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Trump: large-scale tariffs coming up for Canada
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"We're going to end up with a very good relationship with Canada and a lot of the other countries... Many of them actually apologized... Things are going to end up well between Canada and the US," Trump added.
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π¬π§π€¬ Britain cracks down on βninja swordsβ while knives keep taking lives
The UKβs ban on the possession of βninja swords,β introduced after the last yearβs ban on machetes and βzombieβ knives, comes as the country struggles with rampant knife crime.
In the year ending June 2024, over 50,000 knife-related offenses were reported in England and Wales (excluding Greater Manchester), a sharp increase from the roughly 36,000 crimes recorded in 2011.
The government tries tackling this crisis via a mix of bans on various sharp implements and awareness-raising programs such as the "Be Safe Project" aimed at educating students about the implications of knife crime.
Meanwhile, critics argue that instead of focusing on weapons, the government should go after perpetrators, with some arguing that the ongoing influx of illegal migrants in the UK may be a part of the problem.
The ban, largely inspired by the tragic death of 16-year-old Ronan Kanda, who was killed with a "ninja sword" in 2022, raises the question: why fight the root causes of knife crime when banning ninja swords seems like a quicker fix?
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The UKβs ban on the possession of βninja swords,β introduced after the last yearβs ban on machetes and βzombieβ knives, comes as the country struggles with rampant knife crime.
In the year ending June 2024, over 50,000 knife-related offenses were reported in England and Wales (excluding Greater Manchester), a sharp increase from the roughly 36,000 crimes recorded in 2011.
The government tries tackling this crisis via a mix of bans on various sharp implements and awareness-raising programs such as the "Be Safe Project" aimed at educating students about the implications of knife crime.
Meanwhile, critics argue that instead of focusing on weapons, the government should go after perpetrators, with some arguing that the ongoing influx of illegal migrants in the UK may be a part of the problem.
The ban, largely inspired by the tragic death of 16-year-old Ronan Kanda, who was killed with a "ninja sword" in 2022, raises the question: why fight the root causes of knife crime when banning ninja swords seems like a quicker fix?
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π¨ US conducts 30 airstrikes in Yemen
CENTCOM reports another airstrike on Houthi positions in northern Yemen. Social media footage shows the moment of the strike.
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CENTCOM reports another airstrike on Houthi positions in northern Yemen. Social media footage shows the moment of the strike.
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The billionaire's artificial intelligence company xAI has acquired social media company X for $33 billion. The combined company is now valued at $80 billion, Musk wrote on X.
"This combination will unlock immense potential by blending xAIβs advanced AI capability and expertise with Xβs massive reach," he added.
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ππ€ Meet China's robotic library
Opened in December 2023, the 72,000-square-foot hub holds 5 million books and 2,500 seats. Its 3-story underground automated sorting system has processed 2.7 million requests - but still requires a human to push buttons.
πΉ Social media footage
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Opened in December 2023, the 72,000-square-foot hub holds 5 million books and 2,500 seats. Its 3-story underground automated sorting system has processed 2.7 million requests - but still requires a human to push buttons.
πΉ Social media footage
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π New US-Ukraine deal: Pay back $120 bln, keep the change A new agreement between Ukraine and the US regarding mineral resources requires Kiev to REPAY ALL ASSISTANCE RECEIVED, which could exceed $120 billion, a Ukrainian newspaper has reported. This includesβ¦
"A quick approval is unlikely," the paper judges based on the reaction of the Ukrainian side, although Scott Bessent hopes to sign the deal next week.
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π¬π± 'We must ensure the US leads in the Arctic' β JD Vance's message in Greenland
The US vice president delivered a speech during his visit to the Pituffik military base in northern Greenland. Here are the main points:
πΆ Denmark has failed to protect the island, Vance says. "This place is less safe than it was 30-40 years ago," he claimed.
πΆ Greenland's infrastructure, security architecture and manpower are "underinvested" and "that has to change," Vance said.
πΆ "The people of Greenland will have self-determination. We hope they choose to partner with the United States because we're the only nation on earth that respects their sovereignty," he added.
πΆ Meanwhile, in the United States, Donald Trump added his voice to the Greenland issue:
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The US vice president delivered a speech during his visit to the Pituffik military base in northern Greenland. Here are the main points:
"We need Greenland for international security. We have to have Greenland."
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ππ₯ Wrong-way truck chaos in Long Beach β car chase footage
Stolen flatbed driver hit several cars in a 20-minute chase in LA, reaching 160+ km/h and finally crashing in front of a paint store. Miraculously, no injuries were reported except for the damaged cars. Suspect arrested after fleeing.
πΉ Video from social media
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Stolen flatbed driver hit several cars in a 20-minute chase in LA, reaching 160+ km/h and finally crashing in front of a paint store. Miraculously, no injuries were reported except for the damaged cars. Suspect arrested after fleeing.
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Vance comments his clashes with the team in the leaked chat
The screenshot of the Signal chat published by the Atlantic shows Vance expressing concern about the planned US strikes, calling them a "mistake".
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"It's important that we all have an honest conversation amongst ourselves and with the President about what we think is in the best interest of the national security of the US," Vice President said.
The screenshot of the Signal chat published by the Atlantic shows Vance expressing concern about the planned US strikes, calling them a "mistake".
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