
Titanic tourist sub missing for third day with five aboard
By Joseph Ax and Kanishka Singh (Reuters) -A submersible taking wealthy tourists to visit the site of the Titanic wreckage
2023-06-20 21:00

Stocks Weaken as Big Tech Weighs; Bond Yields Rise: Markets Wrap
US stocks were weak Monday with mega-cap tech names dragging on equities while Treasuries yields rose amid a
2023-05-08 23:59

Bank of Canada leaves rates on hold, sees weak growth and stubborn prices
By Steve Scherer and David Ljunggren OTTAWA (Reuters) -The Bank of Canada (BoC) on Wednesday held its key overnight rate
2023-10-25 22:56

Florida man turns $1 lottery ticket bought at Publix into staggering $1.45M victory on August 3
Larry Strickland, a resident of Tallahassee, claimed his remarkable prize won from a Jackpot Triple Play game drawing held on February 15
2023-08-06 17:59

Goldman Cuts US Recession Chances to 15% on Improved Inflation
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. now sees a 15% chance the US will slide into recession, down from 20%
2023-09-05 11:18

Top FARC dissident leader Ivan Marquez dead -sources
By Luis Jaime Acosta BOGOTA (Reuters) -Ivan Marquez, the well-known leader of a faction of former FARC rebels who returned
2023-07-07 09:28

Rain pouring onto Hong Kong and southern China floods city streets and subway stations
Rain pouring onto Hong Kong and southern China overnight flooded city streets and some subway stations, halting transportation and forcing schools to close
2023-09-08 14:00

Vegan landlady roasted for banning tenants from cooking meat and fish in their own home
A landlady has been accused of “outrageous” and “control freakish” behaviour for setting unusually harsh restrictions for prospective tenants. The homeowner used an estate agent to advertise her two “spacious, sun-drenched” apartments in Brooklyn, New York, which were valued at $4,500 (£3,580) and $5,750 (£4,490) per month. When you’re charging such eye-watering rates, you’d hope these flats – with “spectacular outdoor spaces” – would be pretty exceptional homes. And yet, for many interested parties, the dream was shattered when they spotted that the “wonderful vegan landlord” had one eye-catching house rule: “No meat/fish in the building." Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Andrea Kelly, the agent managing the flat, explained to the New York Times (NYT) why the landlady had made such a strict stipulation. She told the paper that the apartments weren’t, technically, “vegetarian-only,” but added that “the owner lives in the building and doesn’t want the smell of cooking meat drifting upstairs.” To be fair, this means that tenants could enjoy the likes of sushi, ham sandwiches and even meaty takeaways without causing a scene. But woe betide anyone harbouring hopes of a Sunday roast or sausages barbecued in their “spectacular outdoor space”. The owner, Michal Arieh Lerer, refused to speak to a NYT reporter about her controversial regulation, but her ex-husband, who co-owns the building and is also vegan, admitted that they’d refused to rent their property out to keen carnivorous cooks since they bought it in 2007. “It’s not about discrimination,” ex-husband Motti Lerer insisted. “You have to fit into the building.” For anyone wondering whether this could legally be classed as discrimination, the answer is, perhaps surprisingly, no. New York’s Human Rights Law lists 14 characteristics that landlords must not consider when choosing a potential tenant. These include age, race, family status, and sexual orientation – there's no mention of dietary preferences. Lucas A. Ferrara, an adjunct professor at New York Law School told the NYT that an interested renter might be able to fight the meat ban if they could prove that they had a medical condition which required some sort of “reasonable accommodation” on the landlord’s part. Still, we’re not familiar with many illnesses whose sufferer needs to regularly fry steaks or grill fish as a matter of urgency. The original listing which caused such a stir was taken down from nextdoor.com on Friday, a day after it was posted. However, the apartments are still listed on the estate agent’s own site, although there’s no mention of the cooked veg-only policy. The listings do note: “Cats welcome on a case-by-case basis (only one, please).” We just hope those felines are happy to forgo mouse hunts or particularly pungent meal pouches, for their sake. Social media commentators have shared their horror at the meat-free rule, with a number suggesting Lerer "shouldn't be a landlord". One Facebook user wrote: "[She] can’t just tell people they can’t cook meat in a home they rent off [her]. It’s like telling a kid they can not play with toys." Another said: "Well I hope they/them enjoy paying the mortgage when they get no tenants." But a third suggested tenants should just find a way around the restrictions. "[Her] property, [her] rules," they pointed out, before adding: "If you lie to [her] and cook meat while [she] doesn't get to know then it's a win-win situation." Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-06-19 16:27

Rihanna, A$AP Rocky have second child together, a boy named Riot Rose
Rihanna and A$AP Rocky are giving the world the first look at their second child together, a boy they’ve named Riot Rose
2023-09-20 04:46

Abortion clinics in 3 states sue to protect pill access
Abortion providers in three states filed a lawsuit Monday aimed at preserving access to the widely used abortion pill mifepristone
2023-05-09 06:50

Company executives urge Europe to rethink its world-leading AI rules
More than 150 executives are urging the European Union to rethink the world’s most comprehensive rules for artificial intelligence
2023-06-30 21:57

Is Adin Ross in trouble? Pro streamer breaks several Kick terms with explicit content on livestream
Kick's CEO acknowledged that Adin Ross is a 'brand risk' to the platform
2023-08-03 12:50
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