North Korea Fires Off Projectile Ahead Of Trump's Meeting With Chinese President

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North Korea launched a projectile Tuesday that may be a ballistic missile days before U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are scheduled to meet in Florida.

South Korean military officials said the unidentified projectile was fired from North Korea’s Sinpo region into the East Sea, according to South Korea’s Yonhap News.

North Korea’s nuclear program is likely to be a top agenda item when Trump and Xi meet at Trump’s resort in Florida this week. Measures to deal with the hermit nation are likely to cause tension between the two leaders.

“If China is not going to solve North Korea, we will. That is all that I am telling you,” Trump told The Financial Times in an interview published Sunday.

This is a developing story, check back for updates.

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This Couple Loves Cheesecake Factory So Much They Took Engagement Pics There

At the beginning of their relationship, couple Nikki-Lee Flowerree and Tommy Redding spent many a date night at one of their favorite restaurants: The Cheesecake Factory

“I’m 99 percent sure it’s where we had our first date,” Nikki-Lee told The Huffington Post.

So when it came time to take their engagement photos on March 19 they headed over to their local Cheesecake Factory in San Diego’s Seaport District for a shoot with photog Jessica McGehee of Reflecting Grace Photography

The Cheesecake Factory is known for its extensive menu offerings, but Nikki-Lee said she and Tommy usually end up ordering the same things. 

“The buffalo blasts are amazing! For the main dish, I usually get stuffed chicken tortillas,” she told HuffPost. “I try to get something new each time, but always end up with that. Tommy usually gets fettuccine Alfredo or a burger.”

And for dessert, they are all about the Oreo Dream Extreme Cheesecake, which even made an appearance in their engagement pics. 

“There’s so many [cheesecakes] I want to try but we both love this one!” Nikki-Lee added. 

The couple’s wedding is set for August 26 in Coronado, California. According to the bride-to-be, the occasion will (regrettably) not be Cheesecake Factory-themed. 

“Although it would be pretty amazing to have an Oreo Dream Cheesecake wedding cake!” she said. 

We couldn’t agree more. Below, photos from the rest of the couple’s San Diego Seaport Village shoot. 

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Obamacare's Popularity Just Hit A Record High

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Republicans are trying to pick up the pieces of their plan to repeal Obamacare, nearly two weeks after their last effort failed. But now they face a new problem: The law has become more popular than ever.

Americans’ views of the current health care law are more positive than they’ve been since the bill was signed in 2010. On average, nearly half of the public now favors Obamacare, according to HuffPost Pollster’s aggregate, with only about 42 percent opposed.

According to a new Gallup survey, Obamacare approval has jumped 13 percentage points in the last five months, thanks to increased backing from both Democrats and Republicans, as well as a notable 17-point swing among political independents.

Fifty-five percent of the public now approves, the first time Gallup polling has found majority support for the law.

If that majority holds, it would be a significant development,” Gallup’s Jim Norman wrote. “Politically, it creates a major obstacle to Trump and Congress’ ongoing efforts to change or replace the law. In future elections, it could turn the GOP’s opposition to the law from an asset into a liability. More importantly in the daily lives of Americans, it might mean that the most sweeping changes to the nation’s healthcare system in decades will remain the law of the land for the foreseeable future.”

Another survey released Tuesday finds less overwhelming support for Obamacare, but little appetite for its repeal.

In the Kaiser Family Foundation’s latest tracking poll, views of the current health care law are evenly split, with 46 percent in favor and 46 percent opposed. But 64 percent of Americans say it’s a good thing that the GOP health care plan failed ― 31 percent because they oppose an Obamacare repeal, and 29 percent because they had concerns about replacing it with the Republicans’ American Health Care Act.

Most also now hold the Trump administration responsible to keep Obamacare running: 61 percent say that Trump and the congressional GOP are responsible for any problems with the law in the future, and three-quarters believe the Trump administration should do what it can to make Obamacare work.

Health care is a particularly sensitive issue for Americans, and it’s newly at the top of their minds. In a survey taken at the height of debate on the GOP bill, concerns about health care eclipsed the public’s perennial worries about the economy, especially among Clinton voters and older Americans.

The Republican health care bill drew strong opposition, but only tepid support among the public, and a plurality of Americans said in the wake of its failure that they’d like to see the GOP move on to other issues.

While the public doesn’t necessarily blame President Donald Trump for the bill’s failure, there are signs it hurt his standing. His approval rating currently stands at an average of about 40 percent, down about 5 percentage points since the beginning of March.

Gallup surveyed 1,023 adults on April 1 and April 2, while the Kaiser Family Foundation poll surveyed 1,203 adults from March 28 to April 3. Both used live phone interviewers to reach landlines and cell phones.

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Hispanic Caucus Fears DHS Head Will Turn A Blind Eye To Agents' Bad Conduct

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WASHINGTON ― Secretary of Homeland Security John Kelly told Latino members of Congress that his immigration agents aren’t going rogue or blurring the line when it comes to enforcement at schools, churches and other sensitive locations, lawmakers said after meeting with him on Tuesday.

But the members “vehemently disagree,” as Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D-N.M.), who chairs the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, told reporters. And they plan to keep collecting photos and other evidence to illustrate what they say is a marked change in immigration enforcement under President Donald Trump, who’s promised to unleash agents who felt constrained under the last administration.

Kelly told lawmakers he would look into their reports of misconduct on the part of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection agents, CHC members said. But overall, the secretary seemed defensive about the idea that even a small number of his agents might be violating policy, according to the members.

“There does seem to be an incredible reluctance on [Kelly’s] part to accept that any of these cases are real,” Rep. Joaquín Castro (D-Texas) said. “So my concern is that there’s a bit of a ‘see no evil, hear no evil’ mentality on his part.”

Since Trump took office, there’s been an increase in reports of ICE and CBP agents carrying out enforcement efforts near schools, churches and hospitals, although a “sensitive locations” policy set under President Barack Obama is still in place. Democratic lawmakers and immigrant rights advocates fear that agents who feel less shackled under Trump will push the limits, either by conducting enforcement just outside “sensitive locations” or by violating the policy altogether.

It’s not an empty concern. The president has frequently indicated that ICE and CBP officers and agents should be allowed to do what they think is best, a departure from the Obama administration’s top-down approach to setting priorities. Officers and agents in ICE and CBP took notice ― some of them applauded Trump’s electoral victory for that very reason.

His blatant denial of the facts is insulting to the intelligence of the American people but unsurprising given the Trump administration’s aversion to telling the truth.
Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.)

CHC members pressed Kelly on whether ICE will train its officers and agents on specific priorities for enforcement. Their impression is “that there are many communities, regions and districts that are allowing their agents to pick up anybody they want to pick up,” Lujan Grisham said, adding that Kelly did not commit to or dismiss the training idea.

CHC members said the meeting went more smoothly than Kelly’s discussion with the broader House Democratic Caucus last month. At Tuesday’s meeting, they said he seemed more willing to listen to their concerns, rather than dismissing them outright. He asked for examples he could look into and promised to try to get to the bottom of their concerns.

Rep. Tony Cárdenas (D-Calif.) said members told Kelly they weren’t talking about 99 percent of agents ― only the small number who might not be following priorities or policies.  

“In any environment, whether it’s politicians, whether it’s judges, whether it’s ICE officers or any environment, it’s that 1 percent that causes chaos,” Cárdenas told reporters. “It’s that 1 percent who step out of line. And that was my point to him, was ‘What are you going to do about that 1 percent?’”

The first thing CHC members want is for Kelly to acknowledge there’s some truth to the reports of ICE agents coming near schools and churches. Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) issued a statement Tuesday saying Kelly’s defense of ICE agents’ actions was “disappointing.”

“His blatant denial of the facts is insulting to the intelligence of the American people but unsurprising given the Trump administration’s aversion to telling the truth,” Gallego said. 

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Web pioneer Tim Berners-Lee wins computing's highest award

World Wide Web pioneer Tim Berners-Lee just chalked up another accolade, and it’s one of his greatest yet. The Association for Computing Machinery has given him the 2016 Turing Award, frequently considered the Nobel Prize of the computing industry….

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Why You Should Always Walk on Escalators

On Tuesday, The New York Times decided to reignite the age old debate of walking versus standing on escalators. And do you know what the paper concluded? “You shouldn’t walk on escalators.” This is a patently incorrect and essentially un-American conclusion for at least four reasons.

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Michael Caine Has Been Tweeting For Almost Seven Years, and I'm Just Now Finding Out

Though it may seem pointless to keep tabs on a celebrity known for his immediately recognizable (and frequently mocked) cockney accent on a text-based medium one generally scrolls through on devices that have been muted, I strongly recommend that everyone improve their presumably terrible and offensive Twitter feeds…

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T-Mobile SyncUP DRIVE car system adds roadside assistance

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The 400 horsepower 2018 Audi TT RS just got a US price

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