@BooVay7

RT @jilevin: Former F.B.I. Analyst Goes to Prison for Taking Classified Documents
www.nytimes.com
10 months ago
US news

Former F.B.I. Analyst Goes to Prison for Taking Classified Documents

A former F.B.I. intelligence analyst from Kansas received nearly four years in prison in a case that bears parallels to that of former President Donald J. Trump, including the same charge of willful retention of national security secrets.The analyst, Kendra Kingsbury, 50, was accused of improperly removing and unlawfully taking home about 386 classified documents to her personal residence in Dodge City, Kan.
RT @cybersecboardrm: Putting sensor-packed Chinese cars on Western roads could be a privacy issue. Just ask Tesla.
…
Wired
1 year ago
Privacy professionals

Is Your New Car a Threat to National Security?

Putting sensor-packed Chinese cars on Western roads could be a privacy issue.Just ask Tesla.
...
Starting this week, Teslas won't be welcome in the Chinese resort town of Beidaihe.
RT @DianaCialino: Meadows Texted With 34 House Republicans About Overturning Election
Truthout
1 year ago
Left-wing politics

Former Trump Chief of Staff Mark Meadows Texted With 34 House Republicans About Overturning Election

Dozens of GOP lawmakers encouraged Meadows to continue to "fight" the legitimate 2020 presidential election results.Former White House Chief of Staff during the Trump administration Mark Meadows speaks during a forum titled House Rules and Process Changes for the 118th Congress at FreedowmWorks headquarters on November 14, 2022, in Washington, D.C.Drew Angerer / Getty Images Recently released text messages between former President Donald Trump's former chief of staff Mark Meadows and dozens of Republican members of Congress reveal the extent to which Trump's inner circle sought to overturn the legitimate results of the 2020 presidential election.
California Democrats further torn after seeing Sen. Feinstein's return to Washington
Los Angeles Times
11 months ago
Los Angeles

California Democrats further torn after seeing Sen. Feinstein's return to Washington

(Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)

As she approaches retirement age, Democrat Donna Perkins understands reluctance about telling Sen. Dianne Feinstein what to do as she winds down her career.After all, California's senior senator has already announced that she would not seek another term - and some argue that the calls for her to step down earlier are rooted in misogyny and ageism.
RT @PJournalismNews: AWARD: Los Angeles Times wins Pulitzer Prizes for covering homelessness and City Council leak …
Los Angeles Times
11 months ago
California

Los Angeles Times wins Pulitzer Prizes for covering homelessness and City Council leak

(Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)

The Los Angeles Times won two Pulitzer Prizes on Monday for coverage of two of the most troubling problems facing Southern California - homelessness and racial division.The newspaper's staff won the Pulitzer for breaking news for a series of stories on a secret audio recording that exposed Los Angeles City Council members scheming in a crass and racist bull session about political power in the city.
RT @Meidas_LaurenA: BREAKING ???? ???? ????
Georgia GOP chairman says he was just following orders from Trump lawyers.
www.cnn.com
11 months ago
US politics

Georgia GOP chairman says he was just following orders from Trump lawyers

Lawyers representing David Shafer, the embattled chairman of the Georgia Republican Party, are arguing their client should not be charged with any crimes for his actions following the 2020 election because he was following advice provided by attorneys working for former President Donald Trump, according to a letter sent to Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis last week.
RT @PJournalismNews: LOS ANGELES TIMES: The Week in Photos @latimesphotos @latimes #photojournalism #photography #j…
Los Angeles Times
11 months ago
California

The Week in Photos: His future coach found him working in a slaughterhouse; and it's a no to $55,000 to leave a rent-controlled apartment.

Hello, and welcome to this week's selection of top stories in pictures by Los Angeles Times photographers.:: His future coach found Dennis Kasumba working in a slaughterhouse.The teen was orphaned at a young age and living in poverty and despair.Now, a young man, he has now found purpose in pursuing his dream to become Uganda's first Major League Baseball player.
RT @NewBlackMan: Column: Reparations is morally right. But L.A. Democrats will decide if it's politically doable
Los Angeles Times
11 months ago
California

Column: Reparations is morally right. But L.A. Democrats will decide if it's politically doable

(Paul Kitagaki Jr. / Sacramento Bee via AP)

One morning a few months back, I came to understand the true meaning of reparations.I was talking with Gloria Holland, one of the survivors of Section 14, the neighborhood of Black homeowners that Palm Springs burned to the ground in the 1950s and 1960s to make way for the high-end hotels and restaurants that define the city today.
Special Skills, Strengths, and Advantages of Single People | Psychology Today
Psychology Today
11 months ago
Relationships

Special Skills, Strengths, and Advantages of Single People

In several online communities of single people, I posed the question, "In what ways do single people (or some subgroups of single people) excel?"We had been discussing the often-repeated claims that currently married or coupled people are happier or healthier or better off than single people in some other way.
www.npr.org
11 months ago
Tech industry

30 years ago, one decision altered the course of our connected world

This was the world's first web page.Thirty years ago, the World Wide Web entered the public domain.Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images 30 years ago, listeners tuning into Morning Edition heard about a futuristic idea that could profoundly change their lives."Imagine being able to communicate at-will with 10 million people all over the world," NPR's Neal Conan said.
www.npr.org
1 year ago
Health

A Good Friday funeral in Texas. Baby Halo's parents had few choices in post-Roe Texas

Samantha Casiano and Luis Villasana and had a baby last week who died shortly after birth.The fatal condition was diagnosed at 20 weeks of pregnancy.When Casiano asked her OB-GYN what her options were, she was told, "You don't have any options.You have to go on with your pregnancy."Kelsey Durell Her name was Halo, and she was born last week, on March 29, two months early and weighing 3 pounds.
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