What happened to the gas prices that doubled as the president started his executive signing?
How could this Biden's Administration concocted this humiliating disorganized withdrawal from Afghanistan. Was that deliberate, or just usual. Just a thought.
President Biden has reacted to America's snowballing humiliation in the graveyard of empires by once again dispatching U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad to Doha, Qatar, to urge the government and the Taliban to seek a political solution, while at the same time dispatching B-52 bombers to attack at least two provincial capitals.
In Lashkargah, the capital of Helmand province, the US. bombing has already reportedly destroyed a high school and a health clinic.
Another B-52 bombed Sheberghan, the capital of Jowzjan province and the home of the infamous warlord and accused war criminal Abdul Rashid Dostum, who is now the military commander of the U.S.-backed government's armed forces.
Many are thinking the Afghanistan war passed it's first year was not worth the cost.
A number of western lowland gorillas at Zoo Atlanta have tested positive for the coronavirus, the zoo announced on its website.
"Recently, Gorilla Care Team members observed coughing, nasal discharge, and minor changes in appetite in several members of the gorilla population," the zoo wrote Friday. "Upon the onset of these signs, the Animal Care and Veterinary Teams immediately pursued testing for SARS-CoV-2. Fecal samples and nasal and oral swab samples were sent to the Athens Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory at the University of Georgia, where they tested presumptively positive. Zoo Atlanta is waiting to receive the results of the confirmatory tests on samples sent to the National Veterinary Services Laboratory in Ames, Iowa."
The zoo believes the gorillas were infected by an employee who was fully vaccinated and wearing Personal Protective Equipment while caring for the animals, but later tested positive for COVID-19
The MTA pumps 14 million gallons of water from subway stations daily, so days with heavy rain pose challenges.
Of the MTA’s 665 miles of subway track, 418 are underground, which means they’re vulnerable to flooding. When the drainage and sewer system are overwhelmed, it sends water flooding into the subway system.
Just a thought.