After Kellyanne Conway retweeted a tweet that former DNC chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz did not stand during a standing ovation for the widow of fallen Navy SEAL William "Ryan" Owens, Wasserman Schultz said "that's their MO, they generate and perpetuate fake news."
You'll never look at Subway chicken the same.
For the past six months, an active-duty Army major studying at the University of Miami, has been taking pictures of city police cars he says were illegally parked. The Miami New Times reported Wednesday that Glen Carr, who moved to Miami in August to study at the school, has sent at least 125 complaints-along with photographs to support his claim-to police departments in or around Miami-Dade County. “It’s not like I’m against them,” he told the paper. “I just want them to be better at what they do. I feel they don’t hold each other accountable.” Carr, who served for nine months at remote base near the Pakistan border just after the attacks of Sept. 11, started noticing police disobeying the same
By Michael Martina and Ben Blanchard BEIJING (Reuters) - Vowing to plant their flag in China and that blood will "flow in rivers", a video released this week purportedly by the Islamic State group shows ethnic Uighur fighters training in Iraq, underscoring what Beijing sees as a serious threat. China is worried that Uighurs, a mostly Muslim people from western China's Xinjiang region, have gone to Syria and Iraq to fight for militant groups there, having traveled illegally via Southeast Asia and Turkey. Islamic State claimed responsibility for the killing of a Chinese hostage in 2015, highlighting China's concern about Uighurs it says are fighting in the Middle East.
On Tuesday evening, President Trump delivered his first address to a joint session of Congress - and first lady Melania Trump marked the occasion with a sequined black power suit, complete with a wide waist-defining black belt.
Risk averse NASA has decided to keep its spacecraft Juno on the looonnnggg orbit of Jupiter. Earlier in February, the agency said it didn't want to risk firing the spacecraft's engines and bring it in for a closer zip around the mega-planet because of a slight glitch in two helium check valves. I know! Yeah, NASA. Apparently the valves opened later than expected during a system charge and since they are "part of the plumbing for the spacecraft's main engine" ... well, better safe than sorry. Faced with a new POTUS and some subtle give and take in the nation over the man and his executive orders, the agency was quick to point out the silver lining of the situation: Juno's larger 53-day orbit allows
In a dramatic shift from traditional policy, an internal White House review on North Korean...