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    • Reality sinks in: Bipartisanship may be dead

      Reality sinks in: Bipartisanship may be dead

      The party-line vote on the pandemic aid package showed the gulf between the parties was too wide to be bridged.

      Dems want more than GOP will accept »
      • Poll reveals U.S. attitudes toward Biden on virus

        Poll reveals U.S. attitudes toward Biden on virus

      • California's Pacific Coast Highway falling into sea

        California's Pacific Coast Highway falling into sea

      • A sign of tough road ahead for Democrats in Congress

        A sign of tough road ahead for Democrats in Congress

      • Violence erupts at massive Colorado street party

        Violence erupts at massive Colorado street party

      • Black women are knitting their way into history

        Black women are knitting their way into history

    • McManus: McConnell wants to use the filibuster to block Biden's agenda. Here's how Biden can outfox him
      Politics
      LA Times

      McManus: McConnell wants to use the filibuster to block Biden's agenda. Here's how Biden can outfox him

      Now the measure, in all likelihood, will go to the Senate to die. Under the rules of the 100-member Senate, it takes 60 votes to end debate and move most bills to a vote. A filibuster used to mean a senator actually had to stand and speechify, refusing to give up the floor and thus keeping a bill from coming to a vote.

    • World
      Associated Press

      Explosion kills 3 Gaza fishermen, Hamas rocket suspected

      Three Palestinian fishermen were killed Sunday after a blast ripped through their boat off the Gaza shore, officials said, in what appeared to be an explosion caused by a misfired rocket launched by the ruling Hamas militant group. Nezar Ayyash, a spokesman for the local fisherman's association, said the men — two brothers and a cousin — were working off the coast of the southern town of Khan Younis when the explosion happened. The cause of the blast wasn't immediately clear, but there were growing indications that it was the result of a misfired rocket.

    • Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin suggests U.S. could again carry out retaliatory strike after Iraqi base attack
      Politics
      The Week

      Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin suggests U.S. could again carry out retaliatory strike after Iraqi base attack

      Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told ABC News' Martha Raddatz on Sunday that the United States still doesn't have a clear assessment of who may have been behind a rocket attack against Iraq's Ain al-Asad base, which is used by U.S.-led coalition troops, earlier this week. Lloyd Austin tells @martharaddatz the U.S. is "still developing the intelligence" on the recent rocket attack against U.S. forces at Ain al-Asad airbase: "But you can expect that we will always hold people accountable for their acts." President Biden previously signed off on airstrikes in retaliation for a similar attack carried out by Iran-backed militias in eastern Syria, a decision that prompted some criticism from congressional Democrats who felt the administration didn't adequately brief lawmakers before moving forward.

    • French billionaire politician killed in helicopter crash
      World
      Reuters

      French billionaire politician killed in helicopter crash

      French billionaire Olivier Dassault was killed on Sunday in a helicopter crash, a police source said, with President Emmanuel Macron paying tribute to the 69-year old conservative politician. Dassault was the eldest son of late French billionaire industrialist Serge Dassault, whose namesake Dassault Aviation, builds the Rafale war planes and owns Le Figaro newspaper. "Olivier Dassault loved France.

    • Myanmar coup: Party official dies in custody after security raids
      World
      BBC

      Myanmar coup: Party official dies in custody after security raids

      An official from Aung San Suu Kyi's party has died in custody in Myanmar after being arrested during raids by security forces in Yangon. On Sunday the body of U Khin Maung Latt was released to his family, who were reportedly told that he had died after fainting. The UN says more than 50 people have been killed since the military detained Ms Suu Kyi, Myanmar's democratically elected leader, on 1 February.

      • Myanmar protests, after death of Suu Kyi official
        Myanmar protests, after death of Suu Kyi official
        Reuters Videos
      • Unions call for total strike in Myanmar; Suu Kyi party official dies in custody
        Unions call for total strike in Myanmar; Suu Kyi party official dies in custody
        Reuters
    • Politics
      Yahoo News Video

      Accountant faces pressure to turn on Trump in criminal probe

      When lawyers asked Donald Trump more than a decade ago to identify who estimated values on some of his signature properties, he pointed to his longtime accountant, Allen Weisselberg.

    • India sets up holding center for Rohingya in Kashmir
      World
      Associated Press

      India sets up holding center for Rohingya in Kashmir

      Authorities in Indian-controlled Kashmir have sent at least 168 Rohingya refugees to a holding center, police said Sunday, in a process that they say is for the deportation of thousands of the refugees living in the region. The move began Saturday following a directive from the region's home department to identify Rohingya living in the southern city of Jammu, said Inspector-General Mukesh Singh. “All of them are illegally living here and we have begun identifying them,” Singh said.

    • World
      Associated Press

      Israeli woman charged after returning from Syria

      An Israeli woman who crossed illegally into neighboring Syria and was returned in a Russian-mediated deal last month was charged in an Israeli court on Sunday, prosecutors said. The woman, whose name has not been released, was charged with illegally leaving the country and visiting Syria in violation of Israeli law before the Nazareth District Court, the prosecution said. Many details remain censored by the Israeli military.

    • U.S. Senator Manchin says filibusters could be made more 'painful'
      Politics
      Reuters

      U.S. Senator Manchin says filibusters could be made more 'painful'

      Centrist Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, a pivotal vote in the U.S. Senate, on Sunday advocated making the procedural maneuver called the filibuster more "painful" to do, with Democrats concerned about Republicans obstructing President Joe Biden's legislative agenda. Some Democrats have advocated eliminating the filibuster to prevent Republicans from blocking Biden's initiatives. White House Communications Director Kate Bedingfield made clear on Sunday that the president is not calling for ending the filibuster.

      • Joe Manchin Signals Openness To Filibuster Reform As Push For Abolishing It Grows
        Joe Manchin Signals Openness To Filibuster Reform As Push For Abolishing It Grows
        HuffPost
      • Manchin says he’s open to tweaking Senate filibuster rules
        Manchin says he’s open to tweaking Senate filibuster rules
        MarketWatch
    • Who truly was the most dishonest president?
      Politics
      BBC

      Who truly was the most dishonest president?

      Former President Donald Trump was often accused of having a complete disregard for the truth. When Saddam Hussein invaded the oil-rich emirate of Kuwait in August 1990, President George HW Bush snarled: "This will not stand." The Kuwaiti government-in-exile promptly hired a US public relations firm, Hill & Knowlton, whose Washington DC office was run by Bush's former chief of staff.

    • Russia scores points with vaccine diplomacy, but snags arise
      World
      Associated Press

      Russia scores points with vaccine diplomacy, but snags arise

      Russia's boast in August that it was the first country to authorize a coronavirus vaccine led to skepticism at the time because of its insufficient testing. Six months later, as demand for the Sputnik V vaccine grows, experts are raising questions again — this time, over whether Moscow can keep up with all the orders from the countries that want it. Slovakia got 200,000 doses on March 1, even though the European Medicines Agency, the European Union's pharmaceutical regulator, only began reviewing its use on Thursday in an expedited process.

      • EU regulator urges caution on Sputnik COVID-19 vaccine
        EU regulator urges caution on Sputnik COVID-19 vaccine
        Reuters
      • Vaccine diplomacy: Putin seeks to leverage Sputnik V to build Russia’s global influence
        Vaccine diplomacy: Putin seeks to leverage Sputnik V to build Russia’s global influence
        MarketWatch
    • Aerials show huge blaze after oil facility strike in Syria
      World
      Associated Press

      Aerials show huge blaze after oil facility strike in Syria

      A suspected missile strike on an oil-loading facility used by Turkey-backed opposition forces in northern Syria sparked a massive blaze across a large area where oil tankers are normally parked, aerial and satellite images show. Syrian opposition groups and at least one war monitor blamed Russia for the strike Friday night near the towns of Jarablus and al-Bab, near the border with Turkey. In a report, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, based in Britain, said Russian warships in the Mediterranean had fired three missiles that struck primitive oil refineries and tanker trucks in the region.

    • Lobbyist says Myanmar junta wants to improve relations with the West, spurn China
      World
      Reuters

      Lobbyist says Myanmar junta wants to improve relations with the West, spurn China

      An Israeli-Canadian lobbyist hired by Myanmar's junta said on Saturday that the generals are keen to leave politics after their coup and seek to improve relations with the United States and distance themselves from China. Ari Ben-Menashe, a former Israeli military intelligence official who has previously represented Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe and Sudan's military rulers, said Myanmar's generals also want to repatriate Rohingya Muslims who fled to neighboring Bangladesh.

    • 'Lesson fully received': An 18-year-old charged in the Capitol riot says he was 'wrong' and begged a judge to release him
      U.S.
      INSIDER

      'Lesson fully received': An 18-year-old charged in the Capitol riot says he was 'wrong' and begged a judge to release him

      The youngest suspect charged in the Capitol riots wrote a letter begging a judge to release him. Bruno Joseph Cua, 18, previously boasted on Instagram of storming the Capitol and fighting inside. Bruno Joseph Cua, 18, faces a slew of federal charges related to the January 6 insurrection, including assault on a federal officer, engaging in physical violence, violent entry or disorderly conduct, and civil disorder.

      • ‘I will not step one foot out of line’: 18-year-old charged in Capitol riot begs for release
        ‘I will not step one foot out of line’: 18-year-old charged in Capitol riot begs for release
        The Independent
      • 18-year-old Capitol rioter wants to go home to his ‘loving family’ who drove him to DC
        18-year-old Capitol rioter wants to go home to his ‘loving family’ who drove him to DC
        NY Daily News
    • B-52s again fly over Mideast in US military warning to Iran
      World
      Associated Press

      B-52s again fly over Mideast in US military warning to Iran

      A pair of B-52 bombers flew over the Mideast on Sunday, the latest such mission in the region aimed at warning Iran amid tensions between Washington and Tehran. The flight by the two heavy bombers came as a pro-Iran satellite channel based in Beirut broadcast Iranian military drone footage of an Israeli ship hit by a mysterious explosion only days earlier in the Mideast. While the channel sought to say Iran wasn't involved, Israel has blamed Tehran for what it described as an attack on the vessel.

    • Austria suspends AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine batch after death
      World
      Reuters

      Austria suspends AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine batch after death

      Austrian authorities have suspended inoculations with a batch of AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine as a precaution while investigating the death of one person and the illness of another after the shots, a health agency said on Sunday. "The Federal Office for Safety in Health Care (BASG) has received two reports in a temporal connection with a vaccination from the same batch of the AstraZeneca vaccine in the district clinic of Zwettl" in Lower Austria province, it said. One 49-year-old woman died as a result of severe coagulation disorders, while a 35-year-old woman developed a pulmonary embolism and is recovering, it said.

    • At Dubai airport, travelers' eyes become their passports
      Technology
      Associated Press

      At Dubai airport, travelers' eyes become their passports

      Dubai's airport, the world's busiest for international travel, can already feel surreal, with its cavernous duty-free stores, artificial palm trees, gleaming terminals, water cascades and near-Arctic levels of air conditioning. It's the latest artificial intelligence program the United Arab Emirates has launched amid the surging coronavirus pandemic, contact-less technology the government promotes as helping to stem the spread of the virus. Dubai's airport started offering the program to all passengers last month.

    • Rights groups call for investigation into killings of Philippine activists
      World
      Reuters

      Rights groups call for investigation into killings of Philippine activists

      Human rights groups called on the Philippine government to investigate what they said was the use of "lethal force" during police raids on Sunday that left at least nine activists dead. The raids in four provinces south of Manila resulted in the death of an environmental activist as well as a coordinator of left-wing group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, among others, and resulted in the arrest of four others, activist groups said. "These raids appear to be part of a coordinated plan by the authorities to raid, arrest, and even kill activists in their homes and offices," Human Rights Watch Deputy Asia Director Phil Robertson said in a statement.

    • Thousands of people who visited a COVID-19 vaccination site in California received the wrong dosage, report says
      U.S.
      Business Insider

      Thousands of people who visited a COVID-19 vaccination site in California received the wrong dosage, report says

      An estimated 4,300 people received less of the Pfizer vaccine than they should have, KTVU reported. Too little of the vaccine was administered due to a problem with new syringes, the media outlet said. California health officials have said patients will be informed "immediately" if they need a booster.

    • Sunshine State dims for Dems amid election losses, cash woes
      Politics
      Associated Press

      Sunshine State dims for Dems amid election losses, cash woes

      Democrats may delight in their brightening prospects in Arizona and Georgia, and may even harbor glimmers of hope in Texas, but their angst is growing in Florida, which has a reputation as a swing state but now favors Republicans and could be shifting further out of reach for Democrats. As the jockeying begins to take on Gov. Ron DeSantis and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio in 2022, Democrats' disadvantage against Republicans is deeper than ever, as they try to develop a cohesive strategy and rebuild a statewide party deep in debt and disarray. Former President Donald Trump's brand of populism has helped power a GOP surge in Florida, where Trump defeated now-President Joe Biden by more than 3 percentage points last fall — more than doubling the lead he had against Hillary Clinton.

    • The mystery American woman wanted in the UK
      World
      BBC

      The mystery American woman wanted in the UK

      Anne Sacoolas, a US citizen, has been charged with causing death by dangerous driving in the UK, but returned home under the protection of diplomatic immunity. In August 2019, Anne Sacoolas collided with motorcyclist Harry Dunn while driving on the wrong side of the road in the UK. Sacoolas returned to the US, claiming diplomatic immunity, and an extradition request was blocked.

    • Prominent Georgia family sued their local grocery clerk after she made claims on Facebook about their role in the Capitol riots, report says
      U.S.
      Business Insider

      Prominent Georgia family sued their local grocery clerk after she made claims on Facebook about their role in the Capitol riots, report says

      A family is suing a grocery clerk after she posted allegations about their roles in the Capitol riots. Katheryn and Thelma Cagle had helped organize buses from Georgia to DC, according to the Washington Post. Grocery clerk Rayven Goolsby confronted them on Facebook after seeing videos of them at the rally.

    • With many vaccinated, Israel reopens economy before election
      World
      Associated Press

      With many vaccinated, Israel reopens economy before election

      Israel reopened most of its economy Sunday as it removed many of its remaining coronavirus lockdown restrictions, lifted by its successful vaccination campaign and giving a boost to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's re-election hopes. The easing of restrictions comes after months of government-imposed shutdowns and less than three weeks before the country's fourth parliamentary elections in two years. Israel, a world leader in vaccinations per capita, has fully immunized nearly 40% of its population in just over two months.

    • Tucker Carlson calls QAnon supporters ‘gentle’ patriots a week after suggesting the conspiracy didn’t exist
      World
      The Independent

      Tucker Carlson calls QAnon supporters ‘gentle’ patriots a week after suggesting the conspiracy didn’t exist

      Tucker Carlson appeared to change his tune on supporters of the false QAnon conspiracy theory during his primetime show on Friday, describing them as “gentle people waving American flags” following the Capitol insurrection. The Fox News host said QAnon supporters “like this country” and suggested some were “maybe kind of confused with the wrong ideas” while referring to the entirely inaccurate conspiracy theory, which claims former President Donald Trump is defending the world from a wealthy network of child predators, conveniently including his apparent political enemies, like Hillary Clinton, while ignoring his own friends and allies. “Do you ever notice how all the scary internet conspiracy theorists – the radical QAnon people – when you actually see them on camera or in jail cells, as a lot of them now are, are maybe kind of confused with the wrong ideas, but they're all kind of gentle people now waving American flags?” he asked during his opening show on Friday, adding: “They like this country.”

    • World
      Reuters Videos

      Iraqi priest dances for joy over Pope's arrival

      The 31 year-old priest said a feeling of overwhelming joy took a hold of him as he began cheering and swaying before the crowds, who were holding balloons and Vatican City flags amid blaring music. Father Momika is an active member of the church committee organizing festivals and activities for youth in the Christian enclave of Qaraqosh. "But this time, it was like a dream come true," he explained, adding that he had never expected the Pope to visit his hometown of Qaraqosh.

    Should humans be next to explore Mars?
    • “Taking humans to Mars would require an investment astronomically out of kilter with the possible benefits.”

    • “Can a Mars settlement be a freer society than we enjoy on Earth? Maybe.”

    • “What we learn...may spark the next revolution that will make life in 2071 beyond anything we can imagine right now.”

    • “Our presence on Mars could jeopardize one of our main reasons for being there — the search for life.”

    • “The future of geologic investigation of other worlds lies with highly improved versions of our Mars rovers.”

    Read the 360