On a surprise trip to Afghanistan on Thursday, President Trump said that the United States has reopened peace talks with the Taliban - just three months after the president scuttled negotiations between Washington and the Afghan insurgents following a terror attack that killed 11 people, including one U.S. soldier.
Trump, who made his first trip to Afghanistan under a veil of secrecy for security reasons, told troops gathered at the Air Force base for Thanksgiving dinner that the Taliban "wants to make a deal very badly."
“We’re going to stay until such time as we have a deal, or we have total victory, and they want to make a deal very badly,” Trump said. “The Taliban wants to make a deal — we’ll see if they make a deal. If they do, they do, and if they don’t they don’t. That’s fine."
There is an explanation, but you have to go back to things decreed by Presidents Washington, Lincoln and Roosevelt (FDR, that is).
In 1789, President George Washington declared Thursday, Nov. 26, as a "Day of Publick Thanksgivin," according to the National Archives. But in the years following, the date for the holiday was announced by presidential proclamation and was celebrated on various days and in different months. When President Abraham Lincoln made his Thanksgiving proclamation in 1863, the last Thursday of November became standard.
Then came the big date dispute of 1939, when two Thanksgiving holidays were observed.
A snippet of a 1933 letter from the Downtown Association of Los Angeles asking President Franklin D. Roosevelt to move Thanksgiving to a week earlier.
Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum
You see, according to the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, a five-Thursday November fell in 1933, and some retailers asked President Roosevelt to move the holiday to a week earlier.
The president denied the request, and Americans ate their turkey on the last Thursday as always in 1933.
But Roosevelt was president for a long time, long enough for another five-Thursday November to roll around in 1939. Once again, some business leaders asked if the date for the holiday could be a week earlier to give people more time to shop for Christmas, and this time Roosevelt agreed to do it. This raised a hue and cry as many people felt that he was catering to large retailers so they could make more money.
Sixteen governors decided their states would have Thanksgiving on the last Thursday of the month as usual, and that's how some people ended up celebrating it a week earlier or later than others — for two years.
Roosevelt stuck with the second-to-last-Thursday schedule, some states stuck with the last-Thursday-of-the-month schedule and finally on Dec. 26, 1941, Congress passed a law making Thanksgiving the fourth Thursday of November.
PennDOT needs to hire another 25 seasonal snow plow operators in Westmoreland County, with early winter weather on the horizon. It currently has 13 on the roster.
About 100 seasonal plow drivers normally are hired to help treat and clear roads throughout District 12 — including Westmoreland, Fayette, Greene and Washington counties, according to PennDOT officials. But, each of the counties has so far fallen short of its hiring target.
The state transportation agency competes with other employers to hire from a depleted pool of qualified workers who have a commercial driver’s license, said PennDOT Safety Press Officer Jay Ofsanik.
“Most people are working, so you don’t have an excess of unemployed personnel,” he said. “In Southwestern Pennsylvania, we’ve had an uptick in the gas and oil industry, and those industries typically use a lot of CDL drivers. For the most part, those jobs pay more per hour, so it’s tough competition.”
PennDOT pays drivers $16.72 an hour to start. Ofsanik noted seasonal work sometimes can lead to a permanent position.
Source: PennDOT needs more snow plow drivers in Westmoreland County | TribLIVE.com
Three employees have been injured and all staff are accounted for, plant owner TPC Group confirmed.
The blast, at 01:00 local time (07:00 GMT) on Wednesday, was felt 30 miles (48km) away. A mandatory evacuation zone is in place for everyone within half a mile of the site.
TPC Group said in a statement that it has activated its emergency response plan and requested assistance from Port Neches Fire Department.
More than 1,200 approved retailers began selling lottery tickets Monday in Mississippi.
(CNN) — For the first time, Mississippi residents can now play their own state lottery.
Instead of going to Louisiana, Tennessee or Arkansas, residents can purchase lottery tickets right in their own backyard. Tickets went on sale at 5 a.m. Monday after lawmakers passed a bill last year authorizing a state lottery.
State Rep. Alyce G. Clarke, a lottery advocate for whom the bill is named, made the first ceremonial purchase, the Mississippi Lottery Corporation said in a news release.
"This is not only a monumental day for the MLC, but it is also an incredible day for Mississippi," said Dr. Mike McGrevey, chairman of the MLC Board
Our view: Torn on just how to react to South Dakota's anti-meth campaign
Written By: Herald editorial board |
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South Dakota has unveiled a new anti-methamphetamine campaign, creating shockwaves across the nation.
The campaign is based on a simple, highly controversial, slogan: “Meth: We’re on it.”
Mirroring the popular Kubler-Ross model of the stages of human grief, here are the stages of our reaction to “Meth: We’re on it.”
Stage 1: Denial.
This is a mistake, right? Nobody – nobody – in their right mind would have OK’d an anti-drug slogan that declares “we’re on it.” After all, this is the same state that unveiled a safe-driving campaign titled “Don’t jerk and drive.” That 2014 campaign urged residents to avoid quick steering maneuvers on icy roads, but jokes and unfortunate entendres prompted the campaign to be killed.
Stage 2: Anger.
This campaign cost a shocking $449,000 to create and, after ad spots are purchased, will cost $1.4 million overall. The state went outside of its borders and spent the money with a Minnesota ad agency. Doesn’t South Dakota have any agencies that could have done this work? Was there no cheaper, or in-state, alternative?
Stage 3: Bargaining.
Perhaps the controversy is worth it. After all, “Meth: We’re on it” has become a nationwide conversation. Although many say South Dakota is a laughingstock as a result of the campaign, the publicity is increasing awareness of the problem.
Stage 4: Depression.
Meth isn’t easily going away, despite best efforts by police, states and others. South Dakota saw 3,366 people arrested last year on meth charges. Thirteen South Dakotans died last year because of meth. There were 4,300 grams of meth seized during 402 arrests in South Dakota in 2011; last year, there were 40,000 grams seized. Also, the number of South Dakota’s younger teens – children ages 12 to 17 – who reported using meth in the last year is double the national average.
Stage 5: Acceptance.
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem counters the controversy with some good points.
“Hey, Twitter. The whole point of this ad campaign is to raise awareness,” she said on a social media post Monday. Later, she wrote “(Meth) is a problem and it needs to be addressed. Combating it needs to be a dinner table conversation. We need everyone on it.”
In the days after the campaign was unveiled, stories were published or televised on Fox News, USA Today, Time Magazine, Newsweek, The Washington Post, CNN, CBS News, the Minneapolis Star Tribune, the New York Daily News, the Los Angeles Times and others. It equals millions of free marketing dollars.
So perhaps it’s best to accept the campaign for its intent: To raise awareness about the meth problem in South Dakota. If that really is the goal, it’s safe to say the campaign has been a success. North Dakotans should take notice; according to The Associated Press, there was a 7% increase in drug arrests in North Dakota last year.
For spending a half a million dollars outside of the state’s borders, Noem deserves criticism. That kind of money shouldn’t easily cross state borders.
But as the nation chuckles at South Dakota, Noem just might have the last laugh.
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – Fire crews were on the Parkway responding to reports of smoke inside the Squirrel Hill Tunnel.
On Twitter, PennDOT said there was “fire activity” on the Parkway between the Beechwood Boulevard exit and Edgewood/Swissvale exit. Dispatchers said they’re investigating reports of smoke on the inbound side of the control room building above the tunnel.
Fire department activity on I-376 eastbound between Exit 74 – Beechwood Blvd and Exit 77 – Edgewood/Swissvale. There is a traffic disruption.
Power in the tunnel was partially out at one point, but the tunnel never closed. PennDOT said half of the lights were out in each direction of the tunnels
PennDOT said the smoke was because of malfunctioning electrical equipment.
Google and Bing both have black box algorithms that help rank news, though their content guidelines are largely similar.
How do search engines decide how to rank news-related results?
It's a top-of-mind question since President Donald Trump accused Google on Tuesday of prioritizing negative coverage from left-leaning outlets, an indictment that appeared to be based on an unscientific report by a conservative news site. Google also denied it uses political bias in search results.
Google is by far the most popular search engine in the United States, with 86 percent market share, according to StatCounter. But there is an alternative: Microsoft's Bing.
Keeping up with friends is faster than ever. Facebook has a new Facebook Beta. Click source below if you dare to try it. We think the old one is alright but that's just our opinion.
Chick-fil-A added five new menu items to its repertoire in hopes that the new adjustments may make the frenetic back-to-school season a little easier.
According to a Monday news release, the new items include 30-count nuggets, Waffle Potato Chips, an “improved” fruit cup, plus two new catering menu options: a Grilled Chicken Bundle and a Spicy Grilled Chicken Sub sandwich.
>> Read more trending news
WEST MIFFLIN, Pa. - Parents in West Mifflin are claiming they were deceived by their children's youth football league.
They paid the nearly $200 enrollment fee, but they've since learned their kids aren't allowed to compete.
The parents told Channel 11 it's because the league lied about a player's age.
A Chinese state-owned company reportedly hacked former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s email server, then inserted code that forwarded them a copy of virtually every email she sent or received after that -- a revelation President Trump is demanding be investigated.
Seventeen people in four states have come down with salmonella-related illnesses from kosher chicken, and one person in New York has died, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control said Wednesday.
Not so long ago, editors and reporters dreaded the dog days of August because news took a vacation. Now the news never stops.
The first scandalizing event is Donald Trump — his candidacy, his election and his presidency. And, on some days to some people, his existence.
Next is the conduct of the mainstream media, which has abandoned all standards of fairness and continues to embarrass itself with overt bias against the president.
Another scandalizing event is the behavior of some federal agencies. The Justice Department, the FBI and the CIA took liberties that were morally offensive, and possibly illegal,
The fourth scandalizing event is the reaction of Democrats to Trump.
Led by Hillary Clinton, the party has thrashed about like wounded animals caught in a steel trap. The grief does not seem limited to three, five, seven or 10 stages. It’s endless.
A Republican congressman touched off a firestorm Tuesday after claiming on Twitter that his office had information suggesting the FBI leaked information to the press and used the resulting articles to help obtain surveillance warrants.
A recent study has found that gun deaths worldwide total about 250,000 yearly and the United States is among just six countries that make up half of those fatalities.
The questions on University Challenge should be posed in a 'gender neutral' way, says the show's producer.
Female contestants have repeatedly spoken of online abuse and objectification after their appearances. All-male teams and all-male finals - such as last year's contest between Balliol College Oxford and Wolfson College Cambridge - have been criticised by the likes of historian and broadcaster Mary Beard.
A pair of Utah newlyweds, married for 15 days, were driving on their honeymoon when they died from a rollover crash in Washington state on Sunday, reports said.
The accident occured on the Interstate-82 about 6 miles east of Prosser, Wash., and just west of Washington’s Tri-City area, KSL.com reported.
In an August Facebook post, Moffat celebrated their union.
“Stephen and I, in joyful disbelief, united our lives together and became husband and wife,” she wrote in the post. "I can’t tell you how much I love this man."
"For now our marriage is until death do us part," Moffat wrote.
Suspects awaiting trial in California will now have their bail eliminated, according to a bill signed by Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown on Tuesday.
Suspects looking at serious, violent felonies won’t be eligible for release prior to trial but the majority of suspects arrested for nonviolent misdemeanors will be let go within 12 hours of being booked, according to the legislation.
The bill gives officials 24 hours to determine whether other suspects should be released before trial. That time can be extended by 12 hours if necessary.
“Today, California reforms its bail system so that rich and poor alike are treated fairly,” Brown said in a statement, according to The Sacramento Bee.
Brown's signature gives the state's Judicial Council, the policy-making body for California's courts, broad authority to reshape pretrial detention policies.
Washington (CNN)For all of Donald Trump's struggles in his first 19 months as President, there's one thing he's proven particularly adept at: Picking winners in contested GOP primaries.
That run of winners is likely to continue on Tuesday night when voters go to the polls in Arizona and Florida.
The most obvious example of Trump's power within the party is in the Florida governor's race, where, late last year, he tweeted favorably about the candidacy of Rep. Ron DeSantis, who was seen as a heavy underdog to state Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam in the primary.
Latrobe police say Alex M. Luther, 24, was arrested at his home on East Fourth Street early Saturday after they discovered his white Ford Edge crashed into a tree at the corner of Route 982 and East Harrison Avenue in Latrobe.
Officer Robert Derk alleges Luther avoided the DUI stop by driving the wrong way down Truman Avenue and eluded police along city streets, while reaching speeds of 89 miles per hour. Derk said patrol cars backed off due to safety concerns but, within eight minutes, found Luther’s wrecked, abandoned vehicle several blocks away.
The barefoot woman had vanished by the time the Texas householder answered the door.
Police are searching for a mystery woman - wearing what looked like broken wrist restraints - who was filmed ringing a doorbell in Texas.
The night-caller, apparently barefoot and semi-clothed, was captured on a surveillance camera approaching a home in Montgomery County.
By the time the householder answered, she was gone. The resident reviewed the security footage and sent it to police.
Montgomery County Sheriff is looking into the "suspicious incident".
End of Facebook post by Montgomery County Sheriff's Office
The unidentified resident of the home in the community of Sunrise Ranch - 60 miles (96km) north of Houston - told police the doorbell rang at around 03:20am local time.
The 2019 GMC Sierra is basically the luxury-branded version of the 2019 Chevrolet Silverado, offering number of fun tech goodies that the Chevy doesn’t. But as fun as those are, it’s really the styling of the off-road model, the AT4, that makes the Sierra stand out.
The agreement would require that 75% of the parts in any car sold in North America be produced in the United States or Mexico to be exempt from tariffs. The existing threshold is 62.5%.
Police are investigating after a gun was found near a bus stop on the first day of school in the Hopewell School District.
Someone out for a walk Tuesday morning found the loaded weapon along Yale Drive near the corner with Webb Street, police confirmed.
The person who found the weapon never touched it and immediately called police.
Ice Pigging Truck[/caption]
Ice pigging is a technique that is effective in removing particles and sediment from main line walls. Ice slurry is injected and pumped through a section of main to “scrub” it, removing all loose particles and debris.