Politics
Kentucky sheriff charged in killing, shooting of judge at courthouse
This undated photo provided by Kentucky Court of Justice shows slain District Judge Kevin Mullins.
Kentucky Court of Justice via AP
A judge in a rural Kentucky county was fatally shot in his courthouse chambers Thursday, and the local sheriff was charged with murder in the killing, police said.
The preliminary investigation indicates Letcher County Sheriff Shawn M. Stines shot District Judge Kevin Mullins multiple times following an argument inside the courthouse, according to Kentucky State Police. Mullins, who held the judgeship for 15 years, died at the scene, and Stines surrendered without incident.
The fatal shooting in Whitesburg sent shock waves through a tight-knit Appalachian town and county seat of government with about 1,700 residents located about 145 miles (235 kilometers) southeast of Lexington.
Lead county prosecutor Matt Butler described an outpouring of sympathy as he recused himself and his office from investigations in the shooting, citing social and family ties to Mullins.
“We all know each other here. … Anyone from Letcher County would tell you that Judge Mullins and I married sisters and that we have children who are first cousins but act like siblings,” Butler said in statement from his office. “For that reason, among others, I have already taken steps to recuse myself and my entire office.”
Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman said his office will collaborate with a commonwealth’s attorney in the region as special prosecutors in the criminal case.
“We will fully investigate and pursue justice,” Coleman said on social media.
Kentucky Supreme Court Chief Justice Laurance B. VanMeter said he was “shocked by this act of violence” and that the court system was “shaken by this news.”
Letcher County’s judge-executive signed an order closing on Friday the county courthouse where the shooting took place.
Mullins, 54, was hit multiple times in the shooting, Kentucky State Police said. Stines, 43, was charged with one count of first-degree murder. The investigation is continuing, police said.
It was unclear whether Stines had an attorney. Kentucky State Police referred inquires about Stines’ legal representation Thursday to a spokesperson who did not immediately respond by email.
Responding to the shooting, Gov. Andy Beshear said in a social media post: “There is far too much violence in this world, and I pray there is a path to a better tomorrow.”
Mullins served as a district judge in Letcher County since he was appointed by former Gov. Steve Beshear in 2009 and elected the following year.
Mullins was known for promoting substance abuse treatment for people involved in the justice system and helped hundreds of residents enter inpatient residential treatment, according to a program for a drug summit he spoke at in 2022. He also helped develop a program called Addiction Recovery Care to offer peer support services in the courthouse. The program was adopted in at least 50 counties in Kentucky.
Mullins also served as a founding member of the Responsive Effort to Support Treatment in Opioid Recovery Efforts Leadership Team.
After the shooting, several area schools were briefly placed on lockdown.
Politics
Newcastle council leader Nick Kemp resigns following bullying row
A council leader has resigned after a bullying accusation was made against him.
On Tuesday it was revealed the Labour leader of Newcastle City Council, Nick Kemp, who is currently on sick leave, was the subject of a complaint made by director of investment and growth Michelle Percy.
In an email to his colleagues, Kemp wrote that he “strenuously” refuted any allegations of bullying and said that recent events had “had a significant and detrimental effect on me and my family”.
He will step down with immediate effect as council leader and be replaced on an interim basis by his deputy Karen Kilgour, who has assumed his duties for the past week.
Kemp wrote to Labour colleagues to inform them of his resignation.
In that email, a copy of which has been seen by the Local Democracy Reporting Service, Kemp said that he no longer felt “able to operate in good faith in the position of leader of Labour Group and of Newcastle City Council”.
He also claimed that he had fallen victim to “efforts of others to deliberately discredit and undermine my work”.
New leader
Kemp has been a prominent figure in city politics for many years, having served as a councillor for Byker since 2002.
The Labour group, which has run the city council since 2011, is expected to elect a new leader over the coming weeks, although details of how that contest will proceed have not yet been announced.
A new leader can only be formally appointed at a future meeting of the full council, the next of which is scheduled for 2 October.
Kemp will continue to sit as a city councillor and said he planned to return to representing the residents of Byker once his health had improved.
Councillor Colin Ferguson, the leader of the official Liberal Democrat opposition in the council, said Kemp had done the “right thing” by stepping aside.
Ferguson added: “But his statement makes clear that tensions will remain in the Labour Group that must urgently be addressed for the sake of Newcastle residents, who risk being badly let down by Labour infighting.”
He reiterated his party’s calls for an independent inquiry into the political culture at the Civic Centre.
“Picking a new leader cannot be an opportunity for Labour to brush the culture under the carpet that led the city to this point,” Ferguson added.
Politics
Keir Starmer and top Labour colleagues to stop taking clothes gifts from donors | Labour
Keir Starmer and his top team will no longer accept free gifts of clothes from Labour donors, as it emerged that Rachel Reeves and Angela Rayner also received donations for work outfits.
After the row over the Labour peer Waheed Alli funding Starmer’s work wardrobe, the prime minister is understood to have decided he will not take donations to pay for clothes in future.
Lord Alli had given him £2,435 worth of glasses and £16,200 worth of work clothing, as well as a stay in a £18m penthouse luxury apartment. Starmer may have broken parliamentary rules in failing to declare clothes bought for his wife by Alli within 28 days of receiving them.
The Guardian can also reveal that Rayner, the deputy prime minister, was given a donation for work clothing from Alli in June. This was declared as a donation in kind from the peer worth £3,550, without saying it was for outfits. She is understood to have contacted the registrar of interests to give a fuller description of the donation.
Reeves has accepted a donation of £7,500 from a donor, Juliet Rosenfeld, since the beginning of last year, which was used to pay for clothing, but it did not amount to a donation in kind.
It is understand that Rayner and Reeves have also decided not to take any future donations of this kind for clothing.
The row over donations from Alli has caused a headache for Starmer after he pledged to run a government of high standards.
The prime minister had taken a defiant line in insisting he had complied with all rules over the declaration of more than £100,000 in free tickets, mostly to football matches, and gifts from Alli.
His decision to no longer accept free clothes comes after pressure on him from several Labour figures.
John McDonnell, the former Labour shadow chancellor, said on Friday that early Labour leaders would have been surprised to see Starmer being “expensively clothed by rich sponsors”.
McDonnell, who had the whip suspended for refusing to vote to cut winter fuel payment, said that when Keir Hardie was elected as the first Labour MP, he went to parliament in his working man’s tweed suit.
He said Hardie was not “expensively clothed by rich sponsors because as a matter of principle he refused to ape the Tories and Liberals in their expensive frock coats and silk top hats”.
“The early leaders of the Labour party must be spinning in their graves at the behaviour of some holding positions in the leading echelons of the Labour party today,” McDonnell added.
Writing for the Guardian, McDonnell also hit out at the “poor political judgment and the failure to control the self-serving arrogance of the heavies that now control much of the party machine, including the leader’s office”.
McDonnell, who served under Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership, said previous Labour leaders would have turned their minds to implementing socialist policies rather than bickering over their own pay.
Harriet Harman, the former interim Labour leader, had also suggested Starmer should admit accepting the freebies was a mistake instead of trying to justify it.
The Labour veteran told a Sky News podcast: “You can either double down on it and try and justify it or you can just say it was probably a misstep, if I had my time again I wouldn’t do it and therefore I’m going to auction for charity or something.”
Diane Abbott, the former shadow home secretary, who had the Labour whip returned earlier this year, said on Friday: “I don’t always agree with Harriet Harman but she is right on this.”
Meanwhile, Stephen Flynn, the SNP Westminster Leader, said Starmer had shown “shockingly bad judgment” by taking more than £100,000 of freebies while “imposing austerity cuts on the rest of us”.
The furore over the freebies has added to tensions in Labour, which was also struck by a row about a salary of £170,000 given to Starmer’s chief of staff, Sue Gray. Junior advisers have been furious that she is being paid more than the prime minister when their salaries have been cut.
Starmer has defended Gray and also sought to downplay his freebies, saying everything has been declared in line with the rules of parliament.
Overall, Starmer has accepted more than £100,000 in free tickets to football matches, concerts and gifts – more than any other MP in the last parliament, and any other major party leader.
The prime minister has been facing questions over the potential conflict of interest created by accepting so many free tickets from Premier League clubs when the industry is lobbying against his plans for a football regulator.
One person involved in the formation of the regulator said there had been a huge amount of attempted lobbying by football clubs towards politicians and officials as they sought to water down the regulation.
Politics
Bigots not welcome in Reform UK, says leader Nigel Farage
Nigel Farage has said “bigots” and “extremists” are not welcome in Reform UK, as he seeks to “professionalise” the party after its election success.
Addressing its annual conference in Birmingham, the Reform UK leader said the party was “coming of age” after winning its first MPs in July.
But he conceded the party had not been “professional enough” to properly vet candidates, following a series of controversies over their past comments.
He added that the party represented the “silent majority” and could have won more seats, but that “amateurism let us down”.
Among proposed changes to make the party more professional, he said the party would be vetting candidates “rigorously” for all future elections.
He added that they would also seek to emulate the Liberal Democrats by aiming to win more seats on local councils to bolster its national electoral chances.
Politics
Trump’s promise to repeal SALT caps revives the fight on Capitol Hill
U.S. Representative Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ) speaks during a press conference about the SALT Caucus outside the United States Capitol on Wednesday February 08, 2023 in Washington, DC.
Matt McClain | The Washington Post | Getty Images
House lawmakers are using former President Donald Trump’s own words as leverage to pressure their colleagues into preserving the original state and local tax deduction, with a fight set to take shape next year.
The SALT deduction allows tax payers to deduct up to $10,000 of property, sales or income taxes that have already been paid to state and local governments. Historically, most of the tax payers who claim the deduction reside in high tax states such as New York, Connecticut, New Jersey and California.
But the cap on SALT became law when Trump was president and after he signed his $1.5 trillion tax bill in 2017, using the new version of the deduction as a pay for method. There was no cap on SALT prior to the Trump tax bill.
House lawmakers are now strategizing how to maintain what could be an unlimited SALT tax deduction in the next Congress, as the SALT cap provision from the Trump tax bill is set to expire on Dec. 31, 2025.
If Trump becomes president again, and Republicans have a majority in both the House and Senate, some House Republicans are pushing their party’s leadership to look at alternative payment methods for Trump’s tax plan, which includes cutting the corporate tax rate from 21% to 15%, according to Rep. Andrew Garbarino, R-N.Y.
Some of those recent conversations have featured Trump’s new stance on bringing back the full SALT deduction, despite his bill being the cause for the $10,000 cap.
Garbarino said he, along with Reps. Anthony D’Esposito, R-N.Y and Nick LaLota, R-N.Y., met with House Ways & Means Committee chairman Jason Smith, R-Mo., as recently as Tuesday on Capitol Hill about the need to restore the full SALT deduction.
During the meeting, the three New York Republicans pointed to Trump’s promise in a social media post to “get SALT back” if he were to become president as a way to encourage Smith to stay away from making any major alterations to the SALT deduction once it expires late next year. House Ways & Means is responsible for helping write and pass tax legislation.
“He [Trump] wants it back,” Garbarino told CNBC in an interview about how they made their recent pitch to Smith. The House Ways & Means chair “said ‘look guys, we are looking at all [pay for] options,’” Garbarino said.
Rep. Young Kim, R-Calif., told CNBC in a statement that the SALT cap is “hurting” her constituents and said Trump’s most recent take on SALT shows he’s listened to “Americans across the country hurting from the SALT cap.”
“We’ll be sure to have a seat at the table during discussions for the 2025 tax package,” Kim said, pointing to lawmakers in SALT reliant states who also want to maintain the original deduction next Congress.
Garbarino said he estimates there are at least a dozen House Republicans who won’t support a tax bill with a SALT cap at $10,000 and, at a minimum, will fight for the cap to be at a much higher level.
Some House Democrats have their own plans to bring back and keep the standard SALT deduction after the cap expires, according to Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J.
The New Jersey House lawmaker said in an interview with CNBC he wants to see the SALT cap expire in 2025 and if Democrats and Republicans from states which rely on the full SALT deduction prove to be critical votes in the House, they’ll stand in the way of legislation that maintains the cap.
“I would just say if you have a five seat Democratic majority, we will have enough people from SALT states to put the full deduction back in place and lower taxes for middle class families,” said Gottheimer. “It will be a battle.”
Politics
Live and let fly: James Bond helicopter firm awaits UK decision on £1bn deal | Aerospace industry
The Merlin helicopter sitting on a factory floor in Yeovil is a familiar sight to James Bond aficionados: it featured in the climactic shootout of the 2012 film, Skyfall.
Workers at the Somerset factory are upgrading the aircraft for the Canadian air force, a lucrative source of income for its owner, Italian state-backed weapons maker Leonardo.
But Leonardo has its eyes on a bigger prize for Yeovil: after a drawn-out process, it has emerged as the single bidder for a £1bn contract to build new medium-sized helicopters to replace the Pumas used for decades by the Royal Air Force in conflicts around the world.
Yet with Labour in the UK carrying out a strategic defence review, some in the industry believe the helicopter purchase could be scrapped altogether by a government that has stressed the gloomy state of the public finances.
What happens next matters hugely for Britain’s last remaining helicopter factory, the Somerset market town of Yeovil, and Britain’s wider defence industry. In a local population of about 50,000 people – with several areas in the 20% most deprived wards in England – Leonardo employs 3,300, many of them at higher pay than the surrounding area.
The town’s history is inseparable from the factory. The first aircraft, a seaplane, left the Westland aircraft works on 1 January 1916 on a horse and cart, according to Leonardo. During the second world war the site – which still retains some overgrown pillboxes – made the Seafire, the marine version of the famous Spitfire, before switching to helicopters. Westland became a household name in the 1980s when a row over its future nearly brought down the government of Margaret Thatcher.
Leonardo insists the MoD purchase is not at risk, despite rivals Airbus and Sikorsky quitting the competition last month. Clive Higgins, the chief executive of Leonardo’s UK arm, said that “we absolutely need a medium-lift platform” and that he was confident that the company can meet specifications that rivals thought were too testing.
Leonardo, like the defence industry as a whole, has benefited from the huge rise in military spending prompted by Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The Italian company’s share price has more than tripled since the start of 2022, valuing it at more than €12bn (£10bn).
The invasion, other conflicts such as the Middle East crisis, and the perceived threat of Chinese aggression have contributed towards a consensus among Nato allies that more military spending is required. Labour under Keir Starmer and defence secretary John Healey are on board.
Previous Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was deeply sceptical of the weapons industry, and Leonardo’s Edinburgh operation has been targeted by protesters alleging it supplies parts for the F35 fighter jets used by Israel in Gaza. (Leonardo said it is subject to UK government export controls and does not supply equipment direct to Israel.) But Starmer’s Labour wants to use weapons purchases to support UK manufacturing jobs – deepening a policy introduced by the previous Conservative government.
That should be good news for jobs at Yeovil. Leonardo was always in a good position to win the contract against rival bids from European aerospace champion Airbus and America’s Sikorsky, owned by Lockheed Martin. Airbus had pledged to invest in an assembly line in Broughton, north Wales, and Sikorsky in Gosport, Hampshire.
However, the new medium helicopter competition has turned into a headache after Airbus and Sikorsky pulled out of the running on the day that bids were supposed to be sent in. Both companies said they did not believe it was possible to deliver the programme at the cost envisaged.
Leonardo is putting forward the AW149, capable of carrying 19 troops, which is currently made in Italy, albeit using some parts and designs made in Yeovil. Leonardo has already started to install equipment for a new UK line, ready to produce the new helicopters within two years.
That would add to the existing vast hangar where new aircraft are assembled – mostly by hand – to satisfy exacting military customers. Merlin and Wildcat choppers for Brazil, Portugal and Norway were among those dismantled to varying degrees when the Guardian visited the factory which sits in an 89-hectare (220-acre) site.
Adam Clarke, the managing director of Leonardo Helicopters UK, repeatedly touted the factory’s “end-to-end capability” of the UK’s only helicopter factory. The sprawling site’s responsibilities range from making helicopter blades – stacked in racks in a new warehouse – and gearboxes to certifying airworthiness and training pilots in simulators.
“You can’t simply say ‘I’m going to take an aircraft that has never been built and stick it in a factory that’s never done it’,” said Higgins – a swipe at “pop-up factory” rivals that had planned to assemble helicopters from foreign-made parts.
“You could well get that level of service from another international partner,” he said, “but would you be at the front of the queue against all of the other international customers and their indigenous domestic market? You might not be.”
After passing through various owners, Italy’s Finmeccanica took over Westland in 2004 before changing its name to the Renaissance inventor (and would-be helicopter designer) Leonardo da Vinci.
Leonardo’s UK operations made profits of £188m in 2023 on turnover of £2.3bn. £830m of those sales came from helicopters. But another key source of business is work on radios and sensors on the joint Tempest programme between the UK, Italy and Japan to produce a new fighter jet by 2035.
Tempest will be a vital part of the Labour review, but Higgins indicated that there is little doubt over its future.
“There’s activity taking place so rapidly on this,” he said. “I think government are very keen to make sure it’s moving forward and we’ll see other updates in the next few weeks I’m sure.”
But on the helicopter contract, Yeovil may have to wait. The Labour review is due to report in the spring.
Helicopters – like other expensive military kit – often get overhauled, with replacements to engines or electronics stretching the life of the “same” aircraft out for decades. Airbus last overhauled the Puma in 2011 with new engines and cockpits, and Bruno Even, the chief executive of Airbus Helicopters, claimed it could operate until 2035.
By that point “vertical lift” may have changed. Nato is working on the next-generation rotorcraft capability (NGRC) project which could result in more “tilt-rotor” craft such as Boeing’s V-22 Osprey, which can fly faster horizontally and vertically, while a European effort involves Airbus and Leonardo. Airbus is focusing on a design that puts extra backwards-facing rotors on a helicopter so it can go faster.
Meanwhile, the rise of drones in civilian life and warfare and electric passenger rotorcraft could add more challenges to the helicopter industry.
Making do with the Pumas could prove an attractive prospect to politicians looking for savings. Leonardo has already bet heavily on tilt-rotor craft, but Clarke said the hope to translate “paperwork exercises” into working machines by 2035 is “very very sporty”.
“I think it will be very expensive,” he said. “If you’re speaking from a taxpayer’s perspective, I don’t know that that’s the best use of money.”
In the meantime, Leonardo is hoping the UK government will be swayed by the economic benefits to Yeovil.
“The value proposition that comes from Yeovil to UK plc is significant,” said Higgins. “If you take something like [the] new medium [helicopter] alone, we know there’s a market internationally for 500-550 platforms. Why wouldn’t UK government want to benefit of that activity taking place here in the UK?”
Politics
Reform UK’s Trump-style rally fires up new members
With a giant Union Jack flag draped above his head, Nigel Farage received a hero’s welcome as he arrived at Reform UK’s conference in Birmingham on Friday.
A brief wave to the crowd, and the Reform leader disappeared behind a bus emblazoned with large red ticks, alongside three of his party’s main aims.
“Slash immigration. Slash the cost of living. Boost wages.”
The rock-and-roll entrance music for speakers and the “Let’s Make Britain Great” baseball caps on show are reminiscent of a Donald Trump rally.
Some of the rhetoric feels familiar too. Like many speakers, Ann Widdecombe – a former Tory MP – says the government must “control our borders”.
If it doesn’t do that, “we will do it the day Nigel Farage enters 10 Downing Street”, she says.
The audience lapped it up, cheering and shouting “shame” at any mention of Labour or Conservative politicians.
With 4,000 activists expected to attended, this conference is ambitious in scope.
It is Reform UK’s first since it gained five MPs in July’s general election, giving it a foothold in Parliament.
It’s a celebration of these new MPs – and a meet-and-greet for the many new members the party has attracted since Farage returned as leader during the general election campaign.
One party source told me he’s not entirely sure who’s going to show up this year.
The party says it now has 80,000 members – and I spoke to dozens who said they’d recently joined, as they entered the conference hall.
Lee Frost and Kenneth Frost, a father and son from Kent, said they joined the party last week.
Lee Frost said the Conservative government “didn’t perform the way they should have done”.
“I voted for them quite a few times. I’d rather give Reform a chance. Immigration is going to get worse and worse.”
Anita Tolgyesi Stanley said she joined the party a few weeks ago “because I was so disillusioned with local politics in Wolverhampton, I thought I’d get involved and do a little bit to help”.
She said she may stand as a councillor in next year’s local elections, “so I’m coming here to see what training was available”.
It’s only a snapshot of the new Reform UK membership intake.
But its gives a sense of who’s interested in the party, as it seeks to professionalise and build a base of dedicated activists.
Reform UK will want to encourage many more to pay its £25 membership fee to match its political rivals, and expand its electoral footprint.
The works starts here in Birmingham.
-
Sport1 day ago
Joshua vs Dubois: Chris Eubank Jr says ‘AJ’ could beat Tyson Fury and any other heavyweight in the world
-
News2 days ago
You’re a Hypocrite, And So Am I
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
‘Running of the bulls’ festival crowds move like charged particles
-
News1 day ago
Israel strikes Lebanese targets as Hizbollah chief warns of ‘red lines’ crossed
-
CryptoCurrency23 hours ago
Ethereum is a 'contrarian bet' into 2025, says Bitwise exec
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Sunlight-trapping device can generate temperatures over 1000°C
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Bitcoin miners steamrolled after electricity thefts, exchange ‘closure’ scam: Asia Express
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Cardano founder to meet Argentina president Javier Milei
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Dorsey’s ‘marketplace of algorithms’ could fix social media… so why hasn’t it?
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Low users, sex predators kill Korean metaverses, 3AC sues Terra: Asia Express
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Quantum ‘supersolid’ matter stirred using magnets
-
Sport24 hours ago
UFC Edmonton fight card revealed, including Brandon Moreno vs. Amir Albazi headliner
-
Technology23 hours ago
iPhone 15 Pro Max Camera Review: Depth and Reach
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
How one theory ties together everything we know about the universe
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
CertiK Ventures discloses $45M investment plan to boost Web3
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
DZ Bank partners with Boerse Stuttgart for crypto trading
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
RedStone integrates first oracle price feeds on TON blockchain
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Bitcoin bulls target $64K BTC price hurdle as US stocks eye new record
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
SEC asks court for four months to produce documents for Coinbase
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
‘No matter how bad it gets, there’s a lot going on with NFTs’: 24 Hours of Art, NFT Creator
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Blockdaemon mulls 2026 IPO: Report
-
CryptoCurrency22 hours ago
Coinbase’s cbBTC surges to third-largest wrapped BTC token in just one week
-
News22 hours ago
Brian Tyree Henry on voicing young Megatron, his love for villain roles
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
How to wrap your mind around the real multiverse
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Quantum time travel: The experiment to ‘send a particle into the past’
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
2 auditors miss $27M Penpie flaw, Pythia’s ‘claim rewards’ bug: Crypto-Sec
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
$12.1M fraud suspect with ‘new face’ arrested, crypto scam boiler rooms busted: Asia Express
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
‘Everything feels like it’s going to shit’: Peter McCormack reveals new podcast
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Decentraland X account hacked, phishing scam targets MANA airdrop
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
CZ and Binance face new lawsuit, RFK Jr suspends campaign, and more: Hodler’s Digest Aug. 18 – 24
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Beat crypto airdrop bots, Illuvium’s new features coming, PGA Tour Rise: Web3 Gamer
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Memecoins not the ‘right move’ for celebs, but DApps might be — Skale Labs CMO
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Telegram bot Banana Gun’s users drained of over $1.9M
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
VonMises bought 60 CryptoPunks in a month before the price spiked: NFT Collector
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Vitalik tells Ethereum L2s ‘Stage 1 or GTFO’ — Who makes the cut?
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Ethereum falls to new 42-month low vs. Bitcoin — Bottom or more pain ahead?
-
Business23 hours ago
How Labour donor’s largesse tarnished government’s squeaky clean image
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Why this is a golden age for life to thrive across the universe
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Elon Musk’s SpaceX contracted to destroy retired space station
-
MMA24 hours ago
UFC’s Cory Sandhagen says Deiveson Figueiredo turned down fight offer
-
MMA23 hours ago
Diego Lopes declines Movsar Evloev’s request to step in at UFC 307
-
Football23 hours ago
Niamh Charles: Chelsea defender has successful shoulder surgery
-
Football23 hours ago
Slot's midfield tweak key to Liverpool victory in Milan
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Hyperelastic gel is one of the stretchiest materials known to science
-
Technology3 days ago
Can technology fix the ‘broken’ concert ticketing system?
-
Fashion Models23 hours ago
Miranda Kerr nude
-
Politics22 hours ago
Labour MP urges UK government to nationalise Grangemouth refinery
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Maxwell’s demon charges quantum batteries inside of a quantum computer
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Odd quantum property may let us chill things closer to absolute zero
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Rethinking space and time could let us do away with dark matter
-
Technology2 days ago
Would-be reality TV contestants ‘not looking real’
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
How to unsnarl a tangle of threads, according to physics
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
X-ray laser fires most powerful pulse ever recorded
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Physicists are grappling with their own reproducibility crisis
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Being in two places at once could make a quantum battery charge faster
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Nuclear fusion experiment overcomes two key operating hurdles
-
Science & Environment24 hours ago
We may have spotted a parallel universe going backwards in time
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Arthur Hayes’ ‘sub $50K’ Bitcoin call, Mt. Gox CEO’s new exchange, and more: Hodler’s Digest, Sept. 1 – 7
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Treason in Taiwan paid in Tether, East’s crypto exchange resurgence: Asia Express
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Leaked Chainalysis video suggests Monero transactions may be traceable
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Journeys: Robby Yung on Animoca’s Web3 investments, TON and the Mocaverse
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Louisiana takes first crypto payment over Bitcoin Lightning
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Are there ‘too many’ blockchains for gaming? Sui’s randomness feature: Web3 Gamer
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Crypto whales like Humpy are gaming DAO votes — but there are solutions
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Help! My parents are addicted to Pi Network crypto tapper
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Crypto scammers orchestrate massive hack on X but barely made $8K
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Why we need to invoke philosophy to judge bizarre concepts in science
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Jupiter’s stormy surface replicated in lab
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Future of fusion: How the UK’s JET reactor paved the way for ITER
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
SEC sues ‘fake’ crypto exchanges in first action on pig butchering scams
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Fed rate cut may be politically motivated, will increase inflation: Arthur Hayes
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Binance CEO says task force is working ‘across the clock’ to free exec in Nigeria
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Elon Musk is worth 100K followers: Yat Siu, X Hall of Flame
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Bitcoin price hits $62.6K as Fed 'crisis' move sparks US stocks warning
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
Bitcoin bull rally far from over, MetaMask partners with Mastercard, and more: Hodler’s Digest Aug 11 – 17
-
CryptoCurrency24 hours ago
‘Silly’ to shade Ethereum, the ‘Microsoft of blockchains’ — Bitwise exec
-
Business23 hours ago
Thames Water seeks extension on debt terms to avoid renationalisation
-
Politics23 hours ago
The Guardian view on 10 Downing Street: Labour risks losing the plot | Editorial
-
Politics23 hours ago
I’m in control, says Keir Starmer after Sue Gray pay leaks
-
Politics23 hours ago
‘Appalling’ rows over Sue Gray must stop, senior ministers say | Sue Gray
-
News22 hours ago
“Beast Games” contestants sue MrBeast’s production company over “chronic mistreatment”
-
News22 hours ago
Sean “Diddy” Combs denied bail again in federal sex trafficking case in New York
-
News22 hours ago
Brian Tyree Henry on his love for playing villains ahead of “Transformers One” release
-
News22 hours ago
Brian Tyree Henry on voicing young Megatron, his love for villain roles
-
CryptoCurrency22 hours ago
Bitcoin options markets reduce risk hedges — Are new range highs in sight?
-
News1 day ago
Church same-sex split affecting bishop appointments
-
Politics3 days ago
Trump says he will meet with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi next week
-
Politics2 days ago
Keir Starmer facing flashpoints with the trade unions
-
Health & fitness3 days ago
Why you should take a cheat day from your diet, and how many calories to eat
-
Technology1 day ago
Fivetran targets data security by adding Hybrid Deployment
-
News1 day ago
Freed Between the Lines: Banned Books Week
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
How to wrap your head around the most mind-bending theories of reality
-
Fashion Models23 hours ago
“Playmate of the Year” magazine covers of Playboy from 1971–1980
-
News4 days ago
Did the Pandemic Break Our Brains?
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
A new kind of experiment at the Large Hadron Collider could unravel quantum reality
-
Health & fitness2 days ago
11 reasons why you should stop your fizzy drink habit in 2022
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
How Peter Higgs revealed the forces that hold the universe together
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Quantum forces used to automatically assemble tiny device
-
Entertainment22 hours ago
“Jimmy Carter 100” concert celebrates former president’s 100th birthday
-
Business3 days ago
Dangers of being a FOMO customer as rates fall
You must be logged in to post a comment Login