>Moroccan national will have his French residence permit revoked after lighting a cigarette with the flame from the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Paris
undignified and miserable
lock him up in the knife wing
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Favreau#Early_life
on a scale of 1 to 10, how retarded are you?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Stream
Russian servicemen had traveled nearly 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) through a 1.4-meter diameter gas pipeline, reached the rear of the Ukrainian military near the city of Sudzha, and dug in, walking in the pipe for two days and spending four more days underground waiting for the order to attack.
what is Durham up to?
panic is panic
>I think that's a great idea, Joaquin.
what an asshole
those dinosaurs are awesome
>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-14976021/underwater-city-turkey-Noahs-Ark-rewrites-Bible.html
An ancient underwater city beneath Turkey's Lake Van could potentially reveal secrets that challenge the origins of Noah's Ark.
The sprawling ruins lie 85 feet below the surface near the town of Gevaş, just 150 miles from Mount Ararat, the mountain traditionally believed to be the final resting place of the biblical boat.
Geological evidence suggests that the ruins were submerged 12,000 to 14,500 years ago, when a Mount Nemrut eruption blocked the Mirat River, and caused massive flooding during the Younger Dryas, a period of extreme climate upheaval.
While mainstream scholars dismiss the theory, many independent researchers believe this disaster wiped out an advanced civilization, one so ancient that it may have inspired the earliest versions of the Great Flood story.
'As far as I'm aware, any civilizations in the last 6,000 years did not have the technological means to create the type of stonework we're seeing here,' said independent researcher Matt LaCroix, who spoke about the discovery on the Matt Beall Limitless podcast.
LaCroix and an international dive team are preparing to explore the site in September using advanced imaging tools to map the ruins, which he believes could help rewrite humanity's timeline.
The underwater complex spans more than half a mile, featuring a stone fortress flanked by circular temples with precisely carved masonry.
There is also a capstone engraved with a six-spoked 'Flower of Life' symbol, an ancient motif also found at sacred sites in Peru and Bolivia.
>As far as I'm aware, any civilizations in the last 6,000 years did not have the technological means to create the type of stonework we're seeing here
who is independent researcher Matt LaCroix
https://www.youtube.com/@MatthewLaCroix/videos
https://archive.is/vZSWD
Miami judge becomes first confirmed U.S. attorney during Trump’s second term
President Donald Trump’s first confirmed nominee for U.S. Attorney is a Miami-Dade judge whose professional background includes poor job evaluations in the office he will now lead.
On Saturday, Judge Jason A. Reding Quiñones secured a 51-41 cloture vote in the U.S. Senate. He will now head the U.S. Attorney’s Office in South Florida, replacing interim U.S. Attorney Hayden O’Byrne.
Trump posted on his social media platform, Truth Social, “Very proud of our great Republican Senators for fighting, over the Weekend and far beyond, if necessary, in order to get my great Appointments approved, and on their way to helping us MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”
Reding Quiñones told the Miami Herald, “As the son of a Cuban political refugee and a proud Miami native, I am deeply honored by the trust and confidence that President Trump, Attorney General Bondi, and the United States Senate have placed in me. As the United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, I will work tirelessly to protect the American people, restore impartial justice, and defend the rule of law without fear or favor.”
Who is Jason A. Reding Quiñones?
Reding Quiñones, formerly a federal prosecutor in the Miami office, was appointed as a Miami-Dade County judge a year ago by Gov. Ron DeSantis and is a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force Reserve.
After graduating from Florida International University’s law school in 2008, he began his career practicing corporate law before transitioning to a military lawyer for the U.S. Air Force and then joining the Justice Department.
Soon after, he joined the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami as a prosecutor in the major crimes section, where he would receive poor evaluations from supervisors relating to incompetence; however, Reding Quiñones filed a discrimination complaint claiming he was being targeted because of his race.
He would later drop that complaint and continue on in the Miami office’s civil division, where he recieved satisfactory job evaluations.
Despite this history, University of Richmond Law Professor Carl Tobias said it likely wouldn’t have a big impact on his confirmation by the Senate.
U.S. Attorney confirmation process not “very rigorous”
The Senate Judiciary Committe process for evaluating U.S Attorney nominees is “not very rigorous,” Tobias said.
That’s because, he said, the panel doesn’t have the resources to conduct hearings and instead relies on staff analysis and recommendations.
“Practically all nominees receive no discussion and voice votes, unless staff detects red flags,” he said.
Tobias believes confirmations have grown increasingly politicized, but in a rare occurrence, Reding Quiñones received a 12-9 committee party line vote before the process continued to the Senate where he would be confirmed.
Aid to struggling U.S. Attorney’s Office
The confirmation is not only a victory for the president, but also a much-needed move for the Miami office, which has remained one of the busiest in the country despite growing struggles.
Since the resignation of former U.S. Attorney Markenzy Lapointe, the first Black lawyer to hold the position in South Florida, earlier this year, the office has lost a half a dozen senior career prosecutors.
“The [South Florida office] does critical law enforcement work and its several hundred attorneys function more smoothly when the office has a permanent, Senate-confirmed leader, who cooperates effectively with the Justice Department and other US Attorneys,” Tobias said.
Other South Florida seats remain open
While the U.S. Attorney position may now be filled, other seats in South Florida and the rest of the state have not made it through Senate confirmation hearings yet.
The Senate failed to confirm one Trump federal judge nominee who would preside in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida and three nominees for the Middle District.
Tobias noted that these are emergency vacancies, as both districts have substantial caseloads that are reaching or already surpassing protracted lengths without resolution.
The Senate is now in recess, which means any appointments will have to wait until September when it resumes session.
“The diligent, overloaded Southern and Middle District judges and the people of Florida must wait for relief,” Tobias said.
We're surrounded. That simplifies the problem.
"Where the Hell do you put the bayonet?"
He said this while at a flamethrower demonstration. Apparently, Puller wanted to be ready to stab the men he set on fire.
All right, they’re on our left, they’re on our right, they’re in front of us, they’re behind us…they can’t get away this time.
PierrE DelectO was a funny handle
There are not enough chinamen in the world to stop a fully armed Marine regiment from going where ever they want to go.
>Cape buffalo, known as the Black Death, kill some 200 people in Africa a year.
Sydney's weeney