The Daily Populous

Friday October 11st, 2024 evening edition

image for Trump was asked about raising his kids. He went on an eight-minute rant calling for the death penalty

Donald Trump was asked about his family and parenting style at an event in Detroit, Michigan on Thursday.

But his answer quickly devolved into an eight-minute rant about drugs that ended in him explaining why some people convicted of fentanyl-related crimes should face the death penalty.

When asked about his kids, Trump went on an eight-minute-long rant calling for people convicted of fentanyl-related crimes to face the death penalty ( AFP via Getty Images ).

“Almost all of it comes through Mexico, and the maximum penalty is the death penalty, and he was going to impose that,” Trump said.

This isn’t the first time Trump has praised the idea of the death penalty for fentanyl-related offenses in China.

Trump went on to blame Biden for his plans going ‘down the tubes’ and explained why the death penalty could help solve “a lot of the problem.”.

He ended his rant by, again, calling for the death penalty for fentanyl-related offenses. »

Human remains found on Mount Everest apparently belong to famed climber who vanished 100 years ago

Authored by cbsnews.com
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A documentary team discovered human remains on Mount Everest apparently belonging to a man who went missing while trying to summit the peak 100 years ago, National Geographic magazine reported Friday.

Alongside George Mallory, Andrew Irvine famously disappeared en route to the summit of Mount Everest on 8th June 1924.

In June, five frozen bodies were retrieved from Mount Everest — including one that was just skeletal remains — as part of Nepal's mountain clean-up campaign on Everest and adjoining peaks Lhotse and Nuptse. »

Man developed a 'headspin hole' after years of breakdancing, case report says

Authored by livescience.com
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A man developed a "breakdance bulge" on the top of his head after repeatedly practicing headspins, doctors report.

The dancer in this case, a man in his early 30s, had been practicing various types of headspins for more than 19 years.

"This case report represents a pioneering effort in detailing a clinical instance of 'headspin hole,'" the authors concluded. »

With development costs rising, we need to make games based on user feedback, not numbers and data from the past, says NEXON Games executive

Authored by automaton-media.com

With development costs rising, we need to make games based on user feedback, not numbers and data from the past, says NEXON Games executive.

When asked about how NEXON Games assesses potential games, the process Park describes focuses more on listening to users’ feedback than analyzing market data and calculating forecasts.

But with development costs gradually increasing, errors in the numbers can accumulate, and you can find your game falling apart at release. »