Tuesday, September 27, 2016
Redman was spotted smoking (photos)
Rob Kardashian TWEETS Kylie Jenner's number as he blasts family for not inviting Blac Chyna to bash
If you thought the Kardashian-Jenners and Blac Chyna had buried the hatchet, think again.
A furious Rob Kardashian appeared to post sister Kylie Jenner's mobile number on Twitter on Monday night.
At first, fans thought the reality star had been hacked, but he then revealed his family hadn't invited fiancee Blac Chyna to the baby shower they had planned for him.
"Kylie's #," he wrote alongside a 10-digit number, before adding, "I ain't hacked either this is rob dog lol."
The 29-year-old then posted the number again before fuming: "Didn't invite the Mother of my child to a baby shower you all were trying to throw for me? You all must have lost your damn minds."
Hillary Clinton was the clear winner of first presidential debate
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump faced off on Monday in the first of three presidential debates before Election Day on November 8.
Despite featuring two of the least liked candidates in modern history, the 90-minute debate was expected to draw a record number of viewers across multiple networks, including NBC, CNN, and Fox.
Monday night's showdown, moderated by NBC's Lester Holt from Hofstra University in Long Island, was divided into six 15-minute segments, though the segments often went over the time allotment.
The topics were "America's Direction" (the state of the union), "Achieving Prosperity" (the economy), and "Securing America" (national security and foreign policy).
Angela Davis: ‘There is an unbroken line of police violence in the US that takes us all the way back to the days of slavery’
“There is an unbroken line of police violence in the United States that takes us all the way back to the days of slavery, the aftermath of slavery, the development of the Ku Klux Klan,” says Angela Davis. “There is so much history of this racist violence that simply to bring one person to justice is not going to disturb the whole racist edifice.”
I had asked the professor, activist, feminist and revolutionary, the woman whom Richard Nixon called a terrorist and whom Ronald Reagan tried to fire as a professor, if she was angered by the failure of a grand jury to indict a white police officer for shooting dead an unarmed black man, Michael Brown, in Ferguson, Missouri earlier this year. “The problem with always pursuing the individual perpetrator in all of the many cases that involve police violence,” the 70-year-old replies, “is that one reinvents the wheel each time and it cannot possibly begin to reduce racist police violence. Which is not to say that individual perpetrators should not be held accountable – they should.”
We’re talking at the Friends Meeting House in London before a memorial service to her friend and colleague Stuart Hall, the black British cultural studies theorist and sociologist, who died in February. It was Hall, she tells me, as much as her mentor, the German Jewish philosopher Herbert Marcuse, who made her think about the structural issues in any given political struggle.
Sunday, September 25, 2016
Miami Marlins star pitcher Jose Fernandez killed in boating accident
The Miami Marlins said on Sunday that Jose Fernandez, one of Major League Baseball’s best pitchers, was killed in a boating accident in Miami Beach.
“The Miami Marlins organization is devastated by the tragic loss of José Fernández. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family at this very difficult time,” the team said in a statement.
Fernandez, 24, was one of three who died in the boating accident, officials said at a Sunday morning news conference.
“He was a pillar to our community,” said Lorenzo Veloz, a spokesman for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. “He was involved in everything that he could be to give back. It’s a great loss, a tragic loss.”
The simple strategy one man used to save enough money to retire at 30
In 2005, Peter Adeney — better known as Mr. Money Mustache — retired at 30 years old.
Leading up to retirement, Adeney and his wife, Simi, both software engineers, stashed two-thirds of their combined $134,000 take-home pay in savings. After just 10 years in the workforce, the couple had accrued about $600,000 in investments and paid off a house worth $200,000, Adeney told Nick Paumgarten of The New Yorker, giving them a solid cushion to retire on.
It wasn’t an easy road to financial independence, but Mr. Money Mustache reached his goal by adopting a simple strategy that anyone can put into practice: Incorporate challenges into your routine.
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