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'Fight': Malcolm X's family demands answers 60 years after assassination

by Shahzad ABDUL

The question of what really happened on February 21, 1965 when Malcolm X, an icon of the civil rights movement, was struck down in a hail of bullets in New York has haunted Americans for decades.

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Christie's first-ever AI sale angers some artists

by Thomas URBAIN

Christie's has launched its first-ever sale dedicated to artworks created with artificial intelligence, riding the AI revolution wave -- a move by the famed auction house that has sparked anger among some artists.

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'Every Cabinet member is sick of him': Trump official heaps dirt on Elon Musk

It isn't just American voters who are growing tired of X owner Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency.

The Washington Post reports that several Trump White House officials are also sick of Musk throwing his weight around and unilaterally shutting down agencies such as the United States Agency for International Development and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

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'25th Amendment remedies' mulled as Trump Fox interview goes off the rails

Donald Trump once again refused to criticize Russian President Vladimir Putin and instead blamed Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy for the destruction in his own country.

The U.S. president appeared Friday on Fox News host Brian Kilmeade's radio program, where he lamented that important cultural sites had been destroyed since Russian troops launched a full-scale invasion on Feb. 24, 2022 – but he refused multiple opportunities to blame Putin for the devastation.

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Kash Patel had floor cleared at FBI with staffers told to pack up their desks: MSNBC

Donald Trump's choice to be the new director of the FBI got off to a rough start on Thursday after he was confirmed by the Republican-controlled Senate by only two votes.

According to MSNBC's Ken Dilanian, on Friday the controversial Kash Patel struck a "conciliatory" tone with employees of the FBI, which was a change from his first encounter.

Speaking with MSNBC host José Díaz-Balart, the justice and intelligence correspondent reported that, before Patel made his appearance on Thursday, the 7th floor at the FBI headquarters was ordered cleared.

ALSO READ: 'Gotta be kidding': Jim Jordan scrambles as he's confronted over Musk 'double standard'

"Yesterday when he first arrived at the bureau headquarters, to some people, he was sending a bit of a different message because what I'm told by three people familiar with the matter, is that before he arrived all the support employees on the seventh floor where the director's office is –– I'm talking about executive assistants and people who move the paper around, the bureaucracy ––they were all told to pack their desks."

"They were being reassigned, and they were to be removed from the seventh floor and then when he arrived with his own team the director's suite was sealed off, I'm told, and no one else saw him essentially assuming command."

He then added, "So those people they're not fired, they're civil servants, and they're going to find other jobs within the organization. But it is sending a message to some people at the FBI, at least, that Mr. Patel doesn't necessarily trust the workforce that he has now been assigned to oversee."

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Ukraine has to eat it': White House trash talks Zelenskyy for not taking lopsided deal

Donald Trump was close to withdrawing American military support from Ukraine after its president Volodymyr Zelenskyy refused to sign a peace agreement that even administration officials admit is intolerable.

Six administration officials told Axios that five incidents over the last five days angered Trump and his top officials, and he and vice president J.D. Vance have warned Zelenskyy to keep his criticism to himself after U.S. officials pushed him to hand over perpetual control of half of Ukraine's natural resources and selected infrastructure – in a deal that's been compared to a "mafia shakedown."

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Chainsaws, ice hockey and dress sense: another week in Trumpworld

Drama, disruption and disputes are essential to Donald Trump's politics, and this week served up another series of extraordinary moments as he completed his first month of a second term in the White House.

- You're fired, please come back -

Key nuclear security staff were sacked in sweeping federal cuts -- before a desperate rush to re-hire them. An official memo admitted "we do not have a good way to get in touch" with the fired employees.

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'Hates him': New book exposes the absence of Melania Trump

A new book by Michael Wolff addresses the marriage between President Donald Trump and his third wife, Melania. According to reports, the book has some startling revelations.

The Daily Beast reported Friday that Wolff writes that Melania “f---ing hates him,” citing a “Mar-a-Lago patio confidant” of Trump and his family. The source seemed “bewildered that this needed saying.”

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'I don't get it': Karoline Leavitt snaps at NBC reporter after fraud numbers busted

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt got personal with an NBC reporter on Friday morning after he called her out for misrepresenting a dollar figure the Department of Government Efficiency claims it uncovered in its search for fraud.

In a brief gaggle outside of the Brady Briefing Room, NBC's Peter Alexander put the fledgling press secretary on the spot after she praised the work DOGE has been doing, which led her to drop her smile and snarl at him.

In the exchange, Leavitt proclaimed, "I think it's fraudulent that the American government has been ripping off taxpayers in this way and we also do know there has been extensive fraud, particularly if you look at Social Security."

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'Queen of Pop' Madonna lambasts 'King' Trump

Pop superstar Madonna has reignited her campaign against President Donald Trump, upbraiding the U.S. leader for calling himself "the King."

Trump declared "LONG LIVE THE KING" to end a social media message on Wednesday stating that he had killed a New York plan to impose a peak congestion charge of $9 for cars entering much of busy Manhattan.

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'Landslide!' Trump lies about polls to claim Dems 'losing their minds' over his popularity

Donald Trump spread lies about the 2024 election to claim he had a broad mandate over a vanquished Democratic Party.

The president won the Electoral College and became only the second Republican to win the popular vote since 1988, and while the vast majority of counties shifted in his direction, Trump's margin of victory – just 1.5 percentage points over Kamala Harris – was one of the smallest in history and fell short of winning a majority of the popular vote, at just 49.7 percent.

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'America’s economic mood is souring — and Trump is getting the heat': CNN

Consumer sentiment numbers released on Friday show that consumer sentiment plunged over the last month, as prices on consumer staples such as eggs and coffee rose significantly.

Or as CNN put it in its report on the latest University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey, "America’s economic mood is now souring — and Trump is getting the heat for it."

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France far-right leader cancels U.S. speech after 'Nazi gesture' by ex-Trump aide

France's far-right leader Jordan Bardella said Friday he had cancelled his speech at a right-wing meeting in Washington after a "gesture alluding to Nazi ideology" by conservative firebrand Steve Bannon.

The president of France's National Rally (RN) party, who is in the US capital, said he was not present when Bannon -- one of the masterminds behind US President Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign -- made a gesture that has been described as a Nazi salute on Thursday at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC).

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