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Monday, January 11
500 Claim Sex Attacks by Muslims in Germany
The news from Germany about thousands of Muslim men—many describing themselves as asylum seeking refugees—raping and groping women during New Years eve celebrations keeps getting worse. According to a new report, the number of reported cases has risen to 516. To make matters worse, the attacks appear to have been coordinated. MORE
Ranchers’ Cause, Not Tactics, Gains Support in GOP Circles
Republicans have widely condemned the armed standoff by a group of ranchers to reclaim federal land in eastern Oregon, but their goal of taking back some of Washington’s vast holdings in the West has gained traction in the GOP. The decades-old idea could garner even more momentum should the party recapture the White House this year. MORE
Aerodrome Is The First Commercial Airport For Drones
Aerodrome is working with the City of Boulder, Nevada, to launch the first commercial drone airport---the Eldorado Droneport. It’s one of only a handful of FAA-appointed UAS test sites in the United States. The plan is to offer training, maintenance and other support functions for the commercial drone industry, as well as for individual drone pilots. MORE
Pay No Attention to Muslim Behind the Curtain
Why are liberal Democrats more interested in covering up for terrorists than protecting the American public? Case in point. Hours after 30-year-old black Muslim Edward Archer ambushed and gunned down Philadelphia police officer Jesse Hartnett with a stolen 9mm Glock, he confessed to investigators that he had acted “in the name of Islam,” police revealed during a press conference. MORE
Mountain Lion Discovered With Teeth Growing Out of Its Forehead
Images of a mountain lion killed in southeastern Idaho on December 30 has confounded viewers, due to an odd deformity. The cat, it seems, has several teeth and small whiskers growing out of its head. But there's a theory as to why. MORE
California Teachers Gear Up to Take Fight Against Unions to Supreme Court
On Monday, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the case Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association. Rebecca Friedrichs and nine teachers are calling into question the agency fees that public-sector workers are required to pay to unions, which they say violate their First Amendment rights. If the Supreme Court rules in Friedrich’s favor, it would make union dues voluntary for all public-sector workers. MORE