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Showing posts from September, 2021

FOX NEWS: Football buttercream sugar cookies for game day dessert These football-shaped cookie treat are perfect for a touchdown celebration.

Football buttercream sugar cookies for game day dessert These football-shaped cookie treat are perfect for a touchdown celebration. via FOX NEWS https://ift.tt/2WqyuD1

FOX NEWS: Former drug addict's astounding transformation to college graduate: 'Consider starting today' Ginny Burton posted two photos that showed how far she has come in her addiction recovery.

Former drug addict's astounding transformation to college graduate: 'Consider starting today' Ginny Burton posted two photos that showed how far she has come in her addiction recovery. via FOX NEWS https://ift.tt/3AWt7KN

New top story from Time: How History Is Repeating Itself for Haitian Migrants Trying to Enter the U.S.

https://ift.tt/3upRk9U In the past 11 years alone, Haitians have suffered natural disasters, rising gang violence, outbreaks of cholera and COVID-19, and political instability, including the recent assassination of President Jovenel Moïse . The crises left many in the hemisphere’s poorest nation feeling they had no option but to leave—despite the difficulties they face in fleeing to other countries. In late September, Americans were confronted with the reality of those difficulties too. An estimated 15,000 people arrived in Del Rio, Texas, during the month, below a bridge connecting the city to Mexico’s Ciudad Acuña. A majority were Haitian nationals, migrants and asylum seekers who ended up living in tents or under tarps, in conditions similar to those in other camps that have formed along the U.S.-Mexico border in recent years. [time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”] Read more: Caught Between U.S. Policies and Instability at Home, Haitian Migrants in Tijuana Are in a State of L

FOX NEWS: 5-ingredient no-churn coffee ice cream for International Coffee Day Spoon up this delicious, no-churn coffee ice cream recipe ahead of International Coffee Day, Oct. 1.

5-ingredient no-churn coffee ice cream for International Coffee Day Spoon up this delicious, no-churn coffee ice cream recipe ahead of International Coffee Day, Oct. 1. via FOX NEWS https://ift.tt/3kWeGkt

FOX NEWS: Police urging parents to inspect Halloween candy after ecstasy discovered Police are once again asking parents and guardians to pay close attention to kids’ Halloween loot as incidents involving “suspicious candy-like substances” emerge close to the trick-or-treating holiday.

Police urging parents to inspect Halloween candy after ecstasy discovered Police are once again asking parents and guardians to pay close attention to kids’ Halloween loot as incidents involving “suspicious candy-like substances” emerge close to the trick-or-treating holiday. via FOX NEWS https://ift.tt/3kXKpBX

New top story from Time: Kathy Hochul Faced Childcare Struggles and Sexism at Work. Now She’s New York’s First Woman Governor

https://ift.tt/3zWK0ne A month into New York Governor Kathy Hochul’s term, Andrew Cuomo has become a ghost. Almost nobody in the governor’s office mentions his name. In a recent hour-long interview, Hochul called him only “this past governor,” when she referred to him at all. When I asked about a model of a ship on display in her New York City office, a staffer informed me that it was “a him thing.” Until August, most of New York politics had been a “him thing.” The Empire State is usually dominated by wannabe emperors, men with massive egos like Cuomo or Eliot Spitzer. The state that birthed the women’s suffrage movement has never elected a woman as governor, or mayor of New York City. Even though she served for six years as Cuomo’s lieutenant, Hochul—a trim 63-year-old Irish Catholic with a voice like Caroline Kennedy and a near-encyclopedic knowledge of the Buffalo Bills—is in many ways an accidental governor. [time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”] She found out she was getti

New top story from Time: For an Unlucky Few, Breakthrough Infections Lead to Long COVID. Patient Advocates Are Fighting for Their Recognition

https://ift.tt/3D3g9vk When health experts talk about the remarkable efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines , they typically point to their ability to prevent severe disease and death. Fully vaccinated people can still get “breakthrough” infections from the virus that causes COVID-19—but compared to an unvaccinated person, they’re more than 10 times less likely to be hospitalized or die from their illness, according to U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) research . Officials often point to these impressive figures as evidence that we can tame COVID-19 into a mostly mild illness that behaves like a routine cold or flu, and thus with which we can coexist . After all, the vaccines were not designed to quash viral spread entirely; they were designed to defang the virus by preventing its worst outcomes. [time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”] But people like April Zaleski know COVID-19’s worst outcomes aren’t limited to severe disease and death, even for the fully vaccinated.

New top story from Time: I Left Poverty After Writing ‘Maid.’ But Poverty Never Left Me

https://ift.tt/3kXte3r I signed my first book contract without paying much attention to what it said. I didn’t know at the time that the book would be a best seller or that it would one day inspire a Netflix series . I just needed the money. I was a single mom with a 2-year-old and a 9-year-old, living in low-income housing, and because of a late paycheck, I hadn’t eaten much for a few weeks, subsisting on pizza I paid for with a check I knew would bounce. This wasn’t my first bout of hunger. I had been on food stamps and several other kinds of government assistance since finding out I was pregnant with my older child. My life as a mother had been one of skipping meals, always saving the “good” food, like fresh fruit, for the kids I told myself deserved it more than I did. The apartment was my saving grace. Housing security, after being homeless and forced to move more than a dozen times, was what I needed the most. Hunger I was O.K. with, but the fear of losing the home wher

New top story from Time: America’s War in Afghanistan Is Over. But in the Horn of Africa, its War On Terror Rages On

https://ift.tt/2ZEtko9 In a remote corner of eastern Africa, behind tiers of razor wire and concrete blast walls, it’s possible to get a glimpse of America’s unending war on terrorism. Camp Lemonnier, a 550-acre military base, houses U.S. special-operations teams tasked with fighting the world’s most powerful al-Qaeda affiliates. Unfolding over miles of sun-scorched desert and volcanic rock inside the tiny country of Djibouti, the base looks—the troops stationed here will tell you—like a sand-colored prison fortress. Inside, two subcamps sit behind opaque 20-ft. fences ringed with yet more razor wire. The commando teams emerge anonymously from behind the gates and board lumbering cargo planes to fly across Djibouti’s southern border with Somalia for what they call “episodic engagements” with local forces fighting al-Shabab , al-Qaeda’s largest offshoot. General Stephen Townsend, commander of military operations in Africa, describes it as “commuting to work.” The Pentagon has