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List of All Articles with Tag 'world'

Roblox Grapples With Employee Demands for More Diversity
Roblox Grapples With Employee Demands for More Diversity
In the spring of 2021, the staff at video-game juggernaut Roblox Corp. gathered for an all-hands meeting over
1970-01-01 08:00
Crypto Trading Volumes Spiked as the Market Celebrated a Court Setback for the SEC
Crypto Trading Volumes Spiked as the Market Celebrated a Court Setback for the SEC
Parts of the crypto market saw frenzied trading following a break in the regulatory clouds surrounding the US
1970-01-01 08:00
JPMorgan’s Kolanovic Sees ‘Modestly Wider’ Path to Soft Landing
JPMorgan’s Kolanovic Sees ‘Modestly Wider’ Path to Soft Landing
A welcome downshift in inflation data has led JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Marko Kolanovic to soften his stance
1970-01-01 08:00
Lockheed Risks $400 Million Payment Delay Until It Shows New F-35 Software Works
Lockheed Risks $400 Million Payment Delay Until It Shows New F-35 Software Works
The Pentagon will withhold about 10% of the price for new F-35s from Lockheed Martin Corp. until the
1970-01-01 08:00
DOJ Criminal Chief to Exit for Return to Private Practice
DOJ Criminal Chief to Exit for Return to Private Practice
The leader of the US Justice Department’s Criminal Division, Kenneth Polite, will leave the agency for a job
1970-01-01 08:00
SEC’s Gensler Says He’s Disappointed With Ripple Ruling on Retail Investors
SEC’s Gensler Says He’s Disappointed With Ripple Ruling on Retail Investors
Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler said he’s “disappointed” with a judge’s ruling that Ripple Labs Inc.’s
1970-01-01 08:00
Bank of America Says Earnings Season Is Off to a Better-Than-Average Start
Bank of America Says Earnings Season Is Off to a Better-Than-Average Start
Corporate America’s initial stretch of earnings releases delivered results that surpassed the historical norm for the quarter’s kickoff,
1970-01-01 08:00
Tesla Board to Return $735 Million in Stock Awards to End Suit Over Pay Packages
Tesla Board to Return $735 Million in Stock Awards to End Suit Over Pay Packages
Tesla Inc. directors, including co-founder Elon Musk, agreed to return more than $735 million in stock awards to
1970-01-01 08:00
Donald Trump Jr says he wouldn’t have got away with having cocaine at White House: ‘Luckily it’s not my thing’
Donald Trump Jr says he wouldn’t have got away with having cocaine at White House: ‘Luckily it’s not my thing’
Former White House resident Donald Trump Jr has weighed in after the Secret Service closed its investigation into the discovery of cocaine in the building - suggesting he would not have “gotten away with that”. The eldest son of former president Donald Trump made the comments at the Turning Point Action Conference on Sunday, when he assured the crowd that snorting cocaine was not his “thing”. “My guys who I stayed in touch with — many of them just dear friends — they’re like, ‘Hey dude, there’s no way you would’ve gotten away with that,’” he animatedly told the crowd. “I go, ‘I know!’ Luckily, I don’t snort, er, cocaine! It’s just not my thing.” Mr Trump has previously denied being a drug user. On his Triggered podcast earlier this year, he described to former Trump White House official Kash Patel the price of his getting involved in politics, in the process making a series of unsubstantiated claims about President Biden’s son Hunter. “I look at what they called me: a traitor,” Mr Trump said. “Adam Schiff wanted to try me for treason, a crime punishable by death, but Hunter Biden can take a billion from China, work for Ukraine oligarchs, work for Russian oligarchs, money launder, be paid in diamonds off the books, not declare anything in taxes, drop guns in dumpsters across from high schools, and it’s like, ‘He’s an upstanding human being. And then I give an impassioned speech, and it’s ‘Don Jr is on coke.’” A small amount of cocaine (around .007oz – enough for a misdemeanour charge) – was discovered in the White House, but the Secret Service said their investigation would have involved 500 people, not a short enough list of suspects to draw any concrete conclusions. However the lack of investigation has lef to criticisms levelled at President Joe Biden for not doing enough to find the culprit, as well as at White House staff in general. Conservative pundits have speculated – without evidence – that the drug may have belonged to the president’s son, Hunter Biden, who is a recovering drug addict. Former President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social: “Despite all of the cameras pointing directly at the ‘scene of the crime,’ and the greatest forensics anywhere in the World, they just can’t figure it out? They know the answer, and so does everyone else!” He subsequently took to calling President Biden a “crackhead”. Read More ‘Don Jr is on coke’: Trump’s son mocks accusations of drug use over his ‘impassioned’ speeches Trump finally reveals how he thinks he could end Russia’s war in Ukraine in a day Judge in Trump documents case under the spotlight after case intensifies following controversial ruling Rudy Giuliani sparks backlash with bizarre appearance at Gilgo Beach murder suspect’s home Donald Trump brands US a ‘third-world hellhole’ run by ‘perverts’ and ‘thugs’ ‘Stoned’ DeSantis canvasser’s lewd rant caught on doorbell camera as 2024 campaign rushes to cut costs
1970-01-01 08:00
Senior ex-intelligence official warns second Trump term could fatally destabilise US, new book says
Senior ex-intelligence official warns second Trump term could fatally destabilise US, new book says
The former number two official in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence has offered a dire prediction about America’s future should Donald Trump or another like-minded Republican succeed in winning next year’s presidential election, according to a new book by a former Trump administration homeland security aide. In Blowback, author Miles Taylor recounts an October 2020 conversation he had with Sue Gordon, a 25-year US intelligence community veteran who served as the Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence from 2017 to 2019, shortly after news broke that the FBI had disrupted a plot by Michigan-based right-wing extremists to kidnap Wolverine State governor Gretchen Whitmer. According to a copy of the book obtained by The Independent ahead of its Tuesday release, Taylor recalls how the news of the kidnapping plot prompted him to telephone Ms Gordon, who he says spent “decades” at the CIA monitoring foreign governments for signs of instability, and ask the former deputy DNI how America’s “democratic stability” would be impacted by a second term in the White House for Mr Trump or a “Maga successor”. Taylor said Ms Gordon’s reply came “in the language of a seasoned intelligence analyst” who speaks “based on data from sources in the field and the uncertainty level of information they don’t have”. He added that she told him how she would “assess with ‘low confidence’ that the United States reaches its three hundredth birthday” — the projected 2076 tricentennial anniversary of the US Declaration of Independence from Great Britain — in “any recognisable form”. “People don’t trust government institutions anymore or each other, and when the world gets tumultuous, they’re more open to authoritarianism,” she said. Continuing, Taylor writes that Ms Gordon told him her reason for pessimism about the long-term viability of the US as a functioning democracy stems from the follow-on effects of four more years of Donald Trump — or someone acting with the same malevolence towards governmental institutions — atop the US executive branch. He said she told him that she does not believe a “Next Trump” would successfully smash through “every democratic guardrail,” but would “stoke unprecedented division and set off a slow turn towards despotism” in the US by “attempting” to further erode democratic norms and bring nominally independent institutions under his or her thumb. “That process can take decades to unfold. If history is any guide, though, it might come suddenly to a head, with the literal pull of a trigger — and the odds of that happening in the not-too-distant future are historically high,” he wrote. Taylor, who was chief of staff at the Trump-era Department of Homeland Security for the first three years of Mr Trump’s administration but is better known as the formerly anonymous author of a New York Times op-ed about “resistance” to the then-president inside his own government, told The Independent in a phone interview that he fears a repeat of the January 6 attack on the Capitol — but worse — should Mr Trump lose next year’s presidential election. Echoing Ms Gordon’s prediction of a long-term breakdown of the American democratic system, Taylor said the possibility of “low-level civil conflict” touched off by Mr Trump or another Republican is “higher now than it even was in that post election period in 2020”. “The muscle memory for those extremist movements has now been solidified. The networks are closer. And ... since that time, many more people, otherwise kind of normal people in small town America, have really taken the stolen election lies, QAnon, and great replacement theory as gospel, and the polling shows that a majority of your everyday Republicans believe those lies,” he said. “Add to that the fact that the country is more armed now than at any point in its history ... it is a powder keg.” Taylor added that his fears of violence go beyond a repeat of what happened in Washington nearly three years ago, pointing to the aborted plot against Ms Whitmer, the Michigan governor, as an example of what could be in store for the future. He told The Independent that he feels “the conditions are very ripe” in the US for “that sort of low-level conflict” in many parts of the country. “This is not just a Washington, DC thing — I really think we could see something a good deal worse, and part of that could also happen if a Trump or a savvier successor is reelected. And that misuse of the justice system could foment that even more,” he said. Read More Man arrested near Obama home threatened other prominent lawmakers, officials say Three men jailed for at least seven years over plot to kidnap Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer DoJ dragged feet over including Trump in Jan 6 probe over fears of appearing biased, report says Oath Keepers leader issues warning to Trump amid ex-president’s legal woes White House blasts Marjorie Taylor Greene’s criticism of efforts to aid US families GOP presidential hopeful lists conservative pool of Supreme Court picks Trump finally reveals how he thinks he could end Russia’s war in Ukraine in a day
1970-01-01 08:00
SEC’s Gensler Warns AI Risks Financial Stability
SEC’s Gensler Warns AI Risks Financial Stability
Wall Street’s top regulator says the proliferation of artificial intelligence means governments will probably have to overhaul regulations
1970-01-01 08:00
Astra, Sanofi RSV Drug Approved in US for Use in Infants
Astra, Sanofi RSV Drug Approved in US for Use in Infants
AstraZeneca Plc and Sanofi’s drug for RSV in infants was approved in the US, the first-ever preventive intended
1970-01-01 08:00
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