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Nate Diaz challenges Jake Paul to New Year’s Eve rematch after declining $10M MMA fight: 'You suck'
Nate Diaz challenges Jake Paul to New Year’s Eve rematch after declining $10M MMA fight: 'You suck'
Nate Diaz has challenged Jake Paul for a New Year’s Eve rematch before having their third fight under MMA rules
2023-10-10 18:52
How old is Sofia Richie? 'The Simple Life' star Paris Hilton pens adorable birthday wish for Lionel Richie's daughter
How old is Sofia Richie? 'The Simple Life' star Paris Hilton pens adorable birthday wish for Lionel Richie's daughter
Paris Hilton and Sofia Richie's sister Nicole Richie grew up together in Hollywood and even starred in their own reality TV show 'The Simple Life'
2023-08-25 11:22
'Welcome To Plathville’ star Kim Plath moves into beau Ken Palmer’s $609K home year after split from Barry Plath
'Welcome To Plathville’ star Kim Plath moves into beau Ken Palmer’s $609K home year after split from Barry Plath
In 2017, Ken Palmer purchased the log cabin-style property with four bedrooms and four bathrooms
2023-09-06 10:29
Indonesia Swaps Reverse Repo, Operation Twist for New Tools
Indonesia Swaps Reverse Repo, Operation Twist for New Tools
Bank Indonesia is issuing new rupiah securities to replace its existing reverse repurchase facility and “Operation Twist” bond
2023-08-25 14:28
Taiwan women freeze their eggs as 'insurance' in hopes of law change
Taiwan women freeze their eggs as 'insurance' in hopes of law change
By Ann Wang and Angie Teo TAIPEI Seated with her legs stretched out on her living room floor,
2023-08-02 07:29
Former Wells Fargo executive Tolstedt avoids prison time in fake-accounts scandal - WSJ
Former Wells Fargo executive Tolstedt avoids prison time in fake-accounts scandal - WSJ
(Reuters) -A former Wells Fargo executive Carrie Tolstedt will not serve prison time for her role in the bank's fake-accounts
2023-09-16 03:29
Trump celebrates anniversary of anti-abortion ruling as he tells religious crowd ‘I’m getting indicted for you’
Trump celebrates anniversary of anti-abortion ruling as he tells religious crowd ‘I’m getting indicted for you’
Former president Donald Trump took credit for the end of abortion rights enshrined under Roe v Wade, which was overturned by the US Supreme Court a year ago. Mr Trump spoke at the Faith & Freedom Coalition’s Road to Majority Conference on the first anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health decision. The crowd gave Mr Trump a standing ovation when he referenced the ruling, a long-sought policy outcome of the religious right. “Exactly one year ago today, those justices were the pivotal votes in the Supreme Court’s landmark decision ending the constitutional atrocity known as Roe v Wade,” he said. The twice-indicted and twice-impeached former president said that what differentiated him from other presidential candidates who attended the conference was that he actually facilitated the end of the enshrined right to seek an abortion, which had been the law of the land for half a century. “Conservatives had been trying for 50 years, exactly 50 years,” he said. The former president gave the closing address at the conference which featured every other Republican presidential candidate, including Florida Gov Ron DeSantis, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy, former vice president Mike Pence, former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley, former Arkansas governor Asa Hutchinson and Sen Tim Scott (R-SC). But the former president received the largest applause of any of the candidates, even noting how attendees booed Mr Christie, who has staged a longshot candidacy for president largely to criticise Mr Trump. Many Republicans have feared that the end of Roe v Wade cost Republicans otherwise winnable elections during the 2022 midterms. Indeed a survey from NBC News found that 61 per cent of voters disapproved of the Dobbs decision. Mr Trump made his typical attacks on the so-called “radical left”. “We cannot be afraid to take on the Democratic extremists,” he said. “We have to be strong and powerful. That’s why when I’m re-elected I will continue to fight against the demented late-term abortionist and the Democrat Party who believe in unlimited abortion on demand and even executing babies after birth.” Mr Trump said he would support exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother. The former president also said that he would seek a federal role on abortion. But the former president did not articulate what federal restrictions he would support. By contrast, Mr Pence, his former vice president, announced his support for a 15-week national abortion ban. “Some have even gone on to blame the overturning of Roe v Wade for election losses in 2022,” Mr Pence said in his address on Friday. “But let me say from my heart, the cause of life is the calling of our time and we must not rest and must not relent until we restore the sanctity of life to the center of American law in every state in this country.” Mr Trump has long boasted of how he got three conservative Supreme Court justices on the bench, which paved the way to the end of federal abortion rights. But Mr Trump has also criticised his Republican rivals for being too harsh when it comes to reproductive freedom. Mr Trump for his part cited numerous policy strides he made on abortion despite the fact that he spent many years as a Democrat who supported abortion rights. In addition, the former president said he would support measures to promote adoption. “I will ask Congress to expand the adoption tax credit,” he said. “We’ll do that because a lot of people have been adopting and that’s a great thing.” But Mr Trump received even louder applause when he spoke about restricting transgender girls from participating in girls’ sports. Numerous Republican legislatures and governors, including Mr DeSantis, have passed and signed legislation both restricting transgender girls’ participation in women’s sports and restricting gender-affirming care for minors. “I will sign into law prohibiting child sexual mutilation in all 50 states,” he said. “And on day one, I will reinstate the Trump ban on transgenders in the military.” He also went further and said that the federal government would not support gender transition care. Despite recently being indicted, the former president received numerous applause when he brought up the slew of legal investigations and the recent charges against him. Mr Trump had pleaded not guilty to both criminal indictments against him. “Every time the radical left Democrats, Marxists communists and fascists indict me, I consider it a great badge of courage,” he said. The former president event attempted to argue that he was a martyr for the evangelical audience. “I’m getting indicted for you,” he told the crowd. Read More Chris Christie defiant as conservative crowd boos Trump criticism Trump news – live: Trump takes credit for Roe downfall as he rambles about Russia’s ‘big mess’ One year later, the Supreme Court's abortion decision is both scorned and praised Biden warns Republicans aren’t done with abortion bans as protesters hit streets on anniversary of Roe’s fall One year later, the Supreme Court's abortion decision is both scorned and praised The religious right used to be uneasy about Trump – but his dominance is now complete
2023-06-25 10:59
What is Cryptosporidium? DPW finds low levels of parasites in Druid Lake Reservoir, says vulnerable people in Baltimore area may fall sick
What is Cryptosporidium? DPW finds low levels of parasites in Druid Lake Reservoir, says vulnerable people in Baltimore area may fall sick
As per officials, a recent sample taken from Baltimore's Druid Lake Reservoir had a Cryptosporidium parasite concentration of 0.09 oocycst per liter
2023-10-01 20:47
Kamala Harris says goddaughter’s friends are choosing college towns on abortion legalisation
Kamala Harris says goddaughter’s friends are choosing college towns on abortion legalisation
Vice President Kamala Harris has said she knows of young people choosing which college they want to attend based on how restrictive the abortion laws are in that state. Commenting in an interview for the Roe v Wade retrospective on MSNBC’s The ReidOut, Ms Harris said her goddaughter told her that her friends wanted to attend schools in states where there was more freedom in terms of reproductive rights. Ms Harris told the roundtable: “When the decision came down she told me ‘Do you know what’s happening? My friends – whatever gender – are starting to make decisions about where they will actually go to college depending on what’s happening in that state.’” “Because of course, if you look at it, I think the number is something like 23 million women of reproductive age live in states that have banned abortion, and what that is gonna mean for those 23 million, for the myriad of health care issues that are at stake ... It’s having a real impact on all types of decisions people make,” she added. The show took a look back at the decision to overturn the landmark Roe v Wade decision that legalised abortion in the US in 1973 when the Supreme Court ruled that “unduly restrictive state regulation of abortion is unconstitutional”. In 2022, the Supreme Court, packed with three Trump-era appointees, overturned Roe v Wade and returned decisions on abortion freedom to the states. Since then, a number of states have introduced effective abortion bans that limit the procedure to the very early days of pregnancy – often before women are aware they are pregnant. Some states have also criminalised assisting women with accessing abortion, and limited abortion to cases of rape or incest. Ms Harris said that the Supreme Court’s decision last year had infringed on women’s rights. “The idea that the highest court in our land just did that and rolled back rights that had been recognized was incredibly shocking,” she said on MSNBC. She said that after she learned the news of the ruling, she called her husband and shared some “words not meant for television at this moment”. Ms Harris went on to say that the ruling means that some have to “suffer in silence,” the thought of which made her “angry and sad”. Read More Where abortion laws stand in every state a year after the Supreme Court overturned Roe A year after fall of Roe, 25 million women live in states with abortion bans or tighter restrictions Judge to weigh suspending Wyoming's first-in-the-nation ban on abortion pills US prepares for potential end of Roe v Wade - live When will there be a Roe v Wade decision? Why these prosecutors are refusing to enforce anti-abortion laws
2023-06-22 23:59
Supreme Court rules state courts can play role in policing federal elections
Supreme Court rules state courts can play role in policing federal elections
The Supreme Court has ruled that North Carolina’s top court did not overstep its bounds in striking down a congressional districting plan as excessively partisan under state law
2023-06-27 22:59
Biden vs. Trump: The 2024 race a historic number of Americans don't want
Biden vs. Trump: The 2024 race a historic number of Americans don't want
The 2024 presidential primaries are in full swing. President Joe Biden is the overhelming favorite for the Democratic nomination. Former President Donald Trump remains the clear front-runner for the Republican nod.
2023-06-25 22:25
ING Beats Estimates as Lower Loan Provisions Boost Profit
ING Beats Estimates as Lower Loan Provisions Boost Profit
ING Groep NV reported second quarter profit that beat analyst estimates as it set aside less money for
2023-08-03 16:28