Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 7:11 p.m. No.23933867   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3925 >>4072 >>4242 >>4253

Indiana unveils new congressional map to erase two Democrat seats

 

The author of Indiana’s new congressional redistricting bill acknowledged the maps are “politically gerrymandered” during committee questioning Tuesday but defended the proposal against accusations of illegal racial gerrymandering.

 

The maps, released Monday morning, were drawn “purely for political performance” of Republicans, Rep. Ben Smaltz told indignant Democratic colleagues on the House Elections and Apportionment Committee.

 

It was the House’s only public hearing on the maps — and was held with less than a day’s notice.

 

Over about three hours, 43 Hoosiers spoke against the proposal and two in favor, excluding several state lawmaker witnesses. The meeting featured ominous testimony from Marion County’s Democratic elections chief and Republican former Lt. Gov. Sue Ellspermann.

 

The committee voted 8-5 to advance Smaltz’s House Bill 1032 to the floor, with one Republican joining Democrats in opposition.

 

https://indianacapitalchronicle.com/2025/12/02/indiana-maps-drawn-purely-for-political-performance-of-gop-bill-author-says/

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 7:14 p.m. No.23933879   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3925 >>4072 >>4242 >>4253

Justice Department could present a new indictment against James Comey to a grand jury this week

 

The Justice Department could present a new indictment against James Comey to a grand jury as soon as this week, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter.

 

Whatever comes next may happen quickly, and no matter what, the sources told CNN, prosecutors will likely present new indictments against the former FBI director and New York Attorney General Letitia James to grand juries in the Eastern District of Virginia.

 

The previous cases against Comey and James were dismissed last week after a judge found that interim US Attorney Lindsey Halligan didn’t have the authority of a prosecutor when the indictments were returned in late September and early October. The Trump administration within hours announced they intended to appeal, though they haven’t done so yet. Internal strategy discussions since then appear to have pushed back that filing, one of the sources said.

 

Comey had previously pleaded not guilty to charges that he lied to Congress five years ago. James pleaded not guilty to mortgage fraud-related charges.

 

After the dismissals of their cases, FBI Director Kash Patel said over the weekend that “multiple responses” could come as early as “right after Thanksgiving” in the dismissed case against Comey.

 

Grand juries sit multiple times a week regularly in the Alexandria federal courthouse, and less frequently in Norfolk, where James’ charges were centered around.

 

During an interview Saturday with the right-wing media outlet Epoch Times, Patel was asked for his reaction to the case against Comey being dismissed.

 

“We the FBI, and our partners at the DOJ, have numerous options to proceed, and we’re executing on all those options,” Patel said. “So we’re not done.”

 

“I would say stay tuned for right after Thanksgiving and you’ll see multiple responses, in my opinion,” he added.

 

To appeal or not to appeal

Comey’s congressional obstruction charges were dismissed last week by a trial-level judge reviewing Halligan’s authority.

 

Cameron McGowan Currie found that Halligan didn’t have the authority to be the Eastern District of Virginia’s US Attorney because she hadn’t been confirmed by the Senate or sworn in by the district’s judges. The judge also decided the indictments against James and Comey, which she alone secured from Alexandria-based grand juries, were invalid.

 

The White House press secretary and the attorney general both said an appeal of the ruling, which would put the two criminal cases before the 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals, was imminent, yet the Justice Department hasn’t notified the court that it plans to appeal as of Monday afternoon.

 

According to federal procedural rules, the Justice Department has 30 days –meaning the week of Christmas – to notify the court of its intention to appeal.

 

The Justice Department could decide it wants to try again to secure a grand jury’s approval of charges against Comey, before deciding whether to appeal.

 

Comey’s legal defense team has several ways lined up to potentially challenge a re-indicted case him again, if it were to be revived.

 

Comey’s lead defense counsel Patrick Fitzgerald said in a statement last week that the judge’s decision to dismiss the case “indicates that because the indictment is void, the statute of limitations has run and there can be no further indictment.”

 

Comey’s team is likely to maintain that legal position going forward, arguing that any charges he might face related to his September 2020 congressional testimony would now come outside of the five-year window, called a statute of limitations, that the Justice Department had to bring a case.

 

Currie, in her opinion last week, indicated in a footnote she agreed with that argument, saying that everything Halligan did before the grand jury was invalid, including her presentation to the grand jury.

 

But the Justice Department appears to believe it might still revive the case under another law that could allow several months to charge the case again, essentially elongating the statute of limitations for Comey into spring 2026, sources have told CNN.

 

What’s next for Letitia James?

As for the James mortgage fraud case, it too could be revived — and doesn’t face the same possible issues around a statute of limitations window closing.

 

James’ lawyers were at the beginning stages of challenging the specifics of her indictment and would likely continue opposing any case that was brought under Halligan.

 

James’ defense lawyer Abbe Lowell has also represented another client challenging a different interim US Attorney’s ability to serve without Senate confirmation. After the 3rd US Circuit Court of Appeals decided on Monday that Alina Habba is not the acting US Attorney for New Jersey, handing Lowell a win there, he to vowed carry forward cases challenging prosecutors in the Justice Department.

 

“We will continue to challenge President Trump’s unlawful appointments of purported U.S. Attorneys wherever appropriate,” Lowell said.

 

A spokesperson for Lowell declined to comment further on what may be next in James’ case.

 

Some legal experts are closely watching exactly how the Justice Department moves forward, and the level of involvement Halligan would have in the cases, now that a trial-level judge said she had been unlawfully appointed.

 

“They can reindict. The question is who can do it. They’ll have to have a different person managing that indictment process,” said John Day, a Nashville defense lawyer and current president of the American College of Trial Lawyers, an organization that recognizes preeminent trial lawyers.

 

Day said he believed the most legally sound move the Justice Department could make would be one the Trump administration isn’t making: Having Halligan step down.

 

“It’s a procedural morass. The uncertainty that all of these machinations have created is sort of alarming,” Day said. “It’s all in this place because the administration has decided it does not want to proceed under normal order.”

 

https://lite.cnn.com/2025/12/01/politics/justice-department-present-new-indictment-james-comey

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 7:16 p.m. No.23933889   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3925 >>3969 >>4072 >>4242 >>4253

Melania unveils WH Christmas decoration video

 

First Lady Melania Trump

@FLOTUS

Home Is Where the Heart Is

AMERICA’S CHRISTMAS

 

This Christmas, let’s celebrate the love we hold within ourselves and share it with the world around us. After all, wherever we are, we can create a home filled with endless possibilities.

 

https://x.com/FLOTUS/status/1995493761363906621

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 7:18 p.m. No.23933898   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3922 >>3925 >>4072 >>4242 >>4253

USDA secretary Brooke Rollins warns will cut funding to blue states over SNAP data noncompliance

-U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins threatened to cut off federal funding to Democratic-leaning states over what she alleged is their refusal to share SNAP program data with the Trump administration.

-The administration “will begin to stop moving federal funds into those states” starting next week “until they comply,” Rollins told President Donald Trump during a Cabinet meeting.

-California, New York and Minnesota are among the states that haven’t provided data on their food stamp programs, Rollins said.

 

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/12/02/trump-usda-snap-funding-rollins.html

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 7:24 p.m. No.23933911   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3925 >>4022 >>4072 >>4242 >>4253

Jaguar Fires Design Boss Behind Type 00 Concept

 

Jaguar’s recent rebrand has drawn heavy criticism. Fans pushed back against the automaker’s controversial ad campaign and had plenty to say about the Type 00 concept—mostly negative. Now, the company is reportedly firing long-time design boss Gerry McGovern in response.

 

According to reports from Autocar and Autocar India, McGovern was "escorted out of the office" earlier this week. We reached out to Jaguar for a statement, but the company refuses to comment on the situation at the moment.

 

This news comes less than a week after the retirement of former JLR CEO Adrian Mardell. New CEO, PB Balaji, acted as the former finance boss at Tata Motors before taking over following Mardell’s retirement. Balaji brings 32 years of experience to the position, with more than a decade working at JLR’s parent company, Tata Motors.

 

While details on McGovern’s firing are still slim, it appears that Balaji could be looking to shake things up at JLR. That move shouldn’t be surprising given the negative feedback surrounding the Jaguar rebrand.

 

McGovern leaves JLR following a 21-year career working with the Jaguar and Land Rover brands. McGovern is responsible for some of the most popular vehicles within the JLR portfolio, like the Range Rover Evoque, the Range Rover Velar, the Land Rover Defender, and the modern Range Rover line. McGovern also led the design team for the controversial Type 00 concept.

 

McGovern started his career at the Austin Rover Group and was responsible for concept cars like the MG EX-E, as well as popular production cars like the MG F sports car and the Land Rover Freelander. McGovern then worked at Ford to help revive the Lincoln-Mercury brands.

 

We’ll update this story with more information as we get it.

 

https://www.motor1.com/news/780585/jaguar-design-boss-gerry-mcgovern-fired-type-00/

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 8:37 p.m. No.23934091   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4242 >>4253

Prada completes the acquisition of Versace after months of negotiations

 

Prada signed a definitive agreement in April to buy Versace from US-based Capri Holdings for around €1.3 billion.

 

Prada announced Tuesday the completion of its acquisition of Versace, the Italian house the luxury brand has long coveted.

 

Prada signed a definitive agreement in April to buy Versace from US-based Capri Holdings for about 1.3 billion euros. The acquisition came after Capri’s sale to Tapestry was cancelled due to concerns from competition regulators.

 

Lorenzo Bertelli, son of Prada owners Muccia Prada and Patricio Bertelli, told Reuters in November that he would take over as executive chairman of Versace once the merger is completed. He said Prada had been pursuing the deal for several years.

 

“There had already been contacts during the COVID pandemic, and there were discussions before the sale of Capri to Tapestry. When the deal didn’t go through because of competition problems, we went back and tried to speed up the process,” Bertelli said.

 

Versace, founded in 1978 by Gianni Versace in Milan, is known for its bold aesthetic. The brand will be integrated into Prada’s two main brands – the eponymous Prada and the smaller but fast-growing Miu Miu – marking a major strategic shift for the Italian fashion house.

 

Bertelli, who pushed hard for the takeover, said Versace met two key conditions: that it was not too risky financially and that it was worth it, given that the brand is among the world’s top brands in terms of brand recognition. In March, a few weeks before the Prada deal was announced, Donatella Versace stepped down as artistic director after nearly three decades at the brand’s helm.

 

Dario Vitale, former design director of Miu Miu, took over her position.

 

https://en.protothema.gr/2025/12/02/prada-completes-the-acquisition-of-versace-after-months-of-negotiations/

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 8:40 p.m. No.23934100   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4104 >>4242 >>4253

Afghan Citizen Federally Charged for Posting Threats to Build Bomb and Kill Americans

 

Mohammad Dawood Alokozay, 30, a citizen of Afghanistan residing in Fort Worth, Texas, has been federally charged for threatening to build a bomb, conduct a suicide attack, and kill Americans and others, in a video shared on TikTok, X, and Facebook.

 

“This Afghan national came into America during the Biden administration and as alleged, explicitly stated that he came here in order to kill American citizens,” said Attorney General Pamela Bondi. “The public safety threat created by the Biden administration’s vetting breakdown cannot be overstated – the Department of Justice will continue working with our federal and state partners to protect the American people from the prior administration’s dangerous incompetence.”

 

“We have zero tolerance for violence and threats of violence to kill American citizens and others like those allegedly made by this individual,” said U.S. Attorney Ryan Raybould for the Northern District of Texas. “I applaud the rapid response of our federal and local law enforcement partners in identifying and apprehending him. Those individuals who jeopardize the public safety and security of North Texas residents will be swiftly brought to justice.”

 

“This arrest demonstrates that the FBI remains steadfast in our mission to defend the homeland and protect the American people. Thanks to public reports of a threatening online video, the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force apprehended this individual before he could commit an act of violence. We continue to ask that if you see something, say something,” said Special Agent in Charge R. Joseph Rothrock of the FBI's Dallas Field Office.

 

“Our commitment to keep America safe is unwavering. Online threats made by those hiding behind a screen will not be dismissed or taken lightly,” said Special Agent in Charge Travis Pickard of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI). “We will use every resource available to make sure these perpetrators are found, arrested, and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

 

Alokozay is charged with transmitting a threatening communication in interstate commerce related to threats he made on a Nov. 23 video call, which was recorded and posted to multiple social media accounts, including TikTok, X, and Facebook. According to the complaint, the video shows Alokozay angrily gesturing and speaking Dari, a language commonly spoken in Afghanistan, while interacting with at least two other males on a video call. A screenshot of a social media post that shared Alokozay’s Nov. 23 statements is below:

 

As alleged, Alokozay threatened to conduct a suicide attack on the other participants on the call, as well as “infidels” and Americans. He claimed he would build a bomb in his vehicle and talked about a particular yellow cooking oil container favored by the Taliban in building improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in Afghanistan. Alozokay stated the Taliban were dear to him and that he came to the United States to kill those on the call. He also claimed he wanted to conduct a suicide attack on Americans. According to the complaint, Alokozay stated he was not afraid of deportation or getting killed.

 

Alokozay is currently in custody pending an initial appearance before a U.S. magistrate judge and further court proceedings. If convicted, Alokozay faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

 

The investigation was conducted by the FBI's Dallas Field Office through the Fort Worth Resident Agency and the Department of Homeland Security, with the assistance of the Texas Department of Public Safety and the Fort Worth Police Department.

 

Assistant U.S. Attorney Vincent Mazzurco for the Northern District of Texas is prosecuting the case.

 

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/afghan-citizen-federally-charged-posting-threats-build-bomb-and-kill-americans

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 8:43 p.m. No.23934111   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4119 >>4122 >>4189 >>4196 >>4242 >>4253

UK announces plans to restrict jury trials to help ailing judicial system

 

Britain will remove the historic right to trial by jury for defendants in many less serious criminal cases in an effort to tackle a growing crisis in the court system, justice minister David Lammy said on Tuesday.

 

Britain’s judicial system is creaking, with tens of thousands of criminal cases stuck in a court backlog and jails so full that prisoners are being released early to ease the strain, with instances of convicts being freed by mistake.

 

Critics of Lammy’s plans say years of neglect and under-investment by successive governments, not jury trials, are to blame for the state of the criminal justice system, with its crumbling court buildings and too few judges and staff.

 

The new measures announced by Lammy, who is also deputy prime minister, would bar defendants from opting for jury trial in cases where a jail sentence was likely to be less than three years. Trial by jury would remain for serious offenses, including murder, rape, robbery and arson.

 

New “Swift Courts” will be created where a judge will sit alone, taking 20% less time than a jury trial, Lammy said, while complex fraud and financial trials will also become judge-only.

 

“I’m clear that jury trials will continue to be the cornerstone of the system for the most serious offences,” Lammy told parliament. “We now face an emergency in the courts and we must act.”

 

The plans, which have to be approved by parliament, apply only to England and Wales. Scotland and Northern Ireland have their own separate legal arrangements.

 

The government says there are about 78,000 cases awaiting trial by jury in so-called Crown Courts in England and Wales, and the number is expected to reach 100,000 by 2028, meaning victims face a lengthy wait for justice.

 

Some trials in London are currently expected to be heard in 2029 or 2030, and there are concerns that some complainants and witnesses are abandoning their cases as a result.

 

The concept of a right to trial by jury in English law was established by the Magna Carta of 1215. However, more than 90% of criminal cases are already handled by Magistrates’ Courts, where a single magistrate or panel of judges adjudicates.

 

Under the new reforms, Lammy said magistrates’ powers will be extended so they can hand down sentences of up to 18 months, meaning fewer cases will need to go to the Crown Courts.

 

“We’re all proud of our justice system rooted in the Magna Carta. But we must never forget that it implores us not to deny or delay justice,” Lammy said.

 

The Bar Council, which represents trial lawyers, said replacing juries with a magistrate or judge sitting alone was not the answer.

 

“We have continuously opposed proposals to curtail jury trials because there is no evidence that their removal would reduce the backlog, nor has it been set out how an alternative system would be resourced,” said Bar Council chair Barbara Mills.

 

“We urge the government to reconsider pursuing radical changes under the mistaken belief that radical equals effective.”

 

https://lite.cnn.com/2025/12/02/uk/uk-courts-juries-restricted-intl

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 8:45 p.m. No.23934112   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4113 >>4127 >>4242 >>4253

UMC pastor shocks his congregation by announcing during the sermon that he's transgender and will be 'transitioning' to a woman.

 

"My parents texted me this morning and they asked for me to TELL YOU all that they DO NOT support me."

 

https://x.com/Protestia/status/1995671546946629768

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 8:47 p.m. No.23934115   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4157 >>4242 >>4253

Apartment rents drop further, with vacancies at record high

-The national median rent for apartments fell 1% in November from October, and now stands at $1,367, according to Apartment List.

-The national multifamily vacancy rate was 7.2% in November, a record high.

-The historic surge in multifamily construction over the past few years is now pulling back, but a good supply of new units is still coming online at a time of much weaker demand.

 

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/12/02/apartment-rents-vacancies-november.html

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 8:58 p.m. No.23934135   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4212 >>4218 >>4242 >>4253

Appeals court upholds ruling that disqualified Alina Habba from serving as New Jersey's top prosecutor

 

In a loss for the Trump administration, an appeals court Monday upheld a lower court ruling disqualifying Alina Habba from her position as acting U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey.

 

In a 32-page ruling, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that Habba's appointment violates the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, or FVRA.

 

Judge Michael Fisher wrote for the three-judge panel, "It is apparent that the current administration has been frustrated by some of the legal and political barriers to getting its appointees in place," saying the steps it took to install Habba run afoul of the law.

 

The decision stems from motions from three criminal defendants who argued that President Donald Trump’s appointment of Habba, who had been overseeing their case, was unlawful and that she should be disqualified and the cases against them dismissed.

 

A lower court judge declined to dismiss their cases but agreed Habba should be disqualified — and the appeals court agreed.

 

Attorneys who challenged Habba's appointment praised the ruling in a joint statement.

 

The decision affirms that “Habba is unlawfully and invalidly serving as the chief federal law enforcement officer in New Jersey, marking the first time an appellate court has ruled that President Trump cannot usurp longstanding statutory and constitutional processes to insert whomever he wants in these positions,” said the trio, Abbe Lowell, Gerry Krovatin and Norm Eisen.

 

The White House referred a request for comment to the Justice Department, which declined to comment. The New Jersey U.S. attorney's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

 

Habba is a former personal lawyer to Trump.

 

A federal judge ruled in August that Habba’s appointment was “unlawful,” though the order was on hold as the legal proceedings continued in an appeals court.

 

In the summer ruling, U.S. District Judge Matthew W. Brann took issue with Trump's naming Habba in March as interim U.S. attorney, a position that is time-limited to 120 days. He said in his ruling that while Trump nominated her in June to be the permanent attorney, the Senate did not take up her nomination.

 

Weeks after Trump nominated her to the permanent position, judges for U.S. District Court of New Jersey appointed her deputy to be the new U.S. attorney. In response, Attorney General Pam Bondi fired the deputy, appointed Habba as “Special Attorney to the Attorney General” with all the powers of the U.S. attorney, and then appointed her to the deputy position, which allowed her to become the acting U.S. attorney again.

 

The appeals court found that Bondi cannot delegate all the power of the office to Habba with the special attorney appointment.

 

"This delegation theory would create a means for the Department of Justice to circumvent the FVRA’s exclusivity provision, effectively permitting anyone to fill the U.S. Attorney role indefinitely. This should raise a red flag," the ruling said.

 

The appeals court ruled just days after a federal judge dismissed criminal indictments against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James after having found that acting U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan, who was prosecuting the cases, was unlawfully appointed.

 

U.S. District Judge Cameron Currie said last month that Halligan, another former Trump lawyer with no prosecutorial experience, “had no lawful authority to present the indictment.”

 

The administration has said it will appeal that ruling, as well.

 

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/justice-department/appeals-court-upholds-ruling-disqualified-alina-habba-serving-new-jers-rcna246751

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 9:01 p.m. No.23934141   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4204 >>4242 >>4253

Japan's same-sex marriage ban is constitutional, says Tokyo court

 

A Japanese court has ruled the country's ban on same-sex marriage as constitutional - bucking a trend set by courts around the country that had raised hopes for marriage equality in Japan.

 

The ruling was met with disappointment from plaintiffs and their legal team who had gathered outside the Tokyo courthouse.

 

Japan is the only G7 country that does not fully recognise same-sex couples or offer them clear legal protection. But it's not an outlier in Asia, where only Taiwan, Thailand and Nepal offer same-sex marriages.

 

Ayumi Higashi, the judge who delivered the verdict, said laws on same-sex marriage should first be deliberated in parliament, the Mainichi reported.

 

Outside the Tokyo courthouse on Friday, the plaintiffs of the lawsuit and their legal team held up signs that read "unjust verdict", local media reported.

 

Shino Kawachi, one of the plaintiffs, told local media that the ruling was "difficult to comprehend".

 

"What is justice? Was the court even watching us? Were they considering the next generation?" she told local media.

 

Her partner, Hiromi Hatogai, said she was "extremely outraged" and wondered if the judiciary was "on our side". But, she added, they would "keep fighting".

 

Amnesty International described the ruling as a "damaging step backwards on same-sex marriage".

 

"The Japanese government needs to be proactive in moving towards the legalisation of same-sex marriage so that couples can fully enjoy the same marriage rights as their heterosexual counterparts," the rights group's East Asia researcher Boram Jang said in a statement.

 

The verdict on Friday is the last among six high court rulings on same-sex marriage lawsuits filed between 2019 and 2021, in courts across the country from Sapporo to Osaka to Fukuoka.

 

Among them, five found the ban unconstitutional - though they rejected the plaintiffs' compensation claims.

 

Friday's ruling by the Tokyo high court marks an exception to this series of verdicts, which had been adding weight to the push for same-sex marriage to be legalised in Japan.

 

The cases will next be taken to the Supreme Court.

 

https://www.aol.com/articles/japans-same-sex-marriage-ban-075748137.html

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 9:04 p.m. No.23934149   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Michigan’s border with Indiana is fuzzy: It ‘isn’t a problem until it is’

-Michigan-Indiana border hasn’t been officially surveyed since the early 1800s, and most official markers have been lost to time.

A commission created to fix the issue has stalled amid difficulties finding surveyors to tackle the full 110-mile project.

State Sen. Jonathan Lindsey, R-Coldwater, hopes his Senate-passed bill will give commissioners the time and tools needed to finish the job.

 

https://bridgemi.com/michigan-government/michigans-border-with-indiana-is-fuzzy-it-isnt-a-problem-until-it-is/

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 9:04 p.m. No.23934151   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4242 >>4253

Michigan’s border with Indiana is fuzzy: It ‘isn’t a problem until it is’

-Michigan-Indiana border hasn’t been officially surveyed since the early 1800s, and most official markers have been lost to time.

-A commission created to fix the issue has stalled amid difficulties finding surveyors to tackle the full 110-mile project.

-State Sen. Jonathan Lindsey, R-Coldwater, hopes his Senate-passed bill will give commissioners the time and tools needed to finish the job.

 

https://bridgemi.com/michigan-government/michigans-border-with-indiana-is-fuzzy-it-isnt-a-problem-until-it-is/

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 9:10 p.m. No.23934163   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4242 >>4253

Teenager who screamed Allahu Akbar 'after stabbing three people' in Madrid is shot by police

 

Police tasered and shot a suspected jihadist teenager who shouted Allahu Akbar at them after allegedly stabbing three people in a Madrid street attack and then holing up in his flat.

 

The 18-year-old, a Spaniard of Moroccan origin, is also said to have tried to attack officers and recite verses from the Koran as they attempted to overpower him.

 

The siege in the Madrid district of Puente de Vallecas ended with the teenager being shot and seriously injured by police after their Taser guns failed to stop him.

 

He was taken to the Spanish capital's Gregorio Maranon Hospital where he was believed to remain under police guard this morning.

 

The drama leading up to the shooting began to unfold around 2pm on Saturday in a street called Martin Alvarez Street in Puente de Vallecas when police received reports a man 'with Arab features' had stabbed three people including an elderly lady and a 40-year-old male who had suffered a two-inch knife wound to his chest.

 

A couple of hours later the suspect's brother rang police to say he was holed up inside his home with a large knife and was acting very aggressively.

 

Cops are said to have categorised it as an 'Islamist terrorist incident' and sent officers from an elite unit specialising in demonstration and anti-terrorist operations to surround the property.

 

The unnamed 18-year-old was tasered twice when officers managed to access the flat around 4.30pm but ended up being shot four times after going at police with a knife.

 

One bullet perforated his lung and another hit him in the kidney.

 

Police union JUPOL said afterwards: 'We want to show all our support to the companions who acted to neutralise a radicalised young man who had attacked three other people.

 

'It was an absolutely proportionate response.'

 

An investigation into the incident was ongoing today.

 

Although it is reportedly being probed as an Islamist terrorist incident, the suspect was also described as being under the influence of drugs.

 

The stab victims received medical attention but none of their injuries have been described as life-threatening.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15320739/Teenager-screamed-Allahu-Akbar-stabbing-three-people-Madrid-shot-police.html

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 9:14 p.m. No.23934172   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4175 >>4184 >>4186 >>4206 >>4242 >>4253

Scientists found tryptophan, the ‘sleepy’ amino acid, in an asteroid

 

Tryptophan, the essential amino acid behind the Thanksgiving myth that eating turkey can make you sleepy, has been found to exist on Bennu, a small asteroid that swings by our planet about every six years.

 

The discovery stems from an unprecedented sample collected by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission, which landed a spacecraft on the asteroid in 2020, captured 4.3 ounces (121.6 grams) of rocks and dust, and safely returned the cache to Earth in 2023. NASA has since distributed a small portion of that sample to researchers around the world to be analyzed.

 

Studying Bennu is important because its composition reflects that of the early solar system, giving scientists a glimpse into the beginnings of life. Previous research on Bennu samples had already found 14 of the 20 amino acids all living organisms on Earth stem from, as well as all five biological nucleobases — the components that make up the genetic code in DNA and RNA.

 

Researchers also previously detected amino acids in samples from another asteroid, Ryugu, which the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency collected in 2019, as well as in various meteorites that have fallen to Earth. This growing body of evidence suggests that asteroids might have delivered essential life ingredients to our planet early on, according to experts.

 

Now, a new analysis of Bennu samples has confidently, although not yet conclusively, identified tryptophan, increasing the tally of protein-building amino acids in the asteroid to 15 out of 20.

 

“Finding tryptophan in the Bennu asteroid is a big deal, because tryptophan is one of the more complex amino acids, and until now it had never been seen in any meteorite or space sample,” said José Aponte, an astrochemist in the Astrobiology Analytical Laboratory at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. He coauthored a study on the findings that published Monday in the journal PNAS.

 

The presence of tryptophan in an asteroid supports the idea that the recipe for life might not have begun only on Earth, Aponte added in an email: “Seeing it form naturally in space tells us that these ingredients were already being made out in the early Solar System. That would have made it easier for life to get started.”

 

Bennu, with a name that name refers to an ancient Egyptian deity associated with the sun, creation and rebirth, stretches about one-third of a mile wide. The space rock likely represents a chunk that broke off of a much larger asteroid sometime between 2 billion and 700 million years ago. It probably formed in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, and its chemical composition reflects the beginnings of the solar system, dating back about 4.5 billion years, according to NASA.

 

The asteroid has been orbiting close to Earth for about 1.75 million years. Data has shown it could hit our planet in the year 2182, potentially leading to a “global winter.” Scientists currently estimate the odds of impact to be 1 in 2,700, or 0.037% chance.

 

Originally, the material that Bennu is made up of came from supernovas, explosions of old stars that occurred well before the formation of the solar system. The extreme heat of the explosions acted as a forge, cooking up the elements found in the asteroid, which then endured more heat from the impact that formed Bennu, as well as radiation from the sun, further altering the elements within. Bennu has also been found to contain ammonia, a chemical that can help form molecules like amino acids, as well as different types of minerals, presenting many of the necessary ingredients for creating the building blocks of life — but not life itself.

 

“They’re like jigsaw pieces that are not yet assembled,” said Angel Mojarro, a postdoctoral researcher and organic geochemist in the Astrobiology Analytical Laboratory at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and first author of the new study. “What this is telling us is that many, many of the building blocks of life can be produced naturally within asteroids or comets, and finding tryptophan expands the alphabet of amino acids that are produced in space and could have been delivered to the Earth.”

 

A total of 33 amino acids had previously been found on Bennu, but only 14 of them are used by living organisms on Earth to build proteins. Tryptophan would join the latter group; it also belongs to a category of amino acids scientists call essential, because the human body can’t produce them and they must be acquired through diet.

 

Mojarro added that more tests are required to corroborate the presence of tryptophan in the Bennu sample analyzed for the study, which weighed just 50 milligrams. However, given the pristine condition of the Bennu samples, it’s likely that the finding isn’t a result of terrestrial contamination, according to George Cody, a staff scientist at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, DC. Cody was not involved in the study but has worked on Bennu samples.

 

“I believe these molecules are legitimately derived from the Bennu asteroid,” Cody wrote in an email.

 

By collecting the sample from the asteroid itself, researchers didn’t have to deal with the damage of atmospheric entry, which alters the chemistry of asteroids that land on Earth, making Bennu a much more reliable “time capsule” of the early solar system’s composition.

 

“Because OSIRIS-REx returned these samples pristine, we’re finally seeing the fragile salts, minerals, and organics that meteorites lose on entry,” said Dante Lauretta, a professor of planetary science and cosmochemistry at the University of Arizona, Tucson, who is also a coauthor of the new study.

 

Bennu’s parent body was a rich geologic world with multiple liquid systems operating in different places and at different times, each driving its own chemistry,” Lauretta added. “Bennu preserves a collection of distinct chemical systems and together they show that small bodies were dynamic, organic-rich systems long before life emerged on Earth.”

 

This paper adds to scientists’ understanding of which molecules necessary to life can be found in extraterrestrial materials, Cody said. If the natural chemistry that occurred at the dawn of our solar system produces the same molecules that life currently uses, he added, then there must be a connection between them.

 

The late Harold Morowitz, a pioneer of studies about the origins of life, believed that the molecules that constitute the core of living organisms might be molecular “fossils” from the solar system’s beginnings, and identifying tryptophan and other protein-building amino acids in Bennu samples adds weight to that idea, Cody explained.

 

Finding tryptophan in Bennu further expands the remarkable diversity of compounds we now know can come from space, said Kate Freeman, Evan Pugh University Professor at Penn State University, in an email. “Asteroids were the early Earth’s grocery delivery service, having provided a wealth of molecules to our prebiotic world,” added Freeman, who was not involved with the study.

 

The new research also highlights how important sample return missions are, according to Sara Russell, a professor of planetary sciences and leader of the Planetary Materials Group at the Natural History Museum in London, who did not participate in the work. Although scientists have thousands of rocks from space available in labs in the form of meteorites, they also need uncontaminated, pristine material brought to Earth by space missions in order to get the full picture, she said.

 

“The discovery of tryptophan in particular is surprising,” Russell added, “as we don’t see this in meteorites, perhaps because it does not survive the fall through the Earth’s atmosphere and impact on Earth.”

 

https://lite.cnn.com/2025/11/27/science/tryptophan-asteroid-bennu-nasa-sample

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 9:18 p.m. No.23934178   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4188 >>4242 >>4253

Apple iPhone shipments to beat Samsung for the first time in 14 years

-Apple will ship around 243 million iPhone units this year versus 235 million shipments from Samsung, Counterpoint Research said.

-It will be the first time in 14 years that Apple will have shipped more smartphones than Samsung.

-Apple’s success is being driven by its iPhone 17 series launched in September.

 

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/11/26/apple-iphone-shipments-to-beat-samsung-for-the-first-time-in-14-years.html

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 9:23 p.m. No.23934193   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4209 >>4242 >>4253

How Japan’s New Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi Torpedoed Ties With China

 

The fallout from new Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s comments on Taiwan continues to send shockwaves. The row erupted because Takaichi overturned Japan’s carefully cultivated posture of strategic ambiguity on Taiwan and crossed Beijing’s red line on what it contends is a renegade province it will reunite with the mainland. She is guilty of making explicit what has been implicit and adopting an expansive interpretation of 2015 security legislation allowing the overseas dispatch of Japan’s Self-Defense Forces even when Japan itself is not attacked.

 

Takaichi’s remarks were preceded by a meeting with the Taiwanese representative on the sidelines of the APEC Summit in South Korea. This prompted a stern rebuke from Beijing, making Takaichi’s Taiwan comments especially provocative.

 

Yet Takaichi has a history of links to Taiwan, including a visit in April before she became Prime Minister, where she met Taiwanese President William Lai and other top politicians. During her visit she also called for establishing a “quasi-security alliance” among like-minded democracies in the Indo-Pacific. She has packed her ruling Liberal Democratic Party executive leadership posts with pro-Taiwan colleagues. Still, her comments have left Japan’s diplomats in damage control mode and the business community wondering if she fully grasps the responsibility of leadership.

 

At the same time, the barrage of vitriol unleashed by China castigating Takaichi as a warmongering militarist includes a reprehensible threat by the Chinese consul-general in Osaka about beheading Takaichi. This recrudescence of wolf warrior diplomacy is counterproductive and enables Japan to depict China as the bullying hegemon.

 

The latest Japan-China spat is reminiscent of the late Shinzo Abe’s speech at Davos in 2014 about the risk of sleepwalking to war, remarks that were then widely interpreted as saber-rattling toward China. Those remarks came on the heels of Chinese and Japanese diplomats waging an op-ed war—accusing each other of being the regional Lord Voldemort of Harry Potter fame.

 

Beyond shrill denunciations, this time around China has tightened the economic vise, discouraging travel to Japan and reimposing a ban on seafood imports. With the Japanese economy in the doldrums and vulnerable, Beijing could do much more to penalize Japan but thus far it has been relatively restrained because China also needs Japanese investment, technology, and markets as it navigates its own economic crisis.

 

Beijing wants Takaichi to retract her remarks but that is a non-starter; she went as far as she could the next day in unequivocally stating she would in future refrain from commenting on hypothetical security contingencies. Beijing is infuriated and wants to underscore just how unacceptable her comments are, and is therefore unlikely to provide an off-ramp anytime soon. A prolonged standoff will harm both economies but, unlike Takaichi, Xi Jinping doesn’t need to worry about elections.

 

Although the Japan-China spat over Taiwan is a useful distraction from China’s economic woes, given that Japan-bashing plays well in the theater of nationalism, there are risks. Beijing is overplaying its hand and stoking an Arc of Anxiety stretching from New Delhi, Canberra, and Jakarta to Manila, Bangkok, Hanoi, and Seoul. Japan’s regional partners have kept their heads down, but can’t help being unnerved by China’s bellicose behavior and what it may portend.

 

So why did Takaichi torpedo bilateral relations so early in her premiership? Some pundits speculate that her sleeping just two to four hours a night might have been a factor, but it seems unlikely that such crucial comments were simply a gaffe. A blustering China is useful to rally domestic support for her stated goal of sharply increasing defense spending. Moreover, standing up to China is red meat for her conservative base and she may have anticipated earning U.S. President Donald Trump’s respect. She may have also expected China to quickly get over it, and that the costs of crossing the red line would be limited.

 

Another factor to consider is that the Japanese government is alarmed by the prospect of a G-2 scenario in which Trump and Xi shake hands over Japan’s head. The fear is that an arrangement without consulting Japan could lead to its interests in a free and open Indo-Pacific being undermined, all while highlighting Tokyo’s declining global influence. The recent U.S.-China détente is troubling enough for Japan, but Trump ramped up these apprehensions by chatting with Xi and announcing an exchange of visits in 2026. The Trump Administration’s pro-Russian Ukraine peace plan released last week has only upped anxieties among U.S. allies. His uncharacteristic public silence on the escalating Sino-Japanese tension and a reported phone call this week, in which he told Takaichi to dial down the dispute, was hardly reassuring either.

 

Lest we forget, the fate of 23 million Taiwanese hangs in the balance. Hardly any of them support reunification with mainland China because they enjoy democratic freedoms and know that those would be quashed under authoritarian rule. But in the age of Trump—and whatever one makes of the Japan-China spat—it is clear shared values are taking the backseat.

 

https://time.com/7337322/japan-china-takaichi-spat-taiwan/

Anonymous ID: ddbaef Dec. 2, 2025, 9:57 p.m. No.23934248   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4253

Turkish owner of oil tanker damaged near Senegal to cease all Russian operations

 

LONDON, Dec 2 (Reuters) - Besiktas Shipping, the Turkish owner of an oil tanker that was damaged near Senegal's coast last week after being hit by four external explosions, said on Tuesday that it was ceasing all shipping operations involving Russian interests.

The vessel, Mersin, was at anchor near Dakar when the four blasts occurred on November 27, resulting in seawater entering the engine room. The cause of the explosions was not clear.

 

In a statement, Besiktas Shipping said it was ceasing all operations with Russia immediately and that it would no longer take any Russia-related voyages.

"Throughout our operations, we have strictly adhered to all international sanctions regimes, maintaining full compliance with the G7/EU Price Cap mechanism and all relevant trade restrictions," it said.

"However, the security situation in the region has escalated considerably. After a thorough assessment, we have concluded that the risks posed to our vessels and crew have become untenable," it added.

"As the safety of our personnel and assets is our highest priority, we are halting all such operations."

The blasts came a day before Ukrainian naval drones hit two sanctioned tankers in the Black Sea, near Turkey's coast, as they headed to a Russian port to load oil, a Ukrainian official said on Saturday.

Another Russian-flagged tanker loaded with sunflower oil reported a drone attack off the Turkish coast on Tuesday.

Ukraine denied any involvement in the latest attack, but a Turkish official said "necessary messages" were conveyed to all relevant parties, including Ukrainian authorities.

Istanbul-based Besiktas Shipping is among the biggest tanker owners in Turkey with 29 tankers in its fleet, according to its website.

 

https://www.reuters.com/world/owner-oil-tanker-damaged-near-senegal-says-it-is-ceasing-all-russian-operations-2025-12-02/