#207501
Kristin Evans, the victim of an alleged assault from former NFL running back Zac Stacy, urged the public to call the authorities if they see the ex-New York Jets and St. Louis Rams player.
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#207502
The well-established link between the COVID-19 mRNA shots and blood clots, myocarditis, heart attacks and strokes is reason enough to stop the vaccine program, argues a London oncologist.
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#207503
In the weeks since he was shot in the back, 10-year-old Tavon Tanner has undergone several operations to repair the damage from the bullet that tore through his small body and remains lodged between his shoulder and his chest.
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#207504
The result is a campaign to legislate virtue, to curtail eccentricity, to smother individuality, to barter truth for the current moral or political enthusiasm.
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#207505
Walter Duranty, a veteran First World War reporter, was widely recognised as an authority on the Soviet Union in the early 1930s. He was also the best-known newspaperman in the world.
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#207506
Godaddy, the world's largest domain registrar and web hosting company is under fire for deceiving its employees with a fake email announcing holiday bonus. Companies regularly use different methods to teach employees about computer safety because security breaches can have a major impact on the business.
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#207507
Illinois Governor JB Pritzker has weighed in on Kyle Rittenhouse being cleared of all charges by a jury in Kenosha.
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#207508
A federal court Wednesday approved Minneapolis' agreement to pay 12 protesters a combined $600,000 for injuries sustained during 2020 demonstrations.
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#207509
Independent presidential candidate Evan McMullin, who grew up in Auburn, tells KTTH's Todd Herman about his bid for the White House.
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#207510
During Mass in Casa Santa Marta on Tuesday morning, Pope Francis told bishops, that the “Great Accuser” is trying to make scandals out of the Catholic church by uncovering their sins.
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#207511
Let us harken back to the 1933 Marx Brothers movie “Duck Soup.”
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#207512
The Trump administration enacted new travel restrictions this week that will curb the number of travelers entering the U.S. from the U.K.
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#207513
Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton appeared on One America News with John Hines to discuss the latest findings Judicial Watch uncovered about January 6. WA...
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#207514
A former Canadian Paralympian and retired veteran told the nation’s lawmakers last week that she was offered medically assisted death in response to protracted requests to have a wheelchair ramp built in her home.
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#207515
Speaking in Laos, President Obama found another audience eager to embrace his perverse view of the Americans who elected him twice. Twice, he called Americans “lazy.” Not lazy because they continue to vote for Democrats who forcibly extract money from those who earn more than they do and hand it out to them. No, said Obama, Americans are lazy because they don’t care enough about the environment, and because they aren’t considerate enough of foreign countries. Seriously.
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#207516
Michael Moore made the scary prediction that Donald Trump was “the last president of the United States” in the trailer to his new documentary “Fahrenheit 11/9,” which premiere in New York Thursday …
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#207517
Thread by @GOPChairwoman: THREAD. Since Democrats in Congress keep attacking @realDonaldTrump, let's compare records. JAN 7: CDC established s incident management system, two days before China announced the outbreak. Pelosi began Week 3 of withholding he…
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#207518
The rush to distribute hundreds of billions in Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans earlier this year opened the door for massive fraud, and more and
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#207519
Oil production woes and prices are part of the plan (if you could call it that).
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#207520
Elon Musk said that “important” data from Twitter was “hidden” and “may have been deleted” in a Wednesday post on the social media site.
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#207521
In 2015, Hillary Clinton’s campaign produced a two-page letter from her doctor, Lisa Bardack, declaring “she is in excellent physical condition” and suffers from “hypothyroidism, seasonal allergies and takes blood thinners as a precaution against clots.” Look back to October 15, 1992, when Bill Clinton’s campaign, after months of pressure from the media, finally gave a detailed health history of the candidate. The history revealed a few embarrassing details here and there, but nothing indicating he couldn’t handle the physical pressures of the office: Clinton’s medical history, as related in letters from four physicians in Little Rock, includes allergies, a left knee ligament strain in 1984, hemorrhoids that same year, and what was described as a “mild hearing loss.” A stress test a year ago showed no heart problems, according to Andrew G. Kumpuris, a cardiologist. Though the reports did not mention the subject, Betsey Wright, a Clinton aide, said the candidate has no history of psychiatric or emotional illness. Caffeine is partly responsible for producing gastric acid, similar to heartburn, which inflamed his larynx and harmed his vocal cords. He has been sleeping on a wedge to elevate his head during the night to prevent the gastric juices from rising and to keep his head less congested. His congestion is sometimes so severe, wrote Kelsy J. Caplinger of the Little Rock Allergy Clinic, that it sometimes prevents him from running because he can’t breathe. “His hoarseness is related to a combination of nasal allergies, mild esophageal reflux (the gastric juices rising to the esophagus) and especially overuse of his voice,” wrote James Y. Suen, his otolaryngologist in Little Rock. “There has been no evidence of any tumors or malignancies.” With a recommended low-fat diet and increase in exercise, Clinton also has lowered his cholesterol level to 184, down from 227 a year ago. Most doctors recommend that cholesterol levels stay below 200. Clinton, who stands 6 feet 2 1/2 inches tall, weighed 226 pounds a year ago and bulked up to more than 240 during the high-stress primary season earlier this year. He is now down to 215. Bill Clinton gave his doctors permission to discuss his health records with the media. Three of his four doctors agreed to interviews with the New York Times. Surely Bill Clinton didn’t enjoy having his hemorrhoids and weight fluctuation discussed in the media, but it was one day of chuckling, and then it pretty much put the issue of his health to bed. It worked for him. Hillary Clinton’s campaign does not appear likely to give anything beyond the letter from Bardack. Why is Hillary Clinton unwilling to meet the standard of disclosure that Bill Clinton set? You may recall that one of Bill Clinton’s rivals in the primary that year was Senator Paul Tsongas. God rest his soul, but Tsongas and his doctors lied through their teeth: When Tsongas ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination the 1992 presidential campaign, he made an issue of his survival from a form of cancer known as non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. But Tsongas and his doctors at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Ronald W. Takvorian and George P. Canellos, repeatedly said he had been cancer-free when he had not. In so doing, they implied that the cancer was cured when indeed it was not curable. Tsongas died in 1997. If he had been nominated and elected, he would not have completed his term. After 1993, he fought lymphoma again, spent much of the next four years in hospitals, eventually had an operation to deal with liver and heart problems that were complications of his cancer therapy. The surgery worked, but he passed away in the hospital… from pneumonia. In 1996, after Bob Dole released all of his health records and challenged the president to do the same, the White House released 11 pages of letters from doctors summarizing laboratory tests. President Clinton sat down for a lengthy interview with Lawrence Altman of the New York Times, who was also a medical doctor.  Bill Clinton told Altman he didn’t think of the interview as an invasion of privacy. “The public has a right to know the condition of the president’s health.”
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#207522
In a court of law, Americans may be innocent until proven guilty, especially regarding allegations from over three decades ago, but in the court of public opinion, the establishment of guilt has a very low bar to clear.
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#207523
Even during the COVID-19 pandemic and darkest days of 2020, Americans proved their benevolence and generosity in ways the government never could.
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#207524
The National Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 2022 ballot came out earlier this week, and one member of the Baseball Writers Association of America immediately announced that he will not vote for former Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling. Jose de Jesus Ortiz, a former St. Louis Post-Dispatch sports columnist who serves as the...
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#207525