Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures during his annual news conference in Moscow, Russia, Friday, Dec. 23, 2016. Putin says he sees “nothing unusual” in Donald Trump’s pledge to strengthen the U.S. nuclear forces, calling the statement is in line with the U.S. president-elect’s campaign promises.
Category: US News
The Latest: Putin rejects accusations of meddling in US vote
Russian President Vladimir Putin is praising U.S. President-elect Donald Trump for keenly feeling American voters’ mood to win the election, and he rejects the White House’s accusations of meddling in the vote. Speaking at an annual news conference, Putin said Friday that Russia hopes to develop “businesslike and constructive relations that would benefit both Russia and the United States.”
The Latest: Putin says nuke missiles can pierce any defense
Speaking at Friday’s end-of-year news conference, Putin said Russia had to develop the capability after the U.S. in 2001 opted out of a Cold War-era treaty banning missile defense systems. He argued that the modernization of Russian nuclear forces is in line with existing arms control agreements, including the New Start Treaty with the United States.
What the U.S. can learn from Norway about retirement
During his first TV debate with Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination, Sen. Bernie Sanders remarked: “We should look to countries like Denmark, like Sweden and Norway and learn from what they have accomplished for their working people.” Clinton didn’t buy it.
Minford: Trade Barriers Damage You, Not Other Guy
Cardiff University Economics Professor Patrick Minford and Aviva Investors Head of Rates Charles Diebel discuss Brexit, trade and the U.K. economy. They speak on “Bloomberg Surveillance.”
Berlin Terror Suspect Killed in Milan by Police
Italian police killed the man suspected of carrying out this week’s Berlin terrorist attack near a Milan area train station earlier Monday, Interior Minister Marco Minniti said at a press conference in Rome. Bloomberg’s Guy Johnson reports on “Bloomberg Surveillance.”
QUIZ: How Well Did You Pay Attention To Markets This Year an hour ago
It was a year dominated by some yuge surprises, but how closely have you been paying attention to the details? Here are 60 things that happened in 2016: 2. How long did China’s stock exchanges stay open before recently introduced circuit breakers ended trading on Jan. 7 after a 7 percent fall? 3. Crude dropped below $30 for the first time since 2004, but what was the proximate cause of the selloff? 5. What did the U.S. Food and Drug Administration find odd about some Parmesan cheese produced in rural Pennsylvania? 2. The ECB cut rates, but President Mario Draghi gave mixed signals at the press conference.
On Nov. 9, Hillary Clinton Voters Ate Their Grief an hour ago
The morning after the 2016 vote, Hillary Clinton supporters woke up in a state of shock and grief. The unthinkable had happened, and almost nobody saw it coming.
Trump: Beef up U.S. nuke clout
President-elect Donald Trump said Thursday on Twitter that the United States should greatly “expand its nuclear capability,” appearing to embrace an end to decades of bipartisan presidential efforts to reduce the role of nuclear weapons in U.S. defenses and strategy. Trump’s midafternoon post may have been a response to President Vladimir Putin of Russia, who in a speech earlier Thursday called for continued improvement of his country’s nuclear abilities so it can “reliably penetrate any existing and prospective missile defense systems.”
Christmas home leave granted to 93 prisoners
Their periods of temporary release have been granted for a range of periods from 23 December to 3 January, according to a statement by the Department of Justice . Thirty five are being released from Magilligan Prison and 51 from Maghaberry Prison.
Behind oil-drilling bans, a debate over competing Arctic visions
Oil companies and Arctic communities have long sought prosperity through resource extraction. Plans announced by Barack Obama and Justin Trudeau imply more focus on tourism and sustainability.
Witcover: Obama’s disappointing swan song
Stephen Cobb, a senior researcher at ESET, breaks down the methods that Russia may of used to hack the DNC. Stephen Cobb, a senior researcher at ESET, breaks down the methods that Russia may of used to hack the DNC.
Cardinal Mahony: churches may offer sanctuary to a DREAMersa who face deportation
Writing in L’Osservatore Romano, Cardinal Roger Mahony, who served as archbishop of Los Angeles from 1985 to 2011, discussed the plight of “DREAMers”: persons who were brought illegally to the United States by their parents when they were children. “While President-elect Donald J. Trump has pledged to implement several severe immigration policies, including the deportation of 11 million undocumented immigrants and the construction of a wall on the Mexican border, the most pressing and imminent challenge his incoming administration presents on this critical issue is its promise to rescind the DACA program,” Cardinal Mahony wrote.
How Barack Obama Failed Black Americans
Born in 1953, I am a child of the waning years of legal segregation in the United States. My parents, on the other hand, spent about 40 years of their lives under Jim Crow, and all of my grandparents lived most of their lives under official American apartheid.
Under Obama, a Disaster for the Democrats
The president’s policies have cost his party Congress, governorships, and nearly a thousand seats in state legislatures. Four faithless electors ditched Hillary Clinton in the Electoral College on Monday, double the number who dumped Donald J. Trump.
Bill to jumpstart research, speed up treatment options
A bill signed by President Barack Obama recently is looking to bring medical breakthroughs and tackle some of the largest health challenges facing Americans. Now a law, the 21st Century Cures Act will speed up the federal review process while reducing bureaucracy needed to approve new medical treatment options.
Trump tweets rattle markets, Mideast, nukes
President-elect Donald Trump long ago earned a reputation for being unpredictable in his statements, but he outdid himself on Thursday. In the span of just a few hours, Trump shook international relations by undercutting the Obama administration over a UN resolution on Israeli settlements, indicated he would ramp up nuclear competition with Russia and then jolted a major defense contractor — and its shareholders — by suggesting he would ask Boeing to replace a fighter jet being made by Lockheed Martin.
Hillary Still Losing Voters a ” Even After Election Day
A post-election poll finds that a tiny number of Trump voters have come to regret their vote, while a group four times larger now says they wish they hadn’t voted for Democrat nominee Hillary Clinton. The poll found that fully 99 percent of Trump’s voters would still pull the lever for him if the election were today instead of a month ago, meaning Trump has only lost one percent of support in the six weeks since Election Day, the New York Post reported this week.
Law’s passage sends right message to Iran
President Barack Obama did something good and wise this week. He refused to veto a bill from Congress renewing authority for U.S. officials to use economic sanctions against Iran.
Trump claims A-list celebrities want to come to his inauguration
President-elect Donald Trump, left, and Kanye West pose for a picture in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York. Here’s President-elect Donald Trump’s explanation-slash-spin for the dearth of celebrities so far slated for his inauguration: he doesn’t want them there.
Avon audience sees – Loving’ as major Oscar contender
Joel Edgerton and Ruth Negga star in “Loving,” a film about the Virginia couple who won a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 1967 making interracial marriages legal throughout the country. Joel Edgerton and Ruth Negga star in “Loving,” a film about the Virginia couple who won a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 1967 making interracial marriages legal throughout the country.
Clinton wins popular vote by nearly 2.9 million
Hillary Clinton received nearly 2.9 million more votes than President-elect Donald Trump, giving her the largest popular vote margin of any losing presidential candidate. Certified results in all 50 states and the District of Columbia show Clinton winning nearly 65,844,610 million votes – 48 percent – to Trump’s 62,979,636 million votes – 46 percent – according to an analysis by The Associated Press.
Exclusive: Former GOP Senator Tried To Convince Constitution Party Nominee To Drop Out For McMullin
Former Republican Washington Sen. Slade Gorton attempted to convince Constitution Party presidential nominee Darrell Castle to drop out so that independent conservative presidential candidate Evan McMullin could have more ballot access. Gorton, who endorsed McMullin, and Castle both described to The Daily Caller what happened in early December.
Report: Philly Transit Strike Negotiations Cost Half A Million Dollars
Philadelphia’s transit authority spent nearly $500,000 on outside legal counsel during negotiations with striking workers this past month. The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority spent $423,388 on outside labor counsel to handle negotiations with Transport Workers Union Local 234 over the contract agreed to after a six-day strike in November, according to the Philadelphia Business Journal .
Let’s Have A Nuclear War
There is some arcane item in the US Constitution that provides for the installation of a new president in January. It is now clear that Donald Trump has never read this document.
“President”Trump On Israel
During the past few years the Israel Ambassador to the US, Ron Dermer, has met with Republican leaders, interfered with the American conduct of policy in the Middle East on ground that he, and Prime Minister Netanyahu, believe President Obama hates Jews and hates Israel. Under the administration of Barack Obama the nation of Israel has been provided over SIXTEEN BILLION DOLLARS worth of military assistance, plus money to build a defensive shield against missiles.
Obama Ends List
The one certainty in modern life is that at some point each one of us will discover that our name is on some list. A colleague, who was born in Lebanon was interviewed by FBI agents regarding his membership in a Lebanon group.
The White Establishment
Bill O’Reilly, the man with a quick tongue and ability to write nonsensical books, has created a storm of anger. He charges that any attempt to challenge the Trump victory or seek a Constitutional change in the electoral system is really a dagger pointed to the hearts of those belonging to the White Establishment.
Donna’s Signature Pina Coladas
This alluring corner hideaway is on Williamsburg’s south side, where expensive cocktail bars have replaced the dwindling Puerto Rican neighborhood’s once ubiquitous bodegas, barbershops, and social clubs. So it’s fitting, if somewhat tragic, that the clientele drinking Donna’s signature cocktail, a rum-heavy spin on the piA a colada, are more likely to associate it with spring break than with its status as the national drink of America’s largest territory.
The Harlem Hip at Lenox Saphire
There are two reasons Phil Young is an uptown legend. First, for his work as a florist: for many years, he ran the Carolina Flower Shop, one of Harlem’s oldest and most beloved stores.
The Don of Hardcore Steps Up Again
In a photo published in 1982 by the small zine Maniac!, Paul Hudson, known then as H.R., stood over a pile of bricks and soil in a scraggly garden, his legs spread apart and every inch of his shirtless upper body tightly flexed. He called it his “last official punk pose,” and in the accompanying interview he explained why he was stepping away from his band, Bad Brains, changing his name to Joseph I, and starting a new, Rastafarian-influenced reggae outfit, Zion Train.
Completing August Wilson’s Life Work
August Wilson’s life work was his “Century Cycle,” a ten-play portrait of black life in Pittsburgh’s Hill District, each set in a different decade. Until this month, only one had not played on Broadway: “Jitney,” about gypsy-cab drivers in the seventies.
“Enough Is Better Than a Feast”: Christmas Dinner in the Time of the Great Depression
Andrew Coe and Jane Ziegelman, a husband-and-wife team of authors and food historians, host their dinner parties in a broad Brooklyn Heights kitchen designed to resemble a nineteen-thirties schoolroom: red cupboards, wood counters that groan with the accumulated weight of cookbooks. Although Coe and Ziegelman once co-wrote a history of foie gras, their latest project is “A Square Meal: A Culinary History of the Great Depression,” a thick volume that examines a complex decade in American dining.
Fox News has kept most of its audience after the election
A sharp drop in cable news ratings following a presidential election is as inevitable as snow in Buffalo. Yet in the Age of Trump, so far Fox News Channel is defying that trend.
Continuing battle with media, Trump avoids news conference
Less than a month from taking office, President-elect Donald Trump has yet to hold the traditional news conference that most incoming presidents have held within days of their victory. Trump, whose refusal to do news conference has been criticized by journalism groups and media watchdogs, has instead tried to convey his message directly to the American public, bypassing the media with pronouncements at his boisterous rallies and, of course, distributing his thoughts 140 characters at a time on his famed Twitter account.
Release of emails by Chicago mayor doesna t end dispute
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s decision to release thousands of pages of private emails does not end a dispute in Illinois about public access to such emails from him and other officials when they deal with government business. Emanuel announced late Wednesday that he had settled a lawsuit by a government watchdog group over emails from his personal accounts, but it allows him and his personal lawyer to decide which emails are public records and which are not.
License issued for $1B Montana power storage project
A Montana company has been granted a license to build a $1 billion, 400-megawatt power storage project in the central part of the state that would supplement electricity from wind turbines and other sources, according to documents released Thursday by federal regulators. The 50-year license from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission allows Absaroka Energy, of Bozeman, Montana, to construct and operate the project on a 177-acre site near the tiny town of Martinsdale, home to fewer than 100 people.
Everyone should be treated with respect — unless you’re a Republican :0
Thursday, Ivanka Trump and her family were accosted by Dan Goldstein, a lawyer from Brooklyn, who yelled at her that her father, who has yet to take office, was “ruining the country.” It wasn’t a spontaneous outburst.
CNN Commentator Says She Was Subjected to Humiliating TSA Pat-Down:…
CNN political commentator Angela Rye can be seen breaking down in tears as she was recently subjected to an invasive pat-down by an airport security agent in Detroit. Video of the search shows Rye crying as a female TSA office completes a rigorous hand search.
Biden: Clinton never figured out why she was running
Hillary Clinton felt compelled to run for president despite lacking a clear campaign vision, Vice President Joe Biden argued in an interview published Thursday. “I don’t think she ever really figured it out,” Biden told the Los Angeles Times’ Mike Memoli.