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发布时间: 2025-05-31 19:30:47北京青年报社官方账号
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WYNNEWOOD, Okla. (AP) — The Oklahoma zoo featured in Netflix's "Tiger King" documentary has closed after federal authorities investigated it for alleged maltreatment of animals and suspended its license. The Greater Wynnewood Exotic Animal Park closed to the public after the U.S. Department of Agriculture on Monday suspended Jeff Lowe's exhibitor license. Lowe, who's the current owner of the zoo, posted on Facebook that they would no longer "exhibit animals to the public.""I no longer want to exhibit animals to the public," the Facebook post read. "We have been contemplating this for weeks. I will still allow my lawyers to prove the USDA is dead wrong. And BTW, the USDA didn’t take my license. They issued a 21 days suspension. Day 22, I could open right back up if I wanted. I don’t want to. The animals are now in private hands and will remain in private hands."The zoo, previously run by Joseph Maldonado-Passage, also known as Joe Exotic, became famous after being featured in Netflix's "Tiger King" docuseries. KFOR-TV reports that local and federal authorities investigated the zoo after receiving a formal report that documented photos showing a lion with its ears covered in flies and another with the tips of its ears covered in blood. 1261

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Women have been hit harder by job loss during the pandemic, according to an analysis by the Institute for Women's Policy Research.It found in April that the unemployment rate for women increased almost three percentage points above the rate for men. It's a direct contrast to the 2008 recession, which left more men out of work.The institute says this time is different because women dominate the fields that have had the most coronavirus-related layoffs, like hospitality and education.Women of color are even more heavily impacted, with the unemployment rate highest amongst Hispanic women.The institute's president and CEO, C. Nicole Mason, says many of those were low wage jobs.“Many of these women, both black and Latina women, women of color were economically vulnerable before the start of the pandemic,” said Mason. “And the pandemic has only worsened those circumstances and their vulnerability.It's disheartening after a strong start to the year, when the institute celebrated women making up 50% of the workforce.They tell us women will face more challenges getting back to work compared to men.“If it feels hard, it's because it is,” said Mason. “Communities, businesses, as well as policy makers need to step up to make sure that women who are unemployed have the opportunity to reenter the workforce and those who can't have the necessary social supports they need to be able to take care of their families.”The institute says the biggest barrier is a lack of childcare support. They're also pushing for paid sick leave and higher wages. 1559

  中山隐血   

in Terminal 4.The TSA says the incident happened Tuesday morning around 9:45 a.m. local time.In a press release, TSA said the man was unprovoked and attempted to rush through the security at Terminal 4.According to police documents, 19-year-old Tyrese Garner pushed his way past other passengers and charged through the metal detector before punching a TSA agent and knocking her to the ground.He reportedly punched four other TSA agents before he was subdued. Police officers arrived and arrested him on charges of criminal trespassing, assault and resisting arrest.Documents say he tried to resist arrest, kicking and writhing while refusing to be taken out of the terminal.One transportation security officer (TSO) was taken to the hospital and at least four others were taken to an urgent care facility. Their exact injuries and conditions are unknown at this time."Got done putting my shoes on and was walking down the hallway part there and all of a sudden I heard screaming and hollering," said witness Donnie Jones, who had just passed through security when the incident occurred.Jones said he's unsure what prompted the man to allegedly try and rush through the checkpoint."When he was coming over that counter...he was like jumping at somebody and you could just see a bunch of swinging and that and you couldn't really tell what was going on," he said. "I don't know what his deal was. It was just an unhappy guy rushing through there."Documents say Garner is from Texas and is mentally unstable. He was reportedly under the influence of drugs or alcohol at the time.Neither police nor TSA has released a motive in the incident.TSA released the following statement on the incident: 1694

  

King did not return an email asking for comment about the tweet. Evans believes online extremists’ interactions on 8Chan are every bit as dangerous as terror tactics used by ISIS or Al Qaida. He said the U.S. Government should be treating these extremists just like those terrorist groups. “I think the fact that we are closing in on 80 people dead in the last five months is all the evidence that you need of that,” he said. University of Northern Colorado Sociology Professor Cliff Leek has read shooters’ manifestos and is familiar with posts on 8Chan. “When I saw the link to the manifesto, I was completely unsurprised,” Leek said. Leek says these groups know how to recruit and points to their likening the killing missions to video games as an effort to target a group of people. “Especially for younger men who are in their adolescence at a time where many of us test our boundaries, if we enter in a space where we’re are anonymous and there’s no one there to push back and say ‘No that’s unacceptable,’ it almost becomes one-up man ship,” he said. Evans says there is no simple solution. 8Chan is hosted overseas. Evans says he doesn’t believe the shootings will stop as the notoriety continues to build for shooters, in their own circles. Evans says not talking about them won’t stop their actions. “I tried not talking about this. A lot of people tried not talking about this. Now dozens and dozens of people have been shot dead,” Evans said. “It's one of those things where I think I know what not talking about this looks like.” 1556

  

— a mystery that remains in hot debate even today.KNXV reached out to several aviation experts who theorized the lights seen Sunday could be from parachute flares used by the military or even helicopters or other aircraft dropping flares during training.In fact, the Outlaw Military Operations Area sits not far from where the video was shot.But video found online of those types of exercises just doesn't seem to match."There were no navigation lights, even the military has to have navigation lights on, that's an FAA rule," Maier said.KNXV reached out to the Federal Aviation Administration, Luke Air Force Base and the Army National Guard, but none could say for certain what it was, leaving the answer to what was caught on camera to anyone's guess."I know what I saw, and I don't think it was from here, and I think it was definitely something else," Maier said.This story was originally published by 908

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