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Walmart is saying sorry for making available a Christmas sweater with an apparent drug reference.The sweater featured an image of Santa Claus behind a table with three white lines that look similar to cocaine lines. Below the image is the phrase "Let it snow." The Global News, a Canadian news organization, 320
WESTLAND, Mich. — Finance apps like Cash App and Venmo have become a popular way for users to quickly transfer small amounts of money to friends and family. But as the services have to expanded to include debit card services, customers across the country have experience issues in accessing their money.For Amber Woods of Westlansd, Michigan, it was all about convenience. She could quickly transfer funds using a special debit card linked to her Cash App account."I started using it to pay bills or send money to my mom, my sister," she said.But then, she says she hit a snag. Without explanation, she couldn't transfer her 9 dollars to her bank account — it was stuck inside the app.Cash App does not have a customer service phone number, leaving users to make contact in the app or via e-mail. Woods did reach out several times, but says she ended up with only generic replies.Nationwide, others have faced similar issues. On Twitter, one user tweeted at Cash App's support account complaining that ,000 was locked in the app. Another Twitter user tweeted at Cash App claiming he was unable to pay his rent because of a tie up.After nearly two weeks, Woods says she finally recouped her funds, but the delay comes as no surprise to the Better Business Bureau (BBB)."Their communication style...is not great," said Melanie Duquesnel of the BBB serving Eastern Michigan.The consumer protection organization has been tracking complaints against Cash App’s parent company Square, nearly 2,000 of them settled in just the last three years."It just made me mad, what gives you this right to hold onto it," Woods said.It turns out Cash App and Square do have a right. The company’s legal fine print saying that Square “...may limit how many transfers you can initiate....to your….bank account and the amount of funds you can transfer in a single transaction… ” Square argues that limited transactions allows the company to screen for risk of fraud.In a statement, Square said it was looking into the matter and added that its "goal is always to provide customers with fast and thoughtful customer support that resolves the issue. Occasionally, as in this case, we fall short of that goal, and we’ll use it as an opportunity to learn and do better in the future."The BBB says Woods' situation is a reminder to pay closer attention to the rules governing the apps that manage money. They recommend always reading the fine print, which could lay out how long money can be delayed during transfers.The BBB also recommeneds reading app reviews — good and band — before creating an account so users know what to expect.The BBB urges anyone that has problems connecting with mobile payment service providers to contact them at 2733

we’re thinking about you. we believe restaurants will have an increasingly essential role in feeding our country. so whether you’re ordering at BK or elsewhere, use minimum contact methods like drive-thrus, pick-up or delivery. take care, https://t.co/tWSdfUbbGucc: @whitehouse— Burger King (@BurgerKing) March 17, 2020 332
U.S. Rep. Glenn Grothman, R-Wisconsin, wants to give citizens the option to donate to building a border wall on the United States-Mexico border and has introduced legislation to allow for crowdsourced fundraising. Grothman announced in a news release that he has introduced a bill called "The People’s Border Wall Fund Act" which would allow the public to contribute to building a border wall. The federal government is in a partial shutdown while Democrats and Republican President Donald Trump are at a standstill over a spending plan that would include a package to build a border wall. Grothman’s plan would create a trust in the Department of Treasury that allows for public donations to be used to build a border wall. 737
Under a strong security presence, this remote farming community prepared to hold the first funerals Thursday for some of the nine American women and children killed by drug cartel gunmen.Dozens of high-riding pickups and SUVS, many with U.S. license plates from as far away as North Dakota, bumped across dirt and rock roads over desert, arid grasslands and pine-covered mountains Wednesday as night fell on this community of about 300 people. Many of the residents are dual U.S. and Mexican citizens who consider themselves Mormon but are not affiliated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.At least 1,000 visitors were expected to bunk down in the hamlet overnight ahead of Thursday’s funerals, filling floor space in the 30 or so homes or sleeping in tents they brought with them. At least one cow was slaughtered to help feed the masses, as well as the few dozen Mexican soldiers guarding the entrance to La Mora.Steven Langford, who was mayor of La Mora from 2015 to 2018, said he expected the killings to have a “major” impact on the community. Once upon a time he didn’t think about moving around the area in the middle of night, but in the last 10 to 15 years things “got worse and worse and worse.” As many as half of the residents could move away, he feared.“It was a massacre, 100% a massacre,” said Langford, whose sister Christina Langford was one of the women killed. “I don’t know how it squares with the conscience of someone to do something so horrible.”When 1504
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