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发布时间: 2025-05-26 06:44:54北京青年报社官方账号
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President Trump seems nowhere near making a deal with Democrats over border wall funding. And instead of waiting on a compromise, Trump's claiming he can declare an "immigration emergency" to get his way. But experts aren't so sure about that. "I don't think he can go through with it," said James Thurber, professor of government at American University and author of "Rivals for Power: Presidential-Congress Relations." "Maybe it will take a judicial action to force him not to do it, but I think that he probably found out that there was such a thing as the national emergency powers of the president and that stuck with him, and so he tweeted and stated things that were well before legal advice given to him."But is there precedent for Trump's potential move? They have been used by President George W. Bush during times of war and by President Barack Obama after Russia annexed Crimea. "Emergency powers were used to build facilities in Afghanistan and Iraq, but they've also been used since the 1976 National Emergencies Act that defines what you can and cannot do. They've been used probably 30 times, primarily on trade issues but also related to war and war powers," Thurber said.An 1204

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Puerto Rico's Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that the oath given to former Gov. Ricardo Rosselló's handpicked successor was unconstitutional, clearing the way for 177

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SOUTH BEND, Ind. — The Indiana parents of a toddler who fell to her death out of an open cruise ship window in Puerto Rico filed a lawsuit Wednesday against Royal Caribbean Cruises, accusing the company of negligence by allowing the window to be opened.Chloe Wiegand fell to her death in July after her grandfather lifted her to the window on Royal Caribbean's Freedom of the Seas ship while the vessel docked. She would have turned 2 this week."We should be celebrating with presents and a birthday cake, but instead we are talking about her death," Chloe's mother, Kim Wiegand of Granger, Indiana, told reporters at a news conference in nearby South Bend.She said she spends time with her daughter's urn every night.Chloe's grandfather, Salvatore Anello, has been charged in Puerto Rico with negligent homicide. He insists he's colorblind and didn't know the 11th floor window in the children's play area was open. He said he believed he was lifting Chloe so that she could bang on the glass like at a hockey game.The lawsuit says the company violated industry standards by failing to provide reasonably safe windows in an area where children play on the ship.The wrongful death lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Miami. It seeks an unspecified financial award. Royal Caribbean didn't immediately reply to an email seeking comment."We all sit here broken," Anello said Wednesday. "But our family is strong and we will stay strong together."Anello is due in a Puerto Rico court on Dec. 17. 1511

  

Recreational marijuana sales totaled about .6 million in the inaugural week of business at the first retail shops in Michigan.Sales during the Dec. 1-8 period brought the state roughly 0,400 in revenue from the excise and sales taxes levied on pot, the Detroit Free Press and MLive.com reported.As of Monday, Michigan's Marijuana Regulatory Agency issued 10 retail licenses for recreational marijuana, five of which began selling last week. More than 1,400 of the state's roughly 1,800 cities, townships and villages aren’t allowing pot shops.Michigan voters approved recreational marijuana last year. Illinois starts recreational sales in January. 665

  

TAMPA, Florida — A Tampa firefighter is back to work after being electrocuted and then brought back to life in December. Wesley Stevens enjoys wood working as a hobby. He got into a process called fractal burning, which is a technique that electrically burns unique branch like designs into wood. Stevens says he built a machine with his father and had done the process a few times before, but this time something went wrong. A 2,000 volt electric shock was sent through his body. "I was pulseless in the driveway and the friend that was with me she began CPR after calling 911,” he said. Hillsborough County Sheriffs Deputy Ernie Foster was on another call down the street and was able to get to his house within one minute. Because of his quick response, he was able to start CPR on Stevens right away. That most likely saved his life. They say the typical response time is around three to four minutes. According to paramedics, Stevens' heart stopped beating for 17 minutes. He was technically dead. "Dead is no pulse, not breathing and he was there. Without intervention, he was not going to survive whatsoever,” said Lt. Ryan Anusbigian, with Hillsborough County Fire Rescue. The CPR kept the blood flowing, which also kept his brain going. "It is a very long time and I would say it’s extremely unusual because most cardiac arrests are not witnessed, it was the CPR that really did him good,” said Lt. Anusbigian. "If you imagine holding your breath for four minutes versus holding your breath for 60 seconds, and that was really the difference there." Stevens woke up in the hospital two days later. Just a few days after that, he and his wife welcomed their baby boy Morgan into the world. "That was a big reason I was fighting to come back,” said Stevens. Nearly 10-weeks-old now, Morgan is happy and healthy — and so is his father. He says fractal burning is a process he will never do again. "It’s just not worth it, especially with Morgan here now I just don’t need it,” he said. Stevens is now back to work full time. As a thank you for saving his life, Stevens designed special firefighter wooden flags for the crew that responded. 2157

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