新デバイスが「売れている」「売れていない」の情報は何を信じればいい? (1/2)
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Appleが2018年10月に発売した「iPhone XR」。製品の評価はさておき、発売から1カ月で拡販のためとみられる値下げが発表されたり、またサプライヤーに対し ...
January 20, 2019 at 07:17AM
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Trump at presidential halfway mark: Where he stands on campaign promises A look at some of the promises Trump made from the campaign trail – and where he stands on delivering them, halfway through his first term.
January 20, 2019 at 05:37AM
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Mathilde Auguez
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Cohen spotted with arm in sling, setting off speculation The sight of Michael Cohen with one of his arms in a sling set off speculation Friday, the day after a BuzzFeed report said Cohen had told investigators that President Trump ordered him to lie to Congress about a Moscow real estate proposal.
January 19, 2019 at 12:48PM
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Border Patrol Arrests 376 Who Dug Under Barrier in Arizona U.S. authorities said Friday that 376 Central Americans had been arrested in southwest Arizona, the vast majority of them families who dug short, shallow holes under a barrier to cross the border. The group members dug under a steel barrier in seven spots about 10 miles (16 kilometers) east of a border crossing in San Luis and made no effort to elude immigration agents. There were 176 children in the group. Nearly all of those in the unusually large group were from Guatemala. They were taken to Yuma after entering the country Monday. The area became a major corridor for illegal crossings in the mid-2000s, prompting the federal government to weld steel plates to a barrier made of steel bollards that had been designed to stop people in vehicles, not on foot, Border Patrol spokesman Jose Garibay III said. In those spots, there is no concrete footing to prevent digging. The group used multiple holes in an apparent effort to get everyone across the border quickly, Garibay said. U.S. Customs and Border Protection released photos and video of a long line of migrants standing patiently on a desert road's dirt shoulder after they were stopped. On Wednesday, the Border Patrol arrested 247 people, mostly from Central America, who turned themselves in to agents in a highly remote part of New Mexico, where authorities have found 25 groups of more than 100 people since October. A group of 115 was found in the same area Thursday. Large numbers of Guatemalan families and unaccompanied children are surrendering to immigration agents in Antelope Wells, N.M., where 7-year-old Jakelin Caal and her father were found Dec. 6 with 161 others. Caal started vomiting on the bus ride to the nearest Border Patrol station 94 miles (150 kilometers) away and had stopped breathing by the time she arrived. She died at a hospital in El Paso, Texas. The southwest Arizona desert is less remote but arrests have also sharply increased after years of relative quiet. The Border Patrol's Yuma sector made 7,857 arrests in October and November, more than double the same period a year earlier. Despite a surge in asylum-seeking families from Central America in recent months, border arrests remain low by historical standards. The Border Patrol made 396,579 arrests on the Mexican border in fiscal 2018, up 30 percent from a 46-year low during the same period a year earlier but still well below a high of more than 1.6 million in 2000.
January 19, 2019 at 11:16AM
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How the State of the Union became a broadcast event
January 19, 2019 at 09:48AM
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Lizzo discography
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How the State of the Union became a broadcast event
January 19, 2019 at 09:48AM
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Abu Bakar Baasyirabu bakar ba'asyir, yusril abu bakar baasyir
January 18, 2019 at 08:00PM
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Abu Bakar Ba'asyirabu bakar baasyir
January 18, 2019 at 08:00PM
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Tammi Piermarini
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Abu Bakar Ba'asyirabu bakar baasyir
January 18, 2019 at 08:00PM
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DRC Rejects African Union Call to Suspend Presidential Election The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has rejected a call from the African Union (AU) to suspend announcement of the final results of last month's presidential election, asserting the independence of the constitutional court considering an appeal of the vote count. "The court is independent, both of us and the African Union," a government spokesman said, adding that it is not the business of the government or even of the African Union to tell the court what it should do." The DRC's constitutional court is expected to rule as early as Friday on declared runner-up Martin Fayulu's request for a recount, alleging fraud. The AU continental body issued a statement late Thursday calling for Congo's government to suspend the announcement of final results, citing "serious doubts'" about the vote. Opposition candidate Felix Tshisekedi was declared the winner of elections Sunday, but Fayulu has challenged the outcome in court, claiming that his opponent made a deal with outgoing president Joseph Kabila. Fayulu's opposition coalition said Friday he captured 61 percent of the vote, citing figures from the Catholic Church, which placed 40,000 election observers across the Central African country. The coalition said Tshisekedi won 18 percent of the vote. By law, only the electoral commission can announce election results in Congo. Pre-election polls indicated that Fayulu was the favorite to replace outgoing President Joseph Kabila. Kabila backed another candidate, his former interior minister, Emmanuel Shadary. The AU statement said that heads of state and government agreed to "urgently dispatch'' a high-level delegation to Congo, as early as Monday, to find "a way out of the post-electoral crisis,'' in response to concern of Congo's many neighbors that more unrest could spill across borders. The DRC's constitutional court could uphold the election results, order a recount or order a new election. Congo's presidential inauguration is scheduled for Tuesday. Meanwhile, U.N. Human Rights office said that it has documented 34 deaths, 59 wounded and 241 arbitrary arrests in Congo since provisional election results were announced on January 10.
January 18, 2019 at 09:54PM
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Evelyn Waldren
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Pelosi's election 'reform' encourages voter fraud to benefit Dems House Democrats are backing legislation that would encourage voter fraud and give Democrats a partisan advantage over Republicans in elections.
January 18, 2019 at 06:00PM
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Nearly 1,000 caravan migrants start process of entering Mexico from Guatemala Approximately 1,000 Central American migrants in the newest caravan have begun the process of crossing into Mexico from Guatemala, a Mexican immigration official stationed at the border between the two countries told Fox News.
January 18, 2019 at 11:38AM
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Study: Asteroids Smacking Earth Twice as Often as Before Giant rocks from space are falling from the sky more than they used to, but don't worry. For the past 290 million years, large asteroids have been crashing into Earth more than twice as often as they did in the previous 700 million years, according to a new study in Thursday's journal Science. But no need to cast a wary glance up. Asteroids still only smack Earth on average every million or few million years, even with the increased crash rate. NASA's list of potential big space rock crashes shows no pending major threats. The biggest known risk is a 4,200-foot (1.3-km) wide asteroid with a 99.988 percent chance that it will miss Earth when it whizzes very near here in 861 years. Tell that to the dinosaurs. Most scientists think dinosaurs and a lot of other species went extinct after a huge space rock crashed into Central America about 65 million years ago. "It's just a game of probabilities," said study lead author Sara Mazrouei, a University of Toronto planetary scientist. "These events are still rare and far between that I'm not too worried about it." Mazrouei and colleagues in the United Kingdom and United States compiled a list of impact craters on Earth and the moon that were larger than 12 miles (20 km) wide and came up with the dates of them. It takes a space rock that's half a mile (800 meters) wide to create holes that big. The team counted 29 craters that were no older than 290 million years and nine between 291 million years and 650 million years old. But we can see relatively few big craters on Earth because the planet is more than 70 percent ocean and past glaciers smoothed out some holes, said University of Toronto planetary scientist Rebecca Ghent, a study co-author. Extrapolating for what can't be seen brings the total to about 260 space crashes on Earth in the last 290 million years. Adding in other factors, the science team determined that the current space crash rate is 2.6 times more than the previous 700 million years. Craters older than 650 million years are mostly wiped off on Earth by glacial forces so the scientists used impact craters on the nearby moon as a stand-in for holes between 650 million and 1 billion years old. The moon is a good guide for estimating Earth crashes, because it is close enough to be in the same bombardment path and its craters last longer. Mixed reactions So what happened nearly 300 million years ago? "Perhaps an asteroid family was broken up in the asteroid belt," Mazrouei speculated. The space rocks then headed toward the Earth and moon, and the planet got slightly more because it is a bigger target and it has higher gravity, Ghent said. Outside scientists are split about the research. Jay Melosh at Purdue said he found the number of craters too small to come to a reasonable conclusion, but Harvard's Avi Loeb said the case was convincing. Humans might not have emerged without mass extinctions from space rocks about 250 million and 65 million years ago, Loeb said in an email, adding, "but this enhanced impact rate poses a threat for the next mass extinction event, which we should watch for and attempt to avoid with the aid of technology." "This demonstrates how arbitrary and fragile human life is," Loeb wrote.
January 18, 2019 at 09:50AM
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African Union Urges Congo to Suspend Final Election Results The African Union continental body issued a surprise last-minute demand late Thursday for Congo's government to suspend the announcement of final results of the disputed presidential election, citing "serious doubts." Congo's constitutional court is poised to rule as early as Friday on a challenge filed by the election's declared runner-up. Martin Fayulu has requested a recount, alleging fraud. Upholding the results could spark violence in a country hoping for its first peaceful, democratic transfer of power since independence in 1960. 'Truly incredible' The AU statement said heads of state and government agreed to "urgently dispatch" a high-level delegation to Congo to find "a way out of the post-electoral crisis" in the vast Central African nation rich in the minerals key to smartphones and electric cars around the world. "This is truly incredible," tweeted Jason Stearns, director of the Congo Research Group at New York University. "Usually, the African Union defers to the subregion ... in this case they departed dramatically." Congo faces the extraordinary situation of an election allegedly rigged in favor of the opposition. There was no immediate government comment. Fayulu accuses the administration of outgoing President Joseph Kabila of falsifying the results to declare opposition leader Felix Tshisekedi the winner after the ruling party candidate did poorly. Fayulu has cited figures compiled by the influential Catholic Church's 40,000 election observers that found he won 61 percent of the vote. Leaked data favors Fayulu Two sets of leaked data show that Fayulu won the election by a landslide, according to an investigation published this week by Radio France International and other media working with the Congo Research Group. In the first set of data, attributed to Congo's electoral commission and representing 86 percent of the votes, Fayulu won 59.4 percent while Tshisekedi received 19 percent. The second set of data, from the Catholic Church's mission, represents 43 percent of the votes. In it, Tshisekedi and ruling party candidate Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary each received less than 20 percent. Fayulu, a lawmaker and businessman who is outspoken about cleaning up Congo's sprawling corruption, is widely seen as posing more of a threat to Kabila, his allies and the vast wealth they have amassed. Tshisekedi, the son of charismatic opposition leader Etienne who died in 2017, is relatively untested and has said little since the Dec. 30 election. The AU statement was issued after Congo's foreign minister and deputy prime minister briefed "a number of heads of state and government" from across the continent on the crisis. It said some of the heads of state would join the AU Commission chair, Moussa Faki Mahamat, in the urgent mission to Congo. Pressure from African nations is seen as having more of an impact on Congo's government, which was annoyed by Western pressure during more than two years of turbulent election delays. The AU statement reflects serious concern by states about the threat of more unrest in Congo that could spill across borders and destabilize its many neighbors. But countries have wavered on how to address the crisis. The AU statement came hours after the 16-nation Southern African Development Community backed off its earlier demand for an election recount, instead urging the international community to respect Congo's sovereignty. It stressed the need for stability in a country where conflicts over the past two decades have killed millions of people. Election troubles reported The AU statement noted that SADC leaders attended the wider continental talks. Congo's election had been meant to take place in late 2016, and many Congolese worried that Kabila, in power since 2001, was seeking a way to stay in office. Barred from serving three consecutive terms, Kabila already has hinted he might run again in 2023. Election observers reported multiple problems, including the last-minute barring of some 1 million voters in the east, with the electoral commission blaming a deadly Ebola outbreak. That alone undermines the election's credibility, some observers said. All of the election results, not just the presidential ones, have been widely questioned after Kabila's ruling coalition won a majority in legislative and provincial votes while its presidential candidate finished a distant third.
January 18, 2019 at 09:58AM
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Bảng xếp hạng vòng loại Asian Cup 2019
January 18, 2019 at 02:00AM
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Vong ban Asian Cup 2019bảng asian cup 2019
January 17, 2019 at 06:00PM
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Malta in the European Union
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Gladys Knight to sing national anthem at Super Bowl LIII Gladys Knight will sing "The Star-Spangled Banner" at this year's Super Bowl.
January 18, 2019 at 01:42AM
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Freshmen Dems stumble in quest to confront McConnell on shutdown Freshmen Democrats led by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez attempted to confront Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in-person over government shutdown and hand-deliver a letter urging him to cave and vote to reopen the government without securing the funding to the border wall.
January 18, 2019 at 01:10AM
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Havlicek stole the ball
Mike Selinker: /* The play */
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Drunken driver who killed 24-year-old mother gets probation: reports An Idaho man who was convicted of felony vehicular manslaughter for killing a woman will not serve time in prison, according to reports.
January 17, 2019 at 02:15PM
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Sportsviet nam asian 2019
January 17, 2019 at 08:00AM
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Li Yongfang
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Nearly 250 illegal immigrants arrested in New Mexico after crossing border, seeking medical care, Border Patrol says
January 17, 2019 at 10:25AM
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Bảng xếp hạng Asian Cup
January 17, 2019 at 08:00AM
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Sea lion at Salt Lake City's zoo healthy again after throwing up child's sock A sea lion named Diego vomited up the sock of a kid Monday morning, causing a stir in a Utah zoo.
January 17, 2019 at 12:13PM
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Nearly 250 illegal immigrants arrested in New Mexico after crossing border, seeking medical care, Border Patrol says
January 17, 2019 at 10:25AM
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January 17, 2019 at 08:00AM
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Nearly 250 illegal immigrants arrested in New Mexico after crossing border, seeking medical care, Border Patrol says
January 17, 2019 at 10:25AM
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Nearly 250 illegal immigrants arrested in New Mexico after crossing border, seeking medical care, Border Patrol says
January 17, 2019 at 10:25AM
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Pelosi ratchets up the pressure Will it work?
January 17, 2019 at 08:29AM
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Nebraska principal who banned Christmas decorations won't return to school, superintendent says An elementary school principal who was placed on leave after she allegedly banned Christmas and holiday decorations will not return to her old job.
January 17, 2019 at 07:48AM
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Does US President Have to Give State of the Union Speech? No The U.S. Constitution mandates in Article II, Section 3, that presidents "shall from time to time give to the Congress information of the state of the union, and recommend to their consideration such measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient.'' But the Constitution offers no specifics on how that should be done. Indeed, the modern State of the Union address — the pageantry, the televised address and the agenda-setting message — is a far more recent phenomenon. And the practice of delivering an in-person address before a joint session of Congress has not always been the norm. Here's a look at the history of the State of the Union address as the White House weighs its response to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's suggestion that President Donald Trump delay this year's address or give it in writing because of the partial government shutdown: Q: Who delivered the first State of the Union address? A: George Washington on Jan. 8, 1790, in New York. Q: Does it have to be a speech? A: No. For Thomas Jefferson's first address on Dec. 8, 1801, he sent written copies to both houses of Congress to be read by each chamber's clerks. Jefferson wanted to simplify what he believed was an aristocratic imitation of the British monarch's speech from the throne, which he thought ill-suited for a republic. The practice of sending written copies to Congress continued for more than a century, when Woodrow Wilson resumed the tradition of delivering the annual message in person on April 8, 1913. He's also credited with transforming the speech from a report on executive branch activity into a blueprint for the president's legislative agenda for the year. Q: When did the annual message become known as the State of the Union address? A: Franklin D. Roosevelt applied the constitutional phrase "State of the Union'' to both the message and the event. It became the popular terminology from then on and has officially been known as the State of the Union address since 1947. The speech was formally known as the "Annual Message'' before that. Q: How has the speech been affected by advances in communications technology? A: Calvin Coolidge delivered the first speech broadcast on radio in 1923. Harry S. Truman's address in 1947 was the first broadcast on television. Lyndon B. Johnson recognized the importance of having a national audience when he moved the speech from midafternoon to prime time in 1965 to attract the largest number of TV viewers. George W. Bush's 2002 speech was the first available as a live webcast on the White House website. Q: Has the speech ever been postponed? A: Yes, there have been several instances, though all appear to have been initiated by the White House, historians say. Ronald Reagan's 1986 address, for instance, was postponed after the Challenger space shuttle exploded in flight on Jan. 28 of that year. And in 1944, Franklin D. Roosevelt was scheduled to deliver his address on Jan. 11 but instead transmitted a written message because of his poor health. Q: What about during a shutdown? A: The State of the Union address has yet to coincide with a full or partial government shutdown since the beginning of the modern budget process in the late 1970s. The closest the country has come was Trump's 2018 State of the Union, which was delivered on Jan. 30, in the week after a two-day shutdown that ended Jan. 22. In 1996, Bill Clinton delivered his State of the Union several weeks after the end of a 21-day shutdown that had previously been the country's longest, offering to "all of you in this chamber: Never, ever shut the federal government down again.'' Q: Is security really an issue? A: In her letter, Pelosi raised concerns about holding the speech during a shutdown, citing the fact that the address has been designated a "national special security event'' in which "the full resources of the federal government'' must "be brought to bear.'' She noted that the Secret Service and the Department of Homeland Security have been operating without funding, "with critical departments hamstrung by furloughs.'' Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen rejected that assessment, tweeting that DHS and the Secret Service "are fully prepared to support and secure the State of the Union.'' About 5,978 of 7,222 Secret Service employees remain on the job. Q: Can't Trump just show up? A: No. Anytime a president comes to speak, it must be at the request of Congress, said Donald Ritchie, the former historian of the Senate. "It's a very inflexible arrangement,'' he said. A resolution agreed to by both chambers specifies a date and time for a joint session of the House and the Senate "for receiving such communication as the president of the United States shall be pleased to make to them.'' Q: Is there a State of the Union speech every year? A: No. Recent presidents — Reagan in 1981, George H.W. Bush in 1989, Clinton in 1993, George W. Bush in 2001, Barack Obama in 2009 and Trump in 2017 — have chosen not to deliver official State of the Union addresses during their first years in office. Those speeches would have come soon after their inaugural addresses. However, many, including Trump, have delivered major speeches in front of Congress that have had the feel of the State of the Union without the title. "It's up to the president,'' said Ritchie, "whether or not he wants to come at all.'' Q: Has the State of the Union speech always been delivered in person since Wilson resumed the practice? A: No. Truman sent his final message in print, as did Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1961 and Jimmy Carter in 1981. As Eisenhower recovered from a heart attack in 1956, he prepared a seven-minute filmed summary of the message from his retreat in Key West, Fla., that was broadcast nationwide. Richard Nixon sent a printed message in 1973; his staff said an oral message would have come too soon after his second inaugural address. Q: Which presidents didn't deliver a State of the Union message? A: William Henry Harrison, who died 32 days after his inauguration in 1841, and James A. Garfield, who was assassinated in 1881 after 199 days in office. Q: Could Trump choose an alternative? A: There's no reason why not. Trump could deliver a speech from the Oval Office or organize an alternative event on Jan. 29 — the date Pelosi had originally invited Trump to deliver his address before a joint session of Congress. The White House also could choose to delay the speech, as Pelosi has suggested. It was unclear how the White House planned to respond. But Ritchie said it would be to the president's advantage to find a way to deliver the address. "You don't want to waste a dramatic moment,'' he said. Sources: Congressional Research Service, White House.
January 17, 2019 at 07:14AM
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Man accused of killing British backpacker in New Zealand pleads not guilty A man accused of murdering British backpacker Grace Millane in New Zealand pleaded not guilty on Tuesday.
January 17, 2019 at 03:45AM
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Michael Joyner
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Mối tình đầu của tôi Việt Nam
January 16, 2019 at 02:00PM
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Karl-Heinz Thiemann
LouisAlain: ←Created page with ''''Karl-Heinz Thiemann''' (born 1933<ref name="Augustin"/> in Herbern (Ascheberg) near Münster, Westfalen) is a German Opera singer (tenor). ==...'
投稿 L List of companies founded by University of Pennsylvania alumni 投稿者: Blogger さん 7 Nation's Most Visible Mass Gathering During Cor...