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WATCH: Online videos expose how human traffickers are sneaking illegal migrants into US
Videos being published on social media show a smuggler's journey into the U.S. with a group of illegal immigrants from the Mexican side of the border.
foxnews.com
Traces of H5N1 bird flu virus found in some milk, pasteurized dairy: FDA
The USDA and FDA said the commercial milk supply remains safe for now.
abcnews.go.com
Donnie Wahlberg and Jenny McCarthy spend ‘whole night together’ on FaceTime when they’re apart
Donnie Wahlberg said he and wife Jenny McCarthy like to feel close when they are apart for their jobs by sleeping together over FaceTime.
foxnews.com
What to Do About Your Bunions
The foot deformity is common, especially among older people—but a stigma persists.
time.com
Key West, Grand Canyon and more spots around the US where you can catch a breathtaking sunset
There are so many places in the United States that provides spectacular sunset views. Key West and Grand Canyon National Park are just a few — check out all six listed here.
foxnews.com
Tabasco put spice in American life: Here's the surprising origin of Louisiana heat
Tabasco, founded in Avery Island, Louisiana, in 1868, is one of the world's most popular hot sauces. It was conceived by an Irish-American banker amid privation that followed the Civil War.
foxnews.com
Andy Cohen Slaps Himself In The Face On ‘WWHL’ After Poking Fun At A Fan: “Joke’s On Me”
"I’m not shading your shades!"
nypost.com
UK police arrest trio over deaths of 5 migrants — including a child — in the Channel
British police said on Wednesday they had arrested three men over the deaths of five migrants who died attempting to cross the Channel from France the day before.
nypost.com
Reggie Bush is finally getting his Heisman Trophy back
The former USC running back gave up the prestigious prize in 2010.
nypost.com
Kathy Hochul Gives National Guard Update Amid Pressure on Columbia Protests
Columbia University previously announced plans for hybrid learning for the remainder of the 2024 spring semester.
newsweek.com
Republican Blames China for Pro-Palestinian College Protests
Pro-Palestinian protests have taken over parts of the Columbia University campus in a "Gaza Solidarity Encampment."
newsweek.com
Louisiana man sentenced to prison, physical castration for raping teen
Glenn Sullivan Sr., 54, pleaded guilty to four counts of second-degree rape on April 17.
cbsnews.com
Cat's Reaction to Drive-Thru Shows She Does Remember the 'Chicky Nuggies'
"It was a core memory," said one commenter on the viral TikTok video.
newsweek.com
Chip Roy raises alarms about George Soros' purchase of radio giant Audacy
Rep. Chip Roy is raising alarms about billionaire George Soros' recent acquisition of a major network of radio stations.
foxnews.com
Dating apps increasingly becoming “hunting grounds” for scammers
Dating companies say protecting their customers is a top priority but critics want them to do more to curb online scams and stop bad actors in their tracks, law enforcement officials and online security experts say. CBS News asks the CEO of Match Group — one of the biggest players in the online dating space — about customers who have lost everything.
cbsnews.com
Supreme Court set to hear arguments over emergency room abortion access in states' rights challenge
The contentious issue of abortion has returned to the Supreme Court, with the justices prepared on Wednesday to weigh a states rights challenge over hospital emergency room access to the procedure.
foxnews.com
Mega shelters and camping bans don’t solve a root cause of homelessness: Housing costs
San Diego is proof: Banning unhoused people from public spaces or moving them into shelters may help manage homelessness, but it doesn’t help solve it.
latimes.com
‘Shōgun’ Ending Explained: Does Blackthorne Die? How Does Toranaga Become Shōgun?
Have questions about what happened? What comes next? We've got you covered.
nypost.com
Newsom ignoring California crises to promote himself in pro-abortion campaign, GOP lawmakers say
California Republicans torched Gavin Newsom for his national abortion rights ad Monday while the state faces crises they say requires the Democrat governor's attention.
foxnews.com
Tesla stock soars 11% in premarket trading after Elon Musk promises affordable EV
Musk's announcement was aimed at calming nervous investors on Wall Street who were still trying to digest the company's most recent earnings report.
nypost.com
Stock Market Today: Rally Looks to Continue and All Eyes on Meta
Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp parent Meta Platforms is the first of the Big Tech companies to report earnings this week.
newsweek.com
Glen Powell Says Sydney Sweeney Affair Rumors Helped Sell ‘Anyone But You’: “It Worked Wonderfully”
The rom-com made more than $200 million at the global box office.
nypost.com
Tears at How Cat Reacts on First Morning After Losing Sister: 'Broken'
In the video the cat seemed to look for her companion.
newsweek.com
Athens Blanketed by Orange Haze Due to Sahara Dust Storm
Historic landmarks in Athens were blanketed in orange courtesy of a Sahara desert storm.
time.com
Driver plows car onto NYC sidewalk, chases down pedestrian in wild road rage incident: video
An enraged Big Apple driver has been caught on camera plowing his car onto a Manhattan sidewalk before chasing down a pedestrian in a wild road rage ordeal.
nypost.com
12 lawn games to help your family get outside more
Whether you want to move your board game night outside or get your kids into new sports, we've got an option for you.
foxnews.com
I Understand Biden—His Condition Is Difficult
It used to be so debilitating that I would avoid talking.
newsweek.com
Choosin’ cruisin’: Sail the Atlantic round-trip from New York
You can now cruise to the Bahamas, Florida and Bermuda from New York
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nypost.com
Michael Strahan’s daughter Isabella reacts to fan not knowing if she’s alive as she battles brain cancer
The University of Southern California student and her dad, Michael Strahan, revealed her cancer diagnosis during "Good Morning America" in January.
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nypost.com
This barefoot jungle walk in Tulum is like something out of a dream
Wandering through Sfer Ik is an experience that is part museum, part art gallery and definitely a topsy turvy encounter.
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edition.cnn.com
Sweat it out - and heal - the way the Mayans did
CNN's Richard Quest steps into the stone igloo of a traditional Temazcal outside Cancún to cleanse the mind and body.
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edition.cnn.com
This Mexican resort town is fun, full throttle! And not by chance
Just 50 years ago, Cancún's first hotel opened along what had been a deserted beach on the Yucatán Peninsula.
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edition.cnn.com
NFL Draft 2024 top-100 prospects: Expert rankings of best players available
The Post’s annual Top 100 Big Board was created based off of evaluations made on film as well as insight gathered in conversations with scouts, executives, agents and NFL and college coaches.
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nypost.com
We tested 12 hair mousses — Here are the very best we reviewed in 2024
Each one gives you unbeatable lift and volume — and we turned to a hair expert to answer some FAQs.
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nypost.com
Woman is 1st patient to undergo combined heart pump implant and pig kidney transplant
In a first-of-its-kind procedure, a terminally ill New Jersey woman received a pig kidney transplant and a surgically implanted mechanical heart pump.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Fire crew rescues adorable poodle trapped under home’s patio
The Swansea West crew firefighters had to tunnel under the property to reach the pup - after being called out at 7:11 a.m. on Tuesday.
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nypost.com
Scammers turn dating apps into "hunting grounds." Could companies do more?
The FBI calls on tech companies to "step up" to protect people looking for love online.
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cbsnews.com
TikToker Kyle Marisa Roth’s family to celebrate her life with recorded online event after tragic death at 36
Kyle Marisa Roth's family is planning a celebration of life for the late TikToker, who died at age 36 earlier this month.
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nypost.com
Fanatics Sportsbook Promo: Land $1K in Matching Bonuses for NBA, NHL, MLB
The "10x$100" Fanatics Sportsbook promo gives new customers up to $1,000 in bonus bets during the NBA and NHL Playoffs.
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newsweek.com
Biden to Sign Aid Package for Ukraine and Israel
The $95.3 billion legislation comes after months of gridlock in Congress put the centerpiece of President Biden’s foreign policy in jeopardy.
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nytimes.com
Supreme Court to hear case about emergency abortion care
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in another major abortion access case as it grapples with the aftermath of reversing Roe v. Wade. Follow here for live audio of the arguments, news updates, analysis and more.
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edition.cnn.com
South African goalkeeper Ronwen Williams reflects on his journey to the top
South African goalkeeper Ronwen Williams was immortalised at the Africa Cup of Nations earlier this year when he heroically saved four penalties against Cape Verde as Bafana Bafana won an epic penalty shootout in the tournament's quarterfinals. For our latest instalment of our African Voices Playmakers series we hear the shot stopper's inspirational story. From his humble roots in Gelvandale, to finding motivation to play again after the tragic passing of his brother, the South African captain opens up about his highs, lows and goals to conquer Africa and beyond with his club Mamelodi Sundowns who play in their second leg CAF Champions League semi-final Friday.
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edition.cnn.com
Colorado's Streams Are Being Loaded With 'Toxic' Heavy Metals
The amount of copper, zinc and sulfate has doubled in the alpine streams flowing from the mountains over the past three decades.
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newsweek.com
Supreme Court to weigh Trump immunity claim over 2020 election prosecution
The outcome of the immunity case before the Supreme Court will have significant ramifications for former President Donald Trump's federal criminal prosecution in Washington, D.C.
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cbsnews.com
Former Knick Greg Anthony knows what it’s like not to get a call during epic collapse
Greg Anthony knows what it's like to not get a call during an epic collapse.
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nypost.com
The Republicans Who Want American Carnage
Tom Cotton has never seen a left-wing protest he didn’t want crushed at gunpoint.On Monday, the Arkansas senator demanded that President Joe Biden send in the National Guard to clear out the student protests at Columbia University against the Israel-Hamas war, which he described as “the nascent pogroms at Columbia.” Last week, Cotton posted on X, “I encourage people who get stuck behind the pro-Hamas mobs blocking traffic: take matters into your own hands. It’s time to put an end to this nonsense.” He later deleted the post and reworded it so that it did not sound quite so explicitly like a demand for aspiring vigilantes to lynch protesters.This is a long-standing pattern for Cotton, who enjoys issuing calls for violence that linger on the edge of plausible deniability when it comes to which groups, exactly, are appropriate targets for lethal force. During the George Floyd protests of 2020, Cotton demanded that the U.S. military be sent in with orders to give “no quarter for insurrectionists, anarchists, rioters, and looters,” insisting unconvincingly in a later New York Times op-ed that he was not conflating peaceful protesters with rioters. Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri, who had raised a fist in apparent solidarity with the mob that assaulted the Capitol on January 6 before fleeing through the halls to avoid them once the riot began, echoed Cotton’s call for deploying the National Guard to Columbia. (Both men, as it turns out, are in favor of some quarter for “insurrectionists” who happen to be on the right side.)Michael Powell: The unreality of Columbia’s ‘liberated zone’What Cotton and Hawley are doing is simple demagoguery. When Donald Trump was inaugurated president, he spoke of an “American carnage” that he would suppress by force. Trump’s attempts to apply the maximum level of violence to every problem did not solve any of them. Migration at the southern border surged in 2019 until a crackdown in Mexico and the coronavirus pandemic brought it down; Trump’s presidency ended with a rise in violent crime (another likely pandemic effect, among other factors) and with widespread civil-rights protests. The protesters at Columbia and other college campuses around the United States are voicing opposition to U.S. support for Israel’s war against Hamas, which began in retaliation for a Hamas raid that killed some 1,200 Israelis last October. Since then, more than 30,000 Palestinians have been killed, about 2 million displaced, and many driven to the brink of starvation. No sympathy for Hamas or anti-Semitism is necessary to believe, as I do, that Israel’s conduct here has been horrifically disproportionate; the U.S. government itself has acknowledged substantial evidence of human-rights violations by Israeli forces as well as by Hamas. There have been documented instances of anti-Semitic rhetoric and harassment surrounding the protests; a rabbi associated with Columbia University urged Jewish students to stay away for the time being, and the university’s president, Nemat Shafik, recommended that students not living on campus attend classes remotely for the time being. In the same way that the Israeli government’s conduct does not justify anti-Semitism, the anti-Semitic acts of some individuals associated with the protests do not justify brutalizing the protesters. As of this morning, the National Guard had not been called in, but hundreds of students participating in demonstrations across the country had been arrested.If the campus authorities need to act to protect the safety of any of their students, including from threats, discrimination, and harassment, then they must. But the university is facing pressure from pro-Israel donors and elected officials to shut down the protests, less because they are dangerous than because these powerful figures find the protesters and their demands offensive.Yet the kinds of mass violence and unrest that would justify deploying the National Guard are currently absent, and the use of state force against the protesters is likely to escalate tensions rather than quell them. The New York Times reported that after Shafik asked the NYPD to clear the protesters’ tent city located on a campus quad, the “decision to bring in the police also unleashed a wave of activism across a growing number of college campuses.” As for Columbia, NYPD Chief John Chell told the Columbia Spectator that “the students that were arrested were peaceful, offered no resistance whatsoever, and were saying what they wanted to say in a peaceful manner.” Nor did the arrests end the protest.The calls from Cotton and Hawley to deploy the National Guard are not about anyone’s safety—many of the pro-Palestinian protesters, against whom the might of the U.S. military would be aimed, are Jewish. As the historian Kevin Kruse notes, sending the National Guard to campuses facing Vietnam War protests led to students being killed, including some who had nothing to do with the protests, rather than to anyone being safer. The most likely outcome based on past precedent would be an escalation to serious violence. Which might be the idea.Conor Friedersdorf: Against the Insurrection ActAs we approach the summer of 2024, the economy is growing, migration to the border has declined at least temporarily owing to what appears to be a new crackdown by Mexican authorities, and in many major cities, crime is returning to historic lows, leaving protests as the most suitable target for demagoguery. The Biden administration’s support for Israel divides Democrats and unites Republicans, so the longer the issue remains salient, the better it is for the GOP. More broadly, the politics of “American carnage” do not work as well in the absence of carnage. Far-right politics operate best when there is a public perception of disorder and chaos, an atmosphere in which the only solution such politicians ever offer can sound appealing to desperate voters. Social-media bubbles can suffice to maintain this sense of siege among the extremely online, but cultivating this perception among most voters demands constant reinforcement.This is why the Republican Party is constantly seeking to play up chaos at the border and an epidemic of crime in American cities, no matter what the reality of the situation might actually be. Cotton and Hawley are demanding that Biden use force against the protesters not just because they consistently advocate for state violence against those who support causes they oppose as a matter of principle, but also because any escalation in chaos would redound to their political benefit. They don’t want to solve any problems, they want to make them worse so that the public will warm to “solutions” that will continue to make them worse. They don’t want order, or safety, or peace. What they want is carnage.
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theatlantic.com
Country singer Jimmie Allen contemplated suicide after sexual assault lawsuit and affair, recalls ‘putting bullets’ into gun clip
Jimmie Allen recently revealed that he contemplated suicide after his former manager sued him for sexual assault.
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nypost.com
Teacher's 'Clever' Hack For Catching Students Using ChatGPT On Essay
Curriculum designer Daina Petronis shared her "trojan horse" method for catching out cheats using AI to avoid doing work
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newsweek.com