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orange site: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33118475

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74
Biden: "Let me start off with two words; Made in America."

I'm ron burgundy

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A passenger on board a Lufthansa flight from Thailand to Germany died Thursday, after his fellow travelers watched in horror as blood gushed out of his mouth and nose.

The unidentified 63-year-old German man was seen boarding the Airbus A380 in Bangkok shortly before midnight visibly sick, with "cold sweats" and "breathing much too quickly," Karin Missfelder recounted to SwissGerman outlet Blick.

At first, she said, his wife claimed they had to rush to catch the flight --- which is why he wasn't feeling well.

But after watching the man for a few moments, Missfelder --- who is a nursing specialist at University Hospital in Zurich --- said she informed a flight attendant that he needed to be examined by a doctor.

A young Polish man answered the call, but he reportedly only asked the man how he was feeling, felt his pulse and said he was OK.

"They gave him a little chamomile tea, but he already spit blood into the bag that his wife held out to him," said Missfelder's husband, Martin.

Soon, blood started spilling out of his mouth and nose.

"It was absolute horror, everyone was screaming," Martin said.

He claimed that the man lost liters of blood, some of which splattered the walls of the plane.

For about half an hour afterward, flight attendants tried to perform CPR — even as the nurse said she knew it was hopeless.

When he finally went still and the captain announced the man's death, “it was dead quiet on board,” she said.

Staff then carried the man's body into the galley of the plane, as it turned and headed back to Thailand.

“Although immediate and comprehensive first aid measures were taken by the crew and a doctor on board, the passenger died during the flight,” a Lufthansa spokesperson confirmed in a statement.

“Our thoughts are with the relatives of the deceased passenger. We also regret the inconvenience caused to the passengers of this flight,” the spokesperson said.

Flight data show it left Bangkok at 11:50 p.m. Thursday and landed back in Thailand at 8:28 a.m. Friday.

There, the passengers said they had to wait two hours without any guidance from Lufthansa before they were finally booked on another flight to Germany, with a stopover in Hong Kong.

But for Missfelder, the worst part was that the man's wife now had to go through customs alone.

She said she regrets that she did not try to help.

“I should have intervened, but I saw that a doctor was looking after him, so I didn't want to get involved,” she said, noting that “the man looked so bad, I don't understand why the captain took off.”

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This :marseychonker: really called the cops over a phone call from dailymail :marseyemojirofl:

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A professor at the University of Idaho has filed a defamation lawsuit last week against the internet personality Ashley Guillard, who alleged to have solved the prominent murder cases and whose TikTok videos have repeatedly alleged that the school's history department chair was involved in the fatal stabbings of four students last month.

Rebecca Scofield is an author and assistant professor of history at the university focusing on gender, sexuality and the American West, among other topics, according to her website. Last week, she filed the federal complaint in Idaho's district court seeking a jury trial along with reimbursement for all applicable legal fees, while accusing Guillard of spreading false narratives about Scofield's connection to the deceased college students and the unsolved quadruple murder.

Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Madison Mogen, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20, and Ethan Chapin, 20, were killed on the second and third floors of the women's rental home near campus in Moscow, Idaho, during the early hours of Nov. 13, as two surviving roommates apparently slept downstairs, officers at the Moscow Police Department have said. Although the local police force, in coordination with state and federal law enforcement agencies, have identified and shared some details about the events directly preceding the gruesome crime, none of their publicized leads have proven substantive so far.

Without an identified suspect or an arrest made, the ongoing national spotlight on the mysterious homicide case has given rise to widespread speculation, theories and rumors about how and why the murders happened, as well as who might be responsible. Most of the conjecture has emerged and spiraled on social media — something that, Scofield alleges, Guillard used for her own advantage to the detriment of the professor and her reputation.

"Defendant Ashley Guillard—a purported internet sleuth—decided to use the community's pain for her online self-promotion," the lawsuit states, noting that Guillard, while operating the relatively popular account @ashleyisinthebookoflife, "posted many videos on TikTok falsely stating that Plaintiff Rebecca Scofield (a professor at the University) participated in the murders because she was romantically involved with one of the victims."

Wendy Olson, one of the attorneys representing Scofield, called Guillard's claims about her client "false, plain and simple," in a statement to CBS News on Tuesday.

"What's even worse is that these untrue statements create safety issues for the Professor and her family," the statement continued. "They also further compound the trauma that the families of the victims are experiencing and undermine law enforcement efforts to find the people responsible in order to provide answers to the families and the public. Professor Scofield twice sent cease and desist letters to Ms. Guillard, but Ms. Guillard has continued to make false statements, knowing they are false. Thus, this lawsuit became necessary to protect Professor Scofield's safety and her reputation."

A tarot card reader focusing on unsolved "mysteries," per her TikTok description, Guillard has in the past posted videos about other high-profile murder cases, including the killing of Migos rapper Takeoff less than two weeks before the killings in Idaho. She has recorded and posted more than 40 statements that Scofield says are false linking her to the students' murders in an extensive series of TikTok videos shared over the last four weeks, according to the lawsuit. The lawsuit also alleges that Guillard continued to post defamatory comments about Scofield online after receiving two cease and desist letters from the professor.

Guillard's videos about the Idaho murders typically garner tens of thousands of views from other social media users on the platform, and they have implicated Jack DuCoeur, the ex-boyfriend of Goncalves, who police say has been cleared as a potential suspect, in addition to Scofield.

"Guillard's statements are false," the lawsuit continues. "Professor Scofield did not participate in the murders, and she had never met any of the victims, let alone entered a romantic relationship with them. Guillard's videos have been viewed millions of times, amplifying Guillard's online persona at the expense of Professor Scofield's reputation."

Scofield and her husband were out of town when the murders took place in Moscow, according to the complaint, which notes that the couple was visiting friends in Portland, Oregon, that weekend. They spent the night of Nov. 12 in a hotel there, and drove for roughly five hours from Portland back to Moscow the next day, "arriving after law enforcement officers had discovered the murders" following a police call from the surviving roommates and other friends that afternoon, the lawsuit says.

The complaint also addresses Guillard's claims involving DuCoeur, who, she says in multiple videos, partnered with Scofield to plan or carry out the killings. Scofield never taught Goncalves, Mogen, Kernodle, Chapin or Ducoeur in classes since joining the staff at the University of Idaho in 2016, nor had she met any of the students in another capacity, according to the lawsuit. It goes on to reference specific remarks in Guillard's videos about Scofield at one time allegedly having a romantic relationship with one of the students who was killed, and denies each one, calling them categorically false.

"Guillard's false TikToks have damaged Professor Scofield's reputation," the lawsuit states. "They have caused her significant emotional distress. She fears for her life and for the lives of her family members. She has incurred costs, including costs to install a security system and security cameras at her residence. She fears that Guillard's false statements may motivate someone to cause harm to her or her family members."

Guillard responded to the lawsuit in a TikTok video posted on Friday, which has been viewed nearly 150,000 times since then.

"I am actually gleaming with excitement," she said. "I'm going to immediately start planning because I cannot wait to present my ideas in court regarding Rebecca Scofield and her role in the murder of the four University of Idaho students."

CBS News contacted TikTok for additional comments but did not receive an immediate reply.

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https://news.yahoo.com/italys-mount-etna-volcano-spews-203848199.html

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/underwater-volcanic-eruption-new-island-japan

https://www.msn.com/en-us/video/weather/popocatepetl-volcano-erupts-triggering-yellow-phase-3-warning-in-mexico/vi-AA1jqlas

https://www.msn.com/en-ae/news/featured/volcanoes-erupt-from-iceland-to-japan-is-the-world-ending/ar-AA1jUgOO

https://media.giphy.com/media/WFvEPuHSulO48/giphy.webp

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https://media.giphy.com/media/SaqJAEITke08x8JeNE/giphy.webp

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:marseysnoo:

https://old.reddit.com/r/worldnews/comments/xwq1h3/at_least_10_killed_including_mayor_in_mass/?sort=controversial

https://old.reddit.com/r/mexico/comments/xwqor5/esto_no_lo_he_visto_en_las_noticias_locales/?sort=controversial

:marseybluecheck:

https://twitter.com/BNONews/status/1577803487001432065#m


Mexican mayor among 20 dead in mass shooting

Gunmen linked to organized crime have opened fire at city hall and a nearby home in San Miguel Totolapan in southwest Mexico, killing at least 20 people and injuring several others, local officials say.

Advertisment Police then responded to a nearby house, where many people were found dead from apparent gunshot wounds.

Another official confirmed that, in total, at least 20 people were killed.

The PRD political party, to which Conrado Mendoza belonged, confirmed the mayor’s death in a statement shortly after the attack.

The massacre is the third attack which shocked Mexico in recent weeks.

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Reported by:

:marseygossip::!marseygossipsmug:

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https://media.giphy.com/media/iNeIBZnPXOlb2/giphy.webp

This b-word is fricking just lucky she survived.

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:marseysnoo:

https://old.reddit.com/r/politics/comments/xog4ef/jan_6_committee_members_say_they_believe_trump/?sort=controversial

Generated from TLDR This:

committee members Schiff and Cheney spoke about the Capitol riot investigation on Sunday.

Two of the most senior members of the House Jan. 6 committee said they believe Donald Trump committed wrongdoing in relation to the riot, but said that the committee will act unanimously when it decides whether or not to refer the former president for prosecution.

Rep. Adam Schiff, a Democratic member of the committee; and Rep. Liz Cheney, a Republican, discussed the investigation in separate interviews over the weekend.

"I do agree there have been several laws broken and it is, I think, apparent that there is evidence that Donald Trump was involved in breaking several of those laws," Schiff continued.

"I think we will be unanimous," she said. "

When the committee concludes its investigation, which was launched more than a year ago, it will decide whether or not to refer Trump for prosecution by the Justice Department.

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38
Sneed pleads not guilty to charges of Aztec ritual sacrifice, claims "cultural insensitivity"
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https://i.rdrama.net/images/16965224705836158.webp

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12589937/Joe-Bidens-dog-Commander-bites-staffer-Dale-Haney.html

https://i.rdrama.net/images/16965224707401292.webp

:#marseydarkbrandon:

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:marseygroomer2: and :marseychonker2: mald

https://old.reddit.com/r/news/comments/17kranb/mcdonalds_chipotle_to_raise_menu_prices_in?sort=controversial

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Some of the comments are interesting but it's actually surprisingly tame for a Zerohedge comments section:

If you are stupid enough to have a fakebook account, you deserve to have your personal data stolen.

:#marseyagreefast:

Not mine, I never DM on FB. In fact, I'm only on FB for Marketplace. You can nail some pretty good deals on there. I just drove 6 hours yesterday to Treasure Coast to pick up my new office chair. A Skully & Skully Williams Executive, American made full grain leather chair for $460. Chair is in mint condition, like it's hardly been sat in. It retails for $4775.

:#platyhappymerchant:

based deal maxer.

Never signed up to Facebook. I always found it funny that up 2006 it was the unwritten rule on the Internet that you NEVER use identification markers that could lead back to YOU IRL.

Then in 2006 somebody just said fu*k that - "let's share everything"!

Nahhhhh!

:#marseyboomer:

remember when schools taught kids not to share personal info online cause strangers wanted to diddle you?

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zombiecel bros lost a real one today

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