• The Speaker of the House traveled to Poland on Saturday to visit the President and other senior officials.

  • The former Defense Secretary said that the former President asked if they could shoot the protesters in the legs. Trump said to shoot them in the legs. There is a revelation from Esper.

  • It is time to end insomnia and poor sleep. The genius sleep patch invention will help you wake up refreshed.

  • According to NYT reporters Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns, Floyd's murder seemed to cause something else entirely in Trump.

  • The state of Florida will have aconstitutional carry law at some point before the governor leaves office. The measure would allow people to carry firearms without a permit.

  • According to a new book, Trump suggested shooting protesters in the legs.

  • People may not know they have the disease. Look for symptoms that are critical.

  • According to a scoop that went viral on Monday morning, the president was sitting in front of the Resolute desk in the Oval Office and he was red faced and complaining loudly about the situation.

  • Co- living, a practice that has helped people split rent as rental and housing prices climb, has been banned by the city council in Kansas.

  • When the invaders drove the stolen harvesters to Chechnya, they realized they couldn't turn them on because they were locked away.

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  • As Ukrainian troops continue to defend the steel plant in the besieged city of Mariupol, it is estimated that around 1,000 civilians are trapped underneath, and they are desperate to get out.

  • Paxlovid was found to be useless in preventing infections in people who had been exposed to the virus, according to Pfizer Inc. 2,957 adults who were household contacts were exposed to an individual who had recently tested positive for COVID-19 and were part of the trial. Paxlovid was given for five or ten days. The WHO backs Pfizer's anti-viral therapy for high-risk patients. Those who took the f.

  • The CEO of MyPillow was banned from the social media platform for a second time after attempting to use a new account. A new account was set up on Sunday. The account was permanently suspended for violating its rules.

  • Americans don't like overpaying on purchases. At checkout, this trick could save you hundreds.

  • Las Vegas is pumping water from deeper within Lake Mead, where other states don't have access, because the Colorado River is so dry.

  • Two years into a swine flu epidemic that saw train and bus patronage plummet to a fraction of pre-COVID levels, and amid new fears about violence on city subways, once frequent commuters have been slow to return.

  • A majority of Americans said they support increased sanctions against Russia in a new poll. The Washington Post and ABC News conducted a poll in which 76 percent of Americans said the U.S. should provide more humanitarian aid. Sixty-seven percent of people think the U.S. should increase economic sanctions.

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  • Cruz says he doesn't look to see what candidates say on the stump because they all say the same thing.

  • The streaming giant made cost cuts after subscriber numbers fell.

  • Hundreds of people have crossed the English Channel in small boats in the last 24 hours, British officials said Monday, after more than a week in which no hazardous journeys were reported. The Ministry of Defense said more than 200 people arrived on the English coast in seven boats from northern France on Sunday. After Britain announced a plan to send some asylum-seekers to Rwanda, the crossings stopped.

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  • One of Russia's few self-made business tycoons, Oleg Y. Tinkov, was worth more than $9 billion in November, making him one of the richest people in Russia. Tinkov, the founder of one of Russia's biggest banks, criticized the war in Ukraine in a post on social media. The next day, he said, Putin's administration threatened to nationalize his bank.

  • Ivan Yakovina, an international affairs expert, said in an interview that the world has to stop Putin because he is a threat to the human civilization. An edited transcript of the interview can be found below.

  • The lawsuit over the way his company's security guards beat up protesters in 2015 seems relatively minor. Lawyers in the case believe that Michael Cohen was in the room when Trump ordered guards to attack the protesters. It would mean that the former president lied.