the "Headline That Caught My Attention or the WTF" thread

WORLD NEWS

US hits back at ISIS-K days after Kabul attack, 'kills' terrorist planner in drone strike in Afghanistan​

A spokesperson for the US Central Command said the unmanned airstrike occurred in the Nangahar province of Afghanistan, adding that the initial indications hint that the ISIS-K target has been killed and there have been no civilian casualties.
Written by Joydeep Bose | Edited by Meenakshi Ray, Hindustan Times, New Delhi
UPDATED ON AUG 28, 2021 09:17 AM IST
The US struck back at the Islamic State on Saturday as it bombed a member of the ISIS-K in eastern Afghanistan in a retaliatory airstrike less than 48 hours after a fatal suicide bombing claimed by the group killed as many as 169 Afghans and 13 American service members, news agencies reported. According to the Pentagon, the drone strikes by the US military targeted a 'planner' of the ISIS outfit.
 
From the "A Fool and His Money are Soon Parted" files, but with some of the money that many have, it might take a bit longer...

Truffles, gold leaf and triple-digit prices: Status dishes are back​

pressherald.com/2021/08/29/truffles-gold-leaf-and-triple-digit-prices-status-dishes-are-back/

By Emily Heil August 29, 2021

Restaurant owners and chefs have been obsessing over how the pandemic might permanently change what diners want. In the past 18 months, so much fine dining has given way to simpler fare – even Noma, the Denmark restaurant known for serving moss garnishes and triple-digit checks, morphed into a burger joint. Perhaps this swing toward familiar comfort foods is here to stay?

No blinging way, at least not for some luxury-seekers. In the latest sign that nature is, in fact, healing, the status dish is making its flashy, made-for-Instagram return. Such menu items – usually eye-poppingly expensive, often flecked with edible gilding and incorporating famously pricey ingredients such as caviar or truffles – have long been with us. They have occasionally made headlines (as they’re designed to do) and sometimes get compiled into world’s-most-expensive lists. But they had been put on mute, like that colleague on Zoom with the ringing phone, as the pandemic shut down restaurants and made takeout our biggest dining splurge.

“There’s a bit of novelty-seeking as people are finally getting out this summer,” says Joe Nunes, a professor of marketing at the University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business who studies the luxury market. “If you want to do things you haven’t done in a year or more, how far away can you get from the mundane than a gold-leaf-covered tomahawk steak?”

Nunes notes such conspicuous consumption went up after the Great Recession, too. “There are some people who are saying now that they’re taking joy in simpler things,” he says. “But there’s a much larger group saying, ‘I’ve lived an austere life, and now I’m going to go out and live a little by spending a lot.'”


Conspicuous consumption dining is back. Steak in gold leaf is among the sort of status foods that are again gaining popularity. Smeilov Serge/Shutterstock

In Atlanta, the three-level, 200-seat Steak Market opens next month, aiming to offer a luxe experience straight out of a hedge funder’s fantasy, with a members-only cigar bar, 300 types of whiskey, a raw bar and … several cuts of premium steak completely encased in gold leaf. The beef will include cuts from Georgia farms, “gold-grade American Wagyu, certified Australian Wagyu, and certified Japanese Kobe,” according to Eater Atlanta, and the prices have not yet been made public.

Serendipity 3, the restaurant in Manhattan’s Upper East Side that already holds Guinness world records for most expensive milkshake and sandwich, last month announced it had clinched the title for the planet’s priciest french fries. The $200 “Crème de la Crème Pommes Frites” are as pedigreed as a bichon at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show: Chipperbec potatoes are blanched in Dom Pérignon champagne and triple-cooked in the fat of geese that were raised, cage free, in southwest France, then sprinkled with truffle-infused sel gris from Guérande, France, and black truffles from Umbria, Italy, all served with a Mornay sauce. As anyone who’s ever watched a late-1980s episode of “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” should expect, the whole thing is presented on Baccarat crystal and showered with “23K edible gold dust.”

The dish isn’t a novelty act, Serendipity 3 chef Joe Calderone insists. “They warrant the price – these are not just a bunch of expensive ingredients thrown together,” he says. “They really are the best french fries in the world.”

And diners are flocking, with a 10-week wait list for the celebrated dish. Calderone says that rather than being out of step with the current state of the world, his $200 fries might be just what people need. “It’s the right time for indulgence given what’s transpired in the last year and a half,” he says. “People deserve to be spoiled a little bit.”

Not everyone is in the eat-like-the-rich mood. In San Francisco, chef Rob Lam at Lily axed the most expensive item on his menu, a $72 fried rice dish he had invented as a sort of joke to appeal to people looking for something “over-the-top and bougie,” he told the San Francisco Chronicle. For Lam, the novelty wore off after the item became hugely popular, and preparing the intricate dish became a chore.
Others are giving the genre a philanthropic twist. A Dutch restaurant last month began offering a $6,000 burger containing Wagyu beef, beluga caviar, Alaskan king crab and white truffle, with the proceeds going to food banks in the Netherlands.

Nunes notes that such dishes appeal more to a newly wealthy diner or someone merely aspiring to that status, not to people with no need to broadcast their affluence. Dishes decked in edible gold are more for people who are compensating, he says, while the superwealthy use more subtle signifiers to communicate their wealth. “If you have enough money that you are always feeling abundance, there’s no need for those things,” he says.

Whatever the motivation, after months of takeout, social media feeds are again filled with over-the-top meals for us proles to envy. A TikTok foodie named Lors last month racked up 2.1 million likes for a video in which she documented a meal under the sparkling chandeliers at Joel Robuchon in Las Vegas’s MGM Grand hotel that cost $445 per person. She captioned it as the “most expensive dinner in the world,” which is probably not accurate, but the multicourse extravaganza was still a study in status dining, with appearances by rich-people staples such as caviar, foie gras, frog legs and lobster.

Lors gave the foie gras dish a seven out of 10 score, docking points for the “tomato candy” incorporated in it. “I don’t like tomato,” she says.

And celebrities are back to using food as a flex. In what might be the most perfect execution of this move, singer and cosmetics tycoon Rihanna celebrated her official entry into the rarefied air of the billionaire’s club this week with an Instagram post of herself enjoying breakfast in bed. The meal was simple – just a massive tin of caviar, perched on a glass bowl of ice – but it spoke loudly. Rihanna, wearing shades and a sweatshirt, surrounded by a sea of (surely high thread-count) white bedding, wielded a single spoon.
 
USA TODAY

13 beers, an empty table: A quiet but powerful way restaurants honor those killed in Kabul​


Gabriela Miranda, USA TODAY
Sat, August 28, 2021, 5:38 PM



Restaurants and businesses across the country are choosing to reserve a table and 13 beers to honor the service members who died during Thursday's bombing near Kabul's Hamid Karzai International Airport.

Ironwood Cafe in Ohio said the news hit close to home – Maxton "Max" Soviak is a native of Milan, Ohio and was among the fallen.

"My husband, grandfather and many in my family served. So, when I read that one of Ohio's own died, I knew I wanted to make a small gesture to honor Max and the 12 other soldiers," Shannon Vasquez, general manager of the cafe told USA TODAY.

Vasquez said one of her regular customers saw the 13 beers, gave her a big hug and said "this reminds me of my grandpa who died in the line of duty."

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Also in Ohio, Niko Moulagianis said he felt compelled to do something, too. He called his bar's general manager and told her about reserving an entire table for 13 beers to honor the service members.

"She told me, 'You do realize it's a Friday night right?' I said, 'Yeah, but do you do realize these people are not coming back to the families?'" Moulagianis, owner of Niko's Bar & Gyros told USA TODAY.

He didn't stop there. Until September 11, Moulagianis will donate a dollar for every beer they sell. The proceeds will go to military charities, or specifically to the families of the 13 who died.

On top of beer sales, he said they've received cash donations from local customers. Moulagianis hopes veterans, affected and military families see the 13 beers and feel "supported and seen."

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"A father came up to me with tears in his eyes and said, 'My son is a Marine. So I thank you.' I told him, 'There's no reason to thank me. I thank you and your son," Moulagianis said.

Michael Maiorana, co-owner of First Line Brewery in New York has also been displaying 13 beers inside the brewery. Staff refresh the pints throughout the night so the beers remain cold. Maiorana said a portion of the proceeds from this weekend will be donated to military-run charities for fallen service members. Customers have donated about $2,000 in cash since Friday, he said.

Other local businesses and bars in the area have followed the brewery's lead. One flower shop placed 13 roses outside their shop, Maiorana said.

"It's great to see our community showing up to support the soldiers and their affected families. We want them to know that at least we are here for them in any small or big way they need," Maiorana told USA TODAY.

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A barbershop in Delaware decided to reserve a single chair in the shop and set out 13 beers as well. The owner of Amstel Barbershop, Robert Allen, placed a folded U.S. flag on top of the chair in hopes customers take a few minutes to honor the lost soldiers. Allen said almost everyone in the city of Middletown knows a veteran or someone currently serving and are heartbroken by the Kabul attack.

On a busy Saturday, Allen said he wanted people to stop and remember the "true sacrifices and heroes."

"Somebody lost a piece of their family they'll never get back. Putting out 13 beers to honor the lives of those soldiers is the least any American can do right now," Allen told USA TODAY.

1630253878314.webp


Hannah Nielson, a kitchen manager at AJOBrady's restaurant in Wisconsin, heard from a former employee who left to become a Marine that some men in her unit died in the Kabul attack. Nielson told restaurant owner Bruce Russell they had to do something.

Nielson saw other businesses and bars setting out 13 beers for the fallen soldiers, so AJOBrady's staff did the same. Except its customers went one step further. Since Friday, dozens have offered to pay for the beer or meal of any veteran or military family who comes into the restaurant.

"We wanted to make sure everyone in our restaurant felt this loss and honor the soldiers. We're active in the community and wanted to shed a light on what's happened," Nielson told USA TODAY.

1630253934071.webp


Russell said the community reaction has been overwhelming, customers have seen the 13 beers and asked where and how they can help other military families. Some have offered donations, while others have thanked and hugged local veterans.

"These families, the sacrifices and those soldiers who died deserve to be seen. So in our small way, we put our 13 beers to honor them, which isn't half of what they deserve. But it's something," Russell told USA TODAY.
 
So your handing him a Covid death Badge also?

I mean, if he dies of whatever he has, the fact he did not get a bed because someone said they were too busy handling COVID patients, then he died of covid too.
Right?
 
This sucks, person, wife and house make it through IDA and then...

An alligator attacked a Louisiana man in an area flooded by Ida.​


A Louisiana man was missing and presumed dead after an alligator attacked him on Monday in an area that was flooded during Hurricane Ida, the authorities said.

A woman said that at about noon on Monday, her 71-year-old husband was attacked by an alligator while walking in floodwaters at their home in the city of Slidell, about 30 miles northeast of New Orleans on the north side of Lake Pontchartrain, according to the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office.

The woman, whose name was not released, told deputies that she was inside her home when she heard a commotion. When she went outside, she saw a large alligator attacking her husband, the Sheriff’s Office said.

Once the attack stopped, the woman pulled her husband out of the floodwaters and returned inside to gather first aid supplies, the Sheriff’s Office said.

When she realized the severity of his injuries, she got into a boat to seek help, about a mile away. When she returned, her husband was gone, the Sheriff’s Office said.

Deputies’ efforts to find the man were unsuccessful, and the incident remains under investigation.

Capt. Lance Vitter of the Sheriff’s Office told WWL-TV that the couple’s home is surrounded by marsh and in an area that “is well known to have alligators.”

In a statement, Sheriff Randy Smith of the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office warned residents to be “extra vigilant” while walking in flooded areas because the storm may have displaced wildlife, causing alligators and other animals to move closer into neighborhoods.

Louisiana and Florida have the largest alligator populations in the United States, with more than one million wild alligators in each state, according to the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. Alligators are most common in Louisiana’s coastal marshes but can also be found in ponds, lakes, canals, rivers, swamps and bayous.

At least five other deaths — three in Louisiana and two in Mississippi — have been attributed to the storm, officials said.
 
The New York Times

An Unceremonious End, and a Shrouded Beginning​


The end of the United States’ longest war was unceremonious — trash blowing across the single airstrip of Kabul’s international airport, Afghans lingering outside the gates, still hoping in vain for evacuation, Taliban firing victoriously into the night sky.

In its final days, it was two U.S. Marines shaking hands with Taliban fighters in the dim glow of the domestic terminal. It was lines of starved and dehydrated evacuees boarding gray planes that took them to uncertain futures. It was the Taliban’s leadership dictating their terms, as a generation of Afghans pondered the end of 20 years of some kind of expanded hope.

It was highway overpasses and park benches stretched across the United States, named in honor of the war’s dead.

The end, at least for the Americans and their Western allies, came on a Monday after the thousands of U.S. troops defending Hamid Karzai International Airport flew out in waves, one lumbering transport plane after another until none were left, in the final hours of the lost war.

Unlike the Soviets defeated before them, the Americans’ legacy was not a landscape littered with the destroyed hulks of armored vehicles. Instead, they left all the arms and equipment needed to supply the Taliban, the victors, for years to come, the product of two decades and $83 billion training and equipping an Afghan military and police forces that collapsed in the face of poor leadership and dwindling U.S. support.

Afghanistan has once more completed a cycle that has repeatedly defined the past 40 years of violence and upheaval: For the fifth time since the Soviet invasion in 1979, one order has collapsed and another has risen. What has followed each of those times has been a descent into vengeance, score-settling and, eventually, another cycle of disorder and war.


An American soldier on a helicopter over Kabul, Afghanistan, May 2, 2021. (Jim Huylebroek/The New York Times)

An American soldier on a helicopter over Kabul, Afghanistan, May 2, 2021. (Jim Huylebroek/The New York Times)

It is up to the Taliban, now, to decide whether they will perpetuate the cycle of vengeance, as they did upon seizing power from a group of feuding warlords in 1996, or will truly embrace the new path that their leaders have promised in recent days: one of acceptance and reconciliation.

Nearly 20 years have passed since Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida executed the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States, and President George W. Bush announced that the United States would invade Afghanistan as the first act in a global war against terrorism. Now, the United States is contending with how to define its relationship with the same Islamist rulers it toppled in 2001 — again a question of vengeance or acceptance — and how to try to head off the resurgence of any international terrorist threat rising from Afghanistan.

Now, there are smaller prospects of airstrikes in the Afghan countryside that leave the unnamed and faceless dead as data points in a colored bar graph of a barely read United Nations report. No roadside bombs buried in haste, in the dead of night, that might strike a government vehicle or a minibus packed with families.

Instead, there is a widespread anxiety about what the true shape of Taliban rule will be with the Americans truly gone. And there is fear that the chaotic rush of the government’s collapse during the Taliban advance could leave an unfixable economy, ruin and hunger.

The United States’ conflict in Afghanistan was a long war with a quick end, or so it seemed. But the withdrawal’s fate was set more than 18 months ago, when the Trump administration signed an agreement with the Taliban to withdraw from the country by May 1, 2021. In exchange, the Taliban agreed to stop attacking Americans, end mass-casualty attacks on Afghans in cities, and prevent al-Qaida and other terrorist groups from finding refuge in the country.

The Taliban’s leverage, earned after years of fighting the world’s most advanced military, multiplied as they captured more remote outposts and checkpoints, then rural villages and districts, then the roads in between them. By the beginning of this year, the Taliban had positioned themselves near several key cities, as the newly inaugurated Biden administration weighed whether to honor the agreement made under President Donald Trump to depart.

By the time President Joe Biden and NATO announced in April the withdrawal of U.S. and coalition forces by Sept. 11, the Taliban were already taking district after district. The Afghan security forces were surrendering or being cut down in droves. Soon, provincial capitals too were under siege, despite U.S. air power and an Afghan military that Biden and other senior officials said was nearly 300,000 strong. But in the final days, the Afghan security forces totaled around just one-sixth of that, according to U.S. officials.

Afghan troops fled more than fought, but those who were killed with their chests facing their enemy died for a cause that not even their leaders seemed to believe in.

Even before Biden’s announcement and Trump’s deal with the Taliban, the United States had been in stages of withdrawal since December 2009, when President Barack Obama announced both a surge of tens of thousands of troops and their departure by 2014.

Since then, Afghans and America’s allies have been in varying stages of alarm and second-guessing, clambering to secure their future and business interests. This uncertainty reinforced the endemic corruption that the West decried, but continued to feed it with billions of dollars in the hope it might somehow change.

Now, at the end, the Afghan politicians and entrepreneurs and elite who fed off the war’s coffers have largely fled. The final U.S. military planes departed, leaving behind at least 100,000 Afghans eligible for resettlement in the United States for their work with the Americans.

The evacuation, which began in July as an orderly and modest relocation of a few thousand Afghans, devolved into an apocalyptic exodus as Kabul collapsed on Aug. 15. Hundreds, then thousands, amassed at the gates; people abandoned their cars; and U.S. forces watched on infrared cameras as people overran their defenses, not with tanks or explosives but with sheer mass.

The Americans and the Taliban then worked together to clear the airport and establish a perimeter after frantic Afghans fell from the underbelly of transport planes and the thud-thud-thud of helicopters evacuated the U.S. Embassy, one of the world's largest diplomatic missions. The evacuation became plagued by scenes that evoked those of another generational American war, when Saigon fell and helicopters were pushed from ships to sea.

“We have a mutually beneficial relationship with the Taliban,” one soldier said unironically this month, standing near the sea of people holding signs and documents and passports in the dead of night, illuminated by the flashlights attached to rifles held by U.S. soldiers who yelled at them to stop pushing and get back. One person was caught in the string of barbed wire and ripped free by panicked family members as more steel barrier coils were laid in place.

A year ago, or 10 years ago, or 15 years ago, the Taliban were shadows in an adjacent tree line, the unseen specters who turned the ground in front of U.S., NATO and Afghan troops into a mine-laden hell. Each step posed the question of what to do if a friend in front was suddenly blown in half — the tourniquet goes here, the blood type is O positive.

Yet in the final hours of America’s war, the Taliban fully materialized, just down the road or on the other side of the gate in the country’s capital. They were suddenly everywhere, their white-and-black flags orbiting the American positions, controlling the crowd, letting the Americans end the war — but not on American terms.

For the U.S. forces on the ground the final weeks of the war, the task at hand wasn’t a presence patrol, or counterinsurgency operations or clear-hold-build or nation-building. There were no raids on Taliban weapons caches or bomb-makers because the bomb-makers and their commanders now controlled the city.

The young soldiers and Marines instead found ways to help those who were lucky enough to make it near the airport gates at all. They pulled people through the threshold to what Afghans believed would be a better life. Sometimes those Afghans didn’t have the right documents, so they were turned away.

Beyond the trauma of having to give that rejection, and face that desperation, the Americans would once more face the loss of comrades in Afghanistan in those final hours — 13 U.S. service members, killed by an Islamic State group terrorist attack on Thursday as they tried to sort a crowd of Afghans holding their documents out for consideration. Almost 200 Afghans were killed in the same attack, in a devastating coda of carnage.

In Qatar, Kuwait, Germany and the United States, tens of thousands of Afghans sit in processing centers, out of the shadow of the Taliban’s new-old government, but uncertain of when or how they might make it to America.

In the United States, historians and analysts will look back on the failed solutions and the misguided strategies and general officers who assured victory even though in off-the-record briefings and closed-door sessions they acknowledged that the United States was losing. Perhaps the American people will demand accountability for the thousands of lives and trillions of dollars spent, only for the Taliban to end up back in control, more powerful than they were 20 years ago.

Or perhaps they won’t care, and will move on in an America that will continue to be profoundly shaped — politically, economically and personally — by the war, noticed or not.

As for those left behind in Afghanistan, a country of 38 million minus the thousands who have fled or died in recent weeks, all they can do is look forward, asking themselves and anyone who will listen: What comes next?

© 2021 The New York Times Company
 
It's only a "recommended sentence length", let's see what the Judge hands out...

Capitol Rioter Known as QAnon Shaman Pleads Guilty​

Jacob Chansley, who stormed onto the Senate floor in face paint and a horned hat, accepted a deal under which federal prosecutors will recommend a sentence of 41 to 51 months in prison.

Jacob Chansley, a former actor and Navy sailor, was one of the first rioters to break into the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Jacob Chansley, a former actor and Navy sailor, was one of the first rioters to break into the Capitol on Jan. 6.Credit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Jacob Chansley, a former actor and Navy sailor widely known as the QAnon Shaman, who stormed the Capitol in January in stars-and-stripes face paint and a horned fur hat, pleaded guilty on Friday to a single felony count of obstructing an official proceeding before Congress.

Mr. Chansley, 34, became one of the best-known figures in the Capitol breach after images of him standing shirtless on the Senate floor brandishing a spear made from a flagpole shot around the globe, vividly representing the role played in the riot by adherents of QAnon, the cultlike conspiracy theory embraced by some backers of former President Donald J. Trump.

Mr. Chansley, who says he has now lost faith in Mr. Trump, remained in the spotlight even after his arrest.

In February, his lawyer, Albert Watkins, persuaded a federal judge to order the jail where Mr. Chansley was being detained to provide him with a strict diet of organic meals. The next month, Mr. Chansley gave a widely watched interview to “60 Minutes,” saying that his actions on Jan. 6 were not an attack on the nation, but rather a way to “bring God back into the Senate.”

His plea hearing in Federal District Court in Washington on Friday departed from the circuslike atmosphere that has surrounded the case from the start. He did not speak other than to answer yes-or-no procedural questions. Under the terms of his deal, Mr. Chansley agreed to accept a recommended 41 to 51 months in prison. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Nov. 17.

Another defendant who pleaded guilty to the same charge this year was given eight months at a sentencing hearing in July.

Among the first rioters to break into the Capitol, Mr. Chansley was arrested three days later and charged with civil disorder, obstruction, disorderly conduct in a restricted building and demonstrating in a Capitol building. Prosecutors say that while he was in the Senate chamber, he left a note on the desk of Vice President Mike Pence saying, “It’s only a matter of time, justice is coming.”


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Mr. Chansley, who had appeared in his shaman costume at several pro-Trump rallies before Jan. 6, was also one of the first defendants to blame Mr. Trump for his own behavior at the riot. A few weeks after Mr. Chansley’s arrest, Mr. Watkins said that Mr. Trump was culpable of inciting his followers to attack the Capitol, adding that he planned to ask the White House for a pardon for his client.

“Does our president bear responsibility?” Mr. Watkins told The New York Times at the time. “Hell, yes, he does.”

More recently, however, Mr. Watkins has said that Mr. Chansley — like other rioters — felt betrayed by Mr. Trump. He also said that Mr. Chansley has repudiated the QAnon cult and would like to be known merely as a shaman, not the QAnon shaman.

“The path charted by Mr. Chansley since Jan. 6 has been a process, one which has involved pain, depression, solitary confinement, introspection, recognition of mental health vulnerabilities and a coming to grips with the need for more self-work,” Mr. Watkins said in a statement on Thursday.

At a news conference after the hearing, Mr. Watkins told reporters that Mr. Chansley had been under pressure from his family not to plead guilty. His family, Mr. Watkins said, believed that Mr. Trump was going to be reinstated as president and could issue Mr. Chansley a pardon — a baseless theory of the sort once promoted by QAnon that continues to circulate among some Trump supporters.

“It took a lot of courage for a young man who was raised by his mother to say, ‘No,’” Mr. Watkins said.

With Mr. Chansley’s plea, 51 of the roughly 600 people who have been charged in connection with the riot have entered guilty pleas, most for misdemeanor offenses like disorderly conduct. At least another 11 defendants are scheduled to plead guilty by the end of October.
 
WTF is wrong with people?? Have we all become defective?


A man armed with a gun is accused of holding a baby as he fired at three women during a road-rage shooting in Ohio, police say.

The bizarre scene unfolded after two women crashed their vehicles in Cincinnati on Wednesday. A 54-year-old woman said she and another driver were involved in the minor collision that didn’t cause any damage and “words were exchanged” afterward, according to police.

“I’m gonna go get my man,” the 54-year-old recalled the other woman telling her, police said. “You better go get yours.”

About half an hour later, 31-year-old Ladon Penn arrived and walked into a home before reappearing with gun, police said.


A screenshot from a video obtained during the investigation captured Penn holding a handgun in his right hand while holding a baby with his left arm, police said. Another screenshot shows him pointing the gun while holding the baby.
 
Wonderful - Just Wonderful


New Delhi — Authorities in India's southern Kerala state are racing to contain an outbreak of the Nipah virus. The virus, which is not related to the coronavirus behind the current global pandemic and is far more deadly, killed a 12-year-old boy in Kerala over the weekend, prompting stepped-up efforts to trace his contacts. New infections have been confirmed.

According to the state's health minister, Veena George, 188 people who came into contact with the boy had been identified by Monday. Of them, 20 were considered high-risk primary contacts — primarily his family members, all of whom were being held under strict quarantine or hospitalized.

Two healthcare workers who came into contact with the victim were already showing symptoms of Nipah infection by Monday. They were admitted to a hospital and their blood samples sent for testing.

Authorities sealed off the area within about a two-mile radius of the boy's home, and they were screening people for symptoms in all adjoining districts of Kerala state. The neighboring state of Tamil Nadu was also on high alert for any suspect cases of fever.

What is Nipah virus?

Like the coronavirus, Nipah is a zoonotic virus, or one that is transmitted from animals to humans. Transmission generally occurs when humans either come into direct contact with the animals, or through consumption of contaminated food. But a high number of human-to-human transmission cases of Nipah have also been reported.

Fruit bats of the family Pteropodidae — commonly known as the "flying fox" — are the natural carriers of Nipah. They are known to transmit the virus to other animals including pigs, dogs, cats, goats, horses and sheep.

There is no cure or vaccine for Nipah yet, and patients are only given supportive medical care.

According to the World Health Organization, up to 75% of Nipah infections prove fatal. The mortality rate for the coronavirus, by comparison, is believed to be about 2%. About 20% of survivors experience neurological symptoms that can persist, including seizures and personality changes.
 
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