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in a Southwest Florida neighborhood. A neighbor wants the owner to take it down, calling it disrespectful. However, the owner refuses, saying it’s a freedom of speech.Marlene McDade proudly displays a Trump 2020 flag in her front yard along NW 36th Place in Cape Coral. On Wednesday, she got an anonymous letter from one of her neighbors asking her to take it down.“It’s my freedom. This is my yard,” said McDade.McDade argues taking the flag down is against her First Amendment right.Part of the letter sent to her says, “Flying the Trump flag, you tell all your neighbors that you disrespect them.”“I don’t disrespect anybody in my neighborhood, I treat everybody the same,” said McDade.The letter goes on to say that removing the flag will bring peace to the neighborhood. “People have to understand I don’t stop them from doing what they want to do,” said McDade. “They have no right to stop me from what I want to do in my yard.”Bottom line, she thinks the letter is foolish. “Quit being so negative about everything. Everyone has a right to their opinion, and I usually keep my opinion to myself, but that’s my flag and it’s staying,” said McDade.She said what she puts in her yard is her business.“Even if my neighbors wanted to put a Hillary (Clinton) sign or an Elizabeth Warren sign in their yard, I don’t care. They can do their thing, and I can do mine,” said McDade.WFTX went around the neighborhood asking who wrote the letter, but no one owned up to it.McDade said she’s standing up for her rights and the flag is staying.This story was originally published by Jillian Hartmann at WFTX. 1603
as more patients claim their implants are making them sick, a WFTS review found. Breast augmentation is still America’s most popular plastic surgery and more than 300,000 U.S. patients had the procedure last year alone.But explant procedures, the surgery to remove implants, are also on the rise.In 2008, the American Society of Plastic Surgeons reported 20,967 women had implants removed. A decade later, that number increased by more than 8,000.“It came as a shock to me — being a plastic surgeon — to see the amount of women coming to my practice with the multitude of symptoms, and thinking it might be their breast implants,” said Dr. Dave Rankin of Aqua Plastic Surgery in Jupiter, Florida.After 15 years in the business, Rankin said he now sees more demand for explant surgeries than implants and told WFTS he performed at least 400 explants last year.Many explant patients are reporting being sickened by so-called "breast implant illness." Reported symptoms include headaches, rashes, chronic fatigue, fevers, brain fog and joint pain. But the illness is not officially recognized by doctors or the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.“I was a skeptic at the beginning and then I became a believer,” Rankin said. “The best candidate in my practice are patients that are very, very sick. They’ve tried everything else. They’ve been to a million different doctors, done hundreds of blood tests. Nothing comes back and this is, ‘OK well let’s try (removing the implants)’ and, fortunately, many of those patients do get better.”But even Rankin isn’t exactly sure what’s causing this mysterious illness.“Additional research and study is absolutely necessary,” he said.Unexplained symptoms started after implant surgeryLeara Marshall said she doesn’t need a study to know she felt better after having her implants removed.Marshall said she wanted to improve her self-esteem when she got implants in 2002 and said she knew something was wrong as soon as she woke from surgery.“I was already getting symptoms because they were hardened and painful within the first six months,” Marshall said.She said her unexplained symptoms — headaches, migraines, inflammation and heart palpitations — continued for 17 years.That’s when Marshall said she found thousands of women on social media reporting similar symptoms.WFTS heard from dozens of women across Florida describing similar accounts. More women say implants made them sick “I had food sensitivities, alcohol intolerance. I developed hyperparathyroidism,” Lissa Boyer said. Boyer described how she had little energy, pain and struggled to take care of her two young children who she said asked her, “When are you going to stop being sick?”Haley Miller said she was diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia and even multiple sclerosis after she temporarily went blind as doctors struggled to explain her symptoms. She said a multiple sclerosis specialist finally brought up the prospect her breast implants could be the cause. “I wanted to immediately go home and get a knife and take them out because I was just like, ‘Wow, this is my root cause. This is why I’m not well,’ ” Miller said. Malissa Sheridan said she suffered chronic fatigue but didn’t suspect her implants were the cause. “I had gone to several doctors trying to find out what’s wrong with me, why am I this way and I would ask ‘Is it my implants?’ and they would say, ‘No,’ ” Sheridan said. Roni Earnest said she experienced fatigue, headaches, rashes and even an unexplained heart attack after having implants for decades before she decided to have them removed.“The minute I had my surgery, I’m telling you, I was healed,” Earnest said.FDA issues warningThe FDA says there’s no scientific evidence supporting breast implant illness but issued a warning in May that some experience “systemic symptoms” that may go away “when their breast implants are removed.” 3895

With the holiday season in full swing, shoppers are heading to the stores to get the latest toys. Before you do, there are two codes you should check to see if they meet the latest safety standards.The first thing you'll want to do is look for the combination ASTMF963, which means the toy meets the latest safety standard.Those standards include that the toys have been tested for choking hazards, sharp edges and other potential dangers.The second number to check is ASTMD4236, which means art materials have been reviewed by a toxicologist.While toys are required to meet specific safety standards, they are not required by law to have the labels indicating they do meet them.In some cases, toys may not have the ASTM label.The Consumer Safety Product Commission says another good way to protect your children is to buy age-appropriate toys. 852
-- meaning wind, humidity and other conditions are ripe for fires.The Hillside Fire is far from over -- officials urge about 1,300 people in an evacuation zone in the north of the city to stay away. But the flames were out in Valdavia's neighborhood by late morning, and Valdivia returned to find only charred remains of his house. He'd lived there a little more than a year."It hurts, but this can get replaced," he said. "You can't replace a life. That was my priority -- just my kids, and making sure everybody was aware."One thing he regrets not grabbing: a laptop with the only copies of some baby photographs of his kids."That's the only thing that hurts my feelings a lot -- pictures I didn't save," he said.The fire was first reported just north of San Bernardino around 1:40 a.m. PT (4:40 a.m. ET) and swept into neighborhoods on the city's edge, consuming about 200 acres by mid-morning, officials said.Authorities rushed to alert residents who'd been sleeping. No injuries have been reported.490 homes in San Bernardino evacuatedFirefighters were working to keep the fire from advancing Thursday."This fire moves so fast that it's imperative that people evacuate when we ask them to," San Bernardino County Fire Deputy Chief Kathleen Opliger said. "It's not a safe place to be."Evacuations have been ordered for about 490 homes in northern San Bernardino, the county fire department said.The fire was a few miles away from Cal State San Bernardino, which was closed Thursday because the regional utility intentionally cut power as a precaution, hoping to prevent fires in the red-flag conditions. The campus lost power at 3:20 a.m. Thursday.Julien Cooper, 53, and his father were sleeping in Cooper's San Bernardino home when he heard his phone ringing. He woke up and smelled smoke."Ten seconds later, I hear the doorbell and I already know what it is since we had a fire a week ago," he told CNN. "It was the neighbor saying that there was a fire in the field."Cooper grabbed his dad and his dog, crossed the street to help the neighbor's elderly mother evacuate and met up with a relative at a McDonald's. Minutes later he returned home and grabbed some valuables -- and his neighbor's home was on fire.Cooper took video of the neighbor's house engulfed in flames. His nephew Henri Moser, who lives out of state, shared it on Twitter. Cooper said he heard firefighters say they'd try to save his house, which had 2428
With the help of Ryan Reynolds, beloved 80s actor Rick Moranis has returned after stepping away from the entertainment business almost 25 years ago.In a commercial for Mint Mobile, Reynolds is joined on-screen by Moranis, who Reynolds adoringly calls him the actor "we've all gone too long without." 307
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