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Pop punk group Blink-182 is setting up a residency in Las Vegas.The trio will be at the Palms Casino Resort for 16 performances beginning in May.The “Kings of the Weekend” shows will run through November.Show dates: 223
President Donald Trump has been nominated for the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize by a Norwegian member of parliament known for his views against immigration, Fox News, The Independent and The Daily Beast report.According to Fox News, Trump was nominated for the prize by Christian Tybring-Gjedde, a member of the Norwegian Parliament, for his work in attempting to bring peace between Israel and the United Arab Emirates."For his merit, I think he has done more trying to create peace between nations than most other Peace Prize nominees," Tybring-Gjedde said during an interview on Fox News.While the number of Nobel Peace Prize nominees varies from year to year, more than 300 people and organizations are nominated for the 2020 prize. Trump himself was nominated for the prize in 2018 for organizing a summit with North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un. Tybring-Gjedde was among those who also submitted that nomination.According to The Daily Beast, Tybring-Gjedde is staunchly against immigration and is known for making controversial statements about Muslims. He's previously compared hijabs, the face coverings worn by Muslim women, to robes worn by KKK members.Israel and the UAE agreed to normalize relations on Aug. 13. Later that month, Trump adviser Jared Kushner joined Israeli and UAE officials aboard a plane that marked the first commercial flight between the countries.While normalizing relations was a significant step for the countries, significant questions about the deal remain — particularly, the UAE's ongoing relationship with Palestine.Four previous presidents — Barack Obama, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson and Jimmy Carter — have been granted the Nobel Peace Prize.Trump has publicly campaigned for the award in the past. At a rally in Toledo earlier this year, Trump insinuated that he deserved the award. 1830

President Donald Trump addressed reporters from the White House briefing room on Tuesday on the coronavirus pandemic, saying that the virus will get worse before it gets better.“It will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better,” Trump told reporters. “Something I don't like saying about things, but that's the way it is. That's the way -- that's what we have. You look over the world, it's all over the world.”Trump specifically mentioned an uptick in cases in the Sun Belt as a cause for concern.“As cases and fatalities rise in certain hard hit states, we're surging personnel, supplies, and therapeutics,” Trump said. “We again have tremendous amount of supply. We are in very good shape and we can move them quickly.”Trump also echoed the advice of leading infectious disease experts by encouraging young people to avoid crowded indoor spaces, such as bars.“We're, instead, asking Americans to use masks, socially distance, and employ vigorous hygiene, wash your hands every chance you get while sheltering high-risk populations,” Trump said. “We are imploring young Americans to avoid packed bars and other crowded indoor gatherings. Be safe and be smart.”While Trump at times took a more serious tone, he repeated a notion that the United States’ response to the virus outperformed other countries due to a low case fatality rate. The case fatality rate is the proportion of confirmed COVID-19 cases to the number of coronavirus deaths. While the US is doing relatively well in this metric compared to several other nations, the number of cases in the US far exceed any other nation.France, which is considered a country with a high case fatality rate, had 20 coronavirus-related deaths reported on Monday, according to New York Times data. Meanwhile, the US had 531 fatalities. Adjusted for population, the US had more than five times the number of coronavirus-related deaths than France on Monday.Trump noted that the number of deaths per day remains lower than at the peak of the virus, but according to Johns Hopkins University data, the number has remained steady, if not ticked up, in recent weeks.“By understanding these risk profiles and learning how to treat the disease, we've been able to greatly reduce the mortality in the United States,” Trump said. 2294
President Donald Trump might not be greeted with a warm welcome home when he and his family move from the White House to Mar-a-Lago once the soon-to-be-former president leaves office in January.According to The New York Times and The Seattle Times, a lawyer for the DeMoss family, who owns property next door to the resort, sent a letter Tuesday to the Town of Palm Beach and the U.S. Secret Service.The letter stated that Trump couldn't live at Mar-a-Lago because of an agreement he signed in 1993 when he converted the private residence into a private club, the Times reported.The Times reported that the letter pointed out that no one, including Trump, may reside there.Per the agreement, no one, including Trump, is allowed to spend more than seven days in a row at the resort, for no more than three weeks total a year, the Palm Beach Post reported.According to the Post, when Trump converted the residence into the club in 1993, his lawyer assured the council that Trump would no longer live at the club. 1018
President Donald Trump said Monday he has no plans to fire Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general who has been facing an uncertain fate for more than two weeks."No, I don't. No," Trump told reporters on Monday after he was asked if he has any plans to fire Rosenstein.Rosenstein is joining Trump on Monday aboard Air Force One for a trip to Florida, where the two men will participate in the International Association of Chiefs of Police's annual convention.Trump and Rosenstein had been scheduled to meet last week to discuss The New York Times report that flung Rosenstein into limbo. The report claimed Rosenstein discussed secretly recording Trump and using the 25th Amendment to remove him from office. They postponed the meeting amid the Kavanaugh confirmation battle and speculation has abounded that Trump might fire Rosenstein.Rosenstein said he never pursued recording the President and denied any suggestion he advocated for Trump's removal.Trump said Monday that the two men will be "talking on the plane" and said he looks "forward to being with him.""That'll be very nice," Trump said. "I actually have a good relationship other than there's no collusion."Pressed further about his relationship with Rosenstein, Trump added: "I didn't know Rod before, but I got to know him and I get along very well with him."After the Times report published, Rosenstein told White House chief of staff John Kelly he would resign, anticipating the article would enrage Trump and he would be fired. But when he showed up at the White House last Monday to meet with Kelly, he left the meeting unscathed.Trump had previously indicated he would prefer to keep Rosenstein in his post, but offered no definitive indication of Rosenstein's fate until his comments on Monday morning.The-CNN-Wire 1798
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