Tag: US News

  • Joshua Tree’s ‘Invisible House’ could be yours for $18m

    Joshua Tree’s ‘Invisible House’ could be yours for $18m

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    Joshua Tree’s real estate boom may have reached a symbolic peak, as the desert town’s iconic, mirror-walled mansion goes on the market for $18m in what is said to be a record-setting asking price.

    The Invisible House, constructed in 2019 by film producers Chris and Roberta Hanley, has hosted celebrities like Lizzo, Alicia Keys, Ariana Grande and The Weeknd, and been featured in the Netflix series The World’s Most Amazing Vacation Rentals.

    The house is a surreal, box-like structure, with glinting glass walls that reflect the desert landscape, and a massive, 100ft indoor pool that stretches nearly half the length of the house. Its owners have touted the meditative aspects of the property.

    “I think Demi Lovato saw aliens there,” Roberta Hanley told the Wall Street Journal.

    The house had previously been available to rent for $150,000 a month, $6,000 per day, or $1,000 per hour, Mansion Global reported last summer. A rental website touted the house’s “dramatic desert contrasts” and the “oversized” pool that “flaunts its abundance in a seemingly barren land”.

    The home features a 100ft indoor pool that stretches nearly half the length of the house.
    The home features a 100ft indoor pool that stretches nearly half the length of the house. Photograph: Brian Ashby/Courtesy of Aaron Kirman and Matt Adamo of AKG | Christie’s International Real Estate

    The residence, which offers a modest three bedrooms and four bathrooms, has a “fully-mirrored exterior which ‘disappears’ into the surrounding desert”, as well as high-end kitchen appliances and charging stations for three Teslas.

    “To our knowledge, it is the most expensive listing in Joshua Tree now,” said Matt Adam, one of the property’s listing agents.

    Even if the Invisible House ends up selling for $9m, half the current asking price, “it will be the most expensive home ever sold in Joshua Tree”, local newspaper San Bernardino Sun reported.

    Just a few years ago, Joshua Tree, a tiny town in California set next to a stunning national park, was a refuge for artists and oddballs, a place where locals said it was possible to rent an apartment for $500 a month.

    But during the pandemic, the town’s two-hour proximity to Los Angeles, and the social media-fueled popularity of Joshua Tree national park, led to one of the largest increases in housing prices in the state. The result has been a worsening local housing crisis, with many longtime residents and local service industry employees saying that skyrocketing rental costs have forced them out of their homes.

    In recent months, the booming desert housing market has started to slow. Average Joshua Tree housing sale prices were down 25% in December 2022, compared with the year before, and the number of houses sold was down by more than 50%, according to Redfin, a real estate company that publishes housing data.

    The Invisible House, of course, is not even close to an average Joshua Tree home, the median price of which was $343,000 last month, according to Redfin.

    Real estate agents at AKG Christie’s International Real Estate have been “bombarded with calls” from journalists and others since the house was put on the market, Adamo said.

    Much of the interest so far has come from potential buyers interested in the house as an investment property, Adamo said. The house has previously brought in as much as $1.4m in income in a single year in rental and production fees, he said.

    So far, there has been more interest from potential American buyers than from international customers, Adamo said, since Americans have a better understanding of the cultural appeal of Joshua Tree’s remote desert landscape, while international buyers are more interested in properties closer to the bright lights of Los Angeles, a two to three hour drive from Joshua Tree.

    Bedroom A of the house.
    Bedroom A of the house. Photograph: Brian Ashby/Courtesy of Aaron Kirman and Matt Adamo of AKG | Christie’s International Real Estate

    Chris Hanley, known for producing films like the Virgin Suicides, American Psycho, and Spring Breakers, has described the “Invisible House” as part art project, part residence, which was inspired in part by a monolith in 2001: A Space Odyssey and by his old friend, Andy Warhol.

    Just buying the glass for the house’s construction cost nearly $700,000, he told the Wall Street Journal. Hanley did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the property.

    “It’s so close with nature and so integrated with the rock formations and everything in the desert. That’s probably the most exciting and appealing aspect,” Adamo said.

    One of Adamo’s favorite aspects of the house is that “the sun literally goes from sunrise to sunset in the [master] bedroom. You could stay there all day and see the house light up in different ways from the angle of the sun and the stars”.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Detailed Weather Update for Today- Check Here – Kashmir News

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    Weather Update for Today: There is a possibility of light to moderate rain/snow showers at most places in Jammu and Kashmir today.

    In Ladakh, light snowfall can occur at a few places. Below normal day temperatures are expected across J&K and Ladakh today: Kashmir Weather

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    Indian Army Recruitment 2023 – Apply Online For Various (Men) & (Women) Vacancies | Salary Rs. 56100/- to 177500


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  • Area Wise State Land List Of Baramulla District – Check Your Name In The List – Kashmir News

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    Jammu And Kashmir Government has Released Full List of state land of Baramulla district in one PDF File which is given below in this article.baramulla

    Meanwhile, J&K’s Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha on Thursday said that common masses and poor people wouldn’t be touched during the ongoing drive launched by his administration to retrieve state land from encroachers

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    Earlier, on 17 jan the administration in Baramulla and Boniyar areas of north Kashmir’s Baramulla district has asked the encroachers to remove illegal encroachments over state land within three days, failing which strict action would be taken against the encroachers.

    However Revenue Department retrieved over many kanals of encroached upon land during an anti-encroachment drive in Pattan & Singhpora Tehsils of North Kashmir’s Baramulla.

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    A revenue department team on directions of Deputy commissioner Baramulla led by SDM Pattan & Tehsildar along with Naib Tehsildar, Patwaris, concerned Numberdar and Chowkidar visited the site and freed the land from the occupation of encroachers.

    Furthermore, Tehsildar Pattan warned the encroachers to vacate the encroached land within one week or elsewhere they will bear the consequences of it.


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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Judge sanctions Trump, Habba nearly $1 million for ‘completely frivolous’ Clinton suit

    Judge sanctions Trump, Habba nearly $1 million for ‘completely frivolous’ Clinton suit

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    The judge ordered Trump and Habba to pay $938,000 to cover the legal costs for the 31 defendants Trump linked in his year-old lawsuit. It’s the second time Middlebrooks has sanctioned Habba in the Clinton lawsuit. The first time was a $50,000 order sought by a single defendant, Charles Dolan. The new round of sanctions was sought by the remaining defendants.

    In the new order, Hillary Clinton got the biggest award of fees for a single defendant: almost $172,000.

    It’s the latest legal setback for Trump, who continues to face peril in advancing criminal probes and civil lawsuits related to his effort to overturn the 2020 election and his retention of sensitive national security records at his Mar-a-Lago estate after leaving office.

    Middlebrooks’ ruling included a point-by-point recitation of the flaws in Trump’s initial lawsuit, noting that it often misstated, distorted or cherrypicked from key documents he claimed supported allegations of a grand conspiracy between Clinton and the Justice Department to target Trump for criminal prosecution.

    “The Amended Complaint is a hodgepodge of disconnected, often immaterial events, followed by an implausible conclusion. This is a deliberate attempt to harass; to tell a story without regard to facts,” Middlebrooks, an appointee of former president Bill Clinton, wrote.

    He specifically cited Trump’s claim that Clinton conspired with former FBI Director James Comey to seek a Trump prosecution — one that Middlebrooks noted never occurred — as “categorically absurd.” He also noted that Trump and Habba repeatedly mischaracterized the findings of special counsel Robert Mueller’s report. They also cited Russian intelligence — shared by then-Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe with Sen. Lindsey Graham — as a basis for one of their claims, without noting that it was Russian intelligence and that Ratcliffe said it was unverified.

    “Mr. Trump’s lawyers saw no professional impediment or irony in relying upon Russian intelligence as the good faith basis for their allegation,” Middlebrooks wrote.

    In his order, Middlebrooks cited Habba’s attacks on him in a Fox News interview, which he said continued to distort the facts of the case and make baseless allegations of improprieties by federal judges and magistrates. He also recounted a litany of other cases filed by Trump and his attorneys that bore similar hallmarks of frivolity.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden, Trump and the classified documents – podcast

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    American presidents face many era-defining challenges: wars, pandemics, recessions. But one that gets less attention seems to keep haunting them: paperwork.

    Last November, at Joe Biden’s thinktank in Washington DC, aides to the US president were packing up and they found something that shouldn’t have been there: a stash of classified documents.

    As David Smith tells Michael Safi, that was not the end of the matter. A further search of Biden’s property turned up more secret documents that needed to be handed over to the national archives. It’s left Biden with a legal headache, but perhaps more pressing: a political one.

    The revelations have been leapt upon by supporters of Donald Trump who wasted no time in calling for Biden to face the same scrutiny as the former president who saw his own home raided by the FBI after ignoring demands to hand over documents he had taken without authorisation.

    The US president, Joe Biden

    Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

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    #Biden #Trump #classified #documents #podcast
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Congratulations: Three Siblings Two daughters & Son Qualifies JKAS – Kashmir News

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    JKPSC Declares Final Result of Combined Competitive (Main) Examination (JKAS)-2021: The Jammu and Kashmir Public Service Commission (JKPSC) has declared the results of the Combined Competitive Examination (CCE) 2021 for the Jammu and Kashmir Administrative Service (JKAS) and has announced the deployment of candidates for medical examination.

    Three siblings identified as Huma Anjum Wani, Ifra Anjum Wani and Suhail Ahmad Wani from village Kahi Trankhal in Bhaleesa area of Doda and are now settled in Jammu.

    Suhail who is younger to sisters has secured 111th rank and obtained 1055 points, Huma Anjum Wani 117th rank with 1050.5 points and Ifra Anjum Wani having 143rd rank with 1034.5 points.

    Their father Manir Ahmad Wani, who was working as labourer in Baglihar project.

    WhatsApp Image 2023 01 20 at 11.47.05

    Congratulations to all those who have qualified the JK CCE 2021.
    To those who couldn’t, may God bestow more strength and perseverance to you.

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    How to check JKPSC CCE 2021 (JKAS) results

    The results of the Civil Services Combined Competitive Examination (CCE) 2021 for the Jammu and Kashmir Administrative Service (JKAS) on the official website of the Jammu and Kashmir Public Service Commission (JKPSC):

    • Step 1: Open your web browser and visit the official website of JKPSC (jkpsc.nic.in)
    • Step 2: On the homepage, navigate to the “Results” section.
    • Step 3: Look for the link for the CCE-2021 results and click on it.
    • Step 4: A PDF file containing the results will be downloaded.
    • Step 5: Open the downloaded PDF file and look for your roll number in the list of selected candidates.
    • Step 6: If your roll number is on the list, you have been selected for the JKAS posts.
    • Step 7: If your roll number is not on the list, or if you find any discrepancy in the results, you can contact the JKPSC office within 15 days of the publication of the results.

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    IMG 20230120 WA0000

    CLICK ON THE BELOW LINK TO DOWNLOAD  FULL RESULT FILE: 

    CLICK HERE: JKAS Result

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Five takeaways from Supreme Court leak investigation

    Five takeaways from Supreme Court leak investigation

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    Here are five takeaways on other key findings of the much-anticipated report:

    Did investigators interview the justices?

    The report indicates Curley’s aides conducted formal interviews of nearly 100 Supreme Court employees and focused on 82 people who had access to either electronic or hard copies of the opinion. All denied involvement in the leak.

    The report acknowledges in passing that, unsurprisingly, the justices also had access to the draft. However, the report is silent on whether the nine justices on the court last term were interviewed as part of the investigation, which the court called “diligent” and Chertoff described as “thorough.” It’s unclear whether the court or the chief justice would have the authority to force such interviews.

    A Supreme Court spokesperson did not respond to a request to clarify whether the justices or their spouses were interviewed.

    The leak was “unlikely” to have been a hack.

    There has been speculation that the draft opinion might have emerged as a result of the Supreme Court’s networks, email systems or servers being penetrated by hackers. It’s not an entirely improbable scenario because the federal courts have been the subject of repeated cyberattacks.

    Last year, Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.) announced that “three hostile foreign actors” attacked the electronic filing system used by lower federal courts.

    But the Supreme Court’s investigation into the disclosure of the draft opinion scoured system logs and netted no evidence of electronic intrusion of the court’s devices, networks or systems.

    “The Court’s IT department did not find any indications of a hack,” the report said.

    Social media sleuthing turned up nothing.

    In the wake of the article in May, online sleuths fingered several law clerks as potential leakers. The court’s investigators followed up on those claims but got nowhere. The team “assessed the wide array of public speculation, mostly on social media, about any individual who may have disclosed the document,” the report said.

    The report doesn’t describe precisely how the investigators pursued those claims, but asserts that the wide array of social media allegations didn’t lead anywhere.

    “In their inquiries, the investigators found nothing to substantiate any of the social media allegations regarding the disclosure,” the report said.

    Court personnel breached policy by telling their spouses or partners.

    A few court employees interviewed in the course of the probe acknowledged they told loved ones how divided the court was in private discussions about the Dobbs case—splitting 5-4 in favor of overturning the federal constitutional right to abortion the court announced 50 years ago in Roe v. Wade.

    “Some individuals admitted to investigators that they told their spouse or partner about the draft Dobbs opinion and the vote count, in violation of the Court’s confidentiality rules,” the report said. “Several personnel told investigators they had shared confidential details about their work more generally with their spouses and some indicated they thought it permissible to provide such information to their spouses.”

    Some staffers said they didn’t realize that was prohibited, though an existing code of conduct for law clerks says: “The temptation to discuss interesting pending or decided cases among friends, spouses, or other family members, for example, must be scrupulously resisted.”

    The report does not indicate whether any employee intentionally shared the full text of the draft opinion with a spouse or partner.

    The court is increasing its security.

    Investigators concluded that many of the court’s practices for handling physical and electronic copies of opinions and internal communications were too casual and archaic, leaving little way to trace potential leaks.

    Provisions allowing many staff to work from home during the pandemic exacerbated these weaknesses, the report found.

    The court’s official statement did not address any steps taken to tighten security, but Chertoff said in his letter that the court had “already taken steps to increase security.” Curley also indicated she’d made some recommendations regarding security, but those were not released publicly Thursday.

    “While there is not sufficient evidence at present for prosecution or other legal action, there were important insights gleaned from the investigation that can be acted upon to avoid future incidents,” Chertoff added.

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    #takeaways #Supreme #Court #leak #investigation
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden: “I have no regrets” about how documents were handled

    Biden: “I have no regrets” about how documents were handled

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    2023 01 19 biden newsom calif ap 773 jpg

    Biden also addressed the news media’s ongoing interest in the documents, as he answered a reporter’s question following a survey of a community affected by recent extreme weather in California.

    “Quite frankly, what bugs me is that we have a serious problem here we’re talking about … and the American people don’t quite understand why you don’t ask me questions about that,” Biden said, referring to his remarks on the storm and climate.

    Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed former U.S. Attorney Robert Hur last week as special counsel to investigate the storage of the documents.

    Members of both parties have decried what they call a double standard on the media reaction and legal handling of the document discovery, as classified documents were also found in an August FBI search of former President Donald Trump’s Florida estate.

    The situations have notable differences: Biden has had fewer sensitive documents discovered than his predecessor, and unlike Trump, he appears to have cooperated with authorities in turning them over.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • More than 1 million march in France against planned pension reforms – video

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    More than 1 million protesters took to the streets across France in a day of mass strikes, as transport, schools and refineries were hit by significant industrial action against Emmanuel Macron’s unpopular plans to raise the retirement age by two years to 64.

    Local and regional train services across France ground almost to a standstill, and public transport in cities such as Paris was ‘very disrupted’, according to transport operators.  Authorities estimated that 40% of primary school teachers and more than 30% of secondary teachers went on strike. Unions said participation was higher.

    Macron insists he will deliver his key election pledge to change the French pension system – raising the retirement age for most people to 64 from 62 and increasing the years of contributions required for a full pension. 

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    #million #march #France #planned #pension #reforms #video
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Florida nixes African American studies course, claims it ‘lacks educational value’

    Florida nixes African American studies course, claims it ‘lacks educational value’

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    governor florida 43018

    Florida’s education agency, in its decision, doesn’t spell out exactly which law the course is violating, but the state in 2022 passed the “Stop WOKE” act that regulates lessons on race and gender in the classroom.

    That legislation, FL HB 7 (22R), or the Individual Freedom Act, was passed by Florida’s Republican-led Legislature to expand state anti-discrimination laws and prohibit schools and companies from leveling guilt or blame to students and employees based on race or sex. It created new protections for students and workers, including that a person should not be instructed to “feel guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress” due to their race, color, sex or national origin.

    Gov. Ron DeSantis, who championed the “Stop WOKE” act, has sought to reshape how children are taught in Florida. His Education Department previously rejected math textbooks over “impermissible” content, including teachings on critical race theory and DeSantis vigorously defended a law that bans educators from leading classroom discussions on sexual orientation or gender identity for kids in kindergarten through third grade. He also used his influence and party cash to support dozens of conservatives running for local school boards.

    The move is part of a push by Florida conservatives to root out traces of “wokeness” in education, efforts that are on track to continue during the 2023 Legislative session, which begins in March. Florida, for example, is now is gearing up to scrutinize diversity, equity and inclusion programs in higher education.

    The AP program is said to be the first African American studies course offered by the College Board and is meant to help high school students earn credits and advanced placement at colleges throughout the country. They have been developing the course for more than a decade to intersect literature, the arts and humanities, political science, geography, and science to “explore the vital contributions and experiences of African Americans.”

    Florida’s decision to scrap the course statewide has been criticized by academics and Democratic lawmakers alike.

    “This political extremism and its attack of Black History and Black people, is going to create an entire generation of Black children who won’t be able to see themselves reflected at all within their own education or in their own State,” state Sen. Shevrin Jones (D-Miami Gardens) wrote in a tweet.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )