentionally showing any disrespect toward women but said that fighting back a... Full story

  • 'Not normal.' Ex-Cuomo aide details groping allegations

    Updated Aug 12, 2021

    Marina Villeneuve and Karen Matthews The Associated Press ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) – An aide who accused New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo of groping her said in her first televised interview that she was initially afraid to identify herself because she worried the governor's "enablers" would destroy her if she spoke up. Brittany Commisso, an executive assistant on Cuomo's staff, detailed her interactions with the Democrat in a joint interview with CBS and The Times Union of Albany that w...

  • Judge doubts eviction ban, but may lack power to stop it

    Updated Aug 12, 2021

    Mark Sherman The Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) – A federal judge who declared the earlier nationwide moratorium on evictions illegal was deeply skeptical Monday, Aug. 9, of the Biden administration's new order, but said she may lack the power to do anything about it. U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich promised a decision soon in an effort by Alabama landlords to block the moratorium imposed last week by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which it said was b...

  • Texas Democrats continue holdout, don't show for new session

    Updated Aug 12, 2021

    Acacia Coronado and Paul J. Weber The Associated Press AUSTIN, Texas (AP) – Texas Democrats still refused to return to the state Capitol Saturday, Aug. 7, as Gov. Greg Abbott began a third attempt at passing new election laws, prolonging a months long standoff that ramped up in July when dozens of Democratic state lawmakers left the state and hunkered down in Washington, D.C. "A quorum is not present," Republican House Speaker Dade Phelan said, who then adjourned the c...

  • Heartbroken parents to sue a year after 9 troops died at sea

    Updated Aug 6, 2021

    The families of eight Marines and one sailor who died when their amphibious assault vehicle sank off the Southern California coast last summer plan to sue the manufacturer of the vehicle that resembles an armored seafaring tank, their lawyers announced July 29, a day before the anniversary of the accident. BAE Systems knew for a decade or more about a design defect that makes it nearly impossible for troops to open the cargo hatches and escape the 26-ton amphibious vehicles wh... Full story

  • France: Thousands protest forced vaccination, COVID passes

    Updated Jul 21, 2021

    Constantin Gouvy The Associated Press PARIS (AP) – Over 100,000 people protested across France Saturday, July 17, against the government's latest measures to push people to get vaccinated and curb rising infections by the delta variant of the coronavirus. In Paris, separate protest marches by the right and the left wound through different parts of the city. Demonstrations were also held in Strasbourg in the east, Lille in the north, Montpellier in the south and elsewhere. T... Full story

  • California fire prompts evacuations; Oregon blaze balloons

    Updated Jul 21, 2021

    Daisy Nguyen and Gillian Flaccus The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – A rapidly growing wildfire south of Lake Tahoe jumped a highway, prompting more evacuation orders and the cancellation of an extreme bike ride through the Sierra Nevada Saturday, July 17, as critically dangerous wildfire weather loomed in the coming days. The Tamarack Fire, which was sparked by lightning July 4, exploded overnight and was over 32 square miles (82 square kilometers) as of Saturday e... Full story

  • Padres-Nationals game interrupted by shooting

    Updated Jul 21, 2021

    Padres-Nationals game interrupted by shooting SAN DIEGO (CNS) – A game between the San Diego Padres and Washington Nationals that was suspended in the sixth inning, Saturday, July 17 after three people were shot outside the Washington D.C. ballpark is scheduled to resume today. The shooting happened at N Street and South Capitol Street SW, near the third base gate of Nationals Park, according to police and Washington D.C.’s NBC4. Two gunshot victims were transported to a hospital, the station reported. Another gunshot vic... Full story

  • Europe flood death toll tops 160, costly rebuilding ahead

    Updated Jul 21, 2021

    Geir Moulson The Associated Press BERLIN (AP) – Rescue workers labored to deal with damage laid bare by receding water Saturday, July 17 as the death toll from disastrous flooding in Western Europe rose above 160 and thoughts turned to the lengthy job of rebuilding communities devastated in minutes. The death toll in western Germany's Rhineland-Palatinate state, home to the badly hit Ahrweiler county, rose to 98. Another 43 people were confirmed dead in neighboring North R... Full story

  • EXCLUSIVE: Congressman Demands Answers On Facebook's 'Censorship Of Legitimate Content'

    MICHAEL GINSBERG AND HENRY RODGERS, The Daily Caller News Foundation|Updated Jul 10, 2021

    Republican Colorado Rep. Ken Buck is demanding that Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg explain the social media giant's censorship of content related to the COVID-19 lab-leak theory. "Facebook has had the embarrassing position of having to defend its censorship of legitimate content," Buck wrote in a Thursday letter, obtained exclusively by the Daily Caller. Buck referenced the alleged racism of the lab-leak theory, as well as a report claiming that Facebook and Instagram, are... Full story

  • As condo crashed down, they escaped through smoke and ruin

    KELLI KENNEDY, Associated Press|Updated Jul 9, 2021

    FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) - Alfredo Lopez and his wife Marian were asleep when the first thundering blast jolted them awake. Moments later, a second boom, much louder than the first, shook the bed on the sixth floor of their Miami apartment. Alfredo rushed to wake his 24-year-old son Michael, urging him to get dressed, before running to the balcony window. "All I could see was just white dust, very thick. I could barely see the balcony railing." The lights cut out and the... Full story

  • How the 'scientific establishment' worked to suppress real science

    Varun Hukeri, General Assignment & Analysis Reporter|Updated Jun 30, 2021

    Scientists have warned about the so-called “scientific establishment” in recent years, noting that industry groups and special interests wield growing influence over scientific research, academic institutions and government agencies. Dr. Marcia Angell, a senior lecturer at Harvard Medical School and former editor-in-chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, noted in a 2017 interview that scientists and medical journals were “getting caught inadvertently publishing false studies” because their research had become more be...

  • Brandon Scott

    Homicides have skyrocketed in six Democratic cities

    Thomas Catenacci, Daily Caller News Foundation|Updated Jun 30, 2021

    The number of homicides in six major cities across the country has increased compared to last year, disproportionately affecting Black people, according to crime data. "We are seeing an uptick in violent crime across the country, specifically gun violence," Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava told The New York Times earlier this month. In Chicago, Black people have been the victims of roughly 81% of the 317 murders in the first six months of 2021, data shows. They...

  • Robert Hughes.

    Discretionary spending categories drag down May retail sales

    Robert Hughes, American Institute of Economic Research|Updated Jun 23, 2021

    Retail sales and food-services spending fell 1.3% in May following gains in three of the prior four months. The weaker result in May still leaves retail sales at the third highest on record and well above the most recent nine-year trend. From a year ago, retail sales are up 28.1%. Core retail sales, which exclude motor vehicle dealers and gasoline retailers, posted an 0.8% decline for the month, leaving that measure with a 23.8% gain from a year ago. Despite the fall, core ret...

  • border patrol

    Nebraska governor to send state troopers to US–Mexico border amid immigration crisis

    Jack Phillips, The Epoch Times|Updated Jun 23, 2021

    Nebraska will send state troopers to the U.S.–Mexico border to aid law enforcement after the governors of Arizona and Texas requested help from other states amid a surge of people crossing the border illegally, Gov. Pete Ricketts announced. Ricketts, a Republican, appears to be the second governor to assist after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said he would deploy troopers and other law enforcement officials from his state to the border. "Nebraska is stepping up to help Texas r...

  • Ransomware gangs get paid off as officials struggle for fix

    Frank Bajak, AP Technology Writer|Updated Jun 23, 2021

    If your business falls victim to ransomware and you want simple advice on whether to pay the criminals, don’t expect much help from the U.S. government. The answer is apt to be: It depends. “It is the position of the U.S. government that we strongly discourage the payment of ransoms,” Eric Goldstein, a top cybersecurity official in the Department of Homeland Security, told a congressional hearing last week. But paying carries no penalties and refusing would be almost suicidal for many companies, especially the small and mediu...

  • Suicide attempts among adolescents skyrocketed during the pandemic, CDC report shows

    Thomas Catenacci, Reporter, Daily Caller News Foundation|Updated Jun 23, 2021

    Suicide-related emergency room visits among both adolescent girls and boys spiked amid the pandemic and continued to surge as lockdowns persisted, according to a government health report. Emergency room mental health visits increased 31% among children aged 12-17 years old in 2020 compared to the previous year, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report released June 11. The CDC noted that, while it couldn’t definitively establish a cause, it’s likely that pandemic-related restrictions on everyday lif...

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